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HISTORICAL! 


r.-.-g^V 


2fnw^DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD.  \Km 


^i 


TWENTY-SIXTH  YEAR. 

HOUSE 


LAST    EDITION. 


MONDAY,  MARCH  15,  1909. 


TWO  CENTS. 


SURGENTS  BEGIN  FIGHT  TO  REFORM 


RULES;  DEMOCRATIC  FORCES  ARE  WITH  THEM 


CANNON  IS 
RE-ELECTED 

Minority  Gives   Champ 

Clark  Total  of  166 

Votes. 


C.   R.   DAVIS, 
Minnesota. 


JOHN   J.    ESCH, 
Wisconsin. 


midnight  lid  in  three 
large  cities  again  sat 
upon  hard  by  thpouse 

ManIor' 
the  senate 


Leavitt  Relief  Bill  Causes 

Sharp  Talk  In  the 

Senate. 


Stuart  Puts  In  Another 

Mortgage  Registry  Tax 

Measure. 

J.  F.  Jacobson  Gives  the' 

House  Old  Time  Talk 

on  Economy. 


Will  Be  Receptive  If  Not 
an  Active  Can- 
didate. 

Is  Interviewed  in  Chicago 

As  to  Burkett's 

Successor. 


KILL  AND  BURN 
IN  WILD  MARCH 

Persian  Forces  Shoot  Rus- 
sian Subjects  on  the 
Frontier. 

St.  Petersburg,  March  15. — A  dispatch 
to  the  Novoe  Vreinya  from  Julfa,  on 
the  frontier  between  Persia  and  Russia, 
says  1,000  Persian  government  horse- 
men and  500  infantryir.ea  are  marching 
on  Julfa,  from  the  Persian  bank  of 
the  Araxes  river,  devastating  the  vil- 
lages and  shooting  down  tlic  people. 

Already  ten  villages,  four  inhabited 
hy  Ilussian  subjects,  have  bten  pillaged 
and  burned.  Many  women,  carrying 
their  children  on  their  oacKs,  attempt- 
ed to  swim  fhc  Araxes  to  the  Russian 
Bld.>.    but   were  shot.  ..       ,,, 

Tliree  hundred  homele.os  families 
have  taken  refuge  on  an  island  in  tho 
river    opposite    Julfa. 

FATHER  AND  SON 
IN  KNIFE  FIGHT 


Reactionary    in   Lower 

Branch  of  Congress 

Claims  Victory. 

• 

Progressives  Go  Into  Bat- 
tle With  Apparently 
Solid  Union. 


a^r^t  .^s^^s::^.;^^^-^^^ 


I.  U  LENROOT, 
Wisconsin. 


CLAREiviCE  B.  MIJ.LER, 
Minnesota. 


HENRY   A.  COOPER, 
Wisconsin. 


AVashliifclon.  March  15. — Josopli  G. 
Caiinun  or  Illinois  was  tAHlay  re-eUitetl 
speaker  of  the  house  oi  representatives 
of  the  sl\ly-llrst  congress,  rcccivhiR 
201  votes:  Champ  Clark  of  Missouri, 
166;  Cooper.  Wisconsin.  8:  Ksch,  Wis- 
consin, l;  Xorris,  Nebraska,  1,  and 
Hepburn,   Iowa.    1. 

Washington.  March  15.-Wlth  an  ap- 
parently solid  union  of  forces,  the 
house  insurgent  Republicans  today  be- 
gan their  supreme  struggle  to  reform 
the  rules  so  as  to  minimise  the  power 
of  the  speaker.  To  all  appearances, 
practically  the  entire  Democrat  minor- 
ity under  the  leadership  of  Champ 
Clark  of  Missouri,  is  with  them.  The 
Cannon  forces,  marshalled  by  ex-Con- 
gfessman  Watson  of  Indiana,  former 
whip    assert  their  fight  is  already  won 


CHAMP  CLARK  IN  ||LLINOIS  LEGISLATURE 

CALL  FOR  UNION 

Tells  House  Democrats 


<Froin   a    Staff   Correnpondent.) 

Bt.    Paul,    Minn.,    March    15.— (Special 
to   The   Herald,)— The   house   again   re- 
fused   this    morning    to    stand    for    the 
midnight    lid,    even    In    the    three    large 
cities.     Representaiive   Wells  of  Breck- 
enrld'ge  moved  a  reconsideration  of  the 
vote    whereby     the     bill    was    defeated 
Thursdav,  after  it  had  been  amended  to 
include  "cities   of    the   second   and   third 
classes    as    well    as    cities    of    the    first 
class      Mr.  Wells  presented  a  bunch  of 
petitions    for    the    bill    f'-«"y,„the    thre« 
cities.     Including       one       from     IJul""^ 
Blgned    by    Mayor    Haven     Cit>     Comp- 
troller McCormlck,  Sheriff   %\.   .1.  B^^ef; 
Postmaster    Guy    A.    Eaton    ^n^'    «b^«Y^ 
fifty     buslJiess    men.       Mr.    ^^  f'ls  ^^am 
the  idea  was  to  amend  the  bill  back  to 
Its  original  form,  so  that  It  applied  only 
•  to   the   three   large   cities. 

W    H    Putnam  of  Red   Wing  made  a 
strong   talk    against    the    motion. 

Representative  McC.rath  said  t  would 
be  a  shame  and  a  disgrace  to  the  party 
,lf    the    Republican    legislature    did    this 

^^KSresentatlves  Kneeland,  L.obeck,J^ 


Quarrel  Over  Property 
Younger  Man  May 
Not  Live. 


(Continued  on  page  5.  aixth  column.) 

ARE  RENT 
OVERMAYOR 

Los  Angeles  Citizens  Agi- 
tated Over  "Recall" 
Issue. 

First  Election  of  Kind 

Held  in  United 

States. 


Chicago.  March  15— William  J.  Bry- 
an in  an  Interview  here  today,  im- 
pressed his  auditors  with  the  idea  that 
he  will  be  a  receptive,  if  not  an  ac- 
tive, candidate  for  the  United  States 
from  Nebraska  In  1911  to  succeed  El- 
mer J.  Burkett,  Republican. 

••Nebraska  lias  adopted  the  organiza- 
tion plan  of  popular  elections,"  said  Mi- 
Bryan.  "I  dont  know  whether  I  will 
be  a  candidate.  A  senatorship  I 
aspired  to  even  when  a  boy.  If  tbere 
seems  to  be  a  good  chance  to  elect 
fo^he  senile  from  Nebra.ska  some 
o^heV  Democrat.  It  will  piease  me  bet- 
ter than  to  be  a  candidate  myself.  I 
ht:ve«a"d  repeatedly  that  I  hope      may 

never  again  be  a  candidate  foi  otlice.  i 
would  n%t "say  that  1  ^vo"ld  not  under 
anv  circumstances  accept  the  nomina- 
tion because  no  one  Is  wise  enough  to 
look  into  the  future  and  decide  on  con- 
ditions in  advance.  .  ■„  i„ 
••I  think  the  Democrat  party  Is  In 
better  condition  than  at  any  time  since 
im.  and  that  It  has  an  exceUent 
chance  to  control  congress  in  1910. 

ROOSEVELT  CURT 
AS  TO  ITINERARY 


Appleton,  Wis.,  March  15.— James 
Grignon,  40  years  old.  lies  in  a  critical 
condition  in  St.  Elizabeths  hospital 
here,  while  his  father,  Alex  Grignon. 
lies  In  his  home,  also  In  a  serious  con- 
dition, as  the  resnlt  of  a  stabbing 
affray   in  the   Grignon   ho.me. 

The  father  and  son  became  involved 
in  an  altercation  over  the  disposition 
of  property,  the  tiuarrel  ending  in  a 
fight  with  "knives. 

Young  Grignon  may  not  survive. 


■(Continued  on  page  8.  fourth  column.) 

HOTEL  CLERK  IS 
SLAIN  5Y  THIEF 

Skull  Is  Frac!ured  and 

Throat  Cut— Till 

Is  Robbed. 

New  York,  March  15. — Lying  in  a 
small  room  adjoining  tlie  hotel  office, 
the  body  of  Isadore  de  Valento,  night 
clerk  of  the  Eastern  hotel,  whose  home 
was  In  Montvale,  N.  J.,  was  found  early 
today  with  his  skull  fractured  by  a 
blo#  from  an  iron  pipe.  His  throat 
was  cut.  The  murderers  had  after- 
ward rified  his  pockets,  taken  $78  from 
the  hotel  till  and  made  an  unsucces.s- 
fuf  attempt  to  get  Into  the  safe,  in 
which  there  was  $3,000 


They  Must  All  Act 
Together. 

Washington.  March  15.— Addresswg 
the  house  Democratic  caucus  this  aft- 
ernoon. Champ  Clark,  ^'"orlty  leader 
who  has  just  been  nominated  foi 
sneaker  of  the  house  said, 
"^"last  December  the.  Democratltc 
caucus  elected  me  minority  leader  b> 
unanimous  vote.  A  moment  ago  you 
una  mously  nominated  me  for  speak- 
er For  these  flattering  evidences  of 
your    confidence    and     esteem,      1      am 

^■■^In^the  last  days  of  the  Sixtieth  c 
irress  we  won  some  notable  victories — 
Lnonlshlng    victories      ^vlien      we    re^ 
member   that    there   was   a   I^^P^^^^V^^" 
malority  of  f  fty-seven  in  the  house. 

••We  achieved  those  triumphs  by 
standing  together  and  fighting  to- 
gether We  can  in  the  present  con- 
fress  win  more  victories,  more  easiiy. 
lecluse  there  Is  now  a  majority  of 
only  forty-seven  against  us.  ^^.^,  ,„ 
••We  must  stick  together  In  order  to 
do  our  dutv.  The  country  expects  us 
fos^rck  together  and  fi^ht  together 

•We  must  remember  that  to  a  very 
large  extent  we  have  in  our  keeping 
the  fmmediate  future  of  the  Detnocrat- 
Ic  party  Recent  events  have  de.mon- 
qtrated  that  the  Republicans  are  dis- 
ortfanlzed  disgruntled  and  at  logger- 
held  s  gen  er  all  v.  Let  us  close  up  our 
ranki  present  a  solid  front  and  dem- 
onstrate to  the  world  that  we  are 
wortlfyof  the  high  vocation  in  which 
we  are  engaged. 

LUCKY  BALDWIN'S  WIDOW 

TO  CONTEST  HIS  WILL. 

Qnn  -Pranclsco.  Cal.,  March  15. — That 
thf  widow  of  Lucky  Baldwin  will  con- 
test lis  will  is  confirmed  by  Garrett 
McEnery,  her  attorney.  ,  A  metnbei^  of 
the  law  firm  has  gone  to  Los  Angeies 
to  Institute  proceedings  on  behalf  of 
the  widow. 


MAY  ELECT  CANNON  AS 
UNITED  STATES  SENATOR 


SHOT  HIM 
FROMREAR 

Attorney  General  Dwells 

on  Course  of  Cooper's 

Bullet. 

Closes  Argument  By  De- 
tailing the  Killing  of 
Carmacll 


The  House  Insurgents  Are 

Charged  With  Abetting 

Springfield  Deadlock. 

End  to  Long  Fight  Over 

Toga  is  Expected 

Soon. 

Hopkins'  Men  Will  Make 

Final  Effort  to 

Win. 


I  Uncle  Sam  Will  Insist  on  Peace  Among  <^"f''i^!!:^[!:^^ 


Los  Angeles.  Cal..  March  15.— Tlie 
city  council  is  in  session  today  for  the 
purpose  of  selecting  a  successor  to 
Former  Mayor  Harper,  who  resigned 
lest  week,  facing  an  election  on  his 
recall,  the  first  election  of  the  kind 
ever  held  in  any  American  city  for  the 
recall  for  a  mayor.  Since  his  reslgua- 
tlon  the  city  has  been  without  a  mayor. 
Feeling  is  bitter.  When  the  council 
convened  this  morning,  the  report  was 
out  that  there  would  be  a  deadlock  t^n 
whether  the  man  named  today  shouul 
serve  for  the  remainder  of  his  term. 
or  only  until  the  recall  election  can  be 
held  and  a  successor  chosen.  . 

A  "dark  liorse"  chosen  this  morning 
by  a  caucus  of  Republican  memberL? 
o^the  council  may  be  the  next  mayor 
of  I>oiJ  Angeles.  At  the  same  time,  the 
friends  of  (Jeorge  A.  Smith,  a  former 
councilman,  who  was  originally  pre- 
ferred by  a  majority  of  the  council,  say 
Ilia  election   is  probable. 

Late  last  night  the  situation  was 
further  confused  by  the  positive  state- 
ment of  one  council  man.  that  the 
members  who  were  favorable  to  a  com- 

"  tOontinued  on  page  8.  fifth  column.) 


Boer  War  Veteran  Wrote 
Him  Advising  Chang- 
ing Plans. 

San  Francisco,  Cal..  March  15.— Capt. 
A  J.  Smiley,  who  is  said  to  have 
served  with  the  Irish  brigade  in  the 
Boer  war.  says  the  hunting  grounds 
where  ex-President  Roosevelt  plans  to 
spend  his  vacation,  are  nothing  but  a 
huge  game  preserve,  and  that  the  hun- 
ter  will   have   a   tame   time. 

The  captain  claims  to  have  hunted 
over  this  ground  many  times  and  as- 
serts that  the  lions  have  been  sliot  at 
so  often  that  they  have  become  gun 
rhv  The  duke  of  Manchester,  accord- 
iuRto  Smiley,  has  shot  over  the  coun- 
trv  which  Itoosevelt  will  traverse, 
without  bagging  any  game.  ^'"''fy 
clHlmf  to  have  written  to  Roosevelt 
SI— resting  that  he  go  to  a  portion  of 
/'Tica  where  elepliants  can  be  met  in 
drives  instead  of  pairs,  as  said  to  be 
the  case  In  the  Mombassa  district. 

Roosevelt's  reply  to  this  Utter,  was 
a  curt  intimation  that  the  itinerary 
had  been  made  out  and  he  could  not 
change    it. 


EIGHT  THOUSAND  MEN 

MARCH,  SINGING  HYMN. 

Denver,  Colo.,  March  15.— Singing 
"Onward  Christian  Soliders,"  8.000  men 
marched'  through  the  streets  to  at- 
end  a  meeting  held  by  Gypsy  Sniith 
the  evangelist.  The  meeting,  which 
was  attended  by  14,000  men,  unani- 
mously adopted  resolutions  against  the 
Carey-Warlaw  bill  before  the  senate, 
which,  if  passed,  will  destroy  local  op- 
tion  in  Colorado. 

. • 

Cupid  HrrakH   I'p   Club. 

Chippewa  Falls,  Wis..  March  15. — 
(Special  to  The  Terald.)— The  Sans 
Soucl  club,  a  bachelors'  organization, 
formed  ten  years  ago,  was  obliged  to 
disband    because    of    lack    of    members. 


Nashville.  Tenn.,  Mar.^h  IB.— Attor- 
ney General  McCarn  resumed  his  clos- 
ing argument  today  in  the  Cooper- 
Sharp  trial  for  the  mur  ier  of  Former 
United    States    Senator    Carmack.      He 

said: 

'•At  the  time  of  adjournment  Satur- 
day I  had  gone  over  the  Immediate 
facts  of  the  tragedy.  1  lad  shown  you 
by  physical  facts  that  .Senator  Carmack 
wa.s  shot  in  the  back.  Don't  forget 
tl»at.  He  was  shot  in  the  back— he 
was  shot  from  behind.  They  ask  us 
for  our  theory.  Well,  gentlemen,  my 
theory  Is  that  the  bull  it  which  came 
out  of  Carmack's  mou  h  entered  the 
back.  And  it  Is  no  more  chivalrous  to 
shoot  a  dead  man  in  the  back  than  to 
shoot  a  li^fe  one.  That  bullet  is  tl.e 
on?y  one  that  ranged  up.  two  bullets 
ranging  downward.  Now.  you  shoot  a 
man  af  he  is  falling  a>^d  the  sho  s  do 
not  range  upwards.  So,  gent  emen, 
these  mfn  are  not  only  a.ssasslns  of 
Carmack,  but  they  art.  cowardly  as- 
sassins of  fact."  , 

"Do  not  take  the  tloctor  s  words. 
Take  the  facts.  Doctors  can  tell  you 
the  range  of  plUs,  hut  they  are  not  ex- 
perts on  the  range  of  billets.  1  hey  tell 
vou  Carmack  could  not  do  anything 
after  he  was  shot  in  the  back  Do  you 
know.  I  think,  tliafs  why  they  shot 
him  from  behind." 

"Counsel  tells  you  that  VO"  are  "ot 
trying  ordinary  criminals  that  these 
are  men  of  distinguished  ancestr>. 
will  when  men  in  pai -s  hu^r^r^iV^"^ 
man,'  approach  him  fr^m  behind  and 
kill  hin  ,  then  it's  time  for  some  of  the 
descendants,  the  tail  of  the  ancestors, 
to   be  cut  off." 

GRAND  JIRY  AS 
GRAFT  DRAGNET 


Washington.  March  16. — Gossip  at 
the  capitol  for  the  last  few  days  is  to 
the  effect  that  Speaker  Cannon  can 
secure  the  United  States  senatorship 
from  Illinois  If  he  desires  it.  Accord- 
ing to  the  rumor  the  deadlock  over  the 
selection  of  a  senator  from  Illinois  is 
due  indirectly  to  the  fight  on  the  part 
of  the  Insurgents  in  the  house  and 
those  opposed  to  Mr.  Cannon  for  the 
speakership. 

It  has  been  said  Cannon  would  not 
accept  the  speakership  If  the  present 
rules  are  changed  but  the  understand- 
ing is-  that,  in  that  event  he  would 
take  a  seat  on  the  lloor  of  the  bouse. 

Gannon,  who  Is  U.  has  had  a  notable 
career  in  the  house,  where  he  ha9 
served  almost  continually  since  tlio 
Forty-third  congress,  beginning  la 
1873.  He  has  been  speaker  foi  in© 
last    three    congresses.  „„„„v.i>vi 

Friends  of  Mr.  Cannon,  approached 
regarding  the  rumor  that  Ih^^^  «.P/^.Ji^ 
might  be  named  by  the  Illinois  leg- 
^lature  for  the  senatorship  declared 
that  they  believe  it  would  not  be 
chiracterlstic  of  Mr.  Cannon  to  accept 


(Continued   on   page  8,   fifth  column.) 

NOT  GUILTY, 
SAYSJORLD 

Publishers  Enter  Plea  In 

the  Panama  Libel 

Case. 


— 

^ 

« 

1 

- 

i 

Pittsburg  Judge's  Order 

Opens  Way  lor  More 

Developments. 

IMttsburg,  Pa..  Marc  i  15.— Judge  Da- 
vis   to«fey    authorized    the    use    of    the 
March    grand    jury,    which    was    called 
lin   extra   session   for  dragnet  purposes 
in  connection   with   the   municipal   cor- 

I-^l^STgra^^S^e-s:^^^ 

MISSISSIPPIANS  liOlTED 

FROM  HOMliS  BY  FLOOD. 

Columbus.  Miss..  March  1^— Jhe 
Tomblgbee  river  has  reached  a  higher 
stHee  than  at  any  time  since  !>>«*;, 
when  a  destructive  Hood  resulted  As 
a  result  the  lowlan  Is  about  Colum- 
bus are  Hooded  and  scores  of  residents 
are  abandoning  their  homes.  A  further 
rise     is    anticipated^. 

PoMited   Ccnt«ry   Mark. 

Alpena.  Mich.,  March  15. — John  Char- 
bonneau.  a  hunter  und  trapper,  who 
was  born  at  St.  Ignace,  Mich  Is  dead 
nt  his  home,  twelve  miles  from  here, 
aeed  104  vears.  The  duke  and  duchess 
of  Manchester  paid  the  aged  trapper  a 
call  at  his  tiome  in  the  woods  several 
years  ago  when  the^r  were  on  a  trip 
through  Michigan. 


Answer  Is  Made  Through 

Counsel  In  Federal 

Court. 


New  York,  March  15.-The  Pres. 
Publishing  company,  publishers  of  the 
New  York  World,  through  its  counsel. 
Delancy  Nicoll.  pl2aded  not  guilty  be- 
fore Judge  Holt  in  federal  court  today 
to  the  charge  of  criminal  libel  in  West 
Point  and  the  New  York  postoffice  iu 
the  Panama  canal   case. 

The  plea  of  not  guilty  Is  In  answer 
to  the  charges  preferred  in  the  now 
famous  Indictment,  chyging  that  ex- 
President  Roosevelt.  William  Nelsou 
Cromwell  J.  P-  Morgan.  Douglas  Rob- 
^neo^  brother-in-law  of  Mr.  Kooseve 
and  others  were  criminally  libelled  la 
connection  with  the  stones  about 
financial  transactions  that  brought 
about  the  purchase  of  the  Panama 
canal  property.  The  indictments  aleo 
charged  Vhe  publishers  of  the  Indian- 
apolis   New.s    With    criminal   jibel. 

Counsel  for  Caleb  van  Hamm,  an 
ediior  of  the  World./ also  entered  a 
plek  of  not  guilty  to  «  similar  charge 
"n  behalf  of  Mr.  van  Hamm.  Counsel 
was  granted  one  week  to  prepare  a 
vpecial  plea  as  to  the  jurisdiclioa 
of  tlie  court. 


-*9 


'  v 


. 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY,    MARCH    16     1909. 


I   WK ATHKU-  ««niw    flurrle*    UjuU'it    .ind    Tuesdny. 
I       w.irmor     UjiJgbt;     llfbc     U)     moderate     vart»ble 


I 


that  a  special  feature  of 
this  store  is  our  ability  to 
fit  the  heavyweights  in 

Suits,  Overcoats, 
Shirts,  Underwear, 
Hose  and  Collars. 


GIRL  ASKS 
DAMAGES 

Marie  Clausen  Makes  Sen- 
sational Ctiarge  Against 
Restaurent  Man. 


Wants  $15,000  for  As- 
sault She  Alleges 
tie  Committed. 


] 


4th  Ave.  W.  and  5uperior  St. 


Prompt  and  Good! 

We  do  Good   Printing   Promptly; 
Origln.il.   New   Idea.^, 

Something  that   will  please.     Try  us. 

Mil. I. Alt    l'RI>ri\(J   CO. 
nulutta  'Phono  1«I04. 


Charging  that  Harry  W.  Johnson,  by 
whom  slie  was  emph)yed  in  a  restau- 
rant at  Twenty-sixth  avenue  west  and 
Superior  street,  entered  her  room  on 
the  night  of  Wednesday,  Dec.  9.  and 
as.^aulted  her.  Marie  Clausen.  17  years 
.)ld.  is  .«uiiig  him  in  district  court  for 
J15.000  damages.  The  case  was  taken 
up  before  Judge  Ensign  in  district 
court  this  morning. 

Mr.  Johnson  was  on  the  stand  for  a 
few  minutes  this  morning,  his  testi- 
mony relating  to  the  amount  of  prop- 
erty he  owns.  He  is  the  owner  of 
several  hou.^es  and  lots  In  the  West 
and  and  said  that  he  estimated  them 
to  be  worth  between  JS.OOO  and  $10,000. 
tree  of  all  encumbrances.  He  refused 
to  answer  anv  questions  in  regard  to 
the  alleged  assault  on  the  ground  that 
liis  answers  miglit  tend  to  incriminate 
hini.  He  Is  36  years  old  and  married. 
The  girl's  story  was  sensational  in 
the  e.xtreme.  s*he  worked  for  Mr.  John- 
son for  three  weeks  previous  to  the 
alleged  assault  and  left  three  or  four 
weeks  afterwards.  Charles  Berg  was 
.ippolnted  guardian  ad  litem  by  thi 
court  and  tiie  suit  is  being  brought  by 
the  girl  through  him. 
,  The  girl  was  born  in  Norwa.v  and 
I  came  to  this  country  with  her  mother 
and  sister  when  12  years  old,  joining 
Thomas  Clausen  her  father,  here  in 
I>uluth.  Siie  returned  to  Norway  alone 
,  two  vears  later,  remaining  there  two 
years"  and  then  coming  to  this  country 
again    last    April. 

Thomas    Clausen,     the    girl's     fathe 
went    to    Norway    ."^ome    time    ago    an_ 
last    fall.    Mrs.    Clausen    obtained    a    di- 
vorce.     She    tlien    went    to   Norway    als 
and    Marie    and    her    brother,    who    Is    2 
years    old,    were       left    in    the       L'nite.. 
Slates.      The   girl    said   she   didn't    want 
to    go    to    Norway    because    she    had    to 
w.irk   anyway   aiid   she   could   do   better 
in    this   country. 

As   she   told   her   story   this    morning, 
she  liad  to  force  back  the  tears  several 
times,    but   slje  held   up  well   under   th 
t»  rrible  siram  on   the  stand.     Cioss-ex 
aminatlon    by    Mr.    Fryberg'er    failed    t 
shake     her.       Since    leaving     Mr.    John- 
son's restaurant,  she  says  she  has  been 
been   living   with  Charles   Berg. 

The  defense  has  entered  a  genera 
ilenlal  of  the  charges  male  by  the  gir 
but  the  exact  grounds  of  defense  hav 
not  yet  been   brought  out. 


CUPID  H.4NDS  ANOTHER 
LEMON  TO  OUR  OLD  FRIEND  ANN 


Ann  iias  had  another  adventure.  Shei 
fell  for  tise  love  spiel  again.  Once 
before  Anna  experienced  the  thrill  of 
love's  young  dream,  and  in  tiiat  experi- 
ence Ann  WAS  stuug.  Her  man  de- 
camped at  the  last  moment,  just  as  Ann 
l:ad    resigned    from    the    kitchen.      not 

©ven    saying    good-bye         In    th.-       » — 
evfu  as  in   tlie  rlrst,   !;:■?  man   va 
taking  with  him  some  jf  the  ca^.         . 
Ann  had  earned. 

Do  you  reniem":»er  Ann?  3ne  is  em- 
ployed as  a  domestic,  she  works  in  a 
home  on  West  First  street.  T.nough 
she  is  not  so  y.iung.  yet  she  has  the 
^tender  passion.  Soft  words,  softlv 
spoken,  which  to  people  with  more 
hardened  sympathies  might  be  ch.-xi- 
acterized  as  mere  nothings,  mean 
everything  to  Ann.  Twice,  m  the  short 
space  of  two  montlis  she  ha.s  been  be- 
guiled by  deceitful  man.  This  latest 
experience  Is  one  calculated  to  sliak-i 
tier  faith  in  the  constancy,  not  to  say, 
the    integrity    or    man. 

The  second  steady  was  similar  to 
the  first.  He  handed  out  something  of 
the  same  line  of  love  adjectives  as  the 
first,  only  he  had  an  innocent  line  of 
open-eyed  speech,  that  for  true  good- 
ness of  soul,  sincerity  of  intention, 
and  depth  of  affection,  would  have 
made  one  of  Bertha  M.  (play's  heroes 
look    cheap   and    unworthy. 

Ann  had  been  in  the  habit  lately  of 
reading  Laura  Jean  LiWay.  Laura  Jean 
ha^  the  'nabnt,  as  you  have  observed, 
if  you  have  perused  her  works  con- 
sclenti'Uisly.  of  classifying  her  men  in- 
to types.  Ann  Instantly  recognized 
her  steady  as  one  of  the  types  set 
forth  in  the  fiction  of  Miss  Llbby  She 
read  the  novel  over  again.  p«)ured  over 
the  manly  qualities  of  the  type,  of 
wliich  her  man  was  a  living  prototype, 
and    then    fell    for   his   work. 

Oh,  yes.  he  proposed;  they  generally 
do  Thev  walked  out  evenings,  and 
from  report  he  took  Ann  to  several 
picture  shows.  They  didn't  cost  much, 
and  tills  designing  near-villain  was 
B.-heming  all  the  time  to  get  his  money 
back. 

The  time  ran  along,  until  the  cere- 
mony was  about  due.  Ann  had  her 
trou*seau  prepared.  Don't  you  remem- 
ber? She  had  it  made  for  her  first  man, 
and  he  left  for  the  West  unexpectedly, 
leaving  Ann  with  the  wedding  para- 
phernalia   upon    her    hands. 

"There  was  nothing  much  to  do.  but 
to  read  from  the  works  of  dear  Miss 
Lihbv.  a.id  to  listen  with  bated  breath 
to   tlie  worda-  of  (leorge. 

FIven  if  George  did  eat  imions  and 
dirink  1>ig  schooners,  he  was  a  hero, 
3«st  the  same.  Ann  went'  carefully 
over  the  works  of  Laura  Jean  to  find 
pome  precedent  for  a  hero  who  ate 
onions  and  drank  high  l>oys;  she 
couldn't  'tis  true,  but  all  heroes  fall  a 
trifle  short  of  our  expectations,  pon- 
dered Ann.  and  she  was  reconciled  to 
George's   breath. 

The    time    for    the    ceremony  drew 

near.  It  was  to  be  an  eventful  day 
for  Ann.  George  didn't  seem  properly 
excited,  didn't  seem  to  grasp  the  true 
importance  of  the  coming  event,  but 
then  Ann  learned  later  just  how  grasp- 
ing  George    was. 

Frt>ni  correct  Information,  it  was 
Just  the  night  before  the  march  to  the 
altar  that  George  knocked  at  the 
kitilu-n  door.  Ann  did  an  Alfred  Shrubb 
to  the  balcony  window,  as  she  pretend- 
ed, for  love's  Imagination  Is  strong, 
and  greeted  George,  as  was  her  custom, 
with    gleeful    gladness. 

George  took  it  all  In  good  part.  He 
•was  a  t>hilosopber.  Then  he  got  down 
to  business.  So  excited  was  Ann  that 
Khe  scarcely  noticed  that  there  was  a 
harii  and  material  look  in  George's 
optics,  an<l  that  his  breath  had  an 
acrid  odor  of  Three-star  Hennessey 
and    fragrant   onions. 

'I'm  broke,  Ann,"  he  started  the  con- 


versation, "and  if  you  want  me  to  look 
nice  tomorrow  evening,  you  got  to 
come  across  with  a  quarter  of  a  cen- 
tury." 

Just  how  George  knew  that  Ann  had 
saved  some  of  her  earnings,  is  un- 
known. Vinains,  however,  are  -lesign- 
;r.g    and    wise.      Ann    r  .'•'. 

Perhaps    a    shade    of    s.-  d 

r  mind.  Burned  chiiaren  are  afraid 
the  flame.  But  then.  George  was  a 
..•cro  after  all;  a  hero  'such  as  Laura 
Jean  Libby  had  portrayed  in  her 
eighty-six  novels.  The  king  can  do 
no  •«rong.  It  would  be  rail-.er  small 
and  mean  of  Ann  not  to  assist  George 
at  the  last  moment. 

George  even  went  into  details.  A 
check  from  the  West  was  delayed. 
He  had  plenty  of  lucre  in  the  bank, 
but  there  had  been  a  delay  somewhere. 
It  was  pretty  late,  the  day  before  the 
wedding,  and  what  could  he  do.  If  he 
didn't  think  so  much  of  Ann,  of  course 
he  would  nevar  iiave  come  to  her  for 
money.  ^^ 

Well — George  got  the  money.  Then 
he  remarked  that  it  was  growing  late, 
and  he  left,  with  $J.'>  In  his  little 
string-latched  wallet. 

There  was  no  wedding.  Ann  is  still 
working  at  the  same  old  stand.  TJeorge 
Is  pluving  dates  some  place  else.  He 
has  rtitled.  as  do  the  l>lrds  of  dark 
October.  He  has  gone,  probably  not 
to  return  again.  Back  to  the  mothball 
reservation  has  gone  the  trousseau, 
and  Ann  is  wondering  where  Laura 
Jean  Libby  got  the  material  for  her 
tyi)es    of    strong,    true    heroes. 

• 

It    Saved    HU    Lex. 

"All  thought  I'd  lose  my  leg,"  writes 
J.  A.  Swenson,  Watertown.  Wis.  "Ten 
years  of  ezcema.  that  fifteen  doctors 
could  not  cure,  had  at  last  laid  mo  up. 
Then  Bucklen's  .\rnica  Salve  cured  it 
sound  and  well."  Infallible  for  Skin 
Eruptions,  Kzcema,  Salt  Kheum,  Boils, 
Fever  Sores,  Burns,  Scalds,  Cuts 
Piles.       25c    at    all    druggists. 


and 


Notice  to  the  Public 

Wc-  wisii  to  announce  to  the  public 
that  Wo  have  bouglit  out  all  the  in- 
terest of  Mr.  John  I'.  Brander.  who  has 
handled  our  family  trade  business  for 
the  last  six  years.  From  now  on  we 
will  handle  this  business  ourselves. 
We  have  secured  the  services  of  Mr. 
Harry  P.  Hall,  who  will  be  pleased  to 
see  all  of  tiie  old  friends  and  custom- 
ers of  Mr.  Brander.  The  office  ana 
warehouse  still  remain  at  the  same 
place,  117  West  First  street.  We  will 
endeavor  to  give  the  public  and  cus- 
tomers  t  he   best   possible   service. 

The  telephone  numbers  are  the 
same.    484    new    and    14:;o-K    old    'phone. 

AVe  shall  be  pleased  to -receive  or- 
ders for  family  trade,  either  b.v  "phone 
or  personal  call  at  117  'West  Flrat 
street,  and  .such  orders  will  be  given 
the  ver.v  best  attention. 

We  invite  all  customers  and  friends 
to  call  at  our  brewery.  Twenty-ninth 
avenue  west  and  Helm,  and  inspect  our 
splendid  new  bottle  house,  and  see 
with  what  care  and  cleanliness 
prepare  our  famous  bi-ands,  the 
and   Moose. 

Thanking    all  friends     for     past 
tronage,    and      soliciting      your      future 
business  and  orders,  we  remain, 
DLLCTII    BREWING   &    MALT^^'G   CO 

Brewery,   Twenty-ninth   avenue   west. 

Family  trade  office  and  warehouse, 
117    West   First   street. 

HAilRY  P.   HALL,   City  Agent. 


we 
Rex 

pa- 


At     Temple 
noon. 


Music 

Rink     Wednesday     after- 


Pleased  to  Announce  the 


Showing  of  Spring  Styles 

Greatest  variety  and  quality  of  fine  woolens 
for  men^s  wear  ever  displayed. 

May  we  have  the  pleasure  of  serving  youf 


Wolvin 
Building. 


W.  F.  Mies, 


110-112-114 

Third  Avenue  W. 


i^ 


^ 


- 


FormcmShowitig  of  Easter  Fashions 

In  Garments  and  Millinery 


Began   Today,  Continuing 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  ! 

Every  Woman  Interested  in  Fashion  is 

Most  Cordially  Invited. 

E  are  now  showing  the  most  beautiful  col- 
lection of  smart  garmemis  in  our  history. 
With  our  fingers  on  the  pulse  oi  fashion, 
we  are  at  all  times  ready  to  show  our  Particular 
Clientele  the  newest  fashion  fancies  as  soon 
as  our  New  York  Cousins  nod  their  ap- 
proval  to   the  style    representatives  from 
across  the  water 

This  is  a  garment  exposition  presenting 
models  that  are  exclusive  in  the  broadest 
sense  of  the  word. 


I 


\ 


.■ 


( -ii-rTaTn '      i% 


Tailored  Suits 


Fancy  models  in  two  and  three-piece  effects— 
also  the  strictly  plain  tailor-mades  for  g^cneral 
street  wear. 


7\f*/>  C  C/>  C    ^^^   formal   or   informal   afternoon    and  evening^   wear  —  also 
-£-/#  C^o  %3  C>0     charming"  Trotteur  frocks. 

f^f\r^4-^     Long- and  medium   lengths  in  broadcloths,  coverts,  serges  and  worsteds. 
y^yJtti^y     Styles  so  strictly  smart  as  to  lend  a  distinguished  air  to  the  wearer. 

HCltS     ^ty^^s  unique  in  their  shapeliness  and  exquisite  color  combinations. 

Also  Linen  Trotteur  Frocks,  Lingerie  Dresses,  Skirts,  Waists, 
Neckwear  and  Girls'  Wearables.  Garments  that  show  themselves  to  be 
the  products  of  the  country's  most  clever  designers  and  most  skilled  workmen. 

Trim-fitting  Princesse  Slips,  Tailored  Combination  irndermuslins,  Sheathbackers,  Per- 
fectly-built Corsets,  and  Dainty  Hosiery  are  things  that  gc  to  make  the  foundation  of  a  perfect 
appearance. 


Duluth. 


9.  M.  dt^titg  $c  (Ha 


Cincinnati. 


< 


^Correct  Dress  for  Women.^'' 


ENTERED  REFRIGERATOR 

C  AR  TO  KEEP  WARM 


W'hen  five  men  told  Judge  "Wlndom 
In  municipal  court  this  morning  that 
they  climbed  In  a  refrigerator  car  be- 
cause they  w^ere  suffering  with  the 
cold,  and  wanted  to  get  warm,  he  ele- 
vated his  eyebrows,  and  mentally  won- 
dered If  they  were  trying  to  "kid"  him. 

"These  men  are  charged  with  tres- 
pass," he  said,  turning  inf|ulrlngly  to 
Capt,  Fiskett.  "Of  what  did  their  tres- 
pass consist?" 

"They  were  arrested  after  being 
caught  In  a  car  in  the  Nortliern  Paclfcl 
yards,"    the    captain    answered. 

"A    refrigerator    car." 

"What  were  you  doing  in  a  refriger- 
ator car?"  the  court  asked  the  five. 

"We  climbed  in  there  to  get  warm, 
yer    honor,"    volunteered    one. 

The  others  did  not  even  crack  a 
smile.  .Judge  Wlndom  looked  puzzled. 
Evidently  the  man  was  serious  in  what 
he  said,  and  was  not  trying  to  be 
funny. 

"How  could  you  get  warm  in  a  re- 
frigerator  car?" 

"We  b'uilt  a   fire  in   the   stove." 

At  this  Juncture  Judge  Wlndom  al- 
most made  up  his  mind  that  they  really 
were  trying  to  have  fun  at  his  ex- 
pense, but  it  was  explained  that  regrl- 
gerator  cars  are  used  for  the  trans- 
portation of  perishable  goods  In  winter 
as  well  as  in  summer,  and  that  where, 
in    summer,   it    is   necessary    to    fill    the 


A  Profitable  Exchange. 

Mr.  Want  Cimw.  (mncr  of  a  htg  orange  ranrli 
Iei  Sail  IkrnariUiio.  California,  has  recently  sold 
it.  and  removed  to  tlie  Isle  of  Pines,  lie  says 
tluit  the  adTitntaRes  of  tlie  Island  over  Califomlj 
are  verj'  marked  in  tlie  fruit  business.  Tlie 
island  has  no  frost,  and  no  need  for  IrrjgaUon. 
it  is  close  to  mnrktt,  and  has  water  traiisporta- 
Uon.  The  climate  and  soil  are  Ideal.  Yet  land 
can  lie  had  on  Uv;  Island  for  about  one-tweuUetli 
of  Calif omla  prices.  We  are  still  selling  per- 
sonally  selected   lands   for   $40    an   acre. 


SHEPHERD  &  CHANDLER 

200  Manhattan  Bldg. 


car  with  ice  to  protect  the  perishable 
shipments  from  heat,  it  is  eijually 
necessary  to  provide  a  stove  and  fire 
in  wlnterto  protect  them  from  the  se- 
vere cold  of  this  northern  latitude. 

"Five  dollars  and  costs  each,  or  five 
days  in  the  county  jail,"  said  the  judge, 
and  the  men  took  the  jail  sentence. 
They  gave  their  names  as:  William 
Kelly,  Peter  Malloy,  William  Pierce, 
Mike  Sullivan   and    Joseph   Connors. 


"My  child  was  burned  terribly  about 
the  face,  neck  and  chest,  I  applied  Dr. 
Thomas's  Eclectrlc  Oil.  The  pain  ceased 
and  the  child  sank  into  a  restful  sleep." 
— Mrs.  Nancy  M.  Hanson,  Hamburg, 
N.    Y. 


EVERY  COACH  DERAILED. 


Great  Northern  West  Bound  Train 
Wrecked  in  North  Dakota. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D..  March  15. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Great  Northern 
train  No.  3,  weetibound,  was  wrecked 
Saturday  afternoon  at  a  point  two  and 
one-half  miles   east   of  Granville,   while 

going  at  full  speed.  The  rails  spread 
and  every  coach  was  derailed  and  the 
track  was  torn  up  for  a  distance  of 
600  yards.  The  engine  plunged  head 
first  into  a  bridge  and  badly  wrecked 
the    structure. 

Only  the  baggage  and  mall  cars 
turned  over.  The  other  coaches  re- 
mained upright  and  none  of  the  pas- 
sengers   were    injured. 

In  the  mail  car  Christian  S.  Simen- 
son  of  Grand  Forks,  wa  sthrown  on 
his  side  and  sustained  bruises  and  in- 
ternal injurH>3.  It  was  not  believed 
his  injuries  will  prove  serious.  A.  M. 
Bach,  mail  clehk  in  charge,  and  Frank 
W   Sauer,  assistant    ascaped  plnjury, 

Beltranit     County     Groiring. 

Bemidji,  Minn.,  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Clerk  of  Court  Fred 
llhoda  has  received  a  report  from  H. 
•M.  Bracken,  the  state  registrar  of 
vital  statistics,  showing  there  were  484 
births  and  207  deaths  In  Beltrami 
county  In  1908,  an  increase  of  277  In 
the  population  of  the  county.  The 
number  of  peopi^  in  this  city  was  also 


increased  forty-three,  there  being  1.30 
births  and  eighty-seven  deaths  during 
the  past  year. 

HASKELL'S  LAWYERS  WANT 
INDICTMENTS  QUASHED. 


Vlnita,    Okla.. 
for   Governor   C. 


March     15. — Attorney 
N.    Haskell    and    other 


prominent    Oklahomar  s     charged     with 

con.splracy  In  connection  with  Musko- 
gee townslte  scheduling,  today  entered 
a  motion  in  federal  cc  urt  to  qu.ash  the 
indictments.  The  court  took  the  mo- 
tion under  advisement,  and  the  case 
went  over  until  the  April  term  which 
convenes    in   Tulsa.    Ajril    5. 


Knauf  Sisters'   facial    treatments  cure 
blackheads  and  pimples.   24   W.   Sup.   St. 


CAPT.  HAINS  TO  BE 

TRIED  ON  APRIL  19. 

Flushing,  N.  Y..  March  15 —Capt 
Peter  C.  Hains,  Jr.,  United  States  army 
will  be  put  on  trial  April  19  on  the 
charge  of  murdering  William  E.  Annis 
at  the  Bayside  Yaclit  club  last  August 
Justice  Garretson  of  the  supreme  court 
will    preside. 


■^-1 


QAL  STEWART 

AVilI  be  in  Duluth  this  week.  If  you  war  t  to  hear  "Cal"  in  your  own  home,  buy 
the  famous  ''Uncle  Josh"  Victor  Records.  More  real  fun,  good  laughs  and 
quaint  humor  in  these  records  than  anything  you  can  imagine.  We  have  a 
complete  stock  of  the  brand  new — never  loaned  records — as  clear  and  as  perfect 
as  can  be.       Come  in  and  hear  these. 

ea/  Stewart's  ''Uncle  Josh"  Records  For  Sale  Here. 


2350 — Jim  Lawson's  Hogs. 
5619 — Moving  Day  in  Pun'kin  Center. 
661 — Uncle  Josh  in  Society. 
1640 — Uncle  Josh  on  a  Street  Car. 
4999— Ground  Hog  Day    at  Pun'kin 
Center. 

2347 — Uncle  Josh  and  Aunt  Nancy 
Visit  New  York. 


YTCTOR 
DISTIIIIJITORS 
AND    LARGEST 
DEL\LERS. 


5282— Uncle  Josh  at  the  Dentist's. 
665— Uncle  Josh    in    a  Department 
Store. 

2542— Uncle  Josh  in  a  Fifth  Avenue 
Bus. 

5000— Uncle  Josh  at  the  Roller  Skat- 

ing  Rink. 
5377— Uncle     Josh's     Letter     From 

Home. 


Only  Xew  and  Per- 
fect Rooord.s.  Xo 
I/oani'd  Ret'ordj*  or 
Used  Ones, 


i 


M^^ 


JIlJUJiJUJXIIIJMI 


DEFECWEJlAkt 


r 


' 


riMT—  ^-  s-  I. 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:        MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1909. 


/ 


EAMES 

VierOR  REQORDS, 

Among  the  woiulerful  productions  on  the  Victor  are  the 
Eames  records.  We  want  you  to  hear  them,  we  want  you 
to  see  how  absohitely  clear,  perfect  and  natural  these  records 
are.  They  will  astonish  you.  To  know  that  you  can  have 
Eames  sing  for  you,  can  entertain  your  guests  and  hear  the 
world's  greatest  artists  without  stirring  from  your  own  fire- 
side, is  to  simply  own  a  Victor  or  X'ictrola— the  musical  world 
is  brought  right  to  your  own  home. 

We  have  all  these  records— new,  perfect  in  tone  quality, 
and  they  have  never  been  worn  down  or  partly  used  by  being 
repeatedly  loaned.  Be  sure  you  are  getting  new  records. 
Buy  them  here. 

Emma  Eames  Records. 

B8009.  •'Good-Bye"    Jofti 

88005.  "Still  wie  die  Nacht" >;         "1 

88011.  "Romeo  et  Juliette"— Valse. Gounod 

88016.  "Ave  Maria" Gounod 

88037.  "Cavalleria    Rusticana"— Celo    Obligate — Vol    lo 

sapete Mascagni 

88036.  "Carmen"— Michael's  Air Bizet 

EameS'de  Go^orza  Duets. 

89003.  "Magic  Flute" — La  dove  prende 

89004.  "Crucifix" Faurc 

89005.  "Don  Giovanni"— La  ci  darem  la  mano Mozart 

Emilia  de  Go^orza  Records. 

64037.  "The  Clang  of  the  Forge" 

64038.  "For  All  Eternity" 

64039.  "The  Holy  City" Adams 

74118.  (a)  "Mother  o'  Mine" Tours 

(b)  "The  Lark  Now  Leaves  Its  Wat'ry  Nest" 
Parker 

74040.     "Pagliacci    Proiogo" Leoncavallo 

74046.     "Carmen '-Toreador  Song Bizet 


ARE  HEADED 
FORBllTTE 

Party  of  Local  Brokers 

Will  Inspect  Western 

Mines. 


There  wiU  be  a  general  exodus  of 
copper  stock  brokers  and  other  citi- 
zens interested  in  the  stocks  tomorrow, 
when  a  large  party  of  Duluthlans  will 
start  for  Butte,  to  look  over  tlie  mines 
of  that  camp. 

Among  the  local  brokers  who  are 
going  are  N.  S.  Mitchell,  N.  W.  Lee. 
and  Martin  Rosendahl.  The  lay  mem- 
bers <if  the  party  will  be  headed  by  >i. 
F.  Hugo,  A.  Stansberg  and  L.  L.  Cul- 
tertson.  J.  A.  Stevens  of  Ironwood, 
Mich.,    and   others   will   also    be   in    the 

'^'^The     aggregation     will     spend     some 
time    around    the    Butte    camp,    inspect- 
ing   tiie    diffe-ent    mines    in    which    Uu- 
luthians  are  interested. 
«       •       • 
stock  market     weakened 


Amal- 
advanced 


The   copper   

today,  a  decline  of  \\c  in  the  prices  of 
all  grades  of  metal  being  largely  re- 
spon.«ible.  The  foreign  metal  situ- 
ation  is   very   weak. 

North  Butte  opened  at  $68.  advanced 
to  $68.50  declined  to  $67.50  and  closed 
at  $67.25"  bid  and  $67.62  »/i  asked 
gamated  opened  at  '67  62% 
to  $67.87  »/4,  declined  to  $66.  lo  anu 
closed    at    $66.75    bid. 

Greene-Cananea  opened  at  $9.v.O  and 
clo.sed  at  $9.37'^  bid  and  $9.o0  asked. 
Butte  Coalition  opened  at  $.3,  ad- 
vanced to  $23.25  and  closed  at  $22. oO 
bfdlnd  $22.87%  asked.  Calumet  & 
Arizona  opened  at  $99  50.  declined  to 
$99  rallied  to  $100  and  closed  at  $99 
bid'  and  $100  asked.  Giroux  opened  at 
$8  2.n.  advanced  to  $8.37%  and  closed 
at  $S.37%  bid.  Anaconda  opened  at 
«ii    ♦  ■"    /z  .    ^^    }40.12%    and   closed 


$14 


,12% 
bid. 
and 


$40  r.O     declined 

at    $40.12%    bid.  ,^      ^ 

Superior  &  l'«ttsburg  sold  at 
and  $13.87%   and  closed  at   $13.8.% 

National  sold  at  59  and  62  <-;^"ts 
closed  at  55  cents  bid  and  60  cents 
asked,  Butte-Montana  at  49  cents  and 
closed  at  40  lents  bid  «>><». ,t^,.*^*"\^ 
asked.  Butte-Ballaklava  V, A^-*'--J'.v*J'd 
closed  at  $16.50  bid  and  $lt>..o  a=-l<*"^: 
Cacurs  at  $1.50  and  $175  and  elos.Mj  at 
$1.50  bid,  $1.75  asked,  and  Chief  Con- 
solidated  at  95  cents  and  c  osed  at  98 
tents  bid  and  99  cents  asked. 

Cordova  w-as  Inactive  and  closed  at 
$1J7%  bid  and  $2  asked.  DeTin-Arizona 
at  J4  bid  and  $4.25  asked.  Globe  at  $a 
and  $5  ?5  asked.  Butte  &  Superior 
bid  and  $1.12%  asked,  ^'alumet  & 
114  bid  and  $U.2o  asked  Red 
^      - bid     and     $2.62  > 


CITY  i^BEFS 


3 


for   interment, 
Chicago   train 


leaving   on    the 
tlii^    alternoon. 


Omaha's 


i 
I 


Monot.vi>e    Composition. 

Quick   wurk   by    Tliwing-Stewart  Co. 


Formal    Itpenlnjc. 

Todav.  tomorrow  and  \\  ednesd.ay  are 
formal  opening  days  at  the  oidding 
Btore. 


opening 

*•* 


Fiflelti    Sells    Out, 

James  C.  Fitield  has  disposed  of  his 
Interest  in  the  Fifleld-Shea  slioe  com- 
pany and  retired  from  the  store  to- 
day. 

■ 
A.    M.    Fenton    111. 

A  M.  Fenton.  <ii^trict  freight  and 
passenger  agent  for  the  Omaha  line  at 
Duluth  Is  confined  to  his  liome  with 
nines.  It  Is  not  believed  that 
Fenton's  Illness  is  ot  a  serious 
ture. 


B.    B.    Hovlaud'M    Father    Dim. 

The  lather  of  B.  B.  Hovland  of 
Duluth  died  last  Friday  at  Zumbrola, 
Minn.,  at  the  age  of  78  years.  The  son 
was  on  his  way  to  Dulutli  from  Chi- 
cago, wlien  a  telegram  reached  him 
on  the  train,  and  he  changtd  cars  at 
Madison.  Wis.,  preceding  from  there  to 
Zumbrota.  Among  the  friends  of  Mr. 
Hovland  from  Dulutli,  who  will  attend 
the  funeral,  is  Maj  J.  Uno  Sebenius, 
H.  A  Smith  of  Arizona— and  \V.  A. 
Barrows  Jr.,  of  Cleveland,  who  were 
in  the  city  yesterday,  will  also  attend 
the   services. 


bid 
and 


the 
Lyceum 


of 
in 


Mr. 

na- 


Xo    Funeral    Here. 

No  funeral  services  over  the  re- 
mains of  \V.  W.  Davis,  who  died  at 
his  home  109  East  Third  street,  last 
Thursdav.'  will  be  held  in  Duluth  The 
remains  "will   be   taken   to  Pennsylvania 


in   the 


T©  ©LI 


Bark  to  <he  I'uor  Farm. 

Patrick  Murphv  was  arrested  in 
Citv  National  Bank  building  Saturday, 
and  a  charge  of  begging  was  placed 
opposite  liis  name  on  the  police  blot- 
ter. It  appears  iliat  he  had  been  an 
inmate  of  the  county  poor  farm  for 
some  time  past,  but  slipped  away  from 
that  in.stitution  without  the  people  in 
cliarge  knowing  anything  about  it. 
evidently  believing  he  could  have  a 
better  time  in  the  city  begging  for  a 
living.  In  municipal  court  he  was 
given  a  sentence  of  fifteen  days  in 
jail    which   was  suspended   on  condition 

that   he   return    to    the   poor    farm. 
■ 
Verdict    Fur    Chanler. 
A      verdict      for      the      defender    was 

brought    in   late   this   afternoon    by    the 

iiirv    in    the   case    of   J.    H.    Whitely 

Fred  T.   Chanler. 


One    Cent    a    IVord    Each    Ia«ertlon — X» 
Advertisement  Less  Than  15  Cents. 


vs. 


WANTED - 
makers. 
Mfg.     Co. 
west. 


EXPERIENCED  SHIKT 
Apply  Dakotah  Garment 
225     South     Fifth     avenue 


FOR       SAx.i-— OFFICE       FURNITURE, 
desk,    tvpewrlter,    letter   press.    Atlas 
of   Duluth   and   Superior.      Old   'phone 
1366-M. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— DOUBLE  SET  OF 
work  harness:  must  be  in  good  con- 
dition and  cheap.  Call  evenings.  Old 
'phone    87-M. 

FOUND— A  DIAMOND  BROOCH,  IN 
cathedral.  Finder  prove  property. 
Call   Matt  Haekatt.  at  Cathedral. 

FOR  RENT— TWO  LARGE  FURNISH- 
ed  rooms,  complete  for  housekeeping; 
water  paid;  sewer,  toilet:  rent  rea- 
sonable.      722     East    Fifth    street. 


Mth.    l.aValley    Dies. 

rs.  Mary  La  Valley.  4H  years  old  died 
yesterdav  morning  at  her  home.  425 
East  Sixth  street.  The  funeral  will  be 
lield  tomorrow  afternoon  from  Stew- 
arts  undertaking  rooms.  Interrnent 
will  he  at  Forest  Hill  cemetery  Mrs. 
LaVallev  died  iust  four  weeks  after 
her  hu.sband's  death.  They  are  sur- 
vived by  four  daughters,  all  of  whom 
reside     In    Duluth. 

ANNUAL  SENIOR  PLAY 

The  Senior  Class  Presents 

"DIAMONDS  AND  HEARTS" 

Under  Direction  of  Mr.  A.  V.  M.  Custance 
ASSKMBLV  HALL.  HIGH  St  H<»OL, 
FHIDAY,   MAHCH  19,   1«0»,  8  P-  M. 

Rfterved  seats.  50  cents:  General  Ad- 
mission. 25  cents.  Tickets  on  sale  at  the 
High  School  and  at  Stone  s  Book  Store. 


W.VNTED— A 
plain  sewinT 
1810-L. 


SEAMSTRESS 
at  once.  Call  old 


FOR 
■phone 


FACE  AND  SCALP  TREATMENT— 
Switches.  puffs.  Janes.  AL  Kelly, 
opposite    Glass    block. 


ON^L 


J 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 

Samuel  Altman  and  Rose  Witz,  both  of 

St.    Louis    county.  ...,„, 

Charles  B.  Eskelson  and  Grace  E.  Boyd, 

both    of   St.    Louis   county 
Ole    Carlson    and    Hannah    Handrieson, 

both   of   St.    Louis   county. 
George    Erickson    and   Marie   Hendrick- 

sen.    both   of   St.    Louis   county. 


lia.s    relumed 
Tryon,  N.  C, 


from 
for  a 


.  H. 

the 


Llnd- 
reor- 
,  are 
with 
Scott 


I 

1 


BIRTHS. 

HOWARD — A  son  was  born  to  Mr.  and 
Mr!«.  C.  G.  Howard  of  5003  London 
road.    March    15^ ^_^_____ 


DEATHS.___^ 

KULICH — Juro  Kulich,  IS  years  of  age, 
of   West    Duluth.   died   March   11. 

PETERSON — \.  C.  Peterson.  40  years 
fild.  died  at   the  poor   farm   March   13. 


J.  L.  Washburn 
his  winter  home  at 
short    buslne.«s   trip. 

George  B.  Chapman  and   u 
say    two   of    the   directors   in 
ganized     Butte-Montana    company 
In    the    citv    today    in    connection 
the    business    of    Butte    &    Alex 
Copper  company. 

L.    H.    Bryan    of    Two 
the   McKay. 

M.    H.   Godfrey   of   Hibbing   is  at 
St.  Louis.  _^        ,  ,,.      .    . 

D.   B-  McDonald  and   wife  of  Virginia 
are   at   the   St.    Louis.  ..   .,       o. 

\V.  W.  Bowe  of  Hlbbing  is  at  the  St. 
Louis.  ,     ,         ^    ^, 

Frank    Carlson    of   Eveleth    is    at    the 
St.   Louis.  ...        .  ^. 

William  Rooney  of  Virginia  is  at  the 
St.  Louis. 


bid 
at  $1 

Wa?rior^\"t  $2.37%  .hid  a.m  Vi-^^-'^ 
a.sked.  Mowitza  $1.25  bid  and  $l.oO 
asked.  Caiman  at  51-57%^,  ,  ^«^,,  ,^7 5 
$1.6212  asked.  Savanna  *- ,*>'d  ^  .1  -."7  i' 
asked  .Copper  Q"^*^"  o/,, .Jj^^H^fi'ii  ' 
bid   and   $7.62%    asked.  Cliff  $1.62% 

and    $1.87%    asked.  ,,  07U. 

Black    Mountain    sold    at    $1.37% 
closed   at   $1.37%    bid. 

•  •      • 
The  annual  meeting  of  the  stockhold- 
ers of  the  Greene-Cananea  Copper  com- 
pany will  be  held  tomorrow  noon  at 
companv's  headquarters  in 
Tlieater    building. 

•  «      « 
Hoval  A.  Smith  of  Globe  and  Blsbee. 

Ariz.,    associated    with    H.    B.    Hovland 
.Mai     J.    Uno    Sebenious.   D,    L.   Fairchild 
and    other    Dulutliians    in    a   number 
big    copper    mining    properties,    was 
Duluth    last    evening,    conterring    with 
some    of    his    associates.      He    left    last 
night    for   Zumbrota.    Minn.,   to      attend 
the  funeral  of  Mr.   Hovlands  lather. 

Besides  being  a  copper  mining  man 
of  wide  repute,  Mr.  Smith  is  prominent 
in  the  Republican  politics  of  Arizona 
and  is  cliairman  of  the  RepublUan 
central  committee  there.  He  repre- 
sented the  territory  at  President 
Taffs    inaugural    ball. 

Mr    Smith   says   the   Globe   and   Burro 
copper  districts  are  the  most  actl\e   In 
the   Southwest  at   the  present   time.   He 
savs    in    the       Globe    district,    develop- 
ment work  on  the  Live  Oak  Property  is 
nrogresesing  nicely  and  on  the  LuieKa 
ground   of   the  Cordova   company   prep- 
arations   are      being     made      to   s\nk    a 
shaft    at    Globe    Consolidated     will     be 
continued,    he    says,    as    it    is      expecUd 
that  the  rich  vein  of  Old  Dominion  will 
be  encountered  at  a  greater  depth. 
•      •      • 
Walker's   copper   letter  In  Saturday's 
Bo.«ton   Commercial   said: 

"Copper  continues  dull,   but  the   tone 
the  market  Is  a  shade  firmer.     Lake 
13c      and      electrolytic      12?4c      per 
Sales     aggregating     approxl- 
100  000,000     pounds     have    been 
since   the   first   of 
of  copper  In   the 
have    been    prac- 
ticallv     exhausted,     current     purchases 
must  "equal    the    total    volume    of    con- 
sumption.      As    a     result     of  .  this,     ihe 
statement    of    the    Producers     associa- 
tion, which  will  Issue  one  month  hence, 
should    show    almost    no    further    addi- 
tion to  the  surplus  stocks  of  copper  in 
this    country,       Tlie    statement.     Issued 
Wednesdav,     indicated    an     increase    of 
about    1.000,000   pounds   of   copper  daily 
in  February;  but  it  did  not  Include  the 
iieavy    sales    made    so    far    this    month. 
There    is    good    reason     for    the    belief 
that    the    actual    surplus    would    show 
verv   little   increase   since   Jan.    1,   If  an 
accurate    summary    of    producers     and 
consumers'    stocks    could    be    obtained. 

"When  tlie  consumers  come  into  tne 
market  and  buy  a  three  months'  supply 
of  copper  in  advance,  as  is  their  custom 
when  conditions  are  normal,  they  will 
quicklv  absorb  every  pound  of  surplus 
in  the"  hands  of  producers,  and  buy 
more  in  addition  for  later  delivery. 
This  will  cause  the  entire  outlook  to 
change  abruptly,  and  consumer.s  will 
thenceforward  see  the  situation  in  an 
entirely    different   light. 

"I  feel  confident  that  this  will  be  a 
vear  of  heavv  consumption,  as  well  as 
abnormal  production;  and  ,  I  believe 
that  the  price  of  copper  will  be  con- 
siderably higher  beforre  Oct.  1.  The 
electrical  equipment  of  steam  railroads 
will  gain  headway  very  rapidly  this 
vear." 


of 

is 

pound. 

mately 

made   at    these   prices 

the   month.      Supplies 

hands    of    consumers 


Harbors    is    at 


the 


formal  cjpnng  ©pm'mg 

^uklh's  ^ashm  Show 


-  Pe=: 


ompcm^ 


amoume 
a  formal  Presmtatm  of  the  IN'e^ 

Q^deas  in 

Smporied  ^owm  and  M)mp§ 

S>^€luBiM  Modeb  in 

J'miomd  cJTMfe  md  Coai$ 
Costumes  and  ^^mi 

Mk  and  Moo!  f'abms 
for  Tuesday  and  ^^dn^sday, 

March  Sijsiemth  md  ^efrntemlh^ 


A  forcible  illustration  of  the  S.  .t  B.  prestige  in  selecting 
correct  interpretations  of  the  modes  upon  which 
fashion  has  set  her  seal  of  approval. 


■^  ■ 


-P"  «- 


w 


YOUR  PRESENCE  IS  REQUESTED. 
No  Cards. 


NEW  ALUMNI 
ASSOCIATIONS 

Former  Pupils  of  LIncohn 
and  St.  Ckments' Schools 
Organize. 


BUILDING  PERMITS. 

To  Hugh  Fawcett.  alterations 
to  front  of  building,  and  new 
floors.  East  Superior  street, 
between  Lake  and  First  ave- 
nues     •  •.• :  •  •       $1,000 

To  J  H  Gray,  frame  addition 
to  "building"on  F^ifty-seventh 
avenue  west,  between  Me- 
dinah   and    Highland    streets. 

To  utto  Johnson,  alterations  in 
building  on  East  Superior 
street,  between  Lake  and 
First    avenues    •  •  •  •  • 

George  Carino,  frame  dwelling 
on  West  Third  street,  be- 
tween Seventh  and  Eighth 
avenues    

To  Ingebrlt  BJerkln,  frame 
dwelling  on  East  Eighth 
street,  between  First  and 
Second    avenues     

To  Mrs.  H.  E.  Trudeau,  frame 
dwelling  on  Peabody  street, 
between  Fifty-Hrst  and  Fif- 
ty-second avenues  east 

To  Anton  Feddock,  frame 
dwelling  on  Eleventh  street, 
between  Sixth  and  Seventh 
avenues    east     


200 


3.500 


2,500 


1.000 


500 


1,000 


TO   CURE   A   COLD  IS   ONE 

Talcc     L.^X.^TIVE    BROMO    Quinine 
Drujjri«ts  refund  money  if  it  fails  to  cure. 
GROVE'S  signature  is  on  eacti  box.     asc 


DAY 

Tablets. 


E.  W, 


HORSES  BURN 
IN  BARN  FIRE 


A  fire  of  unknown  origin  Saturday 
night,  about  1  o'clock,  destroyed  the 
barn  Owned  by  William  Hallerhan,  lo- 
cated on  Second  alley,  between  Fourth 
and  Fiftli  avenues  east, 
belonging  to  Henry 
with    it.  ,    ,  . 

Mr.  Widdls  rents  the  barn,  and  his 
horses  were  the  only  animals  in  It. 
Tliev  were  valued  at  $400  and  the  barn 
was' forth  about  $800.  The  blaze  was 
well  under  wav  when  discovered,  and 
by  the  time  the  fire  department  ar- 
rived on  the  scene  had  gained  such 
headway  that  neither  barn  nor  horses 
couid  be  saved.  It  is  thought  possi- 
ble that  tile  blaze  was  started  by  a 
spark  from  the  pipe  of  some  tramp 
who   was  lodging  there   for   the   night. 


and  two  horses 
Widdis     burned 


POLICE  FORCE 
ORDER  IN  COURT 


Chicago.  March  15.— When  Luman  C. 
Mann,  charged  with  the  strangling  of 
Mrs.  Frances  Gilmor  Thompson,  re- 
sumed the  witness  stand  today,  the 
courtroom  was  crowded  and  the  over- 
flood  of  curious  persons  blocked  the 
corridors. 

The  bailiffs  were  unable  to  maintain 
order  among  the  disappointed  ones  un- 
til   reinforcements    of    police    arrived. 

Mann,  apparentlv  in  better  control  of 
his  temper  than  he  had  been,  entered 
the  courtroom  smiling  and  twirling  a 
light  cane.  He  resumed  the  stand 
vtithout  being  requested  to  do  so.  and 
answered  a  rapid  fire  if  questions  of 
cross  examination,  destined  to  test  his 
memory,    without    hesitation. 

HANCOCK  CHllU  H  IS 

TOTALLY  DESTROYED. 

Hancock  Mich..  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Finnish  Lutheran 
church  here  was  totally  destroyed  yes- 
terday bv  a  fire  of  unknown  origin. 
The  loss  "is  $15,000,  partially  covered 
by    insurance. 


or- 
for 


Lincoln 

Idly    by 

grade 

associa- 


Peptiron  Pills 


Tronlie  th« 
blood,  tone 
the  nerves, 
strengthen  the  stomach,  aid  digestion,  and  pro- 
mote sweet,  restful,  natural  sleep.  Thev  are 
ehoeolate-i'oated,  acceptable  to  the  stomach  ana 
easily  assimilated,  and  the  best  meduino  for 
anemic,  pale,  nervous  and  dyspeptic  men.  women 
»nd  children,  and  all  sufferers  from  the  effects  of 
the  strenuous  life  of  today^  Price  50c.  or  $1  Of 
drucEists  or  by  mail.  C.  I.  Hood  Co..  Lowell,  ilass. 
II  Made  bj  Hood  It's  Qood. 


The  alumni  of  St.  Clement's  Catholic 
parochial  school  have  formed  an  as- 
sociation and  are  planning  to  give  a 
number   of    social    entertainments. 

Forty  members  have  already  been 
enrolled  in  the  new  organization.  Har- 
old Phillips  is  president;  May  >.olan. 
vice  president;  Hazel  O'Nell.  secretary, 
and    Edward   O'Brien,    treasurer. 

Among  other  thir.gs.  the  new 
ganization  is  planning  to  go  in 
amateur    theatricals. 

•      •      • 

Former      students      of      the 

school   are   not    the    ones   to    sit 

when    the    ex-pupils    of    other 

schools  a'te  organizing  alumni 

Accordingly  the  Lincoln  school 
students  of  other  days  have  mobilized 
under  the  name  of  the  Lincoln  School 
Alumni  association,  and  the  members 
declare  that  it  will  eclipse  all  similar 
institutions  in  the  West  end. 

Locate  in  West  End. 

Theodore.  Albert  and  Carl  Winkler 
of  Houghton.  Mich.,  have  arrived  in 
the  West  end  and  have  opened  a  candy 
factorv  at  2234  Michigan  street.  The 
three  'brothers  have  long  experience 
in  the  manufacture  of  sweets  They 
have  joined  forces  as  the  W  inkier 
Bros  companv  and  have  chosen  Du- 
luth as  the  logical  center  for  a  whole- 
sale bsuiness  With  the  Northwest  as  a 
field.  ^_^___ 

^Vest  End  Shortrails. 

Miss  Frances  Prenevost  of  Lake  Lin- 
den has  returned  to  her  home  after  a 
visit    in    the   West   end   with    iier   sister. 

Ml'ss  Marv  Nordin  has  returned  to 
her  home  at  Llndstrom.  Minn.,  after  a 
visit   with   relatives   in   the   West  end. 

I>r  Clark,  missionary  in  Africa  for 
the  American  Baptist  Missionary  un- 
ion was  the  speaker  at  the  First 
Swedish  Baptist  church  at  the  young 
peoples  meeting'  yesterday  afternoon. 
He  also  preached  at  the  morning  serv- 
ice. At  the  evening  service,  A.  Thoren 
and    others    spoke.  .     ^     -  , 

C  E.  Dice,  Ed  Miller,  A.  Carison  and 
A.    JFarrington    have    returned   from   St. 


Paul,  where  they  attended  the  con- 
vention of  the  Modern  Samaritans  as 
representatives    of    Beta   Council. 

The  regular  meeting  of  the  Lpworth 
Leaeue  of  the  First  Norwegian-Danish 
M.  E.  church  will  be  iield  tomorrow 
evening   in    the    church, 

Tlie  revival  services  In  Central  Bap- 
tist church  will  be  continued  all  this 
week,  with  tiie  exception  of  Saturday 
f"  V  f*  II  \  II  &r 

Mrs  'p.  H.  Whalen  and  son,  Leonard, 
have  returned  from  Minneapolis,  where 
they    have    been    visiting    relatives. 

Rev.  Frank  Coolbaugh,  rector  of  the 
Episcopal  church  at  Cloquet,  preached 
at  the  services  In  St.  Luke's  Episcopal 
churcli   last   evening. 

Mrs.  George  M.  Jensen  has  returned 
from    St.     Paul,     where    she    lias     been 

visiting.  ^    -  T7i"„«* 

John  Moir  has  returned  from  East- 
ern  Canada.  „.^, 

Mrs.  I.  K.  Melby  of  Twenty-fifth  ave- 
nue west  will  entertain  the  l^"U® 
Girls'  Society  of  Zlon  Norwegian  Luth- 
eran   churih    Friday    afternoon. 

The  Zenitli  Ski  club,  recently  formed, 
will  hold  the  last  meeting  of  the  sea- 
son this  evening,  in  George  M.  Jenseii  s 
office.  Next  winter's  plans  will  be 
discussed. 


will  be  no  change  in   the   rates   or  the 
sailing  time  of  this  steamer.  ,    ,    . 

Both    boats    are    being    overhauled    in 
the    docks    at    Buffalo    at    the    pre.^ent 
time.      They  will  be  in   tip  top 
the   opening   of   the   season. 


shape  at 


lyiFEilOl^ 


to 


BUYS  LAN  D. 


ikimi 


Soo  Road  Purchases  Property  for 
Side  Tracks  and  Station  Grounds. 

The  Soo  road  has  bought  from  the 
Nemadji  Land  company  the  property 
between  Belknap  and  AMnter  streets. 
All  this  property  lies  so  ith  of  the  \\  }s- 
consln  Central  tracks,  and  the  price 
paid  was  $16,250.  The  plot  of  ground 
comprises    fifty-seven    lets.  ,,^„^,, 

In  addition  to  the  above  mentioned 
ground,  the  road  bought  the  property 
west  of  the  present  rUfht-of-way  and 
Belknap  and  Twenty-flr.it  street.  Tins 
plot  contained  twenty- six  ac»„es.  and 
the   cash   consideration   was    $32,000 

This  last  mentioned  property,  It  is 
expected  will  be  used  for  sidetracks 
station  grounds  and  foi  the  new  depot 
which  the  road  Intends  to  build. 


If  you  are  a  business  man  I  am 
going  to  tell  you  how  you  can  use 
less  than  one  cent  a  day  and  in- 
crease your  business  one  thousand 
times  that  amount  per  year. 


Taxes  Coming  in. 


kimi 


NORTH  ^VEST'S  SCHEDULE. 

Scliedules  of  the  sailing  of  the  lake 
steamers.  North  West  and  North  Land, 
were  received  today  by  the  Great 
Northern  Railroad  office.  There  is 
practically  no  change  from  the  sched- 
uled sailing  trips  of  the  past  season. 
Tlie  North  West  will  reach  Duluth  on 
her  first  trip  of  the  season  Tuesday 
June  U2.  at  S  p. 
night  at  11:30. 
leave  every  Tuesday  up  to 
ing  Tuesday.  Aug.  31. 

There  will  be  no  cliange  In  the  rates 
of  last  year. 

Tlie    call     ports    on    the    list    of    the 
North  West  will  also  remain  unchanged. 
These   will   be   Duluth.    Houghton, 
quette     (east-bound     only), 
Mackinaw     islands.    Detrol 
and    Buffalo.  ...      v. 

The  steamer  North  Land  starts  her 
season  June  26,  sailing  every  Saturday 
between    Buffalo    and    Chicago.      Ttiere 


Saturday  the  Superior  city  treasurer 
collected  nearly  $60,000  in  taxes  which 
was  a  record-breaking  day.  Of  this 
amount  the  Land  &  River  company 
contributed  $46,760.10;  the  Soo  line  and 
Nemadji  Land  compar  y  Jointly  paid 
$7  4R'>  74  The  total  a  nount  of  taxes 
to  be"  collected  is  $76(  ,482.18.  So  far 
approximately  $575,000  has  been  paid. 

Board  of  Trade  Meeting. 

At  the  meeting  of  t  iie  board  of  di- 
rectors of  the  Superior  board  of  trade 
Saturday  evening  H.  A.  Johnson,  the 
present  commissioner  or  the  state  or 
Wisconsin  on  the  Wisconsin  grain  and 
warehouse  commlsslo:i,  was  recom- 
mended for  reappointment,  and  A.  N. 
Lent  was  elected  to  succeed  J.  E. 
Greenfield  as  secretary  of  the  board 
trade. 


m.,  leaving   that   same 
She    will    arrive    and 
and  includ- 


of 


others    and    there    was    no    damage 
any    other    property    in    the   vicinity. 

The  blaze  was  a  specacular  one  and 
thousands  of  people  on  their  return 
from  the  theater  and  elsewhere  gath- 
ered   to    see    it. 

Manager  Louis  Rolide  stated  after 
tlie  fire  that  the  company  would  un- 
doubtedly tear  down  the  old  walls  and 
make  the  new  bulldirg  all  in  one.  twio« 
the    size    of    the    present    structure. 

LAlRifTiS 
ON  TRIAL 


Alphonse  Laurin.  charged  with 
criminal  assault  upon  the  person  of 
Miss  Edna  Stahbrodt,  on  the  Herman- 
town  road,  last  month,  is  on  trial 
before  Judge  Cant  in  district  court 
this   afternoon. 

The  court  room  was  crowded  with  in- 
terested spectators  when  the  case 
opened,  and  the  audience  contained  a. 
good  manv  women.  There  are  eight 
or  ten  girl  witnesses,  friends  of  Mis» 
Edna,  who  testified  relative  to  seeing 
her  Immediately  after  the  alleged  as- 
sault, and  to  finding  pieces  of  her 
clothing  in  the  road  where  she  claim* 
Laurin  attacked  her.  The  otJier  womea 
are  mostly  friends  of  the  principals. 

It  is  claimed  that  laurin.  wlio  Is 
not  vet  21  vears  of  age,  assaulted  Miss 
Stahbrodt  just  about  dusk,  twr)  milts 
from  the  city,  as  she  was  walking  home 
from  Duluth.  According  to  her  story, 
I^aurin  was  frightened  away  by  the 
sound  of  sleigh  bells,  and  Immediately 
afterwards  she  was  picked  up  by 
friends  and  taken  home  In  their  sleigh. 

Her  lather  was  so  enraged  at  her 
story  that  he  seized  his  gun  and  drove 
off  in  search  of  Laurin.  He  overtook 
him  on  the  road  and  would  have  shQt 
and  killed  him,  had  not  his  gun  missed 
fire.  Laurin  slipped  into  the  brush, 
and  Stahbrodt  drove  on  into  town  and 
caused  his  arrest.  He  was  found  by 
the  police  in  bed  at  his  home  near  the 
boulevard. 


I 


-,  — - 


GRAND  FORKS'  BIG  FIRE. 


Mar- 

the       Soo. 
Cleveland 


Grand  Forks,  N.  D..  March  15.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.j--The  factory  of 
the  Congress  Candy  .'ompany.  corner 
of  Alpha  avenue  and  Eighth  street,  was 
destroved  bv  fire  Sati  rday  night.  Tlie 
loss  is  about  $50,000  uid  insurance  is 
$32  000.  Only  portions  of  the  brick 
walls    of    the    big    thrte-story    building 

remain.  ,    .      „  _.„„ 

Harry  Caniff,  one  of  ihe  firemen,     was 

knocked    down   during   the    progress 

the    fire    and    sustained    injuries. 

was    not   seriously    tnj  jred. 

The   loss    on    the    building    is    $oO.OOO. 

and    on    the    stock    $2(.000 

Tlie    factory    employes    quit    work    at 

5  o'clock  Saturday  afternoon  and   there 

was  no  one  in  the  buiding  from  short- 

Iv    after    that    time. 
"  The    building    is    nt't    close    to      any 


of 
He 


CHATTELS  AND  SALARY 

LOANS 

MONEY  TO  LOAN  In  *n>  amount  on  houe»hoW 
furr.llurc,  plaT.rs.  hor.-es  waguiis  an<l  p«Ts<,ii*l 
l)np<rtj  of  Ul  kinds  »t  the  Lowest  Ratet  in  th* 
City. 

Pcn't  fcrget  to  call  at  430  MANHATTAN 
BLDQ..  ItUre  you  make  a  loan  f!nf»!;frr  ai.a  ««t 
our  rat««  ai.U  become  convinced  Uun  we  will  ii\t 
jou   money. 


Duluth  Mortgage  Loan  Go 


430    MANHATTAN    BLDG. 

Zenith   "phcnc    IS'JS  U.  Wm.    Hcrk&i., 


o.» 


-■■t^ 


■^ 


N 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1909. 


If  you  want  to  enjoy  a  pleasant 
evening  bring  your  friends 


to  the 

ST.  LOUIS 
CAFE 

Music    by   LaBrosse  Orchestra 
6  to  8,    10  to  12 

laMe  D'Hole  Dinner  75c.  Inclnding  Wine 
After  Theater  Parties  Catered  To. 


.CONCERNIN€ 


Ireland  for  ever  I 

And  England  all  the  rest  of  the  time. 

And  to  make  the  matter  truly  cos- 
mopolitan, France  and  lis  clever  dra- 
matists at  any   odd  moments   left  over. 

Those  are  the  sentiments  of  Miss 
Margaret  VVycherly  who  plays  In  "The 
Thief."  and  It  keeps  one  nimbly  jump- 
ing from  one  state  of  mind  to  another 
to  keep  track  ol"  Miss  Wycherley's 
national    enthusiasms. 

With  tears  In  her  eyes  she  talks  of 
William  Butler  Veats  and  his  exquisite 
ulays  of  and  for  the  Irish  people.  She 
.speaks  liowever,  from  tlie  standpoint 
of  a  person  who  can't  understand  tho 
necessity  or  reason  for  homo  rule,  and 
then  she  waxes  eloquent  over  llie  mar- 
velous teclinlcal  skill  of  Bernstein,  the 
Frenchman,    who    wrote    'Tlie    Thlel. 

•With     *:J0O     and     a     big 
nerve,     three     years     ago 
piaved     William     Butler 
I  aiie"  one-act  plays.  "The 
l>esire,'     'Catiileen     nl 
Tiie    Hour   Glass  ' 


Builders'  Hardware,  Mer- 
chants' Tools,  Fine  CuUcry 

QUAYLE-LARSON  CO. 

23  Second  Avenoe  West. 


ROYAL  G.  \yiLSON,  SOLOIST. 

"Lohengrin"  Featnred  at  the  Twen- 


Organ 


ReeitaL 

The    program    for    the    twentieth 
concert   at   the    temple   yesterday 
noon  was  up  to   the  high 
Its    predecessors    and 
enjoyed    by    a    large 


and  on  their  return  will  be  In  Wash- 
ington during  the  week  of  April  19. 
during  the  national  meeting  of  the 
Daughters  of  the  American  Kevolution. 
Mrs.  Woodbrldge  will  repersent  the 
Daughters  of  Liberty  chapter  at  the 
meeting.  They  will  return  to  Duluth 
after    that    meeting. 


of 
on 
tlie    ti. 


the 

the 

Ids 

a 

to 


tieth  Free 

free 
after- 
standard   of 
was      thoroughly 
a    large       audience,    which 
Bhowed    it?   appreciation    by   hearty    ap- 
plause and   generous   encore  calls. 

Royal  G.  Wilson,  ably  sustained  the 
demands  made  on  him  for  the  vocal 
p..rilon  of  tlie  numbers.  Mr.  Wilson 
made  his  first  appearance  at  those 
concerts  and  "made  good."  His  voice 
1<»  a  bas>s-barltone  and  his  work  In  the 
first  selection.  "It  Is  Enough,"  from 
the  oratorio  of  "Elijah,"  by  Mendels- 
sohn, showed  that  he  is  especially 
adapted  for  oratorio  music.  He  has  an 
artistic  appreciation,  a  smooth  voice 
with  no  marked  difference  between  the 
upner  and  lower  registers  and  his 
climaxes  are  well  marked  and  true. 
For  an  encore  he  sang  "I  Know  a 
I>ov.^ly   Garden."    by    D'Hardelot. 

No.  4  was  changed  to  Lusts'  'My 
Rosary."  tuneful  and  sympathetic, 
showing  tliat  the  singer  can  satisiao- 
torily  render  soft  and  tender  strains 
as  well  a.s  the  loud.  For  an  encore  the 
old  English  ballad,  "Drink  to  Me  Only 
Wltii  Tliine  Eyes,"  was  given  and  this 
selection  showed  the  good  training  of 
the    voice    and    its    rich    tone. 

The  organ  music  was  represented  by 
the  Incidental  music  to  "Peter  Pan."  as 
the  first  number,  followed  by  the  cele- 
brated March  In  act  3,  of  "Lohengrin." 
The  music  of  this  most  tuneful  and 
beautiful  opera  was  the  feature  of  the 
Instrumental  music,  consisting  of  two 
selections,  in  addition  to  the  "March." 
and  what  was  considered  the  gem  of 
the  Instrumental  program.  Lohengrin's 
Infernem  Land,'  delicately  and  feeling- 
ly interpreted,  the  solo  portion  well 
Drought  out,  and  the  shading  and  end- 
ing being  very  satisfying.  The  program 
was  concluded  bv  Liszt's  symphonic 
poem.  No.  2,  "Les  Preludes,  "  which 
exemplifie'l  the  tumultuous  gaves  of 
sound  which  characterizes  much  of  his 
music,  though  in  this  piece  there  is 
much  melody  and  grand  combinations 
of    magnificent    chords. 

Beethoven's  music  will  be  exempli- 
fied by  some  selections  for  next  Sun- 
day, together  with  some  other  selec- 
tions to   vary  the   program. 

FKDERAL  JUDGE  DALLAS 

RESIGNS  FROM  BENCH. 


supply  of 
some  of  us 
Yeats'  exqui- 
Land  of  Heart's 
Hoolilian,"  and 
said  Miss  Wyclier- 
iy  this  morning,  in  a  golden  brown  ki- 
mona  that  rellected  tlie  glints  ol  her 
hair  and  eyes.  "Tliey  were  beautiful 
and  really  a  great  success,  but  by  tlu- 
time  we  were  ready  to  open,  tlie  few 
members  of  tlie  company  had  pawiu-a 
their  valuables  and  we  were  there  witli 
nothing  but  our  $200  produt-lion  be- 
tween us  and  starvation.  Tlie  plays 
were  a  success,  but  would  never,  or 
course  be  the  kind  tliat  would  make 
a  great  popular  success.  You  had  to 
choose  your  audience  for  tliem.  My 
costume  in  'Oathleen  ni  Hoolihan 
was  the  one  that  Maud  Gonne  wore  in 
the  plav  when  slie  created  the  part 
after  Yeats  liad  written  it  for  her.  Mie 
was  not  an  actress,  but  slie  was  a 
gieat  Irish  patriot  and  to  represent 
Ireland,  calling  the  young  men 
land  to  her  support  and  ;^tartlng 
campaign  of  bringing  back 
that  had  been  taken  from  her.  was 
part    that    appealed     very    strongly 

her  " 

Aliss  Wychely  has  appeared  in  tlie 
plays  of  tliat  other  brilliant  Irishman. 
George  Bernard  Sliaw.  «lie  was  Lydla 
in  the  New  York  production  of  '  Casiiei 
Byron's  Profession,"  and  later  played 
Candida  in  a  revival  in  New  \ork. 
"Lydla  was  the  most  hopeless  tiling' 
you  niav  ever  liope  to  meet,"  said  Miss 
Wycherly.  "She  never  opened  her 
mouth  but  slie  was  trying  to  teach 
somebody  something.  Candida  is  the 
only  fine  big  woman  tliat  Shaw  has 
ever  created.  Tlie  rest  of  his  women 
are  clever  and  interesting,  but  as  hard 
as  nails,  and  make  you  want  to  wring 
their  necks.  But  they  are  a  Joy  to 
play.  But  speaking  about  playing.  Tiie 
Thief  Is  a  wonder.  Critics  and  people 
seeing  the  play  for  tlie  first  time, 
speak  of  the  second  act  as  the  wonder. 
for  only  two  characters  are  on  tlie 
stage  for  tlie  whole  act.  But  to  me 
the  first  act  Is  the  most  wonderful.  It 
works  Into  the  rest  of  the  play  like 
that"  said  Miss  Wyclierly.  Interlacing 
her  fingers.  "I  don^  believe  there  is  a 
single  word  said  whlcli  does  not  build 
up  the  plHV.  Tlie  Inconsequential  ap- 
pearing dialogue  forms  a  necessary 
part  In  tlie  development  of  the  play,  it 
Is    wonderful."  *,    , 

And  tlien  this  alert  and  very  beautiful 
young  woman  talks  in  terms  of  psy- 
chologv  and  universal  human  nature, 
about  ilie  plausibility  of  the  character- 
drawing  of  tlie  Huffy,  inconsequential 
young  woman,  who  as  the  heroine,  be- 
comes a  thief,  and  yet  retains  the  in- 
terest and  understanding  of  tlie  audi- 
ence. "Slie  is  not  a  hero-y  kind  of 
heroine.  "Who  in  the  old  days  would 
have  put  forward  as  his  first  woinan 
character  an  individual  who  steals, 
asks  Miss  Wycherly.  "But  you  may 
know  the  power  of  this  French  dra- 
matist that  he  does,  and  it  makes  the 
situation  and  character  so  true  and  real 
that  his  oudiences.  even  American  au- 
diences, who  might  be  supposed  to  be 
a  little  out  of  sympathy  with  such  go- 
ings on.   understand  perfectly." 

She  becomes  so  enthusastic  over  the 
French  that  one  almost  forgets  what 
slie  said  about  the  Irish  dramatists, 
and  time  oiilv  restrained  her  from 
telling  her  views  of  the  American  play- 
wright. If  she  ever  got  on  to  William 
Shakespeare,  there  would  probably  be 
no  end.  for  in  spite  of  her  admiration 
of  Yeats  and  Bernstein.  Miss  Wycherlj 
Insists  that  he  is  entirely   English. 


Wed  in  Los  Angeles. 

Word  has  been  received  in  Duluth 
of  the  wedding  of  Miss  Anna  Amory 
Frederick,  daughter  of  C.  L.  Frederick 
of  2113  Oak  street,  Los  jVngeles,  Cal.. 
to  Koy  J.  Pennlwell  of  that  city.  The 
service  was  read  Wednesday  of  last 
week  at  the  home  of  the  bride's  father 
by  Kev.  Baker  P.  Lee  of  Christ  Episco- 
pal church.  After  April  5  Mr.  Pennlwell 
and  his  bride  will  be  at  home  at  3402 
Foster  street.  The  family  formerly 
lived  in  Duluth  and  the  bride  is  a 
sister  of  Mrs.  Drew  Dur»n.  who  is  well 
known    liere. 

D.  A.  R.  Meeting. 

The  regular  meeting  of  tlie  ureysolon 
duLhut  chapter  of  the  D.  A.  It.  will  be 
held  tomorrow  afternoon  at  the  home 
of  Mrs.  J.  W.  Harbison  of  228  South 
NIneteentli  avenue  east.  The  assist- 
ing hostess  will  be  Mrs.  J.  A.  Waugli. 
The  outline  is  as  follows: 

Holl  call — Heroes  of  the  South. 

Position  of  the  Carolinas  In  \\ar 
for   Independence. 

Industrial   History. 


Card  Parties. 

Mrs.  W.  W.  Butcliart  entertained  at 
cards  Saturday  afternoon  and  evening 
at  her  home.  1532  East  Third  street.  In 
the  afternoon  five  hundred  was  played 
at  nine  tables,  and  the  favors  were  won 
by  Mrs.  G.  W.  Thomson  and  Mrs.  John 
HlUlard.  The  hostess  was  assisted 
by  Mrs.  W.  B.  Butcliart  and  Mrs.  Flora 
Butcliart.  ,         . 

In  tlie  evening  the  game  was  played 
at  eight  tables,  and  the  prizes  went  to 
Mrs.  Wilson  Palmer  and  ivirs.  Clifford. 
The  mes  favors  went  to  .ludge  Middle- 
coff  and  .1.  E.  Cooley.  The  assisting 
hostesses  were  Miss  Flora  Butchart 
and  Mrs.  Schaller  of  Superior  and  Mrs. 
Hugo. 

Simple  Wedding. 

The  wedding  of  Miss  Grace  Boyd, 
daughter  of  Charles  C.  Boyd,  and 
Charles  B.  Eskelson  took  place  Satur- 
day evening  at  the  home  of  the  brides 
fatlier.  624  Lake  avenue  north.  Only 
the  immediate  friends  were  present  for 
the  ceremony.  The  service  was  read 
by  Rev.  J.  L.  Murphy  of  St.  John  s 
English  Lutheran  church. 
Eskelson  will   be  at   home 


Mr.  and  Mrs. 
in  this  city. 


Y.  W.  C.  A.  Party. 

A  number  of  the  members  of  the 
Young  Women's  Christian  association 
enjoved  an  Informal  evening  Saturday 
In  the  gymnasium,  followed  by  a  sup- 
per.    The   guests   were: 


Mesdames- 

Frank  Barker, 

Moran. 

Green. 
Misses — 

Sojihla  Ceska, 

Marie  Ceska, 

Ada  Gorman. 

Minnie  Nelson, 

IMcSwaln. 

Pete^'son. 

Livingston, 


Ilald. 
i'ickeraU 


Millie  Older. 
Margaret  Stewart. 
Clara  Watt, 
Charlotte  Robin- 
son. 
Wilkinson. 
Maxted. 


Philadelphia.         March  15. — Judge 

George  M.  Dallas  of  the  I'nlted  States 
Circuit  court  for  the  Third  judicial  cir- 
cuit, has  sent  his  resignation  to  Presi- 
dent Taft.  Under  the  law  he  was 
eligible  to  retire,  but  the  announce- 
ment of  his  resignation  was  unex- 
pected. 

NO  DECISION  VET  AS 

TO  COMMODITIES  CLAUSE. 

Washington.  March  15. — Contrary  to 
expectation,  the  supreme  court  today 
did  not  render  its  decision  in  the  case 
involving  the  constitutionality  clause 
of   the    Hepburn    rate   law    of    1906. 

FORMER  CROW  WING 

RESIDENT  IS  DEAD. 


Circle  to  Meet. 

The  members  of  Circle  3  of  the  En- 
dlon  Methodist  church  will  meet  to- 
morrow afternoon  at  2:30  o'clock  with 
Mrs.  Norman  S.  Marshall  of  1907  Ding- 
wall  street. 


Garfield  Circle. 

The  regular  meeting  of  Garfield  Cir- 
cle No.  4  Lailies  of  the  O.  A.  R.  will  be 
held  tomorrow  afternoon  at  2:30 
o'clock  In  their  hall  In  the  Kalamtvzoo 
building. 


Shakespeare  Class. 

The  evening  Shakespeare  class  of 
the  Twentieth  Century  club  will  meet 
this  evening  at  7:45  oVlock  at  the  club 
room  of  the  library. 


Brainerd.  Minn..  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Word  has  been  re- 
ceived of  the  death  recently  in  Nor- 
rldgewick.  Me.,  of  J.  W.  Billings,  for 
many  vears  a  well-known  resident  of 
Crow  Wing  county.  He  once  operated 
sawmills  in  various  parts  of  the  coun- 
tv.  .Mr.  Billings  was  nearly  75  and  Is 
survived    by    his   wife. 


CONTEST  ON. 

Y.  W.  C.  A.  to    Work    for 
Two  Thousand  Members. 

The  degree  meniber.<hip  contest  of 
the  Young  Women's  Chrstian  associa- 
tion opened  today  at  the  association 
rooms,  and  by  evening  It  is  expected 
that  returns  will  begin  coming  into 
the  desk.  T!ie  mark  set  by  the  workers 
is  a  membership  of  2.000  by  April  15. 
one  month  from  today,  and  it  is  hoped 
that  every  member  now  enrolled  will 
become  actively  Interested  in  the  work. 
The  association  now  has  a  member- 
ship of  between  700  and  SOO.  and  the 
plan  adopted  by  the  workers  is  to  in- 
ducH  each  woman  now  enrolled  to  be- 
come Interested  enough  to  secure  three 
nev,-   membersiilps    or   renewals,   by    the 

If  this  were  done  the 
have      the     desired 

women  and  girls  en- 


117-119  W.    Sup.  St.  Duluth,  Minn. 


Another  Lot 

SHIRT  WAIST  BOXES 

if  yoH    didn't  get  in  on  the  laat  lot, 
don't  misa  this  One.' 


end  of  the  month, 
association    would 
number  of  Duluth 
rolled. 

Degrees  will   be 


conferred  upon  the 
members  who  secure  three  or  more 
meinber.ships  or  renewals.  The  secret 
meaning  of  the  degrees  will  not  be 
made  known  until  the  membership 
banquet,  which  will  be  one  of  the  first 
social  functions  to  be  held  in  the  new 
building.  The  degrees  and  colors  which, 
will  Identifv  them  will  be  as  follows. 
Three  members,  B.  A.;  pale  green;  four 
members.  M.  A.,  white;  six  members. 
Ph.  D..  orange;  seven  members.  M.  D.. 
vcllow;  eight  members,  I>.  D..  red;  ten 
fiienibers.  D.D.,  LLD.,  pink;  sixteen  to 
twenty-one  members.  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  foli- 
age green. 

.\  meeting  of  the  membership  and 
business  committees  of  the  association 
will  be  held  the  latter  part  of  the  week 
and  the  progress  of  the  contest  will  be 
posted  on  the  bulletin  board  at  the 
looms  after  a  few  days.  Miss  Margaret 
.Stewart  will  be  In  charge  of  the  cleri- 
cal work  of  the  contest  at  the  head- 
quarters. The  workers  are  hoping  that 
the  members  now  enrolled  will  volun- 
teer tlieir  services  to  aid  in  the  cam- 
paign, wliich  will  necessarily  be  a  very 
one.  to  secure  tlie  desired  num  — 
members  In  tlie  time  set. 


Personal  Mention. 

Mrs.  W.  T.  Bailey  and  daughter.  Miss 
Rebe«ca  Bailey,  have  returned  from  a 
i^;everal   weeks'    visit    in   the  South. 

♦  »       • 

Miss  Kezin  Bennett  and  Miss  Ger- 
trude Williams  of  the  St.  Paul  Y.  W. 
C  A  who  have  been  the  guests  of 
Mrs  Wesley  Feetham  for  the  week 
end,  win  return  to  St.  Paul  this  even- 
ing. 

*  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  D.  Van  Baalen  of  524 
I'^ast  Third  street  have  returned  from 
a  two  months'  visit  in  California. 

*  •      • 

Mr.    and    Mrs.    John    Panton    have 
turned  from  a  three  weeks'  visit  in 

iCast. 

•  •       • 

Mrs  Agnes  L.  Atwood  left  yesterday 
for  a  visit  with  Mrs.  John  H.  Clilsholm 

of   CloQuet. 

•  *      • 

Mrs.  William  R.  Edwards  left  yester- 
day afternoon  for  a  visit  with  her 
parents  at  St.  Clair.  Mich. 

■    «      •      • 

Mrs.  Kittle  Scott  was  called  to  Min- 
neapolis today  by  tlie  serious  illness  of 
her   mother. 


re- 
the 


FOR  EASTER  WEAR. 


The 


Modes  for  Spring  Are 
Decided  Upon. 


For    the    trottlng-f rock 
coat    Is   somewhat    looser, 


Introductory  Sale  of  1 00  New  Tailored 
Suits.  ^jtS  Special  at  $24.95 


have 
ordinary, 
made 


are 


This  sale  represents  one  of  the  greatest  efforts  we 
ever  put  forth  to  accomplish  something  out  of  the 
The  suits  specified  are  the  latest  models,  and 
of  finest  materials,  such  as  are.  used  in  gar- 
ments selling  up  to  $45.00. 

Every  new  fabric  and  model  in  this  collection.  The  coats  are 
in  plainjailored  hipless  models,  with  long  graceful  lines.  The 
materials  are  fine  serges,  satin  striped  prunella;;,  satin  soliel, 
imported  worsteds  and  French  serges,  in  all  the  < correct  color s< 
such  as  faded  rose,  gcslin  green,  stone  green,  turquois^  wijd 


duck,  bisquet  shade,  smoke,  taupe,  navy  and  black.    Beautifully 
tailored  throughout.    These  suits  go  on  sale  tomorrow  and  con- 

tinue^ntil  sold.  Reg- 
ular values  up  to  $35. 
Special  at  


$24.95 


$24.95 


-H 


ese  Two  36-Inch  Silks  Specified  Here 
Are  Both  Exceptionally  Good  Values 


5,000  Yards  of  36-Inch  Black  <t  f  nO 
Taffeta— *f.?!,":  ^'^rt  at ^L\JyJ 

This  offering-  of  yard-wide  Black  Taffeta  Silk  presents 
one  of  the  most  remarkable  silk  values  in  the  history  of  this 
store.  We  have  given  you  some  wonderful  values  in  36- 
inch  Black  Taffeta  in  the  past,  but  this  lot  is  far  superior 
to  any  of  the  previous  offerings.  It  is  an  extra  heavy 
rustling  quality.  The  pure  yarn  dye  sort,  with  rich,  deep 
lustrous  finish. 

Full  36  inches  wide — every  yard  will  give  the 
very  best  of  service — one  of  the  most  serviceable 
silks  you  can  buy  for  skirts,  petticoats  and  waists, 
tomorrow     $1.00     a     yard      instead     of     $1.25. 


ASK  TO  SEE  THE  ROUGH 
SILKS. 

Prime  favorites  with  fashion 
this  season.  Some  with  a  high 
luster;  others  with  the  dull  fin- 
ish, varying  degrees  of  rough- 
ness, lovely  colors. 


2,500  Yards  36-Inch  Black  <l;  i  HQ 
Satin  Messaline—"»S^2t.\^t.:  at  H^  >- *  '  ^ 

Fashion's  most  favored  silk  fabric  at  a  great  saving  in 
price.       Highest  grade  36-inch  Satin  Directoire  Mes.'^aline, 
the  product  of  the  best  makers  of  American 
better  or  richer  made  by  any  foreign  maker, 
silk  quality  tlat  is  strong  and  will   not   pull 


silk;  nothing 

It's  a  pure 

Comes 


in 


black  and  all  the  new  colorings,  such  as  rose,  wistaria, 
catawba,  reds,  browns,  lovely  mode  gray  and  biscuit  shades, 
beautiful  cedar,  apricot  and  delightful  greens. 

Remember,  full  36  inches  wide.     Regular  $2.25 
value.    Special  introductory  price   yard,  $1.79. 


NOTE  AS  YOU  STROLL 
ALONG 


Silk  Headquarters  Head  of  Lakes. 
Lake  Avenue.  Michigan  and  Superior  Streets.  Dnlith,  Minn. 


The  new 
Messalines. 
Taffetas,  in 
striped  and 
next  delight 


Two-toned 


Striped 

The  new  Chiffon 

the  charming 

check  effects, 

your  eye. 


pin- 
will 


against  the  Indignity  put  upon  it.  Sil- 
ver tis.sue  Is  veiled  by  coarse  tulle,  and 
cloth-of-KOld  traveKs  incognito  thinly 
disguised  by  muslins  or  chiffons.  But 
even  more  eccentric  are  the  localities 
chosen  for  braidwork  and  embroidery. 
Quite  frequently  now  one  finds  a  great 
triangular  patch  of  suotache  in  the 
lower  corner  of  a  front  or  back  gore. 
Princess  panels,  which  formerly  re- 
ceived a  great  .amount  of  attention  at 
the  hands  of  tlie  dressmaker,  are  now 
Ignored,  and  trimming  goes  under  the 
arms  and  down  the  sid^  seams. 


tive  at  a  church  fair,  while  for  the 
woman  who  desires  to  entertain  at  a 
small  cost  It  would  be  a  charming 
luncheon.  Wild  sunflower  of  black- 
eyed  Susans  can  alwys  be  found,  or 
nasturtiums  might  be  used,  provided 
one  could  find  a  few  of  the  brown 
ones. 


active 
uei   of 


THIS  BOX  $2.25 

Box  exactly  like  cut —  made 
of  K'>tJtl  lumber  and  well  made — 
covered  with  matting  —  only 
twelve  of  them  to  sell  at  $2.25 
each! 

ANOTHER.  AT  $3.25 
Larger  than  above — has  some 
trimming  on   it!      Line    it  your- 
self and  you'll  have  a  box  worth 
$5  00  at  any  store! 


Rugs !     Rugs 


I 


K.. 


Those  very  artistic  rugs  are  here- The 
borders  and  centers  are  of  differing 
shades  of  same  color—  Much  sought  for 
hij  up-to-date  folks,  come  and  see  them. 


To  Sew  All  Day. 

The  member.s  of  tlie  Women's  Relief 
corps  will  meet  Friday  of  lliis  week 
for  an  rll  day  sewing  session  at  the 
home  of  Mrs.  Robert  Stitt  of  221  Tenth 
avenue  east.  A  picnic  lundieon  will  be 
served  at  noon.  The  meeting  has  been 
postponed  from  Wednesday  of  this 
week. 


J 


To  Travel  in  South. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  S.  Woodbrldge  left 
today  for  the  Kast.  and  will  go  to 
Cuba,  wliere  they  will  be  the  guests  for 
a  week  at  Havana  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Luther  Mendenhall  at  their  winter 
liome  there.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Woodbrldge 
will   visit   tlirough    the   Soutiiern   states 


the  separate 
also  shorter. 
It  is  generally  double-breasted,  and 
fastens  witli  brass  buttons  tliat  make 
vou  feel  a-s  if  you  were  masquedading 
at  a  children's  party  in  an  outgrown 
reefer  jacket  recalled  from  your  school 
days,  says  Mrs.  Simcox  in.  tlie  April 
Delineator. 

Tiiey  are  the  most  comfortable  sort 
of  thing  imaginable,  especially  for  tlie 
country,  where  canoes  and  sailboats 
and  a  "dozen  other  exigencies  call  for 
a  reallv  warm  practical  jacket,  and  the 
loveliest  of  lace  and  linen  wraps  fail 
to  meet   the   situation. 

One  of  the  most  Interesting  develop- 
ments of.  the  spring,  to  my  mind,  is  the 
shifted  position  of  trimmings.  Never 
before  has  the  arrangement  been  so 
arbitrary,  the  location  so  surprising. 
Formerly,  there  were  certain  well-de- 
fined conventions  that  were  adhered  to 
religiously  even  by  those  of  us  who 
rather  pride  ourselves  on  our  origlnalty 
and  resources.  The  retrograde  move- 
ment began  last  fall  when  some  one  de- 
ckled to  use  chiffon  over  lace,  white 
under  colors,  and  several  other  rever- 
sals of  the  established  order.  The  very 
capriciousness  of  the  bouleversement 
recommended  it  to  the  feminine  mind, 
and  the  idea  whicli  lay  dormant  all 
winter  has  broken  fortli  this  spring  In 
the  most  remarkable  shapes  and 
guises. 

Net  blouses  are  mounted  on  linings 
of  broderie  anglalse  so  exQUlsltely  fine 
that   every    leaf   and      flower   crtea   out 


Wkat   Retail  Markets   Off 


er. 


Fresh 
Fresh 
Fresh 
Honey 


cocoanuts,    10    cents    each, 
pineapples,    40   cents    each, 
eggs,    23    cents   a  dozen. 
2:;    cents   a  pound. 
Hot    biscuits. 
Codfish,    10    to   25    cents   a    pound. 
Hamburger   steak,    la   cents   a    pound. 
Pork   sausage.    15   cents   a    pound. 
According    to    the    newest    dictionary 
and    tiie    most    popular,    that    unexpur- 
galed    edition,    edited    by    C.    O.    Apple- 
liagen.     end     man     of    Hie     Y.     M.     C.     A. 
minstrels,     codfish       is     'a     smell     tiiat 
swims." 

Just  at  this  time  when  fish  in  divers 


wavs  appear  at  the  table,  codfish,  that 
homelv.  comfortable,  plebeian  fish,  does 
dutv  rnany  times.  There  is  one  nice 
thing  about  codfish.  As  soon  as  you 
get  within  a  block  of  home  you  need 
no  longer  fret  yourself  about  what  you 
are  going  to  get  for  dinner.  The  cod 
sends  out  a  welcome  that  is  unmis- 
takable, a  welcome  that  can  be  con- 
fused with  no  other,  and  for  many 
minutes  before  it  appears  swimming 
in  a  milk  gravy,  everyone  knows 
wliafs  coming.  There  is  a  boneless 
kind  that  is  little  trouble  to  prepare 
and   not   very   dangerous   to   eat. 


New  Wedding  Custom. 

It  is  a  cliarniiug  innovation  in  the 
heretofore  cut  and  dried  monotony  of 
bridesmaids,  in  white,  in  pink,  in  blue 
— in  twos,  fours,  sixes  and  eight — at 
weddings,  to  iiave  the  bride  attended 
bv  little  misses  and  masters  of  her 
own  family,  or  by  the  children  of  her 
married    friends,    says    an    exchange. 

England  has  long  st.)od  by  this  pret. 
ty  custom  in  part,  and  all  tlie  smart 
weddings  In  high  life  consider  it  ob- 
ligatorv  and  customarily  have  had  this 
charming  feature  attached.  But  very 
recently  the  fine  weddings  liave  shpwn 
brides  of  prominence  attended  solely 
bv  children,  in  lieu  of  the  traditional 
number  of  roaids.  In  all  countries 
children  hkve  appeared  in  bridal 
irocessijn,  but  the  abandonment  ot 
n^aids  and  the  bridal  escort  "of  four 
or  six  children  la  a  novelty.  It  is  not 
\et  a  settled  point  whetlier  these  little 
honorables  are  to  precede  or  follow 
Hie  brl.ie.  The  bride  may  choose  tlie 
manner  she  individually  prefers.  As 
Americans  we  have  not  considered  tlie 
ci>stume  In  any  representative  manner, 
but  have  borrowad  In  many  cases  the 
dress  of  English  or  French  children 
that  have  been  worn  on  these  oc- 
casijns  Were  we  to  select  our 
Colonial  blui  and  buff  suits  for  the 
boys  and  the  youthful  Lady  Washing- 
ton peilod  for  the  girls,  we  should  as- 
suredly win  praise  for  the  charmingly 
picturesque    effect    produced. 

Baked  Bean  Luncheon. 

One  of  tlie  must  fffective  tables  I 
ever  laid  for  my  little  daughter's  pleas- 
ure was  for  a  luncheon  planned  Just 
one  hour  before  it  happened,  writes  a 
mother   in    Woman's    Home   Companion. 

One  of  her  chums  going  through  my 
kitchen  as  I  opened  tlie  oven  door  said. 
"Oh,  I  love  baked  beans,  and  I  always 
order  them  whenever  we  go  to  Fields'." 
So    the    "party"    started. 

Some  "left-over"  crepe  paper  napkins 
with  wreaths  of  tiny  yellow  flowers 
were  ia»u  on  the  polished  oak  table 
for  centerpiece  and  plate  doilies,  in  tlie 
center  stood  a  low  glass  bowl  filled 
with  small  yellow  sunflowers,  and  each 
place  favor  was  a  larger  one.  The 
quaint  brown  bean  pot  graced  one  cor- 
ner, and  diagonally  across  from  it  was 
a  plate  of  old-fashioned  gingerbread. 
On  anotiier  corner  was  placed  the 
sandwiches  of  thin  slices  of  Graham 
and  white  bread  laid  together,  while 
the  fourth  corner  held  the  hot  Boston 
brown    bread. 

Salted  peanuts  and  tiny  cucumber 
pickles  kept  within  the  color  scheme, 
while  sliced  bananas  with  whipped 
cream  for  dessert  made  a  good  end- 
ing to  the  ''Brown  and  Yellow 
eon."  ,  .  ,    , 

Not  an  extra  thing  wa.s  needed 
side  my  ordinary  supplies,  and  I 
add  I   had   ho   maid  at   the   time. 

Such    a    table   would    be   very    attrac 


Lunch- 


out  - 
may 


FOR  GROWING  BOYS. 

Care  and   Intelligence  Used 
in  Choosing  Diet. 

Three  elements  are  essential  in  food 
— blood-making.  bone-making  and 
muscle-making  properties.  And  while 
It  would  l>e  ridiculous  to  state  that 
boys  require  nourishment  more  than 
girls,  ic  is  true  that  the  former  need  a 
larger  quantUy  and  are  more  depen- 
dent on  tlieir  food,  says  an  exchange 
in  writing  of  the  diet  for  growing 
boys. 

Beef  in  any  and  all  forms,  except 
fried,  should  be  regarded  as  a  staple, 
and  thougli  it  is  expensive,  some  of  the 
cheaper  cuts,  such  as  the  round,  are 
equally  nourishing  and  quite  as  well 
flavored  as  tenderloin.  The  very 
cheapest  grades,  provided  tliey  are 
good  quality,  can  be  made  into  ham- 
burg  steak,  wliich.  wlien  well  flavored 
with  onions  and  salt,  and  made  into 
little  cakes,  is  delicious.  A  stew,  prop- 
erly seasoned,  is  to  be  despised  by  no 
one.  A  change  is  hot  roasf,  most  nour- 
ishing and  not  expensive. 

Certain  sweets  are  as  Important  in 
the  daily  dietary  list  as  bread. 

Rice  pudding  coolted  for  many  hours 
with  milk  is  a  staple  arciclo  whicli  al- 
most every  person  likes.  Baked  apples 
and  apple  sauce  are  nourishing,  as  well 
as  supplying  some  of  the  sugar  re- 
quired by  che  system.  Prunes  have  tlie 
same  value.  Bananas  are  nourishing 
when  they  can  be  digested,  and  it 
eaten  with  salt,  rarely  cause  any  dis- 
turbance. 

Fried  bananas  may  be  served  as  a 
vegetable.  They  should  be  done  in  just 
a  little  butler.  Cheese,  by  Itself  or  as 
seasoning,  should  have  frequent  place 
on  the  table.  Molasses  judiciously  em- 
ployed, as  in  an  Indian  meal  pudding. 
Is  excellent.  ,  ,         , 

In  ail  cooking  It  is  to  be  remembered 
that  a  frying  pan  should  never  be  used 
when  any  other  cooking  Implement 
may  be  substituted.  More  good  food  is 
ruined  in  it  tlian  is  saved,  and  constant 
eating  of  grease  is  extremely  bad  for 
the    digestion.  ,...,..      v. 

Milk  and  cocoa  are  two  liquids  to  be 
drunk  In  quantity — that  is.  at  almost 
every   meal.  ... 

Cereals  of  the  old-fash.ioned  kind 
should  appear  at  every  breakfast.  Oat- 
meal, cracked  wheai.  hominy,  cornmeal 
musli  or  something  similar  should  al- 
ways be  served.  Sausages  occasionally 
are  good  for  breakfast,  but  it  must  be 
remembered  that  they  are  extremely 
fat.  and  anv  great  amount  will  upset 
the  digesclon.  Eggs  are  among  the 
luxuries,  but  when  eaten  may  be  boiled 
or   poached. 

Growing  boys  require  meat  twice  or 
tliree  times  a  day.  unless  they  are 
given  a  good  substitute.  There  are 
vegetable  dishes  which  answer  ad- 
mirably in  every  way.  but  they  should 
be    served    only    at    one    meal. 


SOME  FACTS  OF  THE  LIFE  OF 
IRELAND'S  PATRON  SAINT 


St.  Patrick  says  ol  himself  in  his  con- 
fession that  he  was  born  at  "Bannaven 
Taberniae,"  which  Is  extremely  hard 
to  identify.  Some,  however,  claim  that 
Kirk-Patrick,  near  Glasgow,  In  Scot- 
land, took  its  name  from  St.  Patrick. 

The  saint  was  bom  about  372;  was  a 
captive  and  a  slave  of  the  king  of  Da- 
laradia,  in  Ireland,  from  388  to  39.i; 
went  to  Gaul  and  vas  there  ordained 
priest;  was  conset  rated  bishop  and 
sent  to  Ireland  as  missionary  in  432, 
and  died  at  Saul,  near  Strangford 
Lough,  County  Don-n,  LMster,  where 
many  years  before  tie  had  founded  his 
church,  March  17,  4C5,  the  day  now 
sacred  to   his  memo  -y. 

Ireland  was  then  jccupled  by  a  great 
number  of  petty  tribes,  most  of  whom 
were  evangelized  hv  Patrick.  So  well 
was  the  work  acctmplished  that  Ire- 
land was  known  in  subsequent 
turies  as  the  "Island  of  saints 
scliolars." 

The    metJiod    employed 
dealing  cautiously 
old     paganism 
chieftains  were 
through 

Of  tit. 


cen- 
and 


was  that  of 
s  nd  gently  with  the 
of  tlie  people.  The 
first  won  over  and  then 
tliem  tlieli  clans. 
Patrick  himself  much  that  has 
been  related  is  fabulous,  but  his  auto- 
biographical confession  and  his  epistle 
to  Corotlcus.  both  of  which  are  un- 
questionably genuii  e,   reveal   a  devout. 


dli>- 


waa 

Cal- 

Hi3 

was  tlie 


simple    minded    man,    and    a    most 
creet  and   energetic   missionary. 

In    his   epistle    he   states   tliat   he 
of  noble  birtli  and  that  liis  father, 
phurnicus     was    a    ^Ionian    decuiro. 
mother,  Conchessa,  or  Concels, 
sister   of   St    Martin    of   Tours. 

The  family  of  the  saint  is  aftirmed 
by  the  earliest  authorities  to  have  be- 
longed to  Britain  but  whether  the  icrui 
refers  to  Gerat  Britain  or  Brittany  or 
other  parts  of  France  is  not  ascer- 
tained. ^   ,j 

Some  of  the  quaint  stories  told  m 
Ireland  about  St.  Patrick  would  mako 
the  traveler  imagine  tliat  the  saint 
visited  the  island  for  the  benefit  of 
witty  guides,  or  to  promote  mirth  in 
wet  weather.  It  is  not  remarkable  that 
the  subject  of  these  stories  for  sixteen 
centuries  at  countless  hearths,  has 
been  regarded  and  is  today  honored  as 
the  greatest  man  and  the  greatest 
benefactor  tiiat  ever  trod  the  Irish 
soil.  and.  considerli:g  the  versatility  of 
the  Irish  character,  it  is  not  strango 
that  there  remains  respecting  the  saint 
a  vast  cycle  of  legends — serious,  pa- 
thetic and   profound. 


In  Duluth  St.  Patrick's  day  will  be 
celebrated  by  the  presentation  of  the 
drama  "Arrah-Na-Pogue"  at  the  cath- 
edral auditorium.  In  Superior  tlie  an- 
nual St.  Patrick's  day  banquet  will  ba 
held. 


Articles  In  which 


are  used,  have  no  disagreeable  odor  or  sickly 
taste,  but  are  always  enjoyable. 


WEALTHY  ENGLISHMAN  HAD 
HORROR  OF  BEING  BURIED  ALIVE 


It  "\m  I  have  alivay»  drended  the  # 
f  poMMibiUty  of  being  buried  a»ve,  * 
t  I  bequeath  to  in>  frieud  Kdniuim  » 
t  UoydH  the  num  *)f  aS  guineas  free  * 
(  ot  legacy  duty  On  addition  to  * 
If  the  25  OpouudN,  which  1  beoneath  » 
t  to  him  for  undertaking  the  dutle-  » 
It  of  my  executor  and  truMtee),  on  « 
I  condition  that  he  doe*  not  permit  * 
cofi-ln   to  be    ttniilly   cloned 


Mayor  Scott  dioeti   Soutb. 

Hancock.  Midi.,  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mayor  A.  ,T.  Scott, 
acting  on  tlie  advice  of  ills  physician, 
left  .'Saturday  afternoon 
Springs.  Ark.,  for  the 
health.  He  expects 
month. 


for       Hot 

benefit    of    his 

to    be     gone     a 


Mra.  Bede  Ueturua. 

Pine  City,  Minn..  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  J.  Adam  Bede 
and     daughter,     iletta,     have       returned 


til  he  ban  personally  sotUfled 
himMelf  tliat  my  body  -hows  dis- 
tinct signs  of  decomposition,  and 
that  further  the  surgeon  or  phy^ 
slclan  nttendlg  me  at  the  lime 
my  death,  or  some  other 
by  tlie  said 
previously   to 

niy  colTIn  plerc  my  heart  with 
some  sharp  Instrument,  in  the 
preseB<«  of  the  said  Kdmund 
KoydM,  in  such  a  manner  as  could 
not  fail  to  cause  death,  should 
death  not  have  already  occurred, 
has    been    su  M»o"*d    to    l>e 


K(l  niund 
tb^    final 


of 
selected 
Iloyds,  do 
closing   of 


counties,  and  the  will  has  just  reached 
here    for    probate. 

The  will  Is  a  voluminous  document, 
covering  in  minute  detail  the  distriou- 
tion  of  an  estate  estimated  to  be  worth 
:;63,912  pounds,  13  shillings  and  9 
pence,  or  over  $1,200,000  in  American 
money. 

Tlie  duties  of  the  executors  and  Iha 
manner  In  which  the  affairs  of  the 
estate  are  to  be  administered  are  set 
out  in  the  minutest  detail  in  the  will, 
which  contains  several  queer  condi- 
tions. The  queerest  of  all  Is  that 
quoted,  taking  precaution  against  tha 
possibility   of  being   buried   alive. 

Mr.  Qilliat's  property  is  spread  al- 
most all  over  the  world.  He  had  In- 
terests in  England,  Scotland,  Wales. 
Ireland,  Canada  and   the  United  States. 


case." — Kxtract 
ard  Ciillllat 


the 


t'rem  will  of  How-  ^ 


from    Wastington.    where 
attendance    at    the    Taft 


they    were    in 
inauguration. 


The  will  of  Howard  Gllllat.  a 
wealthy  Engllshmsn,  who  died  in  Lon- 
don Dec.  3,  1906,  has  Just  been  filed  In 
the  probate  court  of  St.  Louis  county. 
Mr.  Gilllat  owned  about  ♦lO.OOO  worth 
of   property    In    St.    Louis    and    Carlton 


HOLLANDERS  ((IMK  TO 

SETTLE  LP  COUNTRY. 

Bismarck.  N.  I>..  March  15. — Seeing 
no  chance  to  improve  tlieir  condition  in 
crowded  Holland.  fifty  natives  of 
Breda,  in  Brahantz.  passed  through  the 
city  recently  for  Southheart,  N  .D..  In 
charge  of  Von  dan  Henvel,  a  Cathollo 
priest,  who  for  sixteen  years  has 
brought  thousands  of  families  from  the 
teeming  cities  and  countries  of  the  Old 
World  to  farms  In  the  Northwest. 

The  fifty  are  the  van  of  a  certain 
fifty  more  and  probably  1.000.  Ten 
faniilies  will  come  on  the  next  steam- 
er, as  they  were  left  at  .\ntwerp.  Feb. 
20,  on  account  of  a  crowded  ship. 


J 


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THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD:   MONDAY,  MARCH  10  1^09. 


Arc  You  Going  to  be 

One  of  the  150 
School  Pupils  Who 
Will  Make  up  The 

Herald  Theater 
Party  for  the  Open- 
ing Performance  of 


AN  ACTIVE 
CAMPAIGN 

Committee  Will  Plan  War- 
fare Against  White 
Plague. 

Employment  of  Visiting 

Nurse  May  be  First 

Step. 


Organized  efforts  to  prevent  the 
sprtad  of  tuberculosis  in  tlie  city  of 
Duluth  will  be  actively  taken  up  at 
the  meeting  of  the  g<ineral  committee 
of  the  anti-tuberculosis  society,  at  the 
rooms  of  the  Commercial  club  to-mor- 
row  evening. 

Tills  meeting  will  include  all  of  the 
committees  that  have  been  working 
under  the  Duluth  organization.  Def- 
inite plans  for  the  campaign  in  this 
city  will  be  formulated,  various  com- 
mittees named,  arrangements  for  the 
engaging  of  a  visiting  nurse  made,  and 
progress  reported  upon  the  bill,  before 
the  legislature  at  the  present  time, 
authoizing  counties  to  provide  hospi- 
tals   for    consumptives.. 

While  the  plans  of  the  general  com- 
mittee are  determined  upon,  !io  at- 
tempt has  been  made  up  to  the  pres- 
ent time,  to  put  them  into  execution. 
At  the  meeting  tomorrow  evening, 
means  of  raising  luncis  to  deal  with 
the  tuberculosis  problem,  will  be  con- 
sidered by  the  members  of  the  commlt- 

It  is  believed  that  a  membership 
plan  will  be  carried  out.  making  every- 
one a  member  of  the  organization  upon 
the  pavment  of  $1.  The  members  of 
the  committee  will  endeavor  to  secure 
as  many  members  as  possible,  and  in 
this  way  raise  funds  to  carry  on  the 
work  of  prevention  by  means  of  edu- 
cating  the   people  in   sanitary  methods. 

The  members  of  the  general  com- 
mittee believe  that  they  will  be  able 
to  interest  the  business  men  of  the 
city  In  the  plan  of  membership,  and 
In  this  way  increase  the  organization 
into  one  that  will  include  a  very  large 
percentage   of   citizens.  ,       ^    , 

It  is  earnestly  requested  that  all 
those  Interested  In  the  success  of  the 
movement,  be  present  tomorrow 
evening.  The  meeting  is  a  most  im- 
portant one,  as  the  plans  of  the  work 
of  the  organization  will  be  outlined 
then. 


Exquisite  Dress 
Trimmings 

latest  Imported  Novelties — every 
color  combination  for  the  fasli- 
lona'.ile  shades   of  spring! 


Almn.in   Send   Vour  Mall   Orders  to 


117-110    West    Superior    Street,    Dulutb,    Minn. 
FOR       Q,V1Cti.,      SATISFACTOUV       SKllVICB 

Exclusive  Fabrics  foi 
Elegant  Easter  Gowns 

Choose  Now  -There's  Only  4  Weeks  for  the  Making! 

T"i.^  is  a  season  of  satiny^ 

all  who  see  it! 


Stamping  Done 
To  Order 

An  entirely  new  1909  outfit- 
thousands  of  new  and  charming 
designs  not  to  be  had  elsewhere! 


SHED-WATER  TUSCAN  SILKS.  $1.00. 

Shed-Water  Tuscan  Silk  is  one  of  the  most  satis- 
factory dollar  rough  or  tailoring  silks  ever  produced. 
It  will  not  wrcar  rough— is  very  serviceable— lends 
itself  splendidly  to  the  new  styles,  and  it  is  proot 
again.st  showers.     See  the  new  gold  shades,  the  nickel 


36-INCH  SATIN  PRINCESSE,  $1.50. 

Satin  Princesse— a  satin  that  will  not  grow  rough 

with    wear— the    face    of   it    is    absolutely    fast,    soft. 

lustrous  and  most  effective  for  gowns  and  waists.     It 

is  a  full  yard  wide,  too,  and  is  shown  here  in  all  the 


(f- 


At  the  Lyceum  Theater 

Next  Monday  Evening, 

March  22. 

Essays  must  be  in  The  Herald  office  not 
later  than  Wednesday,  March  17,  at  6  p.  m. 

The  pupils  sending  in  the  150  best  essays 
will  be  Guests  of  The  Herald  at  the  opening 
performance. 

Essays  are  to  be  written  on  one  side  of 
paper  only. 

Give  your  name,  address  and  school,  also 
write  name  of  school  on  outside  of  envelope. 

Address  essays  to  Ben  Hur  Contest  Edi- 
tor, The  Herald. 


You'll  Have  To  Hurry 

Essays  must  be  in  The  Herald  office 
not  later  than    6  p.  m.    next  Wednesday, 
March  17. 


TAKES  NEW  POSITION. 

J.  I.  Thomas  Presented  \Vth  Gold 
Watch  by  Old  Associates. 

J  I.  Thomas,  for  more  than  twenty 
years  employed  as  local  freight  agent 
for  the  Northern  Pacific  railroad,  to- 
day assumed  the  position  of  commer- 
cial agent  of  the  road.  He  succeeds 
Thomas  E.  Blanche,  who  Saturday  ten- 
dered   his   resignation.  .    »   ^  , 

W  H  Smith  of  Superior,  as  stated  In 
The  Herald  some  time  ago,  will  suc- 
ceed  Mr.   Thomas.  .    ,^^      -.  , 

The  employes  of  the  freight  office  of 
the  Northern  Pacific  presented  Mr.. 
Thomas  with  a  Kold  watch  and  fob 
Saturday,  as  a  token  of  the  esteem  In 
■which  he  is  held  by  his  fellow  work- 
ers. The  watch  bpars  the  Initials  of 
the  new  commercial  agent,  as  well  as 
the  trade  mark  of  the  road.  A.  C.  Al- 
tachten,  assistant  freight  agent,  pre- 
sented  Mr.   Thomas  with   the   watch. 


AGAINST  PROPOSED  TAX. 


Upper   Michigan   Merchants   Want 
Coffee  and  Tea  Left  Free. 

Marquette,  Mich.,  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Merchants  In  Upper 
Michigan  who  sell  tea  and  coffee  are 
signing  petitions  to  be  forwarded  to 
Congressman  Young  at  Washington, 
protesting  against  the  reported  plan  of 
the  house  ways  and  means  committee 
to  Impose  a  duty  of  4  cents  a  pound 
on   coffee  and   10  cents  a  pound  on  tea. 

The  protest  Is  based  on  the  conten- 
tion that  the  articles  are  necessities, 
and  to  tax  them  as  is  proposed  in  the 
new  tariff  bill  would  work  a  hardship 
on  the  great  bulk  of  the  wage-earners. 
It  Is  estimated  that  more  than  3.000  - 
000  pounds  of  coffee  ana  approximately 
1,500,000  pounds  of  tea  are  consumed 
In  the  Upper  peninsula  annually. 


Nenr   Ucatb   lu    ni*   I'ond. 

It  was  a  llirilllng  experience  to  Mrs, 
Ida  Soper  to  face  death.  "For  years 
a  severe  lung  trouble  gave  me  intense 
suffering,"  she  writes,  "and  several 
times  nearly  caused  my  death.  All 
remedies  faihd  and  doctors  said  I  was 
Incurable.  Then  Dr  Kings  New  Dis- 
covery brought  quick  relief  and  a  cure 
.to  permanent  that  I  have  not  been 
troubled  in  twelve  years."  Mrs.  Soper 
live.s  in  Big  Pond.  Pa.  It  works  won- 
ders in  Coughs  and  Colds,  Sore  Lungs, 
Hemorrhages,  LaGrippe,  Asthma. 
Croup.  Whooping  Cougli  and  all  bron- 
chial affections.  50c  and  $1.00.  Trial 
bottle  tree.  Guaranteed  by  all  drug- 
gists.  

SHARTEL  WILL 
LAND  JljE  PLACE 

Believed  That  He  Will  Be 

Elected  President  of 

City  Council. 

Alderman    fehartel.     the       "Puradora"  j 
candidate,    next    president    of    the    com- 
mon    council. 

That  is  tlie  way  they  have  it  doped 
out  around  the  city  hall  today.  It  seems 
to  be  the  general  belief  thai  -Mr.  Shar- 
tel  will  be  elected  to  the  place,  al- 
iliougli  he  probably  will  not  have  any 
votes   to  spare. 

The  way  things  look  now  il  Alderman 
Shartel  is  not  elected,  no  one  else  can 
land  the  place,  and  Alderman  Getchell, 
l)resident   now,   will    hold    over      Inden- 

n  itel y 

Alderman  Shartel  had  quite  a  long 
talk  with  -Mayor  Haven  this  morning, 
and  while  it  was  admitted  that  tlie 
matter  of  the  presidency  came  up,  both 
denied  that  anything  was  said  or  done 
whicli  would  have  a  bearing  on  the 
vote    tonight.  »,„„„ 

It  seems  that  no  agreement  has  been 
arrived  at  yet  in  regard  to  who  shall 
be  made  sealer  of  weights  and  meas- 
ures There  are  five  candidates  for 
the  place,  and  five  ballots  at  last 
week's  meeting  failed  to  give  any  one 
of  the  candidates  enough  votes  to 
give  him  the  place.  It  is  claimed  that 
the  aldermen  have  decided  on  no  one 
as    yet.  


natics,  me  nicKci  .     ,  ,  .  -       u  r     „i 

"°  V  u    1  .u       wi-.'.ri-,      raf-iwha    bronze    new  spring  shades — about  a  dozen  to  chDOse  from! 

and  copper  shades,     the     wistaria,     catawoa,  uron^t    ..   v*     »,      ^  ,«„„^  / ,, 

^hadc^  etc— ^5  colors  to  choose  from— it  is  24  inches    It's  an  extra  value— cuts  to  such  good  advantage  for 
\^-i^\c.   '  ^h^  present  style  gowns. 

»»  t  \ .,«,..  ;♦=  m^rStc   sknd  it  wins  And  at  $1.50  a  yard  it  is  one  of  the  best 

S'ew'admrrers^^^y^laT^^^^^^^  -^  mosi  fashionable  bargains  of  the  year. 

THEODORA  CLOTH  IS  VERY  REFINED!     YOU'LL  LIKE  IT! 
Another  of  the  newest  fabrics  of  the  scP.scm-ycni  can't  find  it  anywhere  else  this  side  of  ^h'*-'a^o- 
so  yot^  n  av  buv  it  with  the  pleasure  of  knowing  that  it  is  absolutely  exclusive.     It  .s  a  fine  imported  fab- 
ric ih-it  looks  e'xactly  like  a  broadcloth— but  it  is  not  really  a  broadcloth.       ^  .  ,  „ 
ric  ^'^'i*  '^°7^f-^/fJ,V\^^^^^^                  is  woven— not  pressed— into  the  fabric,  and  stays  there  as  long  as 
Sie  cl^oth  Vistsr  Ve'^ry  rich  ^                                              shades_54  inches  wide-$2.50  the  >ard. 

SATIN  NORTON  IS  HERE! 
Satin  Norton  is  another  new  fabric  exclusive 
with  Gray-TaHant  Co.  It  has  a  lustrous  finish 
and  is  woven  in  a  flat  ribbed  effect  like  the  old- 
fashioned  soliel  cloth— it  also  has  a  shadow 
stripe  in  it— sufficiently  heavy  enough  fi'r  tail- 
ored suits— but  yet  very  desirable  for  gowns. 
It  does  ne*  wrinkle  easily. 


It  sheds  dust  and  is  dressy  in  ef- 
fect— shown  in  the  new  shades — 
46    inches    wide— $1.50    the    yard. 


EARLY  DRESS  GOODS  ARRIVALS 

New  Black  Dress  Goods  are  ready!  Sec  the 
new  crystal  cloth,  the  new  satin  cloths,  ncv 
peau  de  soie,  silk  warp  poplins,  mohair,  Tus- 
sah.  satin  striped  voiles,  satin  armure,  et:. 
You'll  find  the  weaves  and  the  qualities  ycu 
like  here — you'll  like  the  color  of  the  blacks, 
too — they're  deep  and  rich! 

Blacks  will  be  popular  this  Spring 
— of  course  you  want  the  best 
blacks,  and  we  have  them — better 
have  a   look   at  them   very   soon! 


ANOTHER  SALE  OF  LACES  Al'JD  ENTOROIDERJES 
ON  THE  BARGAIN  SgU ARE!    GET  YOUR  SHARE! 


UIDK   KI-Ol  :>it  I\r.S,  25c  YARD. 

Handsome  Eml»roidered  Flounclngs  half  a 
yard  wide— on  Svvlss,  cambric  and  nainsook 
— for  two-piece  suits  and  waists — a  bne  wintn 
for    skirts— tomorrow    and    Wednesday — yard. 


COH^KT  COVKU  KMBKOIDKHV,  a5o  YARD.         , 

Another  slilpment  of  really  cl'oiee  styles  Cor- 
set Cover  Embroidery— half  a  yard  wide— new 
patterns — same  quality  we  gave  you  in  Jan- 
uary— worth    up   to   4Sc   yard. 


5c 


The  yard  for  Tor- 
chon Laces  and 
Insertions. 


Narrow  Nainsook  Edges,  5c. 
Hand  loomed  embroidery — 
dainty  narrow  edges — very 
C^  special  at  5  cents  C -^ 
^C  the  yard.  *^V» 


121/2C 

The  yard  for 
6  -  Inch  F  oun- 
clngs. 


WAIST   KRONTIN«S,   50c    AND   «t>*. 

This  lot  is  one  to  be  proud  of — tlie  pat- 
terns are  fine!  Every  woman  who  sees 
K.(\^  them  will  want  to  sliare  |^Q#« 
-3VIC  in  the  bargain.  Only  %  W^** 
of  a  yard  are  necessary  for  a  waist 
front:     Price  only  BOc  and  0J5c  the  yard. 


D.  E.  H.,  March  is,   09 


I  I 

V 

»  ■<    ■  M     ■ 


by    the 
by 


by        the 
by      the 


Style  5061 


Style  ^105 


Style  5171 


iARTERS 

llTTLE 

IVER 

PILLS. 


Knapp- 


Showing  a  few  of  our  various  shapes 
for  individual  selection,  $3,  $4  and  $6. 


THE  COLUMBIA 

At  Third  Avenue  West 


CONDITION 

DANGEROUS 

Sixth  Avenue  West  Via- 
duct Badly  in  Need 
of  Repairs. 

City  Engineer  McGllvray  will  report 
to  the  city  council  tonight  that  the 
west  approach  to  the  Si.xth  avenue  vla- 
duc  is  so  badly  in  need  of  repair  as  to 
be  In  a  dangerous  condition,  and  will 
recommend  that  provision  for  its  re- 
pair   be   made. 

The  city  engineer  says  It  will  cobi 
$1  000  or  more  to  do  the  work  neces- 
sary, and  asserts  that  unless  the  money 
is  forthcoming  It  will  be  necessary 
for  the  safety  of  that  portion  ot  the 
general  public  which  uses  the  viaduct, 
to  close  the  west  approach  to  trafhc. 

Mr  McGllvray  also  will  recommend 
to  the  council  tonight  that  an  appro- 
priation of  $1,200  be  made  for  the  pui - 
chase  of  an  auxiliary  gasoline  motne 
power  plant  for  the  aerial  bridge,  to  be 
used  in  cases  of  emergency,  when  the 
electric  power  is  out  of  comml.ssion. 
The  council  already  has  approved  tne 
plan  of  such  a  purchase,  but  has  not 
ordered  one  purchased. 

— •  — 

The  Team  Loading  Ordinance. 

To  the  Editor  of  The   Herald: 

I  notice  there  has  been  an  ordinance 
introduced  in  the  city  council    lo  regu- 
late the  sl«e  of  a  load  a  team  of  horses  .  ^     «       , 
should    be    allowed    to    haul    up    hill    in  ':  regulate  tie  BowelB. 
"this  city.     This  bill  is  more  theoretical  ' 
than   practical,   and  if  passed  as   Intro- 
<luced     would    work    hardship    to    many 


work,  that  of  the  Duluth  \  an  &  Stor- 
age company,  we  arc  compelled  very 
often,  when  bidding  lor  work  Irom  out- 
side concerns,  such  as  carting  of  goods, 
machinery,  etc.,  from  the  railroad 
tracks  to  public  and  office  bulldingi-, 
to  compete  with  the  prices  made  in 
other  cities,  and  to  do  this  we  nave 
to  lo.id  on  all  the  team.s  can  easl.y 
handle  without  hurting  or  straining 
them  If  we  are  not  allowed  to  load 
more  than  the  limit  of  the  ordinance 
as  now  introduced,  we  may  as  well  go 
out  of  business  at  once,  for  we  can 
haul,  when  the  .streets  are  in  good  con- 
tlition,  nearly  double  tliis  amount  with- 
out injuring  the  team.«. 

I  can  say  candidly  that  while  I  have 
owned  and  worked  a  great  many  liorses 
for  several  years.  1  have  never  yet  hurt 
a  hor.se  bv  overloading.  And  aside 
from  the  hiimane  point  of  view,  horses 
are  too  valuable  t.o  have  them  ln.iured 
or  to  allow  our  drivers  to  injure  them 
bv  overloading.  I  will  say  further  that 
Iwill  be  pleased  to  aid  the  council  in 
passing  an  ordinance  looking  to  the 
better  care  of  horses  and  the  prevent- 
ing of  abuses  of  any  kind  to  them  in 
this  city.  I  think  careful  investigation 
Into  this  matter  will  show  that  most  of 
the  abuses  that  horses  In  Duluth  are 
subjected  to  are  not  overloading,  but 
underfeeding,  and  more  particularly 
want  of  proper  shoeing.  Yours  truly. 
want,  ox   yiop  ^     ^^     SHtlRIDAN. 

Duluth,  March  15. 
• 

To  Amend  the  Tonnage  Tax  Bill. 

To    the    Editor   of  The   Herald: 

I  would  respectfully  call  the  atten- 
tion of  the  state  legislature  of  Minne- 
sota to  the  fact  that  if  a  tonnage  tax 
is  placed  upon  Iron  ore.  which  Is  a 
product  of  the  ground.  Why  not  meas- 
ure all  products  of  the  ground  by  the 
ton  pro  rata?  ^^     ,.      4.    », 

Icon    ore  by  the  ton  Is   worth  about   |4. 

Metal  bv  the  tons  is  wortli  about  \i3. 

Potatoes  by  the  ton  are  worth 
about   |16. 

Turniips 
about    $10. 

Onions 
about    $50. 

Cabbage 
about  $30. 

Carroto 

about  $20.  ,  *,       K      ♦    .lA 

Hay  bv   the  tons   is  worth   about   $10. 
Havseeds    by      the      tons    Is       worth 

about  $60. 

I    would    respectfully   ask      that      the 


ton      are      worth 


the       ton      are       worth 


ton      is      worth 
ton       are       worth 


Genuine  Must  Bear 
Fac-Simile  Signature 


.  REFUSE  SUBSTITUTES. 


SIGK  HEADAGH 


CAFCfE^ 


Positlrely  cure*  hy 
these  Little  Pills. 

They  also  reUere  W» 
tress  toaa  PyBpcpeU,  la- 
dlg«flUcn  and  Too  Heart; 
Eatkig*  A  pertBct  reoy 
edy  for  Dizziness.  Mauser 
Drowsiness,  B«A  Tarsal 
lA  Uie  Mootb.  Coated 
Ton^e,  Pain  In  tike  Blda. 
J  TORPID  LIVER.  ThtV 
Purely  Vegetable. 


!  tonnage  tax  bill  on  iron  ore  be  amend- 

I  ed,    so    as    to    Include    all    of    the    above 

I  products  of  the  ground   In  this  tonnage 

itax   bill.   It   would  equalize  the  buraen  of 

'taxation   and    it   would   be   more   in   line 

witli   the  provisions   of  the   Constitution 

of   the      United   States,    and    would    be   a 

square  deal  to  all  sections  of  the  state, 

no    special    taxatioi^  to^be^aU^wed,,^ 

Duluth,    March    15. 

PARIS  AGITATED 
OVER  A  STRIKE 

Government  Telegraph 

and  Phone  Employes 

May  Quit 

Paris,  March  16. — I'arls  is  In  sus- 
pense today  over  the  likelihood  of  a 
general  strike  on  the  part  of  the  tele- 
phone and  telegraphers  employes  in 
the  bureau  of  the  postoffice.  All  the 
branches  of  these  services  are  involved. 
There  Is  considerable  excitement 
around  the  general  and  branch  post- 
offices.  Detachments  of  police  and 
municipal  guards  surround  these  build- 
ings and  a  regiment  of  infantry  is 
camped  In  the  courtyard  of  the  general 
postoffice.  Mail  wagons  are  being 
driven  through  the  streets  under  mill- 
'  tary  escort.  The  employes  lay  most 
of  their  woes  to  the  door  of  M.  Simyan, 
under  secretary  of  posts  and  tele- 
graphs, claiming  he  lias  systematically 
prevented  them  from  obtaining  in- 
creases   of    salaries. 

MAN  LATE  TO  WORK  AND 
TWO  DEATHS  MAY  RESULT. 

Lufkln,  Tex..  March  15. — When  J.  F. 
Nutter  reported  for  work  today  he  wa.s 
a  few  moments  tardy.  This  fact 
brought  about  a  dispute  with  J.  C. 
Brown,  wliich  resulted  In  the  latter  be- 
ing fatally  shot.  After  receiving  the 
fatal  wounds,  Brown  attacked  Nutter 
with  a  knife,  inflicting  injuries  which 
may  cause  his  death  as  well. 

MASSACRE  HERO  DEAD. 

St  Peter,  Minn.,  March  15. — John 
Peterson,  aged  78  years,  a  former 
Judge  of  probate  of  Nicollet  county, 
and  an  early  settlor  of  Lake  Prairie 
township,  is  dead.  Mr.  Peterson  settled 
In  Lake  Prairie  township  in  1856,  and 
in  1862  during  the  Sioux  Indian  out- 
break, "was  captain  of  a  militia  com- 
pany and  marched  to  the  relief  of  New 
rim.  participating  in  one  of  the  battles 
fought    there.  

THREE  MEN  MAY  DIE 

DIE  TO  AN  EXPLOSION. 


to  The  Herald.) — Judga  of  Probate 
Hentley  announced  at  tin  county  build- 
ing that  lie  is  a  grandiathcr.  A  son 
was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Hugh  Bent- 
ley    of    Scanlon,    Minn.,    lust    wet-k. 

MIDNIGHT  LID  IN  THREE 
LARCJE  CITIES  A(JAIN  SAT 
UPON  HARD  BY  THE  HOLSE 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


clal  to  The  Herald.) — Christ  and  Nel» 
Hansen.  recently  discharged  from 
the  cliarge  of  failing  to  attend  to  brush 
fires,  winch  resulted  in  disastrous  con- 
flagration in  Ingallston  township,  last 
fall,  have  .otarted  libel  actions  against 
James  S.  Osborne,  the  complaining  wit- 
ness. 


of  the  transfer  companies  and  team 
owners  in  this  city.  In  the  first  place, 
there  should  be  no  set  standard  of 
weights  of  what  all  teams  might  haul. 
The  condition  of  the  streets  and  the 
condition  of  the  team  make  all  the 
difference.  There  are  seasons  when  a 
team  can  haul  twice  or  three  times 
what  It  can  handle  at  another  season 
of  the  year. 

Then  again,  the  horses  that  are 
uroperl'v  fed  or  properly  handled  can 
haul  very-  much  more  than  horses 
poorly    fed   and  poorly    driven.      In   our 


SMALL  PILL  SMALL  DOSL  SMALL  PRICL 


ICARTERS 

iiTTie 

IVER 

PILLS. 


Qenvlne  Mcs!  Bear 
Fac-Simiie  Signature 


REFUSE  SUBSTITUTES. 


Washington,  Mar.h  15. — An  explosion 
at  the  Washington  Gas  Light  com- 
panv  plant  Twenty-sixth  and  G  streets 
northwest. 'early  today,  resulted  in  the 
brining  of  three  men  so  severely  that 
K  Is  thought  they  will  not  survive. 
They  are:  Kdward  Knderson.  Peter  Kel- 
U-y.  white,  and  a  negro  named  Venable. 

WHISKY  JUDGE,  'MAN  WITH 
GOLDEN  nose;*  IS  DEAD. 

Lexington,  Ky..  March  15.— Patrick 
Lamphear.  a  widely  known  whisky 
man,  died  here  last  night.  His  skill  in 
determining  the  cjuallty  of  whisky  and 
the  large  salary  paid  him  had  gained 
for  him  the  sobriquet  of  "the  man  with 
the  golden   nose."      

Grandwon  at  Soaulon. 

Houghton,  Mich.,  March  15.— (Special 


H.  Johnson,  Burncjulst  and  Mattson  op- 
posed the  bill,  and  Keprcsentat!\  cs 
Stone  and  Hodenburg  ot  St.  Paul  ap- 
proved it.  ,  ,  . 
The  motion  to  reconsider  was  lost, 
however,  30  for  and  73  against,  even 
Mr.  Wells,  the  author  of  the  motion, 
losing  his  courage  and  voting  against 
his    own    motion. 

•  •  * 
There  was  anoiiier  eel  o  in  the  senate 
this  morning  of  last  w.?eks  action  by 
ilie  Uepubliran  majority  in  railroading 
tiirough  the  i'etcrsun  hi  1  for  the  relief 
of  S.  W.  Leavitt  ot  the  board  yf  coniiol. 
Senator  Works  called  up  his  resolu- 
tion against  liaving  any  more  suspen- 
sions of  the  rules,  ami  on  motion  of 
Senator  Sullivan  it  was  referred  to  the 
rules  committee,  ^6  to  1j,  where  It  will 
doubtless  die. 

Senator  Works,  in  idvocating  his 
motion,  said  that  senatorial  courtesy 
is  now  an  idle  dream  ^vhcn  the  confl- 
dence  of  the  senate  has  ijeen  abused  by 
slipping  through  an  attempt  to  force 
the  appointment  of  Mr.  Leavitt  under 
the  guise  ot  sympafhy  for  the  old  sol- 
dier. The  bill  was  passed  by  misrep- 
resentation and  subterJuge,  said  Sen- 
ator W'orks.  ^.  , 
Senator  Seward.  Rep  jblican,  though 
he  voted  for  the  motion  to  refer,  said 
that  he  was  surprised  that  there  was 
no  reply  to  the  cliaiges  of  fraud.  This 
was  a  reference  to  tlie  fact  that  Sena- 
tor Peterson  made  no  statement  in  his 

own   behalf.  i,      ,  r-. 

Senators  Laybourn  and  Pugh  of  Du- 
luth voted  for  reference,  and  Senator 
Vail  of  Virginia  was  tlie  only  Ivepubll- 
can  to  vote  witli  the  Democrats  against 
the  Sullivan  motion. 

•      *      • 

The  house  Judiciary  committee  re- 
port* d  to  the  house  tliis  morning  its 
inability  to  agree  upon  the  question  of 
whether  Stuarts  bill  abolishing  the  tax 
on  credits  is  constitutional.  In  view 
uf  this  doubt,  tlie  conuaittee  recom- 
mended tiiat  Mr  Stuart  be  allowed  to 
vubstllute  another  bill  tor  the  one  now 
pending,  and  he  did  so.  It  provides  a 
mortgage  registry  tax  of  10  cents  per 
$100  instead  of  50  centsi,  divided  equal- 
ly between  the  state  ind  the  county 
general  revenue  fund,  nstead  of  beir.g 
apportioned  as  other  taxes  are  distri- 
buted and  providing  that  land  con- 
tracts shall  not  be  cliissed  and  taxed 
as  mortgages.  This  the  present  law 
does.  ^       ,       „ 

The    house    took    a    trlef    recess    this 
morning    to    hear    an    old-time    talk    on 
economy   from   J.    F.  Jacobson   of  Madi- 
son,    the    recent    Republican    candidate 
for  governor   and   once  a   strong   iiouse 
member.      He    criticised      sharply      the 
nractice     of     grabbing       appropriations 
and    said    that    the    poorest    member    is 
the  one  that  grabs  more  than  his  share. 
The    legislature   should    not   allow    bor- 
rowing   by    the    state,    but    should    ap- 
propriate  what    its   levies   produce,   and 
no    more.     The    practice    of    continually 
Increasing    salaries,    ho    said,    is    a    bad 
one       It    is    all    right    10    pay    employes 
what   they   could   earn   in    private   posi- 
tions,   but   most    of    th(    employes   could 
not    earn    a    quarter    ol'    what    thf/    ff^ 
from    the   state    If   they    were    privately 
employed.      He    said    that    the    present 
t^x     levies,     with     the     Indirect     ta-^^s 
now  coming  In.  are  ample  to  take  care 
of    the    business    of    tJ-e    state,    if    it    is 
economically    handled.  ,„„..„ov 

The  capltol  Is  deserted  by  law-mak- 
ers this  afternoon,  for  the  legislature 
f«    out    at    New    Brlgh:on    looking    over 


he^  proposed     AVmou  •  "Packing"  plant 
site      the     guests     of     the     Commercial 

John   I-enno^n^,  oJ_  M_h,^  •&-'i',"KGHAM. 


Such  Coinplnlulni;  Wltncus. 

Menominee,    Mich..    March    15.— (Spe- 


MANY  ACRES  TO 
BE  RECLAIMED 

Eastern  Marshall  County 

to  Benefit  by  Big 

Ditch  Scheme. 

Middle  Kiver.  Minn..  March  15. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — S'tate  Engineer 
Qeorge  K.  Ralph  has  gone  to  the  .scen»- 
of  the  labors  of  the  surveying  crew 
east  of  Thief  River,  where  he  will  tak*- 
active  charge  of  the  work.  Mr.  Ralph 
declared  that  the  state  Is  to  Immedi- 
ately put  through  a  big  drainage  sys- 
tem for  Ea-stern  Marshall  county.  Thief 
river  is  to  be  dredged  and  straight- 
ened its  whole  length,  and  a  complete 
system  of  laterals  put  In  on  all  th« 
section  lines  on  both  sides  of  the  river. 
The  survey.  Mr.  italph  stated,  will  b« 
completed  in  two  weeks,  and  the  con- 
tract for  the  work  let  at  once,  so  that 
the  entire  system  will  be  constructed 
the  coining  summer. 

Tills  project  means  everything  to 
Middle  liiver  and  all  Eastern  Marshall 
county.  It  will  reclaim  hundreds  of 
thousands  of  wet  lands,  and  will  be 
sch  a  stimulus  to  development  that 
Eastern  Marsliall  county  will  go  for- 
ward by  leaps  and  bounds  and  soon  be- 
come what  nature  destined  it  to  be — ■ 
one  of  the  richest  and  diversified  farm- 
Ir.g  sections  in  tlf  world. 
• 

Can't  look  well,  eat  well  or  feel  well 
witii  Impure  blood  feeding  your  body. 
Keep  the  blood  pure  wlih  Burdock 
Blood  Bitters.  Eat  simply,  take  exer- 
cise, keep  clean  and  you  will  have  lonv 
life. 

SELLS  BANK  INTEREST. 

President  of  Thief  River  FaHs  Bank 
Going  West. 

Thief  River  Falls.  Minn.,  March  15. 
—  (Special  to  The  Herald.) — Mr.  Prlch- 
ard,  president  of  the  First  National 
bank  Friday  sold  his  interest  In  the 
Institution  to  Messrs.  Hansen  and  Pat- 
terson of  St.  Hilaire.  Mr.  Hansen  ia 
president  of  a  bank  in  his  town  and 
Mr.  Patterson  Is  one  of  the  wealthiest 
residents  of  this  county.  The  First 
National  will  be  directly  under  the  di- 
rection of  Mr.  Hansen,  who  will  make 
this  city  his  home.  The  retiring  bank- 
er, Mr.  Prichard,  will  leave  at  once  for 
the  West,  where  he  is  Interested  In  a 
lumber  enterprise  with  relatives  In 
Tacoma.  ,         ^    ^ 

The  Presbyterian  church  has  pur- 
chased the  Kratka  homestead,  one  of 
the  finest  residences  In  the  city  and 
will  utilize  It  for  a  parsonage.  It  ad- 
joins the  church  and  is  considered  a 
valuable  property.  This  church  body 
now  owns  two  parsonages  In  this  city, 
cne  having  been  purchased  less  than 
two  years  ago. 

Home  Made  Blood  Purifier 

Tl  -^  best  blood  building  prescription 
known  Is  as  follows:  To  one-half  pint 
of  good  whiskey  add  one  ounce  syrup 
sarsaparllla  and  one  ounce  Torls  com- 
pound, which  can  be  procured  jrom  any 
druggist.  Take  in  teaapoonful  dose* 
before  each  meal  and  before  retinn*. 


S-  Zis: 


"^TT" 


W 


in 


I 


4 


r.T«T  ■a.'fc^'otw  I-- 


- 


—  r- 


-'f 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1909. 


THE  EVENING  HERALD 

Publisl.o.i   ta  H^ld  nid^FJ^st  St..  Opposite  P.  O.  Square. 

THE  HERALD  COMPANY. 
Telephones:      Counting   Hoom,    324;   Editoriat^Room8^1126- 

SUBSCRIPTION^  RATES  PAYABLE  IN  ADVANCE. 

lulled   State*  au.l  (anada,  PoMaite  Prepaid. 

IH.OO 

Dally,   per  yi>ar.   In  advance 

pally,  six  months,  in  advance 

Dally,   three  months,   in   advance 

Daily,    one   month,    in   advance 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postofflce  as  Second-Claas  Matter.  ^ 

'^~~'    DULUTfT  WEEKLY  HERALD      ^^ 

Per   year,   in    advance ^^ 

Six    months,    in    advance 'j, 

Tliree   months,   In   advance •  •  •  • »V' Vilr 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postofflce  as  Srcond-Class  MatteI^ 


2.00 

l.OO 

.35 


BY  CARRIER,  IN  THE  CITY,  TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

K V  KR  V    K V K.%  I  -N <i— UKLI VKUI::U. 


Single   copy,   dally. 

One    month 

Three    months 

Six    months 

One  year 


I  .02 

1.30 
2.G0 
6.00 


TO  SUBSCRIBERS: 

It  Is  important  when  .I'^uIuk  the  addr^-.^s  of  your  paper 
changed,  to  give  both  the  old  anu  Jiew  addresses^ 


LET  US  BE  A  LITTLE  ASHAMED. 


John  Ruskin,  master  of  remorseless  prose,  said  some 
very  hard  thitig^  of  us  in  Ids  day.  some  of  them  ju>t 
as  true  of  us  now  as  they  were  the  day  he  said  them, 

we  greatly  fear. 

For  instance,  here  is  our  indifference  and  even  hos- 
tility to  the  spending  of  enougli  money  to  preserve  the 
priceless  treasures  of  the  state  historical  society  and  to 
provide  a  place  for  them  where  they  may  be  a  blessing 
to  us  and  our  son's  sons  after  us.  forever.  We  call  our- 
selves an  educated,  cultured  people  and  we  point  with 
pride  to  the  thousands  we  spend  upon  our  great  um- 
versitv  and  to  .>ur  school  system,  justly  esteemed  one 
of  the  finest  in  the  Union,  yet  for  all  the.->e  John  Ruskin 
might  justly  rise  from  his  grave  and  tell  us  again  that 
we  have  despised  literature  and  scieiice.  He  proved 
it  in  his  day,  with  figures,  something  after  thi-  wise: 
A  rare  collection  of  fossils,  invaluable  in  its  historical 
significance,  was  oflFercd  the  British  Museum  for  700 
pounds  although,  at  a  private  sale,  it  would  easily  have 
br. night  from  l.(X10  to  1.200  pounds.  The  acceptance 
of  the  offer  dragged  until  the  collection  was  about  to  be 
lost  forever  to  the  nation,  when  a  private  citizen  inter- 
vened, paid  the  price,  and  offered  the  collection  to  the 
nation  which  hnally  agreed  to  pay  him  400  pounds  in 
hand  and  the  balance  of  300  pounds  at  some  future  time. 
Now  the  country  at  this  time  was  spending  upon  its 
public  improvements  annually  the  sum  of  50,000.(X)0 
pounds  to  which  7lX)  pounds,  the  cost  of  this  collection, 
is  as  2.1T00  pounds  is  to  7  pence.  Suppose,  now.  a  private 
gentleman  of  a  fortune  so  large  that  its  exact  amount 
is  unknown,  a  gentleman  who  spends  upon  his  park 
each  year  2,000  pounds.  This  gentleman  prides  himself 
upo4i  his  culture  and  his  love  for  learning.  To  him 
comes  his  servant  with  a  rare  and  precious  book  which 
he  tells  his  master  may  be  had  for  7  pence.  His  master 
puts  the  servant  off  from  time  to  time  until,  when  the 
book-is  about  to  be  lost,  the  servant  buys  it  himself  and 
fetches  it  to  his  master  who  impatiently  gives  him 
4  pence  and  promises  to  bestow  the  other  3  pence  upon 
him  at  some  future  time!  What  shall  we  say  of  the 
culture  of  the  rich  gentleman  who  spends  2.000  pounds 
annually  upon  his  park  and  frets  at  an  expense  of  7  pence 
for  a  book  of  invaluable  knowledge?  Does  he  despise 
learning  or  no? 

Our  representatives  in  legislature  assembled  may 
reply  that  they  have  not  despised  learning.  Have  they 
not.  indeed,  appropriated  their  thousands  for  rural 
schools,  their  tens  of  thousands  for  high  schools  and 
their  hundreds  of  thousands  for  the  university?  They 
have;  but  not  without  some  suspicion  of  self  interest. 
Even  the  most  careless  observer  must  have  noticed  that 
no  appropriations  are  so  easy  to  be  got  as  those  which 
distribute  some  part  of  the  appropriation  to  every  part 
of  the  state.  A  suitable  building  for  the  state  historical 
society,  calls  for  an  appropriation,  however,  which  ap- 
peals solely  to  the  pure  love  of  knowledge,  and  we  are 
as  slow  and  sulky  about  providing  the  needed  pence  to 
pay  for  it  as  was  John  Ruskin's  English  gentleman. 

Let  us  not  indulge  ourselves  in  the  customary  excuses 
in  this  matter,  but  be  a  little  ashamed  of  our  vaunted 
regard  for  the  better  things  of  life— ashamed  enough  to 
build  that  building  right  away! 


tax  as  it  is.  The  report  may,  of  course,  not  be  correct, 
but  the  outlines  of  the  new  tariff"  measure  have  been  so 
frequently  reported  and  there  is  such  substantial  agree- 
ment in  all  the  reports,  that  the're  is  grave  reason  to 
apprehend  that  the  report  as  to  retaining  the  duty  on 
sugar   is   true. 

The  Republican  party  will  not  be  fulfilling  its  prom- 
i.^es  to  the  people  if  it  allows  this  80  per  cent  tax  on 
sugar  to  stand.  The  people  can  no  longer  tolerate  being 
tiuis  robbed  for  the  benefit  of  the  barons  of  the  sugar 
trust.  The  tribute  which  the  country  has  been  each  year 
compelled  to  pay  to  the  sugar  trust  because  of  this 
scandalous  tax  is  about  $140,000,000  per  year,  a  little 
more  than  that,  in  fact.  And  who  pays  it?  Everybody 
pays  it.  The  rich  and  the  poor  alike  pay  it,  but  upon 
the  poor  its  burden  falls  the  most  heavily,  for  sugar  is 
a  necessity.  Men  and  women  who  must  deny  them- 
selves everything  but  the  meager  necessities  of  life 
must  have  sugar  and  of  every  dollar  they  pay  for  sugar 
from  40  to  45  cents  goes  into  the  pocket  of  the  million- 
aires of  the  sugar  trust!  The  Herald  has  no  desire  to 
emphasize  class  distinctions  or  to  inflame  class  prejudice, 
but  it  does  desire  to  call  serious  attention  to  the  fact 
that  the  failure  of  congress  at  this  time  to  reduce  the 
iniquitous  tax  on  sugar  will  do  much  to  emphasize  class 
distinctions  and  inflame  class  hatred.  The  tax  on  sugar 
is  so  distinctively  and  so  boldly  a  wringing  of  pennies 
from  the  pockets  of  the  poor,  a  collecting  of  them  into 
dollars  and  a  presenting  of  the  dollars  to  the  rich  that 
this  matter  can  no  longer  escape  plain   speaking. 

The  sugar  trust  has  brought  to  the  support  of  its  plea 
for  charity  from  the  poor  to  the  extent  of  $140,(X)0,000 
annually,  a  cloud  of  cunning  arguments  and  specious 
reasoning,  but  no  amount  of  suave  speaking  should 
obscure  in  the  minds  of  the  representatives  of  the  people 
the.se  two  facts:  the  tax  on  sugar  is  a  tax  on  a  necessity 
and  independent  sugar  producers  unanimously  declare 
that  the  industry  can  thrive  without  a  cent  of  protection. 

The  people  are  dependent  upon  their  representatives 
in  this  matter  and  they  realize  that  their  representa- 
tives are  perplexed  by  the  conflicting  claims  of  revisionist 
and  anti-revisionist  and  by  the  most  difficidt  problem  of 
justly  revising  the  tariff  and  yet  providing  additional 
funds  for  increased  expenses,  but  they  are  in  no  temper 
to  be  trifled  with  in  so  plain  a  matter  as  this  of  the  trust- 
fattening  sugar  tax. 


HOTEL  GOSSIP. 


Vallo.     St.     Paul;       Charles     E.     Horner. 
New    York. 


HERE'S  A  HINT,  YOUNG  FOLKS. 

Once  \\\>o\\  a  lime  some  one  wrote  to  Theodore 
Roosevelt  and  asked  him  what  he  thought  about  oratory, 
and  this  is  what  he  said:  "On  the  particular  subject  of 
oratory  I  have  not  a  word  to  say.  I  have  never  been  an 
orator  and  never  studied  oratory.  When  I  have  spoken, 
my  aim  has  been  simply  to  say  nothing  in  which  I  did 
not  believe,  to  say  what  I  did  say  as  strongly,  as  accur- 
ately, ac  concisely  as  possible,  and  then  sit  down." 

Mr.  Roosevelt's  rule  is  heartily  commended  to  those 
young  people  of  Duluth  who  expect  to  submit  Ben  Hur 
essays  to  The  Herald.  It  would  be  impossible  to  have 
a  better  rule  to  go  by.  When  you  have  the  story  of 
Ben  Hur  in  mind,  if  it  means  anything  to  you,  which  it 
certainly  will  if  you  soberly  and  earnestly  think  about 
it,  write  down  what  it  means  to  you  "as  strongly,  as 
accurately,  as  concisely  as  possible,"  and  then  stop. 

Another  word:  beware  of  the  awful  adjective.  If 
the  adjective  is  not  full  of  awe  to  you,  it  ought  to  be. 
Good  thoughts  burdened  with  adjectives,  are  like  a 
!  blooded  race  horse  weighted  down  with  unnecessary 
harness  heavily  trimmed  with  shiny  brass  mountings, 
or  like. a  woman's  hat  of  fine  lines  and  elegant  shape 
but  dreadfully  bedecked  with  flaring  flowers  of  every 
hue.  '"For  the  work  of  the  world  at  large,"  says  Alfred 
Henry  Lewis,  "it  (the  adjective)  has  ever  been  a  clog. 
Adjectives  are  the  parents  of  error,  of  misinformation. 
Our  day  would  have  been  enhanced,  and  the  race  set 
forward  by  centuries  if  in  the  beginning  adjectives  had 
been  made  a  capital  offense."  Beware  the  adjective; 
it  has  betrayed  many,  it  may  be  false  to  you. 

It's  a  grand  story,  the  story  of  Ben  Hur.  If  you  can 
dig  out  just  one  of  its  great  truths  and  set  it  down  in 
clear,  simple,  bullet-like  English  you  will  have  done 
something  worth  while— and  will  get  to  see  the  play 
into  the  bargain. 


The  ditch  is  where  Landis  landed  us. 


How   much   grist  will   an   insurgent   Miller   grind? 

Mr.  Archbold  is  glad  but  he  will  not  write  any  letters 
about  it. 


GREAT  MEN  WHO  HAVE  NOT  MET  US. 

John  Archbold— The  most  interesting  letter  writer  in 

the  world. 

Thomas  C  Piatt — A  famous  contributor  to  magazines 
in  the  early  days  of  the  twentieth  century. 

William  Jennings  Bryan— The  Grand  Old  Man  of  the 

Also-Rans. 

John  D.  Rockefeller — Emeritus  professor  of  finance 
of  the  Univeisity  of  Chicago.  A  man  of  raw  learning,  who 
has  forgotten  more  about  Standard  Oil  than  the  rest  of 
the  world  ever  knew.  Late  the  largest  employer  of  pro- 
cess servers  in  the  United  States. 

Theodore  Roosevelt — A  mighty  man  of  teeth,  in 
whose  mouth  a  thousand  words  are  but  as  a  syllable. 
Takes  his  morning,  noon  and  night  with  a  big  stick  in  it. 
The  Frazzler.     March  23  for  him. 

John  A.  Johnson— Minister  plenipotentiary  to  the 
people  of  Minnesota  and  bogey-man  extraordinary  to  the 
Republican  party  thereof. 

W.  H.  Taft— Great  at  playing  possum  and  golf.  Uses 
the  cost  line  of  the  United  States  for  a  waist  band.  The 
Panama  will  be  his  last  ditch. 

Joseph  G.  Cannon— Doesn't  make  much  noise  for  so 
big  a  gun  but  just  watch  his  smoke! 

Kenesaw  Mountain  Landis— The  man  who  looked 
through  the  wrong  end  of  the  telescope. 


The  umpire  will  now  step  up  and  take  what's  com 
ing  to  him. 


Nothing  in  all  this  world  is  impossible  when  William 
der  Kaiser  can  keep  so  still. 


The  deficit  is  a  big  stick  which  the  protective  tariff 
fellows  know  how  to  swing. 


A  tax  of  a  dollar  per  on  new  breakfast  foods  would 
wipe  out  the  deficit  in  a  jiffy. 


The  initiative  and  the  referendum  is  beaten  in  Lin- 
coln, Neb.     This  is  surely  lose  majeste. 


One  straw  hat  does  not  make  a  spring,  but  one  bath 
ing  suit  has  been  known  to  make  a  fall. 


Working    by    ragtime! 

At  the  round- lable  meeting  of  the 
Hotel  McKay  club  last  evening  I.ieut. 
Artliur  Watts  told  thi|t  not  only  had 
music  charms  to  soothe  the  savage 
hrea.st,  but  that  it  also  had  the  power 
lo  stimulate  the  muscles  of  the  i»»iglity 
these;  that  under  the  tntiuence  of  its 
lilting  strains  men  would  labor  with 
much  vigor  and  qulckoe^s. 

"When  American  warships  coal  in 
foreign  ports,  when  there  happens  to 
lie  two  or  three,  or  Sometimes  more 
Hhips  in  one  of  the  port!*  of  the  Orient, 
the  officers  get  up  a  competition  among 
the  crews  of  the  ships,  to  see  which 
ship  can  be  filled  the  quickest.  There 
is  great  rivalry  to  see  which  slilp  will 
win  the  race,  and  iiere  it  is  that  the 
hands  of  the  dittereni  ships  are  pressed 
into   service. 

•If  all  ot  the  ships  have  bands,  so 
much  the  better,  for  the  race  will  be 
that  much  faster.  Tlie  full  band 
gathers  upon  the  deck  of  the  ship  and 
l.iays  lively  marches,  liy  the  rliythm 
of  this  music  the  men  who  are  lilling 
the  ship  with  fuel  work,  the  crew  and 
t:ie  band  of  each  ship  trying  their  ut- 
mo.st  to  outdo  the  band  and  the  crew 
of    the   other   ships. 

"TJie  same  idea  is  worked  out  by  the 
American  negro  on  the  wharves  oi  the 
Mississippi.  Vou  see  them  working 
down  on  the  river  levees,  and  you  will 
invariably  llnd  they  are  working  to  che 
tune  of  some  negro  melody.  They 
strike  up  some  old  .Southern  air  and 
work  by  its  rhythm  ail  day.  They  keep 
time  to  its  muscle,  so  that  the  men  In 
charge  of  the  work  generally  see  that 
the  tune  chosen  by  the  black  workers 
Is  a  lively  one.  Music  is  one  of  the 
greatest  stimulators  for  the  worker; 
vou  will  ttnd  when  any  great  body  ol 
inen  gather  together  co  labor  in  unison, 
that  thev  invariably,  unless  restric- 
tions forbid,  find  that  they  are  singing 
ur  droning  some  air." 

*       *       • 

"Are   you    a    Mason?" 

The  two  Mr.  Masons  met  at  the  St. 
Louis  hotel  .Saturday  evening.  It  was 
their  first  meeting  since  tlieir  last 
meeting,  which  was  their  first  meeting. 
One  of  the  Mr.  Masons  is  from  the 
Copper  count rv.  Houghton;  the  other 
Mr.   Mason   is   from   the   range. 

Well,  the  tir.st  time  they  met,  it 
was  under  difficulties.  They  are  both 
stopping  at  the  same  hotel.  They  both 
came  in  late,  one  later  by  about  half 
an"  hour  than  the  otlier.  The  night 
clerk  gave  the  first  Mr.  Ma.son  the 
other  Mr.  Masons  room.  Then  he 
wanted  to  give  the  second  Mr.  Mason 
Hie  first  Mr.  Mason's  room,  but  tlie 
second  Mr.  Mason  demanded  his  own 
room. 

Anvwav,  the  two  Ma.sons  met  In  the 
second  Mr.  Mason's  room.  The  second 
Mr.  Mason  protested  against  this  in- 
vasion, but  tlie  first  Air.  Mason  re- 
pelled him  with  cold  replies.  Tliere,  In 
the  shimmering,  early  dawn,  they  sat 
and  argue<i  as  lo  whicii  was  a  Mason. 

"My  name  is  Mason."  said  the  first 
Mr.    Mason. 

'•So  is  mine,"  replied  the  second  Mr. 
Mason. 

And  so  they  argued  back  and  forth. 
Then  finally  the  night  clerk  came  up 
and  satisfactorily  explained  the  mis- 
take, rilnce  then,  or  since  the  second 
nueting  of  the  two  Masons,  whicli  was 
last  Saturday  nlgiit.  the  two  aiasons 
iiave  been  fast  friends. 
*      *      • 

Capt.  T.  R.  Kyle,  well  known  to  many 
people  at  the  Head  of  the  Lakes,  paid 
a  graceful  compliment  to  the  climate 
of  Duluth.  at  the  Lenox  hotel,  last 
i.jght. 

The  captain  has  been  confined  at  St. 
Marv'.-j  hospital,  JHnneapolis.  with  a 
severe  attack  of  inllammatory  rhuma- 
tism.  Finallv,  as  he  lay  upon  his  bed 
of  pal.i.  he  thought  of  the  dry  and 
balmv  climate  of  I'uluth.  He  made  up 
his  liilnd;  he  would  come  to  Duluth. 
He  did.  and  he  has  felt  better. 

"1  would  sooner  be  in  Duluth  with 
inllamniatorv  rheuniatisni.  than  to  live 
in  Minneapolis  witli  the  most  perfect 
health."  said  the  captain.  And  to  prove 
the  truth  of  his  assertion,  the  captain 
is  wifii  us  again.  He  intends  to  stay 
at  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  until  his 
iheumatlsm  goes.  Few  people  know  it. 
hut  Duluth  is  one  of  the  best  places  in 
the  country  for  those  afflicted  with 
iheuinatism. 

*      •      • 

Martin  Hughes  of  Hibbing.  and  his 
fellow  townsman.  John  Kleff man.  have, 
sine?  the  report  of  the  purchase  by 
those  two  gentlemen  of  a  horse,  which, 
through  the  grace  of  smiling  fortune, 
did  not  cost  the  two  gentlemen  much, 
not  been  able  to  make  much  progress 
in  taniing  the  vicious  disposition  of 
that    .stubborn   beast. 

It  is  said  that  Mr.  Kleffman  often 
urges  Iklr.  Hughes  to  attempt  to  get 
the  beast  into  the  harness  and  drive 
him  out  for  the  exercise  he  badly  needs. 
Mr.  Hughes  is  equally  Insistent  in  the 
contention  that  Mr.  KlelTman.  knowing 
more  about  horses  than  he  does,  should 
be   the   one   to   escort   the   nag. 

The  nag  has  done  nothing  but  stand 
in  his  stall  and  bite  at  people  whom 
tlie  two  proud  possessors  of  the  beast 
happened  to  take  to  the  barn  to  view 
the  steed.  Tlie  horse  acted  so  meanly 
about  the  enthu.slasm  of  his  two  own- 
eis.  that  he  discouraged  them  from 
sii.jwlng  hini  off.  Now  he  stands  in  his 
lonely  stall,  with  long  hair  and  wild 
tves.'llke  AJax  defying  the  lightning, 
at  v.-ar  with   all   the   world. 

Meantime  Messrs.  Kleffman  and 
Hugh»^s  are  upon  the  lookout  for  some 
horse   that   they   can    really    use. 

•  *      * 

The  McKay  hotel  Is  undergoing  a 
proc*»ss  of  rejuvlnatlon  that  will  result 
In  the  changing  of  tlie  Interior  appear- 
ance of  the  downstairs  part  of  the 
hotel.  All  of  the  old  ceiling  and  fix- 
tures are  being  taken  out,  the  old  ceil- 
ing being  replaced  with  steel  ceiling, 
and  the  flxture.s  by  new  ones.  The 
dining  room  la  being  done  over,  as  well 
as  the  lobby.  Over  Ifi.OOO  Is  being 
expended  in  the  refitting  of  the  ceiling 
of  the  lobby  and  the  dining  room.  The 
improvements  will  make  it  one  of  the 
most  handsome  lobbies  In  the  city. 

•  •      • 

Senator  P.  R.  Vail  of  Virginia  was  at" 
the  St.  Louis  last  night,  on  his  way  to 
the   legislature  at  St.   Paul. 

•  *      • 

At  the  Lenox:  C.  D.  Brown,  Minne- 
apolis; H.  E.  Nells,  Rochester:  J.  E. 
Stanlev.  Rochester;  J.  F.  Colllsn  and 
wife  Raudette:  H.  A.  Hammond,  Hay- 
ward:  W.  C.  Stollswood.  Deer  Lodge, 
Mont.;  Arthur  H.  Hayes.  Minneapolis; 
M.  H  Rarrett.  Chicago;  John  Stelnman. 
Virginia:  Max  Stepetich,  l^veleth;  Peter 
Stepetlch,  Eveleth;  Joseph  Ropshon. 
Chlsholm;  S.  C.  Close,  Minneapolis; 
J.    Smith,    Taconltc;    D.    J.    Mellv 


At  the  McKay:  E.  R.  Jordon,  New- 
York;  M.  A.  Penn  and  wife.  Minneapo- 
lis: John  ^V.  Hicknev  and  wife.  Hib- 
bing; E.  A.  Wirwick.  Mcintosh:  P.  E. 
Orele,  Grand  Itapids:  A.  E.  Anderson. 
Hrand  Rapids:  H.  H.  Hunter  and  wife. 
Minneapolis:  W.  A.  Hall  and  wife.  Vir- 
ginia; .1.  O.  O'Meara,  Marquette:  Nellie 
Faber,  Minneapolis;  .lames  Barton  and 
wife.  Chicago:  A.  F.  McDermott.  Min- 
neapolis; A.  It.  Hoover  Minneapolis;  S. 
C.  .Tohnson.  Crookston:  A.  F.  Nelson. 
Itockford;  Cnarles  A.  Rose.  Brainerd; 
Mrs.  T.  S.  Siattery.  Hibbing;  Mrs.  M. 
Danaby,  Hlbhing. 

THE  WEATHER. 

Spring  seems  to 
be  slowly  sliding 
out  of  tile  lap  ol 
old  Father  Winter, 
and  day  by  day  the 
weather  is  growing 
milder,  and  the 
cold  spells  of  short- 
er duration.  The 
weallier  man  looks 
for  snow  flurriea 
tonight,  but  milder 
weather.  The  sun 
Is  trying  hard  to 
break  through  the  clouds  today,  but 
is  finding  It  rather  difficult  work. 
A   year  ago  today  it   was   bright  and 

fair.  ,  i    ,.  T< 

The  sun  rose  this  morning  at  6:21 
and  will  set  this  afternoon  at  6:13. 
making  eleven  hours  and  fifty-two 
minutes   of   sunlight. 

R.  E.  Clark,  acting  forecaster,  makes 
the  following  comment  on  weather 
conditions: 

"Seasonable  weather  now  obtains 
over  the  greater  part  of  the  country. 
During  the  past  twenty-four  hours 
light  rain  or  snow  has  fallen  over  the 
Gulf  coast  and  the  Southeastern  states, 
tlie  Lake  region,  the  upper  Ohio  and 
Missouri  valleys  and  in  Canada  due  to 
Hie  movement  of  the  two  areas  of  low 
pressure  now  disappearing  over  the 
North  and  South  Atlantic  coast  states. 
Another  disturbance  Is  approaching 
over  Southern  California.  A  large  area 
of  high  pressure,  with  centers  over 
Saskatchewan  and  Missouri,  covers  the 
entire  region  from  the  Rocky  Moun- 
tain eastward  to  the  Ohio  valley.  Tem- 
j)eratures  have  fallen  somewhat  since 
Sunday  morning  over  British  Colum- 
bia. A'lberta  and  the  Lake  region  and 
have  risen  over  Saskatchewan.  Mani- 
toba and  the  Nortliwestern  border 
states." 

Following 
temperatures 

.\l)llen»     

.Vslii-ville   

.Mlaiita    

I'.attlifnrd     

Ili'mnnk     

ItOSt.lll    

Ituff.ilo    

(' liro    

Calgary   

Cliiiiieston    

Clilnigo     

CiticliiiiaU  ■ 

Cimcdnlla    

l>tt\t'tii>c>rt   

Hiiivcr 

l>ctr>U     

l>rvUs  I.ake   

1»i)iIKi'     

Dlllutli    

Kdnu  niton   

Kl   I'liso    

Ksc:in.%l)a     

Calresloii     

Craiul    llHven    ... 

Cirwii   Hay   

Havre    

Helena   

Hotixliton      

lliir..ii     

Jarlt^oiivlllc    

Kaniloops    

Kansas    City     . . . 

Kmixvllle     

I,a    I'liwse    

l.aiHlir     

I.illle   ISiK'k    

l.os   Anselea   

.Maniuelle     


^t  GRAPES,  from  thdr  most  health- 
ful properties,  give  ROYAL  ite 
active  and  principal  injfrecbent 


J^aJdnff  Powder 

Atsolateljr  Pure 

It  IS  comomy  to  use  Royal  Baking  Powder. 
It  saves  labcr,  health  and  money. 

Where  the  best  food  is  required  no  other 
baking  powder  or  leavening  agent  can  take  the 
place  or  do  the  work  of  Royal  Baking  Powder. 


n      TWENTY  YEARS  AGO 

I  Taken  From  the  Columns  of  The  Herald  of  This  Date,  1889. 


were    last    night's    lowest 


32  i  Mt. Heine   Hat    

2G    Miuiplils      

30  ]  Miles   niy    

2  ,  .Mllwaiik'Pe     

12  ■  Mliiiieilosa    

.10  \  .MiHleiia      

....  20  '  Moiittjomery     

28  '  .MiHThe-iil     , 

12     Nut    Orleans     

48  I  Now    Vork    

20     Niirf<)lk     

28  ,  Nortlilleld     

24     Norih  Platte   

21  !  Oklahoma    

:{2    Omaha     

24  :  Pliiipiilx    

2  I  Pltrre     

26  '  PllUslairg     

10  i  Tort   Artliur   

12  I  Portland.    Or 

36  !  Prlnof    Albert 

12  !  CJir.\i>|M-lle      

42  '  It.-.phl   I'lly    

20  \  St.    Ijuiis    

10  I  St.   Paul    

24    San   .\iitonlo    

28     San    traiirUoo    .. 

lo    .>>aiilii    Ko    

20     .Saiilt    ."..e.    Miirle. 

."ill    .^lireieport     

.  ^. .  .28  ;  Sijokane     

22  I  Swill   Current   . . . 

30    Washingtun    

10  !  WiclUta    

20  i  Wllisl'in    

32    Wiimcmucca     . . . . 

.'".0  !  Winnipeg     

li;  '  AVllow  stune    


♦•♦Dr.  Barrett  of  Tower  arrived 
home  last  night  from  his  inauguration 
trip.  The  Tower  Journal  has  been 
well  conducted  in  liis  abS'Mice  by  Henry 
Nelson,   the  foreman. 


.12 

.:;i 

.22 

.24 

-10 

.24 

.;!4 

.16 

.40 

.34 

.36 

.16 

.211 

.28 

.20 

..50 

.22 

.30 

..   8 

.40 

.    G 

-14 

..24 

.24 

.14 

.  .:!8 

.  .  4(i 


.30 
.14 
.32 
.24 
.  6 
.30 
— G 
.20 


•♦•The  Duluth  &  Winnipeg  land 
grant  Tight  is  on  in  the  state  senate. 
Senator  Buckman  is  lea  ling  the  light 
for  the  hill,  while  Senator  Bowen  of 
Sleepy  Kve  is  iireparing;  himself  lor 
as  vigorous  an  onsalught  on  the  bill  as 
he  made  on  a  sliuilar  measure  two 
years    ago. 

»»<.(^  \y  Turner  general  Western 
manager  and  W.  \.  Boo'.h.  one  of  the 
proprietors  of  the  A.  IJooth  Packing 
company,  arrived  in  Du.uth  yesterday 
to  prepare  for  the  coining  seasons 
business.  The  Hiram  Dixon.  their 
largest  vessel  is  undergoing  extensive 
repairs  and  will  soon  be  eady  for  busi- 
ness,   as     will     the    Camj*. 


When  C.  E.  Parent  returns  from 
Kngland  the  deal  will  probably  be 
clo.^ed  wlien  there  will  be  distributed 
nearly  $1,000,000  in  cash  to  about  400 
Iniluth  people  one  or  two  getting 
f:i00.000    each. 


Department  of  .Xgrlculture.  Weather 
Bureau.  Duluth,  March  15. — Forecast 
for  twentv-four  hours  ending  at  7  p. 
m.  Tuesday:  Duluth.  Superior  and 
vicinity  including  the  Mesaba  and  Ver- 
milion Iron  ranges — Snow  flurries  to- 
night and  Tuesday:  warmer  tonight: 
liglit  to  moderate  variable  winds. 

It.    K.   cr...\RK. 
Acting  Forecaster. 


•••The  Scheffer  dressed  beef  bill, 
which  provides  that  all  cattle  con- 
sumed in  Minnesota  shall  be  subject  to 
hoof  inspection  in  this  stale,  in  other 
words  shall  be  killed  ir  Minnesota^  is 
opposed  by  Dulutli  butchers  and  im- 
porters of  meat,  and  they  have  sent  a 
protest    to    the    legislat  ire. 

•••The  ice  is  said  to  be  twenty-one 
Inches    thick    at    the    Soc. 


•••A    London    paper     containing    the 
articles    of    Incorporation    of    the    Iron 
^r  Land  company  of  Mini  esota,  the  suc- 
cessor   to    tlie    Consolidated    Vermilion       _ 
company      has     been       leceivcd       liere. '  packed   with   It 


•••John  iThompson,  brother-in-law 
of  Lawyer  Hopkins,  has  arrived  from 
Fargo  and  will  take  up  his  residence 
in    Duluth. 

•  ••A.  C.  Osborne  has  arrived  from 
Bessemer,  Midi.,  and  wil  soon  open  hla 
new  store  at  West   Duluth 

•••Judge  Carey  and  N.  A.  Gear- 
hart  have  formed  a  partnership  In 
the   real   estate   ami    law    business. 

•••The  wind  hU  v.  today  at  the  rate 
of  twenty-eight  miles  an  liour  from 
the  nortliwest,  accompanied  by  aloet. 
The  minimum  temperature  this  morn- 
ing  was   25   degs.  above  zero. 

•••Word  has  been  received  from  Two 
Harbors  that  Lake  county  has  voted 
license  bv  about   200  majority. 


•••The  snow  storm,  which  has  al- 
ready sent  down  nearly  six  indies,  has 
pleased  the  loggers  and  they  hope  It 
will    stay    for   a    week    or    two. 

•♦•'Vbout  fifty  Duluth  citizens  have 
gone  to  St  Paul  to  work  for  the  Du- 
luth   &    Winnipeg    land    grant    bill. 

•**Tlie  wind  has  blown  the  little 
li-e  In  the  lake  back  to  tlie  siiore  of 
Minnesota    Point,    and      the      canal      la 


MINNESOTA  OP[MONS. 


MEANT  TO  BE  FINNY. 


Rockefeller  can  now  pay  up  the  coal  man  and  have 
enough  left  for  the  ice  man  next  summer. 


The    rumor    that    Joseph    G.    Cannon    would    be    dis- 
charged on   Monday  seems  a  little  premature. 


THE  SIN  OF  THE  SUGAR  TAX. 

It  is  reported  that  the  ways  and  means  committee  has 
agreed  to  leave  the  duty  on  sugar  in  the  new  tariff  bill 
a.s  it  now  exists  in  the  Dingley  law— about  80  per  cent 

ad  valorem. 

The  sugar  tax  is  one  of  the  most  iniquitous  of  the 
whole  list.  It  is  purely  and  solely  a  tax  for  the  benefit 
of  the  sugar  trust.  Independent  producers  of  sugar  in 
this  country  have  declared  in  the  most  positive  language, 
again  and  again,  that  the  sugar  industry  in  America 
no  longer  needs  the  protection  of  any  duty  whatever. 
The  hearings  before  the  ways  and  means  committee 
during  its  recent  sessions  have  demonstrated  by  an  over- 
whelming weight  of  evidence  that  the  duty  on  sugar 
is  not  protecting  the  sugar  industry  but  that  it  is  simply 
putting  the  entire  amount  of  the  tax  as  an  additional 
pr(,fit_additional,  mnid  you— into  the  bulging  pockets 
of  the  sugar  trust.  In  the  face  of  these  facts  it  is  re- 
ported that  the  committee  has  determined  to  leave  the 


If  Mr.  Taft's  cabinet  does  not  make  good,  Yale  and 
Harvard  will  have  to  suffer  the  consequences. 


The  theory  that  the  people  are  the  government  does 
not  find  much  favor  in  the  house  of  representatives. 


When  Hunter  Roosevelt  runs  short  of  expense  money 
in  Africa  Editor  Roosevelt  will  shoot  over  a  few  edi- 
torials at  a  dollar  per  word. 


Refusing  to  enact  needed  legislation  simply  because 
Governor  Johnson  has  recommended  it,  may  prove  to  be 
a  very  dangerous   method  of  discrediting  the   governor. 


If  you  don't  like  what  the  editor  says,  kill  him.  This 
may  not  convince  anybody  of  the  truth  of  your  reason- 
ing, but  it  is  a  fairly  effective  method  of  putting  an  end 
to  the  argument.  » 


It's  an  interesting  game  of  poker  that  Minneapolis, 
St.  Paul  and  Mr.  Armour  are  playing,  but  Minnesota 
ought  not  to  be  compelled  to  furnish  its  state  capitol 
as  a  place  to  play  the  game  in. 


Mrs.         J  .         CPllI  1  Lll>  A  C»v   »y*i  »  ».i_    ,  M  f.  *f  .  A«*.<r*  ■  .>   , 

Cedar  Rapids:  J.  K.  Roper.  St.  Paul;  W. 
Foster.  Chicago;  B.  B.  Bailey  and  wife. 
Hibbing;  A.  Falrehild.  Coleralne;  T. 
Dooley.  Chicago:  T.  R.  Kyle.  Cbleago; 
Harry  Cook,  St.  Paul;  R.  Thompson. 
La  Crosse;  Mrs.  Bryns.  Taconlte;  J.  J. 
Anderson.  Bemldjl;  J.  S.  Bailey.  Vir- 
ginia: J.  W.  Gilboy.  St.  Paul;  P.  D. 
Thuban.  Nashwauk;  EL  F.  Bergen.  Ash- 
land; Kdward  Kelly.  Oshkosh;  J.  Bllz- 
ard.  Chicago;  O.  Bahn.  Chicago;  Victor 
Anderson.  Ashland;  Alice  Klwell,  Hib- 
bing. 

•  •  • 
At  the  St.  Louis:  Matt  Hayes.  St. 
Paul;  M.  H.  Hersey,  St.  Paul;  John 
Dahl.  Grand  Forks;  P.  A.  Reymarch. 
Columbus;  L.  P.  Relmer.  Chicago;  \^^ 
P.  Chlnn.  McKlnley;  Charles  Brooks, 
Minneapolis:  George  Wesberg,  Eveleth; 
At.  L.  Stone.  St.  Paul:  John  Bartol,  Two 
Harbors:  Thomas  Sullivan.  St.  Paul;  M. 
W  Bannard,  Minneapolis:  George  Cun- 
ningham. Soo;  E.  H.  Hatch.  Eveleth;  H. 
Roberts.  Hibl)lng;  Charles  Soldqulst. 
Chlsholm:  P.  R..  Vail.  Virginia;  F.  W. 
Jordan.  Bemldjl;  W.  H.  Undsay,  Butte: 
P.  Burke.  St.  Paul:  W'.  R.  Wa.«ison,  Vir- 
ginia: R.  M.  Williams.  Chicago:  Henry 
Ottenberg.  New  York;  Phillip  Gardett. 
New  York;  M.  H.  Lenham,  St.  Paul,  F. 
W.    Heanery.    New    York. 

At  the  Spalding:  William  Swift, 
Minneapolis;  S.  A.  Anderson.  St.  Paul; 
Joseph  Miksak.  Chicago;  A.  D.  Harvey. 
Cliicago;  H.  G.  Ordemann.  Minneapolis; 
Mrs.  Hillary  Bell,  New  York;  Joseph 
Allerton.  New  York;  C.  T.  Courts,  Chi- 
cago: Miss  Blala.  New  York;  Leonard 
Ide.  New  York;  Arthur  Lawrence.  New 
York;  Miss  Margaret  Wycherly.  New 
York-  Charles  Dalton  and  wife.  New 
York;  Stanley  Sharpe,  New  York;  C. 
C  Overmlre.  Minneapolis;  J.  F.  Kelly, 
Minneapolis;  A.  W'.  Dean,  Bridgeport. 
Conn.;  A.  E.  Danforth.  Cleveland; 
Henry  Bloch.  Dayton:  A.  E.  La  Vigne, 
New  York:  James  Harden.  Chicago: 
W.    B.    Mitchell,    St.    Joseph;    P.    A.    La 


Chicago.  March  15. — Forcast  for 
twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  p.  m. 
Tuesday: 

I'pper  Michigan — Probably  snow  to- 
niglit   and   Tuesda.v. 

Wisconsin  —  Increasing  cloudiness 
witli  probably  snow  flurries  late  to- 
night   or   Tuesday;    warmer    tonlglit. 

Minnesota — Snow  flurries  tonigiit 
and  Tuesday;  warmer  In  east  portion 
tonight;  colder  in  west  portion  Tues- 
day. 

North  Dakota — Partly  cloudy  with 
colder  In  west  portion  and  snow  flur- 
ries In  east  portion:  Tuesday  fair. 

Pwinted   ParHgrapb.H. 

Chicago  News:  Many  a  barber  chair 
occupant  is  cut  and  dried. 

Money  talks,  but  it  frequently  goes 
without  saying. 

A  well  preserved  woman  isn't  neces- 
sarily a  canned  "peach." 

And  lots  of  young  men  act  sensibly 
until  they  fall  In  love. 

A  short  ansvs^er  may  turn  a  blissful 
honeymoon  into  matrimonial  strife. 

The  man  who  claims  to  be  able  to 
do  anything  he  wants  to  seldom 
wants  to. 

A  wise  man  never  asks  a  woman  her 
age;  he  simply  tells  her  she  doesn't 
look  It. 

The  less  a  man  talks  the  less  he  may 
be  suspected  of  belonging  to  an  An- 
anias club. 

If  people  could  live  on  food  for 
thought  the  baker  and  butcher  would 
have  to  retire  from  business. 

If  a  man  marries  for  money  he  may 
be  able  to  make  his  wife  believe  he 
didn't — for  a  week  or  ten  days. 

After  refusing  to  marry  a  man  a  wo- 
man fs  disappointed  If  he  doesn't  visit 
a  booze  emporium  and  try  to  drown  his 
disappointment. 

• 

Refleotionn    of   a    Hachelur. 
New    York    Press:      The      thing      tliat 
worries  a  man  about  being  rich  is  how 
lie   can   get   richer. 

The  redder  a  girl's  hair  is  the  safer 
It  Is  to  tell  her  that  It  is  silken  sun- 
shine. 

One  thing  that  helps  a  man  to  be  a 
good  husband  Is  not  caring  wliether  he 
enlovs  life   or  not. 

(Jiiarrelsome  people  can  got  Just  as 
mad  with  vou  for  agreeing  with  them 
as   for  differing  from  them. 

People  think  they  know  how  to  raise 
children  when  they  don't  even  know 
enough  to  raise  vegetable.s. 

•   

The  t'laliii  ChaMer. 
New  York  Globe:  Efforts  to  ham- 
string the  ambulance  chaser  and  put 
him  out  of  business  as  effectively  as 
no.ssible  are  made  from  time  to  time — 
altogether  too  sporadically.  It  is  true- 
but  we  do  not  hear  as  much  ot  the 
evil  wrought  bv  his  counteriiart.  the 
dalm  chaser,  as  we  should.  The  other 
dav  a  ptalniiff  who  had  lost  his  leg 
in  the  service  of  the  defendant  copora- 
tlon  brought  .suit,  and  was  met  with 
the  prompt  defense  that  within  a  day 
following  the  accident  he  had  signed 
away  hli  claim  for  $300.  An  agent  of 
the  corporation  had  got  hold  ot  him 
before  the  ambulance  chaser  could  and 
had  prevailed  upon  him  to  give  up  a 
right  to  prov>er  Indemnification  for  his 
loss In  consideration  of  a  mere  pit- 
tance. Ht"  was  Ignorant.  He  could 
hardlv  have  understood  certain  terms 
of  the  document  he  signed.  And  he 
was  doubtless  greatly  distraught  by 
his  terrible  misfortune.  Yet  it  was  ail 
but  impossible  for  him  to  prove  that 
he    had    been    imposed   upon. 


Moorheal  Citizen:  Andrew  Carnegie 
has  announced  a  contr  hution  for  the 
l)urpose  of  reforming  Pittsburg.  At 
last,  it  wouid  seem,  hi  has  found  a 
method   by   which   he  might  die  poor. 

New  Ulm  Review:  Wl  atever  division 
of  sentiment  there  may  be  tliroughout 
the  country  as  regards  Theodore 
Roosevelt,  there  ccriaii  ly  exi-^its  none 
as  to  his  sensible  and  womanly  wue. 
The  whole  nation  takes  its  liat  off  to 
the  retiring  mistress  uf  tlie  W  lute 
House. 

Rochester  Bulletin:  Taft's  appoint- 
ment of  J.  M.  Dickinson  of  Tennessee 
to  tlie  cabinet  position  of  secretary  ot 
^^•ar  is  being  criticised  by  the  narrow- 
minded.  Mr.  Dirkinscn  is  a  pro- 
nounced Democratic  leaJer.  but  an  able 
man  of  unimpeadiable  character,  and 
Taft's  Independence  ir  tlie  selection 
of  his  cabinet  is  a  mcst  encouraging 
sign. 

Norman  County  Herald:  We  believe 
in  giving  the  devil  hhi  due,  and  will 
«tate  that  Congressman  Steenerson  ot 
this  district  was  the  only  congress- 
man from  Minnesota  lO  vote  against 
the  subsidy  bill. 

Austin  Transcript:  I'voosevelt's  spe- 
cial messages  to  congress  will  be  good 
reading  for  a  generation.  They  contain 
the  wisest  discussion  o  public  policies 
and  needs  which  have  been  Issued  m 
seven  vears  pat.  If  congres  had 
heeded  "them  more  instead  ot  harking 
so  much  to  the  corporate  Interests,  tlie 
country  would  have  been  far  better 
oiT. 


Kansas  City  Journal:  "In  days  of 
old   were  knights  easily   so   bold?" 

"They  could  well  afford  to  be.  A 
man  in  s/ieet  iron  could  hug  a  girl 
without  getting  lacteraied  by  the  pins 
in     her     waist." 


Judge:  Mr.  i:uffly — I  called  because 
1    thought    you    were    out 

Miss  Pert — Well,  1  thought  I  was 
lui>.  The  maid  niu.-;l  have  thouglit  you 
Were  some   one  else. 


VVashlnglon  Post:  "Have  any  of  you 
farmers   been   uplifted  as   yet?" 

"Vep,"  answered  Mr.  Corntossel. 
"Dav  before  yesterday  Si  Smiling  was 
hit    from    behind    by    an    aulomobiie." 


Cleveland  Leader:  "What  are  the 
names  of  that  young  oouple  next 
door?" 

"SVe  won't  be  able  to  find  out  for 
several  weeks.  They've  just  been 
married  and  he  calls  her  Birdie,  and 
she     calls     him     Pettie.' 


Iron  Trade  Journal:  A  bill  prohibit- 
ing actresses  from  wearing  red.  white 
and  blue  tights  has  tae.>n  Introduced  in 
the  state  legislature.  1'alk  about  freak 
legislation!  Ten  chances  to  one.  the 
author  of  the  bill  Is  baldlieaded  and  a 
regular  front-row  putron  of  some 
near-decent  showhouse,  and  has  in- 
troduced tlie  bill  to  fool  the  folks  at 
home. 

Barnesvllle  Record-nevlew:  It  Is  to 
be  hoped  that  In  the  'push  and  pull 
for  all  manner  of  api)roprlailon.s  our 
legislators  will  not  lose  sight  of  the 
great  and  urgent  need  of  an  appro- 
priation for  a  suitable  biilldlng  in 
which  to  house  the  thousands  of  valu. 
able  volumes,  portraits,  bound  news- 
paper files,  curios  and  relics  in  the 
posse-ssion  of  the  State  Historical  so- 
ciety The  five  rooms  allotted  to  rhe 
socl-tv  m  the  new  caritol  are  already 
overcrowded,  and  ther  -  are  thousands 
,,f  dollars'  worth  of  Its  po.sse.ssions 
stored  in  the  old  caritol.  where  the 
danger  from  fire  Is  j:reat.  and  as  a 
vast  amount  of  this  property  cannot  be 
duplicated  at  any  price.  It  would 
seem  the  height  of  folly  to  permit 
present  conditions  to  continue  a  day 
longer    than    necessary. 

Mankato  Free  Press:  Maybe  some 
of  those  t'nlted  Stat.'s  senators  are 
mad  because  Uncle  Ike  Stephenson  has 
raised  ihe  price  of  seats  in  the  rich 
man's  club, 

Perham  Enterprise:  Why  wouldn't  It 
be  a  good  Idea  to  have  the  presidential 
Inauguration  ceremonies  held  In  Min- 
nesota, where  they  would  be  sure  of 
fine  weather? 


St  Louis  Times:  Reporter — Do  you 
think  this  long-distance  walking  bene- 
fits   you? 

Mr.  Economy — Sure!  I  save  5  cents 
every  trip. 

I..oulsville  Courier-Journal:  "Where 
is  El  Dorado?"  ,,,^ 

"In  tlie  back  of  magazines.  When  I 
read  of  the  money  to  be  made  in  Bel- 
gian hares  and  squabs.  I  grow  super- 
cilious   with    wealth." 


GOOD-B\'E. 


Taft    Yam. 

Leslie's  Weekly:  A  veteran  news- 
paper correspondent  at  Washington 
tells  the  following  story  of  President 
Taft:  On  the  occasion  of  Mr.  Taffs 
call  In  W^ashlngton  to  see  the  presi- 
dent over  Sunday  after  his  terrible 
speech-making  trii»  through  the  West 
and  South  In  1908.  with  a  more  terri- 
ble trip  yet  ahead  of  him.  suffering 
from  a  throat  that  threatened  to  make 
him  speechless  and  from  physical  ex- 
haustion bordering  almost  on  prostra- 
tion, a  friend  called  at  the  White 
House  to  se*»  him  on  an  Important  mat- 
ter "Mr.  Taft."  said  the  friend,  "wlil 
VQU  permit  me  to  say  you  look  mighty 
good  In  the  White  House?"  "Quit 
vour  fooling,"  was  the  quick  reply, 
"and  come  over  here  In  the  corner  and 
talk  to  a  poor,  broken-down  old  man 
who  ought  to  be  In  a  Turkish  bath. 
with  a  wet   towel   around   his   throat." 


How   oft   amid   the   busy  throng 

That    hurries    to   and    fro. 
An  old  acquaintance  c  imes  alonff. 

A   face  with  smiles  £  glow,  ^ 

A  kind  commutual  "pleased  to  meet, 

A  twinkle  of  the  eye 
Then  each  In  careless   tones  repeat 

The  fateful  word  "GJod-bye. 

Ah'  cruel  word  that   vounds   the  heart 

And  brings  the  blttfr   tears. 
That  bids  the  smile  of  hope  depart 

And  darkens  future  years. 
What    universal   sorro^.s   blend. 

What  anguish  they  Imply. 
As   friends   in    parting   frorn  a  friend 

E.xchange   a  sad     'Gtod-bye. 

In  anguish  deep  my  soul  rebels. 

Mv  heart  grows  faint  with  fear; 
Its   direful   utterance  so   foretells 

Of   severed    ties    so   dear. 
It  comes   the  fairest   d  -eam   to  mar. 

To   cloud   the   brightest   sky. 
Oh'   say   "Farewell"   or   ".\u   Revoir. 

But   never  say    "Gool-bye." 


Chicago  News:  .Milton — Yes.  Im 
willing  to  admit  that  women  have 
mucli    better    complexions    than    men. 

Etliel — Naturally. 

Milton — No.    artistically. 

National    Grange:        He— I    love    you 

of    cour.se — but    the    medium    said      Id 
niarrv    a    blon<lc 

She — Oh,    I'll   fix    that    up. 

Washington  Star:  "Did  you  ever 
feel    tliat   the   world  was   against   you? 

"Sure.  1  felt  It  this  morning  when  I 
slipped    on    the    sidewalk." 

Chicago  Tribune:  "I  presume  you 
have   a   family   tree,   Joe."   observed   hia 

"cure."  answered  Joe  Miller.  It  s  a 
chestnut."  ^,  ,    ,       , 

But  this  being  aparently  original, 
was  omitted  from  his  published  work*. 

. • 

The    Recall. 

Philadelphia  I>edger:  Never,  per- 
haps. In  the  history  of  America,  ex- 
cept during  the  critical  times  of  the 
founding  of  the  nation  or  during  the 
Civil  war,  has  there  been  so  wide- 
spread and  deep  an  interest  In  poli- 
tical, sociological  and  what  are  called 
governmental  questions.  In  recent 
vears  the  attention  of  the  people  has 
been  drawn  sharply  to  the  subject  of 
r.opular  flection  o*  serntcrs  and  popu- 
nr  nomlnafo-n  <f  ■\'>\  ■••rts  of  otfl- 
dals  bv  means  of  primaries.  The 
initiative  and  referendum  Is  a  device 
which  manv  people  think  so  highly  of 
that  when  It  ha.«i  been  adopted  Its  ad- 
vocates count  the  liattle  of  free  and 
good  government  already  won.  and 
now  the  "recall"  Is  to  cap  and  crown 
and  real  salvation  of  political  society, 
where  all  the  other  laws  exhibited 
some  defect  duo  to  th«  per-^lstence  of 
perverse     human     nature. 

«»nr    First. 

Utlca  (N.  Y.l  Times:  The  first  cargo 
of  oats  ever  landed  at  any  United 
States  port  from  a  foreign  country. 
arrived  In  New  York  on  Friday.  It 
came  from  Buenos  .\yres  on  the 
steamer  St.  Quentln.  and  consisted  of 
about  200.000  bushels  in  bulk.  The  im- 
portation was  made,  it  Is  claimed,  on 
acount  of  the  scarcity  and  lilgh  price 
of  the  staple  here.  Secretary  Wilson 
believes  the  I'nited  States  can  grow  all 
the  food  required  here  for  man  and 
beast,  and  he  will  not  take  kindly  to 
the  Import  of  oats  from  Brazil.  His 
soil  experts  will  be  requlreil  to  get  a 
hustle  on  in  the  Interest  of  a  greater 
oat    production. 


•PS- 


Nobody  of  Any   1  mportance. 

Chicago  Tribune:  N'obody.  perhaps, 
except  the  people,  is  really  concerned 
about   raising   the  Maine. 

•      

Frank   It.   9Iall    It. 
Minneapolis     Journal:       Send     a     nice 
little  package  of  structural  steel  to  the 
old   folks  at   home.     U's   cheap. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1SC3. 


D.   E.    H..    3-15-'09. 


f '    !  V»i" 


SHIRTS 

READY 

OR 
TO-ORDER 

In  tlie  "good  old  times" 
one  so-called  shirt  used  to 
cost  as  much  as  a  dozen  to- 
tlay. 

There  isn't  a  brakeman,  a 
broker  or  a  half  "broke"  man 
in  Duluth.  who  can't  afford 
to  wear  a  new  shirt  nowa- 
days whenever  he  feels  like 
putting  one  on. 

We  consider  our  Columbia 
jjil  and  Manhattan  $1.50 
Shirts  better  than  any  others 
sold  at  like  prices, 

BUT— 

if  for  real  or  fancied  reasons 
y<ni  prefer  shirts  made  to  or- 
der, come  in  and  let's  take 
your  measure.  We'd  like  to 
show  you  the  1.000  samples 
from     our    "shirts-to-order" 


ASSAULTED 
IN  HERROOM 

West  Duluth  Woman  Is 

Attached  by  Two 

Men. 


MYSTERY  IS 
UNSOLVED 

Nothing  Yet  Heard  From 

Norman  Patton  of 

West  Duluth. 


speci 


alist? 


Pa 


ss 


up 


the 


smooth  itinerant  canvasser. 
We'll  do  better  for  less 
mone}',  and  are  here  to 
"make  good." 


C/othifi*     C»_ 


.A>/»fM- 


llanan  Shoes  for  men  and 


women. 


Prisoners  Arc  Claimed  to 

Have  Entered  Room 

at  Midnight. 


Cliarged  with  crIminuUy  assaulting 
Mrs.  MiUa  Naraiicliich  early  yesterday 
morning  at  her  boarding  house  6520 
Kaleigh  street,  Toney  Smaltz,  age  28. 
and  Vasily  Luziach,  age  33,  are  being 
held    at    the      Central      police      station. 

The  assault  is  alleged  to  have  taken 
placo  at  about  1  o'clock  Sunday  morn- 
ing, and  the  two  men  were  arrested 
later  In  the  morning  by  Officer  Mike 
McDermott.  The  arrest  wa-s  made  at 
70  1  West  Superior  street,  which  is  a 
boarding  house  run  by  Luziach. 
Sinaltz   is   one   of   his    boarders. 

According  to  the  stwry  told  by  Mrs. 
Naranchich,  the  two  men  entered  her 
room  In  her  boarding  liouse.  where  she 
was  sleeping  alone,  and  said  that  tliey 
had  come  to  West  Dululli  to  look  for 
one  of  Luzladis  boarders,  wlio  had 
junvped  his  board.  Slie  ordered  them 
from  the  room.  Out  in  tlie  hallway 
tliey  iield  a  whispered  consultation  and 
returned  to  her  room,  wliere,  while 
Luziach  held  her.  with  ills  hand  over 
her  mouth.  Smaltz  assaulted  her.  But 
when  Lu^'lacli  attempted  to  assault  her, 
slie  claims  tliat  she  sprang  to  lier  feet, 
freed  herself,  and  drove  the  man  back 
with   a   chair. 

Mrs.  Naranchich  fears  the  wrath  of 
her  husband  wiien  he  returns  from  the 
woods  and  learn.s  what  lias  happened. 
She  says  tliat  Smaltz  attacked  her  once 
before  at  Stephenson,  Minn.,  but  that 
she    could    not    prove    tliut    Smaltz    was 

^^^Mrs  Naranchich  speaks  little  English 
and  Nlchlos  Pavkovlch  acts  as  her  in- 
terpreter. 


EXCEPTIONAL 
THE  HOME 


Keep  watch  on  our  ads.  this  week  for  bi^  vahies.  Today,  we  are  offering  some  exceptional  vakies  in 
house  clocks  and  useful  things  for  the  kitchen.  The  very  finest  and  best  quality— prices  always  the  very 
lowest.       Remember  this  is  the  largest  department  of  the  kind  in  the  city. 


The  men  were  arraigned  this  morning 
and  tlieir  liearlng  set  for  tomorrow 
afternoon. 


BRINGSBODY 


Father  Disappeared    In 

Similar  Manner  Many 

Years  Ago. 


It  is  now  almost  two  weeks  since  the 
last  was  iieard  from  Norman  Patton, 
the  linen  buyer  for  Panton  &  White, 
wlio  has  so  strangely  disappeared.  He 
was  last  seen  in  Pittsburg,  a  week  ago 
last  Thursday.  Since  tlien  absolutely 
nothing  has  been  heard  from  him. 

Tiie    young    man's    mother    and    wife. 

wliO  is  a  bride  of  but  little  over  two 
months,  are  stricken  witli  grief.  Neither 
can  account  for  his  unexplained  ab- 
sence. His  wife  says  tliat  tlie  last  let- 
ter she  received  from  lier  lost  liusbanU 
was  postmarked  New  Vork.  It  was  full 
of  affectionate  longing  to  be  home 
again  witli  her,  and  joy  that  his  busi- 
ness would  not  detain  him  mucli 
longer. 

Mr.  Fattons  disappearance  has 
brouglit  to  the  memories  of  many  of 
the  frends  of  tlie  afflicted  family  tlie 
fact  that  the  young  man's  fatlier,  wlien 
Norman  was  but  an  infant,  dropped  as 
mysteriously  from  the  lives  of  his 
family  as  lias  his  son  has  recently 
done. 

When  questioned  concerning  this  this 
morning.  Mr.s.  W.  Langslow.  the  miss- 
ing man's  niother.  admited  that  her 
husband  had  strangely  disappeared  and 
after  several  years  of  fruitless  waiting 
for  him.  he  was  given  up  as  dead, 
though  there  was  no  absolute  proof  for 
such  belief.  After  ten  years  he  again 
returned  home.  His  wife  secured  a  di- 
vorce,   later   marrying   Mr.    Langslow. 

Mrs.  Langslow  also  says  that  while 
a  boy  lier  former  husband  ran  away 
from  his  home  in  Canada  and  enlisted 
in  the  British  army,  and  was  not  heard 
from  for  two  years. 

"Those  traits  in  his  fatlier  can  have 
no  bearing  on  the  disappearance  of 
Norman."  stoutl.v  claimed  tlie  motlier 
and  wlfs.  "Something  must  have  hap- 
pened to  him.  1  cannot  believe  tliat  he 
could  liave  inherited  his  father's  trait 
of  leaving  home.  His  father  went  to 
Panama.  If  Norman  had  planned  to 
leave  us.  why  did  he  go  to  Pittsburg. 
Wliy  didn't  he  take  a  steamer  from 
New  Voilt  for  some  far  away  land?" 


American  Aiarm  Glocic 

One  that  will  keep  good  time.  Is 
well  made  and  well  flnlslied.  You 
generally    pay    9uc —  RQfi 

our  price U^W 

China  Bed  Room  Cloclcs 

Handsome  little  Clocks  for  tiie 
bed  room — clilna  cases,  in  various 
St  vies  and  designs.  Good  \vorks. 
tliat  keep  accurate  SuC 

Brass  Finished  Clocics 

A  liaiulsome  Ltut-s  Finished 
Clock,  mounted  with  metal  fig- 
ures. Something  new  and  ^Ca 
tasty,    at    only I  wv 


Beautiful 

Metallized 

Flower  Pins 

l)esig}i.'i  include  real  Roses, 
Street  Peas,  Wheat  Tops,  etc. 
Prices  from   $1.50  to  $2.76. 


ACROSS  SEA  FURNACE  IS 

I  BLOWN  OUT 


West  Duluth  Girl  Died  of 

Tuberculosis  in 

Finland. 


Father  Had  Body  Brought 

Back  for  Burial 

Here. 


Big 


hill    to  Mid- 
the     I'ine     Hill 


TOK'HED"  IN  SIPEUIOR. 

Duhith  Mail  (ioes  Astray  and  Loses 
His  Cash. 

A  man  who  lives  in   Duluth,  and  who 
Is     pretty 
town, 
police 


well  known  in  his  home 
complained  to  the  Superior 
yesterday  that  he  had  been 
robbed  of  $42  in  cash  and  a  $200  cer- 
tificate of  deposit  in  a  resort  on  lower 
C'limmlng  avenue,  Superior. 

Ti>e  man  says  he  stayed  all  night  In 
the  place,  and  that  when  he  awoke  In 
the  morning  all  his  money  and  the 
certirtcace  of  deposit  was  missing.  The 
police  were  unable  to  find  any  trace 
of  if.  Pavment  on  the  certittcate  of 
deposit,  drawn  on  the  American  Ex 
change  Bank 
stopi)ed. 


of      Duluth.    has    been 


Mrs.  Charle.s  Hill  of  Midway  arrived 
yesterday  in  Duluth  after  a  long  sad 
journey  acro.s-s  the  Atlantic  and  nearly 
lialf  way  across  the  United  States,  with 
the  body  of  her  Hi-year-old  daughter, 
who  died  of  tuberculosis  at  Helsingfors, 
Finland. 

The  mother  and  her  daughter  left 
Duluth  Nov.  o>)  last  for  the  old  coun- 
try, believing  tliat  the  climate  of  tin- 
land  might  help  the  child  regain  her 
health.  They  stopped  at  Helsiiigtors 
with  relatives.  But  the  climate  did  not 
prove  as  beneficial  as  it  was  hoped,  and 
the   child  died.  ,  ,         . 

The  father  In  this  country  would  not 
have  his  daughter  buried  in  the  dis- 
tant land,  so  cabled  his  wife  to  biMng 
tiie  body  home  for  burial.  Mr.s.  Hill 
arrived  yesterday  and  was  met  at  the 
train  by  her  husband.  The  casket  con- 
taining the  girl  was  placed  in  a  car- 
riage and  driven  over  the 
way  to  be  buried  in  tli 
cemetery. 

SWIPED  TRAMP'S  CLOTHES. 

Shivering  Wanderer  Chased  Boys  to 
Regain   His   Raiment. 

West  Duluth  people  residing  in  the 
neighborhood  of  Central  avenue  and 
Main  street  were  thrown  inio  a  state 
of  excitement  Saturday  afternoon, 
wlien  two  small  boys  came  running 
down  the  street  holly  pursued  by  a 
scantily  clad  man.  who  appeared  to 
have    lost     his    reason    as    well    as     his 

clothes.  ,    ,  w    41      ♦!.« 

Lieut.  Wilcox  rounded  up  both  the 
pursued  and  the  pursuer.  The  latter 
claimed  to  be  a  free  lance  of  the 
road,  and  his  appearance  bore  him  out 
in  his  statement.  He  said  lie  had  ar- 
rived in  West  Duluth  that  morning  on 
the  bumpers  of  a  Northern  Pacific 
freight  train.  While  in  West  Duluth 
he  had  bougiit  him.self  a  clean  under- 
shirt for  liid  annual  spring  change.  In 
order  to  avoid  the  gaze  of  the  public 
while  making  the  change,  he  sought 
the  protection  of  the  Central  avenue 
bridge  at  Main  street.  He  hung  his 
outer  garments  on  the  bridge  girders, 
and  receded  farther  into  the  shadow  to 
complete  the  job,  when  two  youngsters 
came  along,  grabbed  his  clothing  and 
set  off  at  a  run.  He  explained  that 
there  was  nothing  left  for  him  to  do 
but   to  give  chase. 

The  lieutenant  .'saw  that  the  boys  re- 
turned the  clothing,  and  made  the  man 
promise    that     he    would     clear    out    of 

I  town  as  soon  as  he  could. 


Plant  at  West  Du- 
luth Will  be  Re- 
paired. 

Operations  have  been  suspended  at 
the  blast  furnace  of  the  Zenith  Purnace 
company.  Saturday  the  furnace  was 
blown  out,  so  tliat  repairs  can  be  made 
on  the  lining.  This  will  not  in  any 
wav  affect  the  -other  departments  of 
the  plant,  and  it  is  said  that  no  men 
will  be  laid  oft  during  tlie  furnace's  in- 
activity. 

The  blowing  out  of  the  furnace  has 
been  anticipated  for  some  time.  There 
are  three  holes  burned  through  the 
firebrick  lining,  whicli  will  take  from 
six  weeks  to  two  months  to  repair. 
The   cost    will    be    over   $12,000. 


Clock  Like  Cut 

Marbelized  en- 
amelled  wood 
frames.  New 
Haven  clock  works 
— that  win  give 
the  best  of  satis- 
faction. Clock   like 

:;ti[r    $3.00 

Iron  Clock 
With  Gitt  or 

Bronze 
Trimmings 

\'erv  handsome 
in  design — keep 
I)erfect  time 
Decorated  with 
gill  or  bronze 
trim  m  I  n  g  s  ^ 
chuk  like  cut— 
for — 


S5.50 


Large  50  Pound 
Flour  Can 

88c 

These  cans  have 
tight-fitting  covers — 
good  strong  handles 
and  hold  full  fifty 
pounds.  They  are  of 
heavy  weight  tin. 
nicely  .lapanned  —  a 
convenient  receptacle 
for  flour  or  sugar. 


Coffee  is  best 
when  gr  o  u  n  d 
fresh.  This  Id 
the  best  coffee 
grinder  on  tlie 
market  .  has 
glass  coffee  can 
on  top;  coffee 
measuring  cup 
underneath — 

Our  Price 

88c 

4  ft.  Step  Ladder 
88c 

Strongly  braced 
— well  made,  of 
good  seasoned 
wood.  A  most 
convenient 
household  n  e  - 
cesslty. 
5-foot  Ladder— 

$1.10 

6-foot  Ladder— 

SI.28 

Wilson 

Bread 

Toaster 

18c 

This  Toaster  Is  the  best  and 
most  economic  to  use.  It  toasts 
four  slices  at  once— also  boils 
coffee  or  steeps  tea  at  the 
same  time. 


Folding  Clothes 
Rack 

A  handy  Folding 
Rack  for  drying 
clothes  —  especially 
during  t  h  'S  cold 
weather,  when  some 
things  need  to  be 
dried  inside,  52  feet 
drying  space,  folds 
up   tiat —  our  price— 


98c 


American  Waffle  Irons — the  beat 
made — there  are  two  styles,  one  for 
gas  ranges  and  one  for  coal  ranges — 

Coal    rnnsr    kind 69e 

Hum    range    kind H8c 

Curtain  Stretchers 

You   save   money,   many    times  the 

cost     of    a    curtain    stretclier    in    the 

saving       on       your       curtains — these 

stretchers    occupy   but    little   spaf^e — 

are   strongly   made  and  big         110* 
value     at QOv 

Adjustable  Pin  Stretcher 

i»d      pinf 
rust.      ; 

SI.48 


Has      lieavy      nickel      plated      pins, 
easily   adjustable— will   m>t    rust.      A 
good  heavy  frame  of  well 
seasoned  wood 


The 
McCiougall 

KHchen 
Cabinet 


Egg  Beater  and 
Measure 

Two  useful  arti- 
cles combined  in 
one  —  a  big  spe- 
cial   value   at — 


25c 


Whips  cream  to 
perfection;  has  a 
cover  that  pre- 
vents liquids  from 
spattering.  Can  be 
used  as  a  grad- 
uated measure  — 
wliips  eggs  or 
cream  in  one  min- 
ute. 


Easy     terms     of     credit 
gladly   arranged   for. 


more  than  pays 
for  iti.elf  in  the 
aniouit  of  work 
and  sl'.'ps  it  saves. 
It  is  the  inost  ' 
convenient,  best 
arranged  kitchen 
cabinet  ever  de- 
vised. The  new 
McDongall  cabi- 
nets are  far  su- 
perijr  to  the 
poorlj    made  inii- 

tatiniu  because  a  McDongall  will  not  split,  warp  or 
crack.  It  is  the  only  sanitary  kitchen  cabinet  made, 
no  place  for  dirt  or  grease  to  lodge. 

Prices  From  $17.75  Up 


We  furnish  your  home 
better  and  for  Icas  money 
than  others. 


M[  M  l^f  r4 


tuberculosis.        The 


MICKISII  WINS  TROPHY. 


the 
will 
home    in 


La.st 


fianie   Played   iu    Henriiksen 
Event  at  Ciirlins  Club. 

The  rink  skipped  by  Mickish  won  the 
Hendricksen  trophy  Saturday  evening 
at  the  Western  Curling  rink  In  the 
final  game  of  the  series.  The  opposing 
rink  was  skipped  by  Hewitt.  Filia- 
trault  defeated  Keyes  in  the  Bagley 
event,  11  to  3.  Only  nine  heads  were 
played. 

The    line-up    and    score    in    the    llen- 
drickson   event   was: 
McDonald,  Ransbottom, 

Buckley,  Winton. 

Hoag.  Furseson, 

Mickish,  skip— i:"..      Hewitt,   skip — 4. 


BIY  OLD  CHURCH. 


will    be    at    Pine    Hill    cemetery. 

Bert  Blackburn,  who  has  been 
Phillips,  for  the  past  three  weeks 
leave  this  afternoon  for  his  hor 
.San    Francisco.  „*„^ 

Miss  Jenny  Jenson.  who  was  operated 
on  for  appendicitis  at  the  Duluth  hos- 
pital,   was    removed    to   her   home    this 

""HSg^^Jacoby  leaves  this  afternoon 
for  Oshkosh  on  business.  He  will  visa 
Detroit  before  returning  home. 

Mrs.  J.  J.  .lorgenson  and  her  sons. 
Ralph  and  Hoy.  have  returned  to  ^^est 
Duluth  after  three  years  In  San  Fran- 
cisco. They  expect  to  make  their  home 
in  tills  city  again.. 

Herman  Krinkle  of  Virginia  was  in 
West    Duluth    today. 

George  Method  returned  Saturdaj 
from    Winton.  .,.^1*1 

Watch    repairing.    Hurst,    W.    Duluth 

F  E  Watson,  manager  of  L..  A. 
Barnes'  real  estate  department.  Is  tn 
Cloquet    today    on    bosiness. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Pickering  of  \  Irginia. 
after  spending  a  few  da.ys  witli  Mt. 
Pickering's  parents  in  Superior,  were 
guests   yesterdav   in    West    Duluth. 

The  union  meeting  of  all  the  Degree 
of  Honor  lodges  of  Duluth,  which  was 
announced  would  take  place  at  Odd 
Fellows'  hall,  Tuesday  evening.  March 
16.  has  been  postponed  until  further 
notice. 

H.  O.  .Schmltz.  former  proprietor  of 
the  West  Duluth  cafe,  lias  sold  out  to 
J.  Anderson,  who  will  conduct  the  busi- 
ness from   now   on. 


GIVE  CASES 
TOJURIES 

Sum  of  $5,000  Asked  for 

Death  of  Workman 

in  Mine. 


PRINTING 


of  the  better  class  is  a  feature  of  our 
business.    Give  us  a  trial  order. 

MERRITT  &  HECTOR,  Printers 


'RUSH  ORDERS  A  PLEASURE" 


Both  Phones 


30-32  West  First  Street 


West 


Duluth  Austrians  May 
Edifice  of  Their  Own. 


Have 


J.  E.  Foublster  has  purchased  the 
old  St.  James  Catholic  church.  Fifty- 
seventh  avenue  west  and  Lexington 
street  and  Is  moving  It  to  Main  street 
on  Fifty-seventh  avenue  west.  When 
it  is  placed  on  its  new  site,  it  will  be 
remodeled  and  in  all  probability  be 
used  bv  the  Austrian  Catholics  for 
their  place  of  worship.  Nlchlos  Pav- 
kovlch. who  leads  the  West  Duluth 
Austrians,  says  that  his  people  will 
buv  the  building  if  satisfactory  terms 
can   be  made.  ,  ,^  .     <i* 

The  old  church  wlien  it  was  built 
seventeen  vears  ago  cost  Jti.OOO.  Fath- 
er Itov  was  its  first  pastor.  The  new 
St.  James  church  cost  about  |30,000 
and  is  a  mucli  larger  building,  prob- 
ablv  .seating  1.000  people, 
old"  one  only  held  300.  The 
old  church  brought  $600. 


DEGREE  OF  HONOR 

ZENITH  LODGE  Ho.  99 

All  niemberi  are  requested  to  at- 
tend the  funeral  of  our  late  Hit- 
ter, Mary  I.n  \  allee,  at  Stewart'* 
undertakioK  roonm.  ni  2:30  Tues- 
day afternoon,  >lareh  1«.  Meet  at 
SiMter  t'osutl'N  at  '1  o'clock, 
•iignert      MNA   *it  H  I  M  \riIEH, 

Recorder. 


Good  Faith  of  Whiteiy 

Questioned  as  Defense 

to  Notes. 


where    the 
sale  of  the 


A  competent  chemist  tests  every 
ingredient  that  enters  into 
HUNT'S  PERFECT 
Extracts  and  Baking  powder. 
Both  are  always  reliable. 

All  Grocers, 

GET   A   C.^N  AND  A  BOTTLK  TODAT. 


West  Duluth  Briefs. 

Miss  Ethel  Stowell  of  North  Fifty- 
ninth  avenue  west  has  returned  from 
a    visit    to    Neilsville,    Wis. 

Mr.  and  .Mrs.  Fred  Aura  of  Hibbing 
hae  returned  to  their  home  after  visit- 
ing   in    West    Duluth. 

Mrs.  Thomas  Sharp  and  daughter  of 
Kveleth  who  have  spent  the  past  week 
with  friends  in  West  Duluth.  liave  re- 
turned    to     their     home. 

The  funeral  of  Hans  Anderson  will 
take  place  tomorrow  afternoon  at  3:30 
o'clock  from  Our  Savior's  church,  with 
interment  at  Oneota  cemetery.  The 
body  is  now  at  W.  H.  Richter's  under- 
taking   rooms. 

Wanted  to  buy — Six  or  seven-room 
house  in  West  Duluth  Must  be  mod- 
end  and  a  bargain.  Address  K  82. 
Herald. 

The  Christian  Endeavor  society  of 
tlie  Westminster  Presbyterian  church 
Sunday  evening  took  under  considera- 
Mon  tfie  subject  "What  Are  Our  Liquor 
Laws  and  How  Are  They  Enforced." 
Tlie  members  of  the  society  commended 
tlie  laws,  but  were  not  perfectly  .satis- 
fied with  the  way  in  which  they  are 
i)eing    enforced. 

Hilma,  the  14-vear-old  daughter  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Korhonen  of  10S 
North    Sixty-sixth    avenue    west,      died 


STANDARD  OIL 
IS  FINED  $20,000 

Federal  Judge  Imposes 

Penalty  For  Accepting 

Rail  Concessions. 

Buffalo,  N.  y..  March  15. — Judge 
Hazel,  in  the  United  States  court  to- 
day, denied  the  motion  of  Standard  Oil 
for  a  new  trial  and  imposed  a  fine  of 
$20,000.  The  case  hinged  on  the 
Standard's  accepting  concessions  from 
railroads  on  sliipments  on  oil  from 
Olean  N.  Y.,  to  Rutland  and  other 
points  in  Vermont. 

There  were  in  all  346  counts  found 
against  the  company,  but  thu.-i  far  only 
fortv     have     been     considered. 

The  railroads  involved  are  tlie  New 
York  Central,  tlie  IVnnsylvania  and 
the     Rutland.  _ 

STEPHENSON  TEMP(mARY 

MAYOR  OF  LOS  ANGELES. 

L.08  Angeles  Cal..  March  15. — W.  D. 
Stephenson  was  today  selected  unani- 
niouslv  by  the  city  council  for  mayor 
to  serve  until  Marcli  26.  the  date  set 
for   the  recall  election. 


Two  cases  were  given  to  juries  in 
district  court  about  noon  today.  In 
■Judge  Dlbell's  courtroom,  the  suit  of 
James  H.  Whitely,  against  Fred  L. 
Chandler  was  completed,  and  before 
Judge  Cant  the  suit  of  Jolin  Mestnlk, 
as  administrator  of  the  estate  of 
.loseph  Mestnlk,  agalpst  the  Malta  Iron 
company,    went   to    the    jury. 

Tlie  Mestnlk  case  dragged  through 
several  days  and  some  interesting 
points  were  raised.  All  of  the  testi- 
mony was  taken  by  Friday  evening 
and  the  arguments  were  made  this 
morning.  Joseph  Mestnlk  met  his 
death  in  the  Malta  mine  at  Sparta  last 
vear,  through  the  burning  of  a  mule 
barn.  The  flames  cut  off  his  escape 
and    he    was   suffocated. 

The  suit  which  was  for  $5,000  for 
the  benefit'  of  the  wife  and  two  clill- 
dren,  was  based  on  the  contention  that 
the  company  had  been  negligent  in  lo- 
cating the  mule  barn  where  It  did.  as. 
in  the  case  of  a  fire,  the  men  In  the 
lower  levels  of  the  mlnr-  were  cut  oft 
from  escape.  The  company  claimed 
the  barn  was  located  In  the  best  pos- 
sible site  that  could  be  found,  and 
further  that  the  fire  was  caused  by  the 
neglicence  of  a  fellow  employe  of  Mest- 
nlk, who  fell  asleep  in  the  barn,  with 
a  lighted  cigarette,  and  caused  the  fire, 
and  was  not  by  the  negligence  of  the 
company. 

During  the  progress  of  the  trial 
Howard  T.  Abbott  made  a  motion  for 
dismissal  and  another  motion  for  a  di- 
rected verdict,  but  Judge  Cant  over- 
ruled him  and  allowed  the  case  to  go 
to  the  jurv.  Samuel  A.  Anderson  and 
John   Heino  conducted  the  case  for  the 

plaintiff.  ,       ^      ,       X 

James  H.  Whitely  sued  Fred  L. 
Chandler  for  $1,350  on  promissory  notes 
given  bv  Mr.  Chandler  on  the  purchase 
of  fifty  "shares  of  stock  In  the  Evener 
Manufacturing  company  In  May.  1907. 
Mr  Whitelv.  who  was  secretary  and 
treasurer  of  the  Evener  Manufacturing 
companv.  claimed  that  he  was  a  bona 
tide  holder  of  the  notes,  they  having 
been  transferred  to  him  by  tlie  com- 
pany   for    a    valuable    consideration    by 


the  company,  without  his  Iiaving  notice 
of    anv    defense    to    tlieir    payment. 

Mr.  Chandler  claimed  tliat  Mr.  White- 
lv was  not  a  bona  fide  hclder  and  the 
defense  of  fraud  and  misrepresentation, 
which  would  have  been  available 
against  Mr.  Whitely.  He  claimed  that 
N  H.  Smith,  wlio  promoted  the  com- 
panv. fraudulently  mlsrer  resented  the 
facts  to  him,  inducing  liim  to  make 
the  purchase  of  stock  and  give  the 
notes   In  payment. 

• 

Giddiiig's  Formal  Opening. 

Today,  tomorrow  and  Wednesday  are 
opening  days  at  the  G  ddlng  store. 
The  garment  exhibits  are  now  at  tlieir 
best,  and  critical  women  vill  no  doubt 
welcome  this  opportunity  to  acquaint 
themselves  with  the  exclusive  styles 
of  the  season.  The  Giddiiig  opening  Is 
the  fashion  event  of  the  setson.  that 
definitelv  determines  ^trhat  Duluth 
women  will  wear  for  the  season.  *** 


Members  of  Zenith  Lodge 
No.  99  Degree  of  Honor 


ornamented  with  about  379  separate 
and  distinct  buttons,  the  fuvorite  slzo 
being  about  that  of  a  <iuarter  and  even 
the  most  ambitious  girl  gets  dis- 
couraged in  trying  to  name  to  the  end. 
rich  man,  poor  man,  beggar  man. 
thief,  etc.  They  are  all  one  piece  dres- 
ses, no  o'her  style  seeming  to  be  pos- 
sible   according    to    the    present    modes. 

The  hat.><  have  become  almost  all 
crown,  and  jei  trimmings  are  very 
popular.  Small  flowers  and  ribbons 
will  appear  in  tlie  spring  millinery 
most  prominently,  according  to  this 
advance  showing. 

The  novelties  and  dress  accessories 
are  always  interesting.  Jet  will  bo 
prominent  in  tliese  pretty  pins  and 
buckles  and  hair  ornaments  and  the 
semi  precious  stones  in  the  amethyst 
coral,  turquoise  and  topaz  in  odd  and 
Interesting  mountings,  are  not  the-least 
interesting  of  tlie  many  beautiful 
things  shown. 

In  the  Junior  department^  the  tailor- 
made  costumes  in  three  pieces  and  the 
simple  but  attractive  tub  frocks  for 
cliiidren  and  young  girls  are  always 
the  center  of  much  interest  to  moth- 
ers with  girls  at  the  difficult  age  to 
clothe,  and  this  department  always  re- 
ceives  enthusiastic  attention. 

During  these  opening  days  there  la 
In     fact,    no    department    of    the    store 


There   will   be   no  Joint  mpetlng  at   Odd  .  furnishin»rs   for  this  first 

Fellows'    Hall.   Tuesday  e -ening.    .March  I  ""f  '--^  in  gaia   •urnisnmb.s   roi    wus  nii.-u. 

16.     Meeting  has   been  POSTPONED. 


I  announcement  of  the  coming  of  spring. 


Signed 


MNA   SCHl  MAC  HEK. 

Kecorder. 


SPRING  STYLES 
BEING  SHOWN 

Much  of  Interest  for  Du- 
luth Women  in  Gid- 
ding's  Opening 

In  the  whirl  of  soft  colors  and  softer 
fabrics  the  Gidding  establishment- 
clothed  its  store  today  lor  the  formal 
spring  opening.  Suits  and  gowns  for 
spring  and  summer  wes  r  in  the  new- 
colors  and  the  new  st:.-les  were  the 
center  of  much  Interested  attention. 
The  severe  tailor  mades  In  the  new 
colors,  olivette,  atlantic,  canard,  cedre. 
burnt  rose,  doubonnet,  buff,  stone 
green,  amethyst  and  l)rownish  and 
bluish  greens,  are  of  course  the  first 
things  to  attract  attent'on,  for  a  siit 
is  the  first  point  of  ir  terest  in  any 
wardrobe.  Navy  blue,  and  black  and 
white  in  combination,  are  making 
some  of  the  smartest  spr  ng  models  and 
are  among  the  stylish  costumes  worn 
in  the  East.  The  slant  cutaway  i.<  to 
be  a  favorite  model  and  the  coat  on 
straight  lines  will  be  much  worn.  The 
linings  are  often  a  cor  trast  in  color 
to  the  suit,  or  in  tones  ot  the  suit  color 
or  the  trimming. 

Trotteur  dresses  in  solt  colors  and  In 
fabrics  that  have  a  satiny  finish  are 
altogether  charming  In  the  new  rose 
tones  and  blues  and  1  new  golden 
shade  that  is  particularly  effective. 
Tiie  linen  trotteur  dre:«ses  appear  in 
shades  of  linen  that  sre  iriesistlble 
and  button  trimmings  seem  to  predom- 
inate  here.      Each  dress      seems   to    be 


ALABAMA  SIFFERS  LOSS 

DUE  TO  RLSING  RIVER. 


Mobile,  Ala..  March  15. — The  flood 
waters  of  the  Alabama  river,  in  the 
south*  rn  part  of  the  state,  threaten  to 
reach  a  .""tage  as  great  as  that  of  the 
spring  of  1SS6.  Corn,  cotton,  fertilizer 
and  farm  products  and  early  planting 
losses  already  have  been  very  high 
from  tlie  overflow.  Steamboats  leav- 
ing here  today  were  instructed  to  send 
warnings  to  the  isolated  places  cut  off 
from  telegraph  and  telephone  com- 
munication. 


Something  New   in 

LIFE  INSURANCE 

ASK 

THE  Prudential 

IMSCRANCE  COMPAKY  OF  AMERICA 

Bom*  Office ,  ft  e  wark,  N.  J. 


ih.  B«M«  «r  y  .*  iw*.i 


Eminent  Physicians* 
Simple  Prescription  for 
Suffering  Women 

"Alpen  Stal.  2  oz..  Fluid  I',x(r*rt  niaok  llaw,  1  <»».. 
Pure  W»lrr.  5  01.  Tcaspoonful  lief  ore  mctils  and  at 
bedtime  f'-r  a  few  days  Ixrfore.  during  and  after  each 
monthly  ixirioi."  Tt.e  ix/st  li  trirUii*  and  you  wlU 
be   agreeabb    turpriaed    vrlth    the    woiiderful    reault 


Fatness  Reduced 

An  absolute  and  perfectly  harmleea 
remedy  for  excessive  fatness  is  to  be 
found  In  Marmola  Prescription  Tab- 
lets. One  tablet  after  each  meal  and 
at  bedtime  will  produce  truly  wonder- 
ful results.  l.arge  case  at  your  drug- 
gists or  from  The  Marmola  Compaoy, 
Detroit.  Mich.,   for   7»   centa. 


. 

, 

\ 

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1 

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1 

1 

^ 

1 

>■  tmftm..   ■  aiaw 


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■  ■  I'     ^ 


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■CffHBSm 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1909. 


m  TO 


OLD  SOLDIER  IS 
SUDDENLY  TAKEN 

George  Corcoran,  a  Weil- 
Known  Hibbing  Man, 
Drops  Dead. 

Hlbbin^.  Minn.,  March  15.— (Spfcial 
to  The  Herald.)— Deatli  came  suddenly 
Saturday  evening  to  George  Corcoran, 
who  runs  an  employment  agency  here, 
when  he  dripped  dead  without  any  ap- 
parent ^^arn»ne  that  he  was  serlou8ly 
111  He  was  tS  years  of  age  and  .i 
veteran  o£  the  Civil  war.  and  had  1  ved 
hire  a  number  of  years  A  daughter 
and  son  live  at  Grand  Kaplds.  Minn., 
where    Mr.    Corcoran    resuleil. 

The  school  board  will  pass  on  the 
•chool  building  bid.s  ne.xt  Wednesday 
evening.  T.  J.  Godfrey  the  ^^erk  of 
the  board,  returned  yesterday  from 
Wasiirlngion,  wliere  he  attended 
Inauguration,  and  will  have  the 
tabulated  and  ready  for  action, 
arc  ten  bids.  ,  ., , 

Dr.   H.    R.    Weirick.    the   president 
the    council,    who    went    East    with 
Godfrey,   is  expected  back  today  or 

""^[e  baseball  meeting.  P>a"n^<^ /,^';,1*'- 
ray.  has  been  postponed  until  i  rV>^>  • 
on  account  of  the  ab-nenoe  of  Dr.  W  eir- 
Ick  who  is  prtsidenl  of  the  associa- 
tion.  

HONOK  JUNE  imiDE. 

Parcel  Shower  Iji  Given  for  Miss 
King  of  Virginia. 

Virginia,  Minn..  March  15.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  Misses  Flint, 
Murphy  Page  and  Dennis  gave  a  parcel 
■hower  for  Miss  Uliie  King  at  502 
Birch  street,  last  Saturday  anernooiv 
A  large  number  of  young  ladies  w.ie 
nresent.    Miss    King    %viil    be      a      June 

Mr.  and  Mrs,  A.  B.  Tredway  of  Mil- 
waukee are  guests  at  home  of  tueir 
•on.    K.    M.    Tredway. 

H.    Solberg.    propritor 


lleth.  From  present  Indications  It  looks 
as  if  neither  will  get  the  franchise,  as 
the  business  men  are  satisfied  to  use 
tlieir  present  gas  systems,  and  think 
that  the  franchise  Is  too  valuable  to 
be  given  awav.  Most  of  the  bu.slness 
men  in  town  favor  bundling  a  mu- 
nicipal   plant. 

LOGGERS'  WORK 
NEARLY  ENDED 

Duluth  &  Northern  Min- 
nesota Returning  Cars 
to  Iron  Range  Road. 


the 
bids 
Tlieie 


of 
Mr. 
to- 


to  The  Herald.) — Carlo  Garlovalla.  for- 
merly a  clerk  In  L..  C.  Sannicolloa's 
grocery  store,  has  returned  from 
lOurope,  where  he  went  during  tlie 
ttnancial  troubles  of  1907.  He  says  that 
more  immigrants  are  coming  to  this 
part  of  the  country  than  evor  this  year. 

BUHL  SCHOOL  BIDS. 


Buhl.  Minn..  March  15.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Bids  will  be  received 
March  :i5  for  a  four-room  school  build- 
ing to  be  built  here  this  year.  The 
bidders  must  furnish  a  certified  check 
for   5   per  cent  of   their   bid. 

BIG  STACK  RAISED. 


Hibbing,  Minn..  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — By  means  of  'gin' 
poles  the  Gogebic  Iron  Works  of  Du- 
luth has  just  raised  a  new  steel 
smokestack.  125  feet  long,  7  feet  in 
diameter,  and  weighing  4U,000  pounds, 
which  it  had  made  for  the  Morion 
mine. 


of  the  Tower 
hotel  has  begun  excavating  for  a  full 
basement  under  the  building,  50  by- 
feet  and  intends  making  other  im- 
provements about  the  place  in  the  near 

ThV"rike  Mercantile  company  has 
moved  IS  uld  frame  store  building  to 
the  rear  of  Its  lots  at  the  corner  o 
Locust  street  and  Mesaba  avenue  and 
commenced  ^^^^vat.ng  for  a  large 
and  hrick  structure.  oO  by  »a  leei. 


has 

•tone 


CHOSE  SIX  DIRECTORS. 

Special    Virginia    Sthool    Election 
Brings  Ont  Large  Vote. 

Virginia  Minn..  March  15.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Six  directors  of  the 
new  independent  Fchool  district  were 
chosen  at  the  special  election  held  at 
the  Roosevelt  high  school  building  Sat- 
urdav  night.  A  heavy  vote  was  polled, 
the   total   number  being  6.'j 

Two    days    pr»^vlous 
two  candidates 


to    the    election 
developed  In  opposition 
to   James    H.   Fleming   and   Clarence    l>. 
the  term  ending  Aug.  l.,l^l^'- 
George  V.  Trimble  and  Guy 
both    of    whom    put    up    a 
for    election,    but    were    de- 
small  margin.     The  vote  in 


Mot-'Te  for 
These  were 
H.    Moore. 
hard    fight 
feated  by  a 


James 
Trimble 


the  contest  stood  as  follows 
H  Fleming.  3:?!;  George  v. 
808;  Oarence  E.  Moore,  338.  and  Guy  H. 

^CharleS'c.  Butler  received  every  vote 
oa«t  N  A.  Holmer  following  with  bol. 
Mf«  *N  K.  Coffman,  650.  and  Joseph 
RoEki'ly.  649.     There  were   six  scatter- 

*"fhe^new   hoard   of   directors   and 
term's  for  which  they  were  elected 

^For   the    term    ending   Aug.    1,    1909— 
Joseph  RosklUy  and  CliurK-s  C.  Butler. 

For    tlie    term    ending   Aug.    1.    ISIO— 
James    H.    Fleming    and    Clarence      E. 

Moore.  ,.  .  , 

For    the    term    ending    Au 
Mrs.   N.   K.  Coman 

The    board    wiil 


but 

the 

mak- 

there    the 


the 
fol- 


,    1,    1911- 
and  N.  A.   Holmer. 
organize   soon. 


TO  AID  FINN  COLLEGE. 


for 


Benefit  to  be  Given  at  Eveleth 
Hancock,  ?lich..  Institution. 

Eveleth.    Minn.,    March      15. —  (Sptclai 
to      Tlie    Herald.) — Next      Sunday, 
Wahonahde  hall,  an  entertainment 
be  given   by   Eveleth   and    Virginia 
ent  to  raise  funds 
lege 


at 
■will 
tal- 
col- 


for  the  Finnish 
at  Ilam.ock,  Mich. 
Among  tho.^e  who  will  participate 
•re:  llev.  and  Mrs.  Wargelin.  Miss 
Bertha  Kuehn.  pianist,  of  Eveleth; 
Jacob  ifiaari.  trombone.  Eveleth;  Joel 
Hanson  of  Virginia,  violinist.  Dr. 
Jackola  of  Duluth  will  be  invited  to 
give  an   addre.ss. 

MOVE  SPARTA  BlILDINGS. 

Dismanteling  of  Range  ViHage  Has 
Already  Commenced. 

Eveleth.  Minn.,  March  IB. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  work  of  moving 
the  buildings  from  the  present 
Sparta  lia.s  already 
Joimson  is  moving 
8p 


Two  Harbors.  Minn.,  March  IB. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Owing  to  a  re- 
duction In  logging  shipments  by  the 
loggers  along  their  line  the  Duluth  & 
Northern  Minnesota  have  commenced 
returning  eome  of  the  175  logging  cars 
they  had  leased  from  the  Duluth  & 
Iron    Range    railway    for    the    winter. 

Calvin  &  Robb  now  have  about  2,000  - 

000  leet  of  logs  banked  at  their  mill  at 
Bassett  for  tlie  summer's  sawing  and 
expect  to  ajl  1,000.000  feet  more  to  It 
before   the   break-up. 

The  home  of  Harold  Henio.  on  bouth 
avenue,  has  been  placed  under  quaran- 
tine, on  account  of  scarlet  fever,  mak- 
ing two  houses  under  quarantine  on 
account  of  that   disease. 

The  local  creamery  association  has 
purchased  from  Gust  Nelson  the  build- 
ing on  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  ware- 
house track,  near  Poplar  street,  for- 
merly used  as  an  ice  house,  and  will 
remodel  it  and  install  the  machinery 
for  their  creamery,  which  they  expect 
to   have   In   operation    by   June  or  July. 

The  Lake  County  Lumber  company, 
at  Stewart,  Saturday,  reduced  their 
force  by  laying  off  a  number  of  men, 
on  account  of  ceasing  logging  opera- 
tions. 

Born— Thursday,  the  11th  Inst.,  o 
Mr    and  Mrs.  Edward  Glass,  a  daugher. 

Some  of  tlie  railroad  boys  are  already 
beglning  to  drift  In  from  their  winter  s 
labors  in  various  parts,  to  await  tho 
opening  of  the  ore  season.  They  report 
work  scarce  and  business  slow, 
somewhat    better   than    last   winter. 

Albln    Oberg    has    been     sent    to 
local    pcsthouse    with    diphtheria 
Ing    tiirce    cases    of    it    sei 
past    month. 

SOCIALISTS  ARE 
VERY  CONFIDENT 

Expect  to  Poll  Record 

Vote  at  Two  Harbors 

on  Tuesday. 

Two  Harbors.  Minn..  March  15. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  Social- 
ists, or  the  Public  Ownership  party,  are 
making  some  strong  claims  as  to  the 
number  of  votes  they  expect  to  poll  in 
tomorrows  city  election.  They  claim 
they  will  get  a  record  vote  and  elect 
most    of    their    candidates.  _    ,  ,  ,   „ 

With  three  candidates  in  the  field  for 
the   various    offices   and   a    large    regis- 

1  tratlon.    Interest    in    the    battle    of    the 
ballots  tomorrow  is  at  a  fever  heat. 

Dr  M  K.  Knauff  heads  the  Indepen- 
dent ticket  as  candidate  for  mayor. 
John  Norlen  and  John  Bover  are  in- 
dependent  candidates   for  aldermen-at- 

The  Socialists  nominated  L.  D.  Rose 
for  mayor;  William  Roleff.  alderman 
First  ward;  C.  10.  Bergren,  alderman 
Third  ward;  Martin  Peterson.  Louis 
Andtrson  and  Alex  Halliday.  aldermen, 
at- large.  ., 

The  cltv  nominating  convention 
placed  the 'following  candidates  in  the 
field-  Axel  Essen,  mayor;  Thomas 
Martin,  city  treasurer;  F.  E.  Evans. 
\  O  Hulberg  and  George  S.  Raper. 
ahlermen-at-large;  August  Tabor,  as- 
ses.sor;  W.  D.  Woodward,  justice  of  the 
peace. 

KILLED  BY  A  LOG. 

Employe  of  Alger-Sniitli  Loses  Life 
at  Camp  No.  5. 

Two  Harbors.  Minn.,  March  15. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Word  has  reached 
here  from  Camp  No.  6  of  the  Alger- 
Smith   company  of  a  fatality  that  took 

place  a  few  days  ago. 

M.  BycanI,  an  employe  of  the  logging 
company  at  Camp  5,  was  killed  by  a 
log  falling  from  a  sleigh  onto  him. 

HIBBING  PERSONALS. 


AoetdentH    I'rtrvfnted    Uacea. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  races  planned 
for  yesterday  afternoon  at  Ely  Lake 
were  not  pulled  off,  as  accidents  to 
several  of  the  entries  reduced  the  num- 
ber of  horses  to  only  one,  and  there 
could    be   no   race. 


ONLY  TWO 
MORE^DAYS 

"Ben  Bur"  Essays  Must 

Be  in  by  Wednesday 

Evening. 

No  Essay  Received  After 

That  Time  Will  Be 

Considered. 


Clark  was  adopted,  and  the  Living- 
stone resolution,  which  proposed  to 
bind  the  Republican  insurgents  to 
vote  against  Mr.  Cannon  for  speaker, 
was   voted  down. 

The  Democratic  nominations  for 
offices  of  the  house  were  made  as  fol- 
lows: 

For  clerk.  Former  Representative 
Kimball  of  Kentucky;  for  sergeant-at- 
arms,  J.  T.  Ellington  of  North  Caro- 
lina, and  for  postmaster,  Robert  L. 
Douglas  of  South  Carolina.  No  nom- 
inee for  doorkeeper  was  selected. 


Jacob     Cleland     Jluried. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  March  15. —  iSpecial 
to  The  Herald.) — The  funeral  of  Jacob 
Cleland,  father  of  Mrs.  C.  F.  Llscombe, 
who  died  at  the  family  home.  301 
Wyoming  avenue.  Friday  morning,  was 
held  from  the  residence  at  2  o'clock 
yesterday  afternoon.  Interment  was  at 
Greenwood  cemetery.  Mr.  Cleland  was 
74   years  old. 

• 

StartM  .\uotber  Kindersnrten. 
Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — On  account  of  the 
large  number  of  kindergarten  children, 
another  kindergarten  has  been  started 
at  the  Methodist  Episcopal  church,  with 
Miss  Ray.  who  has  been  assisting  at 
the  Fayal  kindergarten.  In  charge.  Miss 
.\7.alea  Bean  of  Minneapolis  will  as- 
sist Miss  Brewer  at  tlie  Fayal  school. 
W.  G.  Calderwood  of  Minneapolis  has 
been  secured  by  the  Wahlonlahde  Tem- 
perance society  to  deliver  a  talk  on 
temperance    next    Sunday    niglit. 

• 

New  Ilibblng  Sub-Station. 
Hibbing.  Minn..  .March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Sub-slation  No.  1  of 
the  Hibbing  poatofflce  will  be  opened 
to  the  public  tomorrow  morning.  March 
16.  at  the  Palace  drug  store,  with 
Ephraim  Lavell  In  charge.  Money  or- 
ders will  be  Issued,  packages  and  let- 
ters registered  and  postage  stamps 
sold. 


There  are  only  two  more 
the    "Ben    Hur"   essays    in. 
heed  to  the  hurry-up  call  in 
Saturday    evening    and    the 


days  to  get 
Many    paid 

The  Herald 
mails    this 


FInlMh    niK    IlonrdlDiS    Ilouxr. 

Chisholm,  Minn..  March  l.'>. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Shenango  Fur- 
nace company,  operating  the  Shenango, 
Webb  and  other  iron  mines  In  the  Hib- 
bing district,  has  just  completed  a  big 
modern  boarding  house  at  the  Shen- 
ango mine,  near  here.  The  building  is 
two   stories   and    has   thirty-six    rooms. 


Xo     IlaNfball      Mertlugr. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  15.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Because  of  the  ab- 
sence of  J.  1'.  Tredinnick,  tho  newly- 
elected  manager  of  the  local  baseball 
club,  who  went  to  Duluth  for  a  couple 
of  days,  there  was  no  baseball  meet- 
ing yesterday. 


morning  brought  many  essays  that  had 
been   written    Saturday. 

One  thing  that  must  be  kept  In  mind, 
is  that  the  contest  closes  at  6  o'clock 
Wednesday  evening.  No  essay  re- 
ceived after  that  time  will  be  accepted. 
The  Herald  has  made  but  few  condi- 
tions governing  the  contest,  but  the 
few  that  have  been  made  will  be  strict- 
ly   lived    up    to. 

Interest  In  the  plan  by  which  150 
school  children  are  to  see  the  play 
from  the  best  seats  in  the  theater, 
seems  to  grow  greater  each  day. 
The  letters  liave  come  in  with  a  rush 
since  the  story  was  finished  Friday 
evening,  and  it  looks  as  thougli  tlie 
teachers  who  are  to  Judge  the  contest 
are    going    to    have    their    hands    full. 

The  two  days  left  will  probably  be 
big  ones.  Many  have  wished  to  thor- 
oughly study  the  book  before  writing 
their  essays,  and  these  will,  in  all  prob- 
ability, not  come  in  until  the  very  last 
minute.  The  Herald  advises  each  en- 
trant to  get  the  essay  In  as  soon  as 
possible,  however,  as  it  Is  the  wish  of 
the  people  to  have  some  idea  as  to  how 
many  there  will  be  all  told.  The 
eighteen  teachers  selected  by  Bupt. 
Denfeld  to  do  the  Judging,  may  have 
to  be  added  to,  so  that  the  work  may 
be  finished  up  In  a  short  time.  If 
this  Is  to  be  the  case.  The  Herald  wants 
to  know  it  in  time  to  avoid  con- 
fusion. 

The  final  installment  of  the  story 
that  is  being  read  to  the  pupils  in  tlie 
schools  by  the  teachers,  was  placed  ii) 
the  hands  of  Mr.  Denfeld  today.  The 
final  chapter  will  be  finished  Tuesday, 
and  there  will  then  still  be  time  to  get 
the    essays    in    before    closing    lime. 

Teachers  all  over  the  city  report 
much  Interest  in  the  contest.  When 
the  teachers  who  are  to  decide  the 
winners  start  their  work,  they  will 
probably  have  several  hundreds  papers 
to    look    over    and    judge. 

Remember  the  time — Wednesday  at  0 
o'clock — the    contest    closes. 


HERBERT  SHARVY 
PASSES  AWAY 

Popular  Duluth  Young 

Man  Dies  After  Long 

Illness. 

Herbert  Norman  Sliarvy.  a  well- 
known  Duluth  boy.  who  lived  here  all 
of  the  twenty-five  years  of  his  life, 
died  Saturday  evening  at  11:45,  after  a 
lingering  illness. 

Whilj  Mr.  Sharvy  had  been  ill  for  a 
long  time,  and  his  death  was  not  alto- 
gether unexpected,  It  was  nevertheless 
a   shock    to   his   many    friends      in      tlie 

city. 

The  funeral  will  be  held  tomorrow- 
afternoon,  at  2:30,  at  Trinity  Pro- 
cathedral,  Twentieth  avenue  east  and 
Superior  street.  Mr.  Sliarvy  was  a 
prominent    member    of    the    parish,    and 


site  of 
started.  Frank 
Stein's  store  from 
irta  to  Gilbert.  This  is  the  first  one 
started  vn,  but  others  will  follow  soon, 
as  the  buildings  must  all  be  vacated 
by  April  30.  Not  all  the  buildings  will 
be  moved  to  Gilbert.  The  Flnnlsli 
church  has  been  torn  down,  and  tlie 
lumber  taken  to  Gilbert,  where  another 
church   will    be   put    up. 


MlMdPAL  OWNERSHIP 

POPULAR  IN  GILBERT. 


Hibbing.  Minn.,  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Victor  L.  Power  came 
from  Duluth  Friday  morning,  after 
having*  spent  a  week  in  the  trial  of 
cases   In   the   district   court. 

Miss  Ada  Grenier  is  here  from  Clo- 
quet  for  a  visit  with  her  sisters,  Mrs. 
William  G.  Close  and  Misses  Elizabeth 
and  Norah  Grenier. 

Mrs.  W.  J.  Power  returned  Thurs- 
day noon  from  the  East,  where  she 
made  some  choice  selections  of  season- 
able   goods    for   the   Bazaar. 

Mrs.  I.  Bonnier  arrived  Friday  even- 
ing from  Cloquet  and  remained  over 
Sunday  with  her  daughter.  Miss  Bonnie 
Bonnier. 

L.  O.  Bradley  of  Duluth  spent  last 
week  In  the  city  in  the  interest  of 
his    electric    house-cleaner. 

Mrs.  Rollln  Neal  Dow  of  Minneapolis, 
is  visiting  with  her  mother,  Mrs.  W.  C. 
Northey,   at   the   Mahoning. 


Gilbert.  Minn.,  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  council  will  to- 
night decide  on  the  franchises  that 
have  been  asked  f6T  by  electric  com- 
panies   of    (iilbert,    Virginia    and    Eve- 


Scott's  Emulsion 

does  all  it  does  by  virtue 
of  one  thing — Power — its 
power  to  create  power. 

As  fire  turns  water  to 
steam  so  Scott's  Emulsion 

transforms  thin,  impure 
blood  into  pure,  rich  blood, 
giving  nourishment  and 
vital  energy  to  every 
organ,  every  tissue  and 
every  muscle. 


CHISHOLM  CHILD  DIES 

IN  ITS  SQUALID  HOME. 


Send  this  advertisement,  together  with  name  of 
paper  in  which  it  appears,  your  address  and  four 
cents  to  cover  postage,  and  wc  will  send  you  a 
"Complete  Handy  Atlas  of  the  World."      ::       :: 

SCOTT  &  BOWNE.  409  Pearl  Street  New  York 


Chisholm.  Minn.,  March  15. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  11-year-old 
son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Gold  died 
of  diphtheria  Thursday,  after  a  linger- 
ing illness  amid  the  most  wretched  clr. 
cumstances  imaginable.  The  Golds 
live  in  a  one-room  hut  on  Walnut 
street,  and  besides  the  little  fellow  that 
died   a    little   girl   still    remains. 

This  family  came  to  Chisholm  im- 
mediately after  the  fire  from  Cass 
Lake,  and  for  a  short  time  lived  with- 
out any  shelter  over  their  heads  what- 
ever. Cold  weather  set  In,  and  Mr. 
Gold  secured  some  lumber  and  built  a 
hut  and  moved  in  what  little  lumber 
they  had.  They  have  had  no  bed 
whatever,  so  in  one  corner  a  bunk  was 
erected,  where  the  Golds  slept,  and 
underneath   the    children    slept. 


Judge  Moylan    SIrk. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Judge  Ed  Moylan  of 
Mlasabe  Mountain  township,  has  been 
ill  with  erysipelas.  He  was  very  sick 
early    last    week,    but    Is    improving. 

PROCTOR  HONORS 
DOCTOR'S  MEMORY 

Tribute  to  Dr.  Corson 

Shows  Esteem  in  Which 

He  Is  Held. 

Proctor,  Minn.,  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  Y.  M.  C.  A.  audi- 
torium was  well  filled  with  people  yes- 
terday afternoon,  who  listened  to  the 
tributes  paid  to  the  late  Dr.  C.  C. 
Corson,    by   thtlr   follow    townsmen. 

Sliort  addresses  were  made  by  Rev. 
Father  Walsh,  W.  L.  Carrs,  Prof.  Hol- 
brook,  Dan  Sullivan,  Charles  Wedin, 
P.  McCabe,  J.  J.  Whyte,  Wally  Lovelis 
and  C.  J.  Birch,  Jr.  The  obituary  was 
given  by  E.  S.  Davis.     Solos  were  sung 

and  the  Car  Repairers'  sextette  ren- 
dered "Nearer  My  God  to  Thee,"  as  the 
closing    number. 

Dr.  Carbon  was  physician  for  the  Du- 
luth MIssabe  &  Northern  Railway 
company  here  for  a  number  of  years 
and  his  death  on  Feb.  24,  filled  local 
friends  with  grief.  The  service  yes- 
terday showed:  in  part,  the  esteem  In 
whicli   he  was   held. 

George  Lang,  the  young  brakeman, 
who  died  last  Wedne.sday  of  typhoid 
fever,  was  burled  in  Forest  Hill  ceme- 
tery, Duluth,  Saturday.  The  funeral 
took  place  from  the  home  of  his 
brother  Fred  L.s.ng  at  10  oclok.  Rev. 
Ramshaw,  officiating.  A  special  train 
at  11  o'clock  took  the  funeral  party 
to    Duluth. 

Mrs.  T.  E.  Wood  gave  a  birthday 
party  Wednesday  afternoon  in  honor 
of  her  son,  George.  During  the  after- 
noon games  were  played  and  a 
luncheon    was    served. 

Mr  and  Mrs.  W.  W.  Westfall  have 
returned     from     Michigan. 

The  Entre  Nous  club  was  enter- 
tained by  Mrs.  C.  F.  Peterson  on 
Wednesday.  The  head  prize  was  won 
by  Mrs.  C.  A.  Greene  and  the  conso- 
lation   prize    by    Mrs.    P.    Sauter. 

VV.  J.  Cottrell  has  resigned  his  po- 
sition in  the  car  department  and  taken 
a  position  as  fireman  in  one  of  the 
Peavey  elevators  in  Duluth.  He  In- 
tends to  move  his  family  to  West  Du- 
luth   this    week 

Mrs.  M.  Counihan  and  sister.  Miss 
Frankie.  left  Wednesday  for  .Superior, 
where  they  expect  to  visit  for  some 
time  with  relatives. 

The  M.  E.  Ladies'  Aid  will  meet  with 
Mrs.  M.  M.  Lewis  next  Thursday  after- 
noon. 

H.  E.  Plumer  of  Crookston  was  a 
business     visitor     here     today. 

Miss  Birdie  Larson  entertained  her 
mother,  from  Mora,   over  Sunday 

Will  Kenaston  is  to  resume  his  duties 
as  janitor  at  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  taking  the 
place    of    Al    Buirge,   resigned. 

W.  A.  Clark,  general  car  foreman, 
was  called  to  his  home  In  Superior 
Tuesda  ynight.  on  account  of  the  ill- 
ness   of    his    wife. 

Mrs.  Charles  Koons  Is 
her  home,  suffering  from 
and   lumbago. 

Carl  Wolff  had  one  of 
taken  oft  In  the  sausage 
Sugg's    market    last    Monday. 

Mrs.  Thomas  St.  Cyr  left  Wednesday 
for  a  visit  with  friends  and  relatives 
in    Hibbing. 


HERBERT   SHARVY. 


Cbloihulni   Needs   l.nundry. 

Chisholm.  Minn..  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — This  town  is  badly 
in  need  of  a  steam  laundry.  Tlie  pros- 
pects for  making  money  by  an  up-to- 
date  concern  are  limitless,  and  it  Is 
beyond  the  comprehension  of  many 
citizens  why  some  enterprising  man 
don't  invest  a  few  thousands  in  such 
an  enterprise.  With  7,500  people  living 
within  a  radius  of  one  mile  and  a  half, 
it  seems  too  bad  to  let  all  this  work  go 
out  of  town. 


confined    to 
rheumatism 

his     fingers 
grinder    at 


FOR 


ams 

in  the 

Back 


Bxpiu.Mlun     Ilurttt    Fatal. 

Ashland,  Wis..  March  1.5. — (Special 
to  the  Herald.) — Moses  Muttonem.  the 
Finnish  homesteader,  residing  near 
Brule,  Wis.,  who  lost  both  hands 
through  an  explosion  of  dynamite,  died 
in  a  local  hospital.  Internal  injuriesi 
proving  fatal. 


Mnny   IinuilgrnutM    Coniiugr. 

Eveleth,    Minn..    March    15. —  (Special 


0 


USE 


meera 


Oil 


If  you  have  a  weak,  aching  back, 
or  sharp,  piercing  pains,  rub  your- 
self at  nignt  with  Omega  Oil,  and 
often  the  pain  will  Le  gone  in  the 
morning.  The  Oil  penetrates 
•throueh  the  pores  of  the  skin  and 
goes  direct  to  the  seat  of  the  trouble. 


KIII.1    WoHld-Be    Slayer. 

A  mercile."'9  murderer  is  Appendicitis 
wMlh  many  victims.  But  Dr.  Kings 
New  Life  Pills  kill  it  by  j)reventlon. 
Tiiey  gtntly  stimulate  stomach,  liver 
and  bowt's,  pre%entlng  that  clogging 
thar  invites  aitpendlcltls.  curing  Con- 
BtTpatlon.  nil  <»ufcncss,  Chills.  Malaria. 
Headache  and  Indigestion.  25c  at  all 
druggia-.i. 

CAXXON  IS  REEIECTED 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 

and  that  there  will  be  no  rules  revision. 
The  election  of  Cannon  as  speaker  Is 
conceded. 

The  speaker  was  Saturday  nomin- 
ated by  the  house  Republican  caucus 
for  re-election  by  a  big  majority,  al- 
though hardly  any  of  the  Insurgents 
attended  the  t»«ucus.  The  vote:  Can- 
non. 162;  Smit^i,  10;  Tawney  7;  Keifer. 
5;  Representative  Crumpacker  of  In- 
diana. 1,  and  Representative  McGuire 
of   Oklahoma   1. 

The  house  Democratic  caucus  was 
held  at  10  this  morning,  and  Champ 
Clark  was  nominated  for  speaker  by 
unanimous  vote.  He  made  a  short  ad- 
dress, urging  the  Democrats  to  united 
action. 

To  Bind  Insurgpnta. 
The  members  of  tl.e  Georgia  delega- 
tion who  had  prepared  a  set  of  reso- 
lutions proposing  to  bind  the  Repub- 
lican insurgents  to  vote  against  Can- 
non for  speakL-r.  to  favor  free  debate 
and  unrestricted  amendment  to  the 
tariff  bill,  and  and  to  favor  the  adop- 
tion of  a  new  set  of  rules,  offered  a 
resolution  proposing  that  each  and 
every  Democratic  member  of  the  house 
present  at  the  caucus  be  bound  by  its 
election. 

Representative  Henry  of  Texas  pre- 
sided during  the  selection  of  officer.? 
which  resulted  in  the  re-election  of 
Representative  Clayton  of  Alabama  as 
chairman.  Representative  Robinson  of 
Arkansas  was  elected  secretary  and 
Representative  I'nderwood  of  Alabama 
was  recognized  by  the  chairman  to 
present  his  resolution,  which  pledged 
the  members  to  support  the  Demo- 
cratic leader  "in  his  efforts  to  over- 
tlirow  the  present  arbitrary  rules  of 
the  house  and  to  adopt  rules  that  will 
enable  the  majority  of  the  representa- 
tives in  congress  to  legislate."  The 
resolution    says: 

"To  accomplish  that  end  we  favor 
the  enlargement  of  the  number  of  the 
members  of  the  rules  committee  to 
fifteen  to  be  elected  by  the  members 
of  the"  house  and  we  favor  a  thorough 
and  complete  revision  of  the  rules  of 
the     house." 

The  resolution  also  declares  "we  de- 
nounce the  present  rules  as  a  machine 
intended  to  thwart  and  destroy  the 
representative  character  of  the  house, 
and  to  enable  the  speaker  of  the  house 
to  absolutely  control  legislation,  re- 
gardless of  the  will  of  the  majority." 

The  Democratic  caucus  adjourned  un- 
til 8  tonight  after  adopting  the  Under- 
wood resolution,  binding  Democrats  to 
support  Clark,  In  seeking  enlargement 
of  the  rules   committee. 

There  were  five  absentees,  as  fol- 
lows: Shepard  of  Te.\a8;  Clark  of 
Florida;  Goldfogel,  New  York;  Legare, 
South  Carolina,  McDermott,  Illinois. 
Of  these.  Representatives  Shepard  and 
Goldfogel  are  expected  to  attend  the 
organization  of  the  house.  Mr.  Un- 
derwoods  resolution  was  opposed  by 
Representative  Livingstone  or  Georgia 
and   several  other  members. 

Those  selected  to  continue  in  the 
positions  which  the  Democratic  caucus 
has  the  power  to  tJll  are  Joseph  Sin- 
nott  of  Virginia,  stieclal  messenger; 
Robert  Cowart,  Texas  and  Paul  Port- 
er,   Mississippi,    messengers. 

Before  the  vote  was  taken  on  the 
TTnderwood  resolution.  Representative 
Livingston  of  Georgia  offered  the  res- 
olution proposed  by  the  Georgians,  and 
a  lively  debate  followed.  By  this  time 
167  of  the  Democratic  members  of  the 
'louse  were  present.  Representative 
Moon  of  Tennessee  left  the  caucus  be- 
fore It  had  taken  any  action  on  the 
rules  question.  He  declared  that  his 
vote  could  be  counted  on  by  Mr.  Clark, 
but  that  it  was  against  his  principles 
to  be   bound  by  any  caucus. 

Samuel  M.  Gilmore,  who  was  elected 
March  10  to  fill  the  vacancy  caused  by 
the  death  of  Representative  Davey  of 
Louisiana,  was  here  to  vote  in  the  house 
tliis  afternoon,  there  being  some  ques- 
tion as  to  the  legality  of  his  election. 
There  also  Is  a  vacancy  on  the  Repub- 
lican side  of  the  house  through  the 
election  to  the  senate  of  Representa- 
tive Burton  of  Ohio.  Representative 
Clark  of  Florida  claims  to  have  ar- 
ranged for  a  pair. 

If  Representative  McDermott  cannot 
be  counted  on  to  vote  with  the  Demo- 
crats, their  total  strength  will  be  168 
when  the  previous  question  is  moved 
by  Mr.  Dalzell  of  Pennsylvania  in  the 
house    today.  ,^    ^    ... 

There  was  some  indication  that  the 
Republican  "regulars"  were  planning 
to  delay  action  on  the  adoption  of  rules 
for  the  Sixty-first  congress  In  order 
to  secure  more  time  in  which  to  as- 
semble  their   forces.  . 

The  Underwood  resolution  to  hind 
Democratic  members  to  support  Champ 


was  secretary  of  the  Sunday  school. 
The  interment  will  take  place  at  For- 
est Hill  cemetery. 

Herbert  N.  Sharvy  was  born  in  Du- 
lutli,  Jan.  19,  1884.  Most  of  his  school 
days  were  spent  in  Duluth  and  hv 
graduated  from  the  Central  high  school, 
a  member  of  the  class  of  '04.  He  took 
a  keen  and  active  interest  in  high 
school  affalr.s,  and  was  mascot  of  his 
class.  He  was  also  prominent  In  the 
Delta  Theta  fraternity,  the  secret  so- 
cieties not  at  that  time  being  under  a 
ban. 

.\fter  fini.qhing  high  school.  Mr. 
Sharvy  went  to  Bliss  Electrical  school. 
Washington,  D.  C,  from  which  he  grad- 
uated with  honors. 

At  one  time  he  was  active  In  the 
local  ."National  Guard. 

Mr.  .Sharvy  was  the  son  of  the  late 
Paul  .Sharvy.     H!.«  mother  survives  him. 


WOODSMEN  BACK 
?ROUm  CAMPS 

Beginning   to  Decorate 

tlie  Sunny  Side  of  the 

Street  Again. 

The  woodsmen  are  beginning  to  come 

In  to  tov.n.  and  the  warm,  sunny  spots 

on    the    street    corners    are    once    more 

jacks"    back    from    the 


occupied    with 
big  woods. 

The    lumber 
break   up,    and 


camps  are  beginning  to 
the  men  are  straggling 
back  in.to  town  to  look  for  new  jobs 
and  ship  out  again  on  railroad  work. 
Most  of  them  are  in  no  hurry  to  return, 
and  prefer  to  spend  a  few  days  in  the 
city. 

The  "jacks"  are  the  surest  sign  of 
spring,  and  a  crowd  of  woodsmen  loaf- 
ing against  tlie  sunny  side  of  a  build- 
ing, or  a  lumber  pile.  Is  better  than  the 
first    robin. 


ILLINOIS  LEGISLATION 
MAY  ELECT  CANNON  AS 
UNITED  STATES  SENATOR 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


the  nomination  which  would  compel 
him  to  give  up  his  fight  against  the 
insurgent.?,  who  desire  to  change  the 
rules  of  the  house,  which  Cannon  has 
upheld. 

■ 
A<    thr    Springfield    Knd. 
Springfield,    ill..    Marcli    15.— The    im- 

Fression  is  strong  among  the  different 
actions  which  have  developed  the  sen- 
atrial  dead-lock  that  a  crisis  is  ap- 
proaching and  that  a  shift  of  votes  is 
coming  which  will  break  the  deadlock 
before  long.  On  all  sides  is  heard  the 
opinion  that  an  effort  will  be  made  to 
pull  down  the  plum  for  Senator  Hop- 
kins. The  anti-Hopkins  men  declare  it 
to  be  a  final  effort  after  which,  if  It 
fails,  the  futility  of  further  attempts 
will    be    apparent.  ^   .,     . 

In  some  circles,  it  is  considered  that 
the  most  strenuous  attempt  to  be 
elected  will  be  made  by  Senator  Hop- 
kins this  week,  when  there  will  be 
three  legislative  days  in  which  joint 
ballots  will   be  taken. 

ARE  RENT  OVER  MAYOR 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


gromisc  had  agreed  on  William  D. 
tephens  providing  he  would  accept 
the  election  for  whatever  period  the 
city  attorney  held  was  the  unexpired 
term.  Stephens  declined  to  become  re- 
call candidate  against  Harper. 

The  only  names  used  in  the  talk  of 
new  men  last  night  were  Dr.  Walter 
LIndell,  Lee  C.  Gates  and  W.  M.  Bowen, 
former    president    of    the    council.      It 


Up-Set 

Feeling 


1 


that  follows  taking  a  <3ose  of  castor 
oil,  salts  or  calomel,  is  about  the 
worst  70U  can  endure — Ugh — it 
gives  one  the  creeps.  You  don'i 
have  to  have  it— CASCARETS 
move  the  bowels — tone  'ip  the 
liver — without  these  bad  feelings 
Try  them.  ei 

CASCARETS  IOC  •  bom  fot  ft  ireekt 
treatment,  all  drueeists  Riftgest  eellet 
Is  the  «orld.     Million  boxe«  m  monih. 


} 


New  Spring  Suits! 


We  are  showing  a  very  attractive 
line  of  Tailored  Suits  in  strictly  tail- 
ored as  well  as  slightly  fancy  trimmed 
models,  in  Serges,  Worsteds  and  Nov- 
elty fabrics.  These  models  are  cor- 
rect in  every  detail.     Priced  at 

522.50,  $25.00 
$29.50,  $32.50 

Other  swell  ni«jdels  arc  shown  in 
Dame  Fashion's  most  recent  crea- 
tions, ranging  in  price  from  $35. OO 
to  $50.00  and  upwards. 


-• *1 


% 


Sep 


In  the  New 
urate  Skirts 


^ 


• 


The  lines  we  sh._.w  present  splendid 
values  in  the  latest  modes.  We  have 
them  in  all  the  wanted  shades,  fabrics 
and  lengths,  ranging  in  price  from 
$5.00  upwards. 


^ 


J 


*r 


\ 


Ci 


ftSt^fc 


^m^^. 


■.A^\ 


m 


-« 


The  Display  of 

Spring  Millinery 


For  early  wear,  hundreds  of  beautiful   Hats  at  $5.00,  .$6.50,  $7.50 
and  $10.00  are  now  ready.     Many  of  them  exact  copies  of  French 
models  from  the  most   famous  artists.     Also  scores  of  original   Hats, 
made  by  our  own  ;lcver  staff  of  milliners.     It"s  an  informal  showing 
You  are  invited.  


! 


•    ^1  -WfMI'T  H  p 


LVLUTH—SUFKHIOR. 


f 
* 

t 

> 


was  announced  that  C 
rccept  the  election,  ai 
not  give  any  ans'.ver. 

Efforts  to  bring  aboi 
that    would    mean    the 
George  Alexander,  the 
from    the    race,    were, 
fact    that    if    Alexandei 
only   candidate  on   the 
Fred     C.     Wheeler.     .So. 
The  chairman   of   the  S 
tee  says  Wheeler  will  n 
under    any    circumstan 
cialists   are    devoted    tc 
believe  the  law^  authori 
valid.      If   Alexander    si 
and     leave    Wheeler    a 
course,  Wheeler  would 
cast  at    the   election,    u 
hltionhsts   got  out  a   la 
to  give  their  candidate 
Prohibition     candidate 
ticket,  and  the  Pmljibi 
paring    to     write    his 
ticket. 

A  great  crowd  of  clti 
the   city   hall    and    the 
is    jaminfd    with    citize 
the  outcome   of  the  rei 


'ates  would  not 
id    Stephens   did 

It  a  compromise 
withdrawal  ol 
recall  candidate 
impeded  by  the 
•  withdrew,  the 
ticket  would  be 
■ialist  nominee, 
jclalist  commit- 
ot  be  withdrawn 
ces,    as    the    So- 

the  recall  and 
iing  the  election 
lould    withdraw. 

clear  field,  of 
get  all  the  votes 
nless  the  Prohl- 
rge  enough  vote 
a  majority.     Thy 

is  not  on  the 
tionlsts  are  pre- 
name       on       the 

tens  is  besieging 
council  chainlier 
ns  interested  in 
•all  movement. 


Red  River  valley,  and  there  is  every 
reason  to  believe  that  much  land  will 
ciiange  hands  and  many  new  settlers 
will    locate    iifie. 


HILL  DENIES  REPORT. 


St.    Paul,    Minn.,    Mai 

to  The  Herald.) — "The 
the   Great   Northern    is 
vestments   in  the  Crow 
British  Columbia,  or  ii 
tion." 

James    J.    HU    comm< 
report    from    Toronto    1 
the    Interests    he    repr. 
cured    control    of    the 
Nest     Pass,    north    of 
berta. 


eh    15.— (Special 

report  Is  untrue; 
not  making  in- 
s  Nest  mines  in 
I  any  other  sce- 
nted thus  on  a 
hat  Mr.  Hill  or 
'sents,  has  se- 
mines  at  Crows 
Spokane,    in    Al- 


Maiiy     Se<tlerM 

Crookston,  Minn.,  Ma 
to  The  Herald.) — Jose 
turned  from  an  exter 
Middle  West  and  he  c 
will  be  many  people  fr 
ing  to  this  section  th 
and  summer.  He  foun 
favorable   toward   Polk 


Coming. 

rch  15. — (.Special 
r>h  Ball  has  re- 
ded trip  In  the 
lalms  that  there 
om  Illinois  com- 
i  coming  spring 
1  sentiment  very 
county  and  the 


Worth     Keading. 

It  is  a  matter  of  greatest  encourage- 
ment to  all  wlio  are  Interested  In  sani- 
tation and  hygienic  reform  that  our 
statesmen  and  government  officials  <ro 
at  last  coming  to  recognize  tlie  fact 
that  the  health,  energy  and  stamina 
of  the  people  of  the  Ignited  States  la 
the  greatest  asset  which  this  nation 
posses.'=es.  It  Is  also  a  matter  of  im- 
portance to  know  that  the  daily  use  of 
golden  grain  belt  beer  Is  conducive  to 
good  health.  It  gives  a  feeling  of 
bodily  comfort  and  mental  exhilaration 
and  makes  red  blood  and  health  tissue. 
(Oder  of  vour  nearest  dealer,  or  be  .«up- 
llitd  by  P'Uluth  branch,  Minneapoll* 
Brewing   company. 

TEA!  HERS  OKliANIZE. 


■  I 

I 


The  Border  Educational  .Association 
Is  Formed  at  Baiidette. 

Baudette.  Minn..  March  15. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  lirst  teachers' 
Institute  held  here  came  to  a  close 
S.aturdaj  .ifternoon,  after  a  successful 
session  of  two  days.  T.  J.  McGuIre, 
president  cf  the  Baudette  .•rchools  pre- 
sided. The  program  was  interestinff 
throughout  and  enjoyed  by  all  present. 
Considering  the  interest  taken  In  edu- 
cational matters  a  Border  Educational 
association  was  organized.  The  fol- 
lowing officers  were  elected  for  the 
ensuing  year: 

President.  Albert  Berg  of  Spoonerl 
vice  president.  Charles  L.  Wilcox  of 
Roosevelt;  secretary,  Miss  Katherine 
Berry  of  Baudette:  treasurer.  Miss 
Grace  Halverson  of  Clementson;  com- 
mittee on  organization.  Miss  Emma 
Erickson  of  Spooner,  Miss  Virginia 
Gravelle%  of  Graceton  and  Charles 
Grandjean    of    Baudette. 


1 

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« 

GOING  TO 
ST.  PAUL  AND 
MINNEAPOLIS? 


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t 

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ip~- 

■ 


C  S^  P  M  &  0  R' 


The  most  comfortable  train  and  at  the  most  convenient 
hour  is  the 

TWILIQHT  LIMITED 

Leaves    DULUTH 4 :35  P.M. 

^Leaves    SUPERIOR    4:55  P.M. 

Arrives  ST.  PAUL 9:55  P.M. 

Arrives  MINNEAPOLIS 10:25  P.M. 

Makes  connecions  in  St.  Paul  Union  Depot  with  trains  for 
Mankato,  Sioi  x  Falls,  Mitchell,  Sioux  City,  Council  Bluffs, 
Omaha  and  beyond. 

All  the  club  comforts  and  conveniences  of 
travel — Parlor  Cars,  Observation  Cafe  Cars 
and  riodern  day  coaches  on  the  TWI- 
LIGHT LIMITED. 

Also  convenient  hours  on  Return  Trip  from  Minneapo- 
lis and  St.  Pa  il  to  Superior  and  Duluth. 

For  Tickets  and  Information  Call  at 

302  West  Superior  Street,  Duluth. 

815  Tower  Avenue,  Superior. 

A.  M.  FENTON,  District  Passenger  Agent. 


..-1^  .— 

1 

i 

■f*" 


■   ■  ■ 


ir^ 


-  -i*'  -  -ji^ 


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m».«s 


1.        liTTT 


dk: 


-  ■!  llfcMI 


-iu 


rtiT^  ^ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1903. 


FTIHl 


NO  RECORDS 
ARE^OKEN 

Riders  Unable  to  Keep 

Their  Feet  on  SKi 

Hill. 


* 


DUNLOPS  "JNVINCIBLES"  AS 

SEEN  BY  THE  HERALD  CARTOONIST 


imUAN  GOVERNMENT  IS 
INACTIVE  THUS  FM  IN 
BLACK  HMD  MURDER 


-.  Longest  Standing  Jump 
Was  128  Feet  By  Ole 
Fiering, 


No  records  were  broken  at  the  ski 
tournanient  pulled  off  on  Cliester  hill 
by  the  members  of  the  Duluth  club 
yesterday.  The  weather  was  the  best 
•Tperlenoed  this  year  for  the  specta- 
tors, and  a  good  program  was  fur- 
Cishod. 

August  Norby,  Superior,  was  the 
.^•Inner  of  the  tournament  In  the  pro- 
fwBslonal  elans.  Ha  had  4"»7  points. 
Olaf  Jannum  of  Minneapolis  was  sec- 
ond with  406  points,  and  Olaf  Larson  of 
f>u:urh  was  third  with  375.  The  longest 

ttandlng    jump     was     123    feet    by    Ole 
'el  ring. 
In     the     amateur    class     the    winners 
re:       Arnold    Olson.    Duluth.    354 
llndrum.    Duluth.   3^1;   iL   Bergslln. 
rior.    303. 
The  weather  was  very  mild  yesterday 

tnd  the  riders  claim  that  the  snow  was 
oo  stlckv  for  the  best  results.  The 
■  peed  gained  by  the  riders  was  the 
irreatest  of  the  year,  but  many  of 
'them  had  much  dlfflcuUy  in  keeping 
tielr  feet,  so  slippery  did  the  slide  be- 
oomu  after  having  been  used  'or  some 
time. 

One  queer  feature  of  the  tournament 
•was  the  fact  that  the  Duluth  men  who 
have  been  hot  favorites  in  this  line 
01  sport  for  some  years  past,  and  who 
are  nearly  always  in  on  the  prize 
fnoney.  fell  away  back  In  yesterdays 
4:«?nta. 

Next  -S  inday  a  benefit  tournament 
yrV.l  be  held  for  Christ  (runhus.  who 
broke  his   leg  two   we>*ks  ago. 


wer« 
nine 

peril 


ii. 

Su- 


JIB 


Ole    Boy.    the    Stiperlor    horse    owned 
by    Martin   Thorpe,    won    the    Henders6n 
cup    donated    earlli^r    In    the    season    by 
James    Henderson.       He    won    his    third 
•vent     SaturdAv     on     the     ice     track     at 
the    foot    of    Twenty-flrst    avenue    west. 
W      G.     .Shlve's     Bonneslta     and     C.     R. 
Riiafa    Tomango    had    a    chance    as    one 
had   captured    two    races   and    the    other 
one.       The     blanket     donated     by     J.     H. 
Constantine  for  competition  In   the  2:20 
chiss   will    probably   go   over   until    next 
ye<ir   a   sthe    season    Is    now    practically 
over    and    there    seems    to    be    little    In- 
terest  In    horse    racing. 
•       •       • 
In    an     interview       recently,      Walter 
Whitehead's       manager       said     that     ho 
■would    soon     take    the    bis    negro    west 
and    fight    lilm    with    the    best    In    that 
part    of    the    country.      The    tight    game 
In  and  around   Duluth  is  not  now  what 
It    was    some    little    time    ago,    and    all 
the    engagements    for    this    part    of    the 
country    have    been    cancelled.      Tonight 
In     Wisconsin        Georgo     Gunther.     the 
colored  min  who  says  he  Is  from  Aus- 
tralia    and     has     been     quite     a     noise 
around  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  since  he 
hit    the    country    some    time    ago.    will 
meet    Tony   Caponl.         Whitehead,    it    Is 
Uk-ly.     will    meet    Ounthar    some     time 
ne.xt  month  and  directly  after  the  figlit 
be    win    be    taken    West    by    his    man- 
ager. 

Chuck    O'Connell     has    been    matched 

•  ^Ith   N!.k  Constantlne.  They   will   meet 

aome    time    next    month,    althouyh,    the 

place  or  exact  date  of  the  meeting  has 

not    been    decided    on^ 

"I'LL  FIGHT,  BIT 
ON  MY  OWN  TERMS" 

Jack  Johnson,  Champion, 

Makes  This  Statement 

in  St.  Paul. 

Sn.  Paul.  Minn..  Marcli  1.5. — Jack 
Johnson,  tli'e  negro  pugilist,  champion 
bf-avvweight  of  the  world,  arrived  in 
St.  Paul  at  6  o'clock  last  evening  from 
Vancouver,  and  left  shortly  after  8 
o'clock  for  Ci:lcaifo.  Jolinson  said  ho 
had  heard  nothing  from  Jeffries  regard- 
Ins'  a  tight. 

•*I  will  fight  Jeffries,"  said  the  col- 
cred  man  "'If  Isa  make."*  tlie  challenge, 
but  it  will  be  on  my  tertns.  I've  fought 
always    with    the    otiier    fellow    getting 


Rome.  March  15. — The  question  Is 
raised  here  whether  the  United  States 
is  entitled  to  special  satisfaction  from 
the  Italian  government  on  account  of 
the  murder  of  Lieut.  Joseph  Petroslno, 
of  the  New  York  police  department  at 
Palermo.  While  the  nature  of  the 
crime  was  such  as  to  stir  the  hearts  of 
all  the  people,  the  officials  of  the  gov- 
ernment point  out  that  only  tlie  diplo- 
matic and  con.sular  bodies  are  under 
the  special  protection  of  the  govern- 
ment and  that  only  in  the  event  of  a 
member  of  one  or  the  otlier  of  these 
bodies  being  as.sassinated  by  an  Italian 
In  this  country  could  the  government 
be  held  In  a  mea.sure  responsible. 
Petroslno  did  not  come  under  this 
head,  but  was  in  the  same  category  as 
an  American  citizen,  abroad,  contem- 
plated in  tlie  treaty  comtemplated  Feb. 
26,  1871,  e.stablisliing  that  the  .subjects 
of  each  cou.itry  sliall  enjoy  tlie  same 
protection  and  security  for  their  per- 
son  and   property   a.-;   natives. 

The  American  ambassador  has  made 
further  representations  to  the  foreign 
office  setting  forth  the  imperative 
necessity  for  the  protection  of  both 
Italians  and  Americans  of  bringing  as- 
sassins of  Petroslno  to  justice.  Tlie 
foreign  office  officials  as.sured  him 
that  evervthing  possible  wa.s  being 
done  by  "the  Italian  government  and 
promised  that  slie  should  be  kept  in- 
formed of  ail  develop\i.rnts.  The  gen- 
eral Inspector  of  police  has  already 
proceeded  to  Palermo  to  make  a  full 
Investigation  and  the  government  in 
addition  to  leaving  nothing  untried  to 
discover  the  criminal.s,  has  offered 
large   rewards   for    their  capture. 


ASSOCIATED  PRESS  SPORTING 
FORECAST  FOR  THE  WEEK 


Every  pugilistic  enthusiast  In  the' 
world  Is  waiting  eagerly  for  definite 
news  as  to  wliether  James  J.  Jeffries 
will  agree  to  meet  Jack  Jolinson  in 
a  contest  for  the  heavyweight  chani- 
pionship  of  the  world.  The  recent  ar- 
rival In  this  country  of  Hugh  D.  Mc- 
intosh of  Sydney.  Australia,  has  added 
greatly  to  the  public  interest  In  the 
possibility  of  such  a  contest,  but  con- 
siderable feeling  has  developed  that 
Mcintosh's  offer  of  a  purse  for  the 
match  on  foreign  soil  should  not  be 
accepted,  and  that  the  question  as  to 
the  merits  of  the  men  should  be  de- 
cided here.  It  is  known  that  Jeffries 
Is  not  inclined  to  fight  abroad  and  that 
if  he  decides  to  re-enter  the  ring  he 
probably  v.ould  favor  the  offer  for  a 
world's  cliampionsliip  battle  In  Seattle 
durir.g  tiie  exposition  tiiere.  He  lias 
taken  up  road  work  in  connection 
Willi  the  llglit  Indoor  exercise  he  has 
been  doing  and  will  continue  this 
work  the  coming  week.  Jeffries  tells 
his  friends  that  his  wind  is  improving 
rapidly     and     ho 


Australan      who 
Atnerican  color.>^. 


ho     Intends 
possible,    to 


to 
his 


t!ie 
for 


best 
me.' 


of  the  terms.     Xo  more  of  that 


<  (_:>*: 


AN  AM.nElR  LFAUIE. 

Cpper  Peninsula  Teams  May  (»et  To- 
gether and  Play  Organized  Ball. 

'Marquette.  .Mich..   March    15. — (Special 
to     'i'iie     Herald.) — A     baseball     league. 


./l  man's  hat  marks 
his  dress  sense. 
Wear  a  Gordon  hat; 
correct  and  lasting. 
The 

G^ordon 
//at  $3 

rhc  Gordon  De  Luxe  $4.00 


sa.\s 
work  up  gradually.  If 
real     fighting    trim. 

It  is  no  secict  among  friends  of 
Jeffries  tliat  he  is  anxious  to  flglit 
.Johnson  and  has  practically  made  up 
his  mir.d  to  do  so  as  soon  as  lie 
feels  sure  tliat  he  will  be  able  to 
do  himself  justice  in  tlie  ring.  .John- 
son, who  has  declared  his  willingness 
to  flght  Jeffries,  Is  expected  to  be  In 
the  East  within  the  next  two  weeks 
and  it  may  be  that  lie  and  Jeffries' 
manager  will  then  come  to  an  agree- 
ment. 

•      •      • 

American  bicy«'l;-  riders  will  compete 
at  the  Zoological  Gardens.  Berlin,  in  a 
six-day  bicycle  race  this  week.  The 
race  will  begin  today  on  the  same 
conditions  which  govern  the  annual 
New  York  race.  Among  the  American 
riders  who  will  compete  are  Floyd  Mac- 
Farland  San  Jose.  Cal. ;  Walter  Dc- 
mara,  San  Francisco  and  James  Moran, 
Chelsea.     Mass..    and    Jack    Clark,      an 


made  up  of  teams  representing  the  iron 
and  copper  regions  of  Fpper  Michigan. 
Is  In  prospect.  It  will  be  a  strictly  am- 
ateur organization,  and  will  pla.v  on  a 
scliedule  calling  only  for  Saturday. 
Sunday  and  Iioliday  games. 

Marquette.  Islipeming  and  Negaunee. 
in  the  Iron  country,  and  Hougliton  and 
Calum*^t.  and  either  Lake  l.lnden  or 
Hancock,  in  the  Copper  country,  are 
tiie  prosp.iective  members,  and  a  meet- 
ing of  representatives  from  the  two 
districts  will  be  held  in  this  city  sliort- 
ly  to  discuss  and  formally  pa.S3  upon 
the  pr(;Ject. 


Is    now     racing     under 
is  also  entered. 

•  •       « 

The  New  York  Athletic  club  will 
hold  its  annual  Indoor  carnival  at 
Madison  Square  Garden  Tuesday. 
Kvery  athlete  of  prominence  in  eastern 
colleges  and  clubs  has  sent  in  his  en- 
try. 

Tonight  Dorando  Pietro  of  Italy  and 
Johnny  Hayes,  winner  of  the  London 
Olympic  Marathon,  will  meet  in  Madi- 
son S'luare  Garden  for  the  third  time 
In  a  match  to  settle  the  qxiestion  of 
Marathon  supremacy.  Dorando  broke 
down  at  Sheppard's  Bush  and  Hayes 
fell  a  victim  to  Dorando's  prowess  last 
fall    in    New    York. 

The  Marathon  wave  has  hit  Pitts- 
burg and  two  contests  have  been  ar- 
ranged in  tliat  city  for  the  16th  and 
31UI1  of  this  month.  The  Indoor  track 
measures  seven  laps  to  tiie  mile.  On 
Tuesday,  ten  men  will  qualify  there  to 
meet  five  New  York  amateur  distance 
men.  including  K.  H.  White.  Tom  Mor- 
rissey,  Samuel  Meller  and  M.  J.  H.van 
at  the  full  Marathon  distance  in  the 
Pittsburg    rink    on    March    30. 

•  •       • 

Edward  Payson  Weston  will  cele- 
brate ills  71st  birthday  this  afternoon 
bv  starting  on  a  4,300  mile  walk  from 
New  Yprk  to  San  Francisco.  He  hopes 
to  reach  tlie  Pacific  coast  within  100 
days.  The  old  "Fed"  will  start  from 
tlie  general  postoffice,  New  York  at  4 
o'clock. 

•  •       • 

Amateur  and  pr)i'essional  bllliardlsts 
will  have  an  inning  tills  week  in  New 
York.  Amateur  three  cushion  players 
of  Cliicago,  Kansas  City  and  St.  Louis 
will  play  a  stories  against  Eastern  ex- 
perts on  Monday,  Tuesday  and  Wednes- 
day. The  games  will  be  at  50  points 
each.  The  western  team  will  consist 
of  James  Shea  and  Charles  Mornln, 
Chicago:  Jordan  W.  Lambert  and  Dr. 
William  Campbell,  St.  Louis  and  T.  J. 
Backus.  Kansas  City.  The  Eastern 
players  will  be  A  Brook  Heiser.  C. 
Palasko,  1>.  Ballou,  James  Blair  and  D. 
Louterbach. 

•  •       • 

George  Slosson.  professional  18.1 
balk  line  champion,  will  defend  his 
title  against  George  Sult«n  Thursday 
In  the  tiardeii  Concert  hall.  New  York. 
The   match   will   be   500   points   up. 


of  trade  buttons  begins  tonight.  Only 
C  class  rinks  are  entitled  to,  enter  the 
contest,  as  it  is  a  C  class  event.  The 
games  committee  has  the  C  class  bon- 
splel  In  cliaige.  and  they  made  the 
draw  tills  morning. 


DAKOTA  RACE 
PROGRAM  FRAMED 

Prospects  Are  Bright  for 

Five  Fast  Racing 

Days. 

Grand  Forks.  N.  D.,  March  15. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Secretary  Bachol- 
ler  of  the  state  fair  association  lias  is- 
sued the  race  program  which  will  be 
held  at  the  state  fair  this  year,  July 
20  to  24.  The  program  is  one  of  the 
best  that  has  been  arranged-  Slake 
entries  will  close  May  15  and  class  en- 
tries are  to  close  July  5.  The  program 
follows: 

FInit  Day — July  20. 
Free-for-all    pate   or   trot,   class. 
Three-minute    pace    or    trot,    take. 
Four  and   one-half  furlong  dasli. 
Six-furlong  dash. 

Second    Day — July 
2:25    pace   or   trot,   stake. 
2:18   trot,  class. 
Flve-furlong    dash. 
One-mile   dash. 

Third    Uay — July 
trot,     stake, 
pace  or  trot,  class, 
half  mile  dash,  2-year-olds  only, 
and    one-quarter-mile    dash. 

Fourth    Day — July   23. 
pace    or    trot,    stake, 
pace  or  trot,  elaaa. 
Flve-furlong   dash. 
One-mile    dash. 

Fifth    Day — July    t4. 
2:15    pace    or    trot,    stake. 
2:35  pace,  class. 

Five-furlong  dash,  consolation,  hors- 
es that  have  started  at  meet  and  not 
won  a  race. 

Six-furlong    dash,    consolation. 
In  pace  or  trot  races,  trotters  are  al- 
lowed  five  seconds'    time. 


ItalinnM    .\rreMted. 

New  Y'ork.  March  15. — Lieut.  Antonio 
Vocharis,  cliief  assistant  to  Detective 
Joseph  Petroslno.  who  was  killed  by 
assassins  In  Sicily,  has  arested  four 
Italians  in  the  Italian  quarter  of 
Brooklyn.  Vocharis.  who  was  assist- 
ed by  half  a  dozen  men  from  the 
Italian  criminal  squad,  took  the  men 
Into  custody  only  after  one  of  their 
number  had  fought  desperately  to  es- 
cape. _, 

The  men  arrested  are  Amadio  Pietro, 
Vito  Andraguo,  Vlto  Velo  and  Stefano 
Castronove.  It  Is  Intimated  Vacharls 
has  reason  to  believe  that  the  men  had 
knowledge  of  the  plot  to  kill  Petro- 
slno.      Castronove.     the    man     who    at- 


SAY  COERCION  IN 
HASKELL'S  CASE 

Motions  to  Quash  Indict- 
ments Ctiargc  Testi- 
mony Suppression. 

Muskogee.  Okla..  March  15. — Sensa- 
tional allegations  are  contained  in  mo- 
tions to  quash  the  indictments  agalnat 
Governor  Haskell  and  other  prominent 
Oklahoma  men  charged  by  the  govern- 
ment with  conspiracy  in  connection 
with  the  Muskogee  townslte  schedul- 
ing, lih'd  here  on  behalf  of  the  de- 
fandants  and  served  on  Assistant  Unit- 
ed   Slates    District    Attorney    Gregg. 

Tlie  motions  charge  misconduct  on 
the  part  of  the  special  assistant  at- 
torney general,  Sylvester  Rush  of 
Omaha,  who  conducted  the  grand  Jury 
examinations.  It  Is  alleged  that  gov- 
ernment secret  service  operatives  gave 
hearsay  testimony  before  the  grand 
jurv,  {liat  important  testimony  was 
suppres.se.i.  that  tl^e.,  government  de- 
nied the  Jury's  req>lesi  for  certain  te.s- 
timony,  that  wlin^scs  were  coerced 
and  held  in  subjection,  and  that  Rush 
told  the  jury  that  Indictments  should 
be  returned  because  tlie  government 
wanted   It  done. 

It  is  further  charged  that  witnesses. 
Instead  of  being  permitted  to  testily 
freelv  were  confronted  wltli  previous- 
ly prepared  statements,  purporting  to 
contain  their  te.sllmony.  and  torced  to 
say  the  statements  were  correct  and 
an  Implltd  threat  was  made  by 
Rush  when  a  Juror  attempted 
lion   a  witness. 

The    United    States    circuit    couit 
been    asked    to    assign    a    Judge    to 
the  case  in  place  of  Judge 
bell    of    this   district,    who 
to   preside.  


tempted  to  escape,  is  said  to  have  re- 
cently come  here  from  Chicago,  where 
he  Is  alleged  to  have  been  a  leader  of 
the  Black  Hand  groups.  Revolvers  and 
stilettos  were  found  on  the  prisoners. 

Seven  other  arrests  of  Italian  sus- 
pects were  made  in   this  city  yesterday. 

Inspector  McCafferty,  head  of  the  de- 
tective service,  has  made  some  caustic 
remarks  over  the  neglect  on  the  part 
of  the  Italian  police.     Said  he: 

•If  an  Italian  detective,  sent  here 
on  a  mission  bv  that  government  and 
working  in  behalf  of  the  Italian  po  ice. 
had  been  murdered  in  New  York  we 
would  liave  notified  the  slain  mius 
home  people.  So  far  as  the  police  ot 
SKllv  are  concerned,  we  have  not 
heard  a  word  of  Peiroslno's  death.  I 
cabled  Saturday  for  information,  but 
have  received  no  answer  from  l.  al- 
ermo." 

Wonders   an   to   Robbery. 

The  inspector  nald  tliat  iie  was  par- 
tlcularlv  anious  to  know  whotlier  Pet- 
rosiiio  was  robbed  after  being  shot.  He 
intimated  that  Petroslno  had  some  pa- 
pers valuable  to  the  police  here  In  tun- 
ning down  Black  Hand  and  o' lier 
Italian  offenders.  The  neglect  of  the 
Palmero  police  makes  it  Impossible  for 
th"  police  here  to  know  whether  i-'et- 
rosliio  had  these  papers  In  his  pocket 
when  slain  and  whether  or  not  the  as- 
sassins secured  them.  The  Inspe -tor 
said  i'etrosino  had  letters  of  instruc- 
tion from  the  department  here,  wl  Ich, 
If  stolen  by  the  murderers,  would  re- 
veal to  the  Italian  criminals  just  what 
plans  the   police  of  New    York   havt    on 

"If  the  police  have  any  papers  .hat 
Petroslno  had,"  said  Inspector  Mci^af- 
ferty     "we   would    like   to   know    It. 

To    the   quesaion    If    Italian   criminals 
here     had     re<iuested     confederates 
Italy  to  kill   Petroslno  In   that 
Inspector    McCafferty    said 
that   theory.      Petroslno 


in 
couT  try. 
he  dou  Dte«i 
was  constantly 
in  perilous  positions  in  New  Y^ork,  tlie 
inspector  said,  and  that  If  criminals 
of  this  country  would  have  dared  to 
kill  him  at  all  they  would  have  ilone 
it  in  this  city.  Petroslno,  he  naid, 
was  frequently  alone  In  <lark  places  in 
New  York,  in  Italian  dives  and  <n-en 
in  his  way  home  late  at  night,  when 
t'lM-  criminal  class  had  an  opportunity 
to    carry    out    his    murder. 

Mrs.  Petroslno,  the  young  wlf»  of 
the  murdered  detective.  Is  prostrated 
as  the  result  of  the  tragic  death  ot  her 
husband. 


because  two  un  .'eri- 
the  District   of  Col- 
on  Inauguration  day 
their  pages  the  daily 
weather.   Us  readers 
compel    it    to    restore    them,    and 
department  or  congress   were  to 


so  freely  criticise 
fled  forecasts  for 
umbla  have  fallen 
were  to  omit  from 
predictions  of  the 
would 
if   tlie 


close  a  station  of  the  bureau  In  any 
part  of  the  I'nlted  States  the  proj.erty 
Interests  would  demand  its  res' ora- 
tion. Tl;is  would  not  be  the  case  If  Hie 
hysterl:;al  abuse  that  is  now  beinu  In- 
dulged  ii'    was    iustified.  ' 


the  Wisconsin  Central  Railway  com- 
pany. The  Minneapolis,  St.  Paul  & 
Sauit  Ste.  Marie  Railway  company 
leased  line  certificates  will  be  is- 
sued in  exchange  lor  the  Wisconsin 
Central  preferred  stock  under  a  con- 
tract independent  of  the  lease. 

"The  Wisconsin  Central  railway  is  a 
property  of  great  strategic  value,  and 
of  considerable  possibilities,  but  like 
all  properties  that  are  endeavoring  to 
keep  p:ice  witii  the  requirements  of  a 
growing  business,  it  now  requires  large 
sums  of  money  expended  upon  it. 
Aiming  the  re<iulrenieiits  is  the  short- 
ening of  its  line  between  Minneapolis 
and  Chicago,  adltlonal  equipment  and 
further  rectification  of  grades.  This 
Is  a  work  that  will  require  several 
years  to  complete  and  naturally  means 
tisat  tlie  money  for  those  undertakings 
must  be  provided,  which  will  likely 
have  an  effect  upon  tlie  returns  which 
mav  be  paid  upon  the  stock. 

"It  was  these  considerations,  among 
others,  which  prompted  the  committee 
in  accepting  tlie  offer  of  the  Minne- 
apolis, St.  Paul  &  Sault  Ste  Marie 
Railway  company,  and  whicli  the  board 
of  directors  deemed  to  be  for  the  very 
best  interest  of  the  preferred  share- 
holders. 

"The  parties  who  originally  con- 
ducted tlie  negotiations  were  large 
holders  of  the  preferred  stock.  They 
demanded  a  guaranty  of  4  per  <ent  up- 
on this  stock,  and  tliat  an  opportunity 
should  be  given  to  all  tlie  holders  of 
preferred  stock  to  participate  in  such 
guarantv.  The  result  Is  that  the  offer 
is  only  open  to  the  shareholders  for  a 
limited  time  and  the  board  recom- 
mends the  prompt  deposit  of  the  stock 
If  it  is  intended  to  take  advantage 
the    offer    made," 


of 


Hives,  eczema,  itch  or  salt  rheum 
pets  vou  crazv.  Can't  bear  the  touch 
of  your  clothing.  Doans  Ointment 
cures  the  most  obstinate  cases.  Why 
suffer.      All   druggists   sell    it. 


EAMES  ORIEF-STRICKE!^' 


Into 


Ml 

ques- 


21. 


22. 


2:22 
2:12 
One- 
One 

2:20 
$:1S 


has 
try 
H.  F.  Camp- 
has   declined 


MOORE  DEFENDS 
WEATHER  BUREAU 

Sends  Out  Circular  Letter 

Explaining  Storm  of 

March  4. 


Because  Her  Name  Is  Drawn 
the  de  fiogorza  Suit. 

New  York.  March  15. — Kmlllo  de 
Gogorza,  the  baritone  singer  who  is 
on  a  concert  tour  with  Mme.  Emma 
Eames,  is  defendant  in  a  malntetaince 
suit  instituted  by  his  wife,  Mrs.  F.lsa 
de  Gogorza.  According  to  the  alle- 
gaiions  made  by  Mrs.  de  Gugor;;a,  it 
!.->  the  concert  tour  which  has  caused 
all  the  trouble.  She  is  sulnj:  for 
separation  from  her  husband,  a.  the 
same  time  specifically  stating  that  she 
has  no  cause  far  absolute  divorce,  as 
far  as  she  knows.  But  she  doeii  say 
this: 

"Wo  lived  happily  together  until  he 
(meaning  iier  husband)  went  on  a  con- 
cert tour  witii  one   ICmma   Eames." 

As  happiness  is  now  a  thing  of  the 
past  as  far  as  she  and  M.  de  fSoiforza 
are  concerned,  according  to  Mr^.  de 
Gogorza.  the  wife  thinks  she  s  lould 
have  separate  maintenance  allowed 
her.  In  the  meantime  she  wants  $250 
weekly  alimon.v  and  an  allowance  of 
$2,500  for  attorney's  fees. 

These  requests,  she  thinks,  are  rea- 
sonable, in  view  of  the  fact,  aj;  she 
states,  that  her  husband  makes  $  10.000 
a  year  by  his  prowess  as  a  singer.  So 
siie  went  before  Justice  (;)'Gorman  and 
asked  for  the  temporary  alimony  al- 
lowance, pending  tlie  trial  of  th«'  suit 
for  separation. 


EeiOIRY  OF 
ySElEiTS 


WHKKKTOtiOTOMGHT 


LYCKUM— "The  Thief.  " 
EIJOU — New    van. lev!  lie 


bill. 


"The  Thief." 


MOTOR  RE(  ORDS  BROKEN. 


CLUBHOUSE  IS 
NOW  ON  ITS  WAY 


DINHAM  STILL  IN 
ALL  THE  EVENTS 


Youttiful  Skip  Is  Tliis 

Year  Establishing  a 

Good  Record. 

That  "boy"  curler.  Will  Dinham.  is 
certainly  showing  the  members  of  the 
Duluth  Curling  club  that  he  Is  In  the 
game  all  the  time.  His  two  rlriks  got 
down  to  the  finals  ana  seml-flnals  In 
one  event;  he  has  the  hoard  of  trade 
buttons,  and  he  is  still  in  the  race  for 
the  other  events,  with  the  season  near- 
ly   over. 

Saturday  he  met  and  defeated  Nichols 
in  two  events,  the  Bagley  and  Manley. 
He  has  lost  but  few  games  all  season, 
and  In  addition  to  honors  already  won. 
he  Is  class  winner  In  the  Bagley  and 
squad   winner  in    the  Manley. 

Play    In    the    bonspiel    for    the    board 


Yacht  Club  Main  House 

Being  Moved  Down 

tlie  Ice. 


De  Rosier  Makes  Some  Fast  Tinie  on 
Los  Angeles  Track. 

T.os  Angeles,  Cal..  March  15. — Several 
world's  records  for  motor  cycle  racing 
v.'ere  broken  yesterday  at  the  new 
saucer    track   here. 

In  the  five-mile  professional  race,  De 
Rosier  of  New  York  made  tlie  dis- 
tance in  4:09  2-5.  The  previous  record 
was   5:25. 

De  Rosier  of  New  York  reduced  the 
two-mile  record  to  1:40;  F.  Huyck  of 
Chicago,  the  five-mile  amateur  record 
from  4:38  to  4:11  3-5;  E.  Llngenfelder 
of  Chicago,  the  three-mile  record  from 
3:01  3-5  to  2:28  2-5,  and  G.  C.  Huyck 
of  Chicago  the  three-mile  amateur  rec- 
ord   from    3:48    3-5    to   3:27    2-5. 


Willis  I. 
bureau   at 
following 
failure  to 
4 


.Moore,  cliief  of  the  weather 
Washington,  has  Isr.ued  the 
statement,  explaining  the 
predict   the   storm    of   March 

and  defending  the  weather  bureau: 

"It  is  not  usual  to  answer  criticisms 
of  the  forecasts  of  the  weather  bureau, 
but  the  liundreds  of  press  clippings 
that  have  been  received  since  Marcli 
containing  adverse 
bureau  seem 
from  me. 

"Forecasts     of     the     weather    bureau 
are  before   the  public  every  day  in   the 
year.     In  the  past  about 
out    of    each    ten    failed 
and   it  may   be  expected 
ratio  of  failure  will 
meteorology  can 
now,  an  exact 

"In  the  case 


4. 

criticisms     of     the 
to  call  for  this  statement 


Chicago,  March  15. — Mme.  Ilmma 
lOames.  who  was  at  a  hotel  here  yes- 
terday, refused  to  see  reporters,  I  ut  to 
a  friend  who  visited  her  she  confided 
her  grief  over  her  name  being  drugged 
Into  the  de  Gogorza  suit.  "This  1^  ter- 
rible! terrible!"  she  moaned.  'Why 
sliouhi  this  womati  draw  my  nann'  into 
her  affair?  1  do  not  know  what  h«-r 
differences  with  her  husband.  t-lgn-H- 
de  Gogorza.  mav  be.  but  wliv  seek  to 
involve  me?  What  shal!  I  do?  The 
newspapers  in  all  the  world  probably 
have   the   awful    story." 


"Dove,  like  opportunity,  is  an  angel 
that  comes  but  once,  and  when  It  cornea 
It  ouglit  to  be  prized  and  cherished 
above  everything  else  on  earth.  Not 
all  the  riches  of  the  world  can  buy  it 
or  keep  It,  and  when  once  it  has  gone 
it  will  never  return."  Thus  says  a 
great  writer  and  an  acute  ob.server  of 
mankind,  in  brief,  this  is  the  text  ot 
"The  Thief."  tlie  great  play  by  Henri 
Bernstein  wlilch  lui.-'  had  world-wide 
presentation,  which  ran  for  ten  months 
al  the  Lyceum  tlienier.  New  York  and 
which  Cliaries  Froliman  will  present 
at  the  Lyceum  the  tlrst  half  of  tliia 
week   commencing   toniglit. 

In  "The  Thief  woman  s  vanity  and 
man's  complaisant  conceit  wlilch  too 
often  sacrifices  love,  are  powerfully 
e.xhlbited,  but  there  is  also  heroin 
shown  thai  the  great  chaiico  for  the 
regeneration  of  botli  lies  In  the  pure 
and  unselfish  love.  Bernstein's  sklll- 
tul  analysis  of  ihi.s  vanity  and  conceit. 
liis  sympathetic  treatment  of  the  con- 
llict  of  iwo  estranged,  yet  loving  hearts 
and  their  liappy  and  logical  reconcili- 
ation explain  tin-  universal  vogue 
"The  Thief" 


ot 


CENTRAL  LEASE 
MISINTERPRETED 


The    clubhouse    of    tiie    Duluth    Yacht 
club    will    be      in      its   new    location   by 
W.    Reau,    who    is   super- 
work,  liad  fourteen  teams 
the   Ice  at   an    early   hour 
and    the    clubhouse    was 
1  way  gliding  down  the  ice  to 
resting  place. 


nightfall.     H. 
intending  the 
of  horses   on 
tliis    morning, 
soon  on  Its 
its  future 


Elk  Day  at  Congress. 

Pittsburg.  Pa..       March       15. — The 

third  and  last  week  of  the  ninth  an- 
nual international  tournament  of  the 
American  Bowling  congress  started  to- 
day at  10  a.  m.  Today's  sessions  are 
in  honor  of  the  Elks,  and  many  recep- 
tions have  been  arranged  for  visiting 
Elks'  teams.  Two  special  trains  ar- 
rived  today   from    Wheeling. 


l)^(l^(yylltyyyyyyyyyyy^i^yyyyyyy 


The  old  pavilion,  near  the  White 
City,  has  been  moved  out  on  the  ice. 
and  the  piling  is  being  driven  so  that 
no  time  will  be  lost  in  getting  the 
buildings  on  their  foundations  before 
the   ice  weakens. 

It  is  estimated  that  tlie  improve- 
ments being  made  bv  the  Boat  club 
will  cost  more  tlian  $15,000.  The  Yacht 
club  launch  houses  are  being  torn 
down  and  being  rebuilt  at  the  main 
house  of  the  Boat  club.  Teams  are 
engaged  In  hauling  the  lumber  as 
fast  as  it  can  be  ripped  off.  and  the 
work  IS  going  ahead  very  rapidly. 


0 
* 
* 

* 


F:.V PIKES   A.S    PASTOIt 

TALKS  OF  t  NCEIIT.\IXTY 

OF  LUTK  DURATION'. 


Yoiingslown,  Ohio,  March  15. — 
"No  one  of  yon  can  toll  at  what 
hour  death  will  oonu%"  .said  the 
pn.stor  of  the  I'resbyterlan  ehnreh 
lit  Holland,  near  here,  je^ler- 
dijy.  Iliirdly  hnti  he  ."jpoken  when 
Mrs.  Matilda  Wlllhinis  fell  from 
her  seat  and  died  of  heart  trouble. 


* 
* 

* 


<Hf-»»y)KjiCJi(»****»»»»»» 


!Vew  Steamrr  Laiinrhed. 

St.  riair.  Mich..  March  15.— The  steel 
steamer  Nortli  Lake,  built  by  the  Great 
I^akes  Kngint-ering  works  for  the  Mu- 
tual Terminal  Steamsliip  company,  was 
successfully  launched  Saturday.  The 
North  Lake,  which  la  MO  feet  long, 
was  christened  by  little  Miss  Catherine 
Nobel,  daughter  of  the  manager  of  tlie 
line. 


one  predicltion 

to    be    verified, 

tliat   the   same 

be  maintained  until 

be  made,  what  it  is  not 

science. 

of  the  storm  that  visited 
Wasiiington  on  March  4  last,  the  fact 
is  tiiat  the  disturbance  began  here  on 
the  morning  of  the  3rd.  and  was  accu- 
rately forecasted  the  day  before.  The 
bureau  anticipated  that  the  storm  ceii- 
ter  would  pass  over  tiie  Middle  Alantic 
states  during  the  night  of  the  3rd.  and 
that  nortliwest  winds  and  falling 
temperatures  would  leave  a  clear  day 
for  the  4th.  The  center  passed  precisely 
as  forecasted,  the  wind  shifted  and  the 
temperature  fell,  but  Instead  of  the 
northwest  wind  clearing  the  sky,  as  it 
does  in  nearly  all  cases,  precipitation 
In  the  form  of  snow,  occurred  and 
continued  for  twelve  hours  after  the 
•^torm  center  had  passed  eastward.  No 
forecaster  could  forsee  this.  Were  we 
to  forecast  a  fall  of  snow  following  the 
passage  of  storm  centers  that  move 
from  the  northwest,  we  would  have 
hundreds  of  failures  charged  against 
us.  Instead  of  an  occasional  one.  for  it 
is  rare  tliat  snow  falls  in  the  Middle 
Atlantic  states,  except  with  the  ap- 
proach of  a  storm  from  the  southwest, 
ivhlch  causes  northeast  winds,  and  it 
is  extremely  rare  that  any  storm  In 
this  region  that  begins  witli  rain  ends 
with  snow  of  any  considerable  amount. 
On  the  contrary,  many  storms  that  be- 
gin as  snow  end  as  rain. 

"The  forecast  in  question  was  made 
by  one  of  the  most  experienced  fore- 
casters of  the  bureau,  and  was  con- 
curred ill  by  all  the  forecasters  who 
were  conversant  with  the  conditions, 
and  the  same  forecast  would  be  made 
today  If  similar  conditions  existed. 

"The  forecasters  of  the  irnlted  States 
weather  bureau  are  the  equals,  if  not 
the  superiors,  of  any  others  in  the 
world,  and  their  predictions  of  frosts, 
cold  waves,  ^ood^  and  marine  storms, 
although  subject  to  error  in  the  pro- 
portion of  about  one  to  ten.  are  of  sucli 
value  to  the  industries  of  the  nation 
ih^i  if  one  of  Uie  newspapers  that  now 


Does  Not  Guarantee  [livi- 

dends  on  the  Pre* 

ferred  Stock. 

New  York.  March  15. — The  following 
statement  was  Issued  authoritatively. 
Saturday:  "A  misapprehension  iippar. 
ently  e.xlsts  in  the  minds  of  muny  of 
the  holders  of  the  preferred  stock  of 
the  Wisconsin  Central  Railway  com- 
pany in  regard  to  the  condition  of  the 
lease  negotiated  with  the  Minneipolis. 
St  Paul  &  Sault  Ste.  Marie  Railway 
company.. which  it  is  proper  should  be 
corrected. 

"The  lease  does  not  provide  f(T  any 
guarantv  of  dividends  on  tlie  preferred 
stock.  The  shareholders  will  le  en- 
titled to  such  di.strlbutlon  of  tlie  net 
revenue  as  may  be  available  ;n  the 
discretion   of   the   board   of   directors   of 


Mine.  Eanies'  Visit. 

Thursday  evening,  Marcli  18,  will 
prove  to  be  a  great  niglit  arlisllcally 
and  socially  for  Duluth  and  vicinity, 
for  It  Is  the  night  that  Emma  Eames, 
tlie  famous  soprano,  assisted  by  that 
superb  baritone.  Emilio  de  Gorgorza, 
will  give  their  concert  in  tiie  Lyceum 
theater.  Some  of  the  most  beautiful 
and  costly  gowns  ever  worn  by  any 
g'real  prima  donna  on  the  concert  stage 
are  tiiese  worn  by  tills  dlstingul.slied 
star  The  one  she  will  wear  liere  will 
be  a  creation  by  Worth  of  Farla 
Madame  Eames  is  a  woman  of  regal 
beauty. 

"The  Girls  From  Beilin." 

Corinne  will  come  to  the  Lyceum 
next  Friday  and  Saturday  in  her  now 
musical  success.  "The  Girls  From  Ber- 
lin," by  John  J.  McXally.  William  Jer- 
ome and  Jean  Schwartz.  The  story  la 
said  to  be  diff<>renl  irom  anything  yet 
attempted  in  the  line  of  musical  plays 
and  the  part  assigned  tlie  star  is  well 
fitted  to  her  talents.  The  supporting 
company  is  made  up  of  some  we  1 
known  musical  comedy  artists,  as  well 
as  a  beauty  ciiorus  of  exceptional 
grace. 

. •■ 

Don't  use  liarsli  piiysics.  The  reac- 
tion weakens  the  bowles.  leads  to 
chronic  constipation.  Get  Doan  s  Reg- 
ulets.  They  operate  easily,  tone  the 
stomach,    ciire    constipation. 


Gen.   W.  J.    I'mIhkt 

C  olorado  Springs,  C'oio., 
Gen.  William  J.  Palmer 
Colorado    Sprigs,    died    at 


Dead. 

March  13. — 
founder  of 

his  country 
si  at  Glen-Eyrie,  west  of  this  city,  late 
.Saturday.  i>eatli  came  as  a  result  of 
a  fall  from  a  horse  In  October.  l'J06. 
wliicli  resulted  In  breaking  his  back. 
Gen  Palmer,  who  is  widely  known 
throughout  the  country,  tias  often  be»n 
called  the  foremost  citizen  of  Colorado. 
H»»  leaves  an  estate  valued  at  $15,- 
000.000. 


s.s,s. 


BEST  TPECTMEHT 
FOR  CATARRH 

S.  S.  S.  is  the  best  treatment  for  Catarrh  because  it  is  a  perfect  blood 
purifier.  It  is  the  only  medicine  that  is  able  to  get  down  into  the  circula- 
tion and  entirely  remove  the  catarrhal  matter  and  impurities  which  P^od^^ 
the  trouble.  As  long  as  the  mv  cous  membranes  and  tissues  are  kept  inflamed 
and  irritated  by  this  impure  at:  d  infected  condiUon  of  the  blood  Catarrh  wiU 
remain.  Its  disagreeable  and  dangerous  symptoms,  ol  ringing  noises  in  the 
ears,  mucus  dropping  back  inio  the  throat,  headaches,  watery  eyes  ditiicult 
breathing,  and  even  stomach  disorders  and  weakened  health,  cannot  be  penna- 
nently  relieved  until  the  blood  Is  purified.  Nothing  equals  S.  S.  S.  lor  thia 
purpose.  It  goes  down  to  the  very  root  of  the  trouble,  and  remov^  every 
particle  of  the  catarrhal  matter  i  rom  the  blood  and  enriches  this  vital  fluid  so 
that  all  the  mucous  surfaces  are  supplied  with  nutritive,  healthful  qualities,  in- 
stead of  being  constantly  irrita:ed  and  inflamed  by  impurities  in  the  circula- 
tion. Then  the  symptoms  begn  to  pass  away  and  when  S.  S.  S.  has  entirely 
purified  the  blood.  Catarrh  is  permanently  cured  and  the  general  healtH 
greaUy  built  up.    Book  on  Catarrh  and  any  medical  advice  desired  sent  freo 

to  all  who  wiitc^  

V      .THE  SWIFT  SPECIFIC  CO.,  ATLANTA,  OA. 


^p 


II 


' ■■  -i  ■=«: 


■*-! 


■•- 1 


■  i  ■       ■ 

■ 


%•" 


— ==-J 


Ik 


M^T*  j»t  awit**— I 


\\        » 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1909. 


the  world's  miracles.  Just  as  Christ  is 
a  miracle  among  men.  No  further  evi- 
dence of  the  truth  or  existence  of  mir- 
acles  is   necessary." 

••rnltarianit^m.  •  said  Mr.  Nelson,  Is  a 
btautlful.  Intellectual  creed  but  li 
lacks  the  dvnamic  force  of  other 
branches  of  Christianity  because  it  de- 
r.lc-8  the  divaniti'  of  Christ.  He  ended 
with  a  defense  of  Christ's  blood  atone- 
ment. 


INCARNATION. 


Rev.  Powell  Talks  on  Real  Problem 
of  Christian  Church. 

The  real  problem  of  the  Christian 
church  from  the  hepinning  has  been 
to  preserve  the  real  humanity  of 
Christ,  and  not  to  assert  his  Godhood. 
according  to  Rev.  John  Walker  Pow- 
ell, pastor  of  the  Kndion  M.  E.  church, 
in  his  sermon  yesterday  morning.  "Tlie 
Doctrine  of  the  Incarnation"  was  the 
subject    of   his   sermon. 

He  said  that  nion  turn  away  from 
the  old  theologv  with  its  cold  ab- 
stractions to  the  warm  brotherliness 
of  a  human  Christ,  because  the  heart 
needs  to  find  such  human  sympathy  in 
its  rellRion.  liut  this  is  lust  what  the 
incarnation  was  intended  to  teach, 
tliat  this  warm,  understanding  humati 
sympathy  is  to  be  found  in  God  Him- 
self. 


Worth    Their   Weight  U  Gold 


The 

Gold  Dust 


/  Wins 


j: 


) 


\ 

f 
i; 


PULPIT 


ATFORM 


THE  COST  OF 

THEJALOON 

Pastor  Says  Duluth  Spends 

$10  for  Every  Dollar 

Received. 

Discusses  Liquor  Problem 

From  on  Economic 

Standpoint 


"No  man  would  be  willing  to  have 
hie  boy  ruined  in  order  to  bring  $1?!.- 
000  into  the  city  treasury,"  said  Rev. 
J.  S.  Kirtley  In  discussing  the  liquor 
question  at  the  First  Baptist  church 
yesterday.  "Tiie  taxpayers  will  not 
want  to  have  It  so  and  they  will  some 
day    abolish   the    whole    business   as   an 


Thev  are  engaged  In  a  non-productive 
business,  for  in  consuming  tlie  luiunr 
v,-e  do  not  utilize  these  values  as  we 
do  when  we  con.sume  bread,  but  we 
destroy    the    values. 

•Tliose  men,"  he  conliinied.  wou  d 
be  worth  as  an  estimate  $1.75  a  day  In 
some  productive  employeninl  or  Jot.b- 
075  a  vcar  for  all  of  them.  The  sixty- 
four  teams  employed  in  distributing 
liquor  would  be  worth  $1  a  day  or 
$79  ::t;0  a  vear  in  some  other  employ- 
ment. The  police  department  and 
municipal  court  cost  $75,000  a  year  to 
conduct  and  at  least  one-third  of  tliat 
co^t  would  be  cut  off  by  tlie  abolition 
of  tlie  Ihiuor  business.  Thus  we  have 
a  total  exnense  and  loss  of  $97,435  per 
vear  in  order  to  get  $1S1,000  and  tnat 
is  not  all  of  the  loss,  lor  at  least  1'7 
per  cent  of  all  the  poverty  which  our 
charitable  organizations  relieve  and  -10 
per  cent  of  what  our  poorhouse  re- 
lieves and  SO  per  cent  of  the  expense 
of  the  penitentiaries  and  over  50  per 
tnt  of  the  expense  of  our  insane  asy- 
lums are  due  toTlquor. 

"But  this  is  not  all.  Hundreds  of 
cliiKlien  are  having  their  productive 
powers  for  the  future  lessened  by  the 
poverty  and  liaid  labor  and  ill-usage, 
which  drunkenness  imposes  on  them. 
Here  we  have  an  additional  loss,  and 
if  we  could  get  in  all  the  items  we 
would  probably  find  that  for  every 
dollar  gained  in  licenses,  we  lose  ten. 
Yet  we  have  left  out  of  view  the  chief 
fruit  of  tile  traffic  in  the  degraded 
manhood,  the  crushed  womanhood  and 
the    blighted    cliildiiood.' 


DR.  J.  S.  KIRTLEY. 


utterly  indefensible  waste  of  money 
and    manhood." 

Mr.  Kitrley  took  for  his  subject  the 
loss  of  Duluth  through  saloons.  The 
llnuor  business  has  become  a  great 
economical  question,  though  it  has 
not  ceased  to  be  a  moral  issue  and 
never  can  he  said.  He  pointed  out  that 
Duluth  receives  $181,000  a  year  from 
her  169  saloons  and  twelve  hotels,  2 
per  cent  or  $3,610  going  to  the  state 
inebriate   home  ^,„ 

"We  liave  in  the  city  1,043  men  en- 
gaged in  the  business  of  manufactur- 
Tng,     distributing    and    selling    liquors. 


DARWIN  AS  AN 
EMANCIPATOR 

Scientist  Freed  Religious 

Thought  From  Dead 

Tradition. 

"This  battle  of  life.  In  which  tlie 
weaker  and  less  fitted  are  gradually 
eliminated,  so  that  a  higher  type  may 
take  their  place,  is  from  the  standpoint 
of  nature  a  sifting  process,  accomp- 
lished by  selections;  that  Is,  the  In- 
dividuals are  chosen  for  survival  on 
account  of  their  Inherent  fitness;  their  ] 
fltiifss  selects  tliem  for  survival."  said 
Ucv.  George  U.  Gebiiuer  at  the  First 
Unitarian    church    yesterday. 

*  Now  tills  law  of  natural  selection  as 
propounded  bv  Darwin  is  certainly  a 
most  Important  feature  In  the  develop- 
ment of  animal  life,  tliough  by  itself 
it  seems  too  small  a  nail  to  carry  the 
entire  weight  of  phy-sical  and  psychical 
evolution.  But,  however  It  may  fall 
sliort  in  solving  the  riddle  of  the  uni- 
verse, evolution  itself  Is  an  established 
fact  and  as  a  theory  of  life  it  has 
opened  new  vistas  for  mankind  and 
has  been  of  Immense  pragmatic  value. 
The  world  since  Darwin's  days  Is  not 
looking  backward,  but  forward.  There 
is  no  field  of  human  pursuit  and 
tliotight  whicli  has  not  been  quickened 
by  tills  fertile  thougiit  of  development. 
In  every  department  of  life  it  is  recog- 
nized and  the  rational  study  of  all 
human  conditions  is  based  upon  it. 
Everywhere  the  fine,  but  strong  thread 
of  evolution  guides  us  through  the 
labyrinth  of  life.  History  receives  a 
new  Interpretation  through  It,  ann 
literature  a  new  meaning.  Every  sci- 
ence bears  witness  to  its  influence,  and 
education  Is  supremely  Indebted  to  It. 
And  though  the  organized  church  may 
have  suffered  by  its  onslaught  on  Its 
worn  out  doctrines,  religion  Itself  has 
been  blessed  by  It.  Darwin,  in  a  very 
true  way    has  become   the  emancipator 


in  religion;  he  has  come  with  a  gospfl 
I  of  salvation  from  dead  tradition.  He 
lias  brouglit  us  a  freedom  vviiich  is  not 
limited  by  any  book  or  laws.  "f,/,^';»^ 
given  us  the  freedom  of  truth.  What 
a  barking  and  everlastingly  protecting 
faith  I'nltarimanlsm  was,  until  tiie 
vaster  gospel  of  evolution  illumined  it. 
We  protested  witli  beliefs  found  in  the 
Bible  against  di.gmas  drawn  fn-m  tlie 
same  book.  But  the  larger  thought  of 
divine    revelation    takes    us    outside    of 

^'^"Ag"Jn   the   thought   of  Divine   Prov- 
idence how  sublime  it  is  in  tlie  light  ot 
a  divine   development.        Ail   the   wrong 
and    evil    and    pain    and    sorrow,    whicli 
we    could    not    reconcile    with    a    loving 
God,    now    has   its    place    in    the    world. 
What  we  call  evil  is  but  Gods   inevita- 
ble   wav    of    bringing    about    what    we 
prize    as    good.       We    see    that    <l>vine 
nature    sifts    and    eliminates    the    unfit 
ttiat  tiie  fit  may  Inherit  the  truth.     A%  e 
see   for    the  first   time   clearly   that   not 
even  a  sparrow  may  fall  to  the  ground 
without     the    knowledge    of     God.         A 
grander  world  opens  before  ^ts.  a  high- 
er   Inspiration     comes    to    "s     b.v     tliis 
wider     vaster    conception    of    God,    who 
1s    In  "all    and    througli    all,    and    works 
in   us   for  a  far   off  divine   event.     And 
when  we  realize  what  is  still  of  greater 
satisfaction,  that  we  may  become  God  s 
co-workers   by    recognition    of   natures 
divnie  laws:  we  mav  become  sifters  and 
•selectors  of  the   tit;   we   may  make  our 
own    fitness   and    train    our   children    to 
fitness.        We    are    no    longer    the    play- 
ball     of     conditions,     even     if     such     be 
dlcine,    but    in    some   way    we    may   help 
to    direct    our    destiny    to    our    highest 

%iarwin  did  not  see  these  Inferences 
of  his  theorv;  he  remained  an  agnostic 
to  his  end.  His  eves  looked  too  keenly 
at  outward  nature  to  discern  her  inner 
spirit.  His  soul  was  not  elastic 
enough  to  take  that  leap  of  faith  whieh 
once  taken  gives  us  a  standpoint  from 
wliich  the  world  is  seen  in  greatest 
glorv  and  nature  the  grand  expresfelon 
of    the    divine    spirit  " 


LACK  SYMPATHY 
FOR  THE  NEGRO 

Pastor   Says   the  Two 

Races  Will  Never 

Mingle. 

Under  the  general  theme,  "Our  Old 
Elevator,"  Rev.  S.  Banks  Nelson,  pas- 
tor of  the  Park  Avenue  Congregation- 
al churcli  of  Minneapolis,  covered  a 
multitude  of  subjects  In  an  address  to 
the  men's  meeting  at  the  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
gvmnasium  veslerday  afternoon.  He 
discussed  the  negro  problem,  the  doc- 
trines of  Christianity,  the  Darwinian 
theorv,  Scotch  and  Irish  history  and 
Unltarianism.  Mr.  Nelsons  address 
was  interesting  and  not  tiring,  for  he 
covered  each  subdivision  of  his  general 
subject    briefly    and    completely. 

"There  is  no  place  for  a  black  man 
in  a  white  man's  country,"  was  Mr. 
Nelson's  summing  up  of  the  negro 
problem.  "I  have  no  prejudice  against 
the  negro,"  continued  the  speaker.  "I 
love  him  as  a  brother,  but  no  one  sees 
more  plainly  than  1  do  that  the  wh  te 
race  of  this  country  Is  constitutionally 
and  radically  in  want  of  sympathy 
with   the  negro."  ,   „,    .„ 

Mr  Nelson  said  It  Is  nonsensical  to 
attempt  to  graft  a  black  race  on  a 
white  one,  for  God  has  determined  the 
habitation  of  the  negro,  as  is  evident 
from  his  treatment  at  thp  hands  of  the 
white  race.  The  white  and  black  races 
must  remain  apart,  he  said,  for,  al- 
though Christianity  may  dictate  that 
white  love  black,  civilization  will  not 
countenance  a  co-mlngllng  of  the 
races  He  reviewed  the  history  of  the 
slave  traffic  and  lauded  the  fifteenth 
amendment  to  the  Constitution  as  a 
great  Christian  act. 

"Man  did  not  descend  from  a  mon- 
kev"  declared  Mr.  Nelson  in  discussing 
the  Darwinian  theory.     "Man  is  one  of 


WOMEN  POLICE 
FOR  PES  MOINES 

Half  Dozen  Female  Sleuths 
Are  to  be  Ap- 
pointed. 

Dcs  Moines,  Iowa,  March  15. — Des 
Moines    is    to    have    women    policemen. 

Councilman  Hamery,  superintendent 
of  the  deparament  of  public  safety, 
hat  made  this  announcement.  He  ex- 
pects  to   appoint   half   a   dozen. 

Mr.  Hamcry's  plan  is  to  have  some 
of  the  women  In  uniform  at  railway 
s'.uiions,  dance  halls  and  other  public 
places. 

Then  he  proposes  to  have  some  of  the 
rr.ost  attractive  wi>men  he  can  hire  lo 
be   I'on-uiiilormed  and  well  dressed. 

CAHLE  BUEEDEKS  MEET. 

Form  Association  to  Promote  Rais- 
ing of  Guernsey  Stock. 

George  C.  Cooper  of  Superior  was 
elected  president  of  tlie  Guernsey 
Breeders'  association,  whicli  was 
formed  at  a  meeting  held  at  the  Com- 
mercial club  Saturday.  A.  J.  McGuIre, 
superintendent  of  the  Grand  Rapids  ex- 
periment farm,  was  chosen  vice  presi- 
dent, G.  T.  McKay  of  Duluth,  secre- 
tary, and  Judge  W.  L.  Windom  of  Du- 
luth,   treasurer. 

G.  G.  Hartley,  A.  J  McGulre,  L.  B. 
Arnold  F.  B.  McLeran  and  John  G. 
Williains  were  elected  members  of  tiie 
executive  committee.  George  C. 
Cooiier,  Judge  W.  L.  Windom  and  J. 
B.  Mcl.eran  were  elected  members  of 
tlie  c<jmmittee  on  rules. 

The  object  of  the  new  association  is 
the  promotion  of  the  dairy  industry, 
especially  the  breeding  of  Guernsey 
cattle  There     are     many       valuable 

cattle  of  this  breed  owned  by  Head 
of  the  Lakes  breeders,  and  breeders 
scattered  throughout  the  northern  part 
of  the  state  and  to  advance  their 
common  Interests  through  an  organized 
a'-'-ociation  tlie  association  was  formed 

It  is  believed  that  the  new  asso- 
ciation will  not  ^>nly  advance  the 
breeding  ot  Guernsey  cattle  In  this 
part  of  th?  Vtate.  but  will  facilitate 
the  selling  of  cattle  that  are  owned 
iiere. 

DOG  SPOILS  KIDNAPING. 

Barking    of    Fox    Terrier    Causes 
Passers-by  to  Rescue  Boy. 

Chicago.  March  15. — A  doughty  fox 
terrier  frustrated  the  attempted  kid- 
napping of  a  little  boy  at  Twenty-first 
street  and  Calumet  avenue  Saturday 
afternoon. 

The  little  victim,  saved  by  his  faith- 
ful pet,  was  Omar  Miller,  the  5-year- 
old  son  of  Herbert  Miller.  The  child 
was  toddling  east  with  the  Intention 
of  "seeing  the  choo-choo  cars."  when  a 
rougli  looking  man  sprang  out  from  an 
alley  He  seized  little  Omar  by  tiie 
v,-r;st  and  dragged  him  away.  The 
boy  cried  luslllv  and  the  man  mut- 
tered:  "Shut   up.   or   I'll  kill   you." 

This  threat  was  not  accepted  meek- 
ly bv  the  dog.  for  it  began  to  bark  and 
growl  furlouslv,  following  up  every 
attempted  kick  made  by  the  kidnapper 
with  furious  snaps  at  his  heels.  The 
canine  commotion  attracted  the  atten- 
tion of  passersbv.  who  rushed  up  to 
vvhere  the  tinv  lad  was  struggling  with 
liis  captor.  Tlien  the  stranger  released 
his  Isold  and  vanished,  amid  a  tri- 
umphant farewell  uttered  by  the  fear- 
less   terrier. 

MRS.  MORSE  SELLS  FURS 
TO  PAY  HUSBAND'S  DEBTS. 

New  York  March  15. — Mrs.  Charles 
W  Morse,  wife  Of  the  former  banker 
and  ice  company  promoter  has  con- 
firmed a  report  that  her  husband's 
fortune  had  been  entirely  dissipated 
and  that  she  had  sold  her  furs  and 
jewels  In  order  to  meet  the  obligations 
incurred  by  him  In  the  form  of  law- 
yers' fees  as  a  result  of  his  recent 
trials. 


cause  many  a  laugh  by  their  comical  capers,  but  they 
are  simply  used  to  illustrate  the  fact  that  Gold  Dust 
Washing  rowder  makes  work  a  pleasure.  Gold  Dust  it- 
self is  a  happy  reality.  It  has  brought  joy,  contentment 
and  rest  into  more  households  than  you  can  count. 

If  you  have  been  a  slave  to  housework,  let  the  Gold 
Dust  Twins  relieve  you  of  youi:  back-breaking  burden. 

Gold  Dust  is  better  than  soap  or  any  other  cleanser.  It 
will  do  the  work  twice  as  well  in  half  the  time,  and  at  half 
the  cost.  To  use  a  homely  exjDression,  you  are  simply  cut- 
ting  off  your  own  nose  if  you  are  not  using  Gold  Dust  in 
connection  with  your  housework.  There  is  no  other  way 
so  simple  as  the  Gold  Dust  way. 

Do  not  use  Soap.  NapKtKa.  Borax,  Soda,  Ammonia  or 

-    Kerosene  with  Gold  Dust,    (iold  Dust  has  all  desirable 

W^T         cleansing  qualities  in  a  perf.sctly  harmless  and  lasting 

form.      The  Gold  Dust  Twins  need  no  outside  help. 

Made  by  THE  N.  K.  FAIRBAIVK  COMPANY.  CHICAGO 

Makers  of  Fairy  Soip  (the  oval  cake) 

"Let  the  Gold  Dust  Twins  do  your  work." 


M 


\ 


THE  RIVAL 


AGNATES 


Waving  Mliiions  Before 

the  Straphangers  of 

New  York. 

Would  Build  Broad  Belt 
Lines  and  Huge  Trac- 
tion Tubes. 


figures.        The    liabtf    of    public    places 
have  apparently  not  yet  been  laid  aside 
by    tliese  -two    notor  ous    New    Yorker^ 
tills  wtek'  for  Piatt  has  summoned  tiie 
scribes     to     his     old       "Sunday     school 
rostrum     and     TJooscvelt     has     emitted 
siiorl     and     snappy     interviews     to     the 
crowd    of    correspondents      that      hover 
about  his  wood  pile.        For  tlic  immedi- 
ate     however,     the     jrospects    seem     to 
preclude     much   public   liaranguing   for 
either.        The   ex-president   will    confine 
himself    to    his    gun    and    penning    lor 
pay.   while   tlie  ex-senator   has   mai>jied 
out    a    business    act  vlty    in    which    he 
must  lose  himself  tc    the  pulilic  eye. 
.lelVrleN    .liiKcrliaf;:. 
With    pi  ess    agents    to    riglit    of    him 
and   pugilist    promoter.^   to  left   of   him, 
big  .Mm  Jeffries  is  heinj?  made  to  volley 
and    thunder    todav    lus   efiuivocal    mes- 
sage on  a  future  fight.     Urchins  infu.sed 
with    awe  attend   the   coining.^  and   go- 
ings  of   tiie   big  boilsrmaker.   while   tlie 
gleaming    teetli    of    llie    black    bellboys 
ciiatter    at    his    app -oach.      The    wliole 
town  Is  set  to  stage  every  move  of  this 
fighter-actor    by    as    spectacular    stunts 
as  ever  gladdened  t  le  heart  of  the  en- 
teri^risiiig   circus    piomooter      of      i>ub- 
licitv.      Through   It  all    tlie   great   good- 
natured    hulk   of   a   man    has   in   private 
retained    his    sinipli    ity.    however,    and 
shown     his     friend."--     that     lie     la     still 
modest  as   well    as   iniglity 


many   votes    tonight   before  a  selection 
Is  made. 


ASKS  FOR  HKLP. 

St.  Paul  Appeals  to  Duluth  on  thf 
Packiu';  Plant  Situation. 

In    her    fight    against   tlie   location    ;n 
St.    Paul    of    the    big    Armour    packlv.g 
plant,   the  .<^alntly  City   has  appealed  tu 
Dulutli    for   a.ssistance.      Alumni   of  tl- 
University    of    Minnesota      In      Duhui. 
have  received  letters  from  the  cltizeij?" 
general  committee  of  St.  Paul,  of -wl.    :. 
Daniel    \V.   1  awler   is   chairman,   urg;:-: 
them   to   use   their   influence  with   lo< ;. 
representatives    in    the    legislature, 
mediately,    to    urge    the    passage    of   jyt 
Howe    bill,    whicli    is   aimed    to   pre\  VB 
the    location    of    the    Armour    pack-""* 
plant   on    the   proposed   site.  i 

The  letters  explain  that  the  comi."^ 
tee  has   looked   Into  the  situation   "^Wm 
great  care,  and  believes  that  the  ste'^B 
tliat  would  arise  from  a  large  pac'i 
industry    situated    but    two    and    thf 
■  juarters  miles  away  would  be  a  ser^ 
menace  to  the  state  university.  • 
• 1 


3^ 


ASK 


And  you  will  ,»„.ll,  «.d  .h..  ,h.y  know  ■^^'-?">^'^'':^^f^SSi^,^>^h^t:S,  "LX 

false  promises  but  have  a  record  of  real,  genuine  cures  to  sustain  them. 

amoni  yvomen  Dr.  Pierce's  Favorite  Prescription  Is  truly  a  favorite  by  reason  of 
Its  remarkable  cares  wAicA.  for  over  forty  years  by  far  exceed  '*''«*^7*"*^^^"  *t 
credited  to  any  medicine  extant.  By  a  little  Inquiry  you  will  no  doubt  f.nd  some  of 
these  cured  and  grateful  cases  In  your  Immediate  neighborhood,  for  they  are  to  be 
met  with  practically  EVERY  WHERE.  They  are  Dr.  Pierce's  best  advertisements, 
seek  their  advice  If  you  are  a  poor  despondent  over^burdened  broken  down,  weak 
or  pain.wracked  woman,  suffering  from  some  derangement  or  weakness  mc.dent 
to  your  sex. 

The  People^s  Common  Sense  Medical  Adviser  in  plain  English,  bv  R- V- Pierce  M.D.,  (new  fully^^^^^ 
vised  uD-W-date  edition)  gives  all  particulars  whicli  women  need  to  know  about  the'^Pecuhar  functions 
IndlZ  to  correct  ord  nfry  derangements  and  weaknesses.  Cloth-bound  volume  of  1^00  pages  31  one- 
cent  stLps  or  in  paper  covers  for  21  cents,  post-paid.  Why  not  send  for  it  NOW?  J^e  New  Ed  o„  u 
Zost  aTu^ehold'^  necessity.  Him, :   World's  Dlspensir,  Hedicil  »«»»'^i«\  "l;  J;  »•  fl«««- ^!?'«';^  ""'""■  ""  *' 

DR    PIERCE'S   PLEASANT  PELLETS  ARE  A  MILD  BUT  EFFICIENT  PHYSIC. 


THEY  MUST  KNOW 


New  York.  March  15.— With  her  trac- 
tion  lord.'3   openly   at   odds  and  seeking 
public   favor,   Gotham    has   never    stood 
the  cliance  that  she  does  today  of  hav- 
ing   her    people    bound    together    by   an 
adefiuate  transit  system.       To  gird  this 
Island      witli    broad    belt     lines    and    to 
criss-cross  its  length  and  breadth  wiih 
huge   traction    tubes,    hundreds   of   mil- 
lions of  dollars  are  being  waved  by  the 
rival    magnates    gefore    the    bewildered 
eyes    of    the    weary    strap- hangers    of 
this  town.       Where  years  have  elapsed 
with    not    a    dollar    offered    to    relievo 
Manhattan     pent-up      press   of     travel, 
prospective  subway  diggers  now  eager- 
ly  hawk   their  plans  and   backing,   like 
theater  ticket  speculators.       .so  one  re- 
members another  such  remarkable  case 
of  competition   between   the  local  traf- 
fic   kings    here    in    all      history,       and 
everyone   believes   tliat   it    is   too    good 
to  last.     Rivalry  has  never  been  found 
'  to  pay  the  powers  in  the  transit  situa- 
tion   half    so    well    as    the    combination 
that   chokes    and    clogs    all    progress. 
^prioK'H   Saint. 
As    hundreds     of    thousands     of    true 
Hibernians    are    today      preparing      to 
ceelbrate  St.   Patricks  day  with  a  fer- 
vor   that    will    make    the    Island    lium. 
New    Yorkers    are    shaking    themselves 
out    of    the   toils   of   a   long,    damp   and 
bitter    winter    in    preparation     lor    the 
bright    days    of    spring.      Snow    seldom 
has   dared   strcv,-    Uiis    island    after   tlie 
great    Irish    sain't    day.    and    the    vivid 
green    of   nature    has   always    followed 
forth  after  the  emerald  banners   of  the 
A     O    H.      Sunlight,    showers    and    bud- 
ding  branches  will    be   a  welcome   set- 
ting for  the  march  of  the  faithful  here 
this    year,    for      the      metropolis      has 
known     no     more     chill     and     cheerles.s 
winter  season   in  a  generation.     Up  at 
Albanv    they    are    trying    to    create    a 
Columbus    day    for    the      loyal    sons    of 
Italy     but     no      race    celebration     will 
bring    such    cheer    to    Gotham    as    this 
Irish    spring   opening. 

Cbilfl  ntixenHhip. 
News  of  the  summary  removal  of  the 
boy  president  of  the  George  Junior  Re- 
public at  P'reeville,  who  was  charged 
with  abuse  of  his  official  powers,  has 
struck  with  envy  the  boes-ridden  citi- 
zens of  this  city  today.  What  these 
boy  and  girl  "citizens"  did  on  their 
own  initiative,  instantly  and  without 
question,  Is  a  thing  whicli  every  New 
Yorker  Is  confessing  he  does  not  rise 
to  accomplish  here  once  In  ten  years. 
The  untrustwortliy  official  New  York- 
ers have  always  with  tliem;  yet  their 
citizenship  has  apparently  never  at- 
tained the  high  iiitch  which  showed 
in  the  prompt  ousting  of  tliis  erring 
boy  by  children,  every  one  of  whom 
is  being  started  straight  afer  a  croo«.ed 
beginning  In  life.  The  successful  re- 
claiming of  hundreds  of  youngsters  at 
this  child  community  has  long  been 
known  and  appreciated  by  the  people 
of  this  citv.  where  every  man  is  taday 
forced  to  take  off  his  hat  to  the  citi- 
zenship  which   it  teaches. 

Celebrated  CItUens. 
Now  that  Roosevelt  is  back  chopping 
wood  over  in  Oyster  Ba"  and  Piatt 
chopping  coupons  In  his  old  sanctum  at 
the  express  company's  office,  private 
life  in  this  town  is  claiming  as  Its  own 
once  more  two  of  Its  most  conspicuous 


ORDINANCES  ARE 
DUE  TO  COME  UP 

Council  Has  Other  Busi- 
ness Besides  Election 
of  President. 

Two  or  three  new  ordinances  are 
due  for  consideration  at  the  council 
meeting  this  evening.  In  addition  to 
the  business  of  electing  a  president 
and  vice  president,  and  sealer  of 
weights   and   measures. 

Alderman  Shartel's  ordinance  mak- 
ing it  unlawful  foi  minors  to  buy  In- 
toxicants Is  due  fcr  consideration  to- 
niglir  and  Aldern  an  Moore  s  ordin- 
ance designed  to  prohibit  the  overload- 
ing of  liorses  maj  also  receive  Itnal 
consideration. 

The  peddlers'  orc'lnance,  designed  to 
replace  the  one  knocked  out  by  a 
municipal  court  decision  recently,  may 
also  come  up  for  i.  final  hearing.  An 
amendment  to  the  building  ordinance, 
to  make  it  unnecensary  to  change  the 
plans  of  the  building  being  erected  at 
the  corner  of  Firs,  street  and  Fourth 
avenue  west,  Is  due  to  come  up. 

It  is  claimed  thac  no  one  is  yet  sure 
of  the  presidency  of  the  council,  and 
it    may    be    necessary    to    take    a    good 


LlD-LlFilXG.  ': 


Sylvester  Maiuello  and  Tony  A' 
Arrested  for  Selling  Liquor.  * 

.Sergeai.t  Gillon  and  Patrolman 
Masonlast  niglit  arrested  Sylvester 
Maiuello  and  Tony  Ayzo,  proprietors  of 
the  saloon  at  625  West  Superior  street, 
and  charged  them  with  selling  liquor 
on   Sunday. 

The  police  officers  had  a  suspicion 
that  the  place  was  open  for  business, 
to  those  who  knew  the  pass  word,  ami 
thev  effected  an  entrance.  They  .say 
that  besides  tlie  two  proprietors,  one 
of  whom  was  acting  as  bartendei-, 
tiiere  were  five  men  around  a  table 
drinking.  The  men  put  up  $50  eacii. 
ball  to  guarantee  their  appearance  iii. 
court  today. 

RURAL  CARRIERS'  MEETING. 

State  Convention  to  be  Held  at  St. 
Cloud  Next  June. 

St  Cloud,  Minn..  March  15.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Stearns  County 
Rural  Letter  Carriers'  association  at 
its  annual  meeting  at  the  federal 
building    elected    the    following: 

President,  G.  D.  Torkelspn    Belgrade 
vice    president.      Frank    Kellas,      Saulc 
Center:     .secretary,     M.     O.     Schensted  . 
Brooten;    treasurer.    Paul    De    Lay,    trt. 

°rrangements  were  also  made  for 
the  state  meeting  of  the  Rural  Letter 
Carriers  Avhlch  will  be  held  In  St. 
Cloud  on   June   14,   15   and   16.  Rep- 

lesentatlves  from  all  over  the  state  are 
expected   in   the  city   for  the   event,  and, 
every  effort  will  be  made  to  give  them 
a  royal  time. 


i 


tfkv* 


r 

f 


I, 


mtmt  ■■■mt 


liereis  something  wrong 
wiKiyour  Stomach 

Kodol 

— until  you  abuse  it  again.  Of  course, 
it  is  mtich  better  to  keep  tlie  stomach 
healthy;  but  if  you  have  not  done  this — 
and  there  is  'something  wrong  with 
your  stomach— try  Kodol.  Tlie  results 
will  surprise  you. 


YOURSirONACH 
NEEEiS 

stomach  sicknesii,  such  as  sour  stom- 
ach, belching,  "heartburn,"  etc.,  is  caus- 
ed by  improperly  digested  food — that 
meaning  indigestion.  And  there  isn't 
anything  any  better  for  indigestion 
than  Kodol.  Kodol  readily  prevents  any 
digestive  disorders,  by  promptly  digest- 
ing all  food  eaten — no  matter  what  kind, 
nor  when,  nor  wlere.  And  when  food 
isthu3  digested  for  the  stomach — reliev- 
ing it  of  its  work  for  a  time — tlie  stom- 
ach speedily  regeins  healthy,  natural 
Btren^i^    Theu  it  can  do  ita  own  work 


Our  Guaraiitcc.Sl*o"f'Sf  °M 

you  are  not  benefited— the  druggist  wilt  * 
at  once  return  your  money.  Don't  hesi- 
tate: any  druggist  will  sell  you  Kodol  on 
these  terms.  The  dollar  bottle  contalM 
2%  times  as  much  as  the  50c  bottle. 
Kodol  is  prepared  in  the  laboratorlea  oJ 
B.  C.  D«Witt  &.  Co.,  Chicago. 


4A. 


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i 

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_   J 

THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY,    MARCH    16     1909. 


STEPHENSON  INSURANCE  AGENCY, 


MILLIONAIRE  COMPANIES  ONLY. 


WOLVIN  BUILDING,  DULUTH. 


Citisena*   InHiirauoi^   Company. 

Prlii-iyal  office.  81.  L"UU.  Mo.  (OripiiUied  In 
IS.!"  )  rharlcs  E.  (.huse.  prrsldent;  Tliotna*  H 
Siv,Uanil.  *ocretary.  Atu>nii?y  to  accept  sunlce  In 
Mlunes'ita.    fooiDilssloiier    of    Insurauce. 

CASH   CAriTAL.    $2i»0. 000.00. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Prpmliims    other    than    perpetu*U t        '"^'H*? 

Bent,    jnJ    Interest '!««>? 

From   all   other  sources Bju.yo 

Pr>tn    <  n    sal*    or    maturity    of    ledgsr 

S7  i . 50 


^ 


l 


I 

14 


1 


m 


^^ 


ItoUl    IncoBM 


529.484.06 


DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Amount   pjlrt  for   luiscs ♦ 

CTOimlsai'iij   r.nil   brokerage 

BalarlM  and  fees  of  offker*,  agenu  and 

emiiliiyM      

Taxes    fits,  rentt  aod  other  r««l  estate 

^xit<"nat'i    

I>l\ii<nU    and    Iniert^t 

I>w*  ..a  s.»l«  or  maturity  of  letlger  aMsta 
All  other  JUburscmcnta 


i\ 


,isa.«K 

,798.  Ii 


ft 

C- 

t 

a.' 

r 

ne.xt 

he 
age. 

C  . 

j|i->m 

pi    IL-      ' 
Il.>t 

Of 


56.303.01 


Hartford    Fire    Insurance    Company. 

I'rtncipal  office.  Hartfonl.  n.nn.  (OrrfinUcJ  In 
1810.)  rharl«  K.  fh.iso.  prmUltat;  Thomas  TVim- 
Imll.  secretary.  Altonie>  U)  uctwpt  service  In  Mlnne- 
ioU.      Commiaalc ntT   "i    Insurame. 

CASH    CAI'ITAL.    *J.  )rt').000.00. 
INCOME   IN    1908. 

Premiums  other   than   pernetuaU I 

Kcnts   iind   interml 

Ff.iu  ali  other  i'>un-M ...... 

I'roflt   on   »ale   or   maturity  of   ledcet 

a»*eta    


14,071.4.55  83 

738.568.8:: 

936.23 

2.412.50 


23 
16 

31 


.025.01 
.000.00 
43". 30 
.181. 'J5 


Total    dUtjursemenu * 


4!I«.B87.57 


Exceax    ,.f    Inome    orer    .lUbursmeiito.  .$  40,496.4a 


ASSETS  OEC.   31.   1908. 

Value   if   rei»I   t-itate   owned 

M'rtKJfid    li'ii!i3 

Hoial.t    and    stocks    owiit-il 

Ca»h   In   office  and  In    liank 

Accrued    InltTwl   auil    rtnla 

Premiums  in  course  of  collection 


400.00 

93.2J0.IIO 

498. OlS.?:) 

62,  J4 1.30 

9.333.00 

119.763.80 


Total   a.lndtt«<l   asseU. 
ASMts    not    admitted.    . 


» 

.$7.09<}.50 


LIABILITIES   OEC.   31,    IW. 

UnpnId    looses    nnd    cUlins • 

Beliisuraiiio   reserve '  '  ■,  '  '  '  '  j 

BaUirU*.   e»i>en»«».   taxe*.   Oivldenda  and 

Interest     due 

Capital    atotlt    paid    up 


813.733.74 


39.014.25 
3KJ.517.97 

4.850.00 
200.000.00 


Total    Income    * 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

.Vniount   paU   f'T   iis-ics ♦ 

t'ommliiloui    and    brokerage 

.SalarieB    .ind    fet.*    of    officers,     agents 

and    enipl'>«w .•  •  •  • ; ; 

Tdjis.     fc*«.     r<nu    and    other    real 

e9tst.>   expenses    

l>lvl.ii.T\.ts   an.l   Intirest :v'.'    ' 

1.043    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

as4et:i     

.Ml   jtljer  dlibursctneuta 


14.S12.U03.40 

7.828.359  .57 
2.5i>3,08::.2C 

1.240.669.  lt> 

631.942.31 
GOO, 000. 00 

30.<'n2.40 
823,179.45 


NlaKara    Fire    Inmirauoe    Company. 

I'riiu-l|>al  ..fflie.  New  York.  .N.  Y.  (Urgaiilie-l  In 
Ifljo  >  Harold  llerrick.  preeldent;  Oeorge  W.  l>e«cy. 
se.r«tarj.  Attorney  to  accept  8er»loe  In  Mlouesota, 
CommlsslMier  of  Itisumm.'e. 

CA.su    CAPITAL.     1750,009.00. 
INCOME    IN    1906. 

Premiums    otiicr    Mian   pen)etUiUs I     ^.JOfl.. 301.33 

P.in'a    and    interest «!,,,«, 

Fpiu    all   other   sources sso.ot) 

Pr.flt    ou    sale    or    maiurlly    of    ledger 

aaseU     .,..^33.g» 


Total   Income    


$     3.329,893.33 


IN 


1908. 
» 


Total     dUban..menU »      1 3.652.026.17 


bcess  of  litcome  over  disbursements..! 
ASSETS   DEC.   31.    1908. 

V*lue   of   real   esuu   owned I 

.Mortgage    leans     

(olliteral    Icniu    

Hon.  Is  .mi  I  stocks  owned 

rs.^li   In   office   an  1   In    bank 

.\corued   Interest   and   rents 

Premiums  In  courje  of  collection 

.Vll    ottwr   ailmltt  .-1    a«ets 

He,lu>t  apecliil  depoijlt  less  $048,704.62 
UablUty   Ihereou    


I,l>i0.067.23 

1,055, 187.75 

41S.  )00.00 

14. 5110. 00 

15.385.37.^.33 

935.289.68 

17^.641. 11 

1,614.633.28 

803.136.16 

44.337.61 


>  DISBURSEMENTS 

.\mount  paid   fir    l'.--.>id 

rommlsslons    and    br'kerage 

Sil.int.<  .ind  fees  of  officers,  auent*  and 

employes    

Taxes,   fees,   reiiU   and  other  real  estate 

expennes    

Dividends  and  Interest 

Loss     on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

assets    

All  other  dlabursemenU 


,731,504.31 
623,003.43 

300.493.76 

122.039.18 
100.065.00 

113.421.74 
135,513.81 


Orient   Innurance  Company. 

Prinrdpal  office.  Hartford.  Toiin.  (Organized  In 
1HIJ7.)  A.  (j.  Mcllwalnc.  Jr.,  president;  II.  W.  tJray, 
Jr.,  sccreUry.  Atl/imey  to  acoept  senlce  in  Mliine- 
tuta.  Commlasloner  of  Insurance. 

CA.SH     CAPITAL.     J50fl. 000.00. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums  other  than  perpetuala $     1,329,75,5.8.5 

Itt nU  and  Interest ??''*STOi 

From  all   other  source* 1J,»»7.24 


Total  disbursements $     3.326,053.2.3 


Toul   liabilities   Including   caplUl • 


634.382.22 


^''   Ris'i"s   AND    premiums;    i90eBUSIN^^^^^ 

rtroi   rIA.    written    during    the   ye>ir *^'".  •':?:,■    .'V^a 

Premiums    ncdved     ther.«n ■  ■  i.loJ.i^oto 

MiTlne    lad  inland   rUWs  vrrltten  during  ^^^  ^^^^^^^ 

tJie  v»  :ir   • 'ioK  »•! 

Pr«ni  i:i..^    received    tliereon   . . . . ■  -»»  -■ 

Net  am...iMi  in   force  at  end  of  the  year     D8.a62,504.0O 

BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA    IN    I9C8. 

Ftte   llisks.        T.m.ido.        Aggrerale. 
Rl,k.     written... $2.947. 728.00  $179,034.00  •3,126.762.00 


f      20,390,429.00 

.$.55.13i!.06 

31.    1908. 

...$         1,163.750.36 

12,022,473.87 

(Uvldeuds 

182.000.00 
""'....  2.000.O0O.OO 


56  444.15  1.051.53  57.496.03 

41740  9)  59.02  44.799.92 

43.971.34  59  02  44,033.36 

Department  of  Insurance. 
Tlist  the  annual  suiu-nient  of  the 
atUeii^'  in«ur'inc-V  compiriy.  for  the  year  ending  r>e- 
cemhcr  ';lHt  190.S.  of  which  the  al>ove  la  an  abstract. 
has  been  rec-dvod  and  filed  J"  '^U  a^'P»rimt.nt  and 
duly  approfed  by  me.  JOHN  -V   HAKTI<..\N. 

^^  Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


Premiums    rec'd. 
IxMses    incurred. 
Losses     pal'l-    .. 
State  i>f   Minnesota 
I  Hereby   Certify 


Total   admllte-l   .issets 
.Xjisetd     liot     a>iiuitu.>d. 

LIABILITIES    OEC 

rnpild   loeses   an  1   claims 

Kclnsurauce    res'ne 

.Salaries,     expenses,     taxes 

and   liitfrtet   due 

Capital  stock  paid  up 

Totol  UabtUUee  Including  capital... $      15,373,224.23 

^"   Rl's'is   AND    PREMIUMS.    1908   BUSINESS.      ' 
Flr.5  risks  wrlttu.  during  the  >''•»'  ■•i'-^^':'^!^** 

Premiums    recelvel    thereon^ q.!I  r -9rr«  1. 

Net  amount  In  fi:rre  at  and  of  the  year.   1.934,5u2,708.oo 
BUSINESS   IN   MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 

Klro  itUks.         Tornado.         Aggregate. 
llUk,  wrltt.n.$17.585.539.00  »2.739.311.00  $20,.324  3J0.O0 

Ki^sa    S;S:S    '::!'r^.     |  :  i;; 

state   of   Minnesota.    l)»partment    of   Insurance. 

I  ilei-eby  Certify.  That  the  aniuial  st;»ten»cnt  of  Uie 
llarffoni  Fire  Insurance  company,  for  the  ye.tr  ending 
Deoembor  3ial.  1903.  of  wlUch  the  above  U  an  ab- 
stract,   has   been   r«elve.l  an.l  fUed  In   thU  department 

•ind  duly   approved   by  me. 

ana  auij    »vp™  ^^^^^    ^     HAUTICA.N. 

Commissioner   of   Iiuurance. 


E-Tcees  of  lnif)mc  over  Disbursement*   .  .$ 
ASSETS    DEC.    31.    1908. 

Mortgaw    loans     * 

ItoiuU  and  stocks  owned 

C.ish  In   office  and  in   bank 

Acirued   Interest  and   renU 

Prenduiiis  In  course  of  injlUction 

l>etluct    special    deposit    less    $31,592.43 
liability    thtreon 


Total  adnilttcil  a^seU 
.Vssets  not  admitted    . . . 


3.810.15 

383.000.00 

3.624.275.00 

753.307. 13 

43.716.37 

448.2U3.8] 

48.932.57 


Total   Income $ 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

.Vmf.unt  paid   for   lik-ssra    $ 

Commissh.iwi    and    brokfrage 

.Salaries  and  fees  of  offkers.  ageuU  and 

employes    

Taxes,    f-eos.   rents   and   other   real   estate 

e^^pense*    

Loss    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

assets    ...    

AH  otiier  dlsbursemctits   


1,432,738.62 

72C. 689.83 
266,381.21 

100,710.07 

47.800.17 

8.994.83 
100.3t>4.81 


Total    disbursements •     1.246,470.97 

186,267.63 

167,686.38 
.760,518.50 
301.217.47 

26.070.17 
225.470.10 

11,578.01 

62.79.3.89 


.$50,330.85 


I     5.184,199.74 


LIABILITIES 

I'npald   losses   and   claims 
Iteiiisurance   reserve 


DEC.    31. 


.Salaries,   expenses,   taxes,   dividends  and 

inti  rtst    due 

Capital   stock   paid   up 


1908 

.  .$   '    204.699.61 
2,678,966.83 


8).000.00 
750.000.0'l 


Total   liablUUos   Including   capital $     3,803,666.10 


Net    surplus    *     1,520.533.25 

RISKS  AND  PREMIUMS.    1908  BUSINESS.   _ 

Flro   risks   written   during   the   year *^'''?'*'i'','^;,,,'.' 

Premiums   rtceiv«l   thereon .oMI5.\'Ti.'";'.i 

Net  amount   In  force  at  end  of  the  year  185.320,421.00 

BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 

Fire  Ulsk<.  Tornado.  .\ggregate. 
Ulsks  written. ..$2.113.151. HO  $126,7.J|..00  $2.274  8.51.00 
Premiums    re^-d.        30.599.30  790.81  *"-'^« ';' 

I>«ses  incurred  .         25.709.t.l  40.16  "•«<«  J^^ 

L.»se«      paid...         24.737.37  140.46  24,927.83 

State  of   MlniiMota,    Departtuent   of   Insiiranc«. 

I  Hereby  Cerilfy.  That  tiie  annual  statement  of  the 
Niagara  Fire  Insurance  company,  for  the  year  ending 
iHcembtr  3l3t.  1908.  of  which  the  above  Is  an  ab- 
stract has  l-ecn  received  and  flle-d  In  Uiis  depart- 
ment  and  duly  approved  by^^nje.^.   ^    „^,^^,^^^j, 

C  immlssloncr  of  Insurance. 


Kxcess  of  Income  over  disbursements. .  .$ 

ASSETS  DEC.  31.   1908. 

Value  of  real   estate  owned t 

Homis    and    stocks    owiie«l 

Cash    In  office  and  In   bank 

.\rcrueil    Itilerest    and    rt-nts 

Premiums    in    cotirse   of   collection 

All   other   adndttexl   a.«8et» 

D-duct    special    detwslt    less    $23,756.11 
UubUlty    Uiereou 


TVital    admitted    assets 
Assets    not    adudtted .... 


Itoyal     Ii^xchanice    .%i«i«nrance    Company. 

Principal  office  in  Uio  United  SUtes,  New  York 
City.  N.  y.  (Commenced  business  In  the  Cnltetl 
.SUtes  1891.)  L'.  C.  Crosby,  general  manager  la  the 
Uulted  States,  .\ttoniey  to  accept  service  In  Minne- 
sota,  Commissioner  of   Insurance. 

DKPOSIT  C.\PITAL,    $200,000.00. 

INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premluiwi  other  than  perpetuals $ 

Renls  and  Interest 

From   all   otlier  bouroes 

Total   Income • 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Amount   paid   for   losses $ 

Conunlsslons    and    brokerage 

Salaries     and    fees     of    offlceis.     agenU 

and  employes   

Taxes,   fees,   rents  and  other  real  I'sUte 

exi>etlae8   

Return    to    home  olllce 

.Ml  other  dlsbuiseoients 


1,683.865.31 
75,373.14 
49,5i0.tt5 


1,808,749.40 

713.808.24 
465.080.61 

120,259.81 

39.701. .30 

192.191.32 

93,430.88 


Toul  dlsbuneraenta $     1.624,472.19 


Excess  of  Income  over  dlsburse-ments.  .  ..$        184,277.21 


...$111,200.85 


$     2,432.746.74 


1908. 

$         121, 
1.235, 


19. 

33, 
600, 


493.17 
627.88 

038.39 
813.39 
000.00 


LIABILITIES   DEC. 

I'np.ild    losses    and    claims 

rielnsurame    reserve     • 

.Salaries,    expenses,   taxes,   dividends  and 

lnter»«t    due     

.\11  other  liabilities    

Capiul    »t*xk    paid    tip 

TcUl  Uabilia«»  Including  caplul $     j. 909. 983. 13 

Net    surplus     »        522,763.61 

RISKS  AND    PREMIUMS.    1908   BUSINESS. 

Fire   risks    wrilieii   .lurliiK   the   y>  nr $164.194,i;t5.00 

Premiums    recelKnl     thereon 1,918.948.76 

Net  amount  In  force  at  enil  of  the  y«Tir  210, 820,471. OJ 
BUSINESS   IN   MINNESOTA   IN   1908. 
Fire   and    Tornado    Risks — 

Risks    vvrituen     $ 

Premiums     re-eel»ed 

Losses  Incurted 

l.<>sse-^     paid 

.\mount    at    risk 

.SUte  of  Mlnnes(  ta.   I>tT)artin«nt  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.   That  the  annual  sUtement  of  the 
Orient    Insurance    company,    for    the   year    ending    De 
ceml)er    31st,     1!'»8.    of    which    the    afxjve    Is    an    ab- 
stract,    has     been     re<.elved     and     filed     in     UUs     de- 
partment  and  duly   approved   by   me.  

JOHN    A.    HARTIGAN. 
Cuuuuissloncr  of  Insurance. 


ASSETS  DEC.  31.   1908. 

Bonds  and  stinks   owneil $ 

Cash  In  office  and  in  bank 

Ac(  nie<l  Interest  aud  rents 

Preudtmis   In   course  of  eM)lltH-Uon 

.\11   other  admitted   assets 

Deduct    special    deposit    less    $11,678.48 
liability    thereon 


1,771,261.00 
189,104. r.i 

22.177.36 
413.850.22 

40,132.12 

43,821,54 


The    Phoenix    InNurance    ( 

Principal     office,     Hartford,     Conn. 
1S54.)    D.    \V.    C.    SWIton.    president: 
secretary.      Attorney    to  ^accept    servlc 
Commissioner  of  Insiimnce. 

CAPITAL  STOCK,    $2.0M,0 
INCOME    IN     1908. 

Premiums   other   llian    perpetuals 

Itcuts  and  Inlertst 

From   all    other   soure-es 

Profit -oB    sale    or    maturity    of    ledg 

assets    

Total  Income   „••.;;■; 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    I 

.\moui^t  paid  for  losses    

Commissions   ami    bnikerage 

Salaries  and  fees  of  off  leers,  agents  a; 

employes     ,'    '  .' 

Taxes,   fees,    rents  and  other   r««i  es.* 

expenses   

Dividends  and  liiten-»t 

I»si  on  Bale  or  maturity  of  ledger  ass> 
All  other  disbursements 


onipany. 

(Organlzol  In 
John  B.  Knox, 
I   In    Minnesota, 


00.00. 
$ 


4.551. 494. on 
324,469.17 
544.87 

8.000.00 


$ 

)08. 

..$ 

id 
ta 


Total   adm^ted   aiisets. 
Assets   not   adiulttexl 


$130,166.75 


.$     2.392,706.35 


LIABILITIES  DEC.  31.    1906. 

I'npaid  losses   and   claims $ 

Relnstirince  reserve    

Salaries,    expe-nses.    Uxes.    dividends   and 

lntere.n    due 

.Ml   other  liabilities   

1  »epo»it    capital     


109.002.00 
1.532,732.43 

20.500.00 

4.520.55 

200.000.00 


Total   llablllUes    Including   capital $     1,866.844.93 


Total  disbursements 

Exce'ss    of   income    over    dlsburseraeius 
ASSETS   DEC.   31.    I9( 

Value  of   real   estate  owned 

.Mortgage  loatis    

Collateral    loans    • 

Bonds   t.nd   >tiK-ks  owned 

Casli  in  office  snd   In   bank 

.\ccrued    Interest    and    rents 

Premiums   In   ceurse   of   e^jllectlon . . . 

All   other  admitted   assets ,:■;,■, 

Dciluct  special  deposits,   less  $221.13- 
UablUiy      thereon 

Ti>Ul    admitted    assets .vrVo. 

.\ssets    not    admltu?.!.  .  .  .^  .  ■  ^5'0.39,. 
LIABILITIES   DEC.   31, 

Cnpald   losic-s  and  claims 

Ueinsuranco    n-s<-rve    ■  •  ■  •  •  •    •  •  ■ 

Salaries,   expen.-es,   taxes,   dividends  i 

Interest   due    

Commission  and   brokera  ge 

All     other     Uahlllties 

Capital  stock  paid  up 


8. 


4.884.308.13 

2.382.571.21 
322.276.1- 

489,118.74 

148.475.86 

280,360.00 

40,627.36 

223.802.70 


.$     4,487.231.99 

$         397.276.14 

111.013.38 

44.983.33 

60.100.00 

6, 894, 884. 75 

e»9,717.15 
,58.115.82 

395,753.15 

539.704.32 


Flreman'a   Fund    InMurauce   Company. 

Principal  office.  Ssn  Kran<fs<.o.  Cal.  lOrgaiUsad  In 
1863.)  Wm.  J.  Dutton.  president:  I.ouls  Welmann. 
seerietary.  AtteTney  to  ace-ept  service  in  Minnesota, 
Commissioner    of    Insurance. 

C.\SH    CAPITAL.    $1,60X000.00. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums  other  ttian  perpetuals $     4.217.286.91 

lionus  and  Interest 224.217.05 

From  all  other  sourt«8 22.420.00 

Profit    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

asset*     179.50 


92 


57,287.08 


..$     8.776.984.82 
08 

1908. 

..$         450,140.38 
3.967.197-.71 


Total    Income »  4,401,083.46 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Amount    raid    for    losses $  2,324.311.03 

C'«.unl»slons     and     brr>ker:ice 708,731.13 

Salaries     and     fees     of    officers,     agent* 

and    cmplo.ves    475. 389.95 

Taxes,   fiee.   rents   and  other  real  estate 

expenses     139,46S.64  . 

Dividends   and   Interest 16).000.00 

IxMs    on    sale    or    maturtty    of    ledger 

Hssels     2.200.00 

.Ml    other    alsburiementa 254.105.14 


•I\)tal    dlsbuisemcnts I  4.064.485.89 

Kxi-ess    of    Income    ivrr    dl^l'UiveinenU     $  '   399.597.5T 
ASSETS   OEC.   31.    1908. 

Value  of   real   ewtate  owned $  566,110.50 

Mortgage     loans 233,980.00 

Collateral  leans lt.H,95t».00 

Bonds   and  slocks  owned 4.'ill.«6«».50 

Cash  In  office  und  In  bank *'*iT»MJ 

.Vccnied   inl.'rest   and   refits a-'-r^lrl 

Pniidums  In   course  of  euUlectlon ail'I-- 

.Ml   otlier  admllte<l   nsset* 88,878.5o 

Deduct     spe<lal    deposit    les*    $95,029.24  .„,,«„ 

lUhlltly  thereon 80.370.T6 


Ad 


58.709.50 

90,040.52 

92.409.21 

2.000.000.00 


3,608.946  00 
51.011.63 
29.216.35 
28,(>15.79 

8,507,576,00 


Net    surplus 


525,861.37 


RISKS  AND   PREMIUMS.    1908  BUSINESS^ 

Risks  written  during  the  year ♦''^'•^•.•-■^'II^? 

duuis     re<elve.l      Uiereon „.r,  ..TTuM^i  I 

auiount  ll.  fon-e  at  end  of  the  year.    253,21  l.SJj.Ot 


Fire 
Preiidu 
Net  auioun 


BUSINESS 

Fire   Risks- 
Risks   written    

Premiums    received 
Losseit  incurred    .    . 

Losses  paid    

State  of  Minnesota 

I   Hereby  Certify 


IN    MINNESOTA    IN    I90B. 


$     3.091,596.00 

34,761.45 

.    ..  9.788.04 

11,392.04 

Department  of  Insurance. 
That    the  annual   sUitenient  of   tlie 
Itoyal  Kichange  Ataurance  conipauy.   tor  the  year  end 
Ing    De-ornil.Hr    31st.    10)3.    of    wliMi    the    above   Is    an 
«l«trnct      has    been    received    and    fUed    In    this    de- 
parime.it  and  duly  "".roveel^by  me^     n^RTlOAN. 
Cominlssioiicr  of  Insurance. 


Total   lUbilltles    including   caplul.  ■■$     6.665,097.32 


.Net    surplus     ^,.:^b  ' '  Voju 

RISKS    AND    PREMIUMS,    190) 
Fire  risks  wiitien  during  Uie  year... 
Premiums     received    'l"'''*^'"    ,  .i'      ;.. 
Net  amount  In  force  at  ij'"'  ''V''^  ^f 
BUSINESS  IN  MINNESOTA 
Fire   Risks.  Torn 

Risks  wrilten.$  3, 138,180.00  $    697.oy 
Prem's    lle-'d        108,765.96 
Looses  Incur  d  73,600.88 

Am-t  at  risk.  '2.">l*'>'-»»'>" J-f/"-;.*' 
State  of  Minnesota.  Department  or 
1  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  annua 
Phoenix  Insurance  eonipuny.  f"",  ''" 
ceml*r  ;ilst.  1008.  of  which  to 
stra.t.  has  been  re.-elve<l  and  fUe< 
mciit  ai'd  duly  approved  1*^^™'^^.  ^ 
Commlsslone 


3.34 
67 
54 


$     2.111.887.50 
BUSINESS. 

$ti20.j:i2..'..'.4.'Mi 

6,255,690.10 

ar!    744.787. 156.00 

IN  1908. 

do.        ARgregale 

,.00  $  8.«35.275.t»0 

>  :,\  112,ti08.50 

;.i;)  79.283,117 

^.19  75,o4o.:;s 

).00     14,624,8.50.00 

Insurance. 

statement  of  the 

year   ending   De- 

nlKive    is    an    ah- 

1    In    this    depart- 

HAUTIGAN, 

r    of    Insurance. 


ToUl   admitted  asaoU $     6.371,840.9i 

.\ssets   not    ailinltled    $2.58, 57". 49 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1906 

I'npall    losses   and   tjaims $ 

Iteliwurance     r«aene • 

sal.irics.   expenses,   taxes,   dividends  and 

Interest  due    

ConimlisloiH    and    brokerage 

.\ll   other   llablUtl?H    

Capital   stock   paid    up 


418.486.44 
2.941.901.51 

9S.008.00 

180.156.95 

9,027.70 

1.600.000.00 


Total   llablltl-*   Including  caplul $     5.»42.»7a.60 

.\e'    surplus  «     1.120.268.S7 

■    RISKS  AND   PREMIUMS.   1908  BUSINESS. 
Fire    risks    written    .■.nrlng    the    ><-'»f         *■'-*•  V.J'  Tsaa 

PreuiluiiLs    reielved   thereon i.iin.liz.v* 

.Marine   and   Inlaittl  risks  written  during  ^^  ^^^^  ^^^^^ 

Pr-.-niinins     reeeivHl    thereon ,,?:^^,  i„Too 

Ne;  amount   In   force  at  end  of  ">;:>ear  132  3ol. 401.00 
BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1906. 

Marine  and  ___ 

Fife  Risks.     Inland.       TomadO.    Aggregato. 


PLAN  SCHOOL 
FOR  _SIJMMER 

Six  Weeks  of  Summer 

School  to  be  Held  In 

Crookston. 

Exellent  Corps  of  Teach- 
ers Promised  for  the 
Occasion. 


Crookston.  Minn.,  March  15.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  HeraUI.)— Supt.  of  Schools 
N.  A.  Thorson  liaa  received  a  com- 
munication from  the  state  superinten- 
dent, stating  tltat  a  summer  school 
would  be  held  in  Crookston  the  coming 
summer.  This  Information  will  be  re- 
ceived with  great  approbation  by  all  ', 
Interested  In  education,  and  also  by  the 
busitiess  Interests  of  the  city. 

Mr  Thorson  stated  that  he  believed 
the  sVhool  would  be  in  session  at  least 
six  weeks,  and  there  is  no  <iuestton 
but  that  a  very  large  number  of  teach- 
ers and  others  would  be  brought  to 
Crookston  to  take  advantage  of  the 
oDPortunitv  offered  by  the  school.  None 
was  held  in  the  city  last  year,  and 
there  is  every  reason  to  believe  that 
the  sessions  this  summer  will  attract  ; 
people  from  all  sections  of  Northern 
and    Northwestern    Minnesota.     ^    ^    ^. 

ThA  superintendent  says  that  the 
Bchool  will  be  provided  with  an  excel- 
lent corps  of  teachers  and  Instructors, 
and  there  Is  eve-iy  reason  to  believe 
that  an  opportunity  will  be  given 
which  will  be  of  the  greatest  benefit 
to  the  section.  The  pr<igram  and 
schedule  for  the  school  has  not  as  yet 
been  made  public  by  the  state  superin- 
tendent, but  there  Is  every  reason  to 
believe  that  It  will  be  announced  with- 
in the  coming  few  weeks. 

PROSECUTOR  IS 
AFTER  GRAFTERS 

I       — 

Marinette  County  District 

Attorney  Petitions  for 

a  Grand  Jury 

Marinette,  Wis.,  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Determined  to  make 
good  the  platform  on  which  he  was 
elected  to  break  up  a  ring  of  alleged 
grafting  county  officials,  and  render- 
ed desperate  by  the  turndown  received 
at  the  hands  of  the  Marinette  county 
board.  District  Attorney  Schwlttay  of 
Marinette  county,  is  going  from  door 
to  di.or,  asking  taxpayt-rs  to  sign  a 
petition  requesting  Circuit  Judge 
Hastings   to   caM    a  grand   jury. 

Every  move  Schwlttay  has  made 
thus  has  been  cleverly  blocked.  The 
county  board,  with  but  two  .dissenting 
voices  voted  not  to  favor  grand  Jury 
investigation  and  city  Justices  dis- 
charged the  two  supervisors  he  had  ar- 
reste-d  for  graft,  on  their  preliminary 
hearing.  He  started  a  third  case  be- 
fore another  city  justice,  but  the  defen- 
dant immediately  swore  the  case  away 
from  that  official  on  an  affidavit  of 
prejudice.  ,,..... 

The  latest  move  of  the  district  at- 
torney started  Marinette  to  its  founda- 
tions although  tiie  city,  without  a  oent 
in  Its  treasury  at  present,  has  been 
torn  bv  dissensions  and  factional  fights 
lasting  ever  since  the  fall  election.  The 
district  attorney  claims  the  impov- 
erislicd  city  and  ctuinty  treasuries  are 
in  that  oondlUon  aa  a  result  of  ravaffos 


LAKE  LINDEN  CONGREGATIONAL  CHURCH. 


Lake  Linden,  Mich.,  March  15. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — A  celebration  of 
much  Interest  to  the  older  residents 
of  this  place,  and  especially  to  those 
identified     with       the       Congregational 


church,  began  yesterday  when  appro- 
priate services  were  held  commemorat- 
ing the  twenty-flfth  anniversary  of  the 
dedication  of  the  edifice. 

Other  services  will  be  held  during 
the  celebration.  Rev.  John  W  Savage 
was    the    first    pastor    of    the    church. 


made  bv   former  prosecutors   and  pres- 
ent  members   of  the   county   board. 

In  less  than   an   hour  his  petition  re- 
ceived 200  signers. 

FALLS  DOWN  STAIRS, 

BREAKING  COLLAR  BONE. 

Middle  River,  Minn..  March  15.— 
(Special  to  The  Herald.)— Will  Wilier, 
son  of  Adolph  Wilier  of  this  place,  who 
Is  employed  by  the  Great  Northern  at 
Warroad,  sustained  a  serious  injury 
Thursday  morning  by  lailing  headlong 
down  a  flight  of  stains.  His  collar 
bone  and  a  couple  of  ribs  wei-e  broken 
and  a  hip  bruised  badly  besides  other 
minor  bruises.  The  company  took  htm 
to  the  Thief  River  hospital  Thursday 
evening.  - 

RESCULED  FROM  WATERY 

GRAVE  BY  EMPLOYER. 


Menominee,  Mich.,  March  15. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Andrew  Ander- 
son, driver  for  the  Morris  &  Co.'s  local 
office,  was  rescueei  from  a  watery 
grave  by  C.  W.  Spring  of  Chicago,  tho 
company's  agent.  Anderson  was  driv- 
ing across  the  river  when  the  Ice  sud- 
denly crashed  to  pieces.  Unable  to 
swim  h«  struggled  to  grasp  the  sleigh, 


but  failed.  After  he  sank  twice. 
Spring,  who  was  on  the  shore  awaiting 
thp  team's  arrival,  leaped  into  the  ley 
water  without  divesting  coat  or  shoes 
and  dragged  employe  to  the  edge  of 
the  ice.  Rescuers  pulled  them  both  out 
and  also  saved   the   horses. 

ROPE  IS  DRAWN  TIGHT. 

Copper  Country  Suioide  Made  Good 
Job  of  Self-Destniction. 

Houghton,  Mich.,  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  jury  that  looked 
Into  the  death  of  Peter  Suhonen,  who 
was  found  hanging  Friday  near  here 
with  all  the  evidences  of  suicide,  re- 
turned a  verdict  that  death  was  self- 
inflicted. 

Although  It  was  not  brought  out 
upon  the  stand.  Mr.  Crawford  stated 
later  that  Suhonen's  right  arm  had 
I<ecn  found  broken  when  the  body  was 
being  placed  in  the  casket.  The  under- 
taker's tlseorv  Is  that  the  fracture  re- 
sulted from  contact  with  a  limb  which 
was  broken  bv  the  body's  fall.  The 
common  clothes  line  with  which  Su- 
honen made  tho  noose  was  so  tightly 
knotted  about  the  dead  man's  neck  that 
it  retpjored  the  efforts  of  two  men  to 
remove  it.  ,       ,^    ^ 

.Suhonen  was  by  no  means  destitute, 
as  was  proven  by  the  fact  that  over 
|2U0  was  found  upon  his  person.  Thero 


was  about  $4R  In  American  money, 
checks  for  1,100  marks,  about  $200 
from  Finland,  and  a  certificate  for  ten 
."hares  in  the  Calumet  &  Lac  La 
Melle  Traction  company.  All  of  his 
possessions  will  be  hold  until  an  ad- 
ministrator is  appointed  by  the  Judge 
of    probate. 

CUTS  THROATS  OF . 
HER  TWO  CHILDREN 

Wakefield.  Mich.,  Woman 

in  Mad  Frenzy,  Slays 

Little  Ones  With  Knife. 

Bessemer,  Mich,.  March  15. — In  a  mad 
frenzy  of  religious  excitement,  Mrs. 
Mat  Tekka,  wife  of  a  poor  laborer  liv- 
ing at  the  Sunday  lake  location  at 
Wakefield,  near  this  city,  cut  the 
throats  of  her  two  little  boys  Satur- 
day. The  boys  are  dead  and  tho  wom- 
an, who  has  no  realizing  sense  of  her 
awful    deed.   Is    In    Jail. 

The  lads,  who  were  8  and  10  years 
of  age,  were  killed  with  a  butcher 
knife,  which  had  been  sharpened  al- 
most to  a  razor  edge.  No  one  saw  the 
affair  but  there  was  mute  evidence 
about  the  room  to  show  that  the  eldest 
boy,  at  least,  had  made  a  fight  for  his 
life.  But  the  crazed  mother  had  no 
mercv  and,  with  her  superflor 
strength,  increased  by  the  madness  un- 
der which  she  labored,  the  cruel  knife 
thrusts  soon  ended  the  lad's  resistance. 

The  husband  and  older  son  of  the 
woman  were  away  at  work,  and  upon 
coming  home  for  dinner  found  the 
little  boys  welterig  in  their  blood  and 
the  woman  praying  over  theld  mangled 
corpses.  When  questioned,  she  invar- 
iably replied  that  sl^e  had  to  do  it. 

An  inquest  will  be  held  over  the  dead 
bodies  and  tho  commissioners  of  insan- 
ity will  be  summoned  to  examine  the 
demented    woman. 

PATRK  IDE  SENTENCED. 

Hurley  Youth  \\  ho  Killed  Father 
Goes  to  Industrial  School. 

Ashland,  Wis..  March  15. — (Special  to 
Tlie  Herald.) — Frank  Turelle.  the  boy 
murderer  of  Hurley,  pleaded  guilty  to 
the  charge  of  killing  his  father,  before 
Judge  Parish  and  was  sentenced  to 
the  Industrial  school  at  Waukesha  un- 
til he  is  21.  He  was  13  years  old  when 
he  committed  the  crime. 

The  extreme  youth  of  the  boy  and 
extenuating  circumstances  connected 
with  the  case  had  a  great  deal  to  do 
with  the  .sentence  Infilcted  by  Judge 
l>arish.  The  mother  of  the  boy  was 
In  court  but  seemed  to  pay  little  heed 
to   the  case. 

DEER  RIVER  EVENTS. 

Iteni.s  of  Interest  in  Western  Itasca 
County  Town. 

Deer  River,  Minn.,  March  15. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— The  Ladle.s'  Aid 
society  will  give  a  lunch  and  program 
on  March  17.  the  lunch  to  begin  at  4 
o'clock  and  the  program  at  8  p.  m. 

The  Commercial  club  had  as  Its 
guests  Saturday  nl«ht  three  of  the 
county  commissioners.  Messrs.  O  Brlen. 
Trebllcock  and  McWilUams.  The  lat- 
ter two.  with  Commissioners  King,  re- 
turned In  the  afternoon  from  an  in- 
spection trip  up  north,  and  Mr.  O  Brlen 
just   happened   In.  .,       w      * 

Frank  Malone,  a  cook  aged  about 
50  who  has  been  employed  at  different 
nlaces  about  town  for  the  past  three 
vears,  died  at  Bena  yeserday  of  heart 
disease.  He  was  staying  with  George 
Gaeibraith's  and  George  is  trying  to 
locate    his    relatives. 

Several  new  members  wore  taken 
into  the  Indies  of  the  Maccabees  lodge 
Tuesday  night.  .     ..  ,        . 

A  burglar  alarm  system  is  being  In- 
stalled In  the  First  National  bank  this 
week  by  the  Electrical  Protection  corn- 
nan  v    of    Minneapolis.    ,   ^     ^  ,        , 

I  C  Johnson  of  iJiulipth,  formerly  of 
the  Bemldjl  "bunch."'' was  drumming  up 
feed  and  grain  trade  here  yesterday, 

L  M.  Hanson,  auditot-  for  the  Fltger 
Brewing  company,  who  bAa  of  late  be- 


come considerably  acquainted  here, 
was  here  most  of  last  week  on  busi- 
ness for  his  firm.  ^^^^ 

KITTSON  COUNTY  FAIR. 

Plans  on  Foot  to  Hold  Annual  Show 
Sometime  in  July. 

Hallock.  Minn.,  March  15. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— At  the  annual  meet- 
ing of  the  Kittson  County  Agricultural 
society  held  last  week  olTicors  were 
elected  and  plans  laid  for  holding  the 
fair   some    time    in    July. 

The  matter  of  having  a  special  corn 
exhibit  was  brought  to  the  attention 
of  the  society  by  Andrew  Antlerson  of 
Red  River,  and  his  remarks  along  this 
line  were  enthusiastically  received.  A 
special  committee,  consisting  of.-'^"- 
drew  Anderson,  Eph  Clow  a"d  J.  A. 
Swenson,  was  appointed  to  take  t^ils 
matter  In  charge  and  to  make  arrange- 
ments for  distribution  of  a  small  quan- 
tity of  seed  to  farmers  who  wish  to 
lake  part  In  this  contest. 

Special  prizes  will  be  awarded  in 
this  department  and  it  is  e^P^^ted 
tliat  the  contest  will  stimulate  interest 
In  corn  raising  throughout  the  count.\ 
and  be  the  means  of  increased  pro- 
duction in  coming  years,  besides  bet- 
tering  the   quality   of   .«ieed. 

The  following  were  elected  as  onlc- 
crs  for  the  coming  year.  President. 
John  A.  Ross;  vice  president.  .1.  D. 
Henrv;  treasurer,  T.  M.  George;  secre- 
tarv.C.  I.  Moore;  directors,  J.  A.  Rp'js, 
T,  M  George.  J.  D.  Henry.  K.  Lllls, 
A.  K.  Hales.  P.  H.  Konzen.  N.  P..  LunU- 
gren.   E.   C.    Yelter   and   C.   I.   Moore 

HOME  FROM 'big  (RIISE. 

Rush  City  Boy  Back  From   Great 
Battleship  Voyage. 

Rush  City.  Mlnii..  March  ^^^.--(Spe- 
clal  to  The  Herald,  i— John  G.  Kuhnle 
of  the  battleship  Louisiana  is  at  home 
on  leave  of  ab.sence  Irom  his  long  trip 
around  the  world  with  the  »ef,t-  "« 
has  twentv-one  days  leave  and  must 
return  to  his  ship  which  has  been  ord- 
ered   out    on    a    cruise. 


DIVORCE  IS  DENIED: 

DEFENDANT  IS  HAPPY. 


Grand  Forks.  N.  D.,  Ma'^^^V.^^iTTom' 
clal  to  The  Herald.)— Judge  C.  F.  Tem- 
pleton  has  denied  a  divorce  In  t^.e  case 
of  Zena  Burtscher  vs.  Frarik  J.  ""7- 
.scher  on  the  ground  that  the  Pla  ntlff 
was  a  resident  of  Minneapolis  ami  tiot 
North  Dakota.  He  fouitd  that  the  evi- 
dence was  sufficient  to  warrant  the 
plaintiff  getting  a  decree,  but  sj^e  »'a^ 
been  in  Minneapolis  several  '"""*  ^ 
and  is  evidentlq  not  a  resident  of  this 
state  The  defendant  was  pleased  over 
the  turn  of  affairs,  as  If  his., wife 
getB  a  decree  In  Minen.sota  she  will  not 
have   a   chance    to   get   alimony    In    this 


for  the  Minneapolis  Brew 
W  E.  Race,  the  foreman, 
from  Minneapolis  and  star 
The  building  is  to  be  of  i 
will  Include  an  Ice  house, 
and  oft  Ice.  „,,      ,     , 

St  Cloud— Mrs.  Elizabet 
from  the  effects  of  burns 
in  Glenci>e.  Okla..  on  bun 
at  the  age  of  64  years, 
was  a  former  resident  ' 
and  Luxemberg,  moving 
about  a  year  ago.  She 
sons  and  two  daughters. 
Crookston — An  examlna 
dates  for  the  position  of ' 
Indlttn  service  was  heltl  ; 
I  uildlng  Thursday  by  fei 
Dunlap.  Mrs.  Edith  Twe. 
Totten  school,  and  Mls^ 
Smith  of  Red  Lake  Falls 
ainination. 

Brainerd — The  remains 
nev  were  taken  to  St.   Pi 
ing  by  his  wife  for  burial 
was    an    employe    Of    the 
shops    and    had    been    In 
here  about  tv.o   months. 
Staples — F'rank   Simon 
.sawmill    to    the    Crosslai 
the    Gallipo    ford    of    the 
antl  will   have   It  In  open 
few  days.      He  has  been  f 
300,000  feet  to  cut  at  tha 
Stillwater— Mrs.        The 
died  earlv   Friday   mornlr 
dence,     215    West    WlUan 
was    born    in   Germany, 
and    came    to    this    city 
husband.    Bernard    Bakei 
atTo.     Slift  Is  survived  by 
The  funeral  will  be  held 

Long  Prairie- The 
creamery  for  the  south v 
the  countv  that  has  be- 
long  is  at  last  a  certali 
mass  mieting  held  In  C 
ganizatlon  was  perfectec 
ments  made  for  the  es 
the  enterprisf  at  once. 

Milaca — Last  Tuesda> 
this  village  resulted  Ir 
prises,  chief  among  th 
dccisiv?  vote  cast  again 
Ing  the  first  time  In  I 
the  town  that  the  anti- 
could  claim  a  victory. 

Mankato — A  serious  a< 
at  the  union  depot  Tliu 
jis  Oinalia  passenger  tr. 
pulling  out  for  the  Wesl 
ell.  a  stranger  in  the 
manner  got  run  over  an< 
was  cut  off  at  the  auk 
St.  Cloud — There  has 
suicide  in  Stearns  cour 
vear  1908.  as  is  shown 
at  the  office  of  Clerk 
Llmperich.  who  has  recel 
from  the  state  board  of 
births  and  deaths  In  the 
the  past  vear.  There  w 
reported,  while  the  de 
section  man  in  the  emplo 
477, 

Moorhead — Albert  Mil 
section  man  in  the  etuph. 
trn  Pacific  at  Dilworth. 
at  St.  Paul  for  $25,000  d 
tlie  Northern  Pacific  co 
was  run  down  b.v  a  sv\ 
Jan.  22.  and  lost  a  leg. 

Rush  City — Alfred  Ai 
ant  cashier  of  the  First 
left  for  Granite  Falls  « 
a  visit  with  relatives, 
will  locate  at  some  othei 
at  Spokane.  Wash. 


$  3,37.-..299  »8,636,r.09  $    6*2.310  $11,C.%S,»18 


8-.',i:?:i 
62.S.''>4 

ct.o;>!i 


iO.252 

9.652 
7.193 


3.732 
057 


136.418 

TS.ieri 
T2.i»: 


Ing  company. 

having  come 
ted  the  work, 
ood  slzr.  ami 

cold  storag  ■ 

h  Nlstler  died 
at   her   home 

lay,  March  7. 
Mrs.    Nlstlor 

)f  St.  Josepli 
to  Oklahoma 
leaves    seven 

tlon  of  candl- 
matron  In  the 
it  the  federal 
'cretary  J.  J. 
;l  of  the  Fort 
es  Perry  and 
took  the  ex- 

of  John  Cutl- 

ul   this  morn- 

.     Mr.  Cuttney 

(^omo    coach 

the    hospital 

is  moving  his 
d    farm,    near 

Crow  Wing, 
ttion  within  a 
romised  about 
t  point. 

resa  Barker 
g  at  her  resi- 
1  street.  She 
June  10,  1832. 
with  her  late 
,  many  years 
six  children. 
Monday. 

co-operative 
•estern  end  of 
m  talked  of  so 
ity.  At  a  big 
sakis,    the    or- 

and  arrange- 
tablishment  of 

's  election  In 
several  sur- 
em  being  the 
St  license,  be- 
lie history  of 
jaloon   element 


Itisks 

wrlltfii.. 
I'r«nilunis 

rtxT}iv«.il . . 
1.0s  SM 

liirurrttl .  . 
l/)Ases    paid 

■^T'risk  1129r..lSl  701,587  1.42.1.8-,5  n.l23.62« 
SUIP   "f   MI1111PS..IH.    U.'iwrtniciit  of   !n»-.ir:iiup. 

1    Hcrel.y   ((rllfy,    Tl-at   the   annual   -'"•J""'^'    "'"''■ 

..tiding  l».<-."n.LKr  ".1st.  1908,  .'f  «l'l.h  tlw  »»"  ' 
!.ti  al*tn..l.  1ms  U-i-n  rcc-h^l  and  filed  i"  HJ*  de 
paruuua  aiul  duly  ^W" "*•];,;;>;,"'«;    „.,„tI<;aN, 

friminUsloiKr  of  Iinur»nc«. 


Stophen  Loranger;  trustees,  two  years 
.lohn  Hawley.  C.  F.  Elchen  and  .John 
Jlobinson;    asses.sor,    l-'dward    Carroll. 

Menominee— Mrs.  Ed  Stephenson, 
daughter-in-law  of  the  late  ex-Con - 
greslsman  S.  M.  Steph^son,  was  liadly 
hurt  Saturday,  when  her  spirited  horse 
became  frightened  at  an  autotrioblle 
and  reared  suddenly,  throwing  her 
from  her  cutter.  , 

t)ntonagon— Alice.  the  6-vear-old 
daughter  of  Chris  Chilstensen.  who 
lives  on  the  west  side  of  the  river, 
die,!  Tuesday.  The  111  tie  girl  had  been 
bed-ridden  for  the  past  six  weeks;  first 
she  had  measles,  then  mumps  and- fin- 
ally   pulmonary    pneumonia. 


i:WlS( 


state. 


ddent  ocurred 
rsdav  evening, 
iln  No,  7  was 
Frank  Pow- 
citv.  In  some 
1  his  right  foot 
le. 

been  no  race 
ty  during  the 
bv  the  records 
jf  Court  H.  J. 
ved  the  returns 
health  on  the 
county  during 
?re  1.198  births 
iths  numbered 
y  of  the  North - 

ler.  formerly  a 
V  of  the  North - 
has  filed  suit 
images  agafnst 
inpany.  Miller 
Itch    engine   on 

iderson,  asslst- 
Nallonal  bank. 
)n  Tuesday  for 
ifter  which  he 
point,  possibly 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS  \ 

Eau  Claire — Next  month  will  see  ao- 
tlve  work  on  the  part  of  the  G.  A.  R. 
in  preparing  for  encampment  here  this 
summer  Already     several     prellmln- 

ar  steps  have  been  taken. 

Ashland— Patrick  Berry,  while  work- 
ing on  a  skidway  at  Thomas  McMann  s 
camp  on  the  reseveratlon.  had  the 
misfortune  of  having  a  log  roll  on 
him  He  was  brought  to  St.  Josephs 
hospital,  where  It  was  found  that  his 
right  leg  was  fractured  Just  above  the 
knee  an.l  his  body  conalderahly  brulBed 
Marinette— The  buildings  destroyed 
on  the  poultry  farm  of  Dr.  Mlchaells 
are  alleged  to  have  been  fired  by  in- 
cendiaries. Fire  Warden  Vander- 
boom    is    Investigating. 

Green   Bav— The   $15,000   damage  BUh 
brought    by    John    R.    Zerat.sk y    against 
the    Milwaukee    road,    was    decided      in 
favor     of    the     defendant     on     direction 
of     the     court.         The       plaintiff       was 
blamed    by    the    road    for    causing      the 
death    of    several    other    railroad    men 
In   the   wreck  in  which  he  was  Injured. 
Rhlnelander — One      of       the      largeel 
hardwood    timber    deals    transacted    In 
the    Northwest    In    the    last    few    yftftrs 
was    closed    Saturday,    when    the    Rob- 
bins  Lumber  company  of  this  city   sold 
a    tract    of    9,000    acres    In    Iron    county. 
Michigan     to    Fuller    &    Rice    of    Grand 
Ranlds.  Mich.       The  price  Is  not  given. 
Chlnpev,-a  Falls — V  fiutter  was  caused 
among    women    in    the    churches    when 
the   Rev.    Mr    Barrett,  at   the   MethodlBt 
church,   Informed   them  that  he  expect- 
ed   them    to    take    oft    their    hate.        He 
.said    that    he    wanted    to    see    the    per- 
sons    he    was    talking    to    and    not    to 
speak  to  a  bower   of  feathers  and  rib- 
bons. 


MKXOMINEE  NOTES. 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


DAKOTA  BRIEFS 


Menominee.  Jllch..  .March  15.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald,)— John  T.  Jones  of 
Iron  Mountain.  Inventor  of  tlie  famous 
iron  ort  reducing  process,  will  be  the 
nrlncipal  speaker  and  guest  ot  honoi 
at  the  annial  banquet  of  the  Menomi- 
nee Commercial  cltib.   on   March   !». 

Fish  Warden  DeBell  of  Menominee 
arrested  three  Marlnettte  youths,  who 
weer  in  this  city  selling  undersized 
trout  The  boys  confesssed  to  the  war- 
den that  they  were  disposing  of  the 
fish  for  tholr  fathers,  who  feared  to 
ship  them  out  of  town. 

Dcod  Woman  H^ld  C'hl'd-      ,. 

Chippewa  Falls.  \V  is..  March  15.— 
Mrs  Thomas  Brassord,  aged  40  years, 
was  found  dead  In  her  home  near  Boyd^ 
Hir  body  was  lying  on  the  fioor  and 
In  her  lan  was  her  2-month3-old  child 
.luletly  sVeeping.  The  cause  of  death 
was  apoplexy. 

Anoka    Laborer**    Clo«e    Call. 

Anoka    Minn..  March   l^.— Clinging  to 

caped    a    horrible    death    shortly    after 
noon    here   Saturday. 


International    Falls— Work    has    been 
begun   on   the  cold  atorage   and   office 


Calumet — Joseph    Schc 
mer.   who  was   Injured  *: 
at    work    In    No.    4    shal 
met   &    Hecla  Is    reporte 
at    the    hospital,    where 
for   treatment.      No   scrl 
of    the   accident   Is    expt 
Hancock — The     Hanco 
the    Ancient    Order    tjf 
arranged    for   a    special 
Copper    Range    railroad 
March    17.    to    attend    tl 
dav  celebration.     The  si 
HaincoK   at   2   p.   m.   aim 
leave    Calumet    at    midi 
Duluth — A.    P.    Mowa 
from    a    business     trip 
range    towns.      J.    H.    H 
turned   from  a  extendet 
and  Chicago. 

Han:ock— Tho  funerf 
Christopher  Wallis,  wh 
dav  morning  at  the  P 
was  held  Saturday 
o'clock  from  the  Pewat 
with  Interment  at  Fore 
Houghton. 

Laurium — The         funt 
Heikala  of  Laurium.  to 
day     afternoon.       The 
tuberculosis,   after  a   y; 
Menominee — Henry    1 
vear-old     Indian     Incor 
caped    from    the    local 
was  found  at  Ingalls. 
returned  to  the  home, 
on   an   Indian   reservatl 
Houghton — C.    O.     B< 
rived    in    Houghton    to 
of  the  local  offices  of 
Western    Transportatl 
successor  to  W.  H.  Ml 
Ontonagon  —  Little 
shown    In    the    election 
day.    which    resulted: 
[Corgan;  clerk,  J.  J.  Vi 


vegal,  a  tram- 
'liurstiay.  while 
t  of  the  ('alu- 
1  doing  nicely 
he  was  taken 
)us  termination 
cted. 

ck     division     of 

Hebernlans    has 

train    over    the 

to   Calumet   on 

le    St.    Patrick's 

>eclal  will   leave 

returning   will 

light. 

t  has  returned 
to  Duluth  and 
odgson  has  re- 
l  trip  to  Duluth 

J  of  the  late 
o  died  Wednes- 
awabic  location 
ifternoon,  at  2 
Ic  M.  E.  church, 
it  hill  cemetery. 


1% 


ral      of      Salma 
ok  place  Thurs. 
child        died     of 
r-ar's   Illness. 
„arvier,     tlie    15- 
-Iglble     who    es- 
detention    home. 
Instead  of  bein 
le  will  be  place 
on. 

rglund  has  ar- 
assume  charge 
the  Lake  Erie  & 
)n  company,  as 
lard. 

Interest       was 

here    last   Mon- 

Presldent,    J.    P. 

ncenti  treaaurer. 


Fargo  N.  D.— Wllber  E.  GlbbonB,  a 
student  in  the  commercial  co""©  o' 
the  agricultural  college,  has  received  a 
notification  from  Congressman  H 
Steenerson  of  Minnesota  stating  that 
he  has  been  named  as  alternote  to  the 
T'nited  States  naval  aca.demy  at  An- 
napolis.    Mr.  Gibbons  Is  from  Audubon. 

^Mandan,  N.  D.— .States  Attornev 
Fa  her  of  Morton  county  has  resigned. 
Mr  Faber  was  elected  last  fall  and 
(luallfled  the  first  of  the  year.  -The  va- 
cany  will  be  filled  by  appointment 
from    the      board    of      county      commls- 

^  Fargo.  N.  D. — After  a  desperate  bat- 
tle with  diphtheria  little  Frederick 
Hallet.  tlie  2-year-old  .son  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs  Frank  Hallett,  succumbed  to  the 
disease  Thur.sday  evening  at  the  fam- 
ily home.     The  funeral  was  held  taatur- 

'^V^rlnd^For'ks.   N.    D.-The   petition    In 

l.Tnkruntcv      of      Cornelius      Hogan,      a 

farmer  f)f  Washington  township    Grand 

Forks    has    been    filed    in    the    office   of 

the  clerk  of  the  federal  court  at  Fargo 

His    liabilities    are    P>aeed    at    $1,909.54 

with   $1,150   in  assets,   practically  all  of 

which  are  claimed  exempt. 

1       Bismarck,     N.      D.— Judge     Carmody. 

'now  of  the  supreme  bench,  resigned  as 

a   member   of  the   state   bar   association 

iand    Attorney    P.    G.    Swenson    of    HlllB- 

!  boro    will  succeed  him. 

Ora^d  Forks.  N-  D.-Mlss  Mary  Shue. 
employed  In  the  Grand  Porks  steam 
laundry,  had  her  left  hand  burned  Frl- 
dav  while  operating  the  body  ironer 
at"the  laundry.  She  was  given  prompt 
1  medical  care  and  removed  to  her  home 
and  while  the  accident  Is  not  as  aeri- 
I  ous  as  was  at  first  expected,  she  Is 
i  suffering  considerable  pain. 
!'  DickrnnM.n.  N.  D.-The  Missouri  Slope 
Educational  association  will  hold  Its 
first  convention  at  Dickinson  on  March 
"•.  and  26.  This  association  will  at 
once  u.alte  educational  Interests  on  the 
slope  and  will  prove  of  much  value  to 
teahers  and  sob  jol  officers  here  In  the 


-t-^ r- 


western  part  of  the  state. 

MInot.  \'.  D.— R-^feree  fn  Bankrupts 
1  H  Lewis  has  Just  passed  the  ZOO 
mark  In  the  list  of  ba"»';','^P%.<^,^"5 
since  he  became  referee  In  the  fall  of 
1905  The  cases  have  averaged  about 
five"  each  month,  which  Is  a  small 
number  for  the  size  of  the  territory 
Sver  which  Mr.  Lewis  has  Jurladiction. 


TT 


-».? » 


I 


n 


-♦- 


V 


12 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:        MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1909. 


WHEAT  HAS 
DULL  TONE 

The  MarKet  Eases  Off  as 
a  Result  of  the 


»«-»»«it»»)>it«i»»)»»»«»»««***»**«**»««*****************%' 

THE  MARKETS  AT  A  GLANCE. 


M 


Flax 


^-i. 


Apathy. 

Is  Higher  at 

End  of  Quiet 

Session. 


n 

it 
^^ 

it 
a 
a 
n 
it 
it 
a 
■ii 
a 
a 
it 

it 


Duluth  May  wheat  closed  l^c  lower. 
Chicago  May  wheat  closed  %c  lower. 
Minneapolis  May  wheat  closed  y2C  to  %c  lower. 
Liverpool  wheat  cables,  unchanged  to  %d  lower. 
Duluth  May  flax  closed  %c  higher. 
New  York  stocks,  easy  and  dull. 
Boston  copper  stocks  closed  lower. 
Duluth  curb  coppers,  fairly  firm. 
Chicago  live  stock,  steady  to  lower. 


the 


Duluth  Board  of  Trade,  March  15. — 
"Wheat  was  ratlier  quiet  today  and 
prufit-takiub'  sales  put  prices  frac- 
tionally lower  than  Saturday's,  at  the 
close.  Sales  were  not  alone  responsi- 
ble for  the  easier  feeling  as  the  gen- 
eral apathy  of  the  market  caused  a 
natural   decline   values. 

World's     shipments     were     about     as 
expected.     Cables    were    easier.      Liver- 
pool   closed    unchanged 
Pudapest    S 

wheat    In- 


|»^H><c»».****il**««««««»»«****««*»««********^ 


•"id    lower, 
unchanged 


to 
higher.   Berlin 
and    Antwerp    S*^    lower. 

The      visible      supply    of 
creased    54,000    bu.  ,    .        , 

The  Mav  option  closed  uc  lower 
Duluth  and  ^Vinniptg,  'isc  lower 
Chi.aeo  ^.-U-vc  lower  in  Minneapolis, 
yi?U.wer  in  New  York,  ^sc-  lower  in  St. 
Louis  and  i*c  lower  in  Kansas  t.it> 
The  July  option  closedJ**c 


In 
in 


lower  in  Du- 


slack  Prices  at  the  start  were  a  shade 
to  »sc  lower  than  the  previous  close, 
.\lav  being  at  6S(&r,.SV8C.  Early  in  the 
dav   Mav   sold  at   S.TsC. 

tl-.e  market  was  weak  all  day  owing 
to  general  selling  by  commis.^on 
houses.  May  sold  off  to  67ViC.  The 
close  was  weak  with  May  down    ?4C  at 

'  Commission  houses  were  sellers  of 
oats  and  the  market  was  easy,  there 
being  little  demand.  May  opened  V4C 
lower  at  55'»c  and  sold  at  55i«B(aV4C. 

Provisions  were  weak  because  ot  a 
10c  decline  In  live  hogs.  Pit  traders 
and  local  packers  were  the  chief  sell- 
ers. Prices  at  the  start  were  unchanged 
to    7*40    lower. 

Articles —  Receipts. 

Flour,    bbls 23.900 

Wheat,  bu 36.000 

Corn,     bu 223.800 

Oats,   bu -32<00 

live,    bu 10.000 

Barley,   bu 115,600 

Car  lot  receipts — Wheat  39 
contract    grade;    corn, 
3     of    contract    grade; 
Total  receipts  of 
Minneapolis     and 


Flax- 
Coni. 

TDt*l 


-No     1.    10.      Totnl    of   riM,    10;   la#t    year,    tl. 
1;    oal*.     13;    rje.    :!:    barley.     11. 
of   al   car*.    13fl.      lars   on    track   today. 


332 


HEARD  ON  THE  FLOOR. 

Gossip  of  the  Trading  Room  aud  the 
Pit. 

rere    |1. 14^,4     and 
$l.l5Ti    asked. 


16    of 

with 

cars. 

cago. 

were 

last 

tng 


Shipments 
15.000 
16.600 
301,000 
217.800 
6,000 
10.900 
cars,  with 
15S    cars, 
oats,    151 
wheat  at  Chi- 
Duluth     today 


innipeg. 
lower   in 


*4  ^  "ft^" 


lower  in 
and 
and 


luth    and    W ,-,..      ,^    - 

Chicago.  *sc  lower  in  Minneapolis 
New  York,  -^c  lower  in  St.  Louis 
V4fe  ^sc  lower  in  Kansas  City. 

MaV  corn  closed  *»c  lower  in  Chicago 
and  unchanged  to  >,d  higher  In  L-ivej- 
pool.      May    oats    closed    »-8^%c    lower 

*"vVor*id^"shipments  of  wheat  and  corn 
last  week  the  week  previous  and  the 
corresponding  week  a  year  ago,  are 
•hown  as  follows: 

WHKAT. 


Tias 

Wefk. 

2.272  000 

1.:12.1K»0 

168.000 

5.oy6.ooo 


Wteh. 

l.tf.'i'.'.OtlO 

1.«»'.000 

280.000 
5.5J2,OOJ 


..   1,248.000 
16.V0U 

,.  10.318. OOJ 
fOKX. 

7l>6.000 

34U.01I0 

. .    I.ISS.OVO 


1.224.t»00 
112.000 


I.agt 
V*ar. 

2.'.»68.O00 

248.000 

384. 0«« 

r.  1:0. 000 

48.000 

8.000 

424.0.10 

248.000 


10,800.000      11. 504,000 


66C.000 
86y.OOO 
3S»0.000 


951,000 

333. OJO 

638,01)0 

24,001" 


400  cars,  compred  with  628  cars 
week  and  702  cars  the  correspond- 
day  a  year  ago. 
Close:  Wheat— May,  $1.16'A;  .Tub'. 
$104^,;  September  98V4c;  December, 
99I4C.  Corn— March.  65»4c;  May.  6J_Sc; 
July,  67>2c:  September,  «,' '«  "^ .*> ' ^i": 
Oats— May  54a4^54Ji.c;  July,  *%\l: 
September.  40%c.  Pork— May,  $.17^85. 
Julv  $17.87  »^;  September.  $1^.8.^. 
Uird-Mav,  |l6,22'4=:  July,  |10  32^1i) 
10.35;  September.  *T0.46©;10.47>^. 
—May.      $9,35@9.37^;        July,      $9.50@ 


9.52 'i;     September, 


Ribs 

.50<a 

Cash 


Amrrlo*     

nussia      

Danube     

Argrntina      ..... 

iDdia     

Austria  Hungary 

AustraU;^     

Varluiu     

Totals     

Aaitrira     

RuEsIa    

Danube • 

ArKcnUna    .......... 

Totah 2.283.000"      1.023,000       1.9-«6,(i00 

Brooinliall  cabled  from  Liverpool: 
"Wheat — There  was  a  steady  opening 
In  wheat,  at  which  time  values  were 
unchanged  to  'sd  lower.  The  market 
was  extremely  dull,  but  during  the 
morning  some  pressure  developed  and 
values  lost  'sd  to  %c^.  Pressure  was 
the  result  of  a  lack  of  American  sup- 
port, laiger  worlds  shipments  than 
V.ere  expected,  and  especially  from 
America  and  Russia  easier  La  Plata 
offerings  and  a  dull  spot  trade.  At 
middav  ihc  market  was  very  dull,  and 
from   igd  to   ^i\  lower  than  Saturday. 

Car  receipts  of  wlieat  were  96 
against  21  last  year,  Chicago  received 
31»  against  34  last  year.  Winnipeg  re- 
ceived   304    against    423    last    year. 

Primary  receipts  of  wheat  were  bis,- 
000   bu.  last   vear  587,000   bu.  Shipments 
215.000  bu,   last  year  279.000 
ances    of    wheat   and    flour 
250,000   bu. 

Primal  y  receipt*  of  corn 
000  bu,  last  qear  587,000  bu. 
476,000  bu,  last  year  32  1.O0O 
ances  of  corn  were  3  5,000   bu. 

Wheat  was  »iuiet  in  iHilulh.  May 
wheat  opened  '4C  lower  at  $1.15%,  ad- 
vanced to  $1.16  and  ranged  between 
that  and  $1.15^  during  the  rest  of  tlie 
session,  closing  at  $I.15='8  a  loss  of 
>.4C       from       Saturday.  July       wheat 

optned    Uc  lower  at   $1.16, 

{l.lo'g    during   the    rest    of 
1.15T»    during    the    rector 
closing   at    $1.15Ti.    a   loss 
Saturday. 

Durum    wheat    closed    '-ic    lower 
cash    spring    wheat    was    selling 
basis   of   Ic   over   May   for   No 

Flax    was   rather   quiet,    but  May   flax 
closed     up.       It     opened     unchanged,     at 
$1.64  5,^     nominal,     went     off     to     $1 
rallied  to  $1.65  and  closed  at 
gain    of    ^c    over   Saturday 


$9.65.  Rye 
8ory81c;  May  81c.  Barley— Cash,  64  Ms 
(&69c.  Timothy— March,  $3.85.  <Jover 
—March,  $8.60.  Cash  wheat— -No  - 
red.  $1.22',<ai.25;  No,  3  red  $1.16 V^'S' 
-  2  hard.  $1.16rgl.l8;  No.  3 
12  V.!®  1.17;  No.  1  "oil^hfJ"' 
29;  No.  2  northern,  $l.lo«e/ 
3  northern.  $1.12>>i  @  116. 
3,  65>A(0  65aic;  No.  3  yellow. 
No.  4,  641i64»'ic.  Oats — No. 
434c;   No,    3   white.    53®54^c 


The 
56,000 
Incerased 


Minneapolis    puts 

calls   $1.16»4    bid   and 

•       •       « 
visible   supply   of  corn    Increased 
bu.  and  the  visible  supply  of  oats 

18,000    bu. 

«  °    •      • 

Harry  Hurdon.  the  Duluth  curler, 
who  has  just  returned  from  Scotland, 
where  he  participated  in  the  interna- 
tional curling  games  and  incidentally 
reflected  credit  upon  the  Duluth  Curl- 
ing club  brought  back  with  him  two 
fine  Scotch  briar  pipes,  wiiich  he  pre- 
sented to  Alex  Guthrie  and  Thomas 
Gibson  of  the  Dulutli  board  of  trade, 
who  are  prominent  members  of  tlie 
local  "heather  colony."  The  P.ipes 
have  carved  on  the  bowls  the  thistle 
of  Scotland  and  bear  the  word,  '  t  or- 
ever."  The  recipients  prize  them 
highly  _ 

THE  COPPER  STOCKS. 

The  following  are  the  closing  quota- 
tions of  copper  stocks  at  Boston  today, 
reported  by  Paine,  Webber  &  Co.,  Room 
A,   Torrey   building:       


bu.     Clear 
aggregated 

were    611,- 

Shipments 

bu.     Clear- 


1.23;  No. 
hard,  $1 
$1.18«4'?i  1 
1.17;  No. 
Corn — No. 
65*4  <&66c; 

2   white.   5.,,^,   -  -  !.,».„ 

No.  4   white,  52Cio2^4c;   standard.   54»4C. 

THE  MINNEAPOLI;^  MARKET. 

Millstuflfs    Demand    Strong— Condi- 
tions Favorable  to  the  -Millers. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  March  15. — Local 
elevator  stocks  of  wheat  decreased 
65,500  bushels  for  two  days.  Cables 
were  weak  and  the  local  market  fol- 
lowed in  line.  Chicago  was  only  I'.'^c 
above  Minneapolis  May.  After  the 
first  hour  there  was  little  change  In 
the  market.  Few  trades  weer  trans- 
acted and  dullness  featured  the  ses- 
sion. May  closed  >8<Sl4c  lower  than 
the  opening.  Omaha 
25,000    bushels    cash 


STOCKS — 


Bid 


Asked 


reported  a  sale 
of  25,000  bushels  cash  wheat  to  go  to 
Minneapolis.  Minneapolis  today  re- 
ceived 265  cars  against  647;  Duluth 
96    against    21;    Winnipeg    304    against 


323. 
high, 
$1.15. 
1.16 'i 


May       opened    at    $1.15*8  <?» 
low,    $1.15 


1.15  U  ; 
close. 


1.15: 


advanced  to 

the  session, 
the  session, 
of    ^gc    from 


and 
on    a 
nortli- 


$1.1434.         No. 

3      wheat, 

No.    3    vellow 

corn,  6234C, 

oats,    Bl(&52c. 

No.    2    rye. 

cars         today, 

none.         Light 

demand    mad.e 

were  too  light. 


ote 
at  ) 


ned    Vie  higher,  at  $1.63 ^i 
$1.63  7r    a  gain  of 


64  »R, 
$1.64Tfe.  a 
July  llax 
and  closed 
gC  over  Saturday. 
October  Hax  "opened  late  at  $1.37.  ad- 
vanced to  $1.37 i-i  and  closed  there,  a 
loss  of  ^c  from  Saturday.  September 
flax  closed  \^c  lower,  and  barley  ^aC 
higher. 

Following  were  the  closing  prices: 
Wheat — No.  1  hard,  on  track,  $1.1(3%; 
to  arrive.  No.  1  northern.  $1.16%;  No.  2 
northern.  $1.14 '4;  on  track,  No.  1  north- 
ern, $1,163^;  No.  2  northern.  $1.1438; 
May,  $1.15%:  July.  $1.15^8,;  September 
$1.0214;  durum  on   track,  No.   1.  $1.03'^ 


— To  arrive, 
Ma.v.  $1.64  "i; 

,  $1.42  V4:  Oc- 
arrive.  51>4c; 
75c;    barley. 


Uo    2,  $1.01  >^:  Mav  durum,  $1.02^2:  July 
durum.        $1.0234.        Flax 

SLfiS^t:   on  track,   $1.6;>''8 
uly.     $l.'53  7fc;     September 
tober.    $1.37^8.      Oats— To 
on    track.    51»4C.      Rye,    i2 
62-63v^c.  ^„    ,      ^ 

Cars  inspected:  Wheat,  96.  last  year, 
21;  corn,  1:  oats.  13:  rye,  2;  barley,  14; 
flax    10.  last  vear.   99. 

Receipts:  Wheat.  64.773:  corn,  1,068; 
oats,    2;    barley.    30.144:    flax,    3,551, 

Shipments:  Oats,  16,217;  barley,  16.- 
908. 


$1.15->4<&  1.1      .. 

Julv   opened  $1.16;  high.  $1.16%  @ 
:     low,     $1.15%;       close.     $1.15%  # 
Cash    wheat    was    in    good    de- 
mand again  today.     Millers  were  ready 
buvers   and    the   majority    of    the    <'ner- 
ings   went  to  the  country  mills.     No.    1 
northern    sold    for    2c    above    May    ami 
No      2     for     even     May     prices.       Close: 
No.     1     northern,     $1.1634;       to     arrive, 
$1.1634;    No.    2    northern,    $1.1434(0  1.15: 
to      arrive, 
$1.10*4  (5  11 3 
No.    3    white 
733.4^76^40. 

Flax — Receipts,         23 
against    122;    shipments, 
offerings    and    a    stiong 
a  firm  market.  Receipts 
thougli    to    allow    any    activity    to    the 
market  Prices     were     the     same     as 

Duluth    May.        Close,    $1.64%. 

Barley — Receipts.  46  cars,  against 
:;9-  shipments,  57.  I'nder  a  strong  de- 
mand prices  advanced  \'iC.  This  market 
was  noticeably  stronger  than  outside 
markets.  Both  malsters  and  feeding  in- 
terests were  buvers.  Receipts  were 
light  for  two  days.     ,<"losf.,  63®  64c. 

^lillstuffs,  shipments.  2.0.0  tons.  De- 
n-and  was  strong  and  business  condi- 
tions were  very  favorable  to  millers. 
Shipments  were  heavy  as  usual  for  over 
Sundav  Prices  remained  unchanged. 
Bran    in  bulk    $23 (S  23.50. 

Flour  shipments  over  Sunday  were 
not  as  heavv  as  mifclers  expected.  l>e- 
mand  came  entirely  from  domestic 
business,  there  being  no  appreciable 
e-xport  trade.  Country  millers  busi- 
ness wa.-^  generally  in  better  condition 
than  the  local  millers'  trade.  Prices 
held  tlrm.  .^shipments.  56.011  barrels. 
First     patents,     $5.65C.i  5.57 ;     second    pa- 


No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No, 

No, 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Durum 

Durum 

Durum 

Duram, 

Durum. 

Durum, 

Durum. 

0*ta.   1 

0«ta.  1 

OaU.  1 

Oats,  1 

Oats.   1 

BarVey. 

B&rlvy. 

Barley, 

H.-irhy. 

Barlry. 

Flax.  1 

riax.  1 


CsHh 

hanl   whe.it,    1   • 
III  rth«rn.    1   car 
iKirtlv.rn, 
northern, 
northern, 
Tiiirthern, 
northeni. 
ncrtluni, 
ntrthciM. 
nf  rtl.fm, 
nortliern 
nurthtm, 
northern. 
s{.ring,    1 
•  prlrg,    1 
wheat, 

1    rar 

1    cnr 

1     ITX 

1    car 
1    cnr 

1  c:vr 
c?,r  .Vo. 
car  -Nf. 
car  No. 
car  No. 
car  No. 

2  cars  .... 
2     ca  rs 

1  car    »e«ly 

2  cars   fet'dy 

3  i»r8 

car 

car 


Sales    Monday. 


patents 


tents.     $5.55(R  .■).65; 
4.50;    second   clears 


first    clears, 
$3,151*3.25. 


»w    York   <>rnln. 

New  York.  March   15. — Close: 
—May.    $1.20%:    July.    $1.12%. 
May,   7514c;   July.   74%c. 


$4.40(g' 


■Wheat 
Corn — 


ill  store 

i    car< 

700   Iju  to  arrlto 

4.000  bu  to   urrlte 

.T   cars 

2   cars 

I.IOJ  bu  to  arrlre 

X   car   to   arrive 

2    cars 

2  cars 

3  car«,   mills 

1    car 

car  smutty 

car 

No.   1  to  arrive. . 


8.0U 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Xo. 

No. 

No. 
3 
2 
3 

:< 
4 


bu 

1 

1 

1 

2 

3 

3 

white. . 
white. . 
white., 
white.. 
Willie.. 


riax.  800    bu. 


..$1.17\ 
,.  1.16H 
..  1.161* 
..  1,16^ 
..  1.16"^ 
..    1.16% 

..  Lie-^ 

..    1.16'4 
..    1.17 
,  .   1.16Ts 
..   1.17 
..   1.17^4 
..   1.15l« 
..    1.13 
..   l.UVj 
..    1.04 
..    1.04»4 
..   1.03'4 
..    1.04 
..    I.O2H1 
..    l.OHi 
..    1.01% 

..    .sm 

,..  .52H 
,..  .52>i, 
...      .52 

...    .sm 

. ..  .6:1 
. ..  .62 
. ..  .60 
...  .61 
. ..      .62'2 

...  1.C5H 

...  l-eo** 

...  1.65H 


laverpool    Grain. 

Liverpool.  March  15. — Close:  Wheat — 
Spot  stronger;  No.  2  red  western  win- 
ter 8s  6»4d.  Futures  quiet;  May.  8s 
2%d;  Julv,  6s  3%d;  September,  7s  ll'^d. 
Corn — Spot  firm;  new  American  mixed 
(via  Galveston),  5s  lOV^d.  Futures  dull; 
March,    5s    9%d;    May,    5s    10>4d. 


American    AVheat   MarketM. 

Duluth.  .MiimcaiMillg.  Chicago.    New  York 


..    1 
..   1 


M,iy— 
(►pen     . . 
Hjgh     . . 
|X)W     . . . 
fUse    .  . . 
<"lo«e    13 
July— 
Open    . . 
Hlgii     .. 
Low     . . . 
(.'lose 
(lose 
St. 
May      . . . 
Julv    .... 
Kansas 

May     

July    t 

Wlniiipcg — 

May     

July    


1.^%B 
16 

1.-.% 
l.loHB 

1.15H 


$1.15%-i4 
1.1.-.%-% 

l.!.*) 
1.1.-. 
1.15'4 


% 


13.. 


Louis — 


City- 


l.lf.B 
l.l€«/i 
LL^.^fi-ie 

1.16V4 


16 

16% 
.15% 

15H 
.16Vi 


1.16%-% 

1.17 

1.16\i 

1.16% 

1.17H 


-0.'> 


20>.s 
20% 
2lVi 
20%  A 
21 


% 

% 


% 


1.05% 
1.05% 
1.04% 
1.04%  A 
1.05%-% 
Close     15th. 
....$1.13% 
....   1.01% 

....   1.07% 
....       96% 

....    1.12% 
....   1.13% 


1.13A 
1.13% 
1.12%-% 
1.12%A 
1.13% 
Close     13th. 
$1.14% 
1.02% 


Amalgamated      .'•.       66',4 

Anaconda    ^H^ 

Adventure    7% 

Ahmeek 1^ 

Allouez    38% 

American   Telephone    ...     128% 

American    Zinc    

Atlantic    1^ 

Arcadian    » 

Arizona  Commercial    ...       34^ 

Begole    12 

Boston   Consolidated    ...       10% 

Boston  Corbln    17% 

Black   Mountain    1  % 

Butte    Coalition     2% 

Butte  iV-   London    24c 

Calumet   &    Arizona    .•••       99 

Calumet  &  Hecla 615 

Centennial    29c 

Consolidated   Mercur    ...       30c 

Copper    liange    75% 

Cumberland    Ely     

Daly    West     

l>avis    Daly    

Dominion    Copper     ... 

East     Butte     

P'ranklin     , 

First    National 

Giroux     

Gtani>y    

Greene-Cananea    

Hancock    Cons 

Helvetia     

Isle    Royale    

Keweenaw      

Lake    Cupper     

La    Salle    

Mass.    Cons 

Mass  Gas    

Mexico  Mining 

Miami    Cojiper 

Michigan    

Mohawk    

Nevada    Cons    

Nevada  Utali 

Newhouse    

Nippihing    

Nortli   Butte 

Ojibwav    

Old   Dominion    

Oscelola    

Parrot t    

Pneu.  Ser 

Quincy    

Raven    

Santa  Fe   

Shannon     

Shoe  MIclilgan    

Superior  (Jopper 

Superior  &  Pittsburg 

Tamarack    

Trinity     

I'nited    Copper    

I'nited   Fruit    

U.   S.   Mining    

do   pfd    

r.    S.   Oil    

Utah   Apex    

rtali    Cons 

I't<ili   Copper    

Victoria     

Winona         

AVolverine 

Wyandot    

Yukon  Gold    

.\rizona    Michigan    

American    Saginaw    .... 

Boston     Ely     

rUitte-Ballaklava      

Butte    &    Montana 

Butte    &    .Superior 

Chief    Cons 

Cactus     

Calumet    &    Corbin     .... 
Calumet   &  Sonora    .... 
Calumet  &   Montana    .  . 

Carman    

Chemung 

Cliff    

Copper   Queen    

Cordova    

Denn-Arlzona     

Duluth  &  Montezuma. 
Globe  Consolidated  .  . . 
Goldfield    Consolidated 

Lion    Gulch     , 

Live    Oak     I        6 

Lake     Superior  &  Sonora         3% 

M.    M.    &    M 2  ^4 

Mowitza     1^-4 

National   Exploration    . .       55c 

Ohio    Copper     7   13-16 

Rawhide     Royal     13c 

Rav    Consolidated    12% 

Red    Warrior    2% 

Rawliide    Coalition     58c 

San    Antonio    14 

Savanna    2 

Shattuck    15% 

Superior    &    Globe    1 

Superior    &    Montana 

Torre    Roca     3 

Tonopah     Nevada     6% 

Warren     3% 

Wolverine    &    Arizona..         1 
Zenith    Lead     2 


9% 

"he 

14 

13% 

6^4 

92 

9% 
11% 

3»4 
26 

3% 
16 14 
14% 

4% 
64 

3% 
13  14 
10% 
60 
17% 

2% 

3% 
10% 
67  1,4 
13  I4 

48>/4 

30% 
9% 

85 

38c 
2% 

14 

56% 

41% 

13% 

78 

13 

11% 
132 

39% 

44% 

31V4 
5% 

39 

40  >4 
4% 
6 
141 
2% 
4% 
1% 
3% 

"i6%' 

40c 

1 
98c 

1% 

1 


18c 

1% 

19% 

1% 

1% 

1% 

4    1-16 

4    1-16 

5 


66% 

"8%' 
175 

39% 
129% 

34% 

14% 
514 

35  lA 

14 

10% 

17% 

■  •  •  2  %  ■ 

27c 
100 
619 
2  9  %  c 
34c' 
76 

'"9%" 
4% 
12c 
14>>4 
14 


DULLNESS 
INSrOCKS 

Ruled  During  Most  of 

Session  and  Close 

Was  Easy. 

Prices  Started  Lower,  Ad- 
vanced Slightly,  But 
Fell  Off  Again. 


New  York,  March  15. — Light  offer- 
ings of  stocks  caused  opening  declines 
in  prices  tunning  to  a  point  In  Erie 
first  preferred  and  to  »  large  fraction 
in  Ontario  &  Western,  Erie  and  North- 
ern Pacific.  Hocking  Coal  advanced  a 
point. 

The  market  showed  a  disposition  to 
advance,  but  the  active  inquiry  for 
stocks  was  limited  to  a  few  of  the 
specialties.  Reading  was  purchased 
steadily  and  touched  125%.  a  gain  of 
1>4.  Consolidated  Gas  and  Pedples 
Gas  also  showed  unusual  animation, 
and  moved  up  1%  and  2  points,  respec- 
tively. American  Beet  Sugar  hardened 
1>4  and  American  Smelting  preferred  1. 
American  Sugar  rallied  a  point.  Lake 
Erie  &  Western  preferred  sagged  2%. 
and  National  Biscuit  and  Allis-Chal- 
mers  preferred  1. 

The  moderate  activity  lapsed  Into 
semi-stagnation  after  the  first  hour, 
and  price  sbecaine  almost  immovable. 
American  Ice  rose  a  point.  Bonds 
were   heavy. 

An  abrupt  fall  of  %  In  Reading  fol- 
lowing the  news  from  Washington  that 
no  decision  would  be  made  today  in 
the  commodities  clause  case.  Support 
was  offered  and  it  returned  to  126.  the 
highest.  The  rest  of  the  list  was  neg- 
lected. Hocking  Valley  Coal  Increased 
its  gain  to  2%,  and  Minneapolis  &  St. 
Louis  preferred  also  rose  a  point. 

Tiie  market  closed  easy  and  dull.  The 
level  of  prices  sagged  sliglitly.  Detroit 
Union  sold  at  a  decline  of  4. 


•PHONES— 

ZESTTH,    1464.        DULtlTH,    18Ti. 


REFERENCES: 

Olty  National  Bank, 

Flnt  National 


Bank. 


Martin 

Rosendahl 

&Co., 

Incorporated. 

CAPITAL,  $50,000.00. 


Duluth  Copper  Curb  Market 

N.  S.  MITCHELL  &  CO., 


Private   "Wire*. 
City  'Phonea,   1S05. 


Z02-Z04    MANHATTAN    BUILDING. 
Roferenccwi 
CITV    NATIONAL  BANK. 
Duluth.  Minn. 

MARCH   15,   1909. 


Private  Lone  Distance. 
'Pbonea,  l«57.1SOS. 


«pB.it< 


t 


: 


I     Bld.j    Ask. 


I     Bld.j    Ask. 


Copper  Stock 
Brokers 


414    WEST    SITFERIOR 
102-lOa  AiANUATTAN 


STRBET. 
BLiDO. 

My  own  wires  to  the 
Copper  country.  Also  con- 
nections to  Eastern  mar- 
kets. 


American  Saginaw  . 
Arlz.-Mlchipan  .... 
Black  Mountain  . . . 
Butte  Montana  .... 
Butte  &  Superior. . 
Butte  Ballaklava  .  . 
Calumet  &  Arizona. 
Cal.  &  Montana  .  .  . 
Calumet  &  Sonora. 
Carman   Cons 

Copper    Queen    •••• 

Cordova    

Cactus     

Donn-Arlzona    . . . .  •  1 

East    Butte    

Globe    Cons 

Greene    Cananea    . . 


3.50 
1.37 
1.37 
.42 
1.06 

16.501 

99.50 
.18 

14.00 
1.37 
1.62 
1.37 
2.00 
1.50 
4.00 

14.37 
6.00 
9.37 


3. 
1. 
1. 


4i> 
50 
62 
.46 
1.12 
16.75 
100.00 
.20 
14.25 
1.62 
1.87 
1.62 
2.12 
1.75 
4.25 
14.62 
6.25 
9.62 


Keweenaw    •' 

liive   Oak    

Jjake  Sup.  Sk  Sonom. 

Mowitza    

Nipissing    

Xational    

North    Butte    

Red  Warrior    

Rawhide  Royal 

San   .\ntoiilo    ■ 

Savanna    

Sup.  &  Pitt.sburg 

Sup.    &    Boston 

Shatturk-Arizona    . . 

Superior  &  Globe 

Tuoiimme     

Warren    • 

Zenltli  Lead  &  Zinc. 


4.00 
6.00 
3.75 
1.37 
10.75 
.55 
67,75 
2.371 
.141 
14.50 
2.001 
13.87] 
14.25 
15.751 
l.OOj 
1.75 
3.50 1 
2.00 


4.50 

6.25 

4.25 

1.50 

11.00 

.58 

68.00 

2.50 

.16 

14.75 

2.25 

14.12 

14.50 

16.00 

1.06 

1.87 

3.75 

2.12 


J 


C 


New   York    stock 
by   Pip<  r.    Juhiismi 


quc'ULldiis 

&     CBI2. 


funilsheU    The    Herald 


I  Open.  I  Hl«>i.|  Low.  |  Close. 


■914  ' 
12>h 

26«4 
4Vi. 

17 

1514 
5 

65 
4»4 

11 
61 

17 1^ 


4 
lO' 


67% 

13  l* 

49 
128% 

31 

10% 

86 

40c 
2% 

14'^ 

57 

42 

14 

SO 

13% 

12 
132»& 

40 

45 

31% 

40 

41 
4% 
6% 
143 


AUls      Chalmers [. 

tlo  pfd    

Amalgamated   

Amerlf iu>    Sugar    

Amtrlran  Car  Foundry.. 
.\mfrl(an  I.<iCom(>Uve  .  .  . 
American    Cotlon    Oil.... 

Amertoan  8me!t(  rs   

.^nni'ouda    

Ati-hlS')n      

d."    pfd     

ItaUimi  re    &    Ohio    ... 
llrcikljn    U.-ipld    Tr.UiSll 
Cciilri'.l    I.eatlKT    ....... 

Clicsapeake  &    Ohio    . . . 
Chicago -t;t.     Wrslern    com 
C'hiiag'-(;riat  Westtm   A. 
Clilcago-Creat   Western   B. 

C.   M.  ii  .«f.   Paul 

Col(ir.i<l<i   Fuel  &   Iron.... 

CoUrad;>  Soiithtrn    

Coiisolldateil   (!as    

Canadian    Purlflc    

Ueluwarc    &    Huihon    

litn\fr  &    Kill  (Jr.inde 

l»cnv.°r  &   Illo  <]rande 

lUstllUrs     

n..  S.  8.  &  A 

Krie     

d)  1st  pfd 

do    'Zni\    pfd 

C.riat  Xcrtliern    

Ureal    Nonlicrn   Ore. . . . , 

Illiiols   Central    

IntirMi't   

luwa   t  intral    

Kaiuas   City   Bouthcm... 

MUs>ouri    Pacific    

Natlpn.il    Lead ^.  ^ 

Ntw    Ycrk    Central    ....T 
Ni.rfdlk    U    \Vk*.tcm    .... 

*N<'rth  .•Viurrtcai!   

N<irlliern    Pacific    

rpnns.vl\ania    

People's   (las 

Prkssed  Stiel  CAr 

lU-puliUc   Steel   &   In>n.. 

d  1   pfd 

Uock  Uland    • 

<Ui   pfd    

Keading    

Slof^s-Shefrield   

Soo  IJne   

Soutlieni    Hallway    

do  pfd    

Somliem  Pacific  

Tennessee    Copper    

Texas    Pacific    

Third    .\\cnue    

Twii:    City     

riil(  n   Padflc    

Ctah  Cupper    

••r.    ».    Steel    

d  J    pfU     

Wahash    

do   pfd    

We^linghouse    

Wesl<  m    Cnlcn    

Wisccjisln   Central    

do  pfd    


41 

67  S 
128 
48H 
50  >4 

"82«4 

40H 

1()3H 

lll2*s 

106%  I 

70^ 

27\ 

'"  r, 
141  \ 

32  Ml 

63 

128>4 
165  H 

43^4 
4.T,, 
34 

"23  »4 
37  S 

HU 

66  »4 
141 

15 

28  S 

r.h\ 

74  s< 
123H 

7(ii* 
136H 
ll"."* 
1H>\ 

S.'VH 

201* 

71'4 

22 

61H 
124  >4 

72  >, 
143 

23  »^ 

em 

46% 
42Vs 
32% 
37 


174H 
40H 
43  »4 

110% 
17% 
43% 
77% 
65% 
4f< 
8H% 


41% 
♦i» 

121'% 
48% 
511% 

83% 

40% 
103% 
102% 
107% 

71% 

28 

67 
6% 

142% 
32% 
63 

131 

166 

44' 
44 

34% 

23% 

38 

2!'% 

140% 
66% 

141 
15 

28% 
44% 
611% 
75% 

124% 

'79% 

137% 

1211% 

113V« 

35% 

20% 

71% 

22% 

61% 

126 

72% 

143 

23% 

61% 

47% 

42% 

32% 

37 

'  17.5% 
40% 
44% 
110% 
17% 
44 

77% 
66 
4!'% 
»t^% 


.    . 


41 

66% 
128 
48 
.Mi% 

82% 

39% 

103% 

102% 

106% 

70% 

27% 

65% 

6% 

1413^ 

32 

63 

128% 
165% 

■43% 
43% 
34 

"23% 
37% 
2?% 

13!t% 
66% 

141 
14% 
28% 
43% 
68% 
74% 

123% 


79% 
136% 
120 
110% 

35% 

20 

71% 

22 

61% 
124% 

72% 
142% 

23% 

61% 

46% 

41% 

31% 

37 


UlbbInK' 


—BRANCH   OFFICES- 
PAID  UP  CAPITAL  $50,000.00 

IV.  LEE  &  CO.^ 

BANKERS  AND  BROKERS 

Private  Wire*  to   Copper  Country, 

DVLVTH  CURB 


Superior. 


Inc. 


Both  'phones,  2093. 


Hanac  aud  all  B.««fern  Markets. 

410  Weat  Superior  Street 
STOCKS. 


-t 


Doth 
ROOM  "B," 


'Phont-M.    148B. 

'  PIIO  BNIX  BLOCK. 


J.  a  RORBERS, 

Copper  Stockfi  and  Bonds 

Curb    Stoeka    ■    Specialty. 
Listed    Secjrltles. 


174% 
40% 
43% 

110% 
17% 
45% 
77 
65% 
40 
85% 


13b 
41 

66% 
11:8% 

48% 

50% 
51%b 

82% 

40 

10:1% 
102% 
106% 

70% 

28 

66% 
0% 

3iib 
8'a 

141*4 

129% 

166 
173%b 
43% 
43% 
35 
Kb 
23% 
37% 
29% 

140% 
66 

141 
14% 
28 '; 
43% 
68% 
75 

123% 

86  %L 
79% 

130% 

129% 

112 

.r.% 
20% 

71% 
22% 
61% 

124% 
72% 

142% 
23% 
fol% 
46% 
41% 
31% 
37 
104  %b 

174% 
40% 
43% 

110% 
17% 
43% 
77 


KILLED  BY 
PILE  DRIVER 


Joe  Bellmour,  a  Frenchman,  who 
rteided  In  Superior,  was  killed  at  1 
o'clock  tills  afternoon  wliile  at  work 
on  a  pile  driver  at  Thirty-ninth  street. 
Park  Point.  He  was  employed  by  the 
Interstate  Dredge  &  Dock  company, 
which  l.as  the  contract  for  moving  the 
Duluth  Yacht  club  buildings  from  the 
old  site,  a  few  blocks  from  the  canal 
to  a  point  fartlier  down  the  Point. 

Thet  crev,-  of  men  were  preparing  to 
drive  a  pile,  to  be  one  of  those  used 
In  the  foundation  for  the  building,  and 
Bellmour  was  working  about  the  pile, 
when  the  large  iron  clamp,  to  be  placed 
over  its  liead,  accidentally  fell  upon 
liim,  catching  his  head  underneath  it 
&nd  cru.shing  it.  Deatli  was  almost 
instantaneou.s.  The  body  is  now  at 
Durkan  &  Crawford's  undertaking 
rooms. 


N.  E.  LllGOFF 

STOCKS  AN))  BONDS. 


AH    Orders    Promptlr    and    Confiden- 
tially   E}x«cuted. 

500-501-502    LONSDALE    BUILOING. 
Old   phone   1C2B;        Zenith   phone  WT7. 


FRED  H.  MERRITT 

BROKER. 

Slocks,  Bonds,  Grain. 


SUPERIOR    STREKT. 
Duluth  1408;  Zenith  071. 


328    WEST 
Telephones: 

»L\RCH   15.   1909 


Bid.  j    Ask. 


49  u 


BIG  RUSH  OF 
NEW  MEMBERS 


Apparently  the  attractions  offered  by 
tlie  combined  boat  and  yacht  club,  look 
good  to  Duluthians,  for  within  the  last 
few  days  no  less  than  108  applications 
for  membership  have  been  received. 
Before  the  end  of  the  week  it  Is  ex- 
pected that  the  club's  memberslilp  will 
be  full,  and  a  waiting  list  will  be  es- 
tablished. .    ,      ^   ^,       ,,     ,. 

When  the  two  clubs  joined  the  limit 
was  fixed  at  1,200  of  whom  2,000  were 
life  members.  This  left  1,000  sustain- 
ing memberships,  and  the  membership 
at  that  time  was  within  120  of  that 
mark  .  The  club  made  no  effort  to  lill 
these  vacancies,  hut  the  notice  of  the 
union  of  the  clubs  brought  in  108  ap- 
plications, and  tliere  are  now  but 
twelve  vacancies  left.  A  few  more  may 
occur  when  the  time  comes  to  pay  up 
the  dues,  but  there  is  little  doubt 
tliat  the  club  will 
this  year. 


With  our  own  private  wlra 
connections  witJ;  New  Tork. 
Boston  and  the  copper  countries 
of  Michigan.  Montana,  Nevada, 
Utah,  Arizona  and  Mexico,  we 
are  the  best  eqaipped  to  give 
you  quick  executions  on  all  the 
leading  local  stocks  of  any  brok- 
erage house  in  the  city. 

PAINE.  WEBBER  &  CO., 

815  WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 
Torrey  touilding. 


nuttc-.\.  Srott  $2  pd  . 
liuttc-Hallaklava  .  .  .  . 
Butte  &  Sui)erior.  . .  . 

t'at'tus    

(aluniet  &  Sonora..  . 

Carnian   

Chief  Conp 

Copi^OT  tjuoen 

Cordova  $2  |>d 

Dcnn-Arizona 

Giroux    

(ilol)e  $2  |>d 

Grcone  Cananea    .  . 
l>uke  S.  &  S.  $2.50  ikI 

Lion  (Jul«'Ii 

I  Aw  Ooak  $2  pd 

Mowitza 

Hawlilile  Ho.vai   .... 

Hod  Warrior    

San  .\ntonio  $1  pd.  . 

Savanna   $2    pd 

Shattu<'k-.'\ri7.ona  . . 
Sup.  &  Pittsburg.  .  . 
Zenitli    


$8,371 
16.37} 

i.oe! 

1.56; 
11.00 
1.37 
.95 
1.50 
2.00 
4.00 
8.25 
4.75 
9.25 
3.50' 

10.50: 

6.00) 

1.50 

.14 

2.50 

14.12 
2.00 

15.50 

13.75 
2.00 


$8.62 
16.02 
1.12 
1.62 
14.25 
1.37 
.98 
1.56 
2.00 
4.12 
8.37 
5.00 
9.37 
3.75 
11.00 

1 .62 

.16 

2.62 

14.37 


14.25 


Tl  tal    gbi.res.    313.80?. 

•  Kji  «il\ia«ii<l    of    1%    TM-r   <rnt. 

••Ex-oUldeml    of    %    per   <^'it- 


07% 
97%- 

.12% 
.14% 


3*4 

1% 
163* 
46c 

1'4 
99c 

1^4 

1% 
14>4 
20c 

21  <r 

1% 

1% 

2>^ 

.3-16 

4   3-16 

5»4 

11 

6»4 
3 ',4 
3»4 

60c 

icc' ' 

12  7^ 
2% 

60c 

15 
2Vi 

16 
1    1-16 

50c 

."6%' 
3% 
1'4 
2% 


have   a   waiting 


but 
list 


New 
market 
1    to    3 
during 


ChieaKu    OatN, 


THE  CHirACO  MARKET. 

Small  Northwestern  Receipts  Offset 
Deeline  in  Liverpool  Price. 

Chicaso,  March  1  .'>. — Small  receipts  In 
th»  North we.«!t  offset  a  decline  of  ^d  to 
>4d  in  the  price  of  wheat  at  Liverpool, 
and  caused  a  Arm  tone  in  the  market 
here  today.  Tiiere  was  a  scattered  de- 
mand l>v  commis.iion  houses  and.  aft*r 
the  flr.xt  few  mlnute.s.  offerings  were 
not  large.  Tiie  market  opened  with 
pi  ices  off  '4c  to  %c,  compared  with 
Saturday's  close.  May  being  at  $1.16 »A 
to  $1.16'4.  and  July  at  $1.05  to  $1.05>8- 
Earlv  in  the  day  May  advanced  to  $1.1 1. 
while  .Julv  sold  up  to  $1.05%. 

The  market  weakened  again  because 
of  the  heavlnes.'i  of  corn,  but  rallied 
once  or  twice  in  the  last  half  of  the 
day,  owing  to  European  war  talk  and 
to  reports  of  export  sales.  The  low 
poi n t  for  M» -  w-as  $1.16  V^ .  The  close 
was  weak  with  May  off  %c  at  $1  lev*. 
July   rloHf-d    %<f^%c   lower  at   $1.04%. 

Traders  in  the  corn  pit  were  bear- 
ish ly  Inclined,  owing  to  more  favorable 
weath^'r  for  the  movement  of  the  crop. 
Kev«ral  of  the  leading  holders  were 
Bioderattf     seller*,     and     demand     was 


Open 
High 
Low 
Close 


.May. 
Oats. 

...15% 
..!55%-% 

....S4% 
..,'.4%-% 


and    Pork. 

May. 

('<.ni. 

08% 

67% 
67%B 


.May. 

Pork. 
$17.80 
17.85 
17.80 
17.85 


Grain   In 

Saturday,   March 


.\t  Duluth 
Wheat— 

Xo.   1   herd 

No.   1   northtm 

No.   2   n<  rtlif  m 

No.   3    sprliiC 

No.  4    spring 

No  grade   

Velvet  rliaff 

Sp«.  ial  tin  

Diir.im     

Uoiided    

Total   of   nhent 

Incrfase  (iiiring  week.. 
.»5ttKk»  a  year  ago 

Coarse  Grains — 
Oats    

Increa»e    

Rye    

Dfcreaie 

Fl.^x   

Iiicreoii*    

Ccm    

Increase  

llurUy    

Increase  


Store. 

13,   1909: 


Bushfla. 
. .  493.84- 
..4.571.366 
. .  48,3.132 
. .       10. .385 

1.733 
51 

1.068 
. .  877.87;) 
.  .1.4.32. 'J46 
. .     323.u6'J 


,..8.246.270 
, ..  515.732 
...8.618.475 

...1.279.495 

...       46.762 

19.704 

441 

...1,027. 3.10 

...       31.672 

...     315.102 

4.7111' 

. ..     7P5.940 

. . .     133.642 


Midway   Horwe   Market. 

Mlnn«"iia  Transfer.  St.  Taiil.  .Minn..  March  15.— 
Rarnit  &  Zimmerman  report;  All  hor>es  gold  well. 
Tlie  spring  scasi.n  1b  now  fairly  on  and  the  market 
has  assumtnl  a  healthy  tone.  The  movement  for  the 
week  was  fully  one-thinl  hf.nvler  than  for  the  same 
period  last  year.  Iteciclpts  are  liberal  and  about 
equal  the  demai.d.  A  Isrge  numUr  of  Dakota  buyers 
are  on  I  he  market  and  slilpments  were  made  tx^i  York. 
Mlnnewaukon  and  fJranvllIe.  N.  D.  CoTen  and  Moose 
Jaw.  Can..  New  Rlchmtiul  and  Spooner,  Wis.  l>eal 
crs  expfct  large  conslgiimtnts  of  logging  horses  from 
the  woikIs  en  the  markit  this  week  and  the  We<lne8- 
day  aulctJon  sale  will  be  well  supplied  with  the 
money  maklig  kind,  and  country  dealers  should  not 
fall  to   be  on   hand.  .,-..-,,. 

I>rafters.    extra    |16j(n.i4;> 

Drafttr.s.     choice     120^16.' 

Draifers.    common    to    gfKJd 65(<ill5 

Farm  mares  and  hores.   extra 140(ol60 

Kami    mares    and    horse*,    choice 110(5133 


New    York    Money. 

New  York.  March  15. — Close: 
Prime  mercantile  paper,  3»4  to 
4  per  cent:  sterling  exchange,  steady 
with  actual  business  in  bankers'  bills 
at  $4. S6  10  Tl  4. S0.20  for  60  day  hills  at 
$4  88.20  for  demand;  commercial  bills, 
$4  85%  fi  4.S5"i  :  bar  silver.  .'■.Os.gc;  Mexi- 
can dollars,  4c;  government  bodns, 
steadv;  railroad  bonds.  irregular; 
moneV  on  call,  easy  134«a2  per  cent; 
ruling  rate  1=^4;  closing  bid  l»,i:  offer- 
ed 1*4-  time  loans  very  dull  and  very 
soft;  60  davs  2*^  per  cent>^  90  days  2  i-fe 
per  cent;  six  months,  2^  to  3  per  cent. 
m 
The  Cotton  Market. 
York,  March  15. — The  cotton 
opened  steady,  at  a  decline  of 
points.  Price  srallled  slightly 
the  morning,  with  the  market 
verv  quiet    but   steady. 

Spot  market  quiet;  middling  uplands, 
9.85:  middling  gulf.  10.10:  sales  486 
bales  Futures  closed  barely  steady; 
closing  bids:  March.  9.47:  April.  9.42; 
Mav  9.43;  June.  9.35;  July.  9.35:  Au- 
gust 9  32:  September.  9.26;  October, 
9  26-  November,  9.21;  December,  9.21; 
January,   9.20. 

■ 
Chicago  I.iventock. 
Chicago.  March  1'..  — Cattle — Keceipts  estimated  at 
26  00D-  market  steady  to  a  shade  lower;  l>e«ve»,  $4.60 
^7  .30;  TrxBF  steers.  $4.50^5.40;  western  steers.  »4.10 
@560'  eU^cktrs  and  feedtrs.  $3.50(a5.50;  cows  and 
heifers  tl.!H1frt5.7.'i:  calves,  |6.00(a8.25.  Hogs— Re- 
celps  f'tlmated  at  64.000;  market  10c  lower;  light. 
$6.20<n6.60;  mlxe«i,  »6.30(s6.75:  heavy,  16,49^6.80; 
rought  J6.40&6.r.O;  good  to  choice,  heavy.  $6.50(a 
6  80-  pigs.  $.'i.  10(0 6.00;  bulk  of  sales.  16. 35^6.70. 
Sheep— Kf^tlpts  e«tlmate<l  at  25,000;  market  weak  to 
10c  lower;  naUve.  t3,25ft5.65;  western.  ».3.25fe6.60; 
yearlings,  $.-..75(<t7.00;  lambfi.  native,  $5.50^7.60; 
western,    $5.50<a:.60. 


MILLER  VOTES 
WITH  REGULARS 

"Washington,  .Marcli  15. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Rtpresentative  Clarence 
B.  Miller  lias  announced  that  he  will 
stand  by  the  administration  and  sup- 
port   the    Cannon    rules.  ,   ,  • 

He  has  emphasized  his  position  in 
this  respect  by  voting  with  the  regu- 
lars though  he  says  his  personal  be- 
lief is  that  tlie  rules  sliould  be  amend- 
ed. Having,  however,  entered  tlie 
caucus,  he  proposes  to  abide  by  its  con- 
elusions. 

TAFT  MESSAGE 
IS  UNWRITTEN 


Washington,  March  15.— President 
Taft  has  had  not  had  an  opportunity  to 
write  a  single  word  of  his  tariff  mes- 
sage  to   congress. 

His  time  is  still  given  over  to  callers 
and  the  prospect  now  is  that  he  will 
not  write  the  message  before  early  to- 
morrow. 

This  naturally  wllkmean  a  compara- 
tively brief  message  expressing  in 
general  terms  his  views  and  in  no 
manner  going   into  details. 


INSURGENTS 
WIN  POINT 


Washington.  Marcii  15.— The  fight  on 
the  rules  of  tlie  hoise  began  at  12:20 
p.  m.  today,  when  Mr.  Dalzell  of  Penn- 
sylvania offered  a  resolution  making 
the  rules  of  the  last  house  those  of 
the    present    session. 

The  Democrats  forced  a  roll  call  on 
ordering  the  previous  <iuestion 

The  previous  question 
194  to  188  the  efCet  I  of 
shut    off    debate. 

The  roll  was  then  called,  on  the  adop- 
tion   of   the   resolution.  .    .    ,00    t^ 

The  resolution  was  defeated  189  to 
193,  til  us  accomplishing  the  success  ot 
the  insurgents. 

Champ    Clark,    tlio    minority 
offered  a  resolut 
fifteen   to  amend 

A  scene  was 


was    ordered, 
whicli   was   to 


leader, 
on  for  a  committee  of 
th?  rules, 
created  when  Clark  and 
DaUell  engaged  in  a  heated  argument 
over  the  right  of  Dalzell  to  stand  at 
the  speaker's  desk  «lurmg  the  roll  call. 
Clark's  resolution  provided  that  the 
committee  of  fifteen  revise  tlie  code 
and    report   at   the    liouse   session     next 

^^Iflark^'moved  the  previous  questioti 
on  the  adontion  of  his  resolution  and 
a    roll    call    was    ordered 

The  house  refused,   1-9   to  .20^.   to 
der  the  previous   question,   with   tlie 
suit  that  the  whole  question  was  again 
left    in    the    air. 

He  Is  Not  Guilty. 

George  Niooll.   inlicted   by  the  grand 

1ury    imon    a    cliarge    of   attempting  an 

ndecent    assault    upon    the    person    ot 

I'ottie  Bellrazieau  of  Second  ave- 

and   Fou-th    street,   was     ar- 

districl   .-ourt  this  afternoon 

the   charge. 

assault,  the 

woman    drove    him    away    by    shooting 

him  in  the  log  with   a  revolver. 


or- 
re- 


Says 


Mrs. 

nue   east 

raigned  in   _ 

and   pleaded   not    g'li  ty    to 

At  the  time  of  the  alleged 


PIPER., 
JOHNSON 

csl  case: 

BROKERS 

MEMBERS: 

Bcston  Stock  Exchange 
New  York  Stock  Exchange 
New  York  Produce  Exchange 
Chicago  Stock  Exchange 
Chicago  Board  oi  Trade 
IMpls.  Chamber  of  Commerce 
Duluth  Board  of  Trade 
Winnipeg  Grain  Exchange 

406-411  Chamber  ol  Commerce  and 

New  York  Life  Arcade, 

Minneapolis 

102  Pioneer  Press  Bldg..  SI.  Paul 
Grain  Exchange  Winnipeg 

DULUTH: 

« 

Temparary  Olllce  — 

18  3rd  Avenue  West, 

R.  G.  Hubbell.  Manager. 

BEll  PHONE  73).  ZENITH  PBONE  Ui. 


Long  radliiies.   Der  dot 

Spliiacl).  per  crale 

Toniutoes.    si*    basket* 

ion.aiu«.  VEGETABLES. 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 


Fees  are  on  a  lo  .vcr  level  today.  Ap- 
little  hiKher  and  the  rest  of 
unc  langed  from  Satur- 


Farm   mRrts.   compmii   to  good. 

Kellvtry     

Itrlvc  rs   aiiil    saddlers    

Mules,    according   lo   slie    


60  (n  110 
130(1(180 

14CS23^ 


GAVE  FOUR  MEN 
A  HARD  BATTLE 

Insane  Man  Breaks  Away 

From  Guard.  But  Is 

Recaptured. 


BIG  FOLEY  FIRE. 


Folev,    Minn. 
The    Herald.) 
again  visited 
of  the 


Duluth  Car     Iniipeptlon. 

Whetit — >■<•■  1  lurthtm.  37;  No.  2  northern.  18; 
No.  3  spring.  8;  No.  1  durum,  17;  No.  2  durum. 
8-  No.  3  durum,  3.  Total  of  dunim.  28;  mixed,  2; 
velvet   ctuOI,    3.     ToUl   of    wbe&t,    86;   last  year,    21. 


St.  Paul   IJveBtock. 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  March  l'>. — Cattle — 
Receipts.  2.200;  market  steady;  steers. 
$4.00=^4  6.25;  cows  and  heifers,  $2.25  @ 
5  00-  calves,  J2.25(@6.50:  stockers  and 
feeders.  $2.50(6  5.00.  Hogs — Receipts, 
2  700-  market  generall.v  10c  lower; 
range.  $6.10®  6.45:  bulk.  $6.30(&6.35. 
pjicpp — iteceipts.  200:  market  steady; 
$6.00i&7.50;  lambs,  $4.80(^4.50. 
■ 
Treaiiur>-   BalanpeM. 

Washington.  Marcli  15. — Today's 
statement  of  the  treasury  balance  in 
the  fund  exclusive  of  the  $150,000,000 
gold  reserve  shows:  Gold  coin  and 
bullion.  $41.293.2.^1:  gold  certificates. 
$46  23S.595:  available  cash  balance, 
$135.0b7.99i. 


Four  jailors  liad  a  fierce  fight  with 
a  crazy  man  shortly  after  1  o'clock  this 
afternoon.  It  was  all  the  four  men 
could    do    to   subdue    him, 

Victor     Storms,     jailed     for     Insanity, 
was   being   taken    from   the  jail   to  pro- 
bate   court,    to    be    examined 
sanitv,     wlien     he     suddenly 
break     for      liberty    and 
guard. 

He  got  only  a  few  steps, 
before  he  was  overtaken.  The  guard 
grabbed  hold  of  him,  and  a  battle 
roval  followed.  With  the  strength  of 
tlie  insane.  Storms  probably  would  have 
escaped  had  not  reinforcements  ar- 
rived from  the  jail.  Three  Jailors 
ioined  the  guard,  and  tlie  four  men 
finally  were  able  to  get  Uie  man  under 
control. 


as    to    his 
made     a 
escaped    the 

however, 


Marcli    15.  —  (Special    to 
—A    disastrous      fire      lias 
this   place,  and   the   plant 
New  London  Milling  company   is 
in    ruins,    involving    a    loss    of    $50,000. 
partly  covered  by  insurance. 

Tlie  200-barrel  mill,  the  warehouse 
and  the  elevator,  in  which  were  75,000 
pounds  of  flour,  the  office  and  the  corn 
granarv  were  destroyed, 
ern  freight  car.  half 
was  also  destroyed. 

It    is   expected   the   company   will    re- 
build. 


pies  arQ  a 
the  market 

day. 

The    following 
iccretanr   of  the 


Creamery 

Tubs    

llcnovated    . . 

Ladles    

Packing  stcck 

Fre.=h  eggs    • 


prints . 


IS 

quotatlo:»    were    furnished    by 

produce    ex<hang«. 
BUVTER. 

30 

28 

26 

12 

16 


tb« 


32 
30 


E009. 

'ch):esb. 


Full  cream,   twins   

Wisconsin  Hats    

Block    and    wheel    cheese 

Ulmburger,   full  cream    

i''"°°»*  ucnl-y:"" 

New    fancy   white   clover,    per   lb.. 
•   do    per    case    ..^^^^ 

Vermont,   per  lb     •  • 

Maple    sjTUP,    10  lb. 


@ 

® 

9 
& 


SYKUP. 


can; 

NUTS. 


A  Northwest- 
loaded   with  flour, 


Changes  Plea. 


Ernest  Stahl,  the  19-year-old  West 
Duluth  boy,  in  jail  on  the  charge  of 
committing  an  Indcent  assault  upon  an 
11-vear-old  girl  who  pleaded  not  guilty 
in  "district  court  last  week,  today 
changed    his   plea    to   guilty. 

STEPHENSON  AGAIN 

SWORN  INTO  SENATE. 

AVashlngton,  March  1.".— In  the  sen- 
ate todav.  Senator  La  Follette  pre- 
sented the  credentials  of  his  colleague. 
Senator  Stephenson  of  Wisconsin,  and 
accompanied  him  to  the  desk  of  the 
vice  president.  Mr.  Stephenson  took 
I  the  usual   oath  of  office. 


lb.. 


FllberU,    per    It. 
French    walnut*.    >er 
Iwomia    soft-sb^tled    •Unuu. 

lb     ; 

CociinuU.    per   doi 

Braxlls.  per  doi. 
Mixed  nuU.  per 
Peanuts.  P«r  lb- 
Chestnuts,   per  lb 


pet 


lb.. 


20 

IS 
16 
17 
10 
10 

IT 
50 

IS 

35 

14 
16 


18 
fO 
50 
12H 


17 

21 

16 
16 

18 
20 


Punipklns,     per    aoz 

Hubbard  souash.   per  do*. 

Cabbages,    per   crate 

Onlcns.  Spaulsh.  per  t«»te 

Horseradish,    per    bbl 

Red  Olob4s  colons .   new.   oer  100  lb*     1 

Potatoes,    per   bushels 

Sweet   pctatoet,  ■  per    bus I 

Brown    bean*      " 

Beets,  per  bus 

Mew    carrots,    per    bus 

Turnips,    per   but •• 

Bagus.    per    bus.  ............  ..•.•«• 

Parsley,    per    doi 

Oyster  plant,  per  dox 

NEW    CIDER. 

New  apple  cider,   per  kef S 

Black    raspberry    juice 

orange,  cbero  or  peu^^..^^^.... 

Choice,    per    lo 

lUce  com.   sbeL'ed    i,^  •_ 

DKES.sro    POUI.TKT. 

Springs,    per    lb 

Hens,     per    lb 

Xurtoeys,    per    lb. .......«••••.  •••••• 

UUv%*.   per  lb • 

Geese,    per    lb 


rs 

T5 
4  SO 

1  M 

1  SO 
8  00 
>  00 

8  SO 


9  1  or 


FISH. 


50 

95 

i  wt 
rs 
rs 
rs 
rs 

40 

rs 

3  50 
6  50 
3  50 

4 
S 

IS 
15 
22 
17 
14 


(3  1  00, 


Pike,  per  lb 

Perch,    i)er    lb 

Fresh  salmon,   per 
I'Ukercl,    per    lb. . , 
White,    per   lb.    . . . 
I'rcsh   lake   trout 
Herring,   per  lb.    . 


lb. 


Timothy. 
Upland. 


per    ton . . . 
No.    1,   per 


HAT. 

ton 

FEED. 


8     9 
12 


keg    . . . 
box 

10  lb. 

bos . . . 


box. . 


FHUim. 

Bananas,   per  lb 

Malaga    grapes,    per 
Dat.s,    hard.     12-lb. 
Dates,   sugar  wal'"^^ 
Figs.   Smyrna,   lo-lb. 

Figs.    CaUfornla     

Oranges    .    ••■• 

I.emons,     ChiuvtDlA     .  ■ 

I.lmes.   per  box 

drape  fruit,  per  box... 

Applf«    •  •, •  ••  • 

(ranU-rrles.    per   bbl... 

Florida   P>»'='P«P{n:i,rvtXiETABLE8. 

Wax  beans,   per  l)asket     2 

pie  plant,  per  box... 
Cucuml>er»,  hothouse. 
Fancy  Golden   Hunt 

Kndlvcs.    per    bus 

Lettuce,   hothouse,  per 
UaUlsbcs,   pef  ao» 


•rate 


doi... 
cele  ry . . 

bii.! 


4 
8  00 
1  1« 
1  10 

1  25 
85 

2  75 
4  00 

1  <to 

4  00 

5  00 
12  50 

4  SO 


SO 

1  2S 
3  00 

35 

2  00 
1  25 

TS 


•U 


4^4 


I   25 
3  25 


Khorts.  per  ton.. 
Bran,  per  ton. . . . 
Oats,    per   bu 


11 
7 

• 
10 

a 

11  00 
•  60 

27  00 
26  00 

sr 


9 

9 

9 


9 


IT 
IS 
2S. 

IS 
1ft 


8 
IB 


MEATS. 


BeeT    

Mutton    . . . 

Lard     

Pork  U.lnt 

Vci.l    

LaiEbs    . . . 


7     @       10*4, 

8 

11% 
11 

7 
12 


M    * 


® 
(a 


@ 


50 
>.50 


45 


<'hieneo. 

rhlcngo.     March    13.— Butter-Market 
tries.      22(si8%c;      dairies.      20 @  2.5c. 
easy     at     mark;     firsts.      17^r;     prime 
(-lieese-Market   firm:    daisies.    15H@16c 


firm:    creani'- 
I'::gKs-  Marka, 
firsts.     18>4o 
twins.    14  Vi 


^ilSc;  jfung  Americas.  17<b17>4c;  long  horns.  16% 
(«17c.  PoUto<s— Market  steady;  choice  to  fancy, 
S8(«(iac;  fair  to  choice.  8."i(«87c.  r<:.ultr>— Market, 
steady:  turkeys.  17c;  chickens.  UVic;  springs,  15o. 
Vtal— .Market  steady;  50  to  60  pound  welghu,  19 
71.5c:  60  to  85-pound  weights.  8(s9c;  85  to  110- 
pound   weights.    Pjrillc. 

Are   you  losing   sleep  over  some   "of- 
fice    worries?"        You     can't     find     "lost 
sleep"  again,  even  through  advertising: 
but  you  can   use  the  want  ads.   to  cur», 
;t  of  your  office-worries. 


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THE    DULt/TH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY,    MARCH    15     1909. 


18 


LONG  TERM 
LEASE 

The  undersigned'  are  prepared  to 
make  a  long  term  lease  on  the 
southeast  corner  of  First  street  and 
First  avenue  east. 

Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

First  National  Bank  Building. 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

FROM  PAGE  14. 


k^<%^i^^'^^^k^*%^^^*^^'^^0^^' 


—  ^.<i^^»^^Ji     • 


DESIRABLE  PaOPERTY 

$a,7."<» — .^ix  rooms,  hardwood  finish 
throughout.  Hath,  gas.  electric 
light,  cellar.  Back  plastered.  Ce- 
ment sidewalk.  New  house,  1907. 
I.,.>t  .=10x1511.  London  road,  near 
Fifteenth  avenue. 

f;:s,504>— Seven -room  house,  hardwood 
Moors  througliout.  Electric  light. 
Barn  in  rear.  Fine  corner  lot. 
Fifth  avenue  east. 


We     wrttr 


Innnrance     in 
pauleN  uul}'. 


A 1     eoiu- 


FARM  LANDS. 

FOK  SALK — TUB  LAND  "dKPART- 
ment  of  the  l>uluth  &  Iron  Itange 
Railroad  company  is  preparing  to 
put  on  the  market  a  number  o£  ten 
and  twenty  acre  tracts  for  poultry 
farming  and  truck  gardening  at 
Meadowlands.  These  lands  will  be 
well  ditched  and  drained  and  sold 
on  easv  terms  and  long  time.  '■"^\ 
further  information  address.  I..ancl 
Commissioner,  Uuluth  &  Iron  itange 
Hailroau  company.  512  Wolvln  build- 
ing.   Dululh,    Minn.  


DUl!-UTH'S 

PROGRESSIVE    . 


CH>S.  p.  CBftlG  &  CO. 

RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

DUIUTH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 

Office:     426  West  Superior  St. 

'Phone.     9CS. 

/ 
Tot  Hihblnp.  Virginia.  Eveleth. 
Coleraine,    ••Mouniain    Iron. 
••iSparia.    ••Blwabik 'Ti-*©  AM 

For      Hibbing,      Virginia. 

••Eveleth.    Coleraine ♦3:50  PM 

For     Virginia,     Cook.     Ranier, 
Fort     Frances,    Port    Arthur, 

Beau  lette.       Warroad      and         

Winnipes    'T:!©  PM 

•Daily.     ••Except  Sunday. 

Cafe,  Observation  Car,  Me-saba  Range 
points.  Solid  Vestlbuled  Train,  Mod- 
ern   Sleeper  through   to   Winnipeg. 


FOK  SALE— 640  ixCKES  BEST  SEC- 
tion  of  farm  land  in  Douglas 
county,  Wisconsin,  three-quarters  of 
a  mile  east  of  Poplar,  on  Northern 
Pacific  railway;  no  improvement;  nice 
creek  plenty  of  timber;  a  fine  stock 
and  dairv  and  truck  farm.  Price, 
$12.50  per  acre;  half  cash,  balance 
in  five  equal  annual  payments,  6  per 
cent.  This  will  be  on  the  market 
for  a  few  days  only  at  this  price. 
Call  or  write  for  information.  Isaiah 
Henry  Bradford.  213-:il4  Torrey 
building.  


t  i 


FIRMS! 


FOR  SALE— MINUTES  OF  HOME- 
stead  of  120  acres,  small  house  and 
clearing;  one  and  one-fourth  mile 
from  town  and  station;  a  bargain. 
Address    L    45    Herald. 

FOK  S.-vLk— WE  HAVE  FOR  SALE 
Indian  scrip  of  the  Canadian  gov- 
ernment covering  10,000  acres  of  land 
which  can  be  located  In  sunny 
Southern  Alberta;  price  $7.50  per 
acre;  an  e.xceptlonal  opportunity. 
Call  on  or  write  us  for  particulars. 
The  O.  W.  Kerr  company,  Minneapo- 
lis,  Minn. 


Something  is  Always  Wanted.    Just 

what  it  is,  who  makes  it,  sells  it,  or 

I  does  it,  and  where  it  may  be  obtained 


FOR  SALE— HORSES. 


FOR  SALE — TWENTY  ACRE  FARM 
two  miles  from  car  Hue;  splendid 
six  room  cottage;  large  barn  and  hen 
house;  will  sell  in  five  acre  lots 
if  so  desired.     Address   H  55,  Herald. 


WHITE  EARTH  RESERVATION 

lands  In  .Minnesota;  good  lands  at 
low  prices;  the  lands  are  very  fertile, 
heavv  blai.k  loam  over  clay  sub-soil; 
we  have  large  or  small  prairie  or 
timber  tracts,  from  $S  to  $15,  accord- 
ing to  location  and  cultivation. 
Heaullou  &  I>ahl.  317-319  Palace 
building,     Minneapolis,     Minn. 


THE  DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  RAIL- 
ROAD COMPANY. 

"TUE_VjEUM ILION'  ROUTE." 

DULUTH.  I     ArriTC 


Le«te.     I 

'  I  f      Knife   lUver.    Two    Har 

*7-30  a«|  I  bora.     Tuwer.     Kly.     Aurora 
•  3.15  pmM  BlwaUk.    McKinley.    Sparta 

^7.43  am    I                   Eri'lfUi  and  1 

I  t  Virginia^ J 


:l 


«I2.00  m 
•K7.45  pm 
f  6.4S  pm 


•  lully  livept   Sumlay       tSunday  only. 


Dulutb  &  Northern  Minnesota  Railway 

Offlrea,  510  Lunndale  Uldg.,  Ouluth. 

Trains  leave  Knife  River.  20  miles  out 
on  tne  D.  &  1.  R.  R.  every  day  except 
Sundays,  on  arrival  of  the  train  leaving 
Union  station,  Duluth,  at  7:30  a.  m.  Re- 
turning connections  are  made  at  Knife 
River  with  trains  due  In   Duluth  Lnion 

tt*Ui)ti  at  '.Vt  p.  m.  Coimectlons  are  ma?1e  daily,  ex- 
rapt  S>!i:rl.»>  at  Baptism  Klver  with  sta«e  Uiie  for 
Uraiii   .M.irali  and  all  north  .Sliort-  points. 


NORTHERN  PACIFIC  RAILROAD 

Arrive. 


Lea»e. 
'•4.00  pm 

•S.30  am 
•7.30  pm, 
•8.15  am| 


A«hUnd  and  Eaat 

.Vshlaiwt   ana   East 

..Minn,   and  Ualiota  llxpreM. 
North  Coast  Limited 


L««v«.     { 

i8  00  am{ 

•1.53  pra, 

•II.  10  pm; 


••Duluth    Short    tine." 


ST.     PAUL 
MINNEAPOLIS. 

•DaliyT     tUiUy  exct-pt  Sunday. 
Depot  and  .<31  West  Superior  streoL 


•11.15am 

•  6.40  pm 

•  8'  15  am 
•6.25  pm 


Arrive. 
•  6.30  am 
t2  05  pm 
•7  00  pm 

'Pbone,  214.   Union 


MORTH^WESflRirilNEJ 

tl_JC.ST.  p.  M.a*  O.RY.lli=_J 


WHOLESALE  B  A  R  G  A  I  N  S— 12,800 
acres  in  Montana  at  $5.75  per  acre; 
40,000  acres  in  Texas  at  fl.75  per 
acre.  Jay  P.  Morrill,  i'alace  building, 
Minneapolis. 


FOR  SALE— EIGHTY  ACRE  FARM 
twelve  miles  Irom  town  on  Rice 
Lake  road.  Will  sell  cheap  for  cash. 
J    64,    Herald. 


')i.%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%^'iHk  %%%%%%^f^%%%%%'if  %%%%'*  %%%%%%% 


AUTOMOBILES. 

Thomas  Flyers,  40-hp.  6-cyllnder  J:5,000 
Thomas  Flyers,  60-hp.  ♦J-cvllnder.  4.500 
Thomas  Flyers,  70-hp.  6-cvllndor.  6.000 
Chalmer.s  Detroit,  20-hp.  6-cyl....  1,500 
Most  perfect  cars  In  America.  Mutual 
Auto  Co.  Garage  rear  B.  of  T..  Duluth. 


Ft)R    SALE—  ,,^^c,-. 

HORSES  HORSES  HORSES  HORSES 
We  are  leaders  In  our  tine  and  can- 
not be  undersold.  Our  moto,  "quick 
sales  and  small  protlt."  We  have  from 
400  to  600  head  of  horses  on  hand, 
consisting  of  draft  horses,  farm 
mares,  delivery  horses  and  mules. 
We  can  sell  you  one  horse  or  a  car- 
load.  Auction  every  Wednesday  at  |  Horseshoeing 
1:30  p.  m.  Private  sales  daily.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Take  interur- 
ban  cars  from  either  city.  Barrett  & 
Zimmerman,  Midway  Horse  Market, 
St.    Paul. 


ATTORNEY. 


William    Marx,      Attorney    at    Law,    510 
Burrows    bldg.      Zenith    "phone    384-A. 


For  Sale — Draft,  delivery,  farm  mares 
and  tlrivers  always  on  hand  at  our  new 
stables.     308       East       First       St.  Also 

wagons   of  all   kinds.   L.   Hammel  Co. 

FOR  SALE— A  GOOD  TEAM  OF  HORS- 
es.      Inquire   125    West   First   street. 


For  sale,   horses,  mill  wood    Also  ashes 
removed.  2119  w.   1st.  Old    phone  1937-M. 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES. 

FOR  .SALE— TE:N- ROOM  HOUSE  (S 
Hats),  stone  basement,  large  lot. 
strictly  inside;  must  sell  quick;  only 
Jl,800.  Good  business  and  Hat  corner; 
all  improvements  In,  price,  $1,500. 
George  A.  Wieland,  212  Alworth 
bldg.      New    'phone    office   and    house. 


STENOGRAPHERS. 

TYPEWRITING,    STENOGRAPHY  AND 
copying.     Lenox  hotel  notary. 


GRACE  BARNETT,  FIRST  NAT.  BLDG. 
E.  J.  FARRELL,  Lyceum  Bldg.  Old  2380. 


ASHES  AND  GARBAGE. 

.IsHES  aAJiBAGlT^'^^^^MANURE 
hauled.  Dick  Barrett,  Zenith  'phone 
1274-Y. 


REMOVED — GUST     HOLMGREN.      1906 
London   road.      Ol.i  'phone,   331-M. 


I.V  Ouluth       a3  lopn  b5  ■Sl>'n 

I. V  Superior       355pm  5  ISP™ 

Ar  ti'i  C.aire  8  SJjmi  lu  aupni 

ArM»li>jn        315^111  3  ♦.•am 

Ar  .Mii'taukee   ^^—  740101 

Ar  lanc-»viU«     425101  450am 

ArChica^j         7  oam  7  *jani 
at  ally      bHxcept  suaday. 


Lt  Duluth  18  3sain  94  351 'm 
Lv  3Uj>erior  903am  4  55P''i 
Ax  St.  Paul  4  30pm  9  55pm 
<\r  M'polU  S<^pm  ioa5,)m 
Pul.man  sleeper*  and  cJiair 
cars  to  Chicago.  Parlor  and 
i-aii;  cari  to  1  win  l,"itie>i.  Office 
—303  W.  buperior  bt.,  Duluth- 


OULUTH, 

SOUTH  9HORE&  ATLANTIC 

No.  6  1  Xo.  !»  1 
A.M.  1  P.M.  1 

No.  7 

No.  5 

A.M. 

P.M. 

t7.43     •5.OOILV Duluth    Ar 

•10.30 

17.55 

la  05 

•5.13 

Superior   

•10.15 

t8.40 

P  M. 

A.M. 

P.M. 

t7.45 
|8.35 

•5-40 

Ar Houghton    Lt 

•10.30 

•8.30 

Culumet    

•9  40 

P.M. 

A.M. 

t8  55 
i7.45 

•a  50 

bhpcmlug    

•12.25 

t7  55 
|8.44 

•4.30 

Marquette    

•11.30 

•10.15 

Sault  Ste.   Maile 

•5.30 

•  8.00 Montreal   

•9.50 

•  8.1s Boston   

•10.00 

.A..M.  i  P.M.  1 

A.M. 

P.M. 

tS.SO     ♦7.I0LT Montreal     Ar 

P.M.  1  A..M. 

•7.30 

tlO.15 

P.M. 

A.M. 

ta.oo 

•7.18 

.\r New  York L» 

•7.00 

te.45 

PERSONAL. 

PEllSONAI^ECLli>SE— NEW  CUKE 
for  consumption,  asthma,  bronchitis, 
la  grippe  and  all  chronic  coughs. 
i;esults  guaranteed  or  money  re- 
funded. Price  50  cents  a  bottle. 
Cures  croup  in  children  Instantly. 
Second  lloor,  room  5,  Continental 
block,    Omaha. 

PERSONAL  —  MAN  ICIRING,  SHAM- 
pooing  and  massage,  done  at  your 
home.  Address  NelUe  Maize,  123 
West  Second  street.    Old  'phone,  2718. 

PERSONAl^-WEALTHY  LADIES  AN D 
gentlemen  anxious  to  marry.  Write 
box  682,  Des  Moines,  lowa^ 

PERSONA Lr— WHY  DON'T  YOU  FIND 
out  how  to  take  care  of  your  hard- 
wood floors?  It  costs  nothing  to 
have  the  floor  expert  call  on  you.  M. 
J.   Ross,    313    West   Third   street. 


FOR  SALE— S-ROOM  MODERN  HOUSE 
except  heat,  lot,  50  by  140;  easy 
terms.      «26    East    Seventh    street. 


FOR  SALE— 6-ROOM  HOUSE  IN  WEST 
Duluth.  Water  and  gas.  Parties  leav- 
ing the  city.  Snap  if  taken  at  once. 
Call  2821   West  Third  street. 


BLACKSMITHS    AND    WAGON 
MAKERS. 


&    Jordan, 


and 
!0-22 


repairing — Devaney 
First    avenue    west. 


BOATS  AND   LAUNCHES. 


.\11  kinds  built  to  order  and  for  sale; 
also  gas  engines.  H.  .S.  Patterson, 
Railroad   street    and   Sixth    Ave.    west. 


COAL  AND  WOOD. 

city     Wood    Yard.       Prompt    deliveries. 
.1.   D.   O'Connell,   Prop.     Both  'phoiie.s. 


HARDWARE  AND  TOOLS. 

O.    A.    Gelse.    10    W.    1st    St.    with    first 
class  tin  shop  in  connection.  "Phones. 


IMPROVED    SHOE    REPAIRING. 

GOImTeR^SHOE^WORKS— Shops  10   1st 
avenue  we.-rt  and   12  4th  avenue  west. 


KODAKS  AND  CAMERAS 

Eclipse   View   Co 


,   Inc.,    30   4th   Ave.    W. 
Develops    and    finishes    for    amateurs. 


LAND  FOR  SALE. 

We  always  have  bargains  in  wild  and 
improved  land  List  with  us.  E.  H 
Hobe  Land  &  Lber  Co.   10   5th  av. 


W. 


LOAN  OFFICE. 

Money   loaned   on   all    articles    of   value 
City   Loan   Office.   524    W.   Superior  St. 


LYCEUM  SCENIC  STUDIO. 

Photographic     background     painted     to 
order,  decorating  all   kinds.     Lyceum. 


CIVIL   ENGINEERING. 

Duluth  Engineering  Co..  W.  B.  Patton, 
Mgr.,  613  Palladlo  Bldg.  .Specifications 
pi  eiiared  and  construction  superin- 
tended   for  waterworks,  sewerage,  etc. 


DENTIST. 

Dr.   W.   H.   Olson,  222  New  .Jersey   Bldg. 
All    work  guaranteed.      Both   'phones. 


FOR  SALE— HAS  TO  BE  SOLD  WITH- 
in  tlie  next  few  days;  explained  in 
this  office.  Best  central  location  in 
West  l>uluth,  corner  house,  7  rooms, 
stone  foundation,  water,  sewer,  gas 
and  electric  lights,  $1,100;  cash  down. 
J500;  don't  delay.  The  Harris  Realty 
company,   533   Manhattan   Bldg. 


FOR  SALE— ELEVEN-ROOM  HOUSE 
fifty-foot  lot,  in  Minneapolis;  easy 
terms,  or  will  exchange  for  prop- 
erty in  Duluth;  a  bargain  for  some 
one.  R.  C.  Black,  314  West  First 
street. 


PERSONAL — Foot  specialist;  corns  ex- 
tracted, 25c;  inverted  nails  and  bun- 
Ions   cured.     Scott.   17    E.  Sup.   street. 


PERSONAl^LADIES  ONLY— USEFUL 
secret,  worth  $5  to  any  married  lady, 
for  25c.  1  will  help  any  sister  in 
trouble.  Stella  J.  Sargent,  Winner 
station,    St.    Louis.    Mo. 


PERSONAL — Electric    cabinet    Turkish 
baths.     Knauf  Sisters,  -4   W.  Sup.  St. 


Personal — Manicuring,    massage,    scalp 
treatment.   813   Torrey;   'phone  946-X. 


FOR  SALE — SIX-R<j0M  HOUSE  IN 
West  Duluth.  Water  and  gas.  Parties 
leaving  the  city.  Snap  if  taken  at 
once.        Call    2821    West   Third   street. 

FOR  SALE  —  EIGHT~ROOM  HOUSE 
with  all  modern  conveniences.  To 
deal  with  owner.  Zenith  'phone  2005-X 
1016   East   Sixth  street. 

FOR  SALE— 8-ROOM  HOUSE  FOR  2 
families;  water,  sewer,  gas  lights, 
hardwood  tlcora;  easy  terms.  618 
East    Seventh    stret. 

FOR  SALE— 7-ROOM  HOUSE,  WITH 
water,  gas  and  sewer.  Bargain  If 
taken  at  once.  H  .S.  Merry,  729  East 
Sixth   street 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICE. 

N^rT^^mrT^cirT'srTtirAv^^      Esfb. 
1882.   "We   get   the  men."    Phones   376. 


ELECTRICAL  CONTRACTORS. 

E.stimates   furnished,  electric  repairing. 
F.  Tlscher,   113   2d  av.  w.  Zen.  2288-Y. 


LAUNDRY. 

Model   Laundry,   126    V..   lst^Str""We  do 
the   woik."      Old.    2740-U      New.    1302. 


"  MATTRESS  MANUFACTURER. 

Mall    order.s    a    specialty.      Zen.    1*32. 


MUSICAL  MERCHANDISE. 

Boston  Music  Co.  Mail  order.s  a  special- 
ty.   121    W.    1st.      Olil   2787-M.   New   673. 


MASQUERADE  COSTUMES. 

Complete   lino   for  all   occasions.      Fan- 
ny   Roswold,    113    First    avenue    east. 


ENGRAVING. 

.lewelrv   and   Silverware,   lowest    prices. 
Dul.  "Eng.    Co..    4th    av.    W.    &    1st    St. 


FOR  SALE  —  SEVEN-ROOM  HOUSE, 
water,  electric  I'sht.  sewer,  bath, 
double  lot,  concrete  loundatlon  and 
walks;  reasonable.  Reason  for  sell- 
ing, owner  leaving  city.  115  Vernon 
sti  eet. 


FINANCIAL. 

Buy   Germania-Tungsten    stock.    $100.00 
share.  Hoffman.  605  Man.  Zen.  1731-D. 


FLORIST. 

W.    W.    Seekins.    302     E.    Sup.    St.      Cut 
flowers  and  floral  emblems,  all  kinds. 


FURS  STORED  AND  REPAIRED 

Fur  garments  made  to  order  a  special 
ty.      Duluth   Fur   Co.   327   W.   First   Si 


PROFESSIONAL. 

DB  MITCHELL,  electro-magnetic  spe- 
cialist, has  positive  cure  for  kidney, 
stomach,  liver,  heart,  deafness,  blind- 
ne.ss,  piles,  sexual  weakness,  all  fe- 
male troubles.     325  West  First  street. 


PHOTOGRAPHER. 

Snap    shots,    25c    a    dozen    at    McK<»n- 
zle's,    30    East    Superior    St..    upstairs. 


PLUMBING  AND  HEATING. 

Geo.   McGurrln  Co.,   329    E.   Superior  St. 
Old,   815.  JOBBING.  New,   983. 


PAINTS.  OILS  AND  GLASS. 


FAMILY    THEATER. 

S.A.VOY — Vaudeville     and     feature 
tures,    afternoon    and    evening. 


St. 


pic- 
10c. 


WANTED  TO  BUY. 

We  buy  furniture  and  stoves.  Joe  Pop- 
kin,  22  W.  Ist  St.     Zenith  1857-X. 

Highest  prices  paid  for  2d-hand  furni- 
ture and  clothes.  619-D  Zen.  1  W\ 
Sup.    SL ^ 

WANTED  TO  BUY— IF  YOU  WANT 
to  sell  or  buy  property,  any  kind, 
anywhere.  Write  the  Northwestern 
Business    Agency.    Minneapolis.    Minn. 


•Daily.       tDallj    except    Sunday.      Dlulug    car    on 
Ttaliig    Noit.    T    and    8. 

'the  great  northern 


[^•.•we.     i 


STATIU.NS. 


Arrive. 


tS  00  ami 

•  3.23  pm] 

•  11.10  pml 

•8  45  ami 
•8  35  pm! 
t2.20  pmj 
|8.00  ami 

•Daily. 
ri?aj>    at   9 


w 


ST.  PAUL  1  t«>  <5P" 
\  and  y  *l  .53  pm 
(  MINNEAPOLIS.  J  •6.30  am 
I  Crookston.  firinU  Forks.  |  •6.33  pm 
1^  Montana  ami  Coast.  J  •7.13  am 
.Swan  lUver.  Hibblng.  Virginia.  tl2.30pm 
.St.  Cloud.  Wllniar.  Sioux  City.  t»0'5pm 
t  Dally  except  Sunday.  Twin  City  gleepcri 
p.    m.      Offtce.    SpaUUng   hoteL 


HOTKLr  LrE:NOX 

5ffo8t    thoroughly    equipped    In    the 
Northwest.      Sanitation   perfect. 
EUROPE.\.\.    »1.00    AND    UP. 
A.MEK1CAN,    V2.00    A.\D    UP. 


ORMONDE  HOTEL 

J21-223  Lake   Avenue   South, 
The   Ouly    FlrBt-C»u»(»   »1.00   Per   Day 

Hotel    In    the   City. 
Every      room     heated     and     modern 

throughout.  

Anieiican  and  Raropean  Plan. 
.MIKE    GL,EESO.\,   Prop. 


PERSON.\L  —  LEARN  HYPNOTISM. 
Free  lesson  and  particulars.  Box 
152,    Estherville,    Iowa. 


Wanted  old  clothes,  furniture,  etc.   Sal- 
vation Army,  Old  1003-K;  new  2134-X 

PERSONAL— PAINTING  AND   PAPER- 
hanging.      Zenith,    1518-X.      C.   Gill. 


PERSONAL— OLD  MIRRORS  RESIL- 
vered  St.  Germain  Bros..  121  First 
avenue    wesL 


BUSINESS   CHANCES. 

uusTness      chances^^^^for      sale^ 

rooming  house,  15  rooms,  well  fur- 
nished, best  location  in  city;  reason 
for  selling,  leaving  the  city.  Ad- 
dresa  L  55.  Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE — FOR  SALE — 
Two  lunch  cars.  Twenty-sixth  ave- 
nue  west  and  Michigan   street. 


WANTED        TO  BUY 

trunk.      L  59,   Herald. 


—    DRESSER 


Highest  price  paid  for  cast-oft  clothing. 
M.  Stone,  213   W.  Ist  St.     Bell  1834-L. 

W.>NTED  TO  BUY— A  LARGE  OR 
small  tract  of  land  for  Investment. 
I    6&.    Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— 
Delicalessen  and  restaurant,  well  es- 
tablished business;  good  location. 
Ownir  intends  to  leave  Duluth  and 
will  sell  cheap.  Address  L.  52. 
Herald. 


SUM.MONS- 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis. 
'District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
C.    A.    Luster, 

Plaintiff, 
vs. 
Pope     Motor     Car     Company,     a 
corporation. 

Defendant. 
The   State    of   Minnesota    to   the   iabove- 
named  Defendant: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  complaint  of  the 
plaintiff  in  the  above  entitled  action, 
which  complaint  has  been  filed  In  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  said  District 
Court,  at  the  City  of  Duluth.  County  of 
St.  Louis  and  State  of  Minnesota,  and 
to  serve  a  copy  of  your  answer  to 
Bald  complaint  on  the  subscribers,  at 
their  office,  in  the  City  of  Duluth,  in 
the  said  County  of  St.  Louis,  within 
twenty  (20)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you,  exclusive  of 
the  dav  of  sucii  service:  and  if  you 
fall  to  answer  the  said  complaint 
within  the  time  aforesaid,  the  plaintiff 
In  this  action  will  take  judgment 
against  you  for  the  sum  of  $243.45.  to- 
gether with  the  costs  and  disburse- 
ments of  this  action. 

Dated    January   30th,    1909. 
WASHBURN,   BAILEY  &   MITCHELL, 
Attorneys  for  Plaintiff, 
709  Lonsdale  building,  Duluth,  Minn. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald— March    8-15-22, 
1909. 


SAVE  TIME! 

Telephone  roar  want  ads.  to  The 
Herald.  The  rate*  are  the  aamc, 
and  vre  wilt  uiall  you  a  bill  after 
Ita   Insertion. 

BOTH    'PHONICS,    824. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— UP- 
to-date  restaurant  in  the  West  end. 
Complete  outfit.  Doing  good  business. 
Other  business  to  attend  to.  In- 
Quire  G14   West   First  street. 

BUSINESS  CH.VNCE — FOR  VALUABLE 
timber  land,  improved  and  unimproved 
farms  in  the  Cow  Creek  Valley,  ad- 
dress the  Glendale  Real  Estate 
Agency,  Glendale,  Or. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE — FOR  SALE  14- 
room  boarding  house,  very  central. 
J   73.   Herald. 


BUSl.NESS  CHANCES — LAMB  MARINE 
Engine,  best  on  earth,  for  sale  by 
T  W.  Wahl,  208  Lonsdale  V>uilding. 
Our  representative  will  call,  upon 
'phone  message.    Both   'phones,  439. 


BUS1N1:.SS  CHANCES  —  FOR  SALE, 
large  twenty-room  modern,  setam- 
heated  hotel.  Including  large  sample 
room,  parlor,  etc..  fine  lawn,  good 
town,'  big  business;  will  sell  on  easy 
terms.  George  McDonald,  Sr.,  City 
Hotel,   Hawley,   Minn. 

BUSINE.SS  CHANCE— Will  trade  piano 
for    driving    horse.      123    W.    First   St. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES — FOR  SALE  OR 
win  trade  for  good  real  estate,  a 
grocery  store;  good  location,  doing 
good  business;  have  other  business 
on  hand  and  cannot  attend  to  It.  L 
58,  Herald. 


MEDICAL. 

LADIES — $1,600  reward!  I  positively 
guarantee  my  great  successful 
".Monthly"  remedy.  Safely  relieves 
some  of  the  longest,  most  obstinate, 
abnormal  cases  in  three  to  five  days. 
No  harm  pain  or  interference  with 
work.  Mail  $1.50  Double  strength, 
$2.  Dr.  L.  M.  Southington  R.  Co., 
Kansas   City.   Mo. 

LADIES— DR.  LA  FRANCO'S  COM- 
pound;  safe,  speedy  regulator;  25c. 
Druggist  or  mall.  Booklet  free.  Dr. 
La    Franco.    Philadelphia.    Pa. 


FURNACE  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work    done    on    short   notice.   Burrell   & 
Harrnon,  308  E.  Superior  St.     'Phones. 


FURNITURE  RECOVERED. 

334   E.  Superior  St.  or  'phone  Zen.  949. 


~  FURNITURE  AND  PIANOS. 

Polished    and    repaired.      Thompson    & 
Hill,  336  E.  Sup.  St.  Old  'phone  1202-L. 


FURNITURE  AND  STOVES. 

All  kinds  at  lowest  prices.     Shapiro    12 
First  avenue  west.     Zen.    phone   10o2. 


FRENCH  CLEANER  AND  DYER. 

Zenith  Valet.  213   W.   1st  St.  Expert  re- 
pairing   and     tailoring.      Old     1S.14-L. 


k 


The   Little   Paint   Man    says: 

RherwIn-WllUams    Is   the   best. 

NORTHWESTERN  PAINT  CO. 

323    West    First    Street. 


PAINTERS    AND    DECORATORS. 

John    Hogan    &.   C).,    22    E.    Ist    St.      Let 
us  figure  on   your  work.     Zenith  741. 


:  ADDITIONAL  SFPRTS 

ENGLISH  ARE 
POORSPORTS 

Canadian    Curlers    Not 

Any  Too  Well  Used, 

Says  Hurdori. 

But  the  Scots  Entertained 

the  Visitors  Like 

Kings. 


Englishmen  are  poor  sports,  accord- 
ing to  Harry  Hurdon  of  the  Dululh 
Curling  club,  who  has  ju.'it  returned 
from  Scotland  and  Etigland,  where  iie 
played  with  the  thirty-six  Canadians, 
who  represented  the  curllrg  clubs  of 
this  continent  In  match  games  with 
both    Scotch    and    English    rinks. 

•In  England,"  says  Mr.  Hurdon, 
•curling  l.>i  played  very  differently 
from  the  way  it  is  played  in  Scotland 
and  Aineri'-a.  Instead  of  using  brooms 
to  sweep  the  stones,  the  binglishman 
u.s^-s  a  push  brush.  Tlili  brush  is 
a-lmosl  the  same  as  th;  ordinary 
Irushes  with  the  long  pole  attacked, 
wlilch  are  used  to  sweep  out  buildings. 
They  run  along  even  with  their  stone 
and  sweep  lightly  ahead  of  It.  It 
really  does  not  good  and  1  don't  See 
why    they    use    anything    at    all. 

"They  refused  to  allow  us  to  cut 
cleats  in  the  ice  to  make  a  foothold 
and  insisted  that  we  use  their  iron 
standing  places  although  none  of  us 
had  ever  used  them  before.  Our  stone.s 
were  put  In  the  clubroorns  until  it 
cume  time  to  use  tliem  and  by  that 
lime  they  were  hot.  No  consideration 
was  given  us  along  this  line  and  we 
l)layed  under  many  disadvantages. 
They  would  not  give  our  stones  time 
to  cool,  neither  would  they  loan  us 
slones  that  were  thoroughly  cool.  It 
tikes  a  curling  stone  some  time  to 
g.t  cold  all  the  way  throug'h,  and 
every  time  wo  threw  them  they  went 
Just  a  trille  easier.  At  that  they  only 
beat   us   out   by   two   points. 

"I  had  the  time  of  my  life.  There 
were  thirty-seven  In  the  party  and  It 
was  one  continual  round  of  pleasure 
all  the  time  we  were  gone.  We  played 
at  many  points  through  S.^otland  and 
in  each  town  school  was  dismissed,  so 
that  the  children  could  get  a  look  at 
the  'Indians'  from  the  otUer  side  of 
the  water. 

"The  Scots  on  the  othl^r  side  are 
royel  entertainers,  as  well  as  thorough- 
bred .sports  In  every  sense  of  the  word. 
They  took  us  all  over  the  country  In 
special  trains  and  did  everything  they 
could  for  our  comfort  and  enjoyment. 
There  was  not  a  dull  moment  all  the 
time  we  were  there,  and  all  the  other 
boys   feel   the  same  as   I   d«    about   It. 

"We  won  the  Lord  Struthcona  cup 
and  brought  It  back  to  America  with 
u.-i.  It  will  be  on  exhibltioi  In  a  num- 
l)er  of  Canadian  cities.  When  It  Is  In 
Winnipeg  we  will  try  to  liave  it  sent 
to    Duluth    for    a    short    tine. 

'Out  of  the  twenty-eight  game  we 
played  in  Scotland,  we  lost  two. 

"The  year  after  next  the  Scots  will 
send  several  rinks  to  America,  and 
we  hope  to  have  them  play  at  all  the 
rlifferent  clubs.  They  enjoyed  the 
games  greatly  and  many  were  enthu- 
siastic  about   coming   to    America." 

WELCOMED  HOME. 


out    of    the    way    by    Saturday    evening, 
and  the  curling  season  finally  closed. 


Will  Talk  to  Umpires. 

Milwaukee,  Wis..  March  15. — Presi- 
dent O'Brien  of  the  American  associa- 
tion of  baseball  clubs  today  notified 
his  staff  of  umpires  to  report  to  him 
in  Milwaukee  on  April  12,  two  days 
before  the  season  opens  for  the  pur- 
pose of  receiving  instructions  with  re- 
gard to  various  plays  which  may  com* 
up  during  the  season.  In  addition 
strict  rules  will  be  laid  down  govern- 
ing rowdyism.  It  being  Mr.  O'Brien's 
aim  to  rid  the  national  game  in  the 
American  association  of  all  unpleasant 
features. 


JOHN  PANTON 
IS  OPTIMISTIC 


PRINTERS  AND  BOOKBINDERS. 

Merritt  &  He<nor.  Railway  and  commer- 
cial printing.  30-32  W.  1st  St.  Phones. 


PLASTERING  AND  BRICKWORK. 

Estimates  furnished.   W.  J.   Darby.  New 
'phone,     1224-A;     old     "phone,     424-M. 


RELIABLE  SHOE  STORE. 

Shoes  that  wear  and  fit  for  all.     Lowest 
prices.  Joe  Williams,  123  1st  Ave.   W. 

ROOfTnG^ND   SHEET   METAl! 

Work    executed    promptly.       Burrell    & 
Harmon.    308   E.   Superior  St.   'Phones. 


HOME  BAKERY. 

The  Zenith  will  furnish  you  bread  and 
pastry.      Zen.    1879-D.      427     E.    4th    St. 


CLAIRVOYANTS. 


.MADAM  BOSWELL  EGYPTIAN  PAL.M- 
is,  118  Third  avenue  west,  tells  past 
present   and    futre 


on    all    affairs 
fife;   satisfaction   guaranteed. 


of 


MADAM  STERLING,  PALM  READING 
25c.  Card  reading  50c.  114  East  Su- 
perior   street.  


STOVE   REPXiRS. 

WE  CARRY  IN  STOCK  REPAIRS 
for  10,000  different  stoves  and  ranges. 
C  F  Wiggerts  &  6'on.,  410  East  Su- 
perior street.      Both   telephones. 


HAT  MFR.  AND  CLEANER. 

Geo.    G.    Moosbrugger.    successor    to    C. 
Volland,  24  First  avenue  E.      Phones. 


HAY.   SEED  AND   FARM   MCH'Y. 

T    A.   Scarlett.    127   W.   1st  St.     'Phones. 
Make  Lakeside  Tuesdays  and  Friday.s. 


SHIRTS  AND  UNDERWEAR. 

Made     strictly     to     order,     fit     guaran- 
teed.    C.   C.  Smith,   409   Torrey  Bldg. 


TYPEWRITING. 

Public  "stenographer  and  notary   publjc. 
Miss  Orton,   433   Man.   Bldg.   Zen.    1598. 


TURKISH  BATH  PARLORS. 

Guaranteed     cure,     all     rhf-umatic     ail- 
ments.   S.  Kasmir,  umler  Hotel  McKay. 


UMBRELLAS  RECOVERED 

And  repaired.     It  pays  to  do  them  now. 
Glngold.    Mfr.,    125    E     Superior   St. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES  —  FOR  SALE— 
The  only  candy  kitchen  In  the 
btislest  town  in  the  Northwest,  with 
a  big  outlook  for  business  the  com- 
ing summer.  The  state  firemen's 
convention  will  meet  here  next  sum- 
mer. Will  sell  cheap:  poor  health 
reason  for  selling.  Address  E.  Dus- 
sault,    7    Broadway,    Coquet,    Minn. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE — FOR  SALE— A 
restaurant  and  confectionery  outfit. 
Including  dishes,  lunch  counter, 
stools,  showcases,  shelving  and  re- 
frigerator. Will  sell  separate.  231 
•4;:!entral    avenue    west,    upstairs. 


DANCING  ACADEMY. 

COFFINS.     18  Lnke  a?cDuo  nortli.     Kew  'pbune   1242. 
Uld  'phone  1127 -B.     Open  Afienioooa  and  eTenluAt. 


DYE  WORKS^ 

•ZENITH  CITY  DYE  WORKS— LARG- 
est  and  most  reliable.  Ail  work  done 
In  Duluth.  Work  calle4  for  and  de- 
livered. "Phones:  Old  1164-R;  new, 
1888.     232  East  Superior  street. 

Duluth  Dye  Works — French  Dry  Clean- 
ing; fancy  dyeing.  Old  "phone, 
1202-R:    new.    1191-A.   330    E.    S-up.   St. 

Northwestern  Dyeing  &  Cleaning  Co.. 
oldest  reliable  dyers  and  French  dry 
cleaners  In  Njrthwest.  15  Lake  ave. 
north.    "Phones:    New,    1516;   old.    1337. 


BURKE  BROS. — Most  up-to-date  dry 
cleaning  establishment  in  the  city. 
22  East  Sup.  street.  Both  "phones.  257. 


SWEDISH   MASSAGE. 

ArEr^ANSENriJASSEURr^40TT?EW 
Jersey   building.    Old   'phone,   1826-K. 


Mrs      H.     Wlklng,     Swedish       massage. 
Flat  2.   2018  W.  Sup.  St.     Zenith,  1894-D. 


Maria  Qrlndereng,  graduated  masseuse. 
Dr.  Arvedson's  Inst.  Sweden.    Zen  844. 


FOR  SALE— COWS. 

FOR  S.\LE— I.  LTLBVINE'^wiLL  AR- 
rive  with  a  carload  of  fresh  milch 
cows,  Sunday,  March  14.  821  Fourth 
avenue  east.     Zenith  'phone.   1708-f). 


Remarkable 
Values 


Call  on  US 

for 
Information 


92,500  buys  a  home  In  East  end,  cor- 
ner lot,  50x75  feet:  seven  rooms, 
gas,  water,  bath;  hardwood  floors 
on  first  door. — 20-4. 

98..'V(0  for  new  brick  flat  building  In 
West  end;  rents,  $S0  per  month; 
three  flats:  hot  water  heat;  mod- 
ern plumbing;  hardwood  floors. — 
51-7. 

91,000  buys  Ibt  on  upper  side  of  Jef- 
ferson street,  between  Twentieth 
and    Twenty-first    avenues. — 169-1. 

9450  for  50x140  feet  on  upper  side  of 
Eighth  street,  iretween  Third  and 
Fourth  avenues  east.  Snap. — 245-1. 

975  buvs  lot  on  beach,  between 
Twenty-seventh  and  Twenty- 
eighth   Streets.  Park  Point.— 279-6. 


9:2,500  buys  another  neat  home  In 
East  end;  avenue  paved;  modern 
iilumbing;  porcelain  bath;  stone 
foundation;  hardwood  floors  on 
first  floor;  seven  rooms:  electric 
light. — 20-6. 

94,.'(00  for  75x140  feet  on  East  Second 
street,  between  Twenty-fifth  and 
Twenty-sixth  avenues;  all  Improve- 
ments.—289-13. 

9800  buy.s  50  feet  on  East  First  street 
near  Twenty-eighth  avenue,  upper 
side;  lays  flne;  water  In — 291-7. 

9300  for  lot  on  Minnesota -avenue, 
Upper  Duluth.  near  new  Athletic 
Park;    easy    terms. 

9125  buys  a  lot  on  St.  Louis  avenu*, 
Park    Point.— (128.) 


Chicago's  Darktown  Population  Re- 
ceives Johnson  With  Open  Arms. 

Chicago,  March  15. — The  Ides  of 
March  hereafter  will  have  a  signifi- 
cance to  Chicago's  colored  population 
other  than  that  given  It  by  Roman 
hi.story,  for  today  Jack  .  ohnson,  the 
first  colored  champion  of  the  world, 
ai)peared    amongst    them. 

They  were  at  the  railroad  station, 
wliere  Johnson  was  expect«^d,  and  wait- 
ed patiently  for  two  hours  until  the 
delayed  train  arrived.  "I'he  welcom- 
ers  were  arrayed  In  polka-dot  hosiery, 
peg-leg  trousers,  boldly  designed  shirt 
fronts,  the  masculne  of  cabriolet  hat, 
and  other  garments  accepted  as  the 
latest  dictate  of  fashion,  as  promul- 
gated from  the  sartorial  throne  of  the 
so-called  black  belt.  There  was  a 
hush  as  the  conqueror  of  Tommy  Burn.s 
alighted  from  the  Pullman.  His  eye 
was  keen;  his  step  Jaunty.  There 
was  lithe  strength  appanint  in  every 
movement,  and  his  smile  showed  ap- 
preciation of  mingling  again  with  his 
old  friends.  ,         ,,       ,  , 

"He's  wearing  a  gray  ffdora.  whis- 
pered one  of  the  crowd,  "just  like 
mine.  And  look  at  the  field  glasses 
over  his  shoulder.  Reckon  he  wants 
them  to  look  for  Jeffries." 

For  the  rest  of  the  chan  plon"s  attire, 
it  was  gray.  Australian  gray,  and  the 
rut  was  English. 

Those  who  boasted  a  previous  ac- 
rjualntance  approached  tie  ring  here, 
proudly  accosted  him  as  "Jack,"'  and 
slapped  him  heartily  on  the  back.  Less 
fortunate  Individuals  were  gravely 
"proud  to  meet  Mr.  Johnson."'  and  then 
stood  back  at  respectful  distances. 

An  automobile  was  waiting.  In  It 
Johnson  was  whirled  away  to  the  home 
of  his  friend,  J.  B.  Williams,  in  a  sec- 
tion of  the  city  where  many  colored 
people  make  their  homes. 

Johnson"8  white  wife  ^.-as  not  with 
him.  Siie  left  the  train  at  Milwaukee, 
It  was  said,  to  visit  friendii.  The  cham- 
pion had  nothing  new  to  say  with  ref- 
ence   to  a  fight    with    Jeffries. 

RACES  DECLARED  OFF. 

Carl  Ali'oth  Is  Notified  That  Con- 
tests Have  Been  Cancelled. 


Business  Outlook  Better 

in  West  Than  in 

the  East 

John  Panton,  president  of  the  Pan- 
ton  &  White  company,  and  all  the 
buyers  for  the  Glass  Block  store,  have 
returned  from  the  East,  where  they 
have  been  buying  goods  for  Dulutb 
shoppers. 

"Conditions  in  the  East  are  still 
rather  quiet,  and  it  is  my  observation 
tliat  business  is  a  great  deal  livelier  In 
the  West  and  that  prospects  are  better 
in  the  West,"  said  Mr.  Panton  thl« 
morning. 

"To  my  notion,"  continued  Mr.  Pan- 
ton,  "this  summer  is  going  to  see  a 
great  deal  of  building  in  Duluth  and 
throughout  this  section,  and  the  re- 
cent cut  in  steel  prices  should  help. 
Building  means  business  for  everybody. 
It  gives  the  structural  workers  em- 
ployment, the  building  material  people 
orders,  and  the  merchants  come  In  for 
furnishings   and   such   things. 

"Our  buvers  bought  larger  stocks 
than  In  any  previous  spring,  which 
shows  the  confidence  we  have  in  the 
prosperity  of  Duluth.  I  expect  a  great 
vear  hert^.  Dululh  people  seem  to  have 
money  to  buv  merchandise  with  and 
they  demand  the  best  and  we  try  to 
give     it     to     them." 

While  in  the  Eastern  markets,  the 
buyers  picked  up  all  the  novelties  for 
the  local  trade,  as  well  as  standard 
stocks.  They  boiight  Taft  'possums  and 
such  things.  There  are  novelties  In 
laces  and  embroideries,  too,  the  most 
marked  being  the  gold,  silver  and 
Oriental  laces  These  are  sort  of  a  su- 
perior brand  of  tinsel  material  that 
i)roinise  to  become  very  popular  for 
neck  yokes  and  the  like.  They  are 
expensive     costing    $5    a    yard. 

The  buyers  say.  too.  that  the  day  ot 
the  high  collar  for  women  has  pas.sed. 
for  the  present,  at  least.  The  ladiea 
will  have  to  wear  the  Dutch  collar, 
which  Is  a  low,  lacy  affair.  If  ther 
would    be    in    style   this   summer. 

HALE  APPOINTS 
ALDRICH  HEAD 

Names  Members  of  the 

Senate  to  Select  the 

Committees. 

Washington,  March  15. — Senator 
Hale,  chairman  of  the  Republican  cau- 
cus of  the  senate,  today  announced 
the  following  as  the  membership  of  the 
Republican  committee  to  select  the 
standing  committees  of  the  senate: 

Aldrlch,  chairman;  Keene,  McCum- 
ber,  Crane,  Flint,  Sutherland,  Curtis, 
Borah   and    Dixon.  j,    .   ,  . 

The  committee  immediately  proceed- 
ed to   reorganize   the   committees. 

ANTI-SLNDAY  BARBERINT. 
BILL  PASSED  AT  MADISON. 

Madison,  Wis.,  March  15. — A  Joint 
resolution  was  introduced  In  the  as- 
sembly today  providing  that  the  legis- 
lature remain  in  session  not  later  than 
May  7  The  resolution  was  referred  to 
the  Joint  steering  committee.  In  the 
•senate  a  bill  against  Sunday  barberln^ 
"was  passed,  also  one  prohibiting  the 
sale  of  tobacco  for  cigarettes  to  min- 
ers under  18  years  of  age. 

CHICHESTER'SPILLS 

%mA  •od^««U  Biet*llic\^r/ 
>l*<r  v<A    BIm    Rlbbom.  \^ 

ymn  know*  M  BMt.  tetait,  Atwayt  Rcllabi* 

SOLD  BY  DRUGGISTS  EVERYWNERf 


Every  Womart 

le  InteretUd  and  tbonld  know 

about  the  wonderfnl 

,  MARVEL  >^WrHog  Spray 

The  ntvr  Ticlaal  Kyrtaf*.     /fli^J- 

\       tion  and  ."iurtion.  UMi—WU^ 

e»t->lo»t  Conveni«B«, 


A   HlBh-claan,    Central  Improved  Property    for    Sole 
We   Win  Dulld   a  $«{,000   Home     uu     Small     Caab 

RC\L.   ESTATE  LOANS. 


■  t    a    Sarrlflce. 
Payment. 


FOR  SAI.E— S.  M.  KANER  WILL  AR- 
rlve  with  a  carload  of  fresh  milch 
cows  Sunday,  March  14.  1219  East 
Seventh   street.      Both   'phones. 

FOR  SALE — FOl'R  FRESH  MILCH 
cows,  at  1516  West  Superior  street. 
S.  WlddU. 


JANGLE  OVER  LICENSE. 

Middle  River  in  Quarry  Over  Out- 
come of  Election. 

Middle  River,  Minn.,  March  15. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— This  village  has' 
been  in  sometliing  of  a  Jangle  ever  since 
election  day,  March  9,  over  the  out- 
come of  the  vote  on  the  license  proposi- 
'tion.  A  ruling  from  the  attorney  gen- 
eral is  awaited,  but  the  prevailing^ 
opinion  among  citizens  generally  ano 
al.'so  the  expressed  opinion  of  Judge 
Watt  is,  that  license  will  be  legal  the 
coming   year.  , 

The    question    was    voted    upan    last 


spring,  and  license  carried  by  a  big 
majority,  and  inasmuch  as  the  statutes 
clearly  stipulate  that  any  decision  ren- 
dered by  the  voters  upon  this  question 
stands  until  changed  by  a  reverse  vote, 
theer  really  seems  to  be  no  grounds 
for  th«  contention  that  license  is  down 
and  out  in    Middle  River. 


M'reokii    a    Drainage    Dredge. 

Menominee,  Mich..  March  15. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Determined  to 
fulfill  his  threat  to  put  the  Peshtlgo 
drainage  canal — In  the  course  of  con- 
struction— out  of  business,  John  Quick 
of  Peshtigo  wrecked  a  construction 
dredge  belonclng  to  Contractor  John 
Martin  so  badly,  that  It  Is  unfit  for  use. 
Quick  has  been  arrested  on  a  malicious 
destruction  charge. 


There  will  be  no»  skating  races  at 
Milwaukee  this  year,  as  was  originally 
planned,  and  Carl  Alrotli,  the  local 
skater,  who  was  unable  to  attend  the 
Saranac  Lake  races,  is  Tiuch  disap- 
pointed. 

For  the  past  month  thi?y  have  been 
unable  to  freeze  ice  in  tie  Wisconsin 
city  and  Mr.  Alroth  was  notified  this 
morning  by  letter  that  the  races  had 
been    declared    off. 

Next  year  the  Milwaukee  people  will 
have  an  artificial  Ice  pant,  so  that 
ice  can   be  had  at  any   time. 


fak  jtmr  drafflat  tw  H. 
r  h«  cannot  supply  the 
MAHVKI..  accept  no 
Other,  but  eend  itainp  for 
lUiuirated  bo<.k-w«l'-o     It  trlTei 
Inll  partloularB  and  .lircrtif^Tis  lii- 
Valuable  to  la<lle».  MARVKI,  rO.. 

For    salt    by    Max    WIrth,    Oruggiit. 


WILL  PLAY  FI^.'ALS. 


La.st  Game  in  President's  Event  Be- 
tween Hall  and  Dinham. 

The  finals  in  the  President's  event 
will  be  played  off  this  evening  at  the 
curling  rink.  Hall  and  D;  nham  are  the 
contesting     rinks     and     ti  ere    is     much 

Interest  in  the  outcome. 

At  6  o'clock  Hall  mee  .s  Dunlop,  In 
the  Bagley  event,  and  Alworth  meets 
Dinham   in  the  same  event. 

Play  for  the  board  of  trade  buttons 
will  begin  tonight,  at  w  ilch  time  the 
C  Class  rinks  will  play  down  bonsplel 
style  to  see  who  lands  them  for  the 
season  1908  and  '09.  JacobI  meets  Mc- 
Lennan, Hall  meets  Dint  am,  and  Old- 
ham  meets   Deetz. 

In  this  event  the  rInKs  will  either 
play    or    forfeit    their    games. 

The  season  Is  now  all  but  over,  and 
it   is  expected  that  everj  thing  will   be 


PROPOSALS 

For  Grading   and  Im- 
proving Grounds. 

Sealed  proposals,  addressed  to  the 
Court  House  Commission,  will  be  re- 
ceived at  the  office  of  said  Commlssloiv 
321  Providence  Building.  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota until  10  o'clock  a.  m.,  April  IB. 
1909,  for  excavating,  filling,  grading, 
paving  and  concrete  work  for  the  sitew 
approaches,  terraces,  etc.  for  the  new 
St.  Louis  County  Court  House.  Said 
work  to  conform  to  the  plans  and  spe- 
cifications therefor,  now  on  file  In  the 
office  of  said  Commission.  Copies  ot 
said  plans  and  specifications  may  be 
obtained  by  prospective  bidders  at  the 
above  named  office.  Said  bids  will  be 
opened  publicly  at  the  office  of  said 
Commission  at  12  o'clock  noon,  April  ft 
1909.  Each  bid  must  be  accompanied 
by  a  deposit  equal  to  five  per  cent 
(5  per  cent)  of  the  total  of  the  bid 
which  deposit  must  be  in  the  form  of 
a  certified  check,  payable  to  the  County 
of  St.  Louis.  This  deposit  will  be  re- 
turned to  the  unsuccessful  bidders,  and 
to  the  successful  bidder,  upon  his  en- 
tering into  a  contract  with  said  Com- 
mission, and  the  giving  of  a  satisfac- 
tory surety  company's  bond  to  said  St. 
Louis  County,  the  amount  of  which 
shall  be  the  contract  price,  within  tea 
tlO)  days  after  the  date  of  notifica- 
tion that  his  proposal  has  been  accept- 
ed. Should  the  bidder  fall  to  enter 
into  said  contract  and  bond  within  ten 
<10)  days,  said  deposit  shall  be  for- 
feited to  said  County.  Said  Commis- 
sion reserves  the  right  to  reject  any 
or  all  proposals. 

Dated    at    Duluth.    Minnesota.    March 
13,    1909. 
S-r     LOTTIS   COUNTY      COURT      HOUSa 

COMMLSSIOiN. 

Per   GEO.   H.   CLAYPOOL. 

Secretary. 

Duluth  Eveulnff  Herald.  March  13.  1^ 
17.  i90». 


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1 

DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD.      Monday,  march  15   1909 


IM 


Yes,  You  May  Get  a  Job  Without  A(lvertising--Soinetimes 


3 


-i 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Ailvcrilsenicnt  Less  Than  15  Cents. 

"  SHOPPING 

DY  TELEPHONE. 


MKAT    MARKETS — 

B.   J.    ToUtn    

Mork  Pro? 

LAlMJItlKS — 

i'a'.f    Lainulry    .  .  . . 

lyUtC3     Ijiiuii.lry .  .  . 

Tr<n-    Laundry     . . . 
DUl  titJISTS — 

EJ.iie   Jorouimus    . 

Bt)ycf»     

BAKBllIE^I  — 

Th-    Uon    Ton    

HEATIXU    AND    I'l.i 

Aiohie    AKUoUb'aU 
WOOD — 

W.   ^.   r.llitiyPfn    .  . 


Old 

'Phone. 

,      22 
.1590 

,    479 
447 


...1243 
...    Iti3 

..1720-1^ 
>IBI>0— 


New 
'Phone. 

22 

1S9 

479 
447 
;:57 

1027 
1G3 

lies 

916 
I730-A 


REAL  ESTATE,  FIRE 

LXSURANCEAND 
RENTAL  AGENCIES^ 

John   A.   Stfphenston,    VVoivin   buildiuif. 
E.  D.  Field  C'.>.,  -1'3  Exoiiaiijfd  butl-Jmg. 
L.   A.    i-ursoii    Co..    PioviUenct    buUding. 
PulfiiM.  Ho  A-  &  Co..  31'!*  Kxchange  lildg. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
So  Advertisement  I^ess  Tlian  16  Cents. 

i^oTP.SALK^^^yAFEsT^OFJ^^ 

lure.    arohl*ects'    and    engineers     sup- 
plies,   typewriters    and    supplies. 
Kav  Co..  406  W.  Sup. 


St.  Both 


J.   S. 
phones. 


FOK  iSALl::— SEND  US  yOUll  NAMIi,. 
We  will  ninil  you  the  new  Victor  and 
Kdison  record  lists  each  monlii.  tree 
of    charge.      Frencli    &   Basse tt 

FoITsaLk^NKW  VlCTOIt  AND  l^Dl- 
son  reeords.  Direct  from  the  liiSSV'"^.; 
full  toned,  yeriect  reeords.  liicy 
lust  lor.Kcr  and  sound  bet'.ei.  iiu> 
them    ol    i'rencli    &    Uasa^tt. 

FoTTsALi::— THE  NEW  isTiLE  Vic- 
tor -O.'  A  genuine  brand  new  \i«-loi 
machine  with  horn,  needles  and  ten 
10-lnch  now,  perfect  records.  Dntc. 
from  llie  Victor  factory.  All  com- 
plete for  ?2o.i»0.     Easy  ici'ms. 


f'reucli 


&    Bas.se  tt. 


FOIi  SALE — One 
h.p.    Doman    eni 
t)y.  iierald. 


24- £t.  motor  boat,   10- 
fiue,    lays    luodel.      K. 


MUSIC. 

PllU.NUoUAl'ilS  AND  .\iU;^iv."AL  IN- 
fitruiiients.  Send  jour  orders  for 
popular  song,'*  and  records  to  Zenitli 
Alusic  couumny.  No.  b  East  Superior 
sirtet    Duluin,  Almn. 


IlUtflC  .VNU  ML. Sic  A).  MKKcH.O.UiaE  OK'KVt.KV 

^  iosvriylii-u.  kAiiuii  piiouo- 
^riipiii.  baud  ii'J  of- 
.   ij  e  s  t  I  a     msixaiuii.ia. 

iiiu    V   t'nt   Avttiiue    Mest 


FOR  RENT— FLATS. 


Fui:  i; 

All 

heat. 

west 


2::o>-X. 


KNT— NEW    FIVE-UOOM    FLAT 

iLudfrn       cunvonieiicts.        e.xcept 

at      Tweiity-.vieventii        avenue 

and   Thud  sUeeU 


Zenilli    pliuae 


JOH     SALE-BABIC     UO-CAUTS— TllE 
new    i'rmctss   one  motion   collap.siiJic 
is    the    finest    folding    go 
world;  prices  |o..>y   up; 
'em    over,    or    seiui    tor 
iiayhu  Ac  Co.,  Dululh. 


•  cart  In  tlie 
call  and  looK. 
free 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  In.sertlon. 
Xo  AdvertLsenient  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

helFwSted^^^^remaleI 

^^r^;^^TEi7''^:^^ni3a^EUrENCED  OVEK- 
all  malters.  Christianson-Mendenhali- 
Graham  Co.  , 


WANTE1>— A  COMPETENT  GIRL  II'OR 
general  housework.  Must  be  good 
coolt.    Good    wagt.«.    24    Butte    avenue. 

Hunter's    Park.        Old   'plione.    1011. 

^^     YEARS 
at  922  East 


WANTED— GIKL  ABOUT 
old  for  light  housework, 
Flfili    street. 


WANTED — LADIES  to  call  at  tho  day- 
ligiit  trunk  store.  Our  goods  stand 
the  sunshine.  A  square  deal.  Try  us. 
Repairing  reasonable.  Nortliein 
Trunk  Co..  228  W.  1  st.  Opp  V\  olvin 
building;^ ^ . 

^VANTEb— A  GOOD  GILR  FOR  GEN- 
eral  housework;  small  family.  li" 
East   Tenth   street.     _^^__ ^ 

AT 

in 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
So  Advertisement  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

m  PkBE  II 


One  Cent  a  Word  B^ach  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

^^^^^lp^wante^maleT^ 

WANTED — TWO  FIRST  CLASS  PIANO 
salesmen.  Howard,  Farwell  &  Co. 
liJO    Ea.st   Superior   St.,    Duluth,    Minn. 


WANTED — 100   MEN   TO   BTJY   Watches 
at   Esterly's.   Spalding  Hotel  Jeweler. 


One  Cent  a  Word  lach  Insertion. 
So  Advertisement  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

"fOR^^NT^  ROOMS^ 


SOCIETIES. 


WANTED— FIRST-CI^VSS       GIRL 
1510     East     Second     street,     three 
family.  


WANTED— A  CO.MPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework;  good  wages. 
423:i    London   road. 


booklet, 


1-UR  SALE— ONE  AlAiiOGANiC  PIANO, 
nearly  new  and  in  good  couultion.  A 
splendid  bargaii:.  »10  cash  and  ^i> 
a.  montli.     u  reiich  &  Basse  tt. 

Voii  SAL^J  —  PHONOUKAPllS  AND 
recoids,  oon't  buy  till  you  get  our 
luices.  We  carry  by  far  tho  largest 
lines  of  Victor  and  Edison  maciune.i 
and  records  in  Dulutn;  only  iiew  aiul 
perfect  goods.  Outilts  IflO  up;  casn 
Ol  eaiiy  paymenls;  cutalogus  and  rec- 
ord lists  on  requcist.     Bayna  At  Co. 


fe 


Jt 


FOR  RENT  —  FOUR- 
modern  except  lioat 
Etretl.     Imiuire  J.   V. 

Hut. 


ROOM 

i:',24 

Wilde, 


FLAT   — 

Jcilerson 
baseineiit 


Foil  RENi' — -\ioi>i-:i;N 

Hut,    lieat,   hardwood 
bi.Mti    street,    /.eniiti 


5- ROOM  BRICIC 

riiiish.    6'.i7_  East 
pliuiie    1705-V. 


FOR  RENT— F1VE-ROO.M  FLAT  AT 
12J»<.   East  Fourth  street. 

FoTrRbTNT^STEAM  H1:ATED  FL.VTS. 
with  all  modern  conveniences;  gas 
range  sieam  laundry;  hrst  tlat.  Al. 
W.  Allen.  West  end.  Zenith  phone 
10  48. 


FOR  RENT— FIVE  ROOM  NEW  !•  LA  I ; 
hot  water  heat;  hot  and  cold  waiei, 
janitor  service.  2308  West  li.ird 
street.     Zenith    plione.   7o2.  


ClilCiviau.NG, 

FISCHER, 

FRANKl^lN. 

PlANOa. 

EASi    PAYMENTS. 
VTJ.        HOWARD,    IAKWELL   &    CO., 
jt  l:;o    East   Superior    Street, 

-,.i  "Phones;  Zenitii  147»-X;  Old 
::.  17o;;-K.  W.  J.  Allen,  manager; 
-.j.  Fred  R.  ilann,  expert  piano  and 
ic  pipe  organ   tuning.     ,,,,,^,, 


WANTED— EXPERIENCED  COLL  A  R 
Ironer.  Home  Laundry  company, 
Twentietli    avenue    west^ 

N^ANTrU)^  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  518  North  Fifty- 
eighth   avenue   west. 


WANTED— A  MILLINERY  APPREN- 
tice.  Brandts  Millinery,  114  ^^  est 
Fourth  street. 


WANTED  —  THOROUGHLY  COMPE- 
tent  working  liousekeeper.  Three 
in  family.  Small  modern  home. 
Wages,  $20.  Call  after  6:30  p.  m. 
Old    'phone.    16S9-L. 

W^AN-fED^^lltL  FOR  HOUSEWORK. 
1119    Ea.st    Fourth   s^treet. 


SITUATIONS   WANTED— 
FEMALE. 

sTtuation^vajH^ed^by  a  young 

lady    as     bookkeeper       or       assistant 
bookkeeper.   Address   K  91,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  PLACE  as 
housekeeper;  small  family,  by  mid- 
dle aged  woman.     K89,  Herald. 


siTu.vnoN     wantf:d — by     young 

lady,  light  office  work  and  cashier; 
have  liad  experience  and  can  furnish 
best  of  references.  J   81,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED— YOUNG  LADY 
desires  position  In  doctor's  office.  Ad- 
dress K  99.  Herald^ 

SITUATION  WANT  I'^D  —  WO  RK  BY 
the  day.  Anna  Wesley,  116  West 
Second  street. 


WANTED— MEN  TO  HAVE  THEIR 
trunks  repaired;  best  brass  locks  oOc 
and  $1;  no  more.  Try  us.  Northern 
Trunk  Co.,  228  West  First  street, 
opposite     Wolvin    building. 

WANTED — LEARN  BARBER  TRADE, 
big  demand  for  barbers;  big  wages; 
easv  work:  short  time  »  >  learn;  tools 
given;  catalogue  free.  Moler  Barber 
College,  27  E.  Nicollet  avenue,  Min- 
neapolis^  

WANTED— TEN  BRIGHT  HUSTLERS; 
men  that  will  work  and  that  want  to 
earn    ten    dollars    a    day.      No    drones 

I  or  has-beens,  but  men  full  of  life, 
ginger  and  ambition — ten  dollars  a 
day  guaranteed  to  the  right  parties 
K    85,    Herald. 

"       ~~'  16   TO   18   YEARS 

work;    wages,    $1 
W.    H.    Rleckhoil' 


FREDERIC     HOTEL.  * 

Corner  First  street  and  First  ave-  H- 
nue  west.  106  home-like  rooms,  ■?=■ 
single  or  en  suite;  lot  water  heat;  ^ 
hot  and  cold  running  water  in  * 
.,  every  room.  We  aie  now  making  ■^ 
H'  special   rates  for  Ih  j  winter.  ■^ 

'*  JOHN    J.    HALLir,    Prop.  *■ 

*  * 


FOR  RENT  —  MODERN  FURNlSliElJ 
room  in  private  family;  reasonable. 
7enith    2138-D. 


Volk,  W. 


MASONIC. 
PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79, 
A.  F.  &  A.  M. — Regular  meet- 
ings first  and  third  Monday 
evenings  ot  each  month,  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  mectingf 
March.  15.  1909.  Work — Sec- 
ond degree,  Andrew  C 
M. ;  II.  Nesbitt,  secretary. 


FOR  RENT — FUltNISHl^D  ROOM; 
electric  light;  cooking  allowed.  lll'/4 
East    Fifth    street. 

FOR      RENT   —   FUR.WISHED      FRONT 
room    with    alcove;    modern    conven 
ience.     Zenith  2067-X.     315   West 


3rd. 


WANTED— 10   BOVS, 
old,    sctady    inside 
to    $1.25    per    day. 
Co.,    New    Duluth. 


FOR  RENT— THREE  ROOMS  FOR 
light  housekeeping,  or  two  rooms 
furnished  for  gentlemen,  1718  West 
Second  street. 


i  OK  S.k.LE — Jo-AUOi  LAL.NCll,  FUi..L 
cablii,  drop  windows,  leather  cush- 
ions, full  mass  niUiiiis,  etc.;  t»-n.p. 
engine,  used  bi'.t  few  wteks.  Zen- 
itn    phont,  6040.  


FOR  ,<.vLE  —  36-FOOT  CRUISING 
launcli;  good  rc-:iat)le  engine;  touei, 
cooKing  gaiiey,  icc  boxes,  slee.miii 
capacity  lor  six  peisons;  storage  de- 
pa.,  tnienl  on  top;  electric  iis-'t^^. 
nukei  plated  triimmngs  and  coiiipieic 
in  eveij  respect.  iiiquirt:  i:a  East 
1' irst   street. 

I- Ol ;  hTvia^— $75  TA  K  ES  ELEG  AN  T 
upiigiii  p.aiiu.  Can  be  seen  loom  io, 
i'lioeitix    i>iocK. 


WANTED— COM  i'ETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  Mrs,  F,  H.  De 
Groat,    1619    East   First   street.  


WANTED — DINING    ROO.M   GIRL. 

Roose\elt   street. 


6310 


WANTED— GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework,  family  of  three.  Inquire 
at  No.   6  Adams  flats. 


WANTED— GlItLS  TO  LEARN  MIL- 
lln«ry  at  Mrs.  Melville's  store,  118 
West    Fourth    street. 


SITUATION  WANTED— YOUNG  LADY 
desires  a  position  at  office  work  Ad- 
dress   H    94,    Herald.  


SITUATION  WANTED— YOUNG  LADY 
wants  to  work  for  room  and  board. 
H.   82,  Herald, 


WAxVTED    AT    ONCE— GIRL    WHO    IS 

able  to  keep  hooks  and  tend  to  store. 
European   Bakery.  I'i'J.  East  Third  St. 

\LTERA~ 
Apply  at 
upstairs. 


WANTED — A  FIRST  CLASS 
tion  and  salesla<ly   at   once. 
:!01     We.st    Superior    street. 
Menter    &^    Rosenbloom    Co. 


WANTED — FOUR    GOOD    LADY    CAN- 

vassers,  salary  or  commission.  'Phone 
Zetnith   477.     Ask   for  Mr.   Hansen. 


FOR      RENT— MODERN     FOUR-ROOM, 

heated    Hal    to    csoupie    without    chil- 
dren.     419   East    Fifth    street. 

FOR  RENT— SIX- ROOM  FLAT.  l>OW  N- 
stairs.  624  Garfield  avenue.  $16 
a   month  rent     Water  pauh 

FOR  RENT  —  TWO.  THREE  AND 
four-room  flats,  $6  to  $12  per  month. 
63U  East  Fourth  streeLPliuneJj  ol_-A. 


FOR      SALE      CHEAP— NEW      EDISON 

graphophone    with    twenty-seven    late 
recorus       Address    K    90.    Herald. 

for"  sTaLE-^SOM E  VERY^  CHOICE 
barred  Plymouth  Rocks  and  White 
\\  yandoltes,  cockerels  and  plUets, 
all  laying.  H.  Gould,  Eighth  avenue 
west   and  Tenth   street. 


WANTED— NORWEGIAN  GIRL  FOR 
kitchen  work  in  boarding  house.  Ad- 
dress M.  Edwardson,  Two  Harbors, 
Minn. 


SITUATIONS  WANTED— MALE. 

SlVVATlOS^^W^iiTK^  MAN, 

25  years  old,  seven  years'  thorough 
office  experience;  capable  of  handling 
position  as  cashier  and  bookkeeper, 
auditor  of  disbursements,  or  anything 
in  general  office  line:  best  of  referen- 
ces; now  employed;  desires  to  locate 
with  company  that  offers  real  oppor- 
tunity .^lLY^Z^^lerald^_______ 

SITUATION  WANTED— YOUNG  MAN 
conversant  in  German,  French  and 
English  would  like  any  position  sev- 
eral   hours    daily.      J    92,    Herald. 


WANTED— COLLAR     MAKERS       AND 
harness   makers,    good   wages;    steady 
employment.      Bristol    &    Sweet    com- 
pany, Fargo,  N.   D. 


WANTED— YOLNG  MEN  TO  SEND 
their  subscriptions  and  renewals  for 
the  Saturday  Evening  Post  to  Miss 
L.  Kluge,  agent,  care  of  Herald^ 


wantp:d- 

Superior 


-TWO  PORTERS.  31 1    WEST 
street. 


WANTED — FILER  FOR  SAWMILL, 
two  knot  sawyers;  sawyer  for  small 
mill,  alao  millwright;  200  woodsmen, 
all  summer  work.  National  Emnloy- 
ment  company.  No.  5  South  Fifth 
avenue  west. 


FOR   RENT — THRE1-:     UNFURNISHED 
rooms.      714  W^est  S''cond. 


IONIC  LODGE,  NO.  186.  A.  F. 
&  A.  M. — Regular  meeting 
second  and  fourth  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting, 
special,      Wednesday,     March 

Work — First    degree,      Clar-| 
Miller,    W.    M.;    Hugo    Burgo, 


17,     1909. 
ence    B. 
secretary 


FOR  RENT— TWO  N  3WLY  PAPERED 
and  painted  rooms  In  basement; 
hardwood  floors.  Rent  reasonable. 
Apply   315    West   F(  urtlii^  street. 

F^R  "RE.vF^^^^ONE"ir.VRGl^,  FURNlSH- 
ed  front  room,  suitable  for  man  and 
wife,  or  two  genliemen.  123  East 
First   street. 

FOfTrENT- FURNISHED  ROOM.  11 
fourth    avenue    east. 


Work— 1 
iam     D. 
Richeux, 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER,  Na 
20,  It.  A.  M. — Stated  convoca- 
tions second  and  fourth 
Wednesday  evenings  of  each 
month  at  7:30  o'clock.  Next 
meeting.  March  24th,  1909. 
.  M.  and  M.  E.  AL  degree.s.  Will- 
Underhill.  H.  P.;  Alfred  Le 
secretary. 


FOR  RENT  —  T^VO  DESIRABLE 
rooms.  East  Superior  street,  near 
Fourteenth  avenue.     Old  'phone  2ui. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  PRUDENCE 
Robert,  public  janitor  and  porter. 
Windows  washed,  floors  mopped,  etc. 
Branch   Bethel,   508   W,  Sup.  Zen.  391. 


WANTIOD— BOY  OVP^R  16  YEARS  OF 
age.  Minnesota  Cigar  Box  Co.,  118- 
120    West    Michigan    street,    top   floor. 

WANTED — GOOD  PAINTER.  APPLY 
117    Mesaba    avenue. 


WANTED— GOOD  BOY.  17  OR  18 
years,  to  learn  painter's  trade.  117 
Mesaba    avenue 


WANTED— RAILWAY  MAIL  CLERKS, 
Salary  $800  to  $1,400.  Examinations 
in  Diiluth,  May  15.  Common  educa- 
tion sufficient.  Candidates  prepared 
free.  Write  immediately,  Franklin 
Institute,  Rochester,  N.  Y. 


WANTED — WASHERWOMAN,  SMALL 
family.    307    West    Second    street. 

WANTED — LAl)IES  TO  SEND  THEIR 
subscriptions  and  renewals  for  the 
Ladies  Home  Journal  to  Miss  L. 
Kluge,   agent,    care    of    Herald. 


FOR       RENT— 4-ROOM     FLAT, 
citv      water.      No.    2    Vernon 
Zenith  'phone,   ::228-.<V 


WITH 
street. 


FOR  RENT— 3 -ROOM  FLAT.  23  WES'!' 
Fourtli  street.  Inquire  at  Robert 
Freeiiians.  


FOR  RENT— SIX  KOoM  FLAT  AT  513 
First  avenue  west,  water  paid.  All 
conveniences.  Rental.  $27.  M^i^^i' 
Corporate  Investment  company,  lor- 
rey    Bidg. 


FOR     KENT— C-ROOM 

bath,  electric  light, 
road.  Inquire  1913 
Zenith     phone.    1535. 


LOWER    FLAT, 

1325      London 

London      road. 


P^OR  SALE— SEND  YOUR  SUBSCRll'- 
tions  and  renewals  for  the  l>adies 
Home  Journal  and  Saturday  Even- 
ing Post  to  Miss  L.  Kluge,  agent, 
care    ol    Herald, 


FOR  SALE— ICEBOX,  KITCHEN  CAB- 

inet  and  few  odd  pieces  of  furniture. 
115  Teiiih  avenue  east. 


FOR  SALE— RIGNE  PIANO  USED  FOR 
two  months,  very  cheap  for  quick 
sale.      Call    1208    West    First  street. 


FOR    SALE— 
Inquire     at 


A     PAIR     OF     FEKltETS. 
125     West     First     street. 


WANTED  —  DISHWASHER.  S?:COND 
cook  and  dining  room  girl.  Central 
hotel.  Proctor.  Old  'phone  54. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICES. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  HOTEL 
clerk  or  barkeeper,  thoroughly  ex- 
perienced; good  mixer;  A  1  referen- 
ces.     K    88,    Herald. 

SITUATION       WANTED— GENTL?:M  AN 

of  25  years,  with  commercial  edu- 
cation, desires  a  position  as  assistant 
book  Keeper  for  a  wholesale  house  or 
a  position  as  inside  wireman  for  an 
eectrical  company.  Address  12  Carl- 
ton avenue  west,  Cloquet,  Minn. 


MRS. 
fice. 


SOMERS' 
17    2nd    Av 


EMPLOYMENT     OF- 
.    E.      Both     phones. 


FOR  SALE— BENCH 
vanized    tubs    and 
East    Fifth    street. 


WRINGER,   GAL- 
Wooden    tuu.    2105 


— 


FOR  RENT— 6-ROOM  BRICK  FLAT; 
all  conveniences.  Corner  of  Twentieth 
avenue  west  and  Second  street,  $20 
per  month.  Inquire  127  East  1- irst 
street.  


FOR  RENT— FIVE-ROOM  FLuVT.  31  21-. 
West  F:fth  street,  hardwood  floors, 
electiic  light,  gas.  inquire  Bridge- 
man  &  Russell,  or  call  old  'phone, 
906. 


FOR  RENT— VERY  DESIRABLE  7- 
room  flat,  hardwood  floors  through- 
out, steam  heat  and  janitar  service; 
good  lake  view;  moderate  rent.  C. 
p.    Craig    &    Co.,    503    Sellwood    bldg. 

FOIt  ]:l:NT— NEW  SIX-ROOM  FLAT, 
tji.  liegis  apartments;  conveniently 
arranged;  heat,  water  and  janitor 
service.  M.  H,  Alworth.  lUO  Alworth 
building. 


FOR    SALE — 

CASH    REGISTERS. 
We     manuiacture    a    casli     regis- 
ter every   two   minutes.   Liberal   al- 
lowance  for  exchange    of   registers. 
Call   and  see   our    i909   mouels. 

THE  NATIONAL  CASH  REGISTER 

COMPANY, 

E.    W     Russell.    Sales    Agent. 

425    West    Superior    Street. 

Zenith.    817.  BeU     2585. 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE. 

FOR  SALE— THE  EAST  40  RODS  OF 
lot  11,  Section  6.  Township  46,  Range 
28,  10  acres.  Ten-room  house,  frame 
barn  20x30.  The  nicest  place  for 
summer  home  or  to  keep  boarders  in 
Deerwood.  Also  the  nwVi  of  neV4, 
Section  6.  Township  46,  Range  28, 
close  to  the  mineral  range.  Address 
D.   E.    Whitten.  Deerwood.   Minn. 


FOR  SALE— ELEVEN  ROOM  HOUSE, 
fifty  foot  lot  in  Minneapolis;  easy 
terms,  or  will  exchange  for  prop- 
erty in  Duluth;  a  bargain  for  some 
one.  K.  E.  Black,  314  West  First 
s  t  r  ee  t. 

FOR  SALE— EIGHT-ROOM  HOUSE 
and    lot.      2918    West    Third    street. 


FOR    RENT— HOUSES^^^^ 

FOR  RENT— FIVE  ROOM  HOUSE 
with  conveniences,  rear  2009  West 
Third  street,  $15;  7-room  house  on 
Fourth  avenue  west  near  Fifth 
street,  $13;  thiee  and  four  room  flats, 
water  and  tollfet.  Fifteenth  avenue 
west,  near  Superior  street,  $9  and 
$10.  Harris  Realty  company,  533 
Manhattan   Bldg^ 

FOR  RENT— NEW  6-ROOM  HOUSE  T0 
couple  without  children;  rent  $25.  809 
East  Third  street.  'Phone  1388-K,  old. 

FOR  RENT— EIGHT-ROOM  DWELL- 
ing;  water,  etc.;  Forty-flfth  avenue 
west,  one  block  from  street  car  line; 
rent  reasonable.  Dickerman  Invest, 
ment  company.  Lonsdale   building. 


WANTED— A  SALESMAN  TO  SELL 
exclusive  copvrlghted  art  calendars. 
Onlv  man  of  ability  need  apply.  Call 
at  Lenox  hotel   for  Soule. 


FOR    RENT— FURNLSHED   ROOMS, 
East  Superior  street.  

FOR       RENT- 

front    room, 
table   board 


NICB1..Y       FURNISHED 

suitalle    for    two;    good 

10    West  Second   street. 

^^^^      RKNT— NEAT  ^Y       FURNISHED 

front  room,  first  floor;  gas  light  and 
use  of  'phone;  $2. CO  per  week.  440 
Mesaba  avenue. 


DULUTH  COUNCIL,  NO.  6.  R. 

S.  T. — Regular  meetings  first 
and  third  Friday  evenings  of 
each  month  at  7:30  o'clock. 
Next  meeting.  March  19.  1909. 
Work  —  Royal       and       Select 

Master    degree.     Andalla    W.    Torrance. 

T.    1.    M. ;    Alfred    Le    Richeux,    recorder. 


^12 


at  7:30  oc 
\«ft  be  lu 
16.    Work- 


FOR  RENT— ROOM  AND  BOARD  FOR 
two  in  private  family;  use  of  'phone. 
Call   No.   5    West   Fourth   street. 


FOR       RENT— 
quire   at   628 


THREE       ROOMS. 
West  First   street. 


IN- 


FOR  RENT  —  FURNISHED  FRONT 
room,  .suitable  for  two.  Call  evenings. 
409  West  Third  street. 


WANTED- 
glneer; 
Mesaba 
Minn. 


-GOOD  \\  ASHER  AND  EN- 
also  marker  and  sorter. 
Steam      laundry,      Hibbing, 


WANTED— AN  EXPERIENCED  SCAN- 
dinavian  clothing  salcKman;  must 
speak  good  English  and  have  first- 
class  references.  Write  I,  Summer- 
field.  Cloquet,  Minn. 


FOR  I:ENT— 12-ROOM  HOUSE  ON 
Park  Point.  Zenith  'phone,  1063.  Also 
3 -room  house. 


FOR    SALE — A 
chair,  cheap. 


PHYSICIAN'S      YALE 

206  Alworth  building. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN. 

DO    Yt/U   NEED   MONEY? 
Money  loaned  in   Dululh  or  Superior  to 
salaried  people  without  security;  also 
on  pianos,   furniture,  horses,  wagons, 
etc.    Business    absolutely    confidential. 
Call    and    get    our    rates    and    terms. 
Monthly    or   weekly    payments   as   de- 
sired     No   good   applicant   refused. 
WESTERN   LOAN   CO.. 
521    Manhattan    Building, 
New  'pho'.'e,  930.  Old  'phone,   1036. 


FOR  .SALE-CHICKERING  &  SO.XS 
upright  piano,  cheap  for  cash,  or  will 
take  bankable  note  for  $165,  but 
must  have  the  money.     J   100,   Herald. 


FOR  SAx.E— BIG  BUNCH  OF  $2,000, 
also  sample  to  make  one  quart  of 
rye  whisKy  by  mail  for  50  cents. 
Ernest  G.  Carlson,  Maiidan,  N.  D. 

FOR  SALE — 25-FOOT  LAUNCH,  FULL 
cabin,  drop  windows,  leather  cush- 
ions,   full    brass    fittings,    etc.;    6-h.p 


BOARD  OFFERED. 

Two   desirable   rooms   with   board  at  the 
Colonial.     16    West    Second    street. 


FOR  RENT  —  407  TWENTY -FOURTH 
avenue  west,  $20;  water,  sewer,  por- 
celain bath;  five  rooms;  hardwood 
floors  on  first  floor;  first-class  condi- 
tion.    Little  &  Nolle,  agents. 


WANTED  —  INSURANCE  MEN  TO 
handle  best  line  of  health  and  acci- 
dent policies,  costing  $1  per  month 
and  up.  Include  latest  and  most 
attractive  features.  Big  money  to  be 
made  under  good  contracts.  Call  or 
write  National  Casualty  company.  506 
Pallaolo    building.    Duluth. 


FOR   RENT— 3-R©0:.I   BASEMENT,   AT 
720  East  Third  Btr?et. 


FOR  RENT— 2  LARGE  ROOMS  FOR 
light  housekeeplnjr,  gas  and  electric 
lig-ht  and  heat.     16   West  Fifth  street. 

FOR  RENT—  FURNi^HED  ROOMS,  331 
West  Third  street. 


DULUTH  COMMANDERY  NO. 
18.     K.     T. — Stated       conclave 
first   Tuesday   of  each   month 
at  J:30  o'clock.  Next  conclave 
eld   Tuesday,   March 
Drill,   C.    E.    Peas- 
lee,    acting    E.    C;    Alfred    Le    Richeux, 
record^^*. 

SCOTTISH  RITE— REGULAR 
meetings  every  Thursday 
evening  at  7:30.  Next  meet- 
ing, March  18,  1909.  W'ork — 
Twenty-seventh  degree.  J.  B. 
Coolcy.  secretary. 


ZENITH  CHAPTER,  NO.  25, 
Order  of  Eastern  Star.  Reg- 
ular meetings  second  and 
fourth  Friday  evenings  of 
each  month.  Next  meeting, 
Friday,  .March  26,  1909.  Work, 
regular  business  and  inlaiion.  Gertrude 
Bates,  W.  M.;  Ella  F.  Gearhart,  secre- 
tary. 


FOR  RENT— VERY  J^LEASANT  FRONT 
room,  private  family.  Old  'phone, 
1111-M.     313  Third    avenue  west. 


FOR  RENT— TWO  HEATED  FITR- 
nlshed  rooms  for  Jight  housekeeping 
2609   Huron   street  


FOR  RENT— STORES  &  OFFICES. 

FOR"'R^NT^^^l>PwEsF''Dui^^ 

Central  avenue,  fine  corner  store, 
with  basement,  and  warehouse  in 
rear;  steel  ceiling,  hardwood  floors 
In  both  store  and  warehouse;  one 
of  the  best  corners  on  Central  ave- 
nue. For  rent  from  May  1.  W.  C. 
Sherwood  &  Co.,  118  Manhattan  block. 


FOR  RENT— THREE  UNFURNISHED 
rooms,  electric  light,  city  water  and 
gas.     Inquire   1821   West   First   s trcet. 

POR  RENT — ONE   DOUBLE   ROOM, 

suitable    for    light    housekeeping.    218 
"West    Superior    street. 


TIMBER  LANDS. 

SHELDON-MATHER  TIMBER 
First    National    Bank    Bidg. 


CO.      S0» 
'Phones. 

TIMBER  AND  CUT-OVER  LANDS 
bought  Mortgage  loans  made.  John 
Q.   A.  Crosby,   209  Palladio  building. 

I    buy    standing    timber; 
lands.   Geo.   Rupley.   322 


also    cut-over 
Lyceum  bldg. 


engine,     used 
nlth  6040. 


but    few     weeks.       Ze- 


DON'T  BORROW  MONEY 
'at  exorbitant  rates.  Give  us  a  trial. 
Thousands  of  satisfied  customers  our 
best  references.  We  are  an  old  and 
established  firm,  with  unlimited 
il  Therefore  we  can  loan  at  the 
LOWEST    RATES. 


FOR  SALE — FURNITURE  STOVES, 
carpets,  uraperies  and  housef urnish- 
Ing  of  every  description  at  money 
saving  prices;  cash  or  easy  payments. 
Buylia  &  Co.,  Duluth's  largest  house- 
furnishlng  concern. 


NOW 

your 


FOR  SALE-KIMBALL  PIANOS 
sold  direct  from  factory  to 
home.  No  canvassers  ,  no  agents',  no 
dealers'  profits  for  you  to  pay.  Come 
iu  on  your  own  accord  and  buy. 
Korby  I'iano  Co.,  the  Kimball  factory 
store,    201    East   superior    street. 


BOARD  O  FFERED  —  FURNISHED 
rooms,  steam  heated,  with  or  with- 
out   board.    122    East    First    street. 

BOARD  OFFERED— A  CHANCE  FOR 
two  gentlemen  to  secure  board  and 
room  In  private  family;  East  end; 
walking  distance.  Zenith  'phone 
2138-D. 


BOARD  AND  NICELY  FURNISHED 
room  In  private  family  in  East  end. 
Address   B   53.    Herald. 


Room  and  Board — 301  East  Third  street. 


Room  and  Board,  318  W.  Second  jBtreet. 

O  FF  ERED-^4  26 


WATCHES  rWaIRED. 

Guaranteed    Main    Spring.    $1.00;    watch 
cleaned.  $1.    Garon   Bros.,   213   W    1st. 


FOR  RENT— NO.  114  WEST  MICHIGAN 
street;  four-story;  25x90;  railroad 
track  at  the  rear;  elevator,  refrig- 
erators and  office  all  In.  P.  Beneteau, 
St.   Paul,  Minn.  

FOR  RENT  —  DESK  ROOM— USB  OF 
both  'phones:  $7  per  month.  A  snap. 
Inquire   1010   Torrey   building. 


PICTURE  FRAMING 

St?5^FXvnHENNECirE?"2TrE^ 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  ROOM,  218 
West  Fourth  street,  first  floor,  side 
entrance,  


FOR  RENT  —  NICELY  FURNLSHED 
five-room  flat;  w.iter  paid:  $:;!.o  per 
month.  Apply  Mrs.  Malr,.  519  First 
avenue    east. 


FOR      RENT— NIC  KEY 
comfortable     rooni     in 
lady,  all  conveniences 


FURNISHED 
f^ast  end  to 
K   87,  Herald. 


EUCLID  LODGE.  NO.  198,  A. 
F  &  A.  M. — Regular  meetings 
second  and  fourth  Wednes- 
day evenings  of  each  month 
at  7:30  o'clock.  Next  meet- 
ing, special.   March   10.   Work 

Second   degree.   Martin  J.  Murray. 

M.;    A.     Dunleavy,    secretary. 


W. 


W.    B. 

secretary 


DULUTH  CHAPTER.  NO.  69, 
n  A  M. — Meets  at  West  Du- 
luth first  and  third  Wednes- 
days of  each  month  at  <  :30 
p  "m.  Next  meeting  March  17, 
Work— Roval  Arch  degree. 
Getchell,    H.    P.;    A.    Dunleavey, 


DnA"ni 


-MEKT9 
Fellow*' 


recording   srcrciary 


IXMIGE.     NO.     28.     I.     O.     «      f  " 

every     Friday    evening    »t    Otld 

hall     18  Lake  avtime  north.   Nixt  mtetmg 

Man^h  12th.     Work— Flr»t  degrte.     v\.  H. 

KonkUr,    noble   If-""!;    >-^»i"  ."•"^"''TS' 
A.    II.    Paul,    flnanclal    stiTcUiy, 


FOR  RENT— BEAUTIFUL,  LARGE 
furnished  room,  all  conveniences; 
reasonable.      320    i^ast   Second    street. 


PIANO  TUNING. 

C.  A.  GREGORY.  ZENTrir'PHONE.  606. 


UPHOLSTERING  &  REPAIRING. 

ED.  OTT.  112  1st  Ave.  W.    Both  'phones. 


CLOTHES  CLEANED  &  PRESSED 

Suits  pressed.  50c:  pants,  15c.  Ladles' 
skirts  cleaned  and  pressed,  50c.  Zen, 
1852-X.     J.   Oreckovsky,   10  4th  ave.   W. 

Fine  ladies*  tailoring  a  specialty.  Bring 
your  alterations  and  relining  coats 
before  the  rush.  Mueller,  208  West 
First  street. 


BOARD    AND 
Kasi   Third 


ROOM 

street. 


PATENTS, 


capital 


—SALARY    AND    CHATTEL    LOANS— 

DULUTH    FINANCE    CO. 
801  Palladio  Bldg. Both   'phones. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  PIANOS.  FUR- 
nlture,  liorses,  wagons  and  fixtures 
at  low  lates  and  on  small  payments. 
A  liberal  disccunt  if  paid  beloie  due, 
business  confidential. 

YOU    CAN    GET    IT    TODAY. 

Security    Mortgage    Loan   Company. 

401     FlltsT    NATIONAL    BANK    BLDG. 

Zenith  'ph^ne,  612. 


FOR  S.NX,E  — ADDRESSOGRAPHING 
machine,  cheap.  'It  can  be  seen  at 
Bayha  &  Cos. 


FOR  SALE— SAFES  AND  VAULTS 
opened,  combinations  changed;  fire 
and  burglar  proof  safes,  vault  doors, 
sately  deposit  boxes  and  bank  vaults. 
Christie  Litho^aph  &  I'rinting  Co., 
Northwestern  agents.  Herring,  Hall, 
Marvin  Safe  company,  manufacturers 
of  the   original  Hall  safes. 


PATENTS  —  ALL 
See  Stevens,   610 


ABOUT 
Sellwood 


PATE.NTS. 
building. 


ARCHITECTS. 

Ol.sen   &   Magney.   513-14    Sellwood   Bldg. 
FRANK  L.  YOUNG  &  CO.  201  Pal.  Bldg 


TENTS  AND  AWNINGS. 

poiiaEir'&''car"ro8'^Er^upe^ 


MONEY     TO     LOAN     ON     DIAMONDS, 
watches,     furs,     rifles,     etc.,     and    all 

£oods  of  value.  $1  to  $1,500.  Keystone 
oan  &  Mercantile  Co.,  16  W.  Sup. 


St. 


Money  suppUed  to  salaried  people  and 
others,  upon  their  own  names,  with- 
out security.  Easy  payments.  Offices 
in   66  cities.     Tolman's.   509   Palladio. 


Furniture  and  salaried  loans  by  Unlqji 
Loan  company.  303  PalladlQ  biiu.irng. 


FOR      SALE    —    ONE      OAK       PIANO, 
splendid    tone,    fine    action.      This    In- 
Blrument  Is  a  big  snap  for  the  lucky 
er.     Price  only  $175;  $10  cash  and 
a  month.     French  &  Bassett. 


buyi 
|3  0 


For  Sale — Typewriters,  safes,  casn  reg- 
isters, cabinets.  Edmont,  116  W.  Sup. 


MONEY    TO      LOAN — 
from  $500   to  $5,000. 
estate.      No    delay. 
306  Burrows  building. 


-ANY  AMOUNT 
on  Improved  real 
J.    B.    Greenfield. 


FOR  SALE — 20-ft.  launch,  5-h.p.  Doman 
engine.   1908   model.     A.   44,   Herald. 

FOR  s]\LE  —  WOOD  AND  IRON 
working  machinery;  sawmills,  edg- 
ers,  lathmllls,  saw  tables,  surfacers, 
sharpers.  Northern  Machinery  com- 
pany, Minneapolis. 


LIQUOR  HABIT   CURED. 

Prof.  J.  B.  Fissette,  Ant)-Liquor  Cure; 
guarantees  to  cure  the  worst  habit- 
ual drunkard  In  2  weeks,  or  money 
refunded.  No  danger  to  health.  In- 
vestigate. Testimonials,  advice  free. 
Call  or  write  815  West  Superior  St. 


M0N1:Y  LOANE*b  ON  PERSONAL 
PROPERTY.  Mlnnesoto  Loan  com- 
pany.  20  5   Palladio    building. 

MONEY  TO  LOAij-^LOANS  MADE  ON 
farms  and  timber  claims.  Guaranty 
Farm   Land  <ro.,   416   Lyceum. 


CUTTING    &    SEWING    SCHOOL. 


SHEET   METAL   WORKS. 

Roofing,  guttering,  eave  troughs,  con- 
ductor pipes  a  specialty.  H.  Popkin, 
29   Fifth  avenue   west.  Zenith  2062-D. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITAL. 

prTv^ate^'TiospTtal^^^ 

mothers  will  find  a  pleasant  home 
during  confinement  at  the  Ashland 
Maternity  Home,  with  best  of  doc- 
tors; confidential;  may  board  or 
adopt  Infants.  Mrs.  K.  Hess,  923 
Second    avenue    east.    Ashland,     Wis. 


Nothing  Succeeds 
like  Success" 

IT  IS  SO  TRUE   THAT 

IT  HARDLY   NEEDS  PROOF 

ON  ANY  SUBJECT. 


Pupils     enter 
Third    floor 


any      time — Miss 
Gray- Tallant    Co. 


Cray, 


WANTED  TO  RENT. 

1VANTED  TO  RENT— MODERN  4  OR  5- 
room  cottage.  East  end  or  Lakeside; 
reasonable  rent.     Call  Zenith.  2166-D. 


CARPET  CLEANING. 

INTEKSTATE  CAnpKT''^''CLiKAm^ 
Co.,  Slnotte  &  Van  Norman.  Com- 
pressed air  cleaner:?  and  rug  weavers. 
Both    'phones.      1701-03    W.    Mich.    St. 


MRS.  HANSON,  GRADUATE  MID- 
wlfe;  female  complaints,  413  Seventh 
avenue  east.  Old  'phone,  1594; 
Zenith.   1225. 

before  and 
expert  care; 
infants  rired 
284  Harrison 


Private    home    for   ladies 
during     confinement; 
everything  confidential; 
for.     Ida  Pearson,  M.  D., 
avenue,  St.  Paul. 


Mrs.  H.  Olson,  graduate  midwife;  pri- 
vate hospital.  329  N.  B8th  Av.  W.  Zen. 
3173. 


BOARD  WANTED. 

BOARD  AND  ROO.M  WANTeT)— LADY 
desires  furnished  or  unfurnLshed 
room,  with  board.  Address  B  300. 
Herald. 


HOSPITAL  FOR  LADIES  DURING 
confinement.  Mrs.  W.  K.  Cody,  508 
East  Lake  street,  Minneapolis. 


Tbe  Herald  ivant  ads  have  been  so  suc- 
cessful In  getting  tlie  best  results,  that  It 
Is  only  natural  to  see  them  constantly 
forging  ahead.  Look  at  the  figures  of  The 
Saturday  Herald. 

BUSINESS    CHANCES 127 

HELP  WAHTED 64 

ROOMS   FOR  RENT 47 

FOR  SALE  MISCELLANEOUS 42 

REAL  ESTATE  AND  FARMS 31 

FLATS  AND  HOUSES  FOR  RENT 24 

PERSONAL    16 

WANTED    MISCELLANEOUS 12 

SITUATIONS  WANTED 10 

STORES  AND  OFFICES 3 

TOO  LATE  TO  CLASSIFY 6 

TOTAL  NUMBER  WANTS 382 


FOR  RENT— IN  BJARD  OF  TRADE 
building  large  room  on  Third  ave- 
nue west;  also,  se  ,eral  offices.  Apply 
Secretary.  Room  ::09. 

FOR  RENT— THOROUGHLY  MODERN 
furnished  room.  Reierences  required. 
116 i-i   West   Fourth  street. 

FOR  RENT— DESIRABLE  ROOMS.  ALL 
conveniences.  10  West  First  street, 
flat  B. 

FOR  RENT  —  THREE  ROOMS  FOR 
housekeeping;  modern.  626  W"est 
Third  street.  


¥C      O      T     Itf 
Pin.TTH  TKNT.  NO.   1.   MKKTS  KVEnY 

Wr.liit«day   iv<ning  at  MaccaUe   liall,   /c« 
West   First   street.    Visiting  memlxm   *«I- 
rorac      A.    J.    .^nde^«on.    commander 
Fast   Fourth   ?treof;   J     B.    Gellneau, 
ord  kecptr.     Office  In  hall.     Hours, 
m    to   1   p.   m.     Zenltli   'phone  sai 


601 
rec- 
10  ft. 
X. 


MODKHN   SAMAKITANa.  _     ^_ 

AU-HA  <OlNrlL  NO  1-MEKTS  AT 
Klkg-  hall  t-vtry  Tliursday  ev^tnli.g  at  8 
oflcck.  Heneflcent  degree.  flr*t  and  third 
ThurMlay;  SAn.arilan  cUgree.  second  and 
fouith  Ihursdays.  A.  Netoon  O  8^ .  l.uc» 
Piirdy.    I..    G.    S. ;    T.    A.    Call. 


M. 


fln- 
DanH 


building.   Wallace  V 
Itans   invited. 


ancial    icrll)e.    501    FlrA    National 

WeUbwik.,  scribe.     AU  Samar 


FOR      RENT  —  LyiRGE,    DESIRABLE 

furnished  room;  all  conveniences.  316 
East  Second  strei.         

SUITE  OF  TWO 
front  rooms,  suit- 
four,  or  rented 
523     West    Second 


A.   o.    r.   w. 

FIDFUTY     1.0I>r.K,     NO 

f,    MacMl^e   lull.    224    West    Fli^t    strt«t, 

t\i:T\     Thursday     at    8    p.     m 

nu.n;b<-r,      v,elr<.n,e.        Gust     If""'.,]*. 

W  ■   A     K.    Pi;rl"8.   re«>rder;   O.   J.    Mur- 

Toid.    finandcr.    217    &stFmhstret^__ 


105— MEETS 
:  str«et, 
VUltlDS 


FOR     RENT    —    A 
pleasant  furnlshei 
able    for    two    or 
singly;    modern, 
street. 


FOR       RENT— LARGE  FURNISHED 

front  room,  first  floor,  with  use  of 
telephone  and  bath;  suitable  for  man 
and  wife  or  two  gentlemen,  with  or 
without  board.  329  Fourth  avenue 
west.     Zenith  'phone  778. 


LOST  AND  FOUND. 


IF    YOU    LOSE    AHYTHING— Advertise    It 

here.  It  will  It-  retur  led  to  you  If  an  honest 
reison  finds  It.  Hciiiarkable  reroverUs  ar« 
brcught  about  tvery  d  ly   through  this  column. 

ANVTHING  bring  It  to  Ibi 


IF 


YOU    FIND 

HERALD 


OFFICE. 


L 


Get    a    claim    chceli.      Have    It    advertised. 
Keclaloi  11  If  the  o«wr  does  not. 

THE  LAW— "Every  person  who  shall  Hnd 
lost  pnperty  under  cl n-umstances  which  gave 
blm  knowledge  or  mei  ns  of  inquiry  as  to  the 
true  ovrner.  who  ghall  appropriiUe  such  prop- 
erty to  his  own  use.  ir  to  the  use  of  another 
peRon  not  entitled  hereto,  vtllhout  having 
flrst  made  reasonable  effort  to  find  lUe  owner 
and  restore  the  prorerty  to  him,  shall  be 
guilty  of  larceny"— Section  5088, 
Laws.    Minnesota.   1905. 


.  W, 
Lake 
at 


DVLVTH  LOIXJE    NO.   10.   A.  O    t 
-Meets    at    Odd    Fellovrs     hall.     18 
avenue    n.rth    every    Tuesday    ♦''•''"'"8    , 
S     o'clock.       Visiting     brotlkors     welcome. 
Nurman  Johnson,  master  workra.-in; 
ioote.  reetrder;  T.  J-  St.  Germain, 
cUr    121  Flist  avenue  ntst^ 


H.    O. 

fiuaa- 


I.     O.     F. 
COVRT   ( OMMEltCE.    NO.    3283. 
pendant    order    of    Foresters,    "'•^•»s,  «"» 

at     Uowleys     hall,     .No.     112     West     Flrtt 
street.        -Next     regular     meeting 
Miirch  19th.  C.   A.  CarUon,  C.  «. 
Hoope.',    H.   8. 


INPE- 


Frlday. 
W.;  W. 


West   Tlilrd 


rMTEP  OKnEIl  OF  FORESTEItS— 
North  sur,  No.  49,  mPEta  every  second 
and  fourth  Mondays  at  l".  O.  F.  haU, 
•(■mer  Fourth  avenue  west  and  First 
.tnet  -M.  E.  Ualn,  C.  U..  2  Osborne 
block;  E.  M.  Stewart,  seen  tan.  222  TUrd 
avenue  vveM :  H.  II.  Young,  Ueusurer,  63i 
street;   1732- K.  old   •phone. 


TMTED     OUDER     OF      FOUESTER.S— 

Court  Eastern  Star,  No.  86.  meeto- 
rver\  first  and  Uilnl  Tuesdays  at  L.  O. 
K  hall  ce.rntr  Fourth  avenue  west  and 
FJr^t  street.  A.  L.  Fc«ter.  C.  K.,  lOT 
ICiat  Nlntli  street:  «;.  E.  Paul,  secreiarr. 
3  West  ."Superior  street;  Harry  Mllnes, 
Iloom    23,    Wiuihrcp    block;    Zenith     phonu- 


M.     W      A. 

IMriCKIAL    «AMP    NO. 

at  .-^telnway  hall.  Fourth 
First  strtet.  second  and 
of  e.-ich   nvmUi. 

F     F..    Porenius.    conBUl. 

C     V     Earl,    clerk.    Box 


2206  - 
avenue 
tburtli 


411. 


kevUed       11 


FOUND— LADIES'  GOLD  WATCH. 
Owner  can  have  same  by  identifying 
and  paying  charges.  1018  East  Sixth 
street. 


LOST— GOLD  DIAMOND  SET  LOCKET. 
Monogram  "E.  H.  P.'  on  one  side 
and  babv  picture  inside.  Receive  re- 
ward   at'  502    Boird   of    Trade^ 


MRS.    ANNA    RONGE — Graduated    mid- 
wife.  2018  W.  Sup.  St.  'Phone  1894-D, 


Mrs.     J.     C. 
Wife.  634 


Haglund, 
N.  5tith  Av, 


graduated    mld- 
W.  Zen.  3147-D, 


"NOTHING  SUCCEEDS 
LIKE  SUCCESS" 


FOUND— GOLD  WATCH.  ON  SL- 
perior  street.  Owner  can  have  same  by 
calling  at  230  West  Sixth   .street. 


DRESSMAKING. 

ITliESSMAKlNG— itELIABLE'^DRE.SS- 
maker  and  ladles'  tailor,  with  ten 
years'  expei  ienci'  in  Twin  Cities,  will 
make  suits,  skins  and  waists  at  rea- 
sonable prices.  All  work  gu^-an- 
teed.  331  West  Third  street.  Zenith, 
1602-A. 

MISS  VICTORIA  3A.TEWSKI,  DRESS- 
making.   817   First  avenue  east. 


MEETS 

west  and 
Tuesdays 


.Sparks. 


NOlfni   STAU   LOLKJE  NO.    5,   K.    of   P. 

— Miiets  tvtr>-  Tue-sday  night  at  Hks' 
liail.  118  West  Superior  street.  Next 
rneollng.  Tuisd.ty  evciOng,  March  16. 
W.rk-Uank  ol  Page.  Vlfltlng  Knights 
welcome.  Louis  Uworshak,  C.  C. ;  L.  L. 
e.f   U.    and    S.  ^ 


CLAN 

Meets 
month, 
perior 
cldef; 


STEWART.  NO.  50.  O.  S.  C  — 
rir^t  and  third  Wedne«dayi  eacb 
8  p.  m..  Folz  hall,  116  We«t  Su- 
etrwt.  Alexander  G.  McICnlght. 
Uon    McLonnan.    »e-crctary:      Johrs 


r^ 


! 


(MWaUMa 


\ 


t 


Buinett,    flnancial    secretary,      413      First 
National    U.ink    building.       Next    rcgula» 
meeUng  March  17,  lOOU.     Dancing  Jrom  9  to  12  p.  m. 


MRS.    J. 
street. 


R.    SLOAN. 
Old  'phone 


119    WEST    FIRST 
2137-L;  Zen.  2f)S3-D. 


FANCY 
oring 


DRESSMAKING 

515    East   Fourth 


AND 
street, 


TAIL- 


DRESSMAKING — GOOD  DRESSMAKER 
can    be  secured   hy  1717-L 


ROYAL   LEAGUE.  „,.,.., 

ZFNITH  COINCIL.  NO.  161.  ROY.Ui 
Li-agut-  Meets  In  I-3ks'  hall  first  and 
third  Monday  evenings  at  8  o  cl.ck.  u. 
L.  Harcraves.  s<rll)e.  care 
Shoe  company:  W-  ^^ 
care   of    Marshall -Wellt. 


of    Northern 
Booth,     arcbon. 


VVOOI>MKN  OK  THE  WORLD. 
ZENITH  CITY  CAMP.  NO.  5.— MEET8- 
every  »e<ond  and  fourth  Wednesday*  at 
the  old  Masonic  temple,  fifth  flo.r.  John 
Hauseii  C.  C. ;  A.  .M.  Holmes.  Iwnker. 
720  West  Fifth  streiet.  flat  r.;  Robert 
Forsyth,    clerk.    81T    East    Second    strwt. 

ZENITH  CITY  TENT.  NO.  1044. 
Knights  cf  the  Modem  Macealiees.  meeU 
every  seconil  and  fourUi  Friday  evenings 
of  each  mi  nth  In  Maccabte  hall.  224 
We-t  First  street.  U.  M.  Itlker.  coia- 
mander;  C  H.  Loomls,  It.  K..  Iu3u  West 
Zenith    'plione    2243-Y. 


4. 


M. 


MILLINERY, 

A.  COX.  330  e:ast  fourtiTst. 


MRS.  BRANDT.  114  WEST  FOURTH  ST. 


tary, 


ROYAL  A UC A NFM.  Duluth  Council,  No. 
1483.  meets  flrit  and  third  Friday  even- 
ing'!. Elks'  hall.  Clinton  Brooks,  sec- 
rcuiry.    401    Uurrtiws    buitiUng. 

Me-saba    Council.    No.    1943.    meets    flrst 
ami   tldrd  Wednesday   evenings.   Columbia, 
hall,    Wcbt    end.      A.    M.    Johnson.    »«Ct«*- 
Nbrtb   TwoiUetb   avenue   wetu 


'^^-'^^  — 


■■■ri  II 


i 


4 


~M   \^^ 


I 

I 


■fi9» 


, — , ^  tv  nil    ii*na  i  <  n*» 


1 


SECOND    SECTION. 


ANNUAL 
FINANCIAL  STATEMENT 

OF 

ST.  LOUIS  COUNTY,  MINNESOTA 

For  the  Year  ending  December  31st,  1908. 


SS. 


OFFICE   OF   COUNTY   AUDITOR, 
ST.  LOUIS  COUNTY,  MINNESOTA. 

Dnluth,  Minn.,  December  31st,  190S. 


To  the  Honorable  Board  of  County  Commissioners 
of  St.  Louis  County,  Minnesota : 

Gentlemen:  I  herewith  submit  a  statement  of  the  receipts  ami 
disbursements  of  this  County  during  the  year  ending  Decem- 
ber :Ust,  1908,  and  the  assets  and  liabilities  and  balances  ni  county 

funds  on  said  day. 

Yours  respectfully, 


(SEAL) 


County  Auditor. 


TABULAR  STATEMENT 

— OF— 
Receipts,  Disbursements  and  Balances. 


:  H 

■  p 

.  c 


n 

no 


m' 


"W 


c  o 

(I  P3 

Q 

3. 

n> 

3 
:  o 
•  c 
:  3 


rD  .-   — 
B  i  M 

tA    W    J) 

:      3 

<v 
:      3 


:  Dp 

.  c  » 
:  1 


P  a 

i  :? 

•  p 

.  £ 

•  -) 


State    taxes     

State    school   taxes    

Ftatf  school   Iand.s    

Inheritance    ta.v    

Hunting    Hcen.ses    

State    loan    to    School    District 

No.     9     

State    loan    to    School    District 

No.    ri   

State    loan    to   School   District 

No.   13   

State    loan    to    School    District 

No.    15    ••- 

State    loan    to    School    District 

No.    17 

State    loan    to   School    District 

No.    IS     

State    loan    to   School   District 

No.    19    :••••-••: 

State    loan    to   School    District 

No.    20    :-v: 

State    loan    to   School   District 

No.    21     ;•■••.••: 

State    loan    to   School   District 

No.    22    .-•• 

State    loan    to    School    District 

No.    23    :•••.••; 

State    loan    to   School   District 

No.     24     

State    loan    to    Scliool    District 

No.     25     

State    loan    to   School    District 

No.     26    .-•• 

State    loan    to    School    District 

No.    27     .••• 

State    loan    to    School   District 

No.    2S    

State    loan    to   School    District 

No.     2i»     

State    loan    to   School   District 

No.   30   

State   loan   to   School   District 

No.  31   V •;^: ••••/•: 

State   loan   to    School    District 

No.    32   -^•.•■•v: 

State    loan    to   School    District 

State    loan  "to'Sciiool   iSlstrict 

j^Q     34     

State    loan    to    School    District 

St'ate  "loan    to    Sciiool   District 

State  loan  to  Schiool  District 
No.  38  ;---vi^;  •■•.■■; 

State    loan    to    School    District 

State   loan  "to'Sciiool    tSistrict 

No.    40    •,  ••;^;  ••■•■•; 

.^stat*"  loan    to    School    District 

No.    43    •,-;^;-v: 

State  loan    to    School   District 

>Jq      44     

State  loan   to    School    District 

JJq    45    

.State  loan   to   School   District 

State  loan  to  School  District 
Xo     49        

State  loan  to  School  District 
No.    oO    •  •  ■  • 

State   loan    to    School   District 

State    loan   to   Scliooi   District) 

■»iJq     52    1 

St'ate   loan   to   School    District 

State    loan   to"  School    District 

No.    56    •.••;^; •:•■,■■.•) 

State   loan   to   School   District 

No.   57   •.••^;  ■;■••••; 

State   loan  to  School   District 

No.    62    •  •■ 

State   loan   to   School   District 

No.    53    : ,•■; 

State   loan   to   School   District 

No     58    

State  loan   to   School    District 

No.    r>9    

State   loan   to   School   District 

No.    64    

State  loan    to  City   of  Kly 

State      loan      to      Village      of 

Chisholm     ^, 

State      loan      to      Village      of| 

HIbhinj?     V-M-";-! 

Slate  loan  to  Town  of  htuntz 

Total    ^v' 

D<"<liiet  overdiaft  .Ian.  1,  19t»s: 
State     loan     to     School 

District    No.    45 $9.)2 

State     loan     to     School 

District    No.    48 1.09 

State  loan  to  Village  of 

Mount    Iron    58 

Dedurt  overdraft  Dec.  31,  1?08: 
State     loan     to     School 

District    No.    52 $9.95 

State     loan      to     School 

Dl.'^trlct    No.    i:3 10.38 

State     loan     to     School 

Di.-'triit    No.    fit 7.15 

St:<te  loan   to  Village  of 

Mount    Iron    58 


i$    r.0S,479.25[$ 
27tt,o06.18i 
7,421.57' 
25.140.19 
2^8.00 


508,479.251$ 
279,506.181 

7,431.751 
25.140.191 

3,012.561 


508,479.251... 

279,:k)C).1Sj.., 
7,o98.34!$ 
24,S77.94 
3.012.561... 


36,244.97  $    853,123.13!$    S5-9,6fiS.10;$    849,118.691$      40.576.89 


10.79 


10.79 


10.21 


28.06 


Total     state    funds 1$     36.234.18$    8.5:i,423.13i$    ^9.657.31$    849,108.48)$     40.54S.S3 


Coiiniy   funds:  j 

County     revenue     fund |$ 

County    poor    commission 

Countv    special    road I 

Countv   bond   intertst    fund 1. 

County  road  and  hridse  bond,! 
intere.'Jt  and   sinking  fund...! 

Municipal    railroad    aid    bond, 
interest  and   sinking   fund... 

County     court     house     sinking 
fund    

Accrued   interest    on    bonds 

Couiitv    spicial    school    fund.. 

County    courthouse    construc- 
tion   fund    

County    courthouse    bond    in- 
tere.'^t    fund    

Sundry  accounts: 

Title   assurance    fund 

Surplus    account    

Private   red*  mption    

Moitgage    tax    . .«. 

State    inebriate    hospital 

Refundments    

Judi(ial     Ditch    No.    1,    Itasca 
countv    

State    I>itch    No.    5:i 

State    Ditch    No.    .54 

State    Ditch    No.    56 


Total 


22,76189$ 
23,701.13 
9,840.85 

57.819.13 
30,212.36 

134.492.^ 

104.92 
3,.'Nrf3.21 


1.250.01 

2,461.75 

442.03 

10,250.41 


$    303,263.55 


367.?>S4.06j$ 

:K.22ft.,?3| 

ii5.rot;.29 
40.r.o 

28,.369.73 
17,650.15 

8S.262..54 

48.805.00 
115,571.85! 

633,448.87! 

10.208.76 

1,512.06 

3.v.405/'4| 

22.ir.".Vi| 

120.(»0| 

4,8'J5.01| 


7,817.^5 
14.268.01 
13.S  16.041 


1: 


390.74S.fC);$ 

.56.920. -!6! 

125,747.14 

■VJ.50 

86,188.86 

47.862.51 

222.755.37 

4S.9'''9.92 

119.435.06 

633,448.87 

10,208.76 

2,702.10 
2.461.75 

3S.S.',T.07 

38.406.91 

120.«>0i 

4.895.011 


7.?17.95 
14.2C8.01 
33,846.04 


$X,562,496.69i$l  ,805,760.24 


389.363.11'$ 

34.250.9Si| 

115,979.28 

9.45 


47,322.89 

25,072.40 

222.755.37 

36.327.50 

113.687.93 

451,364.85 

13.343L62 


15.22 

36,729.431 

124.21 

60.00 

7,881.45 

9f>8.(^ 

7,Slt.95 

14,20S.01 

13,84<5.04 


1.385.84 

22,079.48 

■9,767.86 

31.05 

38,865.97 

22,790.11 


12.642.42 
5,747.13 

3S2,0S4.02 


2,762.10 

2,446.r.3 

2^117.64 

38,281.70 

|60.C0 


$l,531,32Tk74l$    241.661.85 


a 


' 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY      MARCH     15^ 


1909. 


IM18T8RICAL 


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3 


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:  3 


:  o 


r"3 

I* 

:     a 
:  Cp 

•  c  * 
I    -I 

•  ^% 


E  p 

•"  p 

^* 

«C3 


P 

01 

e 


:  o 


^ 


Deduct  overdraft  Jan.  1,  1908:  ( 

itefundment    

Deduct  overdraft  Dec.  31.  1908 
County  courthouse 

bond    interest    $3,334.86 

Refundments     2,986.44 

Judicial    Ditch    No.    1, 
Itasca     county     908.0o 


3,987.32 


3,987.32 


3.987.32 


Total    county    and    sundry 

funds    

CITIES,     VILLAGES     AND 
TOWNS. 
CITY  OF  DUUTH: 
General    and    assessments... 

Bond   interest    

Bond    sinking    

Fire    drpartnient    

Board   of   public   works 

Water    fund    

Light    fund    

Heallli    department     

Printing    and     supplies     .... 

Pul)lic    parks    

Public    library    

Water  and  light  plant  

Permanent    improvement    .. 
Police  pension    


7,229.35 


i$   299,276.23;$1, 562,4%-. 69 


$       4,251.20 


< 


$1,801,772.92  $1,527,340.42$    334, 432.  W 


21, ."53.35  $ 

104,769.85 

73,364.10 

52,272.41 

Vi3,199.90 

45.161.35 

34,48^.20 

12,7ft6.62 

6,1.57.01 

15,718.32 

14.fi6S.53 

17.078.98 

84,471.34 

56.88 


21.563.35,$ 

109,021.05 

73,364.10 

52.272.41 

93,1  If".  91 1 

45,16l.:^.5 

34,482.2<t 

12.79C.02 

6,157.<'l 

1.5.71S.32 

14,<XB.53 

17.078.18 

S4.47l.34 

56.8;i 


21.553.35 
l(Jfn021.0ri 
69. 269.07) 
52,272.411.. 
93.199.90'.. 
45.101. S5i.. 
34,482.2.Jl.. 
12,796.62  .. 
G,  157.011.. 
15.718.32].. 
14.068.53!.. 
17.07R.98|.. 
84,471.341.. 
56.83|.. 
-I- 


4,095.08 


Total    city    of 

CITY  OF  ELA': 

General    fund    

Bond   interest   fund   

Bond    sinking    fund    

Fire   department    

Permanent     Improvement     .. 

Water   and    light    fund 

Court    and    police    fund    

Maintenance    

Assessments     

Penalty   and   interest  on  as- 
sessments     

CITY  OF   EVELETH: 

General   fund   

Bond     inttrest      

Fire    deiiartment     

I'ermanent    improvement    ... 
CITY  OF  TOWER: 

General    fund    

Assessments     

Penalty   and   interest   on  as- 
sessments      

CITY  OF   VIRGINIA: 

General    fund    

Bond    interest    

Boiid    sinking    

I'aik   fund    

Library    fund    

Maintenance    

Assessments    

Penalty   and   interest  on  as- 
sessments     

VILLAGE  OF  AURORA: 

General    fund    

Bond    sinking    

VILLAGE  OF  BIWABIK: 

General    fund    

Assessments    

I'enalty   and   interest  on  as- 
sessments     

VILLAGF:  OF  BUHL: 

General    fund    

Assessments     

I'enalty   and   interest  on   as- 
sessments      

VILLAGE    OF   CHISHOLM: 

General    fund    

Assessments     

VILLAGE    OF    FALL   LAKE: 

General    fund     

Asstssments     

Penalty   and   interest  on  as- 
sessments      

VILLAGE    OF    HIUBING: 

General     fund     

Bond    sinking     

Judgment    

Assessments     

Penalty   and   interest   on   as- 
sessments     

VILLAGE   OF   BROOKSTON: 

General     fund     

VILLAGE   OF    COSTIN: 

General     fund     

VILLAGE  OF  DULUTH: 

Bond    interest     

Bi>nd    sinking    funtl 

VILLAGE  OF  FLOOD  WOOD: 

General     fund     

Judgment     

VILLAGE     OF     IRON     JUNC- 
TION: 

General    fund    

VILLAGF:   OF    McKINLEY: 

General    fund    

VILLAGE    OF    MERIJITT: 

Judgment    

VILLAGE   OF  MESABA: 

General    fund    

VILL.XGE      OF      MOUNTAIN 
IRON: 

Genoial    fund    

Assessments    

Penalty   and   Interest  on   as- 
sessments     

VILL.\GE       OF       PROCTOR- 
KNOTT: 

General     fund     

Bond    sinking    fund 

Assessments    

Penalty   and   Interest  on  as- 

sessmeats    

VILLAGE  OF  SPARTA: 
General     fund     


Duluth $       4,S1.20$    575,150.79,$   079,401.991$   575,306.96!$       4.095.03 


2.911 
1,750.82 
1.019.44 
6,828.821 

3.24  .- 
2,473.93! 

3.66L 
121. 16K 

17.56J 

112.49; 

24.89; 
26.33| 
22.51 1 

144  68' 

13.691 

I. 

.49* 


*•••••••• 


8.876.0) 
3.8 
3.980.85 
2.978.42 
9,971.22 


4,976.84 
3.911 

785.12 

29.041 

51.209.91 1 

6,765.381 

153.731 

14,976.31 

98S.20i 
192.38 

23L52 

17.995.  .M 

410.45 

7.995. S6 

3,2»».67 

2,03S.91 

5.82 

34.277.37 

£■97.41 

24,836.-23 

7.16 

a;.201.39 
1.262.4 


J, 


398  43 
83.32 

i 

1.501 
4.765.20 


4.514.38 
53,346.94 

i 

;i96.fi6i 
16.15.- 


79.50, 

I 

311.91 1 


17,029.421 
60.00 

8.0O 

71.161.78 
5O.60 

388.11 
61.90 

24.76 

145,174.24 

21.64 

3.47 

152.66 

7<!.41 

12.96 

123.09 

•    340.5.- 
81.22 

'       22.96 



335.31 


C.24' 


134.67J 
96.691 

6.99 


Total    

Deduct  overdraft   Dec.  31.   1908: 
Village    of   Duluth    bond    in- 
terest     


Total   cities  and  villages. 


2,446.961 


903.49 

642.25 

28.30 


3,442.10 

22.  M 

621.81 

8.27 

«2.10 


8,876.00 

6.78 

5,731.67 

3.997.86 

15,800.04 

3.24 

7,450.77 

7.57 

906.28 

46.60 

51.322.40 

6,790.27 

180.06 

14,91<8.82 

1,132.88 
206.0^ 

24.01 

17.995..51 

410.45 

7,Mt5.86 

3,220.67 

2,038.91 

5.82 

34,277.37 

597.41 

24,836.23 
7.16 

24.201.39 
1,262.42 


17,029.42 
60.00 

8.00 

71,161.78 
i&.Ch 

786.54 
145.2? 

26.26 

149,939.44 

21.64 

3.47 

152.66 

78.41 

12.96 

123.09 

4.854.93 
63,428.16 

419.64 
16.15 

79.50 

C47.2? 

2,446.96 

6.24 


8,876.00  . . 

6.78  . . 

5.731.67  .. 

3,997.86  .. 

15,800.04  .. 

3.24! . . 

7,450.77  .. 

7.57|.. 

9('G.28l.. 


46.60 

51.322.40 

6,790.27 

180.06 

14,998.82 

1.132.88 

206.07 

34.01 


17.996.511. 
410.451. 
7.99.5.86! . 
3.220.671 . 
2,038.91 
5.82 
34,277.37 

697.41 

24,8.36.23 
7.16 

24.201.39 

1,262.421 


17,029.43 
60.00 

8.00 

71,161.78 

55.601 

714.13 
123;.  22 

^       12.17 

149,939.44 

a.64 

3.47 

152.66 


78.41 


1,038.16 
738.94 

34.29 


72.41 
22.00 

14.09 


6,160.15 
60,549.12' 

39a  09 
16.15 




60S.32 
2,446.96 


12.96 
123.09 

'2.879.04 
20.55 


I 


$     79.975.40  lJ0".716-52 


$     79.975.40 


on  as- 


TOWN  OF  ALBORN: 

General    fund    

Road  fund    

TOWN  OF  ALLEN: 

General    fund    

Road    fund     

TOWN  OF  ANGORA: 

General    fund    

Road   fund    

TOWN   OB'  AULT: 

General    fund    

Roatl   fund    

TOWN   OF  BIWABIK: 

General     fund     

Road    fund    

TOWN  OF   BEATTY: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    

TOWN   OF  BUYCK: 

General     fund     

Road    fun<l     

TOWN  OF  BREITUNG: 

General    fund    

Ro.nd    fund    

TOWN  OF  CANOSIA: 

General    fund    

Road    fund     , 

Bond   Interest    

Bond   sinking    

Jutlgment    

Road    .issessment    

Penalty   and   interest 

sessmenls    

TOWN   OF   CLINTON: 

General    fund    

Road    funtl    

Bond    sinking     

TOWN   OF  COTTON: 

General   fund   

Road   fund    

TOWN  OF  CULVER: 

General     fund     

Road    fund    

Road    assessments    

Penalty   and   interest   on   as- 
sessments     

TOWN  OF  1»ULUTH: 

General     fund     

Road     fund     

TOWN   OF    EMBARRASS: 

General     fund     

Itoad     fund     

Bond    interest     

TOWN  OF  FAY.NL: 

General     fund     

Itoad     fund     

TOV.'N  OF  FERN: 

General    fund    ■ 

Read    fund    

TOWN   OF   FIELD: 

Ger.eral  fund   

Road    fund    

TOWN   OF   FLOODWOOD: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    •••• 

TOWN   OF   PREDENBEHG: 

General  funtl   

Road    fund    

Jud^rments     

TOV.X  OF  FRENCH: 

General  fund  

Road    fund    

TOWN  OF  GNESEN: 

General  fu.id  

Road    fund    

TOWN   OF  GRAND    LAKE: 

General    fund    

Road     fund     

Bond    sinking    

Judgment    

Obnoxiu\i.s    weeds    

Penalty   and   interest  on   as 
sessnieiits    


8.442.10' 

22  93 

621.81 

8.27 

642.10 


1.121,691.92 


9fK8.09 
.734.61 

33.86 


8.442.10 

22.93 

521.81 


8.27 
403.40 


1,114,209.80 


79.50 
138.90 

6.24 


80.07 
4.33 


.43 


238.70 


$J.041.716.W  $1,121,691.92  $1,114,209,801$ 


7,787.34 

305.22 
7,482.12 


3.93; 
4.241 

161.38 
469.93; 

10.381 
26.94 I 

18.741 
37.50 


12.C5 
27.39 

15^.76 
653.48 

408.26 
1.010.291 

36.41! 
91.01! 
2.651 
53.97 
296.14 
30.17 

1.29 

15.25; 

96.85 


4.94 
12.38 


9.04 

2.062.44' 
1,124.97 

21.421 
46,23: 


17.2 
43.17 


312.461 


2S.56i 

n.s9 

46  471 

10.81 

.46 

M 


132.961 

133.51! 

I 

8.361 

24.241 

143.14 
518.04 

."^53. 12 
1.069.76 

1,419.35 
8,157.18 

155.07 
52.74 

2,119.83 
3,42r..89 

699.08 
1.747.16 

216.58 
784.30 

■■■■'64.'<'9| 

26.84 

483.75 

3.36 

ir,6.77 
403.:i8 

172.40 

236.77 
697.83 

ir.4.51 
233.01 
157.47 

1.78 

1.235.20"| 

3,084.081 

74.47 

138.78 

4.01 

3,612.60 
2,709.32 


373.831 
856.10 

132.36 
653.46 

■  1&2.98 
381.13 

253.08 

632.60 

4.23 

414.91 
1,194.23 

21*!.  79 
646.95 

262.47 

067.78 

434.S> 

6.16 

12.33 

.01 


136,891 
137.751 


169.741 . 
494.171. 

153..52 
643.98 

671.86 
1,107.26 

1,419.35 
8,167.18 

167.12 
80.13 

2,278.59 
4,079.3 

1,107..'?4 
2,757.45 

252.99 
875.31 
2.65 
M-8.06 
322.98 
513.92 

4.6.5 

182.02 
440.23 
172.40 

241.71 
610.21 

154.51 
233.01 
157.47 

1.78 

1.235.20 
3.0*4.08 

74.47 
147.82 

4.01 

5.675.04 
3.834. -9 

3f<5.25 
902.33 

122.36 
663.45 

17D.25 
424.30 

2.53.08 
632.60 
316.09 


414.91 
1,194.23 

218.79 
646.95 

2S1.02 

729.17 

461.12 

15.97 

12.78 

.CS 


132.10 
132.94 

4.79 
4.81 

169.74 
494.17 

153.52 
643.98 

............. 

571.86 
1,107.26 



1.419.35 
8,157.18 

167.12 
go  13 

a.27B.59 
4,079.37 



1.107.34 

2.757.451 

252.99 
875.31 
2.65 
108.06 
322.98 
613.92 

4.65 

163.30 
368.49 
138.90 

241.  n 
610.21 

154.51 

23:i.0aj 

157.47] 

1.78| 


1,235.20!... 
3,064.081 


65.01 

130.,'* 

2,84 

6,675.04 
3,!i54.29 

298.76 
663.89 


28.72 
71.74 
33.50 


102.75 
384.511 

148  45 
369.T« 

2i'a.08| . 
6.32.60  . 
316.691. 


9.46 

17.32 

1.17 


96.49 
238.44 

19  61 
268.85 

21.80 

54.52 


414.911. 
1,194.231 

218.79. 
546.961. 

2.56.84 

665.95 

421.23 

15.70 

11.30 

.07 


24.18 

63.22 

39.89 

.27 

1.48 

.01 


■ 

1 

on 


TOWN  OF  GREAT  SCOTT; 

General   fund    

Road    fund     

Bond   interest    

Bond     sinking     

TOWN    OF    HALDEN: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    

Road     assessment     

Penalty   and   interest   on  as- 

se.t-sments    

TOWN  OF  HERM.^NN: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    

TOWN   OF   INDUSTRIAL: 

General    fund    

Road   fund    

Road    assessments    

Penalty   and   interest 

sessments    

TOWN  OF  KELSEY: 

General    fund    

Road     fund     

TOWN   OF   KUGLER:. 

General    fund    

Road     fund     

TOWN  OF  LAKEWOOD: 

(Jeneral    fund    

Road    fund     

TOW.N  OF  LAVELL: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    

TOWN  OF  LEIDING: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    

TOWN    OF    MEADOWLAN'DS: 

General     fund     

Road     fund     

TOWN    OF    MESABA: 

General     fund     

Road    fund     

TOWN    OF    MISSABE    MC'UN- 
TAIN: 

General    fund    

Roatl    fund    

TOWN    OF    MORSE: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    

TOWN  OF  MOROOM: 

General    fund    

Ro.id    fund    

TOWN  OF  MIDWAY: 

General     fund    

Road    fund    

TOWN  OF  McDAVlTT: 

CJeneral   fund    

Road    fund    

TOWN    OF    NEW    INDEl^EN 
DKNCE: 

General    fund    

Itoad   fuiul    

TOWN  OF  NICHOLS: 

General    fund    

lioad     fund     

TOW.N   OF   NOUMA.VNA: 

General    fund    

Rofifl    fund    

TOWN    OF    NORTHLAND: 

General    fund 

Road    fund    

TOWN  OF   PIKE: 

(Jtneral     fund    

Rond    fund    

TOWN   OF   PRAIRIE  LAKE: 

General     fund     

Roa<l     fund     , 

TOWN   OF   RICE   LAKE: 

General    fund    

Road    fund    

Bond    Interest     

Bon<l     sinking     

TOWN  OF   StJLWAY: 

General    fund    

■    Road    fund    

TOWN   OF   STUNTZ: 

General    fund    

Road    fund     

TOWN   OF"   STURGEON: 

General    fund    

lioad   fund   

TOWN  OF  ST.   LOUIS: 

General     fund     , 

Road     fund     

TOWN  OF  WHITE: 

Gi'neial    fund    

Itoad    fund    


30.72 
62.49 




247.801 


8.571 
18.38! 

19.31 ! 

48.28; 

79.81  ■ 
199.52 


17.45 
30.08 

10.72 
36.03 


1,545.241 


7.724 
10.50 


.89 
2,593!58' 


2,476.611 
6,440.321 
493.97 
994.161 

101.55 
a.'5.84 
25.88 

.40 

309.11 1 
1,329.581 

168.06 
662.S7 
709.77 

.96 

141.16 

318.5'3i 


107.36 
25S..59! 

I 
338.921 
847.361 

296.331 
744.121 

544.641 
1, 876.701 

I 
149.411 
611.90] 

785.771 
886.82] 


2.376.871 
19.436.25] 

1.181.36 

3.0ti7.47! 

Ka.22j 
115.04] 

207.701 
Tfc3.2^ 

147. Wt 
19S.98 


1,617.17 
1,«8.11 


13.321 
28.95! 

76.r« 
165.10 

53.81 
204.69: 


3,602.05 


118.46 
119.73 

113.94 
2.57.66 

302.  r» 

917.63] 

2.59.;*  I 

82.41] 

196.83 
492.62 

4.65:>.29 
33,0a2.(» 

94.52 
43.21 


2,476.61 

6,440.  .".2 

496.07 

994.16 

132,27 
3.58.33 
215.88 


.40 

309.11 
1,329.58 

168.W 
910.67 
709. 

.96 
149.73 

nn  . 
126.67 

306.87 

418.73 
l,046.8^ 

296.33 
744.12 

544.64 
1.876.70 

16<;S6 
542.04 

796.49 
922.  a> 


2,376.87 
19.436.25 

1,507.51 
4,552.711 

108.39 
120.67 

235.66] 
861.40] 

lii4.72l 
209.48 


169.871 
16S.G7I 

1,618.06 
4,231.09 

896.91 
2,240.08 

1.56.41 
15)>.82 

118.46 
119.73 

127.26 
2W;61 

:^8.»| 

1,0*.2.T:5] 
31.'!.  791 

287.00 

196.83! 
492.621 

4.6.50. 2t*| 
3<;,0l  4.681 

r-».52i 

43.21 


2,476.61  .. 
6,440.321.. 

493.07i.. 

994.16!.. 


107.08 

207.941 

206.561 


25.19 

50.39 

9.32 

.40 


309.111. 
1,329.58|. 

168.061. 
9l0.a7{. 

709.77  . 

.961 . 

146.21 
328.53i 

U2.48 
272.46! 

418.73 
1,046.88] 


ws^- 


3.53 
8.42 

14.19 
34.U 


^lar 


" 


296.331 

744.121 

544.64 
1,876.70 

164.49 
641.13 

2.37 
.91 

7%.49 
922.85 

••••••• 

•••• 

2,376.87 
la,  436.25 



1,118.00 
3,571.15 

389.51 

981.56 

2.14: 

2.99, 


Total    town    funds $ 


6.36" 
252.381 

7.753.88 
12,4;>5.46| 


7,7ta.88 
12.495.46 


92.02 
102.47 

235.66 
861.40| 

136.60 
184.95 


1G9.87 
168.67 

854.10 
3.474.81 

896.91 
2,240.08 

132.82 
134.24 

118.461 
191.731 

127.261 
2M;.61| 

320.76 
901.04 
262.88 
280.19 

196.83 
492.62] 

4.6:.0.29 
36.371.88 

94.52 
43.211 

6..59 
253.43 

7,753.88 
12.495.46 


16.37 

18.20 


1R.12 
24.53 


763.96 

766.88 


23.59 
24.5S 


16,955.97*    159.719.031$    176,675.00,$    168.884.671$ 

1 


INDEPENDENT   SCHOOL 

DISTRICT: 

Lociil    mill    

General    fund    

Building   fund    

Interest    and    sinking    

J^tate   apportionment    

County     apportlonmen:     .... 

State    aid    

Vessel    tonnage    

SCHOOL   DLSTRICT   No     1: 

l^ocal    mill    

General    fund     , 

Building   fund    

Interest    and    sinking    , 

State   apportifinment    , 

County     apportionment     

State   aid    

.SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.  5: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

State  apportionment    

County     apportionment     ... 

State    aid    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.  6: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building   fund    

State   apportionment    

Countv     apportionment     ... 

State   aid    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO.   7: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building   fund    

Interest    an<l    sinking    

State  apportionment      

County     apportifuimeti  t     ... 
SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NC'.   8: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building   fund    

State   apportionment     

Countv     apportionmer  t     ... 
SCHOOL   DISTRICT  NO.  9: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building   fund    

State    apportionment     

County     apportionmer  t     ... 

State    aid    

SCHOOL   DLSTRICT    NO.    10: 

Local    mill    

Gejjeral    fund    

State   apportionment    

County     apportionmeiit     ... 
SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.   11: 

Local     mill     

General    fun<l     

Building    fuiul    

State    apportionment    

Countv    apportionment    ... 

Slate   aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO.    12: 

Local    mill    

Genera!    fund    

Building    fund    

State  apportionment    

Ciiunty     apportionment     .. 

State    aid    

Fines     

SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.  13: 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

Buiidin.g   fund    

Interest    and    sinking 

State    apportionment     

County    apportionment    ... 

State    aid 

SCHOOL   inSTlilOT   NO.   14: 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

Building    fund    

State    apportionment     

County    apportionmei 

State    aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   N 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

State   apportionment 

County    apportionmt 

Slate    aid    • 

SCHOOL  DISTRICT   N 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building    fund    

Interest  and   sinking 

State    apportionment 

County    apportionme 
SCHOOL    DISTRICT   N 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

Building   fund    .■-••.•• 

Interest    and    sinkln 

State    apportionment 

County    apportionme 

Slate    aid    ■■■;^--^ 

SCHOOL   DISTRICT  > 

Local    mill     

General     fund     ... 

Building    fund    

State  apportionment  .. 
County  apportionment 
Btate    aid    


68.23 

181.69 

50.91 

.81 


242.80 


1.91 
1.94 


7,790.33 


$     33,.532.261$      33,522.26i$      32,522.26 

i      266,635.17]      266.»B5.17|      266,6;i.5.171 


2,910,84 


9K,16S..5B 

83. 370. 77 [ 

52,9:«.30 

7.28S.44 

«,  400.00 

3,612.68 

172.24 

2,fs.3.46 

33.78 

101.33! 
1.425.00 

196.70 
1,095.00 

83.03 

1,079.37 

102.30 

14.06 

225.00 

179.:  . 

2,683.34 

3.  .52 

784.50 

10^.91 

1,413.00 

106.50 

1,597.00 

1.70 

1.87 

430.  .50 

59.26 

109.39 

1,627.45 
81.41 
163.10] 
21.141 

792.70 

11,792.37 

45.92 

3,:'.<i9.0kJ 

463..55 

2,190.00 

.59.021 

8X2.021 

59.00 

8.11 


63.99i 
.550.91 
177.96 
150.00' 

18.151 


214.24 

2,846.801 

755.411 

294.JOI 

40.64  ( 

275.101 


It 

0.' 

15 

It 

... 

o.' 

'i7 

3.291.191 

40.795.371 

9.8,53.97 

6.081.40 

70Ct.41 

4.)-i:i.0O 

r>7..50 

275.78 

25,71  >'.94 

27.02 

4,3t8.02 

641.50] 

130.001 

I«93.(K»i 


32.67! 

4S9.S2] 

5.431 

liil.5o; 

3X^9j 

30S.(.»0' 


nt 
O. 

18 

<•• 

>  >  • 

nt 

.. 

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iii 

15.59 

2.r..4<» 

107.. 50 
13.01 


24.13 
361.;  S, 

222.28 : 

i.;«, 

lOC.OO 
12.10, 


1 

136.00] 

1,C.1.33; 

224.801 

31.0i; 

28a  «1 


34.53 

489.07 
9.38i 


SS.90 
1,288.06 

7?.42i 
133.91] 
18S.40i 

36.09! 

5  JO.  25 1 

1.V  021.501 

2,<;!3.61 

2,.^i7.32i 

i,;i?>.9f»; 

272.16' 
2..'.20.<.'0 

320..56 
4.7t?t.92 
194.04 
S22.?f» 
113.32 
460.0C< 


9S,1G^.51 

8:!.;r.o.77 

62.9:!3.30 
7,2.vs.44 
6,400.00 
6.523.52 

172.24 

2,583.45 

.33.78 

101 .:« 
1,425.01) 

196.701 
1,095.00; 

I 
83.03] 

1,079.:17! 

1O2.30I 

14.061 

225.C»0i 

179.57 

2,683.34 

3.52 

784.50 

107.91 

1.413.00 

106.50 

1,597.00 

1.70 

1.S7 

43(»..50 

59.26 

109.39 

1,627.45 

81.41i 

153. 10| 

21.14] 

1 

792.70] 

11,792.37! 

45.92, 

3,:{t".9.t!<> 

463..". 

2,190.00 


•   .59.02. 

8S2.021 

r.9.ooi 

8.11 

278.231 
3,n97.71! 
933.37 
414.&0I 
5S.79I 
275.001 

3.291.191 

40.7'.!5.37! 

9,S53.97| 

5,081.  •^■>  I 

700.41  j 

4,813.101 

57..50I 

27.5. 7« 

25.718.94 

27.<t2 

4,3.'*.02] 

941.50; 

130.091 

993.00 

32.67( 

489.82] 

5.431 

151.5ft: 

20.891 
308.00; 

151.59 
1.K84.73 

332.301 

44.<i2 

280.00 

110.03 
1,6.50.04 
294.70] 
135.841 
289.401 
38.19 


98,1<;s.5li 

83,3it(.77i 

52,9:«.:;o 

7,288.44  

6,400.00  

2,910.81:$       3,612.68 


172,24 

2.583.45 

33.781 

101.33! 
1.425.oo| 

]9«;.70 
1.096.00 


R3.m . 

1,079.37 
102.30|. 

14.06  . 
225.00, . 


179.57 

2,683.34 

3.52 

784.60 

107.91 

1,413.001 


106.50 

1.5;i7.00i 

1.70 

1.87 

4a:i.,5o{ 

69.26| 


109.39 
1,627.451 
81.41 
1.53.1(^ 
21.14! 


607.1 
9,013.341 
34.36 
3,369.<X> 

*^..55 
1,150.00 


•59.02 

l!«2.02i 

59.(»; 

8.111 

213.07 
2..'»2.(«j 
063..50 
264.00 
.33.4;] 
170.00 

3.291.19 

40.795.371 

9,853.971 

5,081.40' 

700.41 

4.813.(;0| 

67.5DI 


185..T3 

2.779.03 

11.56 


1,040.00 


66.16 
,0f>5.f5 
269.  S7 
]S0.;<0 

25.36 
105.00 


275.781. 

2.^,718.941. 

27.021 . 

4.358.021. 

Mi.r^i. 

1.^.091 . 
993.0tti . 


I 


32.67 

4^9.  ^•2, 

5.«! 

151.5.)! 

20.K>i 

306.001 


r.4<t.25l 

20.^21. VM 

2. 19:5. «1  ■ 

2,:i"7.:j:i 

1, 972.90! 

272.1G; 
2,.^i:0.Wl 

3.55.091 
6, 2.5''.  99! 
2113.421 
822  2C«! 
113.32! 
40ti,CO 


13.8.47 

1,726.61] 

l.'^5.20! 

23.r6i 

70.001 

11-0  C3!.. 

1 ,6.VJ.04| . 

294.701. 

135.84'. 

289.40  . 

38.19,. 

I 

540.25:'. 

20,021  ..501 . 

2,49r{61  . 

2.3fi7.32' . 

1,972.911. 

272.16,. 

2,520.00^. 

3.5.^.091. 

5,258.99] . 

21-3  421. 

822.20'. 
113.321. 
4<»).00| . 


13.12 

1>.lJ 

143.10 

'JO.OtJ 

2l0.tO 


in 


3  — 
•    » 

.  .* 


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a 


:  tSJ 
.  a, 

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:  » -« 
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:  o 
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:  3 


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23: 


24: 


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29: 


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31: 


32: 


33: 


34: 


35; 


SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO.   20 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Interest  and  sinking  .... 
State  apportionment  .... 
County    api)ortlonment    .. 

State    aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO.    21 

Local    mill    

General     fund      

RuiliJing     fund     

State    apportionment  ' 

County    apportionment    .. 

State    aid    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO.   22 

Local    mill     

General    fund    

liuiMing    fund    

Intore.st    and    sinking 

State    apportionment     — 

County    apportionment    .. 

Slate    aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local   mill    

General    funj    

Building    fund    

Intere.^t    and    sinking    . 

State    apportionment     . 

County    apportionment 
SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

Building    fund     

Interest    and    .sinking.. 

State    apportionment     . 

County    apporiionnient 

State    aid    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO. 

Local     mill     

Getuial    fund    

BuiMing     fund     

St  lie   apportionment    .. 

L'    'I'lty    apportionment 

;<■  ite    aid    

SCHOOL   DlSTiaCT  NO. 

Loc.Tl    mill    

General      fund      

Building    finul    

State  apportionment    .. 

County    apportionment 

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO. 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

BuiMing    fund    

State  apportionment    .. 

County    apportionment 

State    aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT  NO. 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

State  apportionment    .. 

County    apportionmejit 

State    aid    

SCHOOL    DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill     

Geneial   fund   

Building    fund    

Siate    ai>poriionmeut     . 

County    apportionment 

State    aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local     mill     

General     fund     

Interest    and   sinking    . 

State     apportionment 

Countv    apportionment 

State    aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT  NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

State    apportionment     . 

County    apportionment 

State    aid    

SCHOOL  DLSTRICT  NO. 

Local    mill    ." 

General    fund    

Building     fund     

State    apportionment     . 
County    apportionment 

State    aid    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO. 

Local     mill     

General     fund     

Building    fund     

Stat.-    apportionment    . 
County    apportionment 

Siati'    aid     , 

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local     mill     

General  fund   

Interest    and   sinking.. 
State    apportionment 
County    apportionment 

Stat"     aid     , 

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill 

General     fund 

Building     fund     

State    apportionment 
Countv    apportionment 

State     aid     

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fun.j     

State   apportionment    

Countv    apportionment    .. 
SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO.  37 

Local     mill     

General     fund     

Building     fund     

Slate    apportionnjent     

Countv    apportionment 
SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill     

General     fund     

Building    fund     

Interest  and  sinking... 
Stale  apportionment  . 
County    apportionment 

State     aid     

SCHOOL   DISTRICT    NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

Building     fund     

Interest  and  sinking. 
State  apportionment  . 
Countv  apportiotiment 

State  "  aid      

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

Building    fund     

Interest   and   sinking.., 
State    apportionment 
County    apportionment 

State     aid     

SCHOOL   DISTiilCT  NO. 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

Building     fund     

State    apportionment    

Countv    apportionment    .. 
SCHOOL   DLSTRICT   NO.   42 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

Building     fund     

State    apportionment     

Countv    apportionment 
SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fund 

Building     fund     

State    apportionment 
County    apportionment 

State     aid     

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO. 

Local     mill     

General    fund     

BuiMing    fun<l     

State    apportionment    . 
County    apportionment 

State     aid     

SCHOOL    DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

Building     fund     

State    apportionment    . 
Countv    apportionment 

State     aid     

SCHOOL    DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill    

Geneial    fund    

Building    fund    

.  State  apportionment  . 
.  Countv  apportionment 
SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building    fund    

State    apporiionnient     . 

Countv    ai)portionment 

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO. 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Stale    apportionment 
County    apportionment 
SCHOOL   DISTRICT  NO. 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

State    apportionment     

Countv    apportionment    .. 

State     aid     

SCHOOL   DISTRICT  NO.   5<) 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building     fund     

State    apportionment     

County     apportionment 

State  aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT   NO.  Gl 

Local    mill     

General     fund     

Building    fund    

State  apportionment  — 
County  apportionment  .. 
State  aid    • 


946.751 

"72!  50'. 
8.77, 


8.SW.02 

9.420.71 

.40 

Wl.SO 

120.6«) 


2.'>.'>7.'56 
3.;;29.61 
1.7Sr..T0 
6.872.52 


.70 

10.45 

2.79 

1.74 

115.00 

13.91 

l.fi15.79 
6,!>47.21 


797.."0 
!)«!;.19 


9.34 

100.39 

13.49 

I 

I 

5.  Go 
4.4.S 

20.55 

15tJ0 

l.Sl 

•.'77. S5 
8,ii8.72 


809.981 
1,1S7.51| 
131.061 
157.70 
21.7Si 
203.001 

4flS.57 

UV,572.18| 

.731 

1.092.90 

15»).T7 

1.490.00 

5.545.97 
7S.til2.»3 

2S.04! 

15.7^i'>.t>4| 

0.797.tH)| 

9;;g.s2; 
•v:«o.»joi 


4M 

62  lt5 

17.10 

137.50 

16.tM 

; 

i 

21.42 
321.  H3 

"1^7!  50 
22.69 


fi4.5"< 
9*<.43 

13.*>4 

25.34] 
273.701 

37.S3! 

2G3.70 

19.yt»9.S7 

9,7!<9.S9l 

1.12 

l.tWl.SOi 

229.2t;i 

•2,2%.00| 


n4..>s 

l,P<v_'.o:i, 

17t;.99i 

2.'^.  a*! 

35.:J3| 

SOO.'Wj 

51.131 
496.t»i 
19^.991 

3S.40i 


20.G25.tK 
39.G2S.:^i 

i-...is; 

G.<'.J>!.9<)i 

91.\tiS 

o.lStt.tJOi 

4t>.59 
«»9.t» 
128.70 

17.03 

sos.oo; 

ft7.G0 

1.424.<i9l 

K9S.34 

2S2.70i 

3A>.00, 

I 

w.ss; 

1,.242.S7. 
30.141 

3:<j.io 

4S.G3i 
514.00; 


379.93 
2,134.26 
131.06 
2;!0.20 
30.55 
206.00 

8.959.59^ 

19.992.89] 

1.131 

1.934.701 

277. :{7 

1.490.<W 

8.103.63 

81.942.24 
1.S13.74 

21.633.161 

6,797.90) 

9«f..S2l 

3.»yj.*J0 

«3.-28 

97S.,S8 

15.S3 

27.081 

3XS.70 

51.74 


1 

l.S79.49| 

26.S.'.7.t».S; 

9.789. >^| 

1.121 

2.469.301 

325.751 

2.2«5.C0| 

1.-^.92 
2  i>>2.42 
1W.48 
256.20 
35.33 
360.001 


86.03: 

326.16' 

63.60' 

67.50 

8.17; 


4.31 

43.  SI 

.96 

ii.50 

9.3.S 


7.41 
44.46 


36: 


38: 


138.77 

9.40 

32.ryJ 

3.?3 

2.69 
39.45 


39: 


4>): 


7.74 

56.04 

1.01 

9.07, 


4.071.30 
19,135.10 

814.26 
2.035.64 
2,612.5<7 

316.09 


41: 


43: 


44: 


45:      I 


46: 


47: 


48: 


10.93 

128.76 

2.26 

10O.ro 
12.10 

13.70 

107.33 

73.27 

8*).  00 

9.68! 

I 

I 

I 


10.13 
76.59 

4.S1 
37.50' 

4.54; 


17.19 

58.20 

9.3') 


49: 


6.02 
79.59 


45.00 
5.44 


71.241 

1,«62.0: 

322.30] 

44.:33! 

391.001 


45<).70! 
1.672.06. 
S21.rtl 
II8.8O; 
16.34 
275.00! 

TB.SO] 

1,077.34; 

.46. 

131.8CI 

18.11 

308.00 

21 3. 24 1 

1,33.S.331 

2.91 

81.40 

11.26 

lt)6.00 

3.638.s;i 
7,269.32j 
1,777.96 
797.50 
n'>.01 
l,2i>J.')0 

202.51 
15.58 
78.70 
10.88 

50.27 

752.53 

4.71 

432.40 

59.52 


26.'<.69 

2  222. 7K' 

L453!S4; 

■45, 

151  ..50. 

20.*s9. 

293.i» 


1.70 
22.10 


34.95 

139.80 

"*32*.56 

3.93 

I 

1.13 
14.63 

30.00 
3.63 

1.33 

8.92 

32.50 

3.931 


965.89; 

40.M1.S8; 

l.->,0«>4.54 

3.')2S.40! 

4.f'69.0«J' 

6.84.421 

3.550.WJ 

6G«t29' 

38.687.371 

12.0t>5.4O 

9,>i5.2.321 

2,7.'>8.70, 

3S0.64I 

3.360.«)j 

1.29.171 

1.763.62! 

57.37 

1S6.70I 
25.71 

139.7H; 

l,^6il.<J0; 

1,245.23! 

206.60! 

28.59i 

I 

102.421 

1,.'V36.26| 

986.691 

3.58.70! 

49.. ".01 

625.(J0 

51.731 
630.27 

66.30 

9.11 
40.00 

262.93 

1,158.891 

367.04; 

175.10; 

24.(J7. 

36.93! 

455.61' 
tt0.:W: 

167.201 
23.tK 


333..511 

.065.521 

21.47 

89.50! 

12.401 

I 

23.01 

333.66 

49.80 

6.85 

8(v78 

581.24 

67.90 

9.37 

88.00 

64.07 
945.44 
6itl.97 
«8.00' 
13.67) 
8S.0O( 


56.  <^! 

5tX>.17| 

217.511 

53.40 

7.13! 

1 

21,603.511 

39.62.s.3rr| 

8,143.901 

6.648.901 

915.  SSl 

6,1>9.':K); 

I 

46.591 

699.00 

128.70 

17.831 

3C8.0«J1 

102.41! 

I,4'i7.<)4' 

#15.441 

420.20 

5.5.62 

3S0.<^) 

I 

104.25. 

1,564.03 

540.60' 

71.32' 

514.i»! 

I 

71.24, 

l.O>2.02; 

JJ2.3.>I 

44.;B 

saLWi 
I 

5.'!6.78| 

l,9y.S.22i 

>S4.61 

186.  ;w 

24.51 
275.'J0 

76.S1 

U21.15 

1.42 

2«>9.B0| 

•-'7.49 

308.00 


220. 651 
1,382.791 


.•J08.17 
1,899.06 

97.851 
127.601 

16.16 
203.00 

8,563. 7S 

9,4»4.21 

1.1 

841., SO 
126.60 

865.001 

6,89*\5l| 
61,55(;.S7| 

1,812.49' 
14,.V.5.07 

2.637.20 
353.46 

2.15«J.O0 

I 

K.28: . 

97*f.SJ4! . 

ir-.s.'?'. 

27.08; . 

3s.'<.7'>i . 

61.741. 

1,879.49'. 

26,<V7.08:. 

9,789.891 . 

1.121 . 

2.459.30  . 

325.7."»i . 

2,20d.00|. 

25..30 
274.13 
26.56 
96.90 
12.M 
360. 'JOi . 

7.T31 
16.67 
22.471 
26.401 

3.34I 

I 

12.347.i:s.Jl 

21.pi8.29l 

!t.l4ti.011 

2,644. SO 

3'.4.4s; 

2.994.001 

I 
46.59  . 

1J>.70  . 

i:.j)3' . 


71.75 
23.5.20 

38.20 
102.60 

14.39 


395.81 
10,558.6» 

"'i.Jw-iso 

150.77 
Gi5.00 

2.215.12 

20.385.  :17 

1.25 

7.078.i;9 

4,160.70 

5S:{.36 

1,4«J0,00 


2.91 


81.40i 

11.26 

106.0«^. 

I 
3.63S.S1I 

7,269.:J2; 
1,777.96 

797.50; 

110.01 
I.2OO.OOI 

341.28; 

24.981 
111.2i) 

14.81 

52.96 

791.98 

4.71 

432.40 

69.52 

276.43 

S,27S.76 

1,464.851 

.45; 

226.5i>i 

29.96i 

293.t 


1 


81.48^ 
818.581 

93.851 
100.40! 

13.81! 
225.00^ 


5.087.19; 
59,^6.98: 
15..S7S..S0 

5.*>V4.'>4; 

7.581.50, 

1,0*».51 

3,550.001 

I 

G6S.291 

38.687.37' 

12,tVw.40i 

9.t»2.32! 

2,7.:s.70| 

3S0.64! 

3,300.«»; 

140.10' 
1,892.38' 

59.631 
286.701 

37.811 

! 

15.3.48; 
1.967.33 
1...31S.49 

286.60 
38.27 

102.42 

1,536.26; 

•>    9S6.69! 

358.701 

49..-i)l 

625.001 

61. S6: 
706.86 

4.81| 

103.80! 

13.65 

4O.OOI 

280.121 
1,217.09! 
376.341 
175.10^ 
24.07! 
275.00! 

3S.6:}; 

477.71! 
30..301 

i.rr.20 

23.061 

1 

368.461 

1,205.32! 

21.47; 

122.001 

16.33 

24.14 

348.29 

79.80 

10.48 

88.11 
590.16! 
100.*)! 

13.30! 

88.001 

70.091 

1.025.031 

601.97 

144.<J0 

19.11 

88.00 

81.48 
818.68 

98.851 
HW.40 

13.81 
225.001 


102.41 
1,4S7.'M  . 
715.44  . 
42'».20  . 
55.. >2'. 
SSO.O'ii . 

84.  ns 

l,2tC>.'J3, 
22.25] 

XJo.oo' 

41.79, 

284.0'ji 

I 

71.24; . 

l,<>)2.02i. 

322.  :iO! . 

44.33  . 

391.i>J  . 

I 
53G.7S' , 
l,9ilS.22  , 
S84.611, 
186.30  , 
24.51  \ 
275.0t)| , 

72.92 

1,063.07 

1.40 

136.40 

17.27 

203.00 

201.41 

a.2S>S.79 

1.831 

24.70 

3.31 


3.638.81 
7,269.32 
1,777.96 
797.  r,()  . 

11 0.01 1. 

1,200.00! . 

204.24! 

22.76! 

57.201 

7.24 

52.9«! . 

791.981 . 

4.71! . 

432.401 . 

59.52! . 


270.14, 

2.226.091 

l,42».».56t 

.45;. 

132.001 

16.71 

83.00 

5.')37.191. 
59.946.98; . 
15.878.S0l . 

5.064.04; . 

7.581..50' . 

l.tiOt)..")!:. 

3.550. 0«)i . 

668.291, 

3s.GS7.37( . 

12.065.401 . 

i'.ffc;.82i , 

2,7^.70i, 

38<K&»i 

3,360.00 


128.6e 

1.72S.-3 

163.92 

159.30 

22.34 


49.11 
4S4.50 
195.07 

27.00 
3.79 

9.2.V3.48 

lS,520.tJl 

3.59 

4.0i.»4.1.) 

561.40 

2,195.00 


121.68 
L  616.1 9; 

59.68; 
176.00^ 

22.29! 

I 

126.461 

1,564.55 

1,049.61 

140.H0 

17.83 

ioe.42 

1,536.26; , 

9S6.69; . 

358.70' , 

49.50' , 

625.001, 

61.86' , 
706.86; 
■     4.81 

la-j-so 

13.65 
4O.OOI 

223.13' 
9:«.3S»' 

262.76 
7y.90; 
10.44 

170.00 

38.63 
477.71 

30.301 
167.20; 

23.06 


29S.10 

7.s;) 

210.60 
230.00 


3.89 

58.08 

.02 

72.90 

10.22 

105.00 

19.24 

94.*) 

1.08 

56.70 

7.95 
106.00 


137.04 

2.22 

54.00 

7.57 


C.29 
52.17 
34.29 

"94!6() 

13.25 

210.t)0 


18.42 
276.19 

15.52 

27.02 
402.78 
26S..S8 
145.80 

ao.44 


56:99 

283.71 

123.58 

e7.-20 

13.63 

106.00 


284.47 
930.47! 

4.68 
57.20 

7.24 

20.50 
298.69 

52.  SO' 
6.69 


85.95) 

575.87; 

57.20! 

7.24; 
48.00,' 

I 

70.091. 

1.02.5.03;. 

601.97  . 

I44.OOI . 

19.111. 

SS.OOI . 

75.54 

757.53' 

«6.74| 

43.70* 

6.86 

120.001 


83.99 

274.85 

16.79 

64.80 

9.09 

3.64 
54.6<) 
27.00 

3.79 

2.16 
14.29 
43.20 

6.06 
40.00 


5.94 
61.05 

7.U 
6<'..70 

7.95 
105.00 


\ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD: 


3  — 

■     3> 

-t> 


P 

C 


SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO.   52: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building    fund     

Interest    and    sinking 

State    apportionment     

County    apportionmenc    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO.   53: 

Local    mill    ......... .^ 

General    fund    ., 

Building    fund    

State   apportionment    

County    apportionment    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.   54: 

Locnl     mill     

General    fund    

Building     fund     

State    apportionment    

County  apportionment   

SCHOOL    DISTRICT    NO.    55: 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

Building    fund    

Interest   and   sinking 

Slate   apportioiuneni    

Countv    apportionment    

State  aid    

SCHOOL    DISTRICT    NO   56: 

Local    mill     

General     fund     

State    apportionment    

County    apportionment    

State  aid    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.  57: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Building    fund    

State   apportionment    

Countv    apportionment    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO.   5S: 

Local     mill     

Genera!    fund     

Building    fund    

State    apportionment     

Countv    apportionment    

SCHOOL  1>1.STR1CT  NO.   59: 

Local     mill     

General     fund     

State   apportionment   

Countv    apportionment    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.  60: 

Local     mill     

General    fund    

Building    fund    

Slate   apportionment    

County    apportionment    — 
SCHOOL   DLSTRICT  NO.   61: 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

BuiMing    fund    

State   apporti.inment    

Countv    apportionment    

SCHOOL  DISTRICT   NO.  62: 

Local    mill    

General     fund     

State   apportionment    

County    apportionment    — 

State  aid    — 

SCHOOL   DISTRICT  NO.   63: 

i.,ocal     mill     

General    fund    

BuiMing    fund    

State   apportionment    

Countv    apportionment    

SCH(?oL  DLSTRICT  NO.  64: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

BuiMing    fund    

Interest   and   sinking 

State   apportionment    

County    apportionment    — 

State  aid    

SCHOOL   DISTRICT    NO.    60: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    

Bui!<ling    fund    

State   apporttnnment    

County    apportionment    — 
SCHOOL  DISTRICT  NO.  66: 

Local    mill    

General    fund    ■ 

Building     fund     

SCHOOL   DISTFHCT  NO.   67: 

Local    mill     

General    fund    

Building     fund     

BOARD   OF    EDUCATION: 

I'norganizofi     local    mill... 

Slate   apportionment    

County    apportionment    — 

Total  school  district  funds 


5>'5 

•^-J 

H^d 

s»  ^ 

0  0 

">  or 

»?>  = 

.   -1  '^ 
0 

•i  r* 

p  _  w 

a  p 

'^^l      • 

:  ?7 

0 

s?3 
i3| 

'  3 

3 

(» 

.  (Nd 

:  0 

:  0= 

:  3 

:  Op 

:  0  -« 

.     C  M 

•  0  — 

;  1 

i.^^ 

:  0 

•    i-k 

p  p 

?p 

^^ 

03 


P 
01 

e 


2.70 


40.44' 
3.70 
3.43 

62.50 

7.56 

j 

14.84i 
222.65 


4.07. 
23.93 

1.25 
17.5<J 

2.12' 

13.79I 

206. 9tJ, 
10.64 


i  •'2 

60.00 
7.26 


1.97 
18.41 
12.27 


3.29 

23.28 

■  22.50 
2.72^ 

2.46! 

20.40 


0.57 
2S.95 
39  53 


^.S2i 

*7.83 


1  00' 

15.'H1 
10.00, 


20.08. 


751.04, 


21.73 

325.94 

202.29 

2.25 

96.10 

13.18 

89.05 

1,335.85 

635.49 

299.40 

41.37 

2.17.47 

232.06i 

20.331 

32.301 

4.43i 

CS.87 

1,032.63 

8.91 

53.04 

147.20 

2.'.2ti 

2G0.1J0 

4.5.47 
682.21 
161.401 

22.771 
1*>5."W 

42.22 
C33IT 

15.56 
209.80 

29.09 

47.77 
716.05 
162.18 

44.10 
6.08 

45.81 

034.21 

35.10 

4.92 

13S.37 

l,145.v6 

6.03 

54.00 

7.57 

478.32 

315.91 

24.30 

3.41 

1)«>.19 

2,4SS.6li 

175.:}0 

24.1SI 

4S.00| 


3..52f 

52.73, 
I 

foijij' 

9.f4! 

30.42, 
455.43! 

4.1i>i 
77.^8; 
87.N»j; 

6.:?.>l 
40.tWi 

69.121 
S>-'6.7'>i 
282.74 
241.20 

33.40 

5.85.20 
589.60 
933.56 

5.61 
W.12 

56.08 

9  ■«!•>  98 

'   97.20: 

13.69 


24.43} 

366.381 
206.99i 

5.681 

158.601 

20.741 

103.891 

1,558.501 

635.491 

299.40; 

41.371 

211.54 

i'>6.49 

2L58| 

49.70 

6.55 

82.6.) 
1,239.59; 

19.551 

53.04 
147.20 

20.26 
260.00 

47.691 
715.1>2| 
224.401 

30.031 
I'Xi.O*) 

44.19; 

661.82 

27.83 

209.80 
29.0t> 

51.06 
739.3:i 
162.18; 

66.60 

8.80 

48.27 

654.661 

35.101 

4.92, 


143.M 

1,174.S1 
45.5G| 
54.00; . 
7.57| . 

45.25! 
•TCJS.H; 
343.741 

24.301 . 
3.411. 

166.191 

2.4SS.61 ; 

I75.:}0j 

24.  IS 
4S.0O 


67.73 

10.00! 

70.2O1 

9.84 1 

30.421 

455.43! 

4.1*1; 

77.881 
37..St)l . 
5.3<), . 

40.001. 

I 

59.12| 

fS6.70| 

2S2.74I 

241.2111 

33.40! 


GOo.iSl 
5j<:t.60t 
933.56! 


24.43 

366.38 

206.99 

5.68 

158.  tJO 

20.74 

103.89 
1,568.50 
635.49  . 
299.401 . 

41.371 . 

I 

171.001 

227.931 

9.37 

30.8') 

3.90 

68.59 
1,028.31 
19.56 
40.36 
60.80 
H.lo 
50.00 

47.69 
715.t)2 
224.40 

30.031 . 

IO6.OOI . 

44.19;. 

er.i.82i . 

27.83;. 

209.S0i. 

29.091 . 

46.ml 

672..5Si 

147.05; 

39.60 

6.01 

43.9G 

5f^9.99| 


138.24 

1,127.52 

46.56 


40.82 

485.08! 
307.921 


16«j.19;. 

2,4S8.61l. 

175.301 . 

24.181 . 

4S.oo;. 

4.521 . 
67.7J!  . 
10.00; . 
70.201. 

».84{ . 

! 

27.291 

4OS.41! 

4.10: . 

69.731 


69.12 

886.701 

282.74J 

241.20; 

33.40 

605.281 
6S9.60i 
933.56 


40.54 
28.56 
12.21 
18.9-) 
2.66 

14.07 
211.28 

86.40 

12.11 

210.00 


4.45 

66.7^ 

15.13 

27.00 

3.79 

4.31 
frl.67 
35.li) 

4.92 

5.70 
47.29 

"si..)*) 

7.67 

4.43 

53.06 

35.82 

24.30 

3.41 


3.13 

47.02 

'"8.13 

37.80 

5.30 

40.00 


5.611 

84.121 

66.08 


10.034.021 
97.20' 
13.69! 


10.034.02 
97.201 . 
13.69  . 


i    91.881.37  $1.189,854.37l$1.281.735.74;$l. 179.110.941$ 


299.276.23;  1.562.496.6ft;   1.861.772.92]  1.&27.340l42|      334.432.50 


Recapitulation   of  state   funds';     36.234.18;$   858.423.13]$    889.657.3lJ$    849.108.48,$ 

Recapitulation  of  county 
funds  and  sundry  appor- 
tionments     

Recapitulation  of  cities  and 
villages    funds    •• 

Recaj)itulatlon   of  town    funds 

Recapitulation  of  school  dis- 
trict   funils    

■^'arrant    account     

Taxes  and  penalties   account. 


6.61 

84.12 
56.08 


10-A624.80 
40,548.83 


79.975.40   1,041,716.58 
16.955.97]      159.719.08 


91  .SSI. 37,  1.1S9,S54.37 
13.3t)4.64;  4.441.6,»?1.77 


1,121.691,92'  1.114.209.S*)! 
17G.675.0OI      168.8*4.67! 


1.281,735.74    1,179.110.94! 

.    4.456,046.41    4.439,438.72! 

37;007.36;  3;465.1U.4S    3.502.418.78    3.475.632.85 


7.482.12 
7.79<).33 

102.624.  SO 
15.607.69 
26.785.98 


$  574,695.09  12. 71 4.302.99i  13,288,998.0(5  12,753,725.88]$    535.272.20 

i 1 i 1 


TRIAL   BALANCE  COUNTY  AUDITOR. 
From  General  Ledger  of  County  Auditor  of  St.  Louis  County.  Minn. 
Showing  the  condition  at  the  close  of  business  on  the  31st  day  of  December.  1907. 


Count.v   treasurer 

'Warrants    account     

Taxes  and   penalties 

Current    school    fund    ■ 

County    revenue    ■ 

P.jor   fund    ,....*ii«.... 

Road   and   bridge   fund 

Redemption   fund    

School    fund    tdistricts)    

Town,   city  and    village    

State   revenue  and   school    

State    lands    and    interest    

State    loajis •>•• 

County    bonds,    interest    

Sinking     fund     

Surplus     fund     , «...- 

Refunding    

Title    assurance 

Poor    commission    •<••• 

Inheritance   tax    

Courthou.'»e    sinking    j *... 

Railroad  aid   bond   interest  sinking 

County   road   and    bridge    bond   interes 

and    sinking    

Accrued   interest  on   bonds   

Mortgage    tax    collected    

Hunting    licenses    


Total  for  Year 

1907. 


Balances. 


Debits. 


Credits. 


Debits. 


$3,292. 

2.719, 

2.527 

94 

214 

96. 

42 
861 
956. 

14 

23, 

7 

90, 


394.79!$2. 
713.56  2. 
996.66  2, 
848.58 
,047.02 

93.72 
425.94; 
416.5'.| 

B3.321 
,031.4S! 
."47. 08 1 
4S4.O0I 
995.32! 
451.54 
180.43 


9,779.911 

..-i 

30,297.98 

1.S32.48 

15.974,46 

31.05 

15,607.09 

14.241. 50( 

3.50,8.031 

2.931.94 


719.713.56  $    672,681.23 

733,07S.20' 

565.0*y3.9G; 

98,711.79 

236.811.91  

93.721 

106.266.79; 

42,858.58' 

953,4iXl.S3; 

050.9(2.85! 

336,547.08' 

14,494.18; 

60,124.76! 

7,4,51.54 

90,180.4:}! 

2.461.75;.... 

.5,792..59; 

1.250.04'.... 

53.999.111.... 

1.S52.48  .... 

150.467.29;.... 

30,243.411.... 


73,426.221 

14.406.42! 

19.75H.44! 

3,026.60 


Credits. 


3.987.321 . 


11,372.384.43|11.372.384.43;$   676,668.55 


13,364.t'»4 

37,007.30 

3,86:1.21 

22,764.S9 

"'9,840.86 

442.03 

91,867.51 

94,931.37 

io.is 

36.129.44 


2.461.75 

"  "l".'2i)0'.04 
23,701.13 

""i:i4!492!83 
30.212.36 

57,S19.13 

164.92 

16.25'3.41 

94.56 

$    576,608.55 


TRIAL  BALANCE  COUNTY  AUDITOR. 
From  General  Ledger  of  County  Auditor  of  St.  Louis  County,  Minn. 
Showing  the  condition  at  the  close  of  business  on  the  3Ist    day  of  December.  1908. 


Total  for  Year 
1908. 


Balances. 


Debits. 


Credits. 


Debits. 


Credits. 


County   treasur 


Warrants    account    ., 
Taxes   and   penalties 
Current    school    fund 
County    revenue    — 
Poor   commission 
Road   and   bridge 

Ditch    funds     

Redemption   fund    — , 

School    fund    (districts)    .. 
Town,   city   and   village    .. 

inebriate    hospital    . 

revenue  and   school 

lands    and    interest 

loan 


er '$4,974.710.92|$4.439.438.721$    535,272.201 


9,438.721 
5,632.86] 


4.439,438. 
3.41 

113,687.93! 

3S,S,3ta.11 

:..;.;;.;;:. i    34.250.981 

fund    !      115,979.28i 

36.S40.iir.| 

1   36,729.43! 

1.179.097.08; 


Stale 
State 
State 
State 


1,281,094.47 

60.00 

787,9S5.43 

7.39S.34' 

2r.,S34.21 


'-^''''%^'^:EE■^:-::::::rr^}:!"■:!^(^iifi^^^ 


4,455,046141 1 

3.502.418.78!-.. 

119.435.06;... 

390,748.95... 

56,930.46;... 

125,747.141... 

35,932.00 

38.847.07;.. . 

L281.721.88;... 

1,296,366.921... 

120.001 . . . 

787,9.8.5. 43|... 

7.431. 75|... 

66,087.38 


908.06 


15,607.69 

26,785.93 

5,747.13 

1,3.85.84 

22,679,48 

9,767.86 

2.117.154 

102,624.80 

15,272.45 

60.00 


33.41 

40,2.53.17 


County 

County    bonds,    interest    

Courthouse    bond,    interest 

Surplus     fund     

Refunding    

Title    assurance     

Special    state   aid    

Inheritance    tax    

Courthouse    sinking    

Courthouse    construction    

County    road    and    bridge    bond 

and    sinking ,••;•;••• 

Railroad  aid  bond   interest  sinking 

Accrued  interest  on   bonds   

Mortgage    tax    collected 

Hunting   licenses    


interest 


9.451 
13,.543.62 

15.22 
7,881.451 

"46.'447'.'o6l 

24,877.94 

222.7.55.37 

451.364.85 

I 

47,322.891 

25,072.40 

36.327.50 

124.21 

3,012.56 


40.50' 

10.20S.76! 

2.461.751.... 

4.S95.U1I 

2,762.10!.... 

46,447.00,.... 

25.140.19!.... 

222.755.37  .... 

633,448.87|.... 

8(j.l8S.86l..., 
47.862.51 1.... 
48,969.921.... 
38.405.91!... 
3.012.56! . . . , 


3.334.861 

I 

2.986.44 


31.06 

"2,446.53 

"2',762'.i6 

262I25 

'i83',084!02 

38,865.97 
22,790.11 
12,642.42 

38.281.70 


18,856,857.261 18.853,857.26|$1.G19,501.55!$1.G19,501.56 


ITEMIZED  ACCOUNT  OF  OUTSTANDING  WARRANTS. 

The   following   is   an    itemized   account    af    the    warrants    outstanding, 
total    of   w Well   corresponds   with   'warrant  account"  in  the  general 
ance: 


trial 


the 
bal- 


Countv    revenue    

Road   and   bridge   fund. 

Ditch     fund     

Redemption  fund    

School    fund    (districts) 

Refunding    

Hunters'   licenses   


Total 


■••••■••••• 


1.744.52 
3,712.33 

618.S5 
4.440.32 

239.05 
2,094.12 
2.758.50 


$     15,607.69 


RECEIPTS  INTO  THE  COUNTY  REVENUE  FUND. 
Taxes  for  general  purposes  collected  during  this  year 
Penalty  and  interest  on  delinquent  taxes    

Register    of    deeds'    fees 

Register  of  titles'    fees    

Clerk    of   court    fees    ..., • 

Sheriff's    fees    

Judge   of   probate's   fees    

Bank  interest 

From  state  auditor  for  wolf   bounty 

From  state  for  half  toniage  to  July  1st 

Filing    plats    't^'W    '" 

Louis  Martin  In  case  ol    Matilda  Wissner  vs.    L.   Jl 

From  administrator  of  estate  of  Chas.  H.    Merrill     

From  administrator  of  estate  of  Alcide  Richards     , 
From  J.  G.  Ross,  clerk  of  municipal  court,  city  of 

forfeited    bail— hunter   without   license.... v .,     . 

George  P.  StUlman,  case  Hirschy  vs.  Park,    M.    and    bmitn, 

money     refunded 

L.    A.    Marvin,    deputy     jounty    auditor,    garnishee     fees      in 

case  of  M.  T.  Golske  ^  s.  County  of  St.   Louis 
J.  P.  Johnson^  clerk  of  court,  money  refunded 

cate   juror   tees    order    

J    P.   Johnson,   clerk   of   court,   commission      in 

lion    proceedings.    Wisconsin    Central  Rallw.-iy 
From  C.  T.  Fairburn,  copying  paper  for  village 
From   T.   C. 

Range   17 
Froin   Town 


161.473.11 
10,341.72 


Duluth, 


for      dupli 

condemna 
ompany . . 
of    Gilbert 


mm 


Schmidt,   opying   assessment  list.  Township  66, 


of  Buvck,    copying  Crane  Lake   road   petition 

Town   of  Fredenlierg,   error  in  apportionment     

Town  of  Canosia.   surplus  in  judgment— error     

state  auditor  for  clerk  in  state  sale    ot    land 

O.     Halden,    county   auditor,   copying    sewer    assess- 
Virginia 


From 
From 
From 
From 

meiit,        _^ 

From   O.    Halden.    county   auditor,    for 

of  values  of  land  for  lt»06  and  1907  to 

gins    estate    case    

From    F.    I.   Sailer,   agtnt  for  rents   of 

courthouse    site    

From  J.  W.  Hilliard,  rent  new  courthouse 


furnishing 
slate  auditor 


abstract 
in  Hig- 


buildings    on    new 


site 


211     and     213     Fifth| 


Sales    of   buildings,    etc.,    new    courthouse  site: 
David   Mair.   dwelling    iiid   barn,   206  North      Filth 

west,     called    Caslj    residence 

Ole    Carlson,    dwelling    and    barn,    Nos. 

avenue     west.     Barker     Hats 

A.  Anderson,   barn,  MclJougall's  ground-^    

E.   H.   Lorver.    house,   DIcDougall's   grounds    

Harriet  P.  Warner,  No    129  North  Fifth  avenue  west, 

ing's    residence    

501,  503,  505  an4  507  West  Second 


avenue 


11,217.32 

3,789.82 

10,8.51.77 

4,882.98 

570.02 

9,798.48 

2.043.00 

452.52 

113.75 

50.00 

65.36 

26.21 

25.00 

61.30 

1.12 

18.20 

1385 
2.40 

3.75 

6.45 

42.831 

28.24 

6.00 

3.75 


15.75 

2.328.^ 

25.00 


$  171.819.81 


.    I 


!■■' 


150.00 


40,433.32 


J 


i 


Nos. 


J.    A.    Johnson, 

Barker   Hats    

J.   .\.   Duncan,   trees, 
John   Uno  Sebeiiius. 


M^'Dougall's  groun.ls 
si  rubbery 


O.  S.  Olson,   shrubberj    

Publishing  application  <  for  liquor 

F.    G.    Smith    for    Wm.   Corlin 

Sett    Habrich   and   Jos.    Brula    

L.    Brigg    

Edward    Thompson     

Edward    Thompson     

Schulte   &   Lomon    

J.    Barker    

Adolf    Nord,    Angora      


licenses: 


45^1.001 

15.«10| 

600.00 

Spald- 

i.im.oi) 

street. 

l.l-OO.OO 

15.00 

7.. 50 

2.00 

$             8.80 

8.80 

8.80 

4.40 

4.40 

3,345  50 


St. 


Louis  county,  proportion    of    fees 

and    congres- 


for   jidges   of   district  court 

au(iitor,    flling    fees    for    county 

ilistrict    

district 


From  state  treasurer, 
of    candidates 

sional     

From    O.    Halden,    county 

primaries,   Sept.   l."<ih    1908: 
A     H.    .Steffen,    commissioner.    Fifth    district    ... 
John    H.    MacGillavray,    representative.  Fiftieth 

Wm.    McComber.    commissioner.    Fifth    district     

Jean    W.    New,   commiifsioner,    Fifth   district    

Albert   Overton,    comir  issioner.    Fifth    district    

Darwin   E.   Stevens,   sheriff    

Sam    H.    Owens,    siierilt    

John    H.    Norton,    cour  ly   attorney 

William    J.    Bates,    sh.Miff    

Odin    HaMen,    county    auditor    

J.   A.   McCuen.   county   coroner   

J.    B.    Middlecoff.    judge    of   probate 

Charles    B.    Adams,   co  inly   attorney 

John    Sundeen,    commissioner.    Third    district    

Charles   Kauppi,   commissioner.    Fifth   district     

Lyon.^1    Ayres.    county   surveyor 

M.   C.    Palmer,    register  <jf   deeds    

S.   W    Giliiin,   superintenilent   of  scliools 

JolniR.    Randall,   representative,   Fiftieth    district    .... 

John   R.    Aleining,   slie  iff    

A.    E.    JMremmer,   judg.»   of   probate 

David    Graham,    representative.    Forty-ninth    district 
James    Butchart.    commissioner.    .Seventh     district     — 

Andrew   Miller,    reprcenlative.   Fiftieth  district     

Joseph    .\ustin,    representative,    Forty-nmth   district    .. 

W.    A.    Holgate,    coun;y    treasurer 

Alex    Eraser,    commissioner.    First    district    

O.   N.   Lundberg,   register  of   deeds 

P.    J.    Rvan.   cfunmissioner,    Seventlj    di.^trict    

Joseph   W.  Cumming.  commissioner.   Third    district    ... 

Hugh    Fawcett.    commissioner.    First    district    

John    M.    Martin,    clerl:    of   district   court 

W.    C.    Wright,    commssioner.    First   di.slrict    

J.   P.   Johnson,  clerk  cf  district  court 

Walter  B.   Butchart,   legister  of  deeds 

Richard    F.    Grant,    representative.    Fiftieth    district    . 

K:dw.    Blackwood,    sheriff    ; 

David    Nelson     commissioner/ Third   district    

El  wood  L.  Rabb.  representative.  Forty-ninth     district 

Chas.    Jessmore,    sheriff    

J.    D.    Lowe,    commissioner.    Fifth   district 

J.   G.   Mnatala.    repres  Mitative,    Forty-ninth 

R.   C.   Vincent,  commissioner.   Fir.st   district 

Margaret    Ryan,   suj)erintendent  of  schools 

J.   H.  .lern,  count.v  coroner   

A.  N.   Thompson,   cleric   of  district  court 

Oscar    Stierna.    repres.Mitative,    Forly-ninth 


8.80 
8.80 
4.40 


\ 


57.30 


36.66 


:;;;;; 


district 


district 


Anton    Borgen.    repref  entacive.    Fiftieth  district 

John   Cashln,    register   of   deeds 

Revnolds,  i epresentative.  Fiftieth  district 

Oredson,    representative.   Fiftieth    district 

Tessman,    commissioner.    First    di.strict    .. 

Larson,   sheriff    

O'Brien,   commissioner.   Third   district     


J 

C. 

E. 

O. 

J. 


W. 
A. 
A. 
G. 
J. 


from    courthouse 


Transferred 

arv  loan    

Transferred    from    co  jrthouse    construction 

temporary    loan    


sinking  fund  to  pay  tempor- 
fund 


to     pay 


Total 


10.0.1 
lO.OOi 
10.00 
10.  "Wl 

10.<»! 

lO.OOj 
I'.KOO' 

10.00; 
lo.tK): 
lo.oo; 
io.«»! 

lO.OO' 

io.<»| 

10.00! 
10.001 
10.001 
lO.OOl 

lO.OOi 

io.o«)! 

10.001 

10.00! 

lO.OOi 
10.001 

10.00! 

10.00 

10.00 

10.001 

lO.tlO! 

10.00' 

lO.OO 

10.00 

10.00 

10.00 

10.001 

10.001 

10.001 

10.00! 

10.001 

10.001 

10.001 

10.00! 

10.00! 

10. 00! 

lO.Odi 

lO.OOl 

10.00 

10.00 

10.00 

10.00 

10.00! 

lO.OOl 
10..)0! 
10.001 
10.00 


,liil   1    ■■*  ■■'»,    1^   V 


540.00 

38.898.92 

106.852.13 


$  3*37.984.06 


et  al.,  at  poor  farm 


RECEIPTS  INTO  TH  ^  COUNTY  POOR   COMMISSIONERS'    | 

FUND. 
Taxes    collected    duri  ig    this    year 
Board.   Mrs.   Krompasky 

Sale   of   four   cows    

Sale   of    hay    

Sale   of   iron    pipe    

Refunded    hospital    cliarges 

Wm.  Ray,  for  broken   glass  at  poor  farm 
Overpaid    bill    


I 


102.501 

180.00; 

28.24' 

40.S61 

7.00 

1.50 

l.'W 


1$     32,867.98 


361.40 


! 
1 
1 

i 
1 

1 
> 

4 
3 

i 
1                   \ 

1 

p 
I 

■ 

$     33.229.33 


RECEIPTS   INTO   THE   COUNTY   SPECIAL    ROAD    FU 

Taxes   collected   during   this   year... 

Liquor  license  In  Tow  n    of    St.    Louis 

Liquor  license  in  Mis.sabe    Mountain 

Liquor  license  in  Can  jsia 

Liquor  license  in  Mis.iabe    Mountain 

Liquor  license  in  Field      

Liquor  license  In  Angora     

Liquor  license  In  Leic  ing     

Li<|Uor  license  in  Gre  it    Scott    

Liquor  license  In  Meadowlands     

Liquor  license  in  Gre  it    Scott    

Liquor  license  in  Field    

Liquor  license  in  .Stunt/.     

Liquor  license  in  Industrial     

Liquor  license  in  Stuiitz     


ND. 


Error   in   warrant 


Total 


252.20! 

252.201 

247.20; 

247.'20i 

247.20 

247.20| 

247.20; 

247.20' 

247.201 

247.201 

247.20 

247.201 

247.20; 

247.20 


1$   U2.434.49 


3.470.80 
1.00 


RECEIPTS  INTO  TF  E  COUNTY   BOND  INTERE.ST     FUND 
Taxes    collected    during    this    year 


RECEIPTS   INTO   THE   COUNTY   SCHOOL    FUND. 

State   apportionment    

Penalty  and   interest    

L    J    White,  clerk  manicipal   court.  Ely 

Sadv    Murphv.    clerk    municipal    court,  Eveleth      

Bes.«ie   M     Whitely,    .-lerk   municipal   court.    Chisholm 

G    K    Trast    clerk  n  iinicipal   court,   Chisholm     

Thomas  S.   faradv,  judge   municipal   court,    Hibbing    ... 
J    P    Carey,   judge   municipal   court.   Virginia    


106,398.65 


J.  B.  Flack,  justice 
H.  J.  Milbrook,  justi 
L  V.  Keeler,  justic* 
P.  W.  Gleason,  justi 
C.  A  Altwater.  justi 
E.   F.    Barrett,   justic 

B.  C.   Prout,  justice  . 

C.  O.  Welch,  justict 
H.  H.  Salmon,  justi 
Chas.  Sundberg,  just 
G.   A.   Truman,   justi< 


)f  the  peace.  West    Duluth 
ce  of  the  peace.  M.  ICinley 
•   of   the   peace,    McKinley 
ce  of   the   peace,  McKinley 
ce   of  the  peace.   Ashawa 
e  of  the   peace,   Buhl 

)f  the  peace,  F'ayal 

of    the    peace,    Gilbert     

^e  of  the  peace,  Biwabik  . 
ice  of  the  peace.  Floodwood 
•e   of  the  peace,   Alborn    


100. ')0 
1.53.0) 
171.0*) 
60.00 
1,572.60 
811.00! 


130.001 
1.001 

80.00! 

50.00! 

36.00t 
135.001 
109.00! 

50.00 
300.00 

10.00 
5.00 


2.!J67.fiO 


895.00 


J     P.   Johnson,   clerk    of   the   district   court 
W.  J.  Bates,  sheriff  


Total 


RECEIPTS  INTO  "HE  COUNTY  ROAl>     AND     BRIDGE 
BOND   INTEREST   AND  SINKING    FUND. 

Taxes   collected  durng   this   year 

Bank   interest    

Total     


RFCFIPTS  INTO  THE  MUNICIPAL  RAILROAD  AID   BOND 
"     ^  INTEIifcST    AND    SINKING  FUND. 

Taxes   collected   durng   this   year. 

Bank    interest    


Total 


RECEIPTS   INTO  THE   COUNTY  COURTHOUSE     SINKINGl 

FUND.  ' 

Taxes   collected   during   this   year 

Transferred  into  th<    county  revenue  fund     on     account 
courthouse    constriction    


Total 


RECEIPTS  INTO  THE  COUNTY  COURTHOUSE 
STRUCTION    FUND. 
Bonds  sold  and  premium  on  same 
Transfer  from  cour i house  sinking  fund 

Total   ....•.•....»    ,..•••••..•.•••.• 


1*4 


I  633.448.87 


J 


T 


•  ». 


■ 


T-  —-  ■   i.r.  , .  ■  -  .-  «-T 


I 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD! 


PRIVATE        REDEMPTION 

A.    H.    Brown 

Zilloh    K.    Titcomb.... 

Mary    E.    I'lark 

Mary    E.    Clark 

W.    O.    Derby 

Charles      Downer 

W.    E.    Foster 

A.     Abraham 

Charles    Stal 

Werner     Pressentlne .  . 

Alfred    E.    Merrill 

W.    R.   Jan\e8 

O     P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

L.    D.   Carlson 

A.     Abraham 

O.    P.    Smith 

Charles    R.    Stal 

Charles    U.    Stal 

W     C.    Foster 

W.     C.     Foster 

O.    P.    Smith 

Irondale    l^;i<l    Co.... 

Charles     Downer 

A.     Abraham 

John  .Johnson 

Charles    U.    Stal 

G.    A.    Hvdberg 

Alfred    H.    Merrill 

Albert     Olson 

J.    H.    Brigham 

Charles  Downer 


ORDERS 


63299 

•3300 

«J306 

63307 

«330S 

C3309 

63310 

63311 

63312 

63313 

63314 

63315 

63316 

63317 

63318 

63319 

63320 

63321 

63322 

63323 

63324 

63326 

•3326 

63327 

633  2  S 

63&17 

63669 

•  3670 
63671 
63672 
63673 

•  3674 
6367r. 
63C7C 
63677 
6367S 
63679 
6  3  (ISO 
637  i:i 
63729 
63730 
63731 
63732 
63739 
63751 
63832 
63833 
63S34 
63ti35 

•  3i<36 
63S37 
•3i<3S 

«:>i<4i 

•  3842 
63843 
63844 
63868 
€38b9 
63S81 
63882 
63S>i3 
6389l> 
63V33 
6393  4 
63935 
•3936 
6393T 
63965 
63967 
63^68 
63'.'^^9 
63970 
641113 
64014 
64015 
64016 
64<'17 
64107 
64117 
64152 
64157 
64158 
641.^9 
64160 
64165 
64418 
64419 
64420 
64421 
64422 
•4423 
64435 
64436 
64437 
64440 
64441 
644,-.6 

64.'.:;o 

64531 
64532 
6453X 
64534 

•  45:^5 
64536 
64537 
64538 
64539 
64540 
64606 
64607 
64608 
64609 
64610 
64611 
64614 
64615 
64616 
64647 
646CS 
64669 
64701 
64705 
64710 
64S42 
64843 
64S44 
648  15 
64846 
65010 
•5112 

•  5113 
6B196 
6 


1^ 

G.    S. 

O.    P. 

O.     1'. 

Anna 

F.    A. 

C. 

F. 

F. 

A. 

C. 

\v 


Thos. 
W.    J. 
Thos. 
C.    D. 
Henry 
W.    J 
W.     J. 
Minnie 
W.    M. 
W.    M. 
Minnie 
Minnie 
Minnie 
T.    W. 
VV.     J. 
W.     J. 
Grace 
W.     J. 
J.    W. 
U    M 


C.    Bartholomew 

Wilshouse 

Smith 

Smiili 

D.    Smith 

HoMnson 

Th"mK<>n 

A.     Robinson 

A.     Kobin:?on 

Abraham 

C.    Barliiolomew 

O.    Derby 

Arthur     Howell 

H.     W.     Lamers 

H.     W.     Lamers 

Chas.     Downer 

Olafson 

Holmo? 

CHafson 

Rutherford 

F.    Greene 

Holmes 

Holmes 

Stewart 

Parker 

I'arker 

Stewart 

Stewart 

Stewart 

Hoopes 

Holmes 

Holmes 

D.    Buell 

Holmes 

Hunt 

Unnell ...  •  •  •■ 

Northern   Mtg.  &  Inv  Co 

\V.     J.     Holmes 

A.    Abraham     

A.   J.    McLennan    

O.    P.    Smith     

ciias.     Downer     » 

Henrv   F.   eJreene    

W.    J.    Holmes     

Chas.     Downer     

Marv  .1.  Joerns  et  al.    .. 

C.    R.    Stal     

C.    S.    Sargent    

^Y.     pressentine     

O.'  P.    Smith     

.\lfred  E.   Merrill    

W.  C.   Foster    

H.    C.    Cole    

O.     P.    Smith     

O.    P.    Smith     

Chae.     Downer     

C.   Stai    

O.    S.    .Andreson    

O.   S.   Andreson    

Chas.     Downer     

G.     Frank      

Henrv   F.   Greene    

.Tulia  Hanson   

Clias.     Downer     

I^   D.  Carlson    

O     i  .    Smith     

Thos.     Clark     

.John    Jenswold    

W.   O.    Derby    

M.    D.    C5«ate    

O     P.    Smith     

O.    P.    Smith     

Northern    Mtg.    Inv.    Co. 

O.     P.    Smith     

Werner    Pressentine    ... 
Werner    Pressentine    .  .  . 

O     1'.    Smith 

Leo    A.    Ball    

Alfred    E.    Merritt    

Charles    Downer     

W.    C.    Foster    

R.    R.    Bailey    

L.    L.    Presoi'lt    

L.    L.    Prescott     

L.    L.    Prescott     

Wm.    Bracker     

O.    P.    Smith    

W.   C.    Foster    

O.    P.    Smith     

F.    A.   Robinson    

A.    H.    Brown    

b.    p.    Smith     

O.    P.    Smith    

O.    P.    Smith    

Thomas    Clark     

Alfred    E.    Merritt    

Moses    I'errault    

W.    C.    Foster    

W.   C.    Foster    

F.   W.   Hetmick 


197   Lake  Superior  Con.  Iron 

Mints    

W.     I'ressentine     

H.    J.    Jenswold    

W.   C.   Foster    

F.  A.   Kol>inson    

G.  -V    R\dberg    

O.    P.    Smith    

O.    P.    Smith    

Backus    Brooks     

O.    P.    Smith     

Chas.     Downer     

C.   F.   West    

Grace   D.    Buell    

O.    P.    Smith     

Duluth    Banking   Co.     . . 

Gust    Rydberg     

O.    P     Smith     

Wm.    C.    Sargent    

W.  C.   Foster    

O.   S.    Andreson    

Wm.    Elder    

Wm.    Elder   

Wm.    Elder   

C.    R.    Stal     


65198 

65221 

65223 

65224 

65225 

65284 

65285 

65286 

65311 

65312 

65J13 

65314 

65315 

65316 

65317 

•  5383 

•  5384 

•  5385 
65386 
65430 
66431 
65432 
65454 

•  5455 
65456 
65457 
65458 
65462 

•  5497 
•5501 
65502 
•5503 

•  5554 
65558 

•  5559 
65575 
65576 
65577 

•  5578 
85579 
€5580 
65581 

•  5879 

•  5927 

•  5928 
65929 
65930 
65931 
65932 
65933 
65934 


O. 

O. 

O. 

O. 

W. 

(>. 

w. 


p. 
I', 
s. 
p. 

c. 
p. 

c. 


•  5934  »4  W. 
66083  W.  C. 
•6084 
•6085 
66126 
66130 
66138 
66139 
66140 
66141 
66142 
66143 
661&4 
66155 
66156 
66157 
66158 
66159 
66160 
66161 
66174 
66175 

•  6176 
66228 
66229 
66230 
66231 
66232 
66233 
66234 
•6235 
66236 
66::52 
66352 
6636L' 
66363 
66364 
66584 
66585 
•6586 
•6587 
•6588 

•  6589 
66612 
66613 


Smith 

Smith    

Andreson 

Smith    ... 

Foster  .  . 

Smith   .  . . 

Foster    . 


Martin  .T.   Hoff   

Archey   Kelley    . . . 

W.   J.   Ryan    

Anna  L.  Smith   .  . . 

O.  P.  Smith    

O.  P.  Smith    

A.   Abraham    

T.  Clark.  Jr 

Chas.    Downer    .  . . 
Alfred   E.   Merrill 

W.  C.   Foster    

C.    D.     Rutlierford 
Charles    Downer    . 
Charles    Downer 
W.    C.    Foster    . .  . . 

P.    Smith     

Mendenhall     .  . 

S.    Bell    

P.    Smith    

C.    Foster    

Charles   Iiowner    . 

O.    P.    Smitlj     

W.    C.    Fo.ster    ... 
O.    P.    Smi(l>    ..... 
Thomas    Sin.pson 

M.    Douglas     

Ann  E.  Marey  . . . 
A.  H.  Donald  .  .  . 
Charles    Downer    . 


D. 
E. 
F. 
O. 
W. 


Chas.     Downer     

Chas.    Downer     

O.     P.    Smith     

A.     Abraham     

F.    Louis   Marvin    

Farmers'     Banking     Co. 

Chas.     R.     Stai     

O.     P.    Smith     

F.  W.   Gustafson    

Chas.     Downer     

Louis     K.     Noys     

W.    M.    Prindle    &    Co... 

W.   C.   Foster    

Pine    Free    Lumber    Co. 

O.    P.    Smith     

Chas.    R.   Stal    

Clias.   R.   Stai    

Fred    A.    Robinson     .... 
C.    T.    Trobert    

G.  p-rank.   et   al 

Alfred   Merrill    

Thos.    Clark    

O.   P.  Smith   

W.  C.  Fester 

Chas   Downer    

O.  P.  Smith   

W.    O.    Derby    

O.   P.  Smitli   

:\.    Holgate 

Foster    

A.  M.  I..ang    

0.  S.  Andreson 

1.  T.    Burnside    

F.   Louis  Marvin    

Clias.    1  >owner    

F.    W.    Heimick    

Werner  Presseniine  .  . .  . 


7  59 
61  73 
12  13 

4  03 
18  50 
15  43 
22  34 

4  07 
20  96 
24  00 
55  14 

114  07 

5  25 
60  28 
41  09 

4  20 
83  72 

6  35 
6  39 
6  37 

(7  86 
20  90 

2  20 
15  92 
26  59 

9  30 
48  77 

25  91 

26  47 
24  09 
10  33 
88  47 

3  25 
72 

8  40 

98  76 

147  14 

6  76 

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O.   P.   Smith    

O.    P.    Smith    

Hugo    Sihenck     

W.    B.    Helps    

G.     W.    Stiles     

The   Star  Iron  Co 

Duluth    Baking    Co 

H.    M.    Backus    

(.'harles    R.    Stai    

Charles    Downer    

F.   A.    Robinson    

O.    P.    Smith    

H.   J.   .lenswold    

O.    P.    Smith    

F.    A.    Robinson    

A.    H.    Brown    

Alexander    .\nderson     . 

Chas.  Downer  

Marine  Natl.  Bank  of 
Duluth   


F. 

O. 

\V. 

A. 

A. 

O. 

G. 

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80 


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A.  Robinson 

P.  Smith  ... 

C.  ?'oster  . 

H.  Brown  ... 

H.  Brown  .  .  . 

1'.  Smith  ... 

Frank  

Johnson  

C.  Foster  - 

P.  Smith 


J.  D.  Mahoney  .  . 
A.  E.  Merrill  .  . 
Chas.  Downer  .  . 
<^lias.  l>owner  .. 
(^has.  Dov.ner  .  . 
O.  P.  Smilii  .  .  .  . 
A.  H.  Brown  .  .  .  . 

F.  W.  Hargraves 
().  I".  Smith  .  .  .  . 

O.  P.  Smith 

Chas.  Ji.  Stai 

I'no  Lindstrom 
I'no  l^indstrom 
O.  P.  Smith  ... 
\V.  Presseniine 
O.  P.  Sn.ith  ... 
Chas.  Downer  . 
W.  C.  Fo.ster  . 
J.  W.  Hunt  ... 
Clias.  Downer  . 

G.  Frank  

G.  Johnson 


O.  P. 
M.  L. 
A.  W. 

Chas. 
G.  S. 
O.  P. 
O.  P. 
A.  E. 
Enoch 
Chas. 
Chas. 


Smith 

H.  Steere.  .  . 

Dutton.  .  .  . 
I)owner.  .  .  . 
Willshou«e. 

Smith 

Smith 

Merrill 

Cou.sins.  . 
I)owncr.  .  . 

1  >owner . 


Cha.". 
Chas. 
Chas. 
Chas. 
Chas. 
G.  C. 
Ch.'is. 
G 


G.  L. 
F.  A. 
Gust 
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Alfred  E.  Men  ill 

Thos.  J.  Davis 

O.  P.  Smith 

O.  P.  Smith 

I'no  Lindstrom 

Chas.  H.  .<tai 

O.  P.  Smith 

D.  C.  Reid  

G.  Frank 

O.  P.  Smith 

Downer 

R.  Stal 

l)owner 

R.  Stai 

Downer 

Blackwood 

Downer 

Frank 

Alfrr-d  E.  Merrill 

W.  J.  Stcvcn.>-ou 

Dickernian 

Robinson 

A.    Hydberi? 

Smith 

Charles      liowner 

I'l'o     Lindstrom 

W.    C.    Foster 

Aiired     Merrill 

I'harles     Downev 

L>uluth    Banking   Co 

W.     presseniine 

diaries      Downer 

A.     E.    Mirrill 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.   Smitli 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.       P.    Smith 

A.    E.    Merrill 

W.    C.    Foster 

Thomas     Clark 

W.    C.    Foster 

Charles     Downer 

O.    P.    Smith 

Duluth    Banking    Co 

George    S.    Shaw 

Anna    E.    Mclntyre 

H.    C.    Cole 

G.     Frank 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

Charles     Downer 

O.    P.    Smith 

Grace     D.     Buell 

Charles     Stal 

f).    P.    Smith 

A.    E.    Merrill 

T.    W.    Iloopes 

Erick     Jackson 

Chas.  Downer 

J.    E.    Bartz    

W.    C.    Foster    

W.     Pressentin     

O.     P     Smith     

G    Frank    

l^/eo.    W.    Buck     

Thos.     Clark      

Duluth    Banking    Co 

O.  P.  Smith    

T.  W.  Hoopes . 

W.   C.    Foster    

O.  P.  Smith    

O.  P.  Smith    

O.     P.     Smith     

Anton     Gronsetli      

W.    Pressentin    

G.    Frank    

Chas.     Downer     

A.    E.    Merrill    

Anna    A.   Smith    

O.   P.  Smith    

Chas.     Downer     

O    P.  Smith    

A     E.    Merrill    

O.    P.    Smitii    

W.     Pressentin     

Chas.    Downer    

O.   P.  Smith    

O.    P.    Smith    

Chas.  Downr  1- . 

Duluth    Banking    Co.... 

O.  P.  Smith    

O.     P.     Smith     

O.  P    Smith   

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

Bay  State   Inv.  Co 

Bav   State   Inv.   Co 

W.   C.    Foster 

\V.    C.    Foster 

V.  A.   Robinson 

F.   A.   Robinson 

Fred    A.     Rossom 

Albert    Olson    

W.     Pressintine 

H.     Gibson 

Farmers'    Banking    Co.. 

Robt.    E.   Peeke 

F.     Schuman 

A.    E.    Merrill 

Ida     Gilbert 

Chas.      Downer 

Duluth    Banking  Co 

W.     I'ressentine 

Mesiba  Northern  Town- 
site     Co 

W.   C.    Foster 

Thos.    Clark.    Jr 

O.    V.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

Alfred   E.    Merrill 


33 
12 
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W.    C. 
O.    P. 
Fred 
Fred 
G.    A. 
O.    P. 
G.    A. 
F.    W. 
Fred 
W.    C. 


O.    P. 
A.    K. 
A.    E. 
Fred 
C.    E. 
Fred 
W     C. 
F.    A. 


Fied 
G.    A. 
T.    W. 

John 
H.    C. 


Fred 
Fred 
O.    P. 
Chas. 


B.     Rossom. 
B.    Rossom .  . 

Smith 

I>owner . 


Esther   T.    Wadhams. 

E.     In  gals 

Richardson  &  l>ay.. 
Richardson  &  Day.. 
Richardson  &  Day  . 
Richardson  &  L>ay  . 
Fred  B.  Rossom  .  .  . 
Chas.     Downer     

Chas.     Downer     

O.     P.    Smith     

Fred  B.  Rossom  .  . . 
Fred  B.  Rossom  .  . . 
Fred  B.  Rossom  .  .  , 
Fred    B.    Rossom    .  . , 

O.    P.    Smith     

Fred  A.  Robinson 

Chas.  Downer  

W.  A.  Wagner 


A.  Robinson 

B.  Rossom  .  . 
B.  Rossom  .  . 

Downer  . . .  , 

Nelson  

Smith  

Keyes  

G.  Coates  

Fred  A.  Robinson 

W  F.  King  

John  A.  Samson  . 

Andreson  .  . 

B.  Rossom  . 

Clark.  Jr.  . 

Downer  .  . . 

E.  Merrill  . 

Foster  .... 

Smith  

B.  Kossom  . 

B.  Rossom  . 

R.  Robinson 

G.  Frank 

Alfred  E.  Merrill. 

Charles  R.  Stal 

Fred  B.  Ro.s.»-om .  .. 
Charles  Downer.. 


Fred 
Fred 
Fred 
Chas. 
E.  P. 
O.  P. 
C.  R. 


O.  S. 

Fred 

Thos. 

Chas. 

Alfred 

W.  C 

O.  P. 

Fred 

Fred 

Fred 


20  93 
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10  94 
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21  33 

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35  60 
99  56 
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W.  Pressentlne.... 
Fred  A.  Robinson. 

Foster 

Smith 

B.  Rossom .  . 
B.  Rossom .  . 

Rydberg. . . . 

Smith 

Rydberg.  .  .  , 

Hoopes  .  .  .  .  , 
B.  Rossom.  . 

Foster 


O.  P.  Smith 

O  P.  Smith 

("liarles  Gustafson. 

O.  P.  Smith 

U.  P.  Smith 

Charles  Eklund 

O.  P.  Smith 

G.  Frank 

Charles     Downer.... 
O.    P.    Smith 

Smith 

Merrill 

Merrill 

B.    Rossom.  .  . . 

Bailey 

B.    Rossom.  .  .  . 

Foster 

Robinson  . .  .  . 


Co. 


Ehy    G.    Gridiey     .  . 

C.    A.    Congdon    .  .  . 

B.    Ross'jm    . . 

Rydberg     .  .  . 

Hoopes    .... 

B.    I'helps    .  .  . 

Hornby    .... 
J.'harles    Downer    . 

E.    A.    Merrill     

E.   A.   Merrill    

W.   C.   Foster    

O.     P.    Smith     

Charles    R.    Stai    .  . 

M.  L.   Arnold    .- 

Farmers'    Banking 
M.     Kammerer     .  .  . 
Fred    A.    Robinson 
Charles   Downer    .  . 

O.    P.    Smith     

Fred    A.    Robinson 
Charles    Downer    .  . 

O.    P.    Smith    

Cliarles  I  )owner  .  . 
Thomas  Clark,  Jr 
Alfred  E.  Merrill 
Mary  A.  Miller  .  . 
V,'.  C.  Foster  .... 
Charles    Downer    .  . 

O.    P.    Smith     

G.     Frank     

Charles    Downer    . 
Mattie   A.   Edson, 
Maltie  A.    Edson, 

O.    P.    Smith     

Farmers'   Banking  Co 

Chas     Downer 

W.  E.   Richardson.... 

Chas.     Downer 

H.   C.    Hornby 

Brewster 

Smith 

Lindstrom 

Smith 

Smith 

E.    Merrill .  .  .  . 
Banking    fto. 


et 
et 


al, 
al. 


Judd 
O.  P. 

I'no 
O.   P. 
O.    V 
Alfred 
Duluth 


John  Gulbranson.  .  . 
John  Gu  lb  ran  son.  .  . 
Robert  C.    Ray.   E«.  .  . 

Chas.    R.    Stai 

O     P.    Smitli 

W.   C.   .Sargent 

H.   C.    Helm 

Duluth   Banking  Co. 

Chas.     Downer 

U.    P.    Smith 

O.   P    Smith 

Robt.    P.    Lewis 

W.   C.    P'oster 

H.   C.    Helm 

.1    W.   Hunt 

W.    Pressentin 

O.  P.  Smith 

Duluth   Banking  Co. 

G.   A.    Ryd'.erg 

O.    P     Smith 

Chas!    R.   Stai 

W.    C.    Foster 

Thos.    Chirk. .Ir 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

A.    M.     Long 

Alfred   E.    Merrill.  .  . 
Chas.     Downer. 


O.    P. 

Chas. 
Thos. 
O.    P. 


Smith, 
liowner 
(""lark.  . 
Smith. 


Chas. 
Chas. 
Chas. 
O.  P. 


B. 


Duluth    Banking 

O.    P.    Smith 

Downer 

I>owner 

Downer 

Smith 

Myers 

Jolinson 

Frank.' 

C.    Robinson.  .  . 

Smith 

Smith 

Brennan .... 

Downer 

A.    Robinson  . 

Carlson 

E.    Merrill. 
Beck 


Co. 


F. 
G. 
G. 
W 
O. 


P. 
P. 

John 

Chas. 

?>ed 

L.    D. 

Alfred 

Oscar 


79 
12 
26 
86 
52 
98 
31 


O.    P.    Smith 

W.   C.    Foster 

Star    Inv.    Co 

I'no     Lindstrom 

O.    P.    Smith 

Alfred    E.    Merrill 

Fred    .\.    Robinson.  .  . 
Joseph   W.   Reynolds. 

Chas.     Downer     

W.     D.     Bailey     

Fred    Robinson    

O.     P.    smith     

W.    Pressentlne     . . . . 

O.    P.    Smith     

6.    P.    Smith     

O.    P.    Smith     

Star  Inv.   So 

O.    P.    Smith     

Fred    B.    Rossom     .  . . 

O.    P     Smith     

W.    C.     Foster     

F.  A.    Robinson    

F    A.   Robinson    

O.    P.    Smith     

W.    C.     Foster     

G.  A.    St.   Clair    

Fred    B.    Rossom    . . 
Clias.     Downer     .... 

O     F*.    Emith    

Chas.     Downer     

John    L.    Bacon    

O.    P.    Smith     

W.    W.    Pressentlne 
Fred    A.     Robinson. 


O.    P. 
Chas. 
Chas. 
W.     C 
A.   H 


Smith  . 
Downer 
Downer 
Foster 
Brown 


C.  E.  I.  Foster 

Chas.     Downer     

O.     P.    Smith     

Thos.    Clark     

O    P.  Smith    

Chas    Older    

O.  P.  Smith   

Chas.     Downer     

G.   Frank    

O.     P     Smith     

A.    E.    Merrill    

Clias.  Downer 

John   L.    Bacon    

W.  Pressentlne  ... 
Fred  A.  Robinson  . . 
Fred   A     Robinson    . . 

O.    P     Smith     

O.    P.    Smith    

O.  P.  Smith    

H.    C.    Cole    

Chas.  Downer 

Fred  A.  Robinson  ... 
Duluth    Banking    Co. 

O.     P.    Smith     

W.   B.   Phelps    

A.     H.     Brown     

F    W     Hargraves    . . . 

Chas.'    R.     Stal      

Arthur    Howell    

Chas.     Downer      

Fred  A.  Robinson  .  .  . 
Fred  A.  Robinson  ... 
John  I...  Bacon  .  .  . .  , 
O.     P.    Smith 

F.  A.   Robinson    .... 

Chas.    Downer    

E.    L.    J.    Miller    

O.     P.    Smith     

W.    Pressentlne    .... 

W.   C.   Foster    

Alfred  E.  Merrill  .  . 

Chas.  Downer  

Chas.  Downer  

W.  C.  Foster 

Chas.  Downer 

Thos.  Clark.  Jr 

Atlas  Land  Co 

G.  Coate  .  .  .T. 

M.  D.  Coate 

W.  H.  Dickerman.. 

H.  C.  Cole  

H.  Gibson 

A.  Kjellin  

G.  Frank  

Phebic  B.  Buck 

H.  C.  Cole  

Chas.  Downer  

Geo.  Rupley  

O.  P.  Smith  

O.  P.  Smith  

W.  C.  Foster  

Margaret  A.  Frank 

O.  P.  Smith  

Geo.  Rupley  

Geo.  Rupley  

Chas.  Downer  

Thos.  Clark  


19  66 

2  90 
120  18 

1  89 
10  32 
•7  23 

3  07 
26  03 
36  38 
10  24 
18  99 
66  58 

23  54 
9  23 

94  98 

13  87 
36  84 
21  63 

6  78 
6  92 

5  73 
•  76  75 

12  40 

14  08 

32  42 
10  35 
89  17 

54 

24  40 
20  82 

6  22 
6  34 

10  87 

13  43 
13  10 

6  68 

11  19 

15  64 

33  24 
33  58 
43  46 
49  54 
28  99 

37 
18 
75 
90 


1 

12 

1 

2 
6  ..: 

18  49 
2  93 

19  17 
38  58 

104  16 
i:{  12 
40  67 
10  74 
73  84 
73  84 
10  11 
6  87 

20  07 
66  49 

1  33 
13  67 

4  46 
77  58 
29  73 
46  98 


75179 

75206 

75207 

76208 

75209 

75210 

75211 

75212 

75213 

75214 

75237 

75238 

75239 

75464 

75495 

75540 

75542 

75543 

75544 

75545 

75546 

75547 

75548 

75519 

75550 

75551 

75552 

75553 

75554 

75555 

75556 

7.55.57 

75558 

75559 

75560 

75561 

75562 

76585 

75586 

75.587 

7  5 .5  8  8 

755.' 9 

755a5 

75607 

75608 

76609 

75610 

75611 

75612 

75645 

75646 

75647 

75648 

75649 

75650 

75651 

75652 

75653 

75654 

756 .5  5 

75656 

75657 

75658 

75659 

75660 

75661 

75728 

75729 

757 


Dul.  Banking  Co. 

A.  Ketto  ':.. 

C.  F.  West  

Downer  .  . 

Downer  . . 

Downer  . . 

Downer  . . 

Downer  . . 


Chas. 

Chas. 

Chas. 

Chas. 

Chas. 

F.  B 

O. 

W. 

A. 


O. 
H. 
W 
A 


P 
C. 
M. 
P. 
C. 
E 


Rossoni 
Smith  ., 


.fli 


66 
24 


13  20 

23  16 
15  8  3 

6  95 
303  90 
56  4  5 
18  01 
164  01 
69  7  5 
13  14 

10  56 

11  69 

1  10 
18  30 

21  49 
8  45 

13  48 
15  33 

55  s: 

2  41 

24  29 
31  16 

6  29 

8  66 

41 

22  20 
29  19 
60  72 

106  70 
64  63 

12  24 

28  74 
17  32 

4  69 

29  88 
48  15 
39  43 


86 
59 
64 
78 
56 


6 
9 
6  22 

5  30 

36  13 
15  27 
40  34 
15  73 

37  9!» 
4  46 

86 
11  95 
60  liO 
34  77 
24  68 
22  51 

6  04 
60  75 
19  39 
65  87 

4  41 
30  31 
11  11 
98 
97 
09 
05 
68 
55 


4 

32 

1 

9 
112 
10  65 
12  14 

9  50 
33  99 
20  68 
95  38 

3  62 
18  43 
36  61 

1  30 
6  98 

25  24 

85 

247  OS 

4  98 

6  93 

2  30 
102  86 

9  63 
9  08 

7  79 
6  31 

16  45 
52  16 
61  60 
55  76 

8  97 
36  34 
11  38 
21  38 
30  89 
18  03 
29  34 

5  60 

9  08 

6  22 
83  62 

9  31 
9  48 

3  45 

34  80 

4  65 

12  71 
176  27 

8  61 
69  33 

2  06 
39  24 

7  62 

11  99 

13  11 
79  29 

35  21 

8  00 
3 

1 

44 

23 

21 
142 

11 

62 
6 
185  22 

9  48 

12  72 

13  36 
50  13 

384  72 

108  64 

100  23 

16  64 

2  18 

12 

24 

4  59 

15  49 
40  92 

16  50 
12  48 
21  94 
60  74 

1661.' 
23  21 
34  96 

5  50 
29  13 
11  12 

4  24 
134  50 

16  88 

5  03 
68  72 


30 
75731 
75732 
7573  3 
75731 
75735 
75832 
7  5833 
75834 
75888 
76379 
76380 
76499 
76571 
76572 
76582 
76583 
76584 
7658  5 
76603 
76604 
76605 
76606 
76607 
76608 
76609 
76610 
76646 
76672 
76673 
76074 
76675 
76676 
76677 
76683 
76687 
76690 
76691 
76692 
76693 
76694 
76695 
76696 
76697 
76698 
76699 
76711 
76712 
76713 
76736 
76737 
76745 
70746 
76776 
76777 
76778 
76779 
76780 
76781 
76782 
76783 
76784 
76785 
76786 
76799 
76800 
76801 
76802 
76804 
76911 

76912 


Foster  

Kimball  

Smith  

Hornby  

Ricliardson  .... 

Agatin  

Chas.  Downer  

Chas.  Downer  

F.  B.  Rossom  

O.  P.  Smith 

Fred  A.  Robinson  .... 

John  L.  Bacon  

O.  1'.  Smith  

Wm.  p:ider  

Chas.  Downer  

Fred  B.  Rossom  

Alfred  ^.  Merrill    

F.    J.     Hughes     

F.     Fuller     

F.    J.    Hughes    

F.    Fuller     

F.   J.   Hughes    

F.     Fuller      

O.    P.    Smith     

O.    P.    Smith     

O.    P.    Sn.ilh     

Anpie    C.    Thomas     .... 

O.    I'.    Smitii     

AV.  C.   Foster   

Chas.     Downer     

O.    P.    Smith     

W.    E.     Ridiardson     

Hilga   A.    Linderberg    .. 

Thos.    Olafson 

I^uluth    Banking    Co.... 

O.    P.    Smith 

Fred    A.    Robinson 

Thos.     Clark 

Alfred    E.    Merrill 

Euclid    Iron    Mining   Co. 

Euclid    Iron    Mining   Co. 

Euclid    Iron    Mining   Co. 

F.   A.   Ftobinson 

V.   A.    Robinson 

F.    A.    Robinson 

F.   A.    Robinson 

F.    A.    Robinson 

F.   A.    Robinson 

F.   A.   Robinson 

F.   A.    Robinson 

F.   A.    Robinson 

F.    A.   Robinson 

Chas.     Downer 

K.    L.    J.    Mills 

Chas.    Downer 

J.    I^.    Bacon 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

C.   P.  Craig  &   Co 

Goo.     Rupley 

O.    P.    Smith 

Fred    A.     Robinson 

I>.    M.    Ileimbach 

O.    P.    Stearns 

L.    M.    Heimbach 

R.    M.    Hunter 

A.  S.  and  A.  L.  Osborn.. 

W.    W.   Sanford 

A.    O.    Lang 

Du'ulh     Banking    Co.... 

Ge.irge     Rupley 

G.    G.    Newton 

Thomas    Clark.    Jr., 

Charles    R.    Stal 

O.    P.    Smith 

Alfred    E.    Merrill 

O     P.    Smith 

O.    P.    .Sm  i  t  h 

O     P.    Stnith 

Frank    N.    Schrath 

Arthur     Howell 

W.    C.    Foster 

Thomas    Clark,    Jr 


672  17 

6  50 
126  86 

13  24 

14  50 
4  84 

94  95 
31  64 
17  54 
73  38 

15  37 
2  12 

13  19 

28  75 

8  63 

7  74 
6  22 

34  70 

22  65 

26  68 

84 

17  04 

12  66 

1  69 

6  90 

45  30 

71  89 

47 

95 

24 

48 

24 

48 

10 

79 

18 

96 

83 

79 

91 

20 

27 

95 

7  51 

1  60 

16  15 

3  36 

19  76 
6  98 

4  23 

3  11 
48 

5  A-J. 
28  58 

4  10 
50  98 

20  09 
10  06 
14  14 

6  25 
10  22 


7 

17 

7 

1 

41 

93 

6 

I 

1 

15 


14 

5 
3 


76962 
77014 
77015 
77016 
77011 
77018 
77019 
77020 
77021 
77022 
77023 
77024 
77025 
7  7026 
77027 
77028 


M.    A.    Frank 

O.    I'.    Smith 

W     C.    Foster 

T.    J.    Davis 

E.    L.    J.    Mills 

O.     P.    Smith 

O.    P.    Smith 

Duluth    Banking    Co 
Cora    M.    McGregor. 

Arthur     Howell 

O.    I'.    Smith 

Alfred    E.    Merrill... 

L.    A.    Martin 

Euclid  Iron  Mining 
Euclid  Iron  Mining 
Emlid  Iron  Mining 
Euclid  Iron  Mining 
Fred  A.  Robinson 
Fred    A.    Robinson 

(>.    P.   Smith    

Euclid    Iron    Mining 
Charles    Downer    .... 
B.     Magoffin     

B.  Magoffin     

Duluth    Banking    Co. 
Helen    B.   Mahon    .... 

R.    A.    Jones    

O.    P.    Smith    

O.    P.    Smith    

O.    P.    Smith    

Thomas    Clark     

Duluth    Banking    Co. 

H.    H.    Phillips     

H.   H.   IMiilllps    

H.    H.    Philips    

F.    B.    Myers     

W.   C.    Foster    

F.  R.  Webber 

C.  P.   Webber   

C.    d'Autremont    

William   T.    .Marvin    . 
M.    A.    Webber    .  .  . 
North      &       South 

Land    Co 

North      &      South 

Land    Co 

Atlas     Investment 

G.  A.  Rydberg  .  . 
John  Dallovia  .. 
T.    W.    Hoopes    .  .  . 

O.    P.    Smith    

Fred    A.    Robinson 

H.    II.    Plielps    

W.    C.    Foster    .... 

O.    P.    Smith 

R.  A    Jones 

O.    P.    Smith 

W.   C.    Foster 

R.  C.  Pickering. . . 

R.  A.  Jones 

Chas.  Downer.  .  .  . 
Thos.     Considine.  . 


104 

7 
14 
31 

3 
22 
48  20 

20  95 
54 

108  61 
46  93 
51  52 

10  32 
56  58 
51  99 

123  79 

17  5  45 

35  28 

21  73 
7  87 

6  9.! 
38  47 

11  16 
35  04 

9  62 

7  12 
20  50 

1  05 
30  73 
48  36 
33  66 

22  69 
25  73 

19 

3  17 

10  97 

15  43 

169  16 

999  20 

76 

00 

06 


67038   H.    L.    Shepard     

67041    M.    A.    Thompson     

67055  A.    Lamont     

67180   Alfred    E.    Merrill    

67187   Magnus    Olson     

67192  C.    P.    Johnson     

67237   Hamm   Brewing  Co 

67239   Erick    Johnson    

67489   Geo.     F.     Lindsay      . — 

67502   N.    C.    Clark     

67504  Clements    Cloutier     .... 

07505   W.   A.    Wagner    

67519   K.     Elsentraut     

67523   AV.     W.     Sanford     

67527  John    Anderson     

67528  A.    Kilto    

67567  Alfred   E.  Merrill    

67568  Duluth.         Mesaba  & 

Northern    R.    R.    Co... 

67600  Edwin    Eastman     

07649    Wallace  H.  Wells 

67701   Carl     E.     Lonegren     .... 

67761   J.    H.    Sullivan     

67765   O.    P    .Smith     

67794   Dixon    Land    Co 

67;98   Emil    Olson     

67824    E.   D.   Field  Co 

67828   R.    C.    Henry     

76824   John     G.     Willllams 

67836  A.    Abraham     

67837  O.     P.     Smith     

67850   AV.    J.    Smith     

67854  O.    P.    Smith     

67864   John    Waldal    

67882  Am.     Ex.       Bank.       Vir- 
ginia      

67889   Stein    &    O'Rourke     

67897  Fred    B.    Rossom     

67898  F.    W.  Heimick    

67910   I'llot   Mining  Co 

67937   A.    Abraham     

6797  2   John    Mesbt  rg    

67973  Jas.    Lavick    

08030   Mary   R.  Satterwaite.  . . . 
68039   American  Exchange   .... 

68049   I'nion    Abstract    

68061    A.    S.     Avery     

681*76   .Al.    D.    Coates    

08177    Dan    O'Reilly     

68200  Olaf    G.    Brinteson 

68205   A.    M      Kimball     

6S:il2   Joseph     H.     Jones 

68590    R.  E.  Bartlett   

68604  Northwestern    Imp.  Co.. 

68605  Northwestern    Imp.   Co.. 

68606  Northwestern    Imp.   Co.. 

68607  Northwestern  Imp.  Co.. 
68616  Northwestern  Imp.  Co.. 
68618  Northwestern  Imp.  Co.. 
68620   Northwestern    Imp.   Co., 

68622  Kate    Leak    

68623  Fred    B.    Rossom 

68024    Fred    B.    Rossom 

68625  Fred   B.    Rossom 

68626  Fred    B     Rossom , 

68627  Fred    B.    Rossom , 

68628  Northwestern  Imp  Co., 
68632   Fred    G.    Bradbury 

68659  Northwestern    Imp.   Co. 

68660  C.    .M.    Hiil    Ll.r.   <'o 

68061  ?usie  R.  Hill 
68662 


2  68 

29  04 

61  10 

13  05 

2  36 

29  04 

64  45 

7  74 

3  58 

7  26 

3  00 

1  00 

11  80 

2  07 

116  82 

15  50 

1  28 

8  03 

16  08 

18  79 

6  53 

3  63 

12  82 

11  28 

25  05 

23  05 

33  24 

k.. 
lerk 
t.  . . 


S3 
S 
6 

15 
7 
6 


24 
51 
80 
75 
70 


83  26 
27  74 
16  74 
18  26 
29  02 

9  34 

2  49 
06 

2  17 
15  84 
21  28 
13  20 
31  63 

2 

2 

34 

«^06 

2 

6 

4 

3 

2 

2 

2 


64471  O.   A.   Ahlstrom,   clerk.. 

64713  O.    Haldcn,    county    i  ud- 

Itor    

64714  L.   A.    Marvin,   deputy... 

64715  P.  J.   Borgstroin,  clerk.. 

64716  Martin    Halden,   clerk... 

64717  Amelia   Smith,   clerk.... 

64718  Alex    Schuetz,    clerk.... 

64719  Asa    Dalley.    clerk 

64720  O.    A.    Ahlstrom,   cleik.. 

64721  G.    A.    Ahlstrom.    cleik.. 

64722  And.  Otterson,  clerk.... 

64723  Wm.     Johnson,     clerl 

64724  Wm.   Thompson,    cle 

64725  Laura    Carpenter,    c 

64726  Signe   P.   Flink.  cler! 

64727  A.  J.   AA'asgatt,  clerk.... 
64804   I.  G.   AVollan,  clerk 

64810  J.   O.   AValker,   clerk.... 

64811  B.    O.    Loe.    clerk 

64813   B.   O.  Loe.   clerk 

65020   J.    O.    Walker,    clerk 

05233   Wm.   Thompson,  cle-k.. 
65296   I..    A.    Marvin,    clerk.... 
65550   O.    Halden,    county    aud- 
itor       

J.  O.  Walker,  deputy... 
Amelia  .«imit)i,  clerk.... 
Martin  Halden.  clerk.. 
L.  A.   Marvin,   deputty.. 

I.  G.   Wollan.  clerk 

P.  J.  Borgstrom.  clerk.. 

B.  O.  Loe,  clerk 

G.  A.  Ahlstiom.  clerk.. 
G.   A.   Ahlstrom.    clerk.. 


!-0 
91 
17 
97 
57 
37 
06 
04 
25 
11 
1 


3  73 
11  04 
79  08 
68  37 

9  95 
60  52 

6  60 

2  46 
16  79 


Co. 

Co. 

Co. 

Co. 


Co. 


65 
17 
10  23 
1  3  5 


68672 

68796 

6SS07 

68839 

68848 

68890 

68891 

68892 

68893 

68894 

68942 

6S963 

68980 

68995 

69005 

69024 

69029 

69030 

69041 

691.50 

69557 

70000 

7012  7 

70157 

70166 

70167 

70195 

70202 

70235 
70239 
70272 


Co 

&  Buck 

Ry.   Co. 


86 

78 


Side 
Side 
Co. . 


3 
55 
61  78 
18  89 

7  95 
78  14 

1  69 

11  81 
67  35 

47  50 
492  63 
245  10 

1  46 
4  18 

48  20 

12  22 
164  37 

16  95 

14  73 

6  05 

3  03 

9  36 

42  91 

78  68 

22  87 

65  05 

41  34 

110  38 

252  48 


105  54 

74 

15  58 

5  52 

32  10 

14  90 

4  94 

4  34 

33  11 

17  79 

6  18 

23  30 

15  54 

6  50 

14  75 

10  57 

6  13 

"90  J9 

Total   debits    (see  bal- 
ance sheet) |36.  i^y  fo 

Outstanding  warrants.!   4.440  32 


91 
96 

51 

ro 

3S 
42 
19 
50 
28 


63282 
63303 

63304 

63305 

63343 

63531 

63539 

63708 

63750 

63796 

63816 

63825 

63848 

63871 

63888 

63932 

63972 

63973 

63985 

64009 

64010 

64150 

64151 

64192 

64458 

64516 

64634 

64665 

64694 

65011 

65017 

65116 

65135 

65136 

65152 

65179 

65185 

65236 

65262 

65378 

65684 

65688 

65733 

65893 

65921 

66002 

66035 

66151 

66166 

66179 

66190 

66192 

66196 

66198 

C6200 

66210 

66238 

66351 

66717 

66775 

66789 

66843 

66920 

66935 

66979 

66997 


Lake 


Hoopes. 


REFUNDS. 

R.  M.  Hunter 

A'irglnla    &    Rainy 

Co 

A'irginia  Lbr.  Co. 

A'lrglnia  Lbr.  Co 

AA'.  A.  Holgate,  Co.  Treas. 

AA'.    J     Ryan 

C.   H.'  AppUby 

Chas.  Killis.. 
Mendenhall  & 
Gustav    Rohner. 

John    H.    Dorsey 

AA'.  C.  McClure  &  Co.... 

Frank  Bufflngton 

Taller  IA>r.  Co 

C.  R.  Minnesota  Land  Co. 

The   Northland   Co 

C.  C.   Sloake 

Oscar    Fleer 

L.  S.   Loeb 

Chas.    Downer 

Chas.     Downer 

Brigham 

Brigham 

Downer 

A'lrglnia  Lbr  Co 

O.  P.  Smith 

W    A.  Holgate 

John    H.    Erickson 

Odin  B.  Olson 

O.  I'.  Smith 

E.  Case 

W     A.    Holgate 

Thos.  Olafson 

G.  A.   Rydberg 

J.    Kltz 

W.  G.  Bonham 

Rydberg    

M.    Cook     

Henderson     

E.    Pattison 


3  93 


J.   H. 
J.  H. 

Chas. 


G.  A. 
Edith 
H.  J. 
Grace 

H.  Taylor 

H.    Taylor    

A'irginia 'Lumber  Co. 

A.   H.  Harney    

C     M.    Johnson     

Aug.  Schmidt    

A'irginia   Lumber   Co. 

Christ     Nepp     

A'irginia    Lumber  Co. 

Albin    Johnson     

Lvda  Gilley 

A'irginia   lAimber  Co: 

Henrv    Deulsch    

H.     dldeberg     

Chas.    Abonen    

Wm.  S.  Bishop 

Mrs.  C.  C.  Carlson  .  .  . 
Flfirencp  Ros«'Crans  . 
Marv    Tornowsky    .  .  . 

E.  W.    AVakelin    . 

F.  AA'.  Hargraves  . . 
Caroline  Confer  .... 
Fred  B.  Rossom  .  . 
Fred    B.    Rossom     .  . 

O.  P  Smith  

H.  T.  Agnew 


10  86 

4  02 

3  71 

8  40 

11 

6  84 

10  04 

1  00 

3  14 

4  00 

6  02 

52  58 

6  04 

9  28 

1  00 

1  09 

1  48 

6  57 

8  17 

2  05 

10  64 

1  04 

5  33 

12  84 

10  57 

6  04 

4  64 

10  00 

66  00 

1  7  5 

5  05 

20  13 

93  41 

65  14 

10  00 

9  89 

1  95 

8  67 

3  46 

3  82 

13  91 

64 

4  41 

53 

10  56 

1  29 

8  27 

16  65 

3  72 

2  11 

60 

3  25 

34  68 

1  21 

7  26 

3  27 

4  91 

1  00 

31  22 

1  02 

3  74 

67  92 

4  49 

7  12 

70273 
70:;74 
70275 
70313 
70314 
70319 
70327 
70337 

703  41 
7(>342 
70345 
70368 
70380 
70381 
70484 

704  89 
70494 
71645 
71746 
71811 
71929 
71950 
72012 
72019 
72030 
72033 
72252 
73355 
733  57 
73475 
73541 
73606 
73620 
73757 
73793 
73826 
73972 
75205 
75336 
75443 
75444 
75502 

75507 
75521 
75567 
75568 
75571 
75579 
75665 
75672 
76865 
75693 
75718 

75720 

75724 

75725 

75727 

75852 

76389 

76395 

76398 

76626 

76635 

76654 

76664 

76689 

76743 

76747 

76767 

76795 

76796 

76797 

76727 

76968 

76976 

76977 

76992 

76998 

77034 

77039 

77041 


Dock  & 


Jr.  . 
Co. 


The  A'irginia  &   Rainy 

I.,ake  Co 

O.  P.  Smith  

Agnes  S.  Reed  

p]ll>a  Iron  <'o  

L.  B.  Arnold  

Ch.as.  Rosen  

Ciiae.  Downer  

O.  P.  Smith  

AV.  O.  Derbey  

AV.  D.  Coates  

J.  H.  Brigham  

Dr.  I.  T.  Burnside 

I>avid  Adams  

O.  P.  Smith 
Mlssabe  Timber 
."^tr.vker.  Manley 
AVm.  O'Brien  .  . 
Dul.  &  Iron  R. 
Mrs.  M.  C.  Miller 

Matt  Ifaasia  

H.  H.  I'helps  

Frank    N.    Dickson    .... 
Peter    H.    McHardy    .... 

Myers     Bros 

Cloquel    Lumber  Co 

Grant    McMahan     

L.    M.    Ruden    

Frank    Lushma    

Guaranty       Farm     Land 

Co 

S.     Karon     

Chas.    P.    Craig 
Great     Lakes 
Dredge     Co. 
Matt     Kaski      .. 
.1.    E.   Foubister 
J.   E.  Foubister 
Thomas    Claik. 
Adams    .-ecurlty 
Albert    Kitto    

D.  A.    McLeod     

T.    M.    Herbert     

Mrs.    E.    M.   Collins 

J.    H.    Whltely 

Geo.   Rupley    

C.  H.  Pettit 

Burlington   Lbr.  Co 

Martin   Miller   

AV.  J.  Holmes   

O.  L.  1  ludley   

E.  P.    Heckey    

AV.  B.  Getchell    

Thos.  E.  Considine 

John    AA'ahl    

J.   F.  Newell    

John    Osmundson    

Hans  P.  Dahl    

George    Rupley    

Pine  Tree  Lbr.  Co 

Western   Land   Co 

E.  J.  Shields 

Ad;im    Klrst 

F.  W.  Anderson 

A.  AV.  .s.  Calderwood.  . .. 

E.    J.   Simons    

Freeman   Herber 

Chas.    Gelbeig    ., 

C.  O.  Eklund   

Peter   Pazek    

Gust  Mattson    

Chas.  S.   Christianson. . . 

R.   G.   AVatts    

II.  Torgerson    

(X>mmodore  Mining  Co.. 
Commodore  Mining  Co.  . 
Boston    &.    Dulutli    Farm 

Land  Co 

Wallace  H.  Wells    

C.  M.  Bunn    

Euclid  Iron  Mining  Co.. 
Euclid  Iron  Mining  Co.. 
Euclid  Iron   Mining  Co.. 

O.    S.    Andreson 

George    Rupley    

Byron   G.    Segog    

G.   A.   Rydberg    

Thomas    Olafson     

The    A'lrglnia    &    Rainy 

Lake  Co 

Porter  S.  Hosdon    

William    Chesser    

Emil   Oetel    

Northwestern  Imp.  Co.. 
Euclid  Iron  Mining  Co.. 

B.  K.    AA'alker    

John    G.    Williams 

Algier   Smith    

C.  L.    Rakowsky    

F.    B.   Myers    

Little   &   Nolte    

Charles    Kauppl    

A.  H.    Eckstein    

B.  O.  Loe   

Thomas    Dwyer     

August   Williams    

A.    P.    Iverson    

T.    J.   AValsh    

Gust    Hahn    

L.    B.    Arnold    

George    P.    Miller    

South    Side    Realty    C... 

Stein    &    O'Rourke    

N.    A'.    Steel    Co 

Mrs.   Sarah    Stensby    . . .. 

Charles   Downer    

ly.    B.    Arnold    

Philadelphia  Trust  Safe 

Deposit  In.  Co 


15  61 
11  75 

16  79 
10  47 

9  86 


14 


4 
4 

45 

15 

4 

12  98 

121  89 

95 

17 

68 


1 
4 
6 
6 
1 
3 
6 
2 
12 
11 
7 
4 
6 


03 
74 
02 
00 
43 
76 
83 
78 
17 
92 


10  86 

13  37 

40  76 

14  88 

1  00 

21  93 

62 

38  38 

18  00 

11  25 

63 

14  12 

12  75 

22  42 

15  23 

8  07 

1  00 

1  16 

11  84 

12  2  5 

89  31 

91 

7  10 

12  70 

2  64 

9  49 

2  30 

73  71 

1  74 

9  98 

3  70 

2  13 

42  75 

1  47 

2  00 

4  83 

13  36 

11  17 

15  a'j 

1  32 

13  61 

8  01 

82  92 

7  16 

862  25 

112  35 

18  78 

1  00 

5  67 

S  78 

85 

24  77 

2  51 

1  19 

15  71 

4  39 

05553 

65605 

C5C06 

65613 

65614 

65615 

65016 

05617 

6,5018 

65619 

05620 

65621 

05622 

65023 

65085 

(.5698 

05707 

66191 

(6211 

66242 

66265 

66266 
66267 
66268 
06269 
06^70 
66271 
66272 
60273 
66274 
60275 
66276 
66277 
66278 
66366 
60917 
67051 
67086 

67087 
67088 
67089 
67090 
67091 
67092 
67093 
67094 
67095 
67096 
67097 
67098 
67099 
67100 
67101 
67603 
67829 
67961 
68085 
68086 
68088 
68089 
68096 

68097 
68098 
68099 
68100 
68101 
68102 
08103 
68104 
68105 
6S106 
68107 
68202 
68757 
68759 
68918 
68997 
69054 


9  32 

11  82 

13  69 
2  67 
2  62 
4  20 

14  58 
6  17 

13  12 

1  09 
6  07 

6  35 

2  39 
2  00 

126  77 

12  76 
44 

4  00 

1  35 
9  79 

7  07 

2  50 
7  28 

3  22 
42  00 

14  44 
6  25 
1  99 

1  39 


69055 

69056 

69057 

69058 

69059 

60060 

69061 

69062 

69063 

69064 

69065 

09066 

69067 

09O68 

69069 

69070 

09154 

69159 

70223 

7"344 

70383 

70386 

70394 

70101 

70402 

70106 

70407 

70408 

70409 

70410 

70411 

70412 

70413 

70414 

70415 

70482 

71810 

71937 

72145 

72146 

72147 

72148 

72149 

72150 

72151 

72152 

72227 

72233 

72249 

73650 

73695 

73792 

73830 

73850 

73851 

73852 

73853 

73854 

73855 

73856 

73941 


Alex  Schoutz,  clerh  .  .  .  . 

Asa  Dailey.  clerk 

Laura  Carpenter,  (lerk 
Signe  P.  FUnk,  clerk.. 
Wm.  Thompson,  clerk.. 
Wm.  Johnson,  clerk  .... 
Andrew  Otterson.  t  lerk 
A.  J.  Wasgatt.  ckrk.. 

.\I.  Halden,  clerk 

L.  A.  Marvin,  deputy.. 
Martin  Halden.  cU  rk  .  . 

0.  Halden,  county  aud- 
itor   

J.  O.  AA'alker.  depuiy... 

1.  G.  AVollan.  clerk 

P.    J.    Bcrgstrotn.    cerk. 

A.  J.  Wasgatt.  clerk.  .  . . 

B.  O.   Loe.  clerk 

Alex  Schuetz.  clerU.... 
Asa  Dailey.  clerk  .... 
Amelia  Smith,  clerli  ... 
Wm.  Johnson,  clerl:  ... 
Andrew  Otterson.  Merk 
Wm.  Thompson,  clerk.. 
Laura  C^arpenter.  <•  erk. 
Signa  P.  Flink.  clerk... 

D.   H.  Fredin.  clerk 

M.    Halden.    clerk     

AA'm.   Thompson,   clerk.. 
O.    Halden,    county    aud- 
itor     

L.   A.   Marvin.   Dep 

J.  O.    AA'alker.   Dep 

J.   G.    AVollan.   clerk    

Martin  Halden.  cle  k  .. 
P.  o.  Borgstrom,  chMk.. 

A.  J.    Wasgatt.   cle  k.  .. 

B.  O.    Loe.    clerk    

Alex  Schuetz.  clerk    .... 

Asa    Dailey.    clerk    

Amelia  Smith,  clerk  ., 
Wm.  Johnson,  clert.... 
Andrew    Otterson,    clerk 

Mrs.  T.  Clark,  clerk 

Signe  1'.  Flink.  clerk.. 
I>.  H.  Fredin,  clerK .... 
L.  A.  Marvin,  deputy.  .. 
Amelia  Smith,  clerk... 
L.    A.    Marvin,    deputy.. 

A.  J.    Wasgatt.    clerk... 

B.  O.    Loe.    clerk    

J.  O  .AA'alker,  cleric    

I.   G.   AA'ollan.   derh    

O.    Halden.    county   aud- 
itor     

P.  J.  Borgstrom,  clerk.. 
Martin  Halden.  cUrk... 
Alex     Schuetz.    cl<ik.... 

Asa    Dailey.    clerk    

Amelia  Smith,  cleik.  .  .  . 
A\'ni.  Johnson.  cUi  k  .  .  .  . 
Andrew  Otterson.  clerk 
.Airs.  T.  Clark,  cleik.... 
Signe    P.     Flink.    e  ei  k  .  . 

D.   H.   Fredin,  clerk 

AVm.  Thompson,  cerk.. 
AA'm.  J.  Stephens,  clerk.. 
AA'm.  Thompson,  cerk.. 
AVm.  J.  Stephens,  clerk.. 

Martin  Halden.  cleik 

Wm.  J.  Stephens,  clerk.. 

0.  Halden.    county   aud- 
itor  

L.    A.    Marvin,    deputy.. 

1.  G.  AVollan.  clerk 

A.  J.  Wasgatt.  cle-k.... 
P.  J.  Borgstrom.  clerk.. 
Martin  Halden,  clerk  ... . 

B    O.   Loe.   clerk. 

Alex     Schuetz.    clerk.... 

Asa    Dailey.    clerk 

Amelia  .Smith,  clerk.... 
Wm.  .Tohnson.  clerk.... 
Andrew  Otterson.  clerk. 
Mrs.  Thos.  Claik.  clerk.. 
Signe  P.  P'liiik,  clerk .  .  . . 
D.  II.  Fredin.  clerk.... 
Wm.  Thompson,  clerk.. 
AVm.  J.  Stephens,  clerk.. 
J.  O.  Walker,  deputy.  .  .  , 
D.  H.  Fredin.  clerk.  .  .  . 
AA'm.  J.  Stephens,  clerk.  , 
AVm.  J.  Stephens,  clerk. 
L.    A.    Mai  vin,   deputy.  . . 

0.  H.-ildHii.    audiccr 

Asa    Daile.v.    clerh 

J.   O.    AA'alker,   deputy.., 

1.  G.    Wollan,   clerk 

A.  J.  AA'asgatt.  clerk.., 
P.  J.  Borgstrom,  ch-rk., 
Martin     Halden.    clerk. 

B.  O.    Loe.   clerk 

Alex  Schuetz,  cUrk... 
.Amelia  Smith,  clerk... 
AVm.  Johnson,  clerk... 
Signe  P.  Flinke.  clerk. 
AA'm.  Thompson,  ..-lerk. 
D.   H.   Fredin,   cleik.  .  .  . 

Thos.   Clark,   clerk 

B.    O.    Lop.    clerk    

I.  G.  Wollan,  cleik.  . . . 
O.  Halden.  auditor.... 
L.    A.    Marvin,   dei>uty.. 

B.    O.    I..oe.    clerk       

J.  O.  AValkor.  dejiuty.. 
P.  J.  Borgstrom.  :lerk. 
D.  H.  Fredin,  clerk.... 
M.    Halden.    clerk 


36  00  < 

291  66 
166  66 
95  00 
95  00 
40  00 
£0  00 
80  00 
25  00 

25  00 
75  00 
80  00 

26  00 
60  00 
60  00 
95  44 

100  00 

125  00 

80  00 

5  00 

20  00 

5  00 

88  33 

291  66 
105  00 

85  00 
95  00 
83  33 

100  00 
95  00 

86  00 
25  00 
60  Oo 
80  00 
80  lo 
60  00 
60  00 
20  00 
80  00 
75  00 
95  00 
45  00 

166  06 
60  00 

291  60 
125  00 
110  00 
95  00 
95  00 
85  00 
80  (Ml 
80  00 
85  00 
80  00 
75  00 
25  00 
60  OO 
60  00 
-  1 0  00 
60  00 
25  00 

291  66 

166  66 

125  00 

110  00 

4  5  00 

95  00 

95  00 

85  00 

80  00 

80  00 

85  00 

80  00 

7  5  (to 

6(t  00 

60  00 

65  00 

83  33 

4  2  50 

83  33 

95  00 

85  00 

125  (tO 

110  00 


65626 

65627 
66628 
65629 
66630 
66631 
66075 
66279 

66280 
66281 
66282 
66283 
66284 
66286 
66286 
67102 

67103 
67104 
67105 
67106 
67107 
67108 
67109 
67110 
67111 
67175 
67738 
68108 


68109 
68110 
68111 
68112 
68113 
68114 
68115 
68116 
68117 
68118 
68752 
68915 
69071 


O.  1m  "Wedan,  clertc 

W.    H.    Hillls.    clerk 

T.    B.    Perry,   clerk 

A.   H.    Paul,   clerk 

J.    T.    Nelson,    clerx 

P.  C.  Holgate.  clerk.... 
Gust  L  Wedan,  clerk... 
W.    A.     Holgate,    county 

treasurer    

O    H     Vivian,    deputy... 

G!   L    Wedan,   cierk 

W.    M.    Hillls,   clerk 

T.   B     Perry,   clerk 

A    H.   Paul,  clerk 

J.  T.  Nelson,  clerk 

P.   C.  Holgate,  clerk 

W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer    

O.  H.  A''ivian,  deputy.... 

G.  L.  Wedan,  clerk 

W.    M.   Hillls.   clerk 

T.    B.    Perry,   clerk 

A.   H.   Paul,  clerk 

J.    T.   Nelson,    clerk 

P.   C.   Holgate.   clerk 

Chas.    Peterson,   clerk... 

S.   C.    Miller,   clerk 

Oust  L.  Wedan.  clerk.. 
Gust  L.  AA'edan.  clerk.. 
W.    A.    Holgate.    county 

treasurer    

G.  H.  A'ivian.  deputy... 
Gust    L.    AVfcdan.    clerk.. 

AV.  M.  Hillis.  I  lerk 

Thos.   B.   Perrv.  clerk... 

A.    H.    Paul,    (lerk 

J.  T.  Nelson,  clerk 

J.  T.  Nelson,  clerk 

P.  C.  Holgate.  clerk.... 
Chas.    Peterson,   clerk... 

S.   C.    Miller,   clerk 

Gust  L.  AA'edan.  clerk... 
ChaF.    Peterson,   clerk... 


60  0^ 

100  0© 

85  00 

86  00 
85  OO 
75  00 
60  OO 

260  00 
106  66 
60  00 
100  00 
96  00 
95  00 
95  00 
75  00 

250  00 
166  66 
60  00 
100  00 
95  00 
95  00 
95  00 


Total      

Deduct       order      No. 
charged   in    error    , 


76977. 


Total    

Add   order  No.  75581,  charged 
to   General   Fund,   in   error 


Add  Dr. 
year  . 


balance  from  last 


Total  debits,  see  trial  bal- 
ance sheet  

Outstanding  warrants  . 


1 

3,845  04 

3  22 

« 

3,841  82 

52  31 

1 

3.894  13 

3,987  32 

1 

7.881  45 

73942 
73943 
75439 
75511 
75694 

75741 
75742 
75743 
75744 
75745 
75746 
75747 
75748 
75749 
75750 
75751 
75826 
75827 
76788 
76814 

76815 
76816 
76817 
76818 
76819 
70820 
76821 
76822 
76823 
76*24 
76880 
76901 


Wm.  Thompson. 
Amelia  Smith,  cl. 
AVm.  Johnson,  cl< 
Chas.  Johnson,  c 
I.  G.  Wollan,  cle 
P.  J.  Borgstrom. 
L.  A.  Marvin,  de) 
B.  O.  Loe.  clerk. 
J.  O.  Walker,  dei 
P.  J  .Borgstrom, 
I>.  H.  P'redin.  ch 
M.  Halden.  clerk 
Amelia  Smith,  ch 
Wm.  Johnson,  c 
Chas.  Johnson,  c 
O.  Halden.  count; 

itor    

Wm.  Thompson. 
V.    Rlngsred.    cle 
B.  O.  Loe.  clerk   . 
L.  A.   Marvin,  de 
O.    Halden.   count 

Itor    

L.  A.  Marvin,  de 
B.  O.  Loe.  clerk 
P.  J.  Borgstrom. 
J.  O.  AA'alker.  (  le 
D.  H.  Fredin,  cle 
M.   Halden.  clerk 


.1   2.094  12 


•   •   •    •   •  I 


11  68 


63780 
64002 
64011 
64024 

61025 
64  026 
64027 
C4028 
64029 
64030 
C4031 
64  032 
64033 
64034 
64035 
64036 
64037 
64141 


AUDITOR  AND  CLERKS. 

B.  O.  Loe,  clerk 9  40  00 

I.   G.    Wollan.   clerk 100  oo 

J.   O.   AA'alker.    deputy...  125  00 
O.    Halden,    county    aud- 
itor      291  66 

L.    A.   Marvin,   deputy...  166  66 

P.  J.   Borgstrom,  clerk..  95  00 

Martin   Halden,    clerk...  95  00 

Amelia   Smith,    clerk....  85  00 

Alex    Schuetz,    clerk....  80  00 

Asa    Dalley.    clerk 80  00 

A.    G.    Ahlstrom,    clerk..  26  46 

A.  G.  Ahlstrom.  clerk..  33  54 
Andrew  Otterson,  clerk  75  00 
AA'm.  Johnson,  clerk....  80  00 
AA'm.  Thompson,  clerk..  25  00 
Laura  Carpenter,  clerk  60  OO 
Signe   P.   Flink.   clerk...  60  Oo 

B.  O.   Loe.    clerk 45  Oo 

45  00 


Amelia  Smith,  cle 
Chas.  Johnson,  c 
Wm.  Johnson,  c 
I.  G.  Wollan.  cle 
A'ictor  Piingsred. 
A.  J.  AA'asgatt.  c 
Signe  P.  Flink.  ( 
D.   H.   i-redin.  cle 

0.  Halden,    coun 
Itor     

L.  A.  Marvin,  de 
J.   O.   AValker,  de 

1.  G.  Wollan.  cle 
P.  J.  Borgstrom. 
M.    Halden.   clerV 

A.  J.  AA'asgatt,  c; 
Wm.  Johnson.  < 
(i'has.   Johnson,    i 

Signe    P.    Flink 

A'ictor  Rlngsred 
Amelia  Smith   

B.  O.    Loe 

Total.   audit  jr 
clerks  


r-lerk. . 

rk 

•rk 

lerk.  . . 

•k 

clerk. . 
)uty . . . 

)uty. . . 

[•lerk. . 

rk 

>rk!  !!! 
erk  .  . 
lerk  .  . 
,•  aud-- 

clerk. . 
•k  

)uty  . . 
y  aiid- 

3uty . . . 

clerk. . 

rk  

rk  

rk  '.'.'.'. 

lerk  . . 
lerk  . . 

rk  

clerk, 
lerk  . . 
•lerk  .  . 

rk 

ty  aud- 

puty. . . 
puty. .. 

rk  

clerk. . 

erk .... 
lerk  .  . 
:lerk  .  . 


291  66 
95  00 
95  0  0 
80  00 
80  00 
42  50 
80  00 
75  00 
60  oO 
60  00 
70  0(1 
25  00 
69  2  3 
5  00 
25  00 
40  00 
25  00 

291  66 

166  66 

110  CO 

95  00 

95  OO 

55  00 

85  00 

80  00 

80  00 

85  00 

80  00 

75  00 

60  00 

60  00 

70  00 

20  00 

25  00 

125  00 

5  00 

25  00 

25  00 

lOfi  66 

291  0  0 

20  85 

125  00 

50  85 

35  85 

95  00 

95  00 

85  00 

20  85 

85  00 

80  00 

85 

25  00 
75  00 
30  00 
30  00 
55  00 

291  66 

166  66 

55  00 

125  00 
95  00 
75  00 
95  00 

26  00 
85  00 
80  00 
30  00 
65  00 
50  00 

166  66 
85  00 

126  00 
4  5  00 
75  00 
95  00 
85^00 
80  00 
60  00 


291  06 

6  40 

10  20 

40  00 

83  33 


69072 

69073 

69074 

69075 

69076 

69077 

69078 

69079 

70177 

70416 

70417 

70418 

70419 

70420 

70421 

70480 

70481 

71800 

72123 

72153 

72154 

72155 

72160 

72157 

72158 

72159 

73580 

73780 

73857 

73858 

73859 

73860 

73861 

73862 

73863 

75752 

75753 

75754 

75755 

75756 

75757 

75758 

75759 

70825 

76826 

76827 

70828 

76829 

7083O 

76831 

76832 


W.  A.    Holgate,  county 

treasurer  

G.  H.  A'ivian.  deputy.... 

Gust  AA'edan.  clerk 

W.  M.  Hillis.  clerk 

Thos.    B.   Perry,  clerk... 

A.   H.    Paul,  clerk 

J.  T.  Nelson,  clerk 

P.   C.    Holgate.   clerk.... 

S.  C.  Miller,  clerk 

G.   L.   Wedan,  clerk 

AA".  A.  Holgate,  Treas.. 
G.  H.  A'ivian,  deputy... 
G.    L.    Wedan.   rierk 


W.    M.    Hillis,   clerk 

J.   T.   NVlson   clerk 

P.  C.  Holgate,  clerk... 
Thos.    B.    Perry,    clerk. 

A.    H.    Paul,    clerk 

Gust  L.  AA'edan,  clerk. 
Gust  L.  Wedan.  clerk. 
AA'.  A.  Holgate,  Treas. 
G.    H.    A'ivian,   deputy.. 

Wm.    Hillls.    clerk 

Thos.    B.    Perrv.  clerk.. 

A.    H.    Paul,    clerk 

J.  T.  Nelson,  clerk.... 
P.  C.  Holgate.  clerk... 
G.    L.    AA'edan    clerk .... 

G.   L.    Wedan.  clerk 

A\'.  A.  Holgate,  trfas.. 
G.    H.    A'ivian,   deputy.. 

Hillis.    clerk 

I'«-ri  y.   clerk 

T.    Nelson,    clerk.  .  .  . 

H.    I'aul.    clerk 

C.    Holgate.    clerk.. 
A.    Holgate.    treas. 


AVm 

T.    B 

J. 

A. 

P. 

W 

G. 

G. 

W 


77046>'^ 


H.    A'ivian,    deputy.  .  . 

L.   Wedan.   c  lerk 

M.    Hillis.   clerk 

Thos.    B.    Perry,  clerk... 

A.    H.    Paul,   clerk 

J.    T.    Nelson,    clerk 

P.  C.  Holgate.  clerk... 
AA'.  A.  Hclpate.  treas.. 
G.    H.    A'ivian.    deputy... 

G.   L.   AVedan,   clerk 

AV.    M.    Hillis    clerk 

T.    B.    Perry,    clerk 

J.    T.    Nelson,    clerk 

A.   H.   Paul,  clerk 

P.  C.  ILdRate,  clerk.  .  . 
A.    II.    Markkanen.   elk 


250  OQ 
160  6' 

60  0 
100  0 
96  00 
95  09 
95  00 
15  00 
80  00 

75  00 

76  00 
50  00 
44  80 

250  00 
166  60 
50  00 
lOo  00 
95  00 
95  00 
95  00 
80  00 
75  00 
50  00 
250  00 
166  66 
50  00 
100  00 
95  06 
80  op 
95  00 
95  00 
50  00 
50  00 
250  00 
166  60 
100  00 
95  00 
95  00 
95  00 
80  oO 
50  00 
50  00 
250  OU 
166  69 
100  00 
95  00 
95  00 
95  00 
80  00 
250  00 
166  6 
50  0 
100  0 
95  00 
95  00 
95  00 
80  00 
250  00 
166  68 
100  00 
100  00 
»5  00 
«4  5  00 
95  00 
80  00 
2  00 


Total  treasurer 
clerks  


and 


CLERK    OF    DISTRICT 
CLERKS. 

D.    E.  Cuppernull.  deputy 

W.    G.    Shane,    deputy.. 

Peter  Schaefer.   deputy. 

John  AA'.  Lang,  deputy 
F.  Brady,  deputy .... 
R.  Gilpatrick.  deputy 
P.  Johnson,  clerk  .... 
A.  Dash,  deputy  .... 
G.  HoUoway.  deputy 
A.  Ostergren.  deputy 

Robt.     K.   Johnson,    dep. 

Alex    S.     Hamilton,    dtp. 

B.   T.   Rilling,   deputy    .  . 

Jennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 

O.    H.    Haehnke.    dejiuty 

A.  H.  Markkanen,  dep.. 
W.  G.  Shane,  deputy  .  . 
S.    E.    Helfoe,    deputy    . . 

P.   Johnson,  clerk.  . .  . 

A.   Dash,   deputy    .... 

G.    Holloway,    deputy 

A.  Ostergren,  deputy 
Robt.  E.  Johnson,  dep. 
Alex    S.    Hamilton,    dep. 

B.  T.  Rilling,  deputy  .. 
Jennie    S.    Moodey.    dep. 

A\'.    G.    Shane    

J     R.    Fitzpatrick.    dep.. 

E.    Helps,  deputy    .... 

F.  Brady,  deputy  . . 
P.  Johnson,  clerk.... 
T.    1  'ash,   deputy    .... 

G.  Hollowav,    deputy 
A.   Ostergren,  deputy 

Itnl.t.  E.  Johnson,  dep. 
Alex  S.  Hamilton,  dep. 
B.  G.  Rilling,  deputy.  .  . 
Jennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 
O.    H.    Haehnke.    deputy 


.111,946  14 
COURT    AND 


J. 
V. 
I'. 

K. 


and 


291  66 

83  33 

46  00 

95  00 

125  00 

75  00 

95  00 

86  00 

60  00 

80  00 

110  00 

25  00 

95  00 

60  00 

75  00 

291  66 

166  66 

125  00 

110  00 

95  00 

95  00 

95  00 

80  00 

60  00 

60  00 

25  00 

85  00 

85  00 

$18,395  36 

TREASURBR  A> 
63714   Gust  L.   AVedan, 

64039  AV.     A.     Holgate, 

treasurer    . . . . 

64040  G.  H    A'ivian.  de 

64041  Gust  L.  AVedan. 

64042  AA'.  M.  HillLs.  cl 
6404  3    T     B.    Perry,    e^e 

64044  J.  T.   Nelson,  <  le 

64045  A    H.   Paul,  cler 

64046  P.  C.  Holgate,  c 
64490   Gust   L.   AA'edan, 

64728  AA'.     A.     Holgate 

treasurer 

64729  G.  H.  A'ivian,  de 
61730   Gust  L.   AA'edan, 

64731  AA'.    M.    Hillls.   cl 

64732  T.  B.  Perry,  cle 
65733  J.  T.   Nelson,  cle 

64734  A    H.    Paul,   del 

64735  P.  C.  Holgate,  . 
65362  G.  L.  AVedan.  c! 
65624   W.     A.     Holgate 


64352  Amelia  Smitii,  clerk. 


D   CLERKS. 

clerk .  . . 
county 

"(uty .  . . . 
clerk . . . 

prk 

rk 

rk 

k 

lerk .... 

clerk .  .  . 

county 

puty 

clerk. . . 

erk 

rk 

rk 

■lerk.  . . . 

erk 

.    county 


treasurer 

65625  G.  H.  Vivian,  deputy. 


60  00 

250  00 
150  00 
50  00 
100  00 
85  00 
70  (10 
85  00 
75  00 
50  00 

250  00 
150  00 
60  00 
100  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 
75  00 
60  00 

250  00 
150  00 


63302 

63532 

63572 

63017 

63824 

64008 

64047 

64048 

64049 

64050 

64051 

64052 

64053 

64118 

64155 

64166 

64178 

04179 

74736 

64737 

04  738 

64739 

64740 

64741 

04742 

64822 

64987 

65003 

65006 

65438 

05044 

65645 

65646 

66290 

65648 

65649 

65650 

65683 

65689 

65717 

65718 

65909 

66062 

66287 

66288 

66289 

66290 

66291 

66292 

60293 

66294 

66406 

66826 

66598 

66611 

67112 

67113 

67114 

07115 

67116 

67117 

67118 

67119 

67479 

67481 

67482 

674  90 

67491 

67759 

67791 

68119 

68120 

68121 

68122 

68123 

68124 

68125 

68126 

68615 

68663 

68729 

69080 

69081 

69082 

69083 

69084 

69085 

69086 

69087 

69265 

69426 

70067 

70068 

70422 

70423 

70424 

70425 

70426 

70427 

70428 

70429 

70483 

71125 

S1637 

72160 

72161 

72162 

72163 

72164 

72165 

72166 

72167 

72255 

73423 

73864 

73865 

73866 

73867 

73868 

73869 

73870 

738(1 

74501 

75138 

75225 

75423 

75760 

76761 


W.  (J.  Shane,  deputy.... 

A.  II.  Markkanen,  deputy 

S.    E.   Helps,  deputy 

Thos.     F.    Brady,    deputy 

J.   P.  Johnson  clerk 

V.    A.    Dash,   deputy 

I'.    O.    Holloway.    deputy 

K.    A.    Ostergren 

Robt.  E.  Johnson,  deputy 
Alex  S.  Hamilton,  deputy 

B.  G.  Rilling,  deputy.  .  . 
Jennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 
O.  H.  Haehnke.  deputy 
Thos.    F.    Brady,    deputy 

Helps,  deputy 

Gillpatrick.  deputy 

.Johnson,   deputy. . 

Dash,   dTuty 

Holloway.  deputy 
Ostergren.   deputy 

E.  Johnson,  deputy 


S. 

J. 

J. 

V 

V 

K.   A 

Robt 


K. 
R. 
P    . 

A. 

G. 


V.  A. 
U.  G 
K.    A 

Robt 


Alex  S.  Hamilton,  deputy 
B.  G.  Rilling,  deputy.  .  . 
Jennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 

0.  H.    Haehnke.    deputy 
R.  Gillpatrick.  deputy 

K.    Helps,   deputy 

H.  Markkan'-n.  deputy 
.    G.    Shane,    deputy... 

F.  Bradv,  deputy.  . . . 
Robt.  E.  Johnson,  deputy 
J.    P.    Johnson,   clerl*.  .  .  . 

Dash,   deputy 

Holloway,    deputy 

Ostergren.  deputy 

E.  Johnson,  deputy 

Alex  S.  Hamilton,   deputy 

B.   G.   Rilling,   deputy. .  . 

Jennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 

1.  G.  Gilpatrick.  deputy. 
S.  E.    Helps,    deputy 

A.  H.  Markkanen.  deputy 
J.    P.    Johnson,  clerk.  ..  . 

V.    A.   Dash,   deputy 

U.    G.  Holloway,    deputy. 
K.    A.   Ostergren,   deputy 
Robt.     E.  Johnson,  deputy. 
Alex  S.  Hamilton,  deputy 

B.  G.  Rilling,  deputy  ... 
Jennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 
I.  R.  Kilpatrick,  deputy 
S.    E.    Helps,      deputy... 

H.  Markkanen,  deputy 

G.  Shane,  deputy.  .  .  . 

P.    Johnson,   clerk.  .  . . 

A   Dash,  deputy 

G.  Holloway.  deputy. 
O.  Ostergren,  deputy 

Robt.  E.  Johnson,  deputy 
Alex  S.  Hamilton,  deputy 
B.  G.  Rilling,  deputy.  .  . 
Jennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 


21  50 

4  00 

6  €2 

14  12 

44  87 

46  50 

260  00 

150  00 

100  00 

100  00 

90  00 

90  00 

76  00 

125  00 

6  37 

2  II 
16  3 
20  0 

250  0 

150  00 

100  00 

100  00 

90  00 

90  00 

75  00 

125  00 

10  50 

3  13 

9  00 
•'2  25 

250  00 

150  00 

100  00 

100  00 

90  00 

90  00 

75  00 

125  (to 

1  00 
3  62 

2  23 

3  00 
10  75 

250  "0 
150  00 
1 00  00 
100  00 

90  0" 

90  00 

75  00 

125  00 

2  oO 

10  00 
7  50 
7  75 

250  00 
150  00 
100  00 
100  00 
90  00 
90  00 
75  00 


125 


00 

00 

5 

00 
12 
00 


A. 

W. 

J. 

A'. 

U. 

K. 


I' 
I. 
S. 
J. 
V 

I' 

K. 


G. 

R. 
E. 
P. 
A. 
G. 

A. 


Hcdloway,  deputy 
Gilpatrick,  deputy 
Helps,  deputy .... 
Johns  )n,    clerk... 

Dash,   deputy 

Holloway.  deputy. 
Ostergren,   deputy 
E.  Johnson,   deputy 
Alex  S.  Hamilton,  deputy 
B.    G.    Rilling,    deputy... 
S     Moodv,    deputy.... 
H.    Haelmke.    deputy. 
R.  Gillpatrick.  deputy 
p.    Johnson,    clerk.  .  . . 

A.   I>ash.   deputy 

G.    Holloway,  deputy. 
A.   Ostergren,   deputy 
Robt.  E.  Johnson,   deputy 
Alex  S.  Hamilton,   deputy 
B.    G.    Rilling,    deputy.  .  . 
S.    Moody,    deputy.... 
G.    Shane,    deputy.  .  . 
H.    Haehnke,    deputy. 
Helps,    deputy.... 
Wedan.    deputy.  .  . 
Johnson,    deputy.. 
Dash,  deputy 


Robt. 


J. 

O. 

I. 

J. 

V. 

U. 

K 


J. 

W. 

O. 

s. 

G. 
J. 
V. 


E. 
A. 
P. 
A- 


4 

9 

2 

17 

10  62 

15  00 

250  00 

1  50  00 

100  00 

100  00 

75  00 

90  00 

75  00 

126  00 

a  50 

3  00 

1  12 

250  00 

150  00 

100  00 

100  00 

90  00 

90  00 

75  00 

125  00 

3  25 
14  00 

4  37 
14  00 

250  00 

160  00 

50  00 

100  00 

90  00 

90  00 

-rroo 

125  00 
50  00 
3  25. 
6  00 
250  00 
150  00 
100  OO 
100  00 
90  00 
90  00 
75  00 
125  00 
1  00 
3  50 
250  00 
150  00 
100  00 
100  00 
90  00 
90  00 
75  00 
125  00 
6  62 
1  00 
16  00 
50  00 
250  00 
150  00 


^sr 




_  Ik 


— 


I 


wmm^^^^r-^ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD: 


75762 
757fi3 
7:.Tn5 

7  r>  7  •>  (> 

757G7 
75Tt;S 
70:;S1 
7 '■40  5 

7  • '  '  •*»  -^ 
7fit;7Sv 
7P7t'.l 
76771 
767H7 
7684!> 
76S49 
76S50 
76S51 
76*52 
76S.S0 
76;»02 
76957 
77'^it6 
77007 
77043 


U    G,   Holloway.  deputy. 

K    A    Osttrgren.   deputy 

Koht.  K.  .lnhnson.  deputy 

\lex  »-<.  Hamilton,  deputy 

k  G.  Killing,  deputy 

S.  Mootv.  deputy.  .  . 
R  GiH Patrick,  deputy 
H  Markkani'n.  dt-puty 
K.  Holps.  tleputy  .  .  .  • 
K.  GlHp«t!"ick.  deputy 
G.  Sliaiu-,  deputy    .  .  • 

1>.  Fullf-r.  deputy 

G.  Holloway.  dej.uty 
T  Bradv.  deputy  .... 
I\  .rohnsun,  clerk  .  -  • 
A.  Dasli.  deputy  .  .  ■  • 
Tennie  S.  Moody,  deputy 
K  A.  OsterKi't'".  deputy 
j;  45  John.son.  deputy 
\ie\-  Hamilton,  deputy 
n  G.  RillinK.  deputy.. 
John  W.  I^uiK.  deputy.  . 
()  H  Haelinke.  deputy 
S  K.  Helps,  deputy  .  . .  • 
E     CuppernuU,    Uep. 


J. 
I. 

A. 

I.' 

\v. 

A. 
U. 
F. 
J. 
V. 


D. 


100  00 

100  00 
90  00 
90  00 
75  OO 

11' 5  00 
5  50 

1  00 
IS  50 

2  25 
8  75 

25  00 

.  100  00 

9;^  00 

250  00 

150  00 
li5  00 
100  00 

90  00 
90  00 
75  00 
22  12 
2  25 
5  50 

151  75 


Total. 
and 


clerk   of 
clerks     . 


court 


^12.549  43 


REGISTER 
839SS   .ToJ.n 


64054 
64055 
64056 
6  4'>.')7 
6405S 
64H5'.t 
64t»60 
64061 
64062 
64o«:'. 
64064 
64743 
6  J744 
64745 
64716 
64747 
6474S 
64749 
64750 
61751 
«47-.2 
6k7--^ 
.  64755 

65';';- 

65t,:::: 
6  5  6  Li  4 
65';X5 
6  5  •■■:'.  6 
65i;  '.  7 

65'".;."^ 

65640 

65641 

65i;  12 

66295 

66296 

66297 

662i»S 

66i'i»;» 

66.JI10 

66;>oi 

6«:;i'2 

66:;03 

66  "04 

66r;o5 

67120 

67121 


OF   DKEPS   AND  CLERKS- 
Rittnian.   clerk.  .  .  .1 
M    C.    Palmer,  register.. 
Tl'os.    Clark,    deputy.-, 
jno.    W.  Juntilla.   deputy 
Xtllie  Hoiland.  deputy.. 

Anna   John.son.  deputy 
k    H>rnlbrouk.  deupty.. 
G'   M.    Mallory.    deputy.  . 
Ciri-stine  Mcl.eod.  .Uputy 
Cliira    Lofgren.    clerk... 

\gn»*3    Iveed,    clerk 

Ilhea  Klttman.  clerk... 
M  C  Palmer,  register.. 
Thos.    Clark,    deputy... 

Jno     W.    Juutilla.    clerk 

Nellie    Holland,    clerk... 

Anna     Johnson,     '^'{'^'l*- • 

E      HornibrLiok,     clerk  ■  • 

g!    M.    MaUory.    clerk... 

Chri.sliue    McLeod,    cU-iK 

Clara    LofKren.    clerk... 

Agnes    l'a-e>l.    clerk. 

rJna    IMtiman.    clerk... 

Jno.    Rittman.    oUrk 

iL  C.  I'almer.  register.. 

Thos.    Clark.     d«^P"^>'-.;- 

Jno.    V\'.    JuntiUa-    cleik 

Xelile    Holland,    clerk 

An»ia    Johnson. 

E.    Hornihrook, 

Clara    Eofgren. 

G     M.    Mallory, 

Rlioa    Rittman 


clerk, 
clerk, 
clerk, 
clerk . 
clerk 


clerk. . . 
clerk. . . 
clerk.  . . 
clerk.  . . 
clerk.  ,  . 
clerk 


?rk 


67122 
67123 
67124 
67125 
67126 
67127 
6712S 
67129 
68127 
6S12S 
6S129 
6^1S0 

e-^isi 

681.^2 

6  s  r^  3 
6<i-:.4 

6S136 
6Si:'.7 
6S179 
690SS 


Christine    McLeod.    clerk 
Jno.    Rittman.    clerk.... 
M    C.  Palmer,  regi.'^ter.. 
Th.iS.    Clark,    deputy.... 
Jno.  W.  Juntilla.  clerk.. 
Nellie    Hidland.    clerk. 
Anna    Jc'ins^on, 
K.    Hornihrook. 
Clara    l..'igrvn. 
G.    M-    Mallory. 
Rhea    Pattman. 
Christine    MoLeod 
.Jno.    Rittman.    clerk.. 
M    C    I'alnur.  register 
Thos.    Clark,    deputy. 
67121»^-.Jno.    W.    Juutilla,    el 

Nellie  Holland,  clerk.. 
\nna  Johnson,  clerk.  .  . 
E  Hornibrook.  clerk... 
Clara    Lufgren.    clerk... 

G.   M.  Mallory.   clerk 

Rhea  Rittman.  clerk.  • 
Christine  McEeod,  clerk 
Jol'.n  Rittman.  clerk... 
M  C  Palmer,  regi-^ter.. 
TV. OS.  Clark,  deputy.  .  .  . 
Jno.  W.  Juntilla.  clerk 
Nellie  Holland,  clerk-. 
Anna  Johnson,  clerk... 
E-  Hornibrook.  clerk... 
ciara   Lofgren.    clerk... 

G.  M.  Maliory.  clerk 

Rhi^a  Rittnian.  clerk... 
Chri^^tine  Mcl.eod.  clerk 
J.,hn  Rittman.  clerk... 
\  F,  Swanstrom.  clerk 
M.    C.     Palmer,    register 

of   deeds    

Thos.    Clark,   deputy.  .  .  . 
Tno    W.   Juntilla,   clerk. 
Nellie   Holland,  clerk    .. 
Anna   Johnson,   clerk    .. 
Elizabeth  Johnson,  clerk 
E     Hornibrook.    clerk.. 
C;ara    Lofgren.    clerk... 
it',' ;i    Rittman.    clerk    .. 
•;  ;.~tine   MeEeod.   clerk 
\    F.  Swanstrom,  clerk. 
G.  M.  Mallory.  clerk.  ... 
Elizabeth  Jolu.sin.  clerK 
M     c     P.ilmer.    register    . 
Thos.    Clark,   deputy    -  .  • 
Jno    W.  Juntilla,   clerk. 
Nellie   Holland,  clerk... 
\nna    Johnson,    clerk    .  . 
F    Hornlbr.'ok,   clerk.  .  . 
Clara   Lofgren.   clerk... 
Rhea    Rittman,   clerk    .  . 
Christine   McLeod,   clerk 
G.  M.  Mallory.  clerk.... 
\     F    Swanstrom.   clerk 

Grace  Black,   clerk    

M  C.  Palmer,  register.. 
Thos.  Clark,  deputy  . . . 
Nellie  Holland,  clerk  . . 
John  Juntilla,  clerk  .. 
C.  L.  Lofgren.  clerk... 
E  Hornibrook.  clerk  .  . 
G^-rtrude  Mallory.  clerk 
Rhea  Rittman.  clerk  . 
Christine  McLeod,  clerk 
A     F    Swanstrom.    clerk 

Grace     Black,     clerk 

Anna  Johnson,  clerk.... 
\  F.  Swanstrom,  clerk 
M  C,  Palmer,  register.. 
Thomas  Clark,  deputy.. 
J,)hn   JuntiUa.    clerk.... 

Nellie  Holland,  clerk 

C  L.  Lofgren,  clerk .... 
E  Hornibrook.  clerk .... 
Rhea  Rittman,  clerk.... 
Gertrude  Mallory.  clerk 
Christine  McLeod.  clerk 
Theresa  Long,  clerk.  . . . 
Anna  Johnson,  clerk. .  . . 
M    C    Palmer,  register.. 

Thos.   Clark,   deputy 

John   Juntilla.    clerk 

Nellie   Holland,    clerk... 

C.   L-   Lofgren.    clerk 

F.  Hornibrook.  clerk  .... 
Rhea  Rittman,  clerk.... 
c.ertrude  Mallory.  clerk 
Christine  McLeod.  clerk 
A.  F.  Swanstrom.  clerk 
Theresa  Long,  clerk  .  .  .  . 
Anna  Johnson,  clerk.... 
M.  C.  Palmer,  register.. 
Thos.  Clark,  deputy.... 
John    Juntilla.    clerk.... 

Clara  Lofgren,  clerk 

Nellie  Holland,  clerk  .  .  . . 
E      Hornibrook.     clerk.. 

Cs.     Mallory.    clerk 

Rhea  Rittman,  clerk... 
Mrs.  C.  McLeod.  clerk., 
A,  F.  Swanstrom.  clerk., 
Theresa  Long,    clerk..., 

Edith     Forgy.     clerk 

Anna     Johnson,     clerk. 


75  00 
2,")0  ou 
15''  no 

,Si»  01. 

70  00 

65  00 

«5  00 

65  Ou 

fi5  tti. 

65  00 

65  00 

65  00 
250  00 
150  00 

SO  00 

70  00 

65  00 

65  00 

65  00 

65  00 

65  00 

65  00  , 

65  00  • 

75  00 
250  00 
150  00 

SO  00 

70  00, 

65  00 

65  00 

65  00 

65  00- 
65  00 
65  00 
75  00 

250  00 

150  00 
SO  OO 
70  00 
65  00 
frG  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00  ' 
65  00 
75  00 

250  00 

150  OO 
80  00 
70  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00  , 
65  00 
75  00 

250  00 

150  00 
SO  00 
70  00  i 
65  00  I 

65  00 ; 

65  00 
65  00  ; 
65  00  : 

65  00  i 

75  00  ! 


690  S  9 
690.*0 
69091 
6!>o92 
6'>''93 
6H";>4 
(,}■•  ;>  5 

6  ■•■•:•: 

6  .'  '  J*  ■> 
C'.>152 
7ii:'.s7 

7  '4;;'' 

7"431 

70432 

70433 

70434 

70435 

70436 

70437 

70438 

70439 

7044'> 

70441 

72168 

72169 

72170 

72171 

72172 

7217:5 

72174 

72175 

72176 

72177 

72178 

72179 

73848 

73872 

73873 

73874 

73875 

73876 

73877 

73878 

73879 

73S80 

73881 

73883 

75769 

75770 

75771 

75772 

75774 

75775 

75776 

75777 

75778 

75779 

757S0 

76835 

76836 

76837 

76838 

76839 

76S40 

76841 

7684  2 

76843 

76844 

76845 

76846 

76847 


250  00 
150  00 
SO  00 
70  00 
65  00 
50  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  OO 
50  00 
65  O'l 
65  00 
250  00 
150  00 
SO  00 
70  OO 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
50  00 
65  00 
250  00 
150  00 
70  00 
80  OO 
65  00 
65  00  I 
65  00  I 
65  00 
65  00  I 
50  00  j 
65  00  I 
65  00  I 
60  00  ! 
250  00  I 
150  00  I 
80  00 
70  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
250  00 
150  00 
80  00 
70  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
65  00 
50  00 
65  00 
65  00 
250  00 


64071 

64072 

64074 

64075 

64  756 

64757 

61758 

t,4759 

64760 

64761 

64762 

64763 

tJ4764 

6  »765 

65651 

65652 

65653 

65654 

G  5  6  5  5 

65656 

,  65657 

65658 

656  59 

65708 

66307 

66308 

'■■  ».ri309 

166310 

;66:UT 

1«6"12 

66:513 

66314 

6631. 3 

6634  3 

67131 

67132 

67133 

67134 

6713  5 

67i:{6 

67137 

6713S 

67139 

;;7i  ;o 

U^l3!> 
6S140 
6S141 
6S142 
6M43 
6M44 
6M45 
6S146 
6S14: 
6S14>J 
69113 
69114 
•69115 
69116 
69117 
69118 
•69119 
69120 
69121 
69122 
704  4  9 
704  50 
70451 
704  52 
704  5;'. 
7o454 
70455 
7o456 
, 7U457 
70458 
721^0 
.721M 
' 72182 
72183 
72184 
72185 
72186 
72187 
72188 
72189 
73SS4 
73885 
73886 
73887 
73888 
73S89 
73890 
7.:891 
73892 
73h93 
75781 
; 75782 
75783 
i  75784 
■ 757S5 
i  7.5786 
\  75787 
I  75788 
I757S9 
i  75790 
! 76S61 
J76S62 
I  76863 
176864 
I  76865 
i  76S66 
176867 
76868 
76>169 
76870 


Chas.  E.  Johnson,  deputy 

R.  S.  Lerch,  deputy 

Sieg.  Levy,  deputy 

Wm.  Oppel,  deputy 

Win.  J.  Bates,  sheriff... 
S.  L.  IMerce,  deputy.... 
F.  U  Magie,  deputy.... 
M.  J.  Horsan,  deputy... 
Owen  Gately.  deputy. 


King,  deputy. 

E.  Johnson,  deputy 

Lerch,  deputy 

Levy,  deputy 

Oppel,    deputy 

J.    liates.   sheriff.  .  . 

Pierce,  deputy 

Magie.    deputy.  .  .  . 

Horgan.    deputy.. 

Gately.     deputy.. 

Levy,    deputy 

Lerch.    deputy 

Johnson,    deputy. 

Oppel,   deputy 

King,   deputy.  •  •  •  •  • 
.1.    Bates,   sheriff.  .  . 

Pierce.  depu'V 

Magie.   dev)uty .  . . . 

Lew.    deputy 

Lerch.    deputy 

Johnson,  deputy. . 

Oppel.   deputy 

King,   depvity 

(lately,  deputy... 
Horgun.  deputy.  .  . 
J.    Bates,  sheriff.  . . 

Pierce,  depiiiy 

Magie.  deputy 

Lew,    deputy 

Lerch,  deputy 

Joimson.   deputy.  . 

Oppel.   deputy 

Kiiiyr.  deputy.  .  ■,.  ■  '• 

Gately.   deputy... 

Horgan.  deputy.  . . 

J     Bates,  slieriff .  . . 

Pierce,  deptity 

Ma.glo.  dfputy 

Levy,   deputy 

Lorch,  deputy 

Johnson,    deputy.  . 

Oppel.   dopuiy 

King,  deputy 

Owen    Gately.    deputy... 

M    J.   Morgan,   deputy-... 

J.    Bates,    sherirt.  .  . 

Pierce,   deputy.  . . . 

Magie.  deputy 

l.,€vv.    deputy  .  . 

Lerch.  deputy 

Johnson,  deputy. 

Opoel.   ih'puiy  .... 

Klnar,    deputy.  .  •  •• 

Owen   Gately,    deputy.. 

M.  J     liorgivn,  deputy 


Geo 

Chas, 

R.  S. 

Sieg. 

\Vm. 

Wm. 

S.  L. 

F.    L. 

M.    J. 

Owen 

Sieg. 

R.    S. 

Chas. 

Win. 

Geo. 

Wm. 

S.  I.. 

F.    L. 

Sieg. 

R.    S. 

Chas. 

Wm. 

Gi<o. 

Owen 

M.  J. 

Wm. 

S.  L. 

F.  U 

Sieg 

R.  S. 

C.as 

Wm. 

Geo. 

Dwell 

M.   J. 

Wm. 

S.  L. 

F.  U 

Sieg 

li.  S. 

Clias 

Wm. 

Geo. 


Wm. 
S.    L. 

!•-.  1* 

Sieg 

R.   S. 

Chas. 

Wm. 

Geo. 


Wm. 
S.  L. 
F.  L 
Sieg 
P..  S 
Chri: 
Wm. 


J.    Bates,   sl'.eriff. 


Pierce,   deputy 

Magie.   deputy 

Ui  vv.    deputy 

Lercli.   deputy 

Johnson,  deputy. . 
Oppel.  deputy.  . .  • 
George  Kinff.  deputy... 
Owen  Gately.  deputy... 
M  J.  Horgan.  deputy.. 
Wm.  J.  Bates,  sheriff. .. 
ri     L.    Pierce,    deputy.  . .. 

Magie.    deputy 

Horgan.    deputy.. 
Gately.    deputy.  .. 

King,    deputy 

Levy,    deputy 

E.  Johnson,  deputy 

Lerch.    deputy.  .  • • 

Oppel.    deputy. 


F.  L. 
M.  J. 
Owen 
Geo. 
Sieg 
Ciias. 
II.  S. 
W,    H 


Wm. 
S.   L. 
F.    L. 
M.    J. 
Owen 
Geo. 
Sieg 
C.    E. 
R.    S. 
Wm. 
Wm. 
S.    L. 
F.   L. 
M.    J. 


J.    Bates,    sheriff, 
pierce,    deputy.  .  . 

Magie.    deputy.. 

Horgan.    deputy. 
Gately.     deputy. 

King,    deput.v 

Lew.    deputy.  .  .  . 

Johnson,   deputy. 

Lerch.  deputy. . . 
H.  Oppel.  deputy, 
J.    Bates,    sheriff. 

Pierce,  deputy . . 

Magie,   deputy. . 
Hoigaii.    deputy 


00 


Owen     Gately,     deputy. 
Geo.    King,    deputy.-.- 
Johnson,  deputy. 
Ltw,    deputy.  .  . . 
Lerch,    deputy.  .  . 
11.  Oppel.  deputy. 
J.    Bates,    sheriff. 
Pierce,   deputy. . . 
Magie.    dei)Uty... 
Horgan.   deputy, 

Kiv.g,    deputy 

Gately.   deputy. 


C.  E. 
Sieg 
R.  S. 
Wm. 
Wm. 
S.  L. 
F.  L. 
M.  J. 
Geo. 
Owen 


Sieg  Levy,  deputy 

C  E.  Johnson,  deputy 
R.  S.  Lerch,  deputy.. 
W.  H.  oppel,  deputy. 


85  00 
85  00 
9T>  uO 
63  75 
333  3;{ 
150  00 
115  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
85  00 
85  00 
90  00 
85  00 
333  33 
1 50  00 
115  00 
100  00 
100  00 
90  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 
100  00 
333  33 
150  OO 
1 1 5  00 
100  00 
S5  00 
85  00 
S5  00 
1  0<»  00 
100  OO 
li'O  00 
333  33 
150  00 
115  00 
80  00 
85  00 
85  (to 
85  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
333  33 
150  00 
115  00 
90  00 
85  00 
85  00 
S5  00 
100  00 
100  00 
lOO  00 
333  33 
150  00 
115  00 
Jlo  00 
85  00 
■  S5  00 
85  00 
100  00 
100  00 
lOO  00 
3r53  33 
150  00 
115  00 
90  00 
85  00 
85  00 
So  00 
lOO  00 
100  00 
100  00 

150  00 
115  00 
100  00 

100  00 

100  00 
90  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 
333  33 
150  00 
115  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
90  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 
333  33 
150  00 
115  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
85  00 
90  00 
85  00 
85  00 
333  33 
150  00 
115  00 
lOo  00 
lOO  00 
100  00 
90  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 


6853 
6854 
G855 
6856 
6857 
6910 


J  B.  Mlddlecoff,  judge.. 
Thos.  Clark.  Jr..  clerk.. 
Clarence  Dwyer,  clerk.. 
Rose  E.  Beihoffer,  clerk 
Eugene  Morin,  clerk.... 
Clarence  Dwyer,  clerk.. 


Total 
and 


judge 
clerks 


probate 


250  00 

150  00 

75  00 

25  00 
50  00 

26  00 


|6,224  50 


Jl 

6  408  4 

i;  J0S5 

64086 

64773 

64774 

64775 

t:5r.94 

65595 

65596 

66322 

t;6323 

66324 

67147 

6714  8 

67149 

t;8156 

6'<157 

68158 

69134 

69135 

69136 

70470 

70471 

70472 

72198 

72199 

72200 

73902 

73903 

73904 

75S00 

75801 

75S02 

76858 

76859 

7C860 


DGES  OF  DISTRICT 
J.  D.  Ensign,  salary. 


COURT. 


Wm. 
H.    B. 
J.    D. 
Wm. 
H.    B 
J.    D. 
Wm. 
H.    H. 
J.    D. 


A.    Cant,    salary. 
Dlbell.    salary.. 


Ensign. 

A.  Cant. 

Dlbell. 

Ensign. 

.A.    Cant. 

Dibell. 

Ensign. 


AV*n.  .\.  Cnnt. 
H.  B.  Dibell. 
J.  D.  Ensign. 
Wm.  A.  Cant, 
H.  B.  Dibell. 
J.  D.  Ensign, 
Wm.  A.  Cant, 
H.  B.  Dibell. 
J.  D.  Ensign, 
Wm.  A.  Cant. 
H.  B.  Dibell. 
J.  D.  Ensign. 
Wm.  A.  Cant. 
H.  B.  l>ibell, 
J.  D.  Ensign, 
Wm.  A.  Cant. 
H.  B.  Dibell. 
J.  D.  En><ign. 
Wm.  A.  Cant, 
H.  B.  Dibell. 
J.  D.  Ensign. 
Wm.  A.  Cant. 
H.  B.  Dibell. 
Wm.  A.  Cant. 
J.  D.  Ensign. 
H.    B.    Dlbell, 


salary 
salary 
salary. . 
salary. . 
.salary.  . 
salary. . 
salary. . 
salary. . 
salary. . 
salary. . 
salary. . 
salary .  . 
salary. . 
salary. , 
salary. , 

salary. 

salary. , 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 

salary . 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 

salar.v. 

salary. 

salary. 

salary. 


125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  00 

125  (to 

125  00 

125  00 

70474 

70475 

70476 

72201 

72202 

72203 

72204 

73905 

73906 

73907 

73908 

75803 

75804 

75805 

75806 

76882 

70883 

7C884 

76885 


125  00 
125  00 


W.    E.'Gre'ene,   first   as- 
sistant      • 

Otto    A.    Polrler,    second 
assistant    

Louise  '  Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher   , •  • 

John   H  .Norton,    county 
attorney     

W.    E.'  Greene,    first    as- 
sistant     

Louise   Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher   , ; 

Otto    A.    Polrier,    second 
assistant 

John   II.   Norton,    county 
attorney    

W.    E.    Greene,    first    as- 
sistant      • 

Otto    A.    Poirler,    second 
assistant     

Louise    Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher     

John    H.   Norton,    county 
attorney    

W.    E.    Greene,    first    as- 
sistant      

Louise   Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher     • 

Otto    .A.    Poirler.    second 
assistant    •  • 

John    H.   Norton,    county 
attorney    •  •  .  •  •  •     •  •  .  •  • 
W.    E.    Greene,    first    as- 
sistant      

Louise   Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher      • 

Otto    A.    Polrier,    second 
assistant    


139  78 
83  33 
83  33 
800  00 
166  66 
33  33 
83   33 
300  00 
166  66 
83  33 
33  33 
300  00 
166  66 
33  33 
83  33 
800  00 
166  66 
33  33 
83  33 


73916 
73917 
7391S 
75791 
75817 
75818 
75819 
76871 
76872 
76873 
76874 


P.  McDermid,  assistant 
Al  Arnson,  assistant... 
Gertrude  Bates,  matron 
Gertrude    Bates,    matron 

Joseph    Allen,    jailer 

P.  McDermid,  assistant 
Al    Arnson,    assistant... 

Joseph    Allen    jailer 

P.  McDermid,  assistant 
Al  Arnson.  assistant... 
Gertrude    Bates,    matron 


74988 
75960 


80  00 
80  00 
31  00 
30  00 
85  00 
80  00 
80  00 
85  00 
80  00 

!??.?J7592S 
75933 


75924 

75925 
I 
175926 


Total 


.9 


31  00 
3,306  00 


County     attorney     a"*^,   „  „  ,»  o. 
assistants    ♦   6,84.5  J4 


Total     judges 
Court     


district 


%   4,500  00 


!  r.r 


Total        sheriff 
deputies    .  . . . 


and 


.114,798  71 


SUPERINTENDENT  OF  SCHOOLS  AND 
ASSISTANT. 

superind- 


64076 

64077 
64766 

64767 
6  5  6  6  S 
65950 

66315 

66316 
67141 

64742 
68149 

68150 
69127 

69128 
70463 

70464 
72190 

72191 
73894 

73895 
75792 

75793 
76886 

76887 


.S.    W.    Gilpin. 

tendent     ■  • 

L.    A.   Sulcov.   assistant. 
S.     W.    Gilpin,    superin- 
tendent      

U   A.  Sulcov.  assistant. 
L.    A.    Sulcov.    assistant, 
a.    W.     Gilpin,    superin- 
tendent      •  •  • 

S.    W.     Gilpin,    superin- 
tendent      •  • 

L    A     Sulcov.   assistant. 
S.     W.     Gilpin,     superin- 
tendent      •  • 

L     A     Sulcov.  assistant. 
S.'    W.    Gilpin,    superin- 
tendent      •  • 

L    A.    Sulcov.   assistant. 
S.     W.     Gilpin,     superin- 
tendent      

L    A    Sulcov.   assistant. 
S.     W.     Gilpin,     superin- 
tendent      •  • 

L.   A.  Sulcov,  assistant. 
S.     \\ .     Gilpin,    superin- 
tendent      

L    .-v.   Sulcov.   assistant. 
S.     W.     Gilpin,    superin- 
tendent      •  • 

I     A     Sulcov,    assistant. 
S.     W.     Gilpin,    superin- 
tendent     •.••••:• 

L    A.    Sulcov.   assistant. 
S.     W.    Gilpin,     superin- 
tendent      •  • 

L.   A.   Sulcov,   assistant. 

Total.  Superintendent 
of  schools  and  as- 
sistant      


150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 
100  00 

150  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 

150  00 
100  00 


13,000  00 


INSPECTOR    OF    MINES. 
H.    Harvey,   salary.. 
H.  Harvey,  salary... 
Harvey,  salary. . . 
Webb,   salary. 


^iS  21  '  64078  W. 

8?  O'l  ,  64768   W. 

^aaa' 65604   W.  H. 

12  22  I  66682   F.    J. 

6.1  00  I  j.,-143   p_   J.  Webb,   salary 

^^'^'^    6M51   F.   J.  Webb,   salary 

65  00|g9^.,q   F     J.  Webb,    salary. 

eSOO'-^^gr,   p    J,  Webb,   salary., 

50  00    -,jg..    p     J  Webb,   salary., 

65  00  1  •jojj^g   F    jT.  Webb,   salary. 

2'J22    T5794    F.    J.  Webb,    .salary. 

63  00    -gj.gj  p    j^  Webb,  salary.. 


Total  register  of  deeds 

and    clerk-s    $12,645  00 


63589 

63853 

64035 

64167 

64455 

64754 

64840 

65229 

6564:} 

65675 

66037 

66:jOt; 

€64o:5 

67l::o 

67500 

67736 

67915 

6813S 

68621 

6  87  56 

68S23 

69153 

69266 

70176 

70370 

71617 

71859 

71992 

72108 

73397 

73  63:; 

73S82 

75140 

75311 

75886 

76575 

76769 

76789 


Wm. 
Wm. 
A.  L. 
Wm. 
Wm. 
A.  L. 
Wm. 
Wm. 


Wm. 
A.  L. 
Wm. 
A.  L. 
Wm. 
Wm. 
Wm. 


300  00 
65  00 
60  00 

300  00 
25  00 

100  00 

140  00 
30  00 
95  00 

780  00 
50  00 
75  00 

620  00 


EXAMINER  OF  TITLES  AND  DEPUTY 
REGLSTER    OF    TITLES. 
A.  L.  Agatln,  examiner.  . 
A.  Anderson,  dep.. 
A.   Anderson,   dep.. 
Agatin.  examiner.  . 
A.  Anderson,  dep.  . 
A.   .Anderson,  dep.. 
Agatin.  e.\aniiner.. 
A.  Andt-rson.  dep.. 
A.  AndtM-son.  dep., 
A.  L.  Agatin.  i-.xaminer.. 
Wm.   -A.  Anderson,  dep.. 
A.   Anderson,  dep.. 
Agatin.  examiner.. 
A.  Anderson,  dep.. 
Agatin.  examiner.  . 
A.   Anderson,  dep.. 
A.  Anderson,  dep.. 
A.  Anderson,  dep.. 
A.  L.  Agatin.  examiner.. 
Wm.   A.  Anderson,  dep., 

•A.  Anderson,  dep., 

A.   Anderson,  dep., 
Agatin.  examiner. 

A.   Anderson,  dep. 

A.  Anderson,  dep. 

Agatin.  examiner. 

A.   Anderson,  dep. 

A.  Anderson,  dep. 

A.  .Anderson,  dep. 

Agatin,  examiner. 

A.  Anderson,  dep. 

A.   Anderson,  dep. 

Agatin.  examiner. 

A.   Anderson,  dep. 

Agatin.  examiner. 

A.  Ander.son,  dep. 

A.  Anderson,  dep. 

A.  Anderson,  dep. 


166  66 
166  66 
160  66 
134  61 
166  66 
166  66 
166  66 
166  66 
166  66 
166  66 
166  66 
166  66 


JUVENILE    COURT. 
F.    E.   Resell.',   probation 

officer,  salary    

Margaret     I'orgy.      dep- 
uty,   salary    

F.    E.    liesche.   probation 

officer,  postage,   etc... 

F.    E.    Resche.    probation 

officer,    salary    • 

I'.   E.   Resclie,   probation 
officer,   expenses    .... 
Margaret  J.  Forgy,  dep- 

utv.    expenses    

Margaret      Forgy.      dep- 

utv.  salary   

Mrs."  Margaret  J.  Forgy. 

deputy,    expenses    .... 

F.   E.    Resche,   probation 

officer,   salary    

F.    E.    Resche,    probation 
officer,    postage,    etc.. 
Mrs.    D.    S.    Forgy.    dep- 
uty,  expenses    

Mrs."  D.    S.    Forgy,    dep- 
uty,   salary     

F.   E.   Resche,   probation 

officer,    conveyance     . 

F.   K.   Resche.   probation 

officer,    salary     

Margaret      Forgy.      dep- 
uty,   salary     

Mr.      Husman.      deputy. 

salary    

Mrs.   M.    J.    Forgy,    dep- 
uty,  services    

Agnes      Lasee.      deputy. 

witness    

Frances  Peruse,  witness 
John  Sedar,  witness.... 
F.  E.  Resche.  probation 
officer,  conveyance  .  . 
F.  E.  Resche,  probation 
officer,  conveyance  .  . 
F.    E.    Resche,    probation 

officer,   salary    

Margaret       Forgy.    dep- 
uty,   salary    

F.    E.    Resche.   probation 

officer,  postage 

F.   E.   Resche,   probation 

officer,   conveyance    .  . 

Margaret  J.  Forgy,  dop- 

iitv    conveyance 

Margaret   J.  Forgy,   dep- 

iilv.    conveyance     .... 

F.   E.   Resche.  probation 

officer,    salary     

F.    E.    Resche.   probation 

officei.   postage,    etc.. 

F.   E.    Resche,   probation 

officer,   conveyance    .  . 

Mrs.     Margaret      Forgy. 

deputy,    salary    

F.   E.    Resche.   probation 

officer,    conveyance    .  . 

F.   E.   Resche.  probation 

officer,   -salary    

Margaret    Forgy.      dep- 
uty,   salary 

F.   E.   Resche,   probation 

officer,   conveyance    .  . 

F.   E.   Resche.   probation 

officer,  postage   ...... 

F.    E.    Resche.   probation 

oft'lcer.  salary    

Margaret  Forgy.  salary. 
Margaret      Forgy. 

veyance    

George     V.     Fifer 

veyance    .•■,■■ 

F    E    Resche.   probation 
officer,     conveyance.. 
F.    E.    Resche.   probation 

qff icer.   salary    

Margaret  .Forgy.   salary 
F.     E.     Resche.    con\^ey- 

ance     

F.     E.     Resche,     convey- 
ance      - 

F    E.   Resche.  salary .... 
Margaret    P^orgy.   salary 
F    E    Resche,   probation 
officer,    conveyance... 
73966'  F.    E.    Resche.    probation 

officer,  salary    

74545  Margaret  Rorgy.  deputy 
probation   officer,  sal- 

QJ"*'  ,.• * 

75470  Margaret  Forgy.  deputy 
probation  officer,  con- 
veyance     ,•■■■;■ 

75623  Margaret  Forgy,  deputy 
pro1>atlon  officer,  con- 
veyance    ,•■■■;■. 

Margaret  Forgy.  deputy 
probation   officer,   sal- 

F  E-  Resche.  probation 
officer,   salary    ■••••• 

Mrs  D.  S.  Forgy.  deputy 
probation  officer,  con- 
veyance     ,•  ■  ■    i  " 

76638  Margaret  Forgy,  deputy 
probation  officer,  con- 
veyance     ,••:,■■• 

77035  F  E.  Resche.  probation 
officer,    salary    

Total,   juvenile  court. 
AND 
county 


63276 

6327S 

63359 

64132 

€4145 

64146 

6443S 

64555 

64S39 

64853 

64854 

65001 

65549 

65C73 

65706 

66172 

66173 

66217 

66218 
66219 
66348 

66382 

66383 

66401 

66111 

666S9 

66S.S3 

67020 

67240 

67246 

67581 

67599 

68090 

68584 

6S5S5 

68755 

69190 

69264 


125  00 

60  00 

7  00 

125  00 

52   56 

29  85 

60  00 

16  98 
125  00 

7  40 

17  95 
60  00 
31  01 

125  00 

60  00 

9  86 

14  13 


63956 
64091 
64092 
64093 

64094 
64095 
C4096 
u47.^0 
C47.'^l 
64782 

647S3 
64784 
64  7S5 
64811 
65599 
65600 
^5001 

C5602 
6560  3 
65663 
C5664 
66243 
66:129 
66330 
6b33l 
66332 

66333 
66334 
67154 
67155 
67156 
67157 

67158 
67159 
67160 
KS163 
68164 
68165 
68166 


00 
00 
00 


70065 
70066 

70384 

70487 

70488 

71627 
71694 

71895 

73386 
73496 
73770 


64  64 
24  05 

125  00 
60  00 
7  01 
17  43 
15  53 
22  83 

125  00 
7  00 

13  03 
60  00 
47  12 

125  00 
60  00 

14  93 

6  00 

125  00 
60  00 


68167 
68168 
68169 
69099 
69100 
69101 
69102 


COUNTY    COMMISSIONERS, 

Geo.  Tischer,  salary... - 

E.    M.    Patterson,    salary 

John    Sundeeii,    salary.. 

U.     .S.     Grant     McMahon. 

salary     • 

Chas.  Kauppi,  salary... 
Neil  Mclniiis,  salary... 
p  J.  Rviin.  salary....- 
E  M.  I'atterson,  salary 
Jolm  Sundeen.  salary.. 
U.     S.     Grant     McMahon, 

salary     

Chas.  Kauppi,  salary... 
Neil    Mclnnis.    salary... 

p.    J.    Ryan,    .salary 

Geo.  Tischer.  salary.... 
E.  M.  Patterson,  salary 
Geo.  Tli'cher.  salary.  .  . . 
U.     S.     Grant    McMahon, 

salary     • 

Neil    Mclnnis,    salary... 

P.    J.    Ryan,    salary 

Kauppi.   salary .  . . 

Sundeen,    salary.. 

Kauppi.   salary.  .  . 

I'attyrson,    salary 

Tischer,     salary... 

.Sundeen.    salary.. 

Grant    McMahon, 

salary     .  .,- ,• 

Neil    McJnills.    salary... 

P     J,    Ryan,   salary 

E.  M.  l*attfer.son.  salary 
Geo.  Tischer.  salary... 
John  Sundeen,  salary-- 
U.     S.     Grant     McMahon. 

salary    -  ' • 

Cha3.  Kauppi.  i?alary... 
Nell  Mclnnis,  salary... 
p.  J.  Ryan,  salary..... 
E  M.  Patterson.  Dlst.  1 
Geo.  Tischer.  Dist.  2.. 
John  Sundeen,  l»ist.  J.. 
U     S.    Grant    Mc.Mahan, 

'Diet     4    •■.■c" 

Chas.    Kauppi.   piat.    5.. 

Mclnnl-s,    I^ist.    6.. 

Rvan.    Dist.    7  .  .  .  .  . 

Patterson,   Dist.    1 

Tischer,     Dist.     2.. 

Sundeen.    Dist.    3.  . 

Grant      McMahan, 


Chas. 

John 

Chas. 

E.    M. 

Geo. 

John 

U.     S. 


100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 

100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
loo  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 


63380 
63390 
63391 

64233 

64237 

64239 

64241 

64245 

64863 

64864 

64S.-.5 
64866 

64S67 
64874 
64875 

64883 

64SS4 

64886 

65496 

65768 

65769 

65770 

65771 

65782 

65792 

66437 
66438 


5  00 
22  30 
68  93 

78  51 
4  75 
2  69 

10  00 
78  65 
83  35 
21  00 

36  28 

11  21 


21 

4 

2 


84  58 


42 

144 

2.070 


Neil 
P.  J. 
E.  M. 
Geo. 
Jolin 
U.  S. 


con- 


con- 


75853 

75874 
75895 


15  18 

29  57 

19  52 

125  00 
60  00 

17  68 

16  68 

125  00 
60  00 

15  03 

125  00 

60  00 

23  70 

24  63 

60.00 
125  00 

2  50 

17  35 
125  00 


69103 
69104 
60151 
70442 
70443 
70444 
70445 

70446 
70447 
70448 
72205 
72206 
72207 
72208 

72209 
72210 
72211 
73779 
73909 
73910 
73911 
73912 
73913 

73914 
75642 
75807 
75808 
75809 
75810 

75811 
75812 
75813 
76892 
76893 
76894 
76895 


76896 
76897 


Dist.  4 -.  •  •  • 

Neil  .Mclnnis.  Dist.  b... 
P  J.  Ryan.  Dist.  7  .  .  .^.  . 
Chas.  Kauppi.  Dist.  a .  . 
E  M  Patter:-?on.  Dist.  i 
George  Tisher,  Dist.  2.. 
John  Sundeen.  Dist.  .J.. 
U.  S.  Grant  McMahan. 

Dist.    4     ;•  ■  • 

Ciias.  Kauppi.  Dlst.  a... 
Neil    Mclnnis.    Dist.    6... 

P    J.    Ryan.    Dist.    7 . 

E.  M  Patterson.  Dlst.  1 
George  Tischer.  Dlst.  -. 
John  Sundeen.  Dist.  3.. 
U.    S.     Grant      McMahan, 

Dist.    4    :•  • 

Chas.  Kauppi.  Dlst.  .t  .  . 
Neil  Mclnnis,  Dist.  6.. 
P.  J.  Ry:^n,  Dist.  7.^.. 
Chas.  Kauppi.  Dist  i> . . 
E.  M.  Patterson.  Dist.  1 
Geo.  '  Tischer.  Dist.  2.. 
John  Sundeen.  Dist.  3. 
Neil  Mclnnis.  Dist.  6.  .  . 
U    S.     Grant     McMahan, 

Dist.  4 

P.   J.    Rvan.    Dist.    7 

Chas.    Kauppi,   Dist.    5.. 
E    M.    Patterson.   Dist.  1 
Geo.   Tischer,    Dist.    2    ... 
John    Sundeen,    Dlst    3.. 
U     S.    Grant    McMahon, 

Dist.   4    •••  • 

Chas.  Kauppi.  Dlst.  5... 
Neil  Mclnnnos,  Dist.  6.. 
P  J.  Rvan.  Dist.  7  .  .  .  . 
E  M.  Patterson.  Dist.  1 
Geo.  Tischer,  Dist.  2... 
John  Sundeen,  Dist.  3.. 
U.     S.    Grant     McMahon, 

Dist.  4  •  •  •  • 

Nell  Mclnnis.  Dlst.  6... 
P  J.  Ryan.  Dlst.  7  


100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 

100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 

100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 

100  00 


100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 
100  00 

100  00 
100  00 
100  00 


66439 

66440 

66441 

G6442 

66443 

66444 

66445 

66446 

66447 

66448 

66449 

66450 

66451 

66452 
66453 

66454 

66455 

66456 

66457 

66464 

66465 

66466 
66407 


Total,  county  commis- 
sioners   


18.400  00 


64097 
64098 
64099 

64786 
647S7 
64788 

65665 
65666 

65667 
66335 
66336 
67161 
67162 
67163 
67207 
67260 
67838 


Total 
PROBATE    JUDGE 


AND 


63946 
64079 
64080 
64081 
164082 
64417 
64521 
64769 
■  64770 
. 64771 
64772 
65258 
65510 
65660 
65661 
65602 
66318 


125  00  66319 


540  00 
50  00 
25  00 
50  00 
40  00 
25  00 


66320 
C6321 
C7144 
67145 
'C7146 
r.si5-^ 


Wm. 

Wm. 

A.  L. 

Wm. 

Wm. 

A.  L. 

Wm. 

Wm. 

Wm. 

A.  L. 

Wm. 

Wm. 

A.  L. 

Wm. 

A.  L. 

Wm. 

Wm. 

Wm. 


25  00  I  68153 
75  00  ,68154 


580  00 
50  00 
75  00 

200  00 
50  00 
25  00 
50  00 

780  00 
50  00 
75  00  i 

220  00  ! 

125  00  ! 

380  00  ! 
55  00 
20  00 
60  00 


68155 

69130 

169131 

69132 

69133 

169144 

170466 

'■  70467 

•70468 


r0469 


Total 
titles 


examiner       of 
and    deputy. . 


$6.380  00 


SHERIFF    AND    DEPUTIES. 

64066  Wm.   J.    Bates,   sheriff...         333  33 

64067  S.  L.  I'lerce,  deputy....  loO  00 
C4068  F.  L.  Magie,  deputy....  llo  00 
64069  M.  J.  Horgan,  deputy...  100  00 
84070   Ouen    Gately,    deputv...         100  00 


70496 

72193 

72194 

72195 

72196 

72197 

73897 

73898 

73899 

73900 

73901 

75795 

75796 

75797 

75798 

75799 

75828 


Rose  E.  Beihoffer.  clerk. I 
J    B.  Middlecoff,  judge., 
j'a.s.   A.   Wharton,   clerk. 
Thos.  Clark,   clerk.  .  .  .  .  . 

Rose  E.  Beihoffer,  clerk 
Jas.    A.    Wharton,    clerk. 

Thos.    Clark,    clerk 

J     B.    Middlecoff,    judge. 
Jas.  A.  Wharton,  clerk.. 
Thos.  C'.ark.   clerk...... 

Rose  E.  Beihoffer.  clerk 
Jas.  A.  Wharton,  clerk. 
J.  B.  Middlecoff.  judge  . 
Jas.  A.  Wharton,  clerk. 
Rose   E.   Beihoffer,   clerk 

Thos.    Clark,    clerk 

J    B.  Middlecoff.  judge.. 
Jas    A.   Wharton,   clerk. 
Thos.  Clark,   clerk. . .  .  . . 

E.   Beihoffer.  clerk 
Middlecoff.    judge. 

Clark,  clerk 

K.   Beihoffer.  clerk 
Middlecoff.    judge. 

Clark,   clerk 

E.  Beihoffer.  clerk 
Middlecoff.  clerk. 
Middlecoff.    judge. 

Clark,   clerk 

E.   Beihoffer.  clerk 
Middlecoff,    clerk. 

Morey,  clerk 

Middlecoff.    judge. 

Clark,  clerk 

E.   Beihoffer,   clerk 

Middlecoff',  clerk .  . 

Koneczny.  clerk.. 


.1    1,967  81 
CLEIiK.S. 


Rose 
J.    B. 
Thos. 
Rose 
J.    B. 
Thos. 
Rose 
H.    B. 
J.    B. 
Thos. 
Rose 
H.    B. 
L.  C. 
J.    B. 
Thos. 
Rose 
H.   B. 
Helen 


50 
250  OO 
150  00 
62  50 
35  00 
75  00 
31  25 
250  00 
75  00 
31  25 
62  50 
50  00 
250  00 
100  00 
62  50 
62  50 
250  00 
150  00 
75  00 
75  00 
250  00 
150  00 
25  00 
250  00 
150  00 
25  00 
40  00 
250  00 
150  00 
25  00 
60  00 
2  50 
250  00 
150  00 
25  00 


J  B.  Middlecoff.  judge.. 
Thos.  Clark  Jr..  clerk.  . 
liose  E.  Beihoffer.  clerk 
Eugene  Morin.  clerk.  .  .  . 
Helen  Koneczny.  clerk. 
J.  B.  Middlecoff.  judge.. 
Thos.  Clark,  clerk.... 
Eugene  Morin,  clerk.... 
Helen  Koneczny.  clerk.. 
Rose  E.  Beihoffer.  clerk 
J.  B.  Middlecoff.  judge.. 

Thos.  Clark,   clerk 

C-  E.  Dwyer,  clerk.... 
Helen  Koneczny.  clerk.. 
Eugene  Morin.  clerk.  .  .  . 
Rose  E.  Beihoffer.  clerk 


60  00 

12  00 

250  00 

150  00 

25  00 

50  00 

50  00 

250  00 

150   00 

50  00 

50  00 

25  00 

250  00 

150  00 

75  00 

50  00 

60  00 

25  00 


COUNTY 

64087 

64088 

64089 

64090 

64776 

64777 

64778 

64779 

65495 

65597 

65598 

66043 

66325 

66326 

66327 

66328 

67150 

67151 

67152 

67153 

68159 

68160 

68161 

68162 

69137 

69138 

69139 

69140 

70473 


ATTORNEY 

ANT.S. 


$2,974  15 
ASSIST- 


John    H.    Norton, 

attorney     ,:.••;' 

Wm.    J.    Stevenson,    first 

assistant    • 

Otto    A.    Polrier.    second 

assistant    

Louise  Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher      •  • 

John   H.   Norton,   county 

attorney    •  ••  • 

W.     J.     Stevenson,     first 

a.-^sistant     • 

Otto    A.    I'oirler.    second 

assistant    

Louise    Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher      •  • 

John    H.   Norton,   county 

attorney     ■  •  •  • 

Wm.    J.    Stevenson,    first 

assistant    ■ 

Otto    A.    Poirler.    second 

assistant    

Louise    Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher     •  • 

John    H.   Norton,   county 

attorney     •  •  •  • 

Wm.    J.    Stevenson,    first 

assistant    • 

Otto    A.    Polrier,    second 

assistant    

Louise    Emerson,  stenog- 

rapher  •  • 

John  H.  Norton,  county 

attorney     •  •  •  • 

Win.    J.    Stevenson,    first 

assi^ant    • 

Otto    A.    Polrier.    second 

assistant    

Louise   Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher     •  ■ 

John    H.   Norton,    county 

attorney     •■•• 

Wm.    J.    Stevenson,    first 

assistant    • 

Otto    A.    Poirler.    second 

assistant    

Louise   Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher     •  • 

John    H.   Norton,   county 

attorney    ••-• 

Wm.    J.    Stevenson,    first 

assistant    • 

Otto    A,    Poirler.    second 

assistant    

Louise   Emerson,  stenog- 
rapher     

John   H.   Norton,  county 
attorney    . 


•  •  •  •  • 


300  00 
166  66 
83  33 
83  33 
300  00 
166  66 
83  33 
33  33 
300  00 
166  G6 
83  33 
33  33 
300  00 
166  66 
83  33 
33  33 
300  00 
166  66 
83  33 
33  33 
300  00 
166  66 
83  33 
33  33 
300  00 
37  04 
83  33 
33  33 
300  0* 


68170 

68171 

68172 

68233 

69141 

69142 

69143 

70477 

70478 

70479 

72216 

72217 

72218 

73919 

73920 

73921 

75814 

75815 

75816 

76889 

76890 

76891 


FIREMAN,  JANITOR  AND 
WATCHMAN. 

R.  S.  Cowden.  fireman. .  .$ 
Geo.  K.  Shaw,  janitor... 
John  T.   Russell,   watch- 
man     

R.  S.  Cowden.  fireman.  . . 

Geo.  K    Swan,  janitor... 

John   T.  Russell,    watch- 
man  

R   S.  Cowden,  fireman... 

John   T.   Russell,   watch- 
man  

Geo.  K    Swan,  janitor... 

R.  S   Cowden.  fireman... 

Geo.' K.  Swan,  janitor... 

Geo    K.  Swan,  janitor... 

Ole'A.    Berg,   janitor 

Geo.  K.  Swan,  watchman 

R    S.  Cowden.  fireman  .  . . 

John  Manson,  watchman 

John    T.   Russell,   watch- 
man     

Ole  A.   Berg,   janitor 

R   S.  Cowden,  fireman  .  .  . 

Geo    K.  Swan,  watchman 

John  Manson,  wal<hinan 

Ole  A.   Berg,   janitor.  .  . . 

R.  S.  Co'wden.  fireman.  .  . 

Geo.  K.  Swan,  watchman 

Ole  A.    Berg,   janitor 

R.  S.  Cowden.  fireman  .  . . 
Geo.  K.  Swan,  watchman 

Ole  A     Berg,   janitor 

R    S.  Cowden,  fireman.  .  . 
Geo.  K.  .Swan,  \yatchman 

Ole  A.  Berg,  janitor 

R.  S  Cowden.  fireman.  . . 
Geo.  K.  SwanN  watchman 
Ole  A.  Berg,  fireman .... 
R.  S  Cowden,  janitor..! 
Geo.  K,  Swan,  watchman 
Ole  A.  Berg,  janitor.  .  .  . 
R.  S.  Cowden.  fireman.. 
Geo.  K.  Swan,    watchman 


Total 


.$   2.460  00 


64100 

64101 

64102 

64103 

64789 

64790 

64791 

64792 

65669 

65670 

65671 

65672 

66337 

66338 

66339 

66340 

67164 

67165 

67166 

67169 

68173 

68174 

68175 

6S176 

69123 

69124 

69125 

69126 

70459 

70460 

70461 

70462 

72212 

72213 

72214 

72215 

7391a 


JAILERS  AND  MATRON. 

W.   B.   Butchart.   jailer.. 

Joseph    Allen,    assistant 

P.   McDermid,  watchman 

Gertrude    Bates,    matron 

W.   B.   Butchart.  jailer.. 

Joseph    Allen,     assistant 

p.     McDermid.    assistant 

Gertrude    Bates,    matron 

W.   B.  Butcliart,  jailer.  . 

Joseph    Allen,     assistant 

p.    McDermid,    assistant 

Gertrude    Bates,    matron 

W.  B.  Butchart,  jailer.. 

Joseph    Alien,    assistant 

I*.    McDermid,    assistant 

Gertrude    Bates,    matron 

Joseph    Allen,    jailer 

p.    McDermid.    assistant 
Gertrude    Bates,    matron 
W.   B.   Butchart,  jailer.. 
Joseph  ■  Allen,     assistant 
P.    McDermid,    assistant 
Al    Arnson,    assistant... 
Gertrude    Bates,    matron 
Joseph    Allen    jailer.... 
p.    McDermid,    assistant 
Al    Arnson.    assistant... 
Gertrude    Bates,    matron 
Joseph    Allen.    Jailer.  .  , . 
P.    McDermid,    assistant 
Al    Arnson,    assistant... 
Gertrude    Bates,    matron 
Joseph    Allen    jailer.... 
P,    McDermid.    assistant 
Al    Arnson,    assistant... 
Gertrude    Bates,    matron 
Joseph  Alien,  jailer.... 


LIGHT,    FUEL.     REPAIRS    AND    GEN 

ERAL   EXPENSES.   COURTHOUSE. 
63378   Henry      Lyes.        hauling 

L.  R.  Helbing.  labor  and 

material     

Duluth  Edison  Elec.  Co., 

liglit    services    

City  of  Duluth  Water  & 
Light      Dept.,      water 

services    

National     Gas     &  Light 

Co.,  gas  lights 

Fred    Tischer,    repairing 

arc  lights    

Gowan  -  Peyton  -  Twohy 

Co..    toilet    paper    .... 

Northwestern    Fuel    Co., 

Coal     

Duluth  Edison  Elec.  Co., 

light     services     

C.    L.    Rakowsky.    insur- 
ance     

Little    &     Nolte,     Insur- 
ance     

L    A.    Barnes,   insurance 
Swanstrom  &  Co..  insur- 
ance      

U.  F.  Bates,  insurance.. 

I.    Freii.iuth,    jugs 

T.      Timlin,         repairing 

paper   burner    

Duluth  Edison  Elec.  Co., 

llgiit    services 

Cltv  of  Duluth  Water  & 
Light      Dept-.      water 

services    

Northwestern    Fuel    Co., 

coal      

John    A.    Johnson,    con- 
tract work    

E.    D.    Field    &    Co.,    In- 
surance      ,; 

Hartman      &     0'l>onnell 

Agcy..    Insur.ance    .... 

Mendenhall     &     Hoopes. 

insurance     

Cooley   &   Underhill.    in- 
surance     •  -  • 

Northwestern    Fuel    Co.. 

coal     ■  •  • 

Duluth  Edison  Elec.  Co.. 

light   services    

L.    R.    Bondy,    insurance 
Chas.     P.    Craig    &    Co., 

insurance     

R.    P.    Dowse   &   Co.,   in- 
surance      

Elston    &    Brltts,    insur- 
ance      •  •  ■ 

C.   H.   Graves   &  Co.,  in- 
surance      

W.    B.  ■  Getchell.    Insur- 
ance     

Clark-Hepworth,    Insur- 
ance      

J.    C.    &    R.    M.    Hunter. 

insurance    

John     A.     Island,     insur- 
ance      

Mendenhall     &     Hoopes, 

Insurance     

Little     &    Nolte.     insur- 
fincc    ,,...••••••••*•* 

Pulford  &  Howe,  insur- 
ance     A.'  •  ■  :  •  • 

W.  M.  Prindle  &  Co..  In- 
surance     •  •  • 

Chas.  L.  Rakowsky.  In- 
surance     •  •  • 

S.  W.  Richardson.  In- 
surance     

J    A.   Scott,   insurance.. 
Swanstrom  &  Co..  insur- 

3.11  CO       ,...•••••••••■"• 

J.  Stephenson,  insur- 
ance      : 

W-  Van  Brunt,  insur- 
ance      ^  •  •  • ;  •  ■ 

H.  A.  Wing  &  Co.,  in- 
surance     ■  •  • 

Kelley  Ildw.  Co.,  file  for 

janitor    ^-  '  \'  "A" 

Northwestern    Fuel    Co., 

coal    • 

City  of  Duluth  Water  & 
Light        Dept.,      water 

services     'A  '  ' 

Duluth  ?::dison  Elec.  Co., 

liglit    services • 

John    A.    Johnson,    esti- 
mate      on       contract, 
courthouse  addition.. 
J.   E.  Cumming.   wiring. 
Cooley    &    Underbill,    in- 
surance     ,,••••:•' 

E.  D.  Field  &  Co.,  In- 
surance     

Mauley  &  McLennan,  in- 
surance     

Hartman  O'Donnell  Age, 

insurance     

L    A.   Barnes,   insurance 
R.    P.   Dowse   &   Co.,    In- 
surance     •  •  •  • 

Frencli  &  Bassett.  offfce 

chairs    

"VN'leland  Shoe  Co.,  re- 
pairing      ,••,••• 

Anderson   &   Gow,   labor 

and  material    

A.  J.  Harker  Co..  setting 

in    new    closet,    etc..  . 

Henry      Lyes.      iiauling 

ashes     • 

The  Ohio  Coal  Co..  coal 
Duluth  Edison  Elec.  Co.. 

light    services    

W.    F.    Bates.    Insurance 

Ptillord,      Howe    &    Co., 

Insurance     •  ■  •  • 

68245  John  A.  Johnson.  Bal. 
Cont.  Add.  to  court- 
house     .•  •  • 

68246  Art  Metal  Constructic>n 
Co.,  metal  cases,  aud- 
itor's and  probate  of- 
fices     •  •  •  • 

68247  J.  J.  Wangenstein,  plans 
and  Spec.  Add.  to 
courthouse    •  • 

A.    Thorwall.    repairs 
county  commissioners' 

room    ;  •  ■  'u 

Christie  Lithograph  & 
Printing  Co.,  oak 
tables      for      auditor  s 

office ;•.••• 

L.  R.  Helbing.  repairing 

roof 

Nelson  &  Peterson,  lawn 

seed     , •  •  •  • 

J.    D.    Lowe,    inspection 

boilers     .■•■;.■■ 

Henry       Lyes.       hauling 

Health  department,  Du- 
luth, fumigating 
courthouse     

Kelly  Hardware  Co., 
hardware     •  • 

Duluth-Edlson  Electric 
Co.,  lights    .  .  .  .  ... .  -  - - 

City  of  Duluth  light  and 
water  department, 

water    services     -••••■ 

Henry       Lyes.       hauling 

islios      ...•••••      •••••• 

Kellev  Hardware  Co., 
window  glass,  regis- 
ter's   office 

Nelson  &  Peterson, 
grass    seed    . • 

H  D.  Bullard,  agent, 
repairs  auditor' .s  vault 

Anderson  &  Gow,  car- 
penter   work,    etc.  .... 

Richard  Dinham.  plas- 
tering     

Duluth-Edlson      Electric 

Co..    lights     ••••••;••• 

Henry       Lyes,       hauling 

ashes 

The       Linen       exchange, 

furnishing     towels.... 

Remington       Typewriter 

Co..  repairs  typewriter 

Duluth-Edlson      Electric 

Co..  lights    • 

Gust        Norman.        work 

courthouse     grounds.. 

Stephenson        Insurance 

agency,    insurance     on 

records     .  .  .  ...     .  ■  •  ■  •  • 

Stone-Ordean-M  ells    Co., 
brushes    and    mops... 
L.    R.    Helbing.      repairs 

auditor's    office 

Bayha  &  Co..'  chairs  and 

desk,    sheriff's    office.. 

Waugh.    Kealey    &    Co., 

plumbing • . . 

Northern   Hardware   Co., 

nails     -.  • 

Duluth-Edlson      Electric 

Co.,   light   services.... 
Johnson       Lumber      Co., 

lumber    

Henry      Leyes, 

Duluth   Electric 

stalling    drop 
R.    B.    Knox    & 

surance  on  books. 
Swanstrom     &     Co., 

surance    on    books.... 
Lane,    McGregor    &    Co., 

insurance  on  books... 
Duluth-Fidlson      Electric 

Co.,  light  services.. .. 


The   Ohio  Coal   Co.,   coal 

G.  G.  Dickennan  &  Co., 
insurance  builier's 
risk    premium    

Anton  Ringsred,  letter- 
ing filing  cases    

Gronsetli  &  Olson,  oil, 
etc.,    for    courthouse.. 

O.  P.  Johnson,  garden 
hose,  etc 

The  Ohio  Coal  Co.,  coal. 

Duluth-Edlson      Electric 

Co.,    light  services....  73  24 

Total     $"77884  98 


99  4G 

2  56 
35  10 

1  10 

10  30 
31   95 


Bassett, 


75931  French         & 

springs     - 

75932  City  of  Duluth  Water  & 

Light  department,  gas 

75933  Duluth    Edison    Electric 

Co.,  light  services  .-- 

Total  .  . . 


.$  3,662  78 


36 
00 
29 

00 


27 
35 
00 


22  00 

1100 

21  00 

16  00 

137  26 

68  09 
11  00 

20  02 

41  02 

2  56 

11  40 

13  56 

27 

17 


12 
36 


22  00 


7  60 

65790 

11  00 

65791 

29  60 

65792 

19  83 

65793 

3  80 

66468 
67274 

67275 

67276 

67277 

67278 
67279 

67281 

67282 

67283 

07284 

67285 

67289 
67292 

68243 
68244 


70  00 
70  00 

65  00 
70  00 
70  00 


65  00 

70  00 

65  00 

70  00 

70  00 

70  00 

15  81 

54  19 

52  42 

70  00 

58  50 

6  50 
70  00 
70  00 
65  00 
12  58 
70  00 
70  00 
65  00 
70  00 
70  00 
65  00 
70  00 
70  00 
65  00 
70  00 
70  00 
65  00 
70  00 
70  00 
65  00 
70  00 
70  00 
65  00 


85  00 
80  00 
80  00 
31  00 
85  00 
80  00 
80  00 

29  00 
85  00 
SO  00 
SO  00 
31  00 
85  00 
80  00 
80  00 

30  00 
80  00 
80  00 

31  00 
85  00 
85  00 
80  00 
80  00 

30  00 
85  00 
80  00 
80  00 

31  00 
85  00 
80  00 
80  00 
31  00 
85  00 
80  00 
80  00 
30  00 
85  0# 


68248   F. 
68249 

68250 
68253 
68254 
68255 
68256 

68257 
68265 
68266 

69214 
69217 

C9218 

69219 

69220 

69221 

69230 

70515 

70516 

70519 

70524 

70536 

70543 


LIGHT.     FUEL,    REPAIR 
ERAL    EXPENSES    COl 
163381    Richardson    Electri< 
I  repairing  switclie 

63382  Waugh-Keaiy    Co.. 
er    tiles,    etc 

63383  Dr.     R.     E.       Cavan 
medical   attendan 

63384  F.    A.    Patrick      & 
blankets,   etc    .  .  . 

03385   John  Lindman,  labf 

63386  Louis   Jeiitoft,  w  oo' 

63387  Tom    Timlin.    galvE 
iron    boxes     

63388  Northwestern    Fue 
coal      

63389  North    Land      Coal 
coal    

63390  Duluth       Edison 
trie     company, 
services    

64240   Dr.    R.      E.     Cavar 
medical    services 

64242  The      Ohio      Coal 
pany,    coal     .... 

64243  North    Land   Coal 
pany,    coal     .... 

64244  City    of      Duluth 
and  liglit    depar 
water    services 

64245  Duluth        Edison 
trie      company, 
service    

04869  Dr.  R.  E.  Cavai 
medical  attenda 

04873  Henry  Lyes.  h 
ashes     

64876   Kelley    Hardware 
panv.     kettle.     < 

64S77  Christensen.  Ment 
&  Graham,  cl 
for   prisoners    . 

64878  Wm.  F.  Sch 
brooms     

64879  Stone  -  Ordean  - 
company,    soap, 

64S80  F.  A.  Patrick  co 
towels,    etc    .  -  . 

64881  Northern        Shoe 
pany.  shoes   . .  . 

64883  Duluth       Edison 
trie      company, 
service     

64885  North  Land  Coa 
pany.    coal    .  .  . 

65783  Polrier    &    Co.,    ji 

65784  Minnesota  Slate 
of   Health,   anti 

65785  Christensen.  Men 
&   Graham,    bla 

65786  R.    E.      Cavanau[ 
D..      medical 
ance.   etc    

65787  St.  Mary's  hospit£ 
and    care    

65788  John  Ostrom,   tin 

65789  R.  R.  Forward 
cots    and    stoo 

L.    K.    Daughcrtj 

ware    

A.     J.     Hark<^r, 

ing     

Duluth       Edison 
trie      company 

service     

City    of    Duluth 
and    light  dep 
water    service.- 
Henry       Lyes. 

ashes    

R.  E.  Cavanaug 
medical     alter 
F.    A.    Patrick 

blankets 
F.    S.   Kelley      F 
Co..    wire   spri 

QX.C     

Stone-Ordean-W 

soap,   gold    dt 

Clementson      Bi 

cots    

North    Land     C 

coal 

Duluth    Edison 

Co.,   light   ser^ 
Dr.    R.      E.      Ca 
medical   atten 
Kellev    Hardwa 
pany.    brooms 
Louis    Jentoft, 
North     Land    C 
l)any,    coal     . 
Northwestern  I 
pany,    coal    . 
Duluth    Edison 
Co.,  light  ser 
City     of     Dulul 
and  light  dei 
•water   sorvi<: 
R.  E.  Cavanaui 
medical  alte 
Archie       McD 
Plumbing 
plumbing 
C8200  Tornada    Manu 
company, 
tants    .  .  . 
Chemical       Ma 
ing      compar 
fectants    . . . 
L.    K.      Daughc 
lights    for    j! 
North    Land    C 

pany.   fuel 
Northwestern 
pany,  fuel   . 
Duluth    Edisoi 
company,   lij 
R.   E.  Cavanat 
medical    attt 
L.    K.    DauglH 
piles   for   CO 
Zenith      Broon 
brooms   for  i 
F.  A.  Patrick 
derwear,   etc 
oners    .... 
69226  Slone-Ordean- 
gold  dust,  s 
09227  United     Chem 
panv.   disinf 

69228  A.  J.    Harker, 

69229  Northwestern 
coal     

69230  Duluth    Edi-so 
company,  li 

70497  City     of     Dull 

and   light   d 

water     servi< 

70517  Panton    &     "W 
cots,   etc 

70518  Nortiiland      C 
pany,  coal 

70524   Duluth     Ediso 

company,   li 
70553  R.  E.  Cavanai 

medical  ser 

oners     

Gogebic      SteJ 

Works,   rep 
Henry      Lyes, 

ashes   

Duluth    Ediso 

Co..     light 
City  of  Dulut 

Light  depai 
Nortliwestern 

pany.    coal 
North    Land 

pany,    coal 
R.   E.  Cavana 

cal   service! 
Stone-Ordean 

map    heads 


5    AND    GEN- 

:nty  jail. 

Co., 
s.  etc 


sew- 

lugh. 
ce  .  . 
Co.. 


in  66 
17  36 

13  70 

27  70 

13  56 

20  02 

35 

95  39 

29  15 
67  70 


,035  00 
110  SO 

13  75 

3  SO 

24  96 

10  16 

11  00 

13  66 

70  88 

1  00 

84  29 

29  72 

5  00 
92  71 

70  47 
7  60 

21  00 
406  70 

1,019  00 
201  73 


66434 
66458 
66459 
66400 

66461 

66462 

66463 

6G466 

67286 

67287 

67288 
6'.  290 

67291 

67292 

07293 

68258 
68259 


nized 

l'  Ca.'. 

■  Co.'. 

Elec- 
light 

augh. 

com- 

com- 

water 
Linent, 

"eIoc- 

light 

laugh. 
ice  .  . 
auling 

com- 

■tc 

enhall 
othing 

luckle, 

'Wel'ls 

etc. . . 

iipany, 

com- 

Elec- 
light 

I    com- 

.'li    cots 
Board 

toxin . . 
den  hall 
nkets.  . 
h,  M. 
attend- 

1,  room 

cups .  . 
&    Co.. 

IS 

hard- 

piumb- 

'   Elec- 
.    light 

■water 
irtment. 

hauling 

1.'  M.'  'd.. 
dance .  . 
&      Co.. 

urniture 
ng   cots, 

"elis  Co.. 
St.  etc. . 
OS.,     jail 

jSlI  '  'Co., 

Electric 
ices  .  .  . 
anaugh, 

(lance   .  . 

re    com- 

Avood  .  . 
)al    com- 

'uel  com- 


4  87 

90 

35  00 

167  90 

5  00 

15   00 

5  00 

29  93 

14  70 

35  72 

35  00 

145  55 

16  54 

40  71 

46  04 

50  00 

2  00 

10  40 


1  05 
14  65 


68261 

68262 
68263 
68264 
68265 
69222 
69223 
69224 
69225 


22  00 

56  00 
22  88  ! 
1  50 
9  00 

4  00 

5  00 
4  93 

72  63 

27  36 
4  00 


5  25 

3  00 

4  05 
40  57 
2150 
73  42 

4  00 

3  00 

3  00 

59  15 

14  20 


70579 

72271 

72305 

72306 

72307 

72308 

72309 

72310 

72311 

72312 

72313 

74943 

74973 


70555 

70556 

70560 

70568 

70573 

72305 

72314 

74972 

74974 

74975 

74976 

74977 

74987 


hauling 

Co..  in- 
lights. . 
Co.,    in- 


nl- 


11  00 
4  71 
35  75 
72  90 
1  20 
1  45 
61  78 
9  26 
3  00 
8  45 
17  36 
21  00 
13  56 
6186 


F.      A.       Patr 

sheets,    etc 

Northern  She 

shoes 

Gowan  -  Peyl 

company,   i 

R.   E.  Cavans 

cal  service 

J.     L.        Pro 

wheelbarrc 

C.   H.   Graves 

W.  Van     Bn 

ance     .  . . .  , 

Gowan  -  Pey 

company, 
F.    A.    Patrit 
towels.    et< 
Northern  Sh^ 
shoes     .  .  . 
A.    J.    Harke 
Duluth    Edhs 
Co..    light 
The  Ohio  Co 

coal    .  . 

Northwester 

coal    .... 

75899  Stephenson 

company. 

premium 

Henry   Ly( 

ashes 
R.  E.  Cavan 
cal  servlc 
Geo.   Rohr 
cell  doors 
John   W. 
cords  sla' 
75930  North  Land 
ya&y,  coa 


74978 
74980 

74981 

74982 

74983 

74984 
74987 

74988 

74989 


75922 
75923 
75927 
75929 


Electric 

vices  .  . . 
h  water 
lartment, 

s    

rh.  M.  D., 
idance    .  . 

0  u  g  a  1  1 
compa  n  y, 

facturing 
disinfec- 

nufactur- 
y,     disin- 

rty.     two 

lil     

oal  corn- 
Fuel  com- 

i    Electric 

rhts    

gh,  M.  D., 
jndance. .. 
rty.  sup- 
anty    jail. 

1  factory 
ounty  jail 

&  Co.,  un- 
,  for  prls- 

w'elis  Co., 
5ap.  etc. .  . 
cal  Com- 
ectants  .  . 
repairing. 
Fuel    Co., 

a    Electric 

g-hts    

ith     water 
jpartment, 

:e     

hite.     Iron 

oal      com- 

n    "Electric 

ghts    

igh.  M.  D., 
,ices,  pris- 

xm     JBoiler 

lirs    

hauling 

n  Electric 
services. . . 
h  Water  & 
tment,  gas 
Fuel  com- 

Coal    com- 

ugli,  medi- 

;,  etc 

-Wells   Co., 

icic    &    Co., 

e  company, 

on  -  Twohy 
nill  brooms 
lugh,  medi- 

fctc 

5ser,        iron 

w     

,  insurance 
int,     insur- 

[on  -  Twoliy 
5oap,  etc.  .  . 
k      &      Co., 

)e  company, 

.  plumbing 
on    Electric 

services. . . 
al  company, 

n    Fuel    Co.. 

Insurance 
insurance 

:s,       hauling 

augh,  medi- 

es    

repairing 

Anderson,    5 

)    

Coal     cora- 


77  80 
18  00 
52  35 
24  75 

51  00 

42  48 

15  20 
87  50 

24  60 

52  20 

74  29 

10  50 

16  50 

33  60 

2  10 

3  10 


39  17 

32  44 

5  00 

50  00 

75  52 

63  54 
55  00 
87  50 
25  65 
37  15 

64  55 

8  75 

13  00 

14  25 
60  53 
53  86 

28  37 
56  55 

S3  60 

105  00 


BLANK    ROOKS   AND   ST.vTIONER-i . 

63392  W,    M     Welch    Mfg.    Co., 

books    1°  * 

63393  Wendtland     Bros.,     bdg. 

books    •  -  •  «»  " 

63394  Huntley     Printing      Co.. 

blanks    •  •  •  *  ^ 

63395  Chamberlain    &    Taylor, 

stationery     ^  '' 

63296  Miller  -  Davis  Prtg., 

blanks     "^  ^ 

63397   Christie    Lilho.    &    Ptrg. 

Co.,    books     ^^** 

64249  Chamberlain    &    Taylor, 
stationery    ' 

64250  Dul.  Paper  &  Stationery 
Co.,    stationery    

64251  Miiler-Davis  Co.,  blanks 

64252  W.  M.  Welch  Mfg.  Co., 
Stationery    

64253  Merritt  &^  Hector,  court 
calendars     

64254  Christie  Litho.  &  Prtg. 
Co.,    books    

64SS2  Duluth  Paper  &  Station- 
ery Co..  toilet  paper.. 

648S8  Northwestern  Sup  ply 
Co.,  blanks    

6*889  Keefe  -  Davidson  Co., 
copies    of    code,    Minn. 

64S90  Miller-Davis  Co.,  office 
supi)lies    

64891  Wendtland  Bros.,  re- 
bindlng    h,iaks     

64892-Mlller-Davis  Prtg.  Co.. 
blanks    

64S93  Tribune  Printing  Co.. 
blanks    

64894  P,  J.  Fitzgerald.  150  ta.  1. 
prints    ^-  '    ' 

64895  Christie  Litho.  &  Prtg. 
Co..    books    

64896  Chamberlain  &  Taylor, 
stationery    

65794  Ouellette,     stationery... 

65795  Chamberlain  &  Taylor, 
stationery - 

65796  Miller-Davis  Co..  blanks 

65797  Tribune  Printing  Co., 
blanks  ' ■  •  • 

65798  Tribune      Printing      Co... 
blanks    .-.••• 

65799  Trade  News  Publishing 
Co..  blanks    

65800  F.  H.  Lounsberry.  blanks 
65S01  Wendtland  Bros.,  books 
60469   Lawyers      Co-op.       Pub. 

Co..  Minn  reports.  .  .  - 
66470  Christie    Lllho.    &    Prtg. 

Co..  blanks    

66171  Cl;amberlain    &    Taylor. 

stationery    •  .  • 

66472  Tribune  Printing  Co.. 
blanks • 

66473  Wendtland  Bros.,   books 

66474  Miller-Davis  Co..  blanks 
and  l)00ks 

07294  Chamberlain  &  Taylor, 
stationery     • - 

07295  Miller-Davis  Prtg.  Co., 
bond    blanks     

67296  Hammond  &  Stephens, 
term    reports    

67297  Chri.-tie  Litho.  &  Prtg. 
Co.,  blanks    ■  .  • 

67298  Tribune  Printing  Co., 
blanks     •  •  •  • 

67299  Huntley  Printing  Co., 
blanks     

67300  R.  L.  Polk  &  ""C..  copy 
of  N.    W.   Gazetteer.  .  . 

67301  Wendlandt    Bros.,    books 
08288  Chamberlain    &    Taylor. 

stationery     

68289  F.  H.  Lounsberry,  court 
calendars     

68290  Miller-Davis  Prtg.  Co.. 
blanks     ■■•  • 

68291  Tribune  Printing  Co.. 
Hil'bing,  stamped  en- 
vel'ipes      

68292  Wendlandt  Bros,,  blanks 
68^93  The    Journal    I'rtg.    Co., 

notices     

68294  Tribune  Co.,  Chicago, 
notices 

68295  Dulutli  News  Tribune 
Co..    notices    

68296  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
com'rs    I'yroceedings.  .  . 

69231  Chamberlain  &  Taylor, 
statbmery     

69232  F.  H.  Lounsberry,  pos- 
tals      

69233  E.  F.  Johnson,  plat  of 
Virginia      

69234  Supt.  Public  Instruc- 
tion,    dictionary 

69235  Christie  Litho.  &  Prtg. 
Co..     blanks 

69237  Tribune  Printing  Co., 
stamped  envelopes,  etc 

69238  ^Vendlandt  Bros.,     books 
70525  Duluth     I'aper     &     Sta- 
tionery Co..  stationery 

70527  Chamb<^ilain  &  Taylor 
stationery     

70528  Christie  Litho.  &  Prtg. 
Co.,  circular  letters, 
etc 

70529  Geo.  D.  Barnard  &  Co., 
files,    auditor's    office. 

70534  Miller-Davis  Prtg'.  Co., 
blanks     

70535  F.  H.  Lounsberry  &  Co.. 
apportionment    Idanks 

72296   F.    J.     Webb,    stationery 

72334  Chamberlain  &  Taylor, 
stationery     

72335  Lawyers  Co-Op.  Pub. 
Co..    Minn,    reports.... 

72336  F.  H.  Lounsberry.  court 
calendars,    etc 

72337  Tribune  Printing  Co.. 
blanks     

72338  Christie  Lith.  &  Prtg. 
Co..    blanks,    etc 

72339  Mercantile  Prtg.  Co.,  600 
bonds,    etc     

74991  Ouolelte  &  Co..  station- 
ery     A,"  ■  ■," '  ■ 

74992  Chamberlain  &  Taylor, 
stationery     

74993  Wendlandt  Bros.,     books 

75934  Chamberlain  &  Taylor, 
stationery      

75935  Christie  Litho.  &  Prtg. 
Co..   letter   heads,   etc. 

75936  Miller-Davis  Prtg.  Co.. 
blanks      - 

75937  F.  H.  Lounsberry,  court 
calendars     


9.46  40 
5  00 

227  93 
102  35 

SOO  60 
979  55 

37  00 

46  70 

339  50 


8  on 

80  00 


214  00 
30  50 


7  50 

13  00 

713  50 
431  50 


8  25 
1  50 

23  75 
28  35 
27  31 
61  42 

4  70 

9  00 

24  00 
53  05 

15  00 

5  50 


40  50 

30  00 

160 

9  00 
13  10 

3  33 

3  00 
13195 

30  50 

61  15 

125  00 

2  20 

5  95 
197  50 

11  70 

69  50 

4  00 
51  00 


a^ 


27  80 
26  07 

46  22 
39  00 
17  81 
17  52 

60  65 

02  19 

2  00 

25 

19  75 

14  25 

60  90 

8  40 

103  47 

69  00 

31  95 

59  74 

5  00 
16  00 

16  00 

55  75 

58  45 

30  00 
13  80 

22  32 

99  45 

6  75 


Total 


.$11,714  23 


PRINTING. 

63398  Duluth  News  Tribune 
Co.,  publisliing  com- 
missioners' proceed- 
ings,   etc 

64255  D.  K.  CuppernuU,  pub- 
lishing notice    

64256  Duluth  News  Tribune 
Co.,  publishing  com- 
missioners' proceed- 
ings, etc 

64879  Geo.  A.  Perham.  pub- 
lishing   school    notice 

64898  Tribune  Printing  Co., 
pultlishing  school  no- 
tice     •  • 

64899  Blwabik  Tribune,  pub- 
lishing   school     notice 

64900  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  commis- 
sioners' proceedings, 
etc 

64901  Duluth  News  Tribune 
Co..  publishing  notices 

65802  Daily  Star  Publishing 
Co..  publishing  notices 

65803  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  commis- 
sioners'       proceedings 

65804  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  delinquent 
tax    list    

65805  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  financial 
statement    

65806  Duluth  News  Tribune, 
publishing    notices.... 

66475  D.  E.  CuppernuU,  pub- 
lishing  notice    

66476  Chisholm  Herald,  pub- 
lishing  notice    

66477  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  commis- 
sioners' proceedings. 
QX.C 

67302  The  Construction  News 
Co..  publishing  notices 

67303  Pioneer  Press  Co.,  pub- 
lishing  notices    . . 

67304  Duluth  News  Tribune 
Co  .    publlshin    notices 

67305  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  commis- 
sioners' proceedings, 
gtc 

69''39  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  commis- 
sioners'     proceedings. 

32  00  etc ;,•    • -.v 

70526  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
5  00                     publishing        rommls- 
Bioners'      proceedings. 
56  88  etc • •■ 

70530  The   Aurora  News,    pub- 
58  00  lishlng   notices    

70531  The   Ely   News,   publlah- 
15  00  Ing  notices   . 

70532  Duluth    Star    Co..     pub- 
2^02  llshinK  notlc«a   » 


95  15 

2  00 

80  05 

3  00 

6  30 
3  00 

130  65 

13  40 

2  62 

83  85 

1.227  45 

2  724  55 

18  80 

3  00 

3  00 

118  10 

18  00 

8  80 

18  55 

136  50 

122  00 

170  85 
l&O 
SCO 
6«(l 


i*a>-— >. 


—  ' 


"i  Tiinn-w'T> 


It  •.'  T 


-r-* 


T0562  R.  M.  Sheets,  publish- 
ing  notices    

72341  Diiluth      News      Tribune 

Co..    publisliinf?    notice 

72342  Dwlutli    Kvening  Herald. 

publifliinK  comniis- 
eloners'  proceedings, 
etc 

74994  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  cumnils- 
eioners"  proceedings, 
etc 

7B93S  C.  M.  Atkinson,  publish- 
ing notice  for  range 
courts     

7B939  Virginia  Enterprise, 
publishing  notice  for 
range   courts    

7B940  Tribune  Co.,  Chicago, 
publishing  notice    .... 

78941  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publi.shing  connmis- 
eloners'  proceedings, 
etc 

Total  


3  00 

9  00 

109  20 

362  25 

3  4S 

2  20 

IS  40 

223  95 


REG! 
€3957 
64541 
64:52 
€4.i5K 
6450)9 
64570 
64.-.71 
64.T72 
64.-.74 
64575 
64576 
64582 
€4:.S6 
645!<7 
64t;01 
64002 
64604 
64620 
64S21 
64fi22 
64633 
64637 
6463S 
64660 
64812 
64817 
65005 
65245 
65353 
65359 
65462 
66425 
€5137 
664G9 
65r)39 
65699 
6587fi 
66061 
66124 
66257 
66<;75 
66715 
66791 
6*674 
6S76& 


STER  OF  BIRTHS  AND 

A.    A.    Holt    

John   Trevuihan    

J.     C.     Fanner     

J.   V.   Joimson    

O.    W.    Bray    

\V.   H.    Pluinni'  r    

G.    T.    Ayres     

C      Carson     

Henry     Norman     

D.  C.    itood    

A.   W.    I'ay    

J    P,    Jacobson    

II.    Haneon    

N.   N.   Na.slund    .  , 

S.   H.   Date    

C   A.    Abbott    

("i.arles    Callaghan     ... 
J.    U.   Grady    

A.  H.   Kirk    

E.  A.    H.irratt    

K.    W.    MilU  r    

Cl;a!  lis    Kangas    

\V.    PuravinlH    

B.  Wintergust    

J.    H.    Cramer    

Jotin    Krzfsniski    

A.    M.   Olinan    

E.    J.    Erd    

C.  G.    Nelsou    

C.  T.   tJordon    

N»  Is    Wantilla    

A.    H.    ."^teven    

Aljrat    Andei'son    

J.     E.     Grandy 

M.    Ca.vcrt    

E.  R.    Anjfst 

F.  A.    Allen    

\V.   1>.   McDonald 

M.    Mell     

D.  J.    Cameron    

l>.    t>.    Murray    

C.    V.    Green    

J.    Trevetlian     

\V.   T.   Jenkins    

A.    \V.   Sliav.-    


.    $5,731  20 

DEATHS. 

25 

6  50 

7  25 
67  Of 
29  V5 
ISi.tt 

72  75 
IS  50 

3  (l!l 
11875 

15  75 

4  00 
2  50 
1  25 
7  25 

20  00 
9  25 
6  00 

73  00 
25 

103  25 
6  00 


00 
50 
00 
75 

7r> 

50 
75 
25 

DO 


Total 


5  Ol» 
1  25 

1  7.". 
32  50 
11  00 

2  50 

2  00 

3  25 
685  00 

7  50 
2  25 

50 

8  50 

.$   1,377  50 


I 


69236 
72340 
74994 

75034 
75035 
76036 
75037 
7503S 
75039 

75040 

76041 

75042 

75043 
75t'J4 
75i'45 
75046 
75047 
7B048 
75049 

75u50 
75051 
75052 
75Co3 
75054 

75055 
75056 

75057 
76058 

75059 
75060 
75061 
75062 

75063 

750C4 
75065 
75066 

75067 


XPENSE55, 

Printing 
supplies. 

Printing 
suF'plies, 


ELECTION 

Miller-Davis 
Co..    election 

Miller-Davis 

Co.     election         .  . 

Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
notice  primary  elec- 
tion   ballots    

F.  H.  Lounsberry.  print- 
ing   ballots,    etc 

J.    B.    Flack,    services 
canvassing   board    . 

E.    Morcom.    services 
canvassing   board    .  .  . . 

II.  G.  Gearliart.  services 
on  canvassing  board.. 

H.  G.  Gilderman.  services 
on  canvassing  board.. 

A.    T.    Anderson,    bring- 
electlon     returns. 


on 


on 


Anderson,    brlng- 
election     returns, 

Brosvick,     bring- 
election     returns. 


ing 
etc. 
Algol 
iuj? 
etc. 

B.  B. 
ing 
etc 

August  Berkman.  bring- 
ing eleccion  returns, 
etc .-  •  • 

II.  Bartlett,  bringing 
election   returns,   etc.. 

C.  \V.  Burdick.  bringing 
election    returns,   etc.. 

M.  R.  Cundy.  bringing 
election    returns,   etc.. 

Karl  Eklund.  bringing 
election    returns,    etc.. 

Erick  .1.  Eld.  bringing 
electi<.n   return.s.   etc.. 

W.  H.  Everett,  bringing 
election   returns,   etc.. 

John  Fredrickson.  bring- 
ing election  returns, 
etc .•••/•• 

C.  C.  Frank,  bringing 
election    r«  turns,   etc.. 

Loui.«  P.  Graff,  bringing 
eUction   returns,  etc.. 

P.  M.  Graff,  bringing 
election  returns,   etc.. 

H.  P.  Gill.  bringing 
election   returns,   etc.. 

W'm  Hobernian,  bring- 
ing election  returns, 
etc 

John  Harney,  bringing 
election   returns,   etc.. 

«  F.  Hutchinson,  bring- 
ing    election     returns, 

^^^^ 

Haroid  Hanson,  bringing 
eliction    r>  turns,    etc.. 

John  P.  Tacol  son.  bring- 
ing    election     returns, 

ptp^         ,,,,... • 

FredKuhlmey.  bringing 
election   returns,   etc.. 

Chas.  Kangas.  l>riiiging 
election   returns,   etc.. 

>V  J.  Lowrie.  bringing 
election   returns,   etc.. 

I.ifdvig  G.  Larson, 
bringing  election  re- 
turns,   ftc.     ;•••/•:••• 

D.  J.  McDonald,  bring- 
ing    election     returns, 

J   l».  iloo're,  bringing 

"election  returns,  etc.. 

John  McKay,  bringing 

election  returns,  etc.. 

A  C  Magedauz.  bring- 

election  returns. 


27fi  35 
12  60 

1C5  00 
356  36 

10  20 
28  40 

9  20 

11  40 

3  00 
1  00 
7  SO 


75978 

75979 

75980 

75981 

75982 

75983 

75984 

759S5 

75986 

75987 

75988 
75989 
75990 
75991 

75992 

75993 

75994 

75995 

75996 

75997 

75998 

7f999 

76000 

76001 

76002 

76003 

76001 

76005 

76006 

76007 

7C008 

76009 

76010 

76011 

76012 

76013 

76014 

76015 

76016 

76017 

76018 

76019 

7602U 

76021 

76022 
76023 
73024 
76025 
7C026 
76027 
7602S 


75068 
75069 
75070 
75071 

75072 
75073 

75074 
75075 
75076 
75077 

75078 

75079 

76«»S0 

75081 

7C082 
75083 

75084 
76085 

760S6 

76087 
75088 
76089 

75090 

75971 
75975 

76976 
76977 


Ing 
etc 

Chas. 
ing 
etc 

Gust 


G  Mattson.  bring- 
eiection   returns, 


Meden.   bringing 

election  returns,  etc 

E     M.    .Moline.    liringing 

election   returns,   etc.. 

A.    D.    Mcilae.      J>ringing 

election  returns,  etc.. 

Peter  Nicholson,  bring- 
ing election  returns, 
etc    

Martin  Xtls<»n.  bringing 
election   returns,  etc.. 

Chas.  ^I.  Nelsin.  bring- 
ing election  i-eturns. 
etc .•  ■  • 

R.  S.  Postal,  bringing 
election    returns,   etc.. 

Tiios.  B.  Perry,  bringing 
election,  returns,  etc.. 
Ale.x  Palo,  bringing  elec- 
tion returns,  etc 

W  H  Pluminer.  liring- 
ing election  returns, 
etc    •    :  ••• 

John  Sammersen.  bring- 
ing election  returns, 
etc 

A.  F. 
ing 
etc 

Wni. 
ing 
etc 

Grace 
ing 
etc    

John  .Simi.  bringing 
election   returns,    etc.. 

Geo.  H.  Schulenberg, 
bringing  election  re- 
turns,   etc    

Peter  Trader,  bringing 
election    returns,   etc.. 

Thos.  J.  Tren  grove, 
bringing  election  re- 
turns, etc 

E.  M.  Wickstrom.  bring- 
ing   election      returns, 

etc ••,•••.■•• 

Clias.      West.       bringing 

election   returns,   etc.. 
Fred    Williams,   bringing 

electi<m    returns,   etc.. 
C.    C.      Wieland.      bring- 
ing   election      returns, 

etc 
L.    J. 

ing 

etc 

F.  H. 
ing 


4  20 
2  20 
1  00 

1  60 

2  00 
7  00 
4  60 

1  68 

1  20 

3  00 

1  20 

2  20 

3  00 
1  20 

4  20 

1  60 

2  00 

3  40 
8  00 
2  20 

2  20 

3  00 
11  95 

1  00 

1  30 

1  30 
1  90 
1  00 
1  30 

3  00 

1  50 

2  40 

3  00 
1  60 
1  00 


76029 


American    Express   com- 
pany, express   

Great   Northern   Express 
company,  express    .... 
A.    T.    Anderson,      bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
John      Ayste,        bringing 
election    returfns    .... 
Thos.     Arkkola.       bring- 
ing   election    returns.. 
P.    B.    Boswick.    bringing 

election    returns    

Geo.    L.    Brazich.    bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
John  H.  Brlgham,  bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
J.    D.    Bergstrom.    bring- 
ing   election    returns.. 
Fred          \V.           Bessette, 
britiging     election   re- 
turns       

Loreiitz     Berg,     bringing 

election      returns 

R.     E.     Carey,     bringing 

election    returns     

M.    R.    Cundy.    bringing 

election     return 

Jolin  A.  Dinsmore. 
bringing  election  re- 
turns      

Nel.s    Wanllla.    bringing 

election     returns 

A.    S.     Daniels,    bringing 

election     letiuns 

AV.    H.    Everett.    l>ringing 

election     returns 

Karl    Eklund,      bringing 

election     reluri.s 

Wm.     Ekholm,     bringing 

election     returns 

J.     Fredrickson,       bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
Frank    Flince,     bringing 

election     returns 

August   Forsland,  bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
Janus    R.    Grady,    bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
J.      J.      Ganly.      bringing 

election      returns 

H.       P.      Gill,      bringing 

election     returns 

John    Gratiot,      bringing 

.  election     returns 

L.     T.      Graff,      bringing 

election     returns 

P.   'M.     Graff,       bringing 

election     returns 

Hans  O.  Gjara,   bringing 

election     returns 

Robt.    Hendry,    bringing 

election     returns 

John     Harney,     bringing 

election     returns 

P.    O.     Hieson.     bringing 

election     returns 

J.     H.     Harris,     bringing 

election     returns 

C.      E.      Holt.      bringing 

election     returns 

H.     Haldersen,     bringing 

election     returns 

Wm.     Haberman.     bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
John    Hlllman.    bringing 

election     returns 

Gilbert    .Johns m,    bring- 
ing  election    returns.. 
John   T.   Joyce,    bringing 

••lection     r-^turns 

Jno.    P.   Jacobson.  bring- 
ing election    returns.. 
Edward  Johnson,   bring- 
ing election   returns.. 
\V.  T.   Jenkins,   bringing 
election  returns,  etc.. 
Martin      T.    J  o  h  n  so  n, 
bringing     election  re- 
turns,   ( tc     

Charles    Kmgas.    bring- 
ing   election     returns, 

etc 

H.    A.    Kilchli.    bringing 
election  returns,  etc.. 
Fred    Kuhmey.    bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 
John  J.   Ljung,  bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 
John      Lyncii,      bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 
H.    E.      Lcye,      bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 
T.   J.   McKeon.    bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 
W.      C.      McCr  i  m  m  o  n, 
bringing    election    re- 
turns,   etc    

D.    J.    McDonald,    bring- 
electlon     returns. 


76030 

76031 

76032 

76033 
76034 
76035 

76036 
7C03T 
76038 
76039 
76040 
76041 
76042 

7G043 
76044 


D.    .M(  Rae.    brlng- 
election      returns. 


ing 
etc 

Alex 
ing 
etc     

Win.  J.  Madden,  bring- 
ing election  returns, 
etc     

Andrew  Matts<m,  bring 
ing  election  returns 
ets    

J.  A.  Miller,  bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 

A.  Moody,  bring  elec- 
tion returns,  etc 

D.  M.  Mauser,  bring-, 
ing  election  return.s, 
etc 

J.  A.  Miller,  bringing 
election  .returns,    etc. 

Ray  Moore,  bringl  n  g 
election    returns,    etc. 

J.    P.    :Mason,      bringing 

'    election    returns,    etc. 

W'.  Medd,  bringing  elec- 
tion   returns,   etc 

E.  Mo  line,  bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 

.Maj-t;ii  Nel.>on.  bringing 
election    returns,    etc. 

Peter  Nicholson,  bring- 
ing election  returns, 
etc : 

Joi;n  Pesscla,  bringing 
electiim    returns,    etc. 

n.  E.  Patterson,  bring- 
electlon     returns. 


PelUtier.     bring- 
election     returns. 


Swanstrom.  bring- 
election      rctuifns. 

\v'.  "Scliaub.    i.ring- 
election     returns. 


Schaefer, 
election 


bring- 
returns. 


White, 
eletcion 


bringing 
returns. 


Lounsberry.  print- 
election  ballots.  . 
Duluth  Evening  Herald, 
publishing  sample  bal- 
lots     

H.    L.      Gilderman,      can- 
vassing returns    

Louis    Tillrnan,    canvass- 
ing returns   


1  10 
8  on 

1  50 

2  40 

1  20 
4  20 

1  40 

3  00 

1  50 

3  00 

16  40 

1  10 

1  20 

1  20 
314  24 

120  65 
13  20 
26  20 


ing 

etc 
70045   J.     E. 

ing 

etc. 
T6046Peter     Reyla.     bring  i  n  g 

election    returns,   etc. 

76047  T.      P.      Pury.      bringing 

election    returns,    etc. 

76048  W.    H.    Plumnier.  bring- 

ing   election     returns, 
etc 

76049  Alex      Pola,      bring  i  n  g 

election    returns,    etc. 

76050  S.    A.    Prince.      bringing 

election    returns,    etc. 
7G051   John    Presswell.      bring- 
ing  election      returns, 
etc 

76052  John    Richard,    bringing 

election    returns,    etc. 

76053  M.    A.    Snyder,    bringing 

election    returns,    etc. 

76054  Martin    Saxhaug.    bring- 

ing    election     returns, 
etc 

76055  A.  W.  Swingle,   bringing 

election    returns,   etc.. 

76056  U     C.     Smith,     bringing 

election  returns,  etc.. 

76057  E.    H.    Sherwood,    bring 

Ing     election     returns, 
etc 

76058  Matt    Sarkela.     bringing 

election   returns,   etc. . 

76059  Mike     Snyder,     bringing 

election  rettirns.  etc.. 
7C060   Adolph    Solem,    bringing 

election  returns,  etc.. 
76061  Matt    Sarkela,     bringing 

election  returns,  etc.. 
7C062  A.  F.  Swanstrom.  bring- 
election     returns, 


Swanstrom.  bring- 
electlon     returns. 


Ing 

etc. 
76003    E.  A. 

Ing 

etc 

7fitifi4  Martin    Skala.    bringing 

election   returns,    etc.. 
76065   Peter     Trader,     bringing 

election   returns,  etc.. 
7G066   R.     F.     Towne.     bringing 

election    returns,   etc.. 

76067  T.    J.    Stengrove,    bring- 

ing    election     returns, 
etc.    

76068  Cha.s.      West.       bringing 

election    returns,    etc.. 

76069  Nels     Wielela.     bringing 

election    returns,   etc.  . 

76070  C.   C.    Wieland.    bringing 

eleccion    returns,    etc.  . 

76071  L,     J.     Wliite.     bringing 

election   returns,  etc.. 

76072  A.    H.    Walker,    bringing 

election    returns,   etc.  . 

76073  Fred   Williams,   bringing 

election    returns,    etc.. 

76074  O.     P.     Wilner.     bringing 

election    returns,    etc.  . 

76075  P.   Wlntergust.    bringing 

election   returns,  etc.. 

76076  N.  Youngblood.   bringing 

eUction    returns,    etc.  . 

76077  M.        Yokorn.        bringing 

election   returns,   etc.. 


35  03 

3  33 

3  00 

2  20 

17  80 

15  60 

2  4-1 

4  00 

1  40 

7  95 

4  40 

2  40 
1  60 

1 
1 

2 
4 
2 
1 
1 
1 
3 
6 
2 
2 
S 
3 
1 
6 
1 
1 
1 

1 

■> 

1 
4 

7 

7 

2 
o 

4 
3 


20 
6(. 
40 
60 
20 
50 
50 


63."i95   Henry   Wood    

63596    Wm.    Burnside     

6364'{    Harry   Gustafson    

63644  A.    Aumiller    

63645  Ben  Peterson   

63646  Henry   Neiml    

63733  Fred    H.    Smith    

63734  Fred    H.    Smith    

63736  Edwin  Gabbi    

63737  Irwin  Hunstable 

63738  Henry     Barber     

63752  Charles  Wedan    

63760  John    Kuha    

63797  John   Linklater    

63798  Oscar    Juntilla     

ijilSOl   Nestor    Villianor    '. . 

63S03  Mrs.    Lizzie   Brown    .... 

63850  John    Perkia    

63851  Herbert    Anderson 

62S55   H.    A.    Michelson    

63S56   S.  H.  Stevens   

63859   C.  W.   Wither 

63864  J.    E.    Hovey    

63S72    .Mbert    Walters    

63873  A.    .Vumiller    

63874  Henry    Pearson    

63875  Lyman    Elles    

63S76   Aug.   Leader 

6:;S78    Andrew   .N'tlson    

63884    Wm.     Andrews     

63916   W.    E.    Graham 

6395.')   Nick    Lund     

63906    Wm.    Meittimn    

64173  Fred    Johnson    

64174  N.     B.     Shank 

61176  Isaac    Mali  la    

61177  H.nry    Neimi    

61191    Erick    Takola     

64401    F.    E.    Clark 

64  402   Louis    I'eterson    ■ 

64403    Henry    Wood    

64104  .loscph     Kangas     

64105  Chas.     G«>«>dski     

40  i  04406   -Albeit     Everett      

!  64107   Joe    Sky     

64408   .Mm    Hunstable    

6)499    Emil    Helmer    

64501    Goo.    .\ldridge    

64566   .lames    Lindberg    

64.'i73   Ole    Bystroni     

64600   JoliH     Hanson     

64648   Gunder    Fassa    

64664   C.    W.    Wither    

64708   <"ail    E.    Neubauer    .... 

64712    lOli    Person    

64818   C.    W.    Wither 

649S6   .lolm     .N'asburg     

65094   Joe   Sky    

6509.">    Ema    Cassa     

65096   F.    E.    C.    Clark 

6,")126   John    (^arlson     

65127   <;eo.    Rotabache    

65129   John    Muitlnen    

65165   Nathan    Itantla    

James    I'ashie    

Will  lam     Ferguson     .  .  . 

Robert    Marlines    

James    !>owse    

Jos(  pii    Ha<on    

Louis    E.    .Sulberg 

Williaiu     Ruttle     

Jack    Rajanari     

Henry    Velmenen    

Jacoi)    Pyhala    

Erick   Takala    

Henry    Neimi    

John    Brook     

C.    A.    Firown    

Artliur    Berling     

Oscar   Hanson    

Edward  Colburs 

John    .Swanson     

J.   G.    Osborn    

James   I'etson    

James  Blac  kstone    . . . . 

John    Linkeater    

tMiarles    Hlint    

Charles    Blint    

Ciuist    Quaal    

Ji.iin    Burnside    

James    (Joodsky    

James    Pt  ters    * . 

(."harles     Dumieinl     .  .  .  . 

Victor    yianeu    

Charles    Durheim    

Peter    Y'oger    

John     Labatis     , 

James    Stokes    

.f.acob    Ahoppa    

Ben   I'eterson 

John    La    Prairie    

Nat  T:antia    

Fred  Trav(*rs   

Mike    Konll     

Gust  Lundgren    

Michael  (Jarskl    

Nat    Rantia     

N.    D.    Fairbanks    

Jack    Barker    

John    La    I'rairie    .... 

Isaac    Make    

Joseph    Mohr    

Thos.   Gray    

N.  D.    Fairbanks 

Ed   Hans<ui    

.lolin  Stenborg 

Wm.   Henline 

A.    F.    Pascher    

Chas.    Buyck    

N.   D.  ^  airbanks 

N.    D.    Fairbanks    

Tom  Hillinan   

Wm.    Shannon    

Edgar    Harris    

Christ  Johnson    

John   Norslrom    

Paul    King    

Matt    Harris     

Con    Buckley    

.lohn    .Johnson    

I'ete.^  O.   Larson    

Joe   Promo    

Olaf  Halonen    

N.    D.    Fairbanks    

Ed     .And(  rsoTi 

Robt.     Jf)hnson 

Erick     Lingren 

N.    D.    Fairbanks 

N.    D.     Fairbanks 

Joe     I'rana 

Thos.    W.     Marfoot... 
.Tohn     Mastrom 

Con     Bu<  kley 

Ellen    O.    Gulbranson, 

N.     D.     Fairbanks 

Emll     Helmer 

John     Trygg 

S.      H.      Stevens 

Fred     Traven 

Jacob  Heikkanen  . . . . 

Jolin     Holm 

Elmer     .lohnson , 


60 
00 
20 
20 


00 
20 
00 
60 
20 
00 
60 
40 
80 
00 
00 
80 
20 
00 
00 


7  00 

6  00 

2  4" 

3  40 

8  5-) 
1  20 
1  00 
1  20 

1  20 

2  0*^ 
1  20 
1  10 


00 


40 


1  30 

2  60 

6  40 

3  20 

1  20 

2  40 

1  00 

1  50 

3  00 

13  50 

1  20 


1  20 

1  40 

1  60 

120 

1  00 

1  20 

1  00 

7  95 
12  15 


10  2 


1  50 


6.>2;)< 

6.'<36(; 

6.-,372 

G5373 

t  54.S7 

65.t56 

6. ".583 

65584 

65702 

65703 

65704 

65961 

t.6036 

t.(;i25 

66132 

66133 

66134 

66169 

66221 

66225 

(.6226 

66227 

(.(■;395 

66396 

66400 

66636 

666  37 

60602 

6  6665 

66667 

(6714 

66809 

60880 

6t.933 

66934 

66959 

67034 

67052 

67  2::  6 

67483 

675  4  6 

67616 

676.'>4 

67655 

67656 

67710 

67M7 

67911 

67971 

6S022 

6S091 

6S119 

68760 

68909 

68977 

6.S996 

70164 

70165 

70234 

70323 

7033S 

70377 

70378 

70385 

70491 

71886 

71887 

71888 

71889 

71890 

71954 

71955 

71959 

71993 

72013 

72025 

72242 

72253 

7r.391 

73417 

73611 

73670 

73694 

73737 

73738 

73739 

73777 

7377s 

73967 

73975 

74  562 

75141 

75143 

7.-.!4  5 

7.^440 

75478 

75566 

75620 

7."627 

7r,67  5 

75676 

7.'.7  23 

75822 

7r.S23 

7.'.S24 

7oS25 

758.".0 

76419 

76  120 

76533 

76656 

766 '.7 

7t'.6f,3 

7<i;i66 

71.759 

7'';760 

7G791 

7  <>  8  7  5 

76918 

76919 

76920 

76921 

76922 

76950 

76978 


60 
20 
00 
40 


1  20 

16  40 

1  60 

1  20 


John  Tekotz 

John  Wallins  .  .  .  . 
N.  D.  Fairbanks.. 

W.  H.  Smith 

Fred     Traverse.... 
Andre%\-    Make 
Robert     Cosmer... 

J.    C.    Moore 

B.    C.    Olesoii 

Isaac     I^lon 

David     Ahrsen 

Matt     Slernback... 

Joe      I'reno 

H.    La    Prahic 

Albert    Peterson.  .  , 
Victir    Keastor.  . . 

John     .Tacka , 

G.    A.    Steen 

J.     W.     Relssell 

John  Burnside.  .  . 
Hcn.-y  Mankey  . . 
S.     H.    .Stevi-ns.  ... 

Mike     L^'icht 

Matt     B.iyer 

Fred     La     Clair... 
Matt    Mannikka... 
Fred     Schmuknut. 
John     fJr  -anette.  . 

V.     K.     Schelin 

John  Haikkila.  . . 
John     Burnside.  . . 

Jolm     Knnrros 

lOrick  Lakala.  . . . 
James     Kosby.  .  .  . 

Mike     Lecht 

Geo.     Otter 

Henry     Gustafson. 

Total    





THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD: 


y 


60  00 
45  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  OO 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
45  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 

l.T  00 

15  00 
15  00 
1  5  00 
15  00 

l.T  00 

30  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
60  00 
30  00 
15  00 
30  00 
45  00 
45  00 
3«  00 
15  00 
4  5  00 
15  00 
1500 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
45  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
45  00 
30  00 
10  00 
75  00 
15  00 
1  5  00 
15  00 
15  00 
45  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
60  00 
45  00 
15  00 

15  00 

16  00 
15  00 
45  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
45  00 
45  00 
15  00 

4  Oo 
4  0<t 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
1 .-.  00 
15  00 
24  00 
30  00 
15  00 
1  5  00 
15  00 
45  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 

ir,  00 

15  00 
4  5  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
1  5  00 
30  00 
15  00 
23  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
4  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
60  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 

l.T  00 

15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
4  5  00 
15  00 
1  5  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
45  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
30  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
15  00 
30  00 
15  00 

■  30  on 

SO  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 


meals  for 
meals  for 


•M2S0   Wm.  J.   Bates 

prisoners 
64939   Wm.  J.   Bates 

prisoners    

65571  Wm.  J.   Bales,  meals  for 

prisoners    

66512   Wm.  J.   Bates,  meals  for 

prisoners    

67366   Wm.  J.   Bates,  meals  for 

prisoners    

68308   Wm.  J.    Bates,  meals  for 

prisoners    

69260  Wm.  J.   Bates,  meals  for 

prisoners    

70582   Wm.  J.   Bates,  meals  for 

prisoners    

73577   Wm.  J.  Bates,  mealg  for 

prisoners    

75033    Wm.   .1.   Bates,  meals   for 

^    prisoners    

75973  Wm.  J.  Bales,  meals  for 

prisoners    

Total     . . 


981  60 

1,114  90 

1,110  30 

1,071  60 

1.129  00 

956  00 

896  20 

905  40 

896  60 

828  80 

803  00 


.$11,570  40 


MISCELLANEOUS        GENERAL 
PENSES. 

63285  Mary  Peters<  n,  state 
vs.    Chas.    Rydiiuist... 

63286  Mary  Peterson.  state 
vs.    Chas.    Rydqulst.  .  . 

63355  J,  P.  Jolinson,  clerk, 
postage,     t  tc 

63356  W.  A.  Holgate.  treas- 
urer,   postage,    etc.  . . . 

63357  S.  W.  Gili.in.  superin- 
tendent, traveling  ex- 
penses,   etc 

O.         Haldtn,         auditor, 

pt>stage.    etc 

J.   II.   Norton,  county  at- 
torney,   postage,   etc.. 
Wm.    J.    Stevtnson.    first 
assistant      county    at- 
torne.N,    postage,    etc.. 
E.      L.      Tuohy,      health 
officer,    salary,    etc... 
L.    Ayrcs.      county      sur- 
veyor,  services    

L.   Ayres.     county     sur- 
veyor,  services    

W.      M.      I'rindle    &   Co., 

office    rent    

Mrs.    E.   J.  Grams,  office 

rent     

W.    F.    McKay,    assessor, 

salary    

J.  J.  Heffron,  deputy  as- 
sessor,   salary    

Western      Union      Tele- 
graph company,   clock 

service    

Duluth   Humane  society, 

appropriation      

Consolidated      Stamp     & 
Printing    Co.,      rubber 

stamps,     etc 

W.    M.    Edmont.      agent. 
Oliver    typewriter,    etc 
S.    Geo.    Stevens,      trans- 
cribing   plat    books. .  . 
Duluth      Directory  com- 
pany,   directories    .... 
Telephone   com- 
use  of  long  dis- 

'phone    

state       board    of 

health,     appropriation 

Remington       Typewriter 

company.         repairing 

typewriter     

M  a"  r  t  h  a       Wicklander, 
state  vs.  T.   Gustafson 
Northern  Detective  serv- 
ice,        services         for 

county  attorney    

Northern  Detective  serv- 

for 


63358 
63359 
63361 

63362 
63363 
63364 
63365 
63366 
63367 
63368 
63369 

63370 
63371 

63372 
63373 
63375 
63376 

63377 
63379 

63699 
63839 

63840 


Mesuba 
pany, 
tance 

Minn. 


63846 
64212 

64213 
64214 


.$   4,199  00 


66114 
70330 


FIRE   WARDEN. 
S.  G.   Iverson.  state  aud.$         25  00 
C.     C.      Dinehart,      state 

treasurer    100 


Total 


.$        26  00 

DEPUTY 


Total     .$   1,870  01 


63274 
63344 
63529 
63533 
63588 
63593 
63594 


WOLF  BOUNTY, 

Gust    Johnson    

Henry    Neiml     

Jno.    Kaugas    

Walter  Stone ^. 

John   Hackey    

Chas.  Goosigrease   - . . 
John    Sky 


15  00 
15  00 
60  00 
15  00 
15  00 
4  5  00 
45  00 


TRAVELING    EXPENSES   OF 
SHERIFFS,   ETC. 
Wm.  J.   Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses.  $       380  44 
Wm.  J.  Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses.         313  53 
Wm.  J.   Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.   expen.s'es.  81S68 

Wm.  J.  Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 
Wm.   J.   Bates,  cash   paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 
AVm.  J.   Bates,  casli  paid 

out  for  dep.  exiienses. 
Wm.  J.  Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 
Wm.  J.   Bates,  cash   paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 
Wm.  J.   Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 
Wm.  J.  Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 
Wm.  J.  Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 
Wm.  J.  Bates,  cash  paid 

out  for  dep.  expenses. 


Total 


63428 
64279 
G4938 
65833 
66511 
67355 
68307 
69259 
70581 
73578 
-(5032 
75972 


BOARDING    PRLSONER.C!, 
63429   Wni.  J.  Bates,  meals  for 
prisoners 


357  18 

466  00 

414  53 

467  6G 

590  91 

411  35 

400  29 

552  72 

482  83 

% 

5,686  14 

L«!. 

$ 

877  00 

64215 
6421S 

64219 
64220 
64221 
C4222 
64223 

64224 
04225 
64226 
64227 
64228 

64229 

64230 

64231 
64232 
64234 

64235 
46236 
64238 
64659 
64849 
64850 

64851 

6  4852 
0185E 
64S56 

64857 

64858 
64859 
f.4  860 

64861 

64862 

64868 

64.S70 

64871 

G4S72 

64984 

«49S5 

65231 

G5250 

65251 

65551 

65552 

65589 

65590 

65750 

65759 

65760 

65761 

65762 

6  5  1 6  3 

65764 

65765 

65766 

65767 

65772 

65773 


Ice,    services 

county  attorney  

C.  C.   Idnehart,   state 

hospital  tax  

J.  B.  Middlecoff.  pro- 
bate judge,  postage, 

etc    •  • 

J.     1'.       Johnson,       clerk, 

postage,    etc 

S.  W.  Gilpin,  superin- 
tendent, traveling  ex- 
penses,   etc 

O.  Halden.  county  aud- 
itor, postage,  ttc 

Wm.  J.  Stevenson,  first 
assistant  county  aud- 
itor,  postage    

W.    H.    Harvey,    inspect- 
or  of    mines,    expanses 
W.    F.    McKay,    assessor, 

salary   

J.     J.     Htfiron,      deputy 

assessor    

Alex    Eraser,  deputy,  es- 
timate   for    assessor. . 
E.    A.    Beckman.    asses- 
sor for  town  New  In- 
dependence     

Duluth        Humane        so- 
ciety,   appropriation.. 
L.  Ayres,     county     sur- 
veyor, services    

Whitney      Wall,      agent, 

office    rent 

Prindle     &    Co.. 

rent     

Telephone    com- 
use  of  long  dis- 

'phone    

Telepiione      Co., 
long    distance 


W.    M. 

oftice 

Dulutii 
pany, 
tance 

Mesaba 
use    of 
'plione    

Consolidated      Stamp    & 
Printing       Co.,        rub- 
ber stamps   

Frencii  &  Bassett,  office 
furniture 

Miller-Davis  Co.,  office 
furnittire 

Minnesota  state  board 
of  healtii,  appropria- 
tion      •  •  • 

Dr.  E.  I...  Tuohy,  M.  D., 
seivicfs    

H.  W.  Marconi,  M.  D., 
services    

Tlie  Linen  exchange, 
use   of  toilet   case    .  .  . 

Martlia  Wickl  a  n  d  c  r, 
.State  vs.  T.  Gustafson 

J.  P.  Johnson,  clerk  ot 
court,    postage,   etc... 

O.  Hilden.  county  audi- 
tor's clerk,  postage, 
etc 

S.  W.  Gilpin,  superin- 
tendent, traveling  ex- 
penses,   etc.    . 

Dulutii        Humane        so- 
ciety,   appropriation.. 
Telephone    com- 
'phone   rent    .  .  . 
Telephone    com- 
'phone      rent. 


McKay.      super- 
of       assessors. 


assessor, 


EX- 

12  50 
12  50 
11  10 
23  00 

43  30 

21  45 
5  22 

2  60 

21  40 

293  00 

16  25 

15  00 

35  00 

110  00 

100  00 

7  00 
100  00 

7  27 

97  50 

525  00 

43  00 

6  15 
50  00 

£5 
15  00 

227  40 

129  12 
100  00 


65774 
65775 

65776 

65777 

65778 
65779 
65780 
66086 
66087 
66354 

66375 
66377 
66378 
66380 
G63S1 
66407 
66408 
66409 
66410 

66412 
66413 
66414 
66415 
66416 

66417 

66418 

66419 
66420 
66421 
66422 
66424 

66425 

66426 


J.    J.    Heffron,    assessor, 

salary     

Zenith    Telephone      Co,, 

use  of  phone   

R.  Gearv.  school  services 

Minn.  State  Board  of 
Health,     appropriation 

Elliott-Fisher  Co.,  El- 
liott machine 

Union  Abstract  Co..  ab- 
stracts     

The  Consolidated  Ab- 
stract Co.,  abstracts.. 

Martha  Wicklander, 
State  vs.  T.  Gustafson 

Martha  Wicklander, 
.<tate  vs.  T.  Gustafson 

W.  F.  McKay,  supervis- 
or of  assessors,  sal- 
ary,   etc 

Mary  Peterson.  State  vs. 
Clias.   Rydtiuist    

Mary  Peterson.  State  vs. 
Chas.   Rydfiuist    

Mary  Peterson.  State  vs. 
Chas.   Ryd(iulst    

Jolm  H.  Norton,  county 
attorney,    expenses    .. 

Chas.  Plovitch.  services 
for   county   attorney.. 

O.  Halden.  county  aud- 
itor,   postage    

W  A.  Holgate,  county 
treasurer,    postage .... 

J.    P.      Johnson.      clerk, 

postage    

.S.  W.  Gilpin,  superin- 
tendent, traveling  ex- 
penses     

P:.  L.  Tuohy.  M.  D..  sal- 
ary,    etc     

J.  H.  Scully.  assessor, 
salary    

J.  J.  Heffron.  deputy 
assessor,  salary    

Duluth  Humane  society 
appropriation     .... 

W.  H.  Harvey,  inspector 
of  mines,  traveling  ex- 
penses    

Minnesota  State  Board 
of  Health,  appropri- 
ation      

J.  N.  Gayner,  special  ex- 
penses       examining 

town    accounts     

uth      Ice 

ice    

I'oirier, 


com- 


Zcnith 
pany, 

Duluth 
pany, 
etc. 

■\V.     F. 
visor 
s.alary    .... 

G.     H.    Scully, 

salary    

J.  J.  Heffron.  deputy  as- 
sessor,   salary    

Western  Union  Tele- 
graph Co.,  clerk  serv- 
ice     • 

Minnesota  state  board 
of  health,  appropria- 
tion     

Wm.  J.  Stevenson,  ex- 
penses in  Kane  case.. 

E.  L.  Tuoliv.  M.  D., 
health   officer,   salary. 

Mrs.  E.  J.  Granis,  office 
rent    

W.  M.  Prindle  &  Co., 
office    rent    

fotewart  Transfer  com- 
pany,  services    

Mary  Petf^rson.  State 
v.s.   Charles    Rydquist. 

JIatv      Peterson,      state 
vs.   Charles   Rydfi'iist.. 

John    H.   Norton,  expen- 

c^^g     

Bruna  Gervase.  services 
for  county  attorney.. 

Rosarl  Guitila.  services 
for   county   attorney.. 

August  Kniite.  services 
for  county  attorney.. 

John  AVebb.  servlc^-s  for 
county  attorney    

John  Wallace,  services 
for  county  attorney. . . 

Jas.  Fink,  services  for 
county  attorney    

O.  Halden.  county  aud- 
itor,  postage,    etc 

J.  P.  Johnson,  clerk, 
postage,    etc.    

W.  A.  Holgate.  county 
treasurer,  postage,  etc 

S.  W.  Gilpin.  Supt.,  trav- 
eling  expenses    

Wm.  J.  Stevenson.  .\sst., 
traveling   expenses. etc 

E.  L.  Tuohy.  health  offi- 
cer's  salary    

Duluth  Humane  society, 
approprhition     

W.  M.  Prindle  &  Co.,  of- 
fice rent   

Mrs.  f:.  J.  Grams,  office 
rent    

Whitney  Wall,  Agt.,  of- 
fice rent   

W.    F.    McKay,   supervls- 

.    or  of  asse«Jors.  salary 

G.  H.  Scully,  assessor, 
s&i&r^'    ••••••••••••••• 


5  00 
12  35 

44  70 

22  55 

1  50 

76  10 
125  00 
100  00 

75  00 

11  00 

100  00 

4  00 

97  50 
15  00 

22  50 

2  95 

4  50 
56  00 

5  50 

50  00 
20  00 
10  00 

3  00 
15  00 

3  75 

26  00 

123  97 

100  00 

91  00 

55  30 

87  91 
95  00 
95  00 

42  22 

50  00 
186  85 
30  00 
35  00 
15  00 
3  00 
12  50 
12  50 

20  60 

21  80 
23  50 
35  42 
50  00 

B  00 

5  00 
18.83 

6  95 
29  80 
70  39 
27  05 
20  75 

100  00 

15  00 

70  00 

247  50 

110  00 

S5  00 


The    Dul 
pany. 

Otto  A.  Poirier,  office 
rent    

Mrs.  E.  Grams,  office 
rent    

W.  .M.  Prindle  &  Co..  of- 
fice  rent    

B.  O.  Greening,  con- 
ducting teachers'  ex- 
amination     

E.  A.  Mooney.  conduct- 
ing teachers'  exam- 
ination      

C.  E.  Young,  conduct- 
ing teachers'  examin- 
ation      

66427  I>.    Ayres.    services 

66428  Duluth   Engineering  Co., 

services    

664  29  Western  Union  Tele- 
graph company,  clock 
service  

66430  Central     Scientific     com- 

pany,   anemometer.... 

66431  Geo.    F.    Cram,    atlas.... 

66432  Mesaba    Telejdione    com- 

pany, use  of  long  dis- 
tance    phone    

66433  Duluth    Telephone    com- 

pany, use  of  long  dis- 
tonce    "phone     

66435  Town    of      Kelsey.      ex- 

p«  uses  In  smallpox 
cases    

66436  The      Linen       Exchange, 

clean  towels,  etc 

66718  J.  E.  Manes.  services 
for    couiil.y    attorney.. 

C6719  Dan  Zubell.  services 
for   county   attorne%'.. 

66894   Martha  Wicklander, 

State  vs.  Thos.  Gus- 
tafson 


95  00 

1  30 

14  70 

50  00 

190  00 

22  90 

63  05 

15  00 
15  00 

124  50 
12  50 
12  50 
12  50 
15  00 
40  00 
20  00 
10  04. 
48  48 

66  23 
20  SO 
95  00 
95  00 
100  00 

57  69 

50  00 

148  86 
64  25 
10  00 
35  00 
15  00 

9  90 

9  30 


9  70 
20  00 

7  50 


27  00 

32  45 
12  50 


68241  Town     of     Midwaj 

penses     in     contj 
diseases    .... 

68242  Duluth    Englneerlr 

blue   prints  couri 

site    

6S251    Henry        C.        Clev 
trees     for     coun 

grour.-ds  

Ja.«.   Slbbald,   gi 
courthouse  grou 


68252 
68635 


Norton 


66895 

66896 

C6958 
67072 

67242 

C7243 
67244 
67245 
€7247 
€7248 
67249 
€'.250 
67251 
67252 
67253 

67254 
67255 

67256 
67257 
67268 
67259 
t-7261 
67262 
67263 

67264 
67265 

67266 

67207 

67268 

67269 

67270 


Wicklander. 
Thos.   Cius- 


G7271 

€7272 

C7273 
67280 

67692 
68026 

68220 
68221 
68222 
68223 
68224 
68225 
68226 
68227 
68228 

68229 

68230 
68231 
68232 
68234 

68235 

68236 

6S237 

68238 

68239 

68240 


Martha 
State  vs. 

tafson  

J.       O.       Walker,       ex- 
penses   in      connection 

with    bonds    

Matlillda     Winnes.    Slate 

vs.   I...    Mostal    

John  Linklater,  ser- 
vices for  county  at- 
torney    

.S.  W.  Gilpin,  superin- 
tendent, travtling  ex- 
penses,   etc    

J.    B.    Middlecoff,    Judge, 

postage     

J.      P.      Johnson,      clerk, 

postage,     etc 

O.  Halden,  county  audi- 
tor,   postage,    etc 

E.  L.  Tuohy.  health  of- 
ficer,    salary 

Mrs.    E.    J.   Grams,   office 

rent      

W.     H.     Prindle     &     Co., 

office     rent 

The         First         National 

Bank,   office   rent 

Dulutli    Humane   society, 

appropriations     

Duluth      Telephone    Co., 

telephone    rent,   etc... 

Mesaba     Telephone     Co., 

use    of    long    distance 

telephone     

Western   Union  Tel.   Co.. 

services     

W.  F.  McKay,  supervi- 
sor of  assessors,  sal- 
ary,  etc    

G.     H.    Scully,    assessor, 

salary     

J.      J.      Heffron.    deputy 

assessor,    salary    

W'.    H.    Leonard,    county 

treasurer's  elk,  salary 

C.    R.      F'assett.      county 

treasurer's   elk,   salar.v 

J.      N.     Gayner.     special 

e.xam.     services 

Board    of    Trade    Livery, 
llverv     for     examiners 
Christie    Lltho.    &    Pi  tg. 
Co..       repairing     type- 
writers       

J.  S.  Ray  &  Co.,  type- 
writer   stand    

L.  D.  Campbell,  esti- 
mating   buildings    new 

courthouse     site 

H.  Fee,  estimating 
buildings  mw  court- 
house   site 

Thos.  Olafson,  estimat- 
ing buildings  new 
courthouse  slte....^. 
R.  H.  Doran,  estimating 
buildings  new  court- 
house   site     

W.  JI.  Prindle,  estimat- 
ing      buildings       new 

courthouse     .'-ite 

C.  P.  Craig,  estimating 
buildings    new    court- 

hoii.--e     site 

T.    W.    Hoopes-.    estimat- 


ing     buildings        new 
courthouse    site 

Geo.  R.  Laybourn.  esti- 
mating buildings  new 
courthouse     site 

.Samuel  I.  Levin,  assign- 
ment   of    insurance... 

Town  of  Rice  Lake,  ex- 
penses in  care  of  in- 
fectifius    diseases 

J.  Risattl,  services  for 
county     atiorney 

Martha  Wicklander, 
State  vs.  Thos.  Gus- 
tafson       

W.  A.  Holgate,  county 
treasurer,  postage,  etc 

J.  P.  Johnson,  clerk  of 
court,    postage,    etc... 

S.  W.  Gilpin.  superin- 
tendent,   postage,    etc. 

O.  Halden.  county  aud- 
itor,   postage    

Dulutii  Humane  society, 
appropriation   

Whitney  Wall,  agent, 
office    rent    

Mrs.    K.    G.    Grams,    of- 
fice rent    

AV.    M.    Prindle    &    Co. 
office    rent     

W.  F.  McKay,  supervisor 
of  assessors,  salary, 
etc 

G.  H.  Scully,  assessor, 
salary,    etc 

J.   J.   Heffron.   salary.... 

C.  R.  Fassett,  salary.... 

D.  H.  Leonard,  salary... 
H.     L.     Shepard.     litho- 
graph plats,  etc 

Union  Abstract  Co..  list 
of   ownership    

E.  L.  Twohy,  M.  D.,  sal- 
ary,   etc 

Dr.  William  P.  .Abbott, 
medical  attendance, 
unorganized    towns... 

Minn,  state  board  of 
health,  appropriation 
two   months    

Mesaba  Telephone  Co., 
use  long  distance 
'phone    

Zenith  Telephone  Co.. 
telephone    rent    


8  50 


18  90 

24  37 

3  00  ■ 

30  70 

30  70 

15  00 

15  00 

14  50 
60  00 

40  00 

99  75 
3  35 
44  14 
36  20 
20  00 
35  00 
15  00 
10  OO 
100  00 
62  90 


68710 

68735 

68736 

68737 
68830 

68831 

C8943 

68944 

69187  S, 

69188 
69189 
69191 

69192 
69193 
09194 
69195 
69196 
69197 
69198 
69199 
69200 
69201 

69202 
69203 
69204 
69205 
69206 

69207 
69208 
69209 

69210 
69211 
69212 

69213 

69215 
C9216 
69405 
70158 

70196 
70219 
70300 
70301 
70302 
70316 

70395 

70485 
70499 
70500 
70501 
70502 
70503 
70504 


Van 

for 


Chas. 

for 
Mike 

for 
H.    C. 


155  57 
125  00 

95  00 
49  28 
49  28 
77  15 
3  00 

9  C5 
10  00 

260  00 

260  00 

35  00 

35  00 

35  OO 

35  00 

90  00 

90  00 
64  28 

6  7r. 

42  25 
15  00 


80 
50 
53 
10 


22 
6 

43 

51 
100  00 
247  50 

35  00 

15  00 

164  19 

141  63 
95  00 
80  00 
80  00 

21  CO 

3  40 

21  16 


25  00 

100  00 

6  10 

93  90 

John      H. 
penses   . 

John  H. 
services 
attorney    

M.  K.  Creashaw, 
Ices  for  count 
torney    

John      H.      Norton 
penses     county 
ney 

H.  Abraham,  servl 
county    .attorney 

Miles  K.  Creashaw 
ices  for  count 
torney     

John  H.  A'an  Burer 
Ices  for  count 
torney     

John  H.  A'an  Burer 
Ices  for  couni 
torney     

Miles  K.  Creashaw 
Ices  for  count 
torney     .... 

W.  Gilpin,  sv 
tend'nt  scliools, 
ellng   expenses, 

O.  Halden.  count; 
iter,    postage,    e 

J.  P.  Johnson,  cl 
court,    postage. 

AV.  F.  McKay,  si 
tendent  of  ass 
salary  and  exp« 

G.  H.  Scully,  as 
salary    

G.  N.  Scu^^•.  as 
expenses    . ' 

J.  J.  Heffron,  depi 
sessor,     salary 

C.  R.  Fassett.  trea 
clerk,    .salary 

D.  L.  Leonard,  t 
er's    clerk,    sala 

J.  N.  Gayner,  spe< 
amlner,    service 

J.  N.  Gayner.  spe< 
amlner,    service 

Board  of  Trade 
conveyance    . .  . 

Duluth  Humane  i 
appropriation 

F.  J.  AVebb.  insr'€ 
mines,  t  ravel  ii 
penses,    etc .... 

E.  L.       Tuohy. 
officer,    salary 

Town  of  Ault,  inl 
disease     

N.  Goldsworthy. 
Infectious  disea 

F.  I.  Salter  &  Co. 
ance    

L.  Ayers.  county 
or,    services      o 
commission 
Mesaba     Telepho 

services    

Western       Union 

graph  Co..  serv 

Duluth     Telephoi 

telephone      ren 

long  distance    . 

W.     M.     Prindle 

office    rent,    cq 
Mrs.    K.   J.   Grain: 

rent,    probafn 

First       Nat.     ban 

glnia,    office    r< 

sistant   county 

Christie    Litho.    1 

Co..       furnitur 

office   supplies 

Andrew  Swanson 

Ing    courthous" 

Gust     AVieveg.     < 

courthouse    sit 

Matilda     AVinn«s: 

vs.    L.    Mosioe 

Martha  Wlc" 

State  vs.  Tho.s. 

son     

August     Knutl. 

for    county    all 
John   Armstrong 
tlement     of     \i 
William    Dolan. 
for   county   ati 
Murphy, 
ccriinty    at' 
Koehler. 
county    at' 
Fulton, 
Armstrong 
Louis     County 
Anton     .L     H.ieln 
v.«.  St.   I  .  Co. 
commissioners 
D.  AA'.   Lang,  ser' 
county   attorn 
Duluth    Humane 
appropriation 
AV.     P.    McKay. 
assessf>rs.   sals 
G.    H.    Scully,      i 

salary    

G.     H.    Scully,    ! 

traveling    txp 

J.  J.  Heffron.  do 

sessor,    salary 

Chas.  R.  Fassett 

treasurer's   cb 

ary     • 

AV.    FI.    Leonard 
treasurers   cb 

ary     

A\'m.  J.  Stevens. 

ellng  expense 

Wm.    J.    Steven: 

ary    

O.    Halden,    coui 
itor,    postage, 
W.      Gilpin, 

etc     

H.   Glll>in,   se 

examiner     .  .  . 

H.  Norton.  c< 

torney,   posta 

Ayers,      cou 

veyor,     sf-rvic 

commissioner 

J.    P.    Jolm.'-on, 

court.  p<istag 
Mesaba  TeleplH 
pany.  use  ot 
for  assistant 
attorney  .  .  . 
AVestern  Unlo 
graph  compa 
grams      at  tor 

board     

Duluth    TeleplH 

pany,      toll 

sundry   office 

Zenith      Telej.h 

pany.       'phor 

sundry   office 

Frank   P.   Halle 

ograplK-r,     c« 

commissioner 

AA'.     M.     Prindlt 

office    rent, 

E.  L.   Tuohy.   li 
fleer,    service 

Mrs.    i:.   .1.  Gra 

rent,  probati 
Dennis  Madden 

for  county  a 
A.       B.       Hoste 

Louis  count> 
J.    P.    Johnson. 

court,  postal 
AV.    ^.    Holgat 

treasurer,  po 
O.    Halden,    cov 

itor,  postage 

F.  E.   Resche. 
officer,    iiosts 

S.    AA^      Gilpin. 

tendent.  tra\ 

penses,  etc. . 
Minn,    state      1 

healtli,  app: 
Duluth  Human 

apprf^'fiatioi 
Consoliflated 

Printing    Co. 

stamps 
Town    of 

penses 

cases 
Western 

graph 

Ices     

North    Americ 

graph  compi 

ices    

Mesaba   Telepl 

pany.  servic 
G.    H.    Scully. 

salary   

J.    J.      Heffron 

salary    

D.    H.    Leonar 

treasurer's 

ary     

Chas.  R.  Fass« 

treasurer's 

ary     

Signe    P.    Flin 

auditor's  clt 

Asa  Dalley.  cc 

Itor's  clerk, 

J.   J.      Rittma 

auditor's  cl< 

Alex      .Sehuet; 

auditor's  cl< 

D.  Barnes,  cc 


70505 

70507 
70508 
70509 
70510 
70511 
70512 
70513 

70514 
70520 

70521 

70522 


70523 

70533 

70544 
70552 
70578 
71713 
71850 
72262 
72263 
72264 
72265 
72266 

72267 
72268 
72269 

72270 

72272 

72273 

72274 
72275 
72276 
72277 

72278 

72279 
72280 
72281 
72282 
722«3 


S. 
S. 
J. 
L. 


ex- 
iglous 

g  Co., 
house 

eland, 
house 

•ad  ing 
nds. .  . 
,      ex- 

3uren, 
ounty 

serv- 
y     at- 

,      ex- 

attor- 

res  for 

,  serv- 
y     at- 

. serv- 
y     at- 

, serv- 
y     at- 

, serv- 
y     at- 

iperln- 

trav- 

etc. . . 
■    aud- 

c 

erjt    of 

etc.  .  . 
iperin- 
essors, 
:nses. . 
sessor, 

sessor, 
ity  as- 
surer's 

•easur- 
ry  ... 
ial  ex- 

i    

ial  ex- 

3    

livery, 

society, 

tor  of 
ig     ex- 

"heaith 

ectious 

M.  ■  D.'. 

ses. .  .  . 
Insur- 

survey- 
n      plat 

ie     Co.', 

•Teie- 

ices  . . . 
le  Co.. 
Is      and 

&  '  'co.', 
r<mer .  . 
!.  office 
officers 
k.  Vir- 
nt.  as- 
ait'y.  . 
'rintlng 
e      and 

,  c'.ean- 
:  site.  . 
leaning 

e     

5,    State 

ilander, 
Gustaf- 

pervlces 
orney. . 
In  set- 
w  s  u  i  t .  . 
services 
orney. . 
services 
orney . . 
services 
orney. . 
;osts  in 
.s.   St. 

1."  "  judg. 
board  of 

ices  for 

?v  

society. 

sup.  of 
ry.  etc. 
issessor. 

issessor. 
:nses  . . 
puty  as- 

,  county 
»rk,  sal- 
county 
•rk'^  sal- 

)n,  trav- 
s,  etc.  . . 
5on,  sal- 

ity  aud- 

etc.  .  .  . 

postage, 

rvices  as 

unty  at- 
?e.  etc.. 
nty  sur- 
es   plat 

eierk  of 

e  

me  com- 

'  'phone 

county 

n  "Tele- 
ny.  tele- 
ney   for 

me  corn- 
messages 

rs  

corn- 
rent. 


jne 
e 

IS 

ck. 


sten- 


43  70 
2  50 

12  25 

20  00 
7  50 

9  00 

25  00 

25  00 
9  00 

12  00 

12  00 

10  4  6 

10  46 

104  01 
53  72 
21  78 

146  56 

130  00 

4  95 

95  00 

80  00 

80  00 

108  23 

65  00 

3  00 

100  00 

74  8b 
20  00 
S3  55 
37  10 
17  34 

8  00 
75 

28  95 

60  80 
15  00 


20  00 

82  20 
10  00 
16  00 
50  00 


72284 
72285 
72286 
72287 
72288 
72289 
72290 
72291 
72292 
72293 

72294 

72295 


72298 

72299 
72300 
72301 
72302 


72303 
72304 


73482 

73839 

73840 

74938 
74939 
74940 

74941 
74942 
74944 
;4945 

74946 

74947 

74948 
74949 
74950 
74951 


15 

20 

300 

8 


Mi( 
in 

liiii 
compi 


urthouse 

6    

>     &    Co., 

loroner . . 
ealth  of- 
K,  etc.  . . 
us,  office 
m  officer 
,  ser\ices 
ttorney. . 
Iter.      St. 

fair. . .  . 

clerk  of 
,e,  etc.  .  . 
:•.  county 
stage,  etc 
my   aud- 

etc 

probation 
ge.    etc. . 

superln- 
eling  fcx- 

)oard  of 
■oprlatif'n 
e  society, 

I     

Stamp  & 
rubber 

iway,  ex- 
smallpox 


00 
00 
00 
CO 

8  00 
7  00 

47  30 

49  25 

9  85 
100  00 
150  00 
130  00 

13  10 
95  00 

80  00 

80  00 

55  70 

132  59 

24  17 

32  42 

9  00 

4  19 

12  00 
7  00 

3  30 

76 
38  25 


19  50 
15  OO 
24  00 
35  00 
100  00 
500  00 

6  95 
21  05 
26  93 

7  00 


74952 
74953 
74954 
74955 
74956 
74957 


Itor's    clerk,    salary.. 

A.    J.    Wasgatt,      county 

auditor's  clerk,  salary 

0.  Otterson,  county  aud- 
itor's  clerk,  salary    . . 

Carl  A.  Johnson,  county 
auditor's  clerk,  salary 

C.  L.  Hood,  county  aud- 
itor's clerk,   salary... 

AA'.  J.  Stephens,  county 
auditor's  clerk,  salary 

1.  G.  AVoUand,  county 
auditor's  clerk,  salary 

J.  W.  Johnson,  county 
auditor's  clerk,  salary 

E.  L.  Tuohy.  M.  D., 
health  officer,  salary. 

AA'm.  J.  Stephenson,  spe- 
cial   attorney,    salary. 

A\'m.  J.  Stephenson,  spe- 
cial attornev-.  expenses 
In  connecthm  with  the 
Issuance  of  courthouse 
bonds     

O.  Halden.  county  aud- 
itor, expenses  In  con- 
nection with  the  Issu- 
ance of  courthouse 
bonds    . ^ 

E.  M.  Patterson,  county 
commissioner,  expen- 
ses In  connection  with 
the  issuance  of  court- 
house   l>onds    

Whitney  Wall.  Agt..  ex- 
penses suit  vs.  county 
to  establish  validity 
of  bonds,  sold  May, 
1908    

Mrs.  Alvina  Wall,  con- 
ducting teachers'  ex- 
amination       

Whitney  AA'all,  office 
rent      

AA'.  M.  Prindle  &  Co.,  of- 
fice   rent    

Mrs.  E.  J.  Grams,  office 
rent     

Anderson  &  Gow.  put- 
ting up  fence.  Fourth 
avenue    west    

F.  I.    Salter.    Insurance. 
Northwestern    F'uel    Co.. 

coal  for  Netherland 
flats    

A\^  F.  McKay,  supervis- 
or of  assessors,  salary 

John  Pechlvor.  services 
for  county  attorney. . 

Joe  Perdis,  services  for 
county  attorney    

J     P.   Johns<m,    postage. 

O.    Halden.    postage,    etc 

S.  W.  Gilpin,  traveling 
expenses,  etc 

Wm.  J.  Stevenson,  spe- 
cial attorney,  salary.. 

E.  L.  Tuohy,  health  of- 
ficer,   salary    

Duluth  Humane  so- 
ciety, appropriation    .. 

Lafayette  Bliss.  con- 
ducting teachers'  ex- 
amination     

F.  J.  Webb,  inspector 
of  mines,  traveling  ex- 
pensf'S 

Town  of  Clinton,  ex- 
penses in  diphtheria 
cases     

The  Consolidated  Ab- 
stract company,  namea 
of   ownership    

Smith  -  Premier  Type- 
writer company,  rib- 
bons     • 

The  Miners'  National 
bank,  typewriter  for 
inspector  of  mines. . . . 

Consolidated  Stamp  A 
Printing  c  o  m  p  a  n  y, 
stars  for  sheriff's  of- 
fice       

Western  Union  Tele- 
graph   Co..    telegrams. 

The   Linen      Exchange, 
use  of   towels,   etc. 

W.    -M.    Prindle      & 
office    rent     .... 
Mrs.    F3.    J.    Grams 

fice  rent    

L.    Ayres.      county 

veyor,    services 
Duliilh    Telephone 


am  Ics^^c 


B2  36 


61  30 


27  90 


195  90 


ii  «: 


9  40 

220  00 

15  00 

86  00 

47  80 

40  00 

339  66 

150  00 

43  00 

43  00 

7  00 

66  67 

*inr 


■    ■   ^,1  • 


Co., 
"of- 

sur- 
com- 


pany,   use  of   long  dis- 
tance 'phone    

74958  AV.    F.      McKay,      super- 

vising assessor,  sal- 
ary      

74959  G.    H.    Scully,      assessor. 

salary    

74960  J.     J.       Heffron.       deputy 

assessor,  salary 

74961  Carl    O.      Jolinson.      ser- 

vices on  city  of  l>u- 
luth  assessment  books 

74962  I.     C?.      Wollan.     services 

on  city  of  Duluth  as- 
sc-ssment  bo;>ks    

74963  C.    Le     Roy    Hood,      ser- 

vices on  city  of  Du- 
luth assessment 
books    

74964  A.    J.    Wasgatt,    services 


74965 


on    city   < 
sessment 
Signe      P. 
vices    on 


<t   Duluth   as- 

books   

I'link.       ser- 
city    of      Du- 


71  30 

166  66 

20  00 

100  00 

9  00 

74  9S 

23  97 

2  00 
1  00 

100  00 

25  00 

4  It 

3  00 
15  00 
35  00 

4  00 

14  9S 

150  00 

130  00 

96  0» 

81  0» 

55  0» 

S4e* 

96  00 


^4969 


74970 


74971 


^49^.-. 
r4&S6 

■49f'9 


r5441    .S 


3n 

iny, 


Tele- 
serv- 


m 
iny, 


Tele- 
serv- 


27  66 

150  00 

100  00 

12  31 

7  87 

1  60 

2  00 

75889 
75890 
75891 

75892 

75893 
73894 
75896 
75897 


75901 

'.5902 
75903 
75904 

75905 
75906 
T5&0'(' 
75908 
75909 


75910 


J. 


tone   com- 
es      

assessor. 

leputy, 

d.    county 
clerk,  sal- 

tt.  county 
clerk,  sal- 


k.  county 
rk.  salary 
unty  aud- 
salary . . . 
1.  county 
•rk,  salary 
!.  cejunty 
•rk,  salary 
unty   aud- 


2  C.^. 

120  00 

95  00 

50  00 

80  00 
59  15 
59  15 

51  45 
69  15 


luth  assessnunt  books 
74966   D.     Barnes,     services    on 
city  of   Duluth   assess- 
ment  books   

r4967  A.  Otterson,  services  on 
city  of   Duluth   as.sess- 

ment     books      

74968  Asa  Dailey.  services 
ejn  c!t\'  of  Duluth  as- 
sessment b<ioks 

Alex  Schuetz.  services 
on  cit.y  of  Duluth  as- 
sessment  liooks 

Chas.  R.  I'assett,  county 
treasurer's    clerk. 

clerk    liire    

AV.  H.  Le<mard,  county 
treasurer's    clerk. 

cU  rk    hire    

AV.    W.    Wood,    cabine^t.. 
Panton    &    AVliito      com- 
pa n. v.    crock  er.v    

Northwtstern  F'liel  com- 
p.an.y.  coal  for  Neth- 
erland   fiat     

W.  Gilpin.  super- 
lntend»'nt,  expenses  in 
connection    with      sum- 

me  r   school    

P.   Johnson,   clerk     of 
court,  postage,  etc.... 
O.   Halden.   county  audi- 
tor,   postage,    etc 

.S.    AV.    Gilpin.      superin- 
te-ndent,   traveling  ex- 

\><  nses,  etc 

AA'm.    J.    Steveiisen,    spe- 
cial   attorney,    salary. 

Dr.   E.   L.   fiudiy.   health 

ofltcer.  salary,  etc.... 

Duluth    Hu'uane  society, 

approj)riatl.»n    

W.     M.     Prin.ilo    &    Co.. 

office   rent    

Mrs    E.  J.  Grams,    office 

rent    

75898  Minnesota  state  board 
of  htaltl;.  appropria- 
tion      

AVe:--tern  Uniem  Tele- 
graph  company,   clerk 

service     

Zenit.'i    Telephone    com- 
pany,   'phone    rent,  etc. 
Duluth     Telephone     Co.. 

'phone   rent,    etc 

.\Iesaija   Teltplujne   corn- 
use  of  lung  dls- 

'phone    

Directory    Com- 
dirtctorles    .... 
F.   M<-Kay.  supervis- 
or cf  assessors,  salary 
H.     Srully^    as.sessor. 

salary     

J.  Heffron.  deputy  as- 
sessor,   salary     

A.  J.  Wasgatt.  county 
auditor's  «-!erk.  work 
on  City  of  Duluth  as- 
sessment   books    

D.  Barnes.  count\-  audi- 
tor's clerk,  work  on 
City  of  Liuluih  as- 
sessment   bo<jk8    

75911  A.  Otterson,  county  au- 
ditor's clerk,  work  on 
City  of  Duluth  assess- 
ment   books    

75912  Signe  P.  F'link.  county 
auditor's  clerk,  work 
on  City  of  Duluth  as- 
sessment   books    

75913  Asa  Dailey.  county  au- 
ditor's clerk,  work  on 
City  of  Duluth  as- 
sessment books  

T.'.914  Alex  Schuetz,  county 
auditor's  clerk,  work 
on  City  of  Duluth  as- 
sessment   books    

75915  I.    G.       AVollan.       county 
auditor's    <lerk.    work 
on   City    of    Duluth   as- 
sessment   books    

75916  W.  H.  Leonard,  county 
treasurer's  clerk,  sal- 
ary     

75917  Chas.  R.  Fassett.  county 
treasurer's    clerk,  sal- 

>   ary  


pany. 

tance 
Duluth 

pany. 
AV 

G. 

J. 


60  00 


78  00 


75  00 


80  00 


80  00 


80  00 


80  00 
6  00 

3  88 


14  00 

50  00 
30  94 

40  64 

83  10 

174  37 

loo  00 

15  00 
35  00 

50  00 

30  38 
93  90 
69  65 

9  50 

53  00 
150  00 
135  00 

95  00 

95  00 
81  00 
75  00 
60  0« 
80  00 


80  00 


!»•- 


■  ^1OT*«  I- 


- 


>  -  r 


7591!*  City  of  Ely. 

infectious  diseases    . . 

76919  VillaKe  of  Sparta,  ex- 
penses In  Infectious 
diseases     

75920  Town    of    Mt  Davitt.    ex- 

penses    In     Infectious 
diseases     

75921  K.    Ayres.     county      sur- 

veyor,   services    

77032   Employers'       Detect  I  v  e 
Service,    services    

Total,    miscellaneous 


31  &0 


12  50 

38  07 
8  00 
15  95 
$20,983  17 


PAID  ON  COURT  HOUSK  SITE. 

•SSST    Electra       W.       SpaldinK. 

property    acquired    '«•"., ,,„_,n 
new   court    house   aite.|al.&Z7  iv 

•  723H   Mrs.    F:ila    Barker,    prop- 
erty  acquired    for   new  , 
court   house   site 39.462  40 

•89T6  .\.  M.  and  Annie  E.  Miller, 
property  acquired  for 
new   court  house   site.    34..61»» 


Total 


PRPI'TY 

SHKRIFK— L) 

«;$:{.->  2 

[^ 

J. 

Pierce 

K415»; 

1^ 

J. 

IMerce 

64993 

1^ 

.1. 

Pierce 

•  59S7 

J 

Pierce 

Sijijr.o 

I  J. 

.1. 

Pierce 

672::n 

1.  J. 

J 

Pierce 

f.sjirs 

1  *. 

.1. 

Pierce 

711144 

Li. 

J. 

Pierce 

TV!!*  2 

I.. 

.1. 

Pierce 

7.2  :•> 

1^ 

J. 

Pierce 

7l»o7i> 

I- 

.1. 

Pierce 

Total    

,.$145.1^.05 


.$    60  00 

84  00 
30  00 
54  00 
4.-.  00 
54  00 
6*>  00 
24  00 
69  1)0 
78  00 
60  00 

.  .$   624  00 


«36:o 

6;!647 

6:i»;4S 

63649 

63650 

6:?6.'.l 

6  3  6. '.2 

6365;? 

63654 

63655 

63656 

63657 

6365K 

63659 

63660 

63661 

63t;6l' 

6S»i6"; 

63664 

63S65 

65007 

65132 

65133 

65134 

65137 

65138 

65139 

65U<> 

65111 

651  (2 

65143 

65141 

65145 

65146 

65147 

651  4S 

65149 

65150 

65151 

66SS4 

66940 

66941 

66942 

66943 

66941 

669  45 

6614'J 

66947 

669  4  S 

66949 

66»50 

66951 

66952 

6>;'>53 

«iS'»5  4 

66955 

71621 

71878 

71879 

71880 

71881 

71882 

71S83 

71884 

718:t! 

71 ««!);: 

7M94 
Tl-tH?* 
7189!* 
719i>i» 
71905 
7193:; 
7193!< 
71975 

7MH;: 

720i'l 
75389 
75390 
75391 
7  5. 10  J 
75393 
75rV.M 
7544'i 
75  HO 
75531 
75561 
76999 


GRAND    JURORS. 

Fred    B.    Gladden    

Andrew    Miller    

Geo.    Brozlch    

E.  \V.    Matter    

George    A.    Gray     

H.    I.    Pinto    

Mark    Baldwin     

C.    K.    Evans    

C    E.    Peaslie    

\V.  S.    Bishop    

Th.)S.    E.    Blanch     

W.  .1.   Hunt 

(reo    M.  McGurrln 

Hans  c'l'.rlstiaiison  ... 
Olias.  B.  Woodruff  .  .  • 
Frederick    M.    Paine... 

.loseph   Shartcl    

las.    F.   Gordon    

W.     K.     I'eyton 

N.    Yount?hlood     

C.   M.  Campbell    

S.    H.  Owens 

John    Carmlchael    

M.   S.    Hawkins    

.\.   C.    Parsons    

Fred  Knowlton    

L.    V.    Hall     

\V.    S.    WoodhridKe     .  . 
John    F.    McCarthy    •• 

F.  S.    German     

Austin    Terryberry    .. 
W.    H     Cole 


1,.    K.    Helam    

John  CUson    

H.  J.   KolIlnK 

E    G.   Chapman 

Wni.   J     Hays 

rf     \\  McLeod 

s!    W.   Ricliard.xon.  .  .  . 

Edward     Uyan 

1!.  11.  Ober 

J.   S.   Moore 

Joiin    Grandy 

n     E     Woodbridge.  . . 

G.'   O.   .-^wift 

Chas    \V.  Kelswetter. 

E.     H.     I'ugh 

E.  E.   Plilllips 

I».    A     Blacklnar 

Wni  '  Clifford 

M.    L.   Jenks 

E.  X.  Bradley 

F.  J.     Dacy 

David    Freimuth  .... 

V    A.  Lewis 

D'  .a.  Iteed 

W.    B     L>Hvy 

K.    D.    Field 

W.  C.  Sargent 

S.  H.   Jones 

Geo.   A.    French 

Burr    Porter 

Chas     Franson 

Frank    H.    tJreen 

H.    P.    Green 

P'rank  E.  Fregeon.  . 

C.    F.  McDonald 

H.  E.  Harris 

R.  C,   Hatchings 

Ciias  A.  Payne 

W.  H.  Congdon 

A.  M.  Gaw 

Wni.  M.  Gravatt .  . . 

A.  M.  Fenton 

Wm.  P  Simmons... 
c.  H  ilaehnke 

B.  P.  Neff 

Wm.  H.  Ward 

E.  I.  Bradley 

W.  W  Seekins 

R.  R.  Forward 

F  J.  Pulford 

M'  J.  Mullen 

Aigat  rvedin 

Victor  Huot 

Chas.  J.  Hector 

I..  B.  Manley 

Total   


63273 

632S7 

6. ".3::  9 

633  40 

63524 

63535 

635:!rt 

6S537 

6353S 

63540 

63541 

63542 

63543 

63544 

63545 

6354*; 

63559 

63621 

6:?6';6 

6370.) 

637;s 

63744 

63753 

63755 

63757 

63774 

637  S  4 

63790 

63S02 

63S06 

63817 

63Sl'< 

63S20 

638i'6 

«3SS.> 

638.57 

63879 

63885 

6388r; 

63894 

63H9t; 

6390  t 

6:;!».t5 

6:;9o«; 

6391S 

63919 

6:{9iO 

639  21 

639  J  2 

6"92  4 

6::9J6 

63927 

6392S 

63929 

63930 

63931 

6393S 

6393!» 

63940 

63971 

63974 

63975 

63976 

63987 

$.{9S9 

639i»0 

63991 

63992 

63993 

63998 

filOO'l 

64019 

6110  4 

64105 

64106 

6410S 

64114 

14120 

64123 

64147 

64148 

$4149 

85151 

54175 

t4190 

»4322 

S433:: 

14344 

S4355 

64356 

64357 

61379 

64382 

64386 

64393 

64394 


PETIT    JURORS. 

Wm.    Wentzloff 

Ilenrv    I'airchlld 

P'rank    M.    Hall 

F     C.    Wagner 

Oie    A.    Berg 

Wm.   J.   Ashbeck 

John   Llnd 

Peter  E.  Torgerson 

Vincent    M.    «lrady 

Herbert    C.    Brown 

F'rank  M.  Hall 

Herman    Beier 

James   E.  Thwlng 

Xels  A.  Bergstrom 

F.  C.  Wagner 

t'iarence  E.   Hamilton... 

Goo.   Holmes 

Cha.s.    Vernlng 

Thomas     Caddy 

i\  M.  Burnett 

Wm.    A.    Beers 

E    W.    Kaltenbach 

Leonard    C.    Ferguson... 

E.    A.    Swanstrom 

J.thn'.A.  Doran 

Geo.    E.     Pratt 

C     D.    Pattin.son 

Philip    Pastorei 

Murdock    McLean 

C.    M.    Burnett 

E     .1.    O'Rovirke 

Clias     Gustafson 

Leonard   C.    Ferguson.. 

Walter  I..  Dash 

C.    D.    Campbell 

Ole    Berg    

Odin   B.   Olson    

John   A.    Doran    

Geo.     E.     Pratt     

Paul  L.   Larson    

W.    J.    Powers    

C.  M.  Burnett    

.\.   J.    Kennvbrriok    

.Fohii     Hanson     

Frank   B.    Makowsky    . 
Leonard    <'.     Ferguson. 

I'has.    F.    West    

David    H.    Williams    .  .. 

I'.   .\.  Swanstrom    

Harrv    George     

S.    G.    McConaugh.v     .  .  . 

Wm.    l-    Pierce    

Louis  Stermal    

E.  X    Miller 

C.    D.    Campbell     

X.    Voungblood    

C.  D.   Pattinson 

H.   F.  Smith    

Ole     Berg 


O.    C     Strom     

Wm.    H.    Dlnham    

Kobt.    AVhiteside     

Edward    E.   Zeigler    .  .  . 

Wm.    A.    Beers     

Allen    R.    Keeley 

Itobt.  Korb 

Geo.    Lehr    

A.    Xelson    

Clia.s.    Le    Febvre    

Paul    Lyrak    

Alexander     Sham 

H     1^  Gratheim 

Leonard   C.    Ferguson. 

Geo.   K.  Pratt 

<)din    B.    Olson 

C.    M.    Burnett 

Murdock    McLean 

C.    D.   Pattinson 

Wm.    Olson 

Frank   B    Makowsky.. 

W.    I.U    Dash ...    

John    X.    Carls(»n 

Emanuel     Swanstrom. 

John    A     Doran 

Wm.    A.    Beers 

H     L.   Gratheim 

C.'   H.    Munger 

Wm.   L.  Pierce    

Leonard  C.  Ferguson. 

Geo    E.    Pratt 

J.    IJ.    Flack. 

Martin    Nelson 

A.  J    Kennybrook 

C.    M.    Burnett 

Odin    B.    Olson 

W.    H.    Leonard 


John   Stllomoch 

J.    H.    Powers 

Frederick    R.    Le   Roy... 

Oscar   Jacobson 

Andrew    Haaklnson 

M.   M     McCabe 

E.  J.    tVRourke 

Paul    L.   I.«rson 

William   K.   Beers 

John     Belrholter 

Geo.   E.   Pratt 

Walter  L.  Dash 

Leonard    C.    Ferguson... 

C.    M.    Burnett 

H     L    Gratheim 

Frank    1.     Brei/.e 

Malcolm     Haggard 

Alexander   Shaw 

Ed   McDonald 

S.    H     Bruen 

F.  E.'  Colby 

C.   D.   Patterson 

C.   G.   McConaughy 

Frank  B.  Makowsky.... 

H     G.    Gro.ss 

Louis    Helblng 

J    J.   Durrage 

R.    D.    .\nnis 

L.  A.   Barnes 

.\ndrew    Andrews 

I..eonard    C.    Ferguson... 
Geo.   E.   Pratt 

B.    Olson 

Burnett 

Murdock    McLean 

H     U   Gratheim 

Dave     Andrews 

Geo.    Flfer 

F.   E.  Colby 

John     Rittjnan 

CJeo.   Benneson 

A     H.  Haug 

•  '.    D.    Campbell 

Bernard    J.    Tobeu 

B.  L.    Perry 

t;eo.     E.     Pratt 

H.    i:    Gratheim 

H.    W.    Coffin 

Wm.    A.    Beers 

Louis    Nelson     

.Vugust     Halgren     

Leonard    Schilt/.    

.1.    H.    Powers 

Charle.«!    M.    Xelson 

.lacob    Hector     

Wm.     M.    Spalding 

Fred    Allen    

Emanuel    A.    Swanstrom 

.\ugust    .lol.nson    

P.    H.    Gratheim 

Jii.xoph    Harman    

John     Ehling     

Odin    B.    (Jlson 

Paul     L.     Larson 

Harrv    Miliu-s     

Leonard    C.    Ferguson... 

.\.    F.    Luellevit-/. 

Amos    S.    Daniels 

Malcolm    Haggart     

H.    I'.   Curren 

.\lexan»ler    Shaw     

.Augu.st    F.    Slahlbush... 

Henry    i:.    Bartliolde 

James    B.    Flock 

.A.    J.    Kennybroad 

C.  M.    Burnett 

Josepli   Brink 

Wm.  Chafe    

.1.    M.    O'tJormaii 

K.    H.    Ralhbun    

.Xlois    Ebnei-    

W.    J.    .lohnson     

Walter    I..    Dash     

Murdock  McLean    

Richard  C.  Sloan    

in   warrant   Xo.   63102... 

H.    X.    McHarg     

Cornelius    L.   Twohy.... 

J. din    M.   Oldham    

H.   L.  Gratlu  im    

loseph    .XUaril    

K.  T.   Broderick 

II.  A.  Blum    

Charles     E.    .Sheridan... 

W.    A.    McDinald    

.Vrchibald    McCorlson    .. 

O.   H.    Haehnke    

W.   S.    Wing    

W.    J.  Sloane    

.\.    G.    Strong    

.Andrew    Riff    

Robt.    E.    Carroll    

John    Xelson     

Wm.    P.    Lardner    

W .   S.    Wing    

Bert     L.     Perrv     

.Vrchibald  McCorison 

R.   T.    Broderick    

L.»uis    .stermal     

W.    A.    McDonald    

J.    H.    McGilivery    

John   H.   Cook    

Wm.  M.  McKay    

Julius    .1.    Barnes    

D.  T.    Helm     

J  as.     Prant 

16  20!  65  145   Geo.    W.    Log'an 

O.   S.   Olson 

F.    A.    Klass 

Wm.    G.    Close 

Edwin   J.    Wen/.el 

E.  E.    Burley 

Geo     Hunter 

Christ    Talle 

John    H.    Jeffrey 

Chas.    F.    Nelson 

W.    A.    Bennett 

J.     A.    McCarthy 

W.     W.     Huntley 

F.  L     Young 

O.    S.    Olson 

W.    A.    McDonald 

W.    S.    Wing 

.Archibald     McCorison  .  . 

W.    M.    McKay 

J.    H.    Cook 

Bert    L.    Perry 

C.    E.    Johnson 

Hart     Hewitt 

Edward    M.    Gaylord... 

Robt.     Lueck     

Arthur    H     Berg 

Wm.    E.    Messerge 

C.    D.    Pattinson 

.Andrew   P.    Carlson.... 

Chas.      Lindblom 

John     Sami>.son 

O.    W.    Akerson 

R.    J.    Broderick 

C.    S.    Prosser 

W.    B.    Henderson 

E.    C.    Olstead     

C.     E.    Johnson     

B.     Beni^^on     

(;ust  A.   Bush    

Wtn.   M.    .McKay 

IV'ter  Summery    

M.    McCabe    

Archibald     McCorison., 

.1       H.     McGllivray 

W.    .s.    Wing    

John    H.    Clark    

W.    -A.    McDonald     

.A.    D.    Joyal     

R.   C.    Henry    

l.ouis  Sternal    

John     B.    Greenfield... 
Jeremiah    Kimball    ... 

Iver    Torvi<  k     

Wm.    B.    Bradley     

Bert    L.    Perry    

.\rthur    Farrington     .. 

W.    S.    W  ing    

S     H.    Bruen    

John    H.    Cook    

l.ouis     .'^ternall      

Wm.    M.    McKay 

,1.    H.    MeC.il very 

W.   .\.    McDonald 

Charles     Erickson      .  .  . 

.Archibald     McCorison. 

P'rank     L.     Burrows... 

Andrew    P.    Carlson    .. 

R.     J.     Broderick 

A.  D.    Joyal 

.1.    H.    ('rowley 

Jas.    M.    Campbell,.  .  . 
William    M.    McKay.  .  . 
Jo.sej»h     Trudell 

B.  Benson 

i\    E.    Johnson 

Hugh    A.    Sanborn 

F.    R.    Kennedy 

W.    B.    Cross 

.\ndrew    P.    Carlson... 

Robert    D.    Haig 

.Andrew    J.     Meldahl.. 

Peter     Summers 

Xels     J.     .Anderson.... 

John    P.    Olson 

John    T.    Dowe 

John    R.    Randall 

James     Drewitt 

Robert    T.    Pieroes.  .  . 

John   C.    Warren 

Charles     Stark 

J.    H.    Bowne 

.\.     M.     Morrison 

Christ      Wallin 

Bert    Ia.    Perry 

R.    C.    Henry 

W.    A.    McDonald 

H.    C.    Nelson 

S.     H.     Bruen 

John    J.    McCoy 

Louis     Sternall 

Bert    U    Perry 

R.    J.     Broderick 

J.    H.    McGllvery 

John      Enbery 

RoV>ert     Gudmonson. 

P.     Mcl'abe 

Chas.     Lindbloom. .  .  . 

R    C.   Henry 

\V.   A.  McDonald 

Wm.    Getty 

W.    W.    Brown 

W.   W.    Brown 

C    D.  Campbell 

M.    B.    Hu>bs 

N     YoUngblood. 


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_  II      -  "      "^   ■  >         I     ■  I     ■  'I  »  I      '       'm 


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67'»51 


Frank  Bennett 

Peter  Knudsun 

Arthur  Mahoney 

Wm  Dunn 

Arthur  C.    .Nelson 

ICrnest    Madesoii 

J.   T.   Melvin 

Edward     Hatch 

Henry  l-'rankell 

O.    L.    Pederson 

Richard    Dlnham 

W     W.    Brown 

B.  W.    Hubb 

F.     E.    Colby 

L.    T.    Brazeau 

Robert    Mc<Juade 

Arthur  C.    Xelson 

W.    W.    Brown 

X.   Youngblood 

<'harles    t^ulgley 

John    Gram 

.Arthur  Mahoney 

Thos.    Gill 

John   H.   Hickey 

l-"rarik   II.   Burnett 

V\'m.     Dunn 

O.     H.    Jaikson 

(Jeo.    A.    Bennison 

O.    li.    Pederson 

Robt.    McQuade 

(•ustaf      Leander 

.Arthui-     Xelson 

Paul     Gillrup 

Richard     Stevens 

Earl    M      White 

Frank      Malti<on 

I'Mward     Hatdi 

Samuel     Bingham .... 

It.     J.     McGhee 

Sftli      Marshall 

Frank     H.     .Studahar. 

C.  l>.  FIt/.simmons.  .  . 
A.    Morton     Miller.... 

Simon     Chalmers 

.Ailhur     Mahone.v 

J.     Thayer    Melvin... 

J.     Gram 

Alfred     Thoren 

Earl    M.    White 

Fred    J.    Calhoun .... 

H.     .A.     Kiichli 

O.     H.    .lacobson 

Ernest     Madison 

Tho.«?.     Gaidner 

William     Dunn 

Arthur  C.  Xelson  .  .  .  . 
Geo.  .A.  Oglesby  .  .  . . 
Louis    T.     Brazeau... 

Richartl     lUnliam 

Fred     E.     Colby 

.lolni    A.    .Anderson     . 

W.    U.   Edwards 

C.    ^^ .    Coole     

Chas.  E.  Beuglet  ... 
Richard    Dinliam    . . . 

O.    L.    I'ederson    

.1.    II.    HIckev    

W.    H     i:aton    

Ciias.    Borg    

C    O.    Eklund     

Erick    Mattson     

W.   A.    Russell    

T.    .1.     Rinnert     

Walter  E.  Kennedy  . 
.Arthur    Mahoney     .  .  . 


.Arthur  C.   Xelson 

Paul    tlillrup    

John    Gram     

Fred    .1.    i^alhoun 

F.  B.  S<-hunxann  . 
Geo.     Bennison     .  . 

G.  A.  Dglesbv  .  .  .  . 
J.  .\.  McKinley  .  . 
Thos.  Gordon  .  .  .  . 
Earl  M.  White  .  . 
H.  A.  Kiichli  ... 
Simon    Chalmers 

Wm.    Dunn    

W.  U.  Edwards  .  . 
O.   H.   .lacobson    .  . 

Jas.     Luce      

A.    W.    Clark     

Curl   .\.    Hallburg 


I 
Richard   Stokes   . 

Eail   .VI.    White 

Edward  McHale 

Edward  Lviuh   

S.  M.   Lister 

Axel    W.    Xorberg    

G.  F.  .Am born    

.A.    E.    Hathawav    

.A.   W.   Clark    

Simon   Chalmers    

.Arthur  Mahoney    

Paul  Gillrup   

H.    .A.    Kiichli    

C.    L.    Brundage    

Wm.    Dunn     

O.  H.  .lac.dison 

Austin    M>)ody    

G.    -A.   Oglesby    

Arthur  C.   Nelson    .... 

Fred  J.  Calhoun 

Thos  Gordon 

Ji>hn   Gram    

F.   E.  Colby    

W.    R.    El  wood    

E.   .1.    Ericson    

Jas.   Luce    

Jas.    Kell.v    

John  S.  Manson 

John    Rittman    

B.  W.    Hubbs    

tleo.   Fifer    

James  Kelley    

Fiancis  Long 

Arthur  C.    Nelsfm    .... 

W.   A.   McDonald    

George  R.  King 

John  A.   .Anderson    .  .  .  . 

Richard   Stokes    

.All»ert    iCoherer    

Fred     E.    Colby 

Robert    Olun.l     

Wm.     H.    Jones 

O.     H.     Jacobson 

Fred    B.    Schumann... 

Edward    Lynch     

J.    X.   McKin.lley 

Walter     D.     Xewcomb. 

\\n^.    Dunn     

.Arthur    Mahoney    .  .  . . 

C.  L.    Brundage 

Simon    Chaimers    

Paul    Gillrup     

Thos.    Gor<U>n     

.Arthur    C.     Nelson..., 

Fred    J.    Calhoun 

G.    .\.    Oglesby    

.laines     Kelley     , 

.lohn   Gram    

A.     W.    Clark 

W.     R.    Edward 

67952    F.  Howar.l  Rogers... 

George    Fifer    

N.     Youngblood     

W.    .A.   McDonald 

P.obert    E.    Mace 

C.     L.     Brundage. . . . 

Owen    J.     Hunt 

George     Harris     

W.      W.     Davis 

Carl     Halberg     

Ralidi     J.     Davis 

E.    B.    Fox    

A.   L.   Sturgls 

Fred    J.    Calhoun.... 

T.    -il.    Pulford 

J.     W.     Delane.v 

Fred     E.    Colby 

John  Gram    

Wm.    Dunn    

Paul    Gillrup    

Thos.    Gordon     

W.    R.    Edwards 


67953 

67951 

67955 

67956 

67963 

67964 

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67967 

67968 

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68038 

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68712 
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68717 
68718 
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.\rthur    Mahoney     ... 
Arthur    C.     Nelson... 

R.    E.    Bailey 

.lohn    Ca.ston     

p-red     En  gel     

A.     W.    Clark 

J.    R.    McKinley 

G.    -A.    Oglesby 

H.    J.    Slegel 

Fred     E.    Colby 

D.    A.    McLeod 

Christian    Mickleson 

H.    H.    Meyers 

John    Gram     

.Andrew  Mahoney    .. 

Wm.     Dunn     

Fred    E.  Colby 

Arthur    C.    Nelson.  . 

I'aul    Gillrup     

.\.     W.    Clark 

Thos.    Gordon     

W.    R.    Edwards 

H.    A.    Kiichli 

.Austin    Moody    

Fred   E.  Colby 

Wm.  H.   Bain    

Wm.  J.   Ritcliie 

W.    D.    Edson    

Henry     Taylor     . . . . 

.\ndrew   Xelson   .... 

Geo.    E.    Webb    

Wm.  Thompson  .  . .  . 

F.   E.   Yokum    

S.   E.    Eklund    

.i.    A.    McDonald    .  . . 

B.    .levesatte     

E.  G.  t^hurch    

.lohn    Donovan     .  .  . . 

Geo.    W.    Martin    . . . 

R.  J.   Payne 

Francis     Long     .  .  .  . 

Paul  Chamberlain    . 

Wm.   H.   Hewitt    .  .y^ 

Chas.    C.    Hubocii    .  . 

A.    W.   OHearTi    

Peter   Kedtlson    .  .  .  . 

A.   G.   0?;lesby    

Geo.,    utlev    

O.    D.    Jewell    

.Austin    Moody     . . . , 

Alfred    Saburn     .  .  .  , 

A.  W.  Clark    

.X.    F.    Nelson    

John  Gram    

H.    A.    Kiichli     

Fred    E.    Colby    .  .  . 
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Cl-.as.  W.  Peterson  .... 

Jolm  J.  1  aorp  

Harry  A.  Harker 

Thos  Gordon 

Edwin  H.   IBdoedel 

Christian    Mickelson.  .  . . 
Paul  Gillrup ; 

F.  S.    Miller 

David    WelnJaerg 

J.  F.  McKanna 

Arthur  C.    Nelson 

Joiin    A.    Bolanfr 

Ro))ert  Cas^y 

H.  Panka. 

John    Panki^ 

G.  H.    Feetham 

J.  A.  Helfensteln, 

Wm.     Dunn 

R.  D.  McKeoeher 

Wm.     Young 

Fred    H.    White 

Arvin    Bagley.  .  .' 

S.    M.    I..t>ster 

Fred   J.    Monbhause 

Carl   J.   Drlesboch 

A.   H.    Viele 

Jaa.    R.   McDonough 

.Arthur  C.   Nelson 

Geo.    W.    Detrlt 

Caspera   Ottby 

Henry    Leppman 

John    H.    Ball 

E.  M.  Morgan 

W.    H     Burris 

H.  R.  Patterson 

C.   H.   Harkner 

Peter    Flshan 

Joseph   Hill 

(;ustave     I'arvarenta.  ... 

C^.eo.    O.    Oss 

Matt      Anderson 

Michael    OI>onnell 

Gustav     H.     Youngquist. 

Chas.     Mattson 

Clias.     Heckman 

William     Vuotii , 

Herman     Kandlins , 

\Vm.    G.    Dundas 

Jas.    A.    i*eters 

Horace     Brown , 

Jeannette     Hulen 

Frank    H.     Farrell 


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31  00 

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John  Z.  Rittman 

Charles  Saul 

72058  Axel  Sandberg 

72074  Tho.s.  Jury 

72076  Edward     O'Connor 

72077  John    J.    Oakes 

72078  C.    H.    Cooper 

72079  Peter     Sevanson 

72081  James    H.    Holliday 

72082  Edward    D.    Bak»r 

72083  Jacob      Pentilla 

7l'089   Charles    W.    Oppel 

72090   Herman    E.   Goessler.... 

72092  .\lfred     Phillips 

72093  J.    O.    Johnson 

72094  Wm.     P.    Summers 

72105  Geo.  O  Oss 

72109  Peter  Peterson 

72128  Morris    S.    Brown 

72129  Olof     Glsness 

72130  Herman    H.    Coorst 

72111    Raiiiah    Cole.    Jr 

72142    W.     H.     Alexander     

7  2219   Clyde    R.    Fenton    

72220  George    H.    Elx-rt    

72221  Jacob     Pentilla      

72222  Harry    A.    Ilaaker    

72224    .loiin    J.    Oakes     

72226    I'rank    S.    Miller     

72228  lOIy    H.    .*?herwoo.l     

72229  Eiiward    Mattson    

Frank   J.    Burke    

Charles    Boerner     

Iver    Johnson     

llerman    Kaudslin     

Edwin    S.    Olson    

William    Vuoti     

Charles    Heckman    

William   P.   Summons    .  . 

Charles   Saul    

James    H.     Halli.luy     ... 

I'.     W.     Hock     

William    L.    Galloway... 

O.     H.    Cooper 

Edward    O'Connors    .... 

Herman  H.  Covert 

C.    C.    Eklund    

John    J.    Tl'.orp    

l".     Tl'.omas     

Xewell    T.    Russell    ||{ii|| 

Frank    Pioring    

X.    Youngblood    

Herman    H.   Covert    .... 

O.   H.   Cooi)er    

William    C.    Jobson    .... 

Geo.    O.    Oss 

Jas.    Stillson     

Walter    Caldwell     

Morris    S."  Brown    

Edward    O'Connor    

Jas.    H.    Halliday 

Howard    W.    Dow.v 

Herman   H.  Covert    

Olaf    tlisnes.s     

David     Weinberg     

Iver     Johnson     

.Arthur    H.    Blom     

Wm.    I'.    .Simons     

Herman   E.  .Schmidt   .... 

John    R.    Brodash    

Alfred    Phillips    

Geo.    -A.    Sherwood 

John    Z.    Rittman    

Herman    Kandelin    

Peter    .Arin     

Frank    J.    Burke     

Henry    Butler     

Ramah    Cole.    Jr 

Charles    Heckman     

Gust    Lake     

Charles   Swahoda    

Louis    Cohn     

Thos.    -V.    .Armstrong.... 

Morris     S.     Brown 

Wtn.     W.     Hewitt 

H.    C.     Richardson 

John    G.    Maki    » 

John    Sampson     

James    AV.    Monoghan... 

H.    S.    Patterson     

Oscar   L.  Matlier    

Joe  Perdie   

John  Pechevar  

Wm.  Vuate    

Chas.  Saul    

Wm.  -A.  Thayer   ; 

Gustav    Youngquist    .... 
D.   O.   .Anderson    ......... 

Olaf  A.  Olson    

Herman   H.  Covert 

Wm.  P.  Sinunons 

.las.  H.   Holiday 

Edward  O'Connor 

Olaf  Gisness   

Herman  Kandelin 

Chas.  Heckman    

B.   Jerisalti    

Geo.  O.  Oss    

Gustav    Youngquist    

Malvin  C.  Sundby 

Claude  H.  Hare 

Edward  O'Connor 

Geo.  E.   Webb 

Fred   Moilon    

Olaf  A.  Olson    

Frederick  E.   Yokum 

Geo.   O.   Oss    

Frank   E.  Brooks 

Josepli   .^chmauss    

Frank  J.  Burke 

Wm.   C.    Rol»inson    

John  J.  Tischer 

Clias.  Saul   

F.  K.  Hicks 

Geo.  O.  Oss    

John   Z.    Rittman    

Chas.    F.    Sandon     

Wm.  .A.  Thayer 

i:.     J.     Millette     

Frank    J.     Burke    

Wm.    P.  .Simmons 

Geo.  O.  Oss    

Herman    H.    Covert    .  . . . 

Daniel  E.  Eklund 

James   H.   Halliday    .... 

William    Vuoti     

Charles   Saul    

John  A.  Rogers 

John    Z.    Rittman    

John    Pechevar 

Joe   Perdig    , 

F.   E.   Yokum    

John    Cox    , 

Frank  J.  Burke 

Wm.    P.  Simmons    

Wm.  A.  Thayer 

Philip  M.  Graff    

Herman    H.    Covert    ... 

Wm.  C.   Jobson    

Alex    H.    Davis    

.Albert  Johnson 

Phillip  Sher    

J.   W.    Rawley    

.lohn  J.  Fischer 

John  F.  McKanna 

Frank  Sciiaflfer 

Daniel  J.  O'Brien    

J.    C.    Mischler    

J.  C.  Smith    

Timotliv   W.    Foran    ... 
William    W.    Hewitt... 

Charles    Haul 

John    A.    Erickson 

7S<>10  James    H.    Holliday 

73955   W.    N.    Bemis 

Frank    P.    Robinson... 

Frank        Wilson 

John    Z.    Rittman 

C.    H.    Merritt , 

John    A.    Rlvlers- 

Charles     Boerner 

N.      Youngblood 

Charles    F.    Sandon... 

J.    A.    McDonald 

Frederick     E.     Yokom. 

Edward    F.    Berg 

Charles    Saul 

William     Vieotl; 

Peter     Peterson 

John     Ketala 

i  75158  Nais  C,   iJeUsej' ,..,.. . 


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.lohn  P.  Oilman 

William  A  Hewitt... 
.lohn  A.  Erickson.... 

T.  W.  Foran 

•loseph     M.     Pierce.... 
James    H.    Holliday... 

Gustav      Berg 

Henry      Riley 

H.        Huber 

.A.      Temple 

J.     Temple 

I'M     Erickson 

Oscar      Pohjonen 

.\rtl;ur    H.    Hoyle 

J.     R.     Hanson 

Arthur    L.    Hund 

.1.     F.     McKenna 

E.    C.    Little 

Jolin    M.    Graham 

Fred    K.    Rawler 

K.    Sappola    

Eugene   A.   .Smith 

P.    <'.     Oiielette 

Fred    B.    I'ei  guson  .  .  . . 

John    Kukka    

John     Pariham     

Herman    Fete    

Ed    I>ehman    

Michael    OConnell    ... 

Tho!--.  McArthur 

Axel    Flaaten    

.lohn    Palmer    

Chas.     T.     Wilson 

Claus    M.     Hanson.... 

W.    R.    Rush 

Jonathan    Brewer     ... 

C.  C.    Puck 

Itobt.    H.    .Sessions.... 
i:rnest    11.    Stevenson. 

B.  Land  raid     

Francis    Long    

John    L.    Benz 

Wm.    Carmit'hacl     .... 

Jol.a    W.    Uudin 

Frank    Forsell    

J.ihn    Cameron     

D.  J.    Forgarty 

Wm.    R.    Rush 

Jolin  M.   Pfau 

Vvalier     R.     Knowles. 
Jonatlian    Brewer    .  .  . 

Geo.     Fifer     

S.   R.    Lewis 

C.  C.    Preck 

Gottfried  Olson    

O.    Jones     

H.  C.  .Marshall 

Edward  hchrier 

Jas.    P.   Swanson 

John    O'Connor    

Robt.    M.    Edwards.  .  . 

John     L.     Ruden 

John    E.     Brolherton. 

C.    c     Preck     

Matliew    Fallan    

W.    H.   Little 


Jonathan    Brewer 
John     .M.     Pfau     .. 

.lolm    Walsh     

S.  .M  Sherman.  . 
W.  B.  Knowles.. 
J.  H.  Frankes.  .  .  . 
C.  H.  Campbell.  . 
(iei*.  ^''arrington .  . 
Harry    J.    Morgan 

E.    G.   Churcli 

E    C.   Lamb    

Wm  R.  Itush  .  .  . 
Jonathan  Brewer. 
John     L.     Rudin.  .  . 


C.    Preck 

H.     Runyon 

1',     Mc.Andrews.  .  . 

Berbig     

H.   Campbell 

M.     Hoff 

Got  tf  red    Olson 

Carl     F.     Philipps.  .  .  . 
Thos.      .Mc.Arthur.  .  .  . 

S.    M.    Butcliarl 

C.    N.     Whitney 

S.    E.    Smith 

Dilbert     E.    Case 

Geo.    T.    Withlngton, 
J.     T.     Mc.Anilrews.  .  , 

Neil    .S.    Slocker 

Chas.     Newmeyer... 
Campbell .... 

R.    Itush 

Rudin 

Slubstad 

Jolmson 

Carter 

Puck 

Bii.isting 

Mciver 

Mc Andrews.  . . 
Cleveland  .  . . . 

Cohn 

B.     Knowles.  . 
Nelson 


C.     H. 
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G. 

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Hans 
J.  T. 
O.  M. 
Alex 
Wm. 
Anton 


Wm.    E.    Mos.saur 

Robt.    Freeman 

John    J     Elder 

C.     H.    Campbell 

Wm.     D.     Dyer 

John     L.     Benz 

Jonathan     Brewer 

James  T.  Tllson 

David  .Sang 

Steve  K.   Eklund 

J.    P.    Bates 

James    Dunlap 

Geo.   T.    Fifer 

J.   H.   Runvon 

Dan    E.   Cole 

E.    B.    I'^ox 

J     T.    Mc.Andrews 

W.   D    Dyer 

G.    H.   Campbell 

.lohn    E.   Carlson 

IL    H.   Oppel 

J.     L.     Reedin 

.lohn     Burke 

Mathew    Falcon 

W.   H    Little 

C    C.  Puck 

J.    T.    McAmlrews 

Henfv  Taylor 

A.    W.    Lignell 

Geo.  Close 

N.  C.   Batleu 

C.  C.  Cantlelr 

Jas.     l>unlop 

Robt.   .Sessi.)n3 

Wm     R.    Rusk 

Edw    F.    Schrel 

W.    B.    Knowles 

C.  \\'.  Anderson 

A.     H      Donald 

Thos.  J    St.  Germain. 

O.    J.    Bunting 

S.  M.  Sherman 

D.  S.  Christenson  .  . 
Edward  C.  Lamb  . .  . 
W.  .M.   Thompson    .  .  . 

C.    C.    Puck     

John     Donovan     

John    J.    Eben    

J.    L.    Rudin    


20 
20 
20 
20 
20 
20 
20 
00 
50 
20 


12  20 
18  20 


24  20 
20  60 

2  20 

8  20 
23  00 
29  60 
29  60 
33  60 

25  40 
12  60 

19  00 

9  20 
11  00 
14  20 
39  60 
10  00 

20  00 
20  00 
14  20 
18  20 


t3S19 

63821 

63827 

63828 

63829 

63830 

63831 

63847 

6SS49 

63852 

63860 

63861 

63862 

63865 

63870 

63877 

62890 

63895 

63897 

63900 

63907 

63917 

63923 

6:'.925 

639  15 

63949 

63950 

63951 

I  63952 

63953 

63959 

63960 

63977 

63978 

63979 

63984 

63986 

63996 

63997 

64001 


5o20lt3Sl9   II.    H.    .Macgregor    

4  80     63821    t'hrist     I'risvold     

4  80     63827    John     Koneczey     

4  20    63828    .Alfred    Amundson     

74  20    63829    Henry     Abraham     

4  20    63830    .VI     .Abiaham      

76  20    63831    John    P.    Murray    

John    Konczsky    

H.     R.     Fairchild 

Geo.    Zonet     

Ralph    I  >e  Geco    

Dave     Frankforc     

.lohn    Mcintosh    

Fred     Wilkins     

Louis     Fobare     

Moses    Trouche    

.lacob    Nordstrom    

Dave     Cohn      

Geo.     Shapiro      

Chas.   Sunb>-    

Moses    Trouche    

Jacob    Siegel     

.Albert     IVice     

Xat    Richer    

Mrs.     Fina     Jakkonen.. 

Harry    Gardner    

.lake     Korpe     

Kate    Salomonson     .  .  .  . 

Anna    Jacobson    

Thos.    Mc.Vrthur    

John     Hellan     

Jim     Taylor     

F.    W.    .Vn.lerson 

Wm.     Doyle     

Ed    Le    Bea  u    

Geo.     .Mtman     

Jacob    C^ohr     

John    Anderson    

Ed    Johnson    

L.    F.    Leach 

1, ;■'.,)  I  64012   Chas.    Smiley    

"       64020   J.    P.    Vincent 

Jacob    Colm     

D.     Frankfort     

J.    C.    Mick 

L.    Polintki    

Ed    X.    Xelson 

John    Burdzyerki 

Anton  .Szyniszaki    ...., 

Andrew     Slnasen     .... 

Camile    Shambra     .... 

Wm.    Dwaal    

Chas.    Hendrickson     .  . 

Lee   Keiser    

Dr.    J.    M.    O'Tufty 

Geo.    Stilinovich    

.Andy   Wdner    

Geo.    Altman     

Oscar    Bakola     

Solomon    Katala    

Chas.    Hendrickson    .  . 

Lee    Keiser    

John    Robson    

E.  A.    Barrett 

Ben    Machedzuke    .  .  .  . 

T.    Murayatna    

T.  Murayama    

Takkashi    Murayama 
Ben    Maciiedzuki     .  .  .  . 

Chas.    Kee    

P.    H.    Wagner 

Wm.    Mead    

Joseph    Channega     .  .  . 
Frederick     E.     Adams. 

F.  W.     Hencke 

Celia     Davis 

Anna     Davidsoti 

Wm.     Davis 

Ernest     Glaser 

John     Hillinavlch 

John     Mitonen 

Pete      Klinuis 

Randolph     Miller 

Ton.v     Anderlich 

Pat     McMullen 

D.    J.    Cur  ray 

Sam     Mattson 

Fred      Mattson 

Jacob     Jacobson 

Victor     Anderson .... 

John     -Alii 

Ray     Butchart 

34  20  165038   Lucy     Gonyan 

47  00  I  65039  Geo.     Shapera 

47  00    G5041   Chas.     Smeby 

24  00    05043    Dennis     Madden 

10  00    650 19   J.    P.    Waadley 

3100    65050   Matt     Turner 

8  OO    65051    Gedian     Carlson 

8  00    65052    Fred      Norris. 
8  00    65053    Ellas 

16  20  650S1  Marv 

17  20  65082  Fred 
14  20  65097  Mrs. 

8  00  65098  .Mark 

11  00  65099  .lohn 
29  40  65100  t:hris 
10  00  65101  L.  P. 

9  00  65102  Sevier 
8  80  65103  Carl 

16  00  65104  W.  W 


22  80 
24  20 
34  60 
2  4  00 
10  00 
10  00 
10  00 
10  00 
20  00 
20  00 

6  00 
1  4  00 
32  20 
12  00 
26  00 
18  20 

8  20 

30  20 
24  20 

31  20 

26  20 
1 0  00 

27  20 
8  00 

36  00 

34  00 
1  2  00 
18  20 
22  00 
36  OO 
20  00 
10  40 

6  00 
10  00 
22  20 
4  3  OO 

35  00 
20  00 

6  00 
8  12 
4  00 
44  00 
4  00 

34  20 
4  00 

50  20 
25  00 

51  00 

35  00 
4  4  20 

36  20 


64021 

64022 

64113 

64115 

64116 

61126 

64127 

64129 

64130 

64171 

64180 

64181 

64193 

61205 

64206 

64410 

61478 

64479 

64480 

64181 

64484 

64485 

64558 

64559 

64560 

64590 

61591 

64592 

64593 

64594 

64605 

6161;; 

64010 
65008 
65009 
65012 
65013 
65014 
65015 
65016 
65018 
65019 
65021 
65022 
6503  2 
65033 
65034 
65035 
65036 
, 65037 


25  00 

40  20 

40  20 

8  00 

6  00 

goo 

24  00 

10  00 

30  20 

20  00 

60  80 

10  20 

12  00 

44  20 

14  00 

14  00 

6  00 

6  00 

4  00 

34  00 

64  00 

54  20 

6  00 

56  00 

10  00 

10  00 

6  00 

2  OO 

62  20 

12  20 

14  00 

14  00 

12  40 

2  20 

6  00 
10  00 
12  20 

7  00 
56  20 
43  20 
52  20 
12  00 
32  00 
58  00 
16  00 
28  20 

8  00 
62  00 

7  20 

8  00 


Total.    Petit    Jurors 


WITNESS    FEES. 

F.    Wilson    

Nell  Connor    

Tom   Colosnig    

Frank   t^olosnig    

Mae    RIschie     

Jacob  D.  Siegel 

Eugene  Fiskett 

Albert    Pen    

Clias.    Smeb.v    

Geo.    Sharpers    

O.     Munson      

Victor  Maki    

Camile  Shambo 

.Andrew    Simonson     .  . 

John    Budzynski    

Chas.    Hendrickson    .  . 

Lee   Kieser    

Josepli    Charnlga    

(Mias.    Lee    

M.    Troucha    

Max     Lutzke     

Geo.    Blazing    

John     Helouvich     

Lourl    Tomina    

Geo.  Steiliovich 

John     ivallony     

Jack    Chapp     

Julia  O'Toole 

p.    o'Mara     

Bede  (^arlson    

M.    J.    Gonon     

John  Nicholson    

Cella   Davidson    

Lena   Davidson    

Alma  Davidson    

.Martin    King    

^^ Jacob   Nordstrom    

63568  James  Comkuch    

63569  Lucy  Gonyan    

Rav    Butchart    

W.   <^.   Bloodworth    .  . . 

John    Clavanly    

Harry  M.   Hutch  ins   . , 

L.    P.    Hartson     , 

M.   K.    Whitney    

C.  A.  Anderson 

A.    J.    Otterson    

Ed    Rudberg     

Charles  R.  Sogman    . 

Paul    Cuscetta    

Ralph    Sigma    

Joe    Strabie     

.Steven   Rodmerlt-Ti    . . 

Steven    Servicle    . . . . 

George   Zonlch    

Moses    Trouche    

Moses  Trouche    

John   Mclulosh    

W.   W.   Allen    

Moses    Trouche    .... 

Eugene   Fiskett    

Frank   Coloslne    .... 

Tom    Colosine    

Sarafino  Castango    . . 

O.    Munson    

Victor     Make     

Saraflne  Castango   .. 


63288  J. 


63329 

63330 

63331 

63332 

63334 

63335 

63341 

63342 

63345 

633  4  6 

63347 

63348 

63350 

63353 

63354 

63513 

63514 

63521 

63522 

63523 

63524 

63525 

63526 

63527 

63528 

63554 

63555 

63556 

63557 

63558 

63560 

63561 

63562 

63565 

63566 


63571 

63597 

63598 

63599 

63600 

63601 

63602 

63603 

63604 

63605 

6:;618 

63619 

(3703 

63701 

63705 

£3706 

63727 

63777 

63781 

63783 

63799 

6380S 

63809 

63810 

63811 

63812 

63813 

63814 


.119.182  00 


4  24 

2  96 

12  12 

12  12 

2  12 

2  12 

3  62 
2  12 
1  12 

1  12 
10  12 
10  12 

2  12 
2  12 
2  12 

40 
40 


14 
14 
12 


12 

2  12 

5  80 

2  44 

11  12 


11 
11 


11  12 
11  12 


11 


12 
44 
2  44 
2  44 
2  44 

2  44 

3  44 

2  41 

3  44 
2  12 
2  12 


1  12 

1  12 

1  12 

1  24 

1  24 

1  12 

2  36 

2  36 

2  36 

2  36 

2  36 

2  36 
!  12 

2  12 

11  12 

11  12 

11  12 

14  56 

BOO 

1  00 
I  12 

2  60 

4  00 

4  00 

14  12 

14  12 

24  12 

10  12 

1112 

12  12 

G5041 

05043 

650  19 

65050 

65051 

65052 

65053 

650S1 

65082 

65097 

65098 

65099 

65100 

65101 

65102 

65103 

65104 

65106 

05107 

65108 

65109 

65130 

65131 

65186 

65222 

65230 

65239 

65240 

65242 

65243 
65244 

65246 

65255 

65256 

65261 

65271 

65292 

65294 

65295 

65298 

65299 

65305 

65306 

65307 

65308 

65309 

65310 

05323 

65325 

65326 

65334 

65346 

65348 

65352 

65354 

65355 

65358 

65363 

65364 

65365 

65367 

65374 

65379 

65380 

65387 

65388 

653  S9 
65390 
65398 
65414 
65427 
05441 
65  413 
65472 
65  47  5 
65476 
65477 
65478 
65479 

654  86 
65489 
65490 
65  491 
65  492 
65493 
65509 
65514 
15516 
65517 
65518 
65519 
65520 
65560 
65561 
65562 
65564 
65565 
65566 
65592 
65593 
65674 
65678 
65679 
65680 
65681 
65690 
65694 
65935 
66601 
66602 
66603 
66604 
66605 
66606 
66607 
66608 
66609 
66617 
66618 
66629 
66630 
66631 
66632 
66633 
66638 
66643 
66644 
66645 
66646 
66647 
66648 
66649 
66650 
66651 
66653 
66655 


Da  hi 
Charbonneau , 

Hall 

Zoretic 

Zoretic 

La  Muth 

Gronnette.  .  . 

Hartson 

t  Aune  

Anderson  .  .  .  . 
.Allen  


Ed  Rudberg  

A.  J.  Otterson  

J.  B.  Dunphy 

Wm.  Heasly  

M.  l.utzky  

Joe  Conkovlch 

Martin  Flnercan  .  .  .  . 
Guisppe  GuiUile  .  .  .  . 

Mike  DeJacoma  

Harrv  Emei  y  

M.  D.  Carsora  

Joe  Reed  

An  gel  in  Reed  

.lolin  Andrews  

Martin  Finucan  

Joe  Gentilla  

Tony  Fiskett  

Camil  Gacone  

S.  Shannon    

Frank    Sakaris    

Bessie    M.    Whiting    . 

Oscar    Wilberg    

.1.    P.    W.jodley     

Dennis    Madden     .... 

H.    Nickerson    

Olga     Henderson     ... 

Matt    Tuere    

H.    Davidson     

Marv    Doodson     

.Annie    Roskam    

Lizzie  Tipson    

.1.  H.   Robinson    

P.   M.  Graff    

E.  A.  Swanstrom  .... 

Sivert  .Aune 

Harry   Hutchinson    .  . 

Ed.  Rudberg 

A.  J.  Otterson 

M.  K.  Whitney 

L.  P.  Hartson    

P.   M.  Graff    

Frank  O'Connell    

Qtis   Berdsale    

S.  P.  Sorenson    

E.    H.   Miller    

Chas.  Segerman 

Ed.   Rudberg 

Rav  Butchart   

H.  S.  McGregor    

Lucy   Gonyon    

C.    A.    .Anderson    

E.  J.   Tvedt    

L.  P.  Hartson    

Rudolph  Miller 

Pete   Klimas    

Jas.  Miller   

John  Maltenen 

.lake  Johnson 

Victor   .Anderson    .  .  .  . 

Sam    Malison    

Fred  Mattson    

Walter    AVardcnen    . 

Geo.    Shapiro    

H..  H.  Salmon    

Clias.    .Smeby     

Barney    Milan     

Louis    Purian    

Pete    Klimas 

Rudolph      Miller. .  .  . 

Frank      Ruchia 

John  Stillanvic.  .  .  . 
George  Stilanvlc. 
George     Row 

Mike     Jordan 

Joe     Conkovic 

John     Stilonovich.  .  . 

George     Canic 

George     Stilonovic. 

Frank     Rucli 

Charles     Rebek 

John     Mattson 

A.      Kallainen 

Duncan    McDougall . 

Charles     Rebie 

Louis     Tourin 

Louis     Tourin 

George     Bloznen.... 

James     BIzlns 

W.    A.    Hall 

Joljn    C.    Bush 

W.     W.     Allen 

Herman     Johnson... 

.lohn     Sonka 

.Andrew      .Anderson; 

John     Schultz 

.Anton     Indlhas 

Albert    J.    .Abby 

Andrew     Johnson  . . . 

Bernard     Kinn 

Frt^nk    Nelson 

A  Mc  Intosh 

William  Chose 

Gabriel  Perlman  . 

Matt  McGlone  ... 

Frank  Williams  . 

Jas.  Le  France  .  .  . 

Joe  Gulla  

Nick  Kent  

John  Leider  

Mrs.  Nesha  licsser 
Mrs  Franceska  .  . . 
Adolph  Blyhart  .  . 
L.  LeTourneau  .  .  . 
Mrs.  Geo  Holmes. 
O.scar  Lun.lquist  . 

Nels  Johnson  

Andrew  Peterson  . 

Peter  Meyers  

Ida  Weirschardows 


12 
12 
!1 

:4 

12 

12 

2  4* 

1  12 

24  24 


3  56 

2  12 

2  12 

2  12 

2  1- 

7  1- 

1  12 

9  7i 

1  12 

3  12 

9  40 

5  12 

2  12 

3  4S 

3  4K 

3  8- 

1  12 

3  25 

1  4S 

1  4S 

3  So 

2  60 

2  60 

13  40 

13  40 

13  40 

1  1-. 

1  12 

13  40 

13  40 

4  24 

6 

3 

25 


40 
21 
12 
12 
12 


1  12 

1  60 

10  12 

1  12 

8  12 

8  12 

1  12 

16  08 

16  08 

1  24 

12  00 

12  00 

3  12 

13  88 

13  40 

13  40  I 
13  10 
13  40 
13  40 
3  24 
2  12 


1  12 
1  12 

1  12 

2  24 
2  12 
2  60 

15  12 

1  00 

2  12 
2  90 
2  90 
1  72 

1  12 

10  12 

11  00 

11  12 
112 

2  12 

1  12 

2  24 

12  68 
12  6S 
12  68 
12  68 

12  68 
2  12 
2  12 
1  12 
4  40 

13  40 
13  40 
13  40 
13  40 
13  40 

13  40 

1  36 

2  12 

14  92 
14  92 
14  92 
14  92 

1  60 

2  60 


60 
60 


1  60 


66661 

66663 

66664 

66669 

66670 

66671 

66672 

C66';S 

66674 

66677 

66678 

66679 

66680 

06729 

66730 

66731 

66732 

66733 

6673  4 

66735 

66740 

66741 

66742 

66771 

66772 

66773 

66774 

66790 

66795 

66796 

66797 

66801 

66802 

66803 

66804 

66805 

06S06 

66816 

66818 

66819 

66820 

66822 

66823 

66824 

66825 

66841 

66842 

66844 

66845 

66846 

66847 

66818 

66S49 

66867 

66868 

66870 

66871 

66873 

66874 

66875 

66876 

66877 

66878 

06879 

66829 

66832 

66902 

66903 

66925 

66926 

66931 

66932 

66936 

66937 

66938 

66939 

669.S5 

66993 

67004 

67.)14 

67022 

07030 

67032 

76033 

67035 

670  38 

67039 

67040 

<;7056 

6  7167 

67168 

67174 

67179 

6  7  1  9  S 

672 14 

67215 

67  216 

6721'. 

6721S 

6'.  219 

67  220 

67423 

67121 

67125 

<;7126 

67  4  27 

67  434 

67448 

.J7I92 

67493 

67491 

0749S 

67199 


Anna  Wervchurski. 
Walter  Gridnsonki 

Dan  Lang  

Sala  Ojala  . . .' 

Wm.  Belda  

John  Stennon 

August  Knute  

J.  D.  Park  

D.  D.  Murray 

Minnie    Hargreaves 

Jas.     Sullivan     

T.   P.   Bradley    

Erick     Anderson.... 

Alide   Lueck    

Lottie  Douglas  . . .  . 
Emil     LIndfors     .  .  .  . 

Hllga    Antila    

.lohn    Kats    

Isaac     Cox      

Oscar   Carlson    

K.  A.  Sodergren  . . . 
Wm.  Laudrant  . . . . 
D.    M.     Maxcey     .  .  .  . 

Wm.     Suaiier     

M.  Farrington  .... 
Geo.    Carter     

John     Carter      

Dan   Zubell    

Fred  Wall  I  blom  ... 
A.    Harnstem     

F.    O.    Kling    

Mary    Le   Floie    

P.    C.    Schmidt    

Chas.     .lohnson     .  .  . . 

John      Kre.\-      

John    H.    Crane 

Roland    St.    I'ierce    . 

Jas.    Lavick     

Dennis    Maudison    .  . 

A.     Beckman     

Hans    Christensen 

John  Cameron    

Tom     Kal.js     

Axel     Makkinen 

Frank    Landahl    .  . . . 

.foe    Kalan     

Mike     Ruben     

Joseph    Roman     ... 

Draga    Samerzlch    . 

Sava     Bo.janich     .  . . 

Gober    Radulovich 

Daka    Domjan.jvich 

Mike    Domjanovich 

Oscar     Fleer 

Geo.    A.    French  .... 

Chas.    Ploratieh  .  .  .  . 

Paul     Bonak 

Mike  Rodorlck  .  . . . 

Geo.  Radavich 

Jn.>.  Kastndish  .  .  .  . 

Nick  Draslkovich  .  . 

Stef  Zgonc 

t'has.  Rebeck 

Do.ga  .Abranovich. 


1  60 
1  12 
4  2  4 
4  40 
13  56 
10  12 

10  12 

11  00 

12  12 
12  12 


12 
12 
12 
11 


12 
12 
12 
12 


13  12 

5  00 
13  12 
'  2  60 

13  40 

14  40 
14  10 

13  40 

14  40 
g  50 
8  50 

16  40 
8  50 
8  50 
8  50 

57  «« 
1  12 
1  12 
1  48 
1  48 
1  24 

1  48 

2  48 
2  48 
1 
1 
1 
1 
3 
2 

i 

1 
1 
1 


48 
12 
24 

24 

72 
48 
48 
48 
1. 
12 
2  12 

4  48 
2  48 
2  48 

2  12 

3  00 
2  48 

13  80 
13  6S 
13  6.S 
13  68 
13  68 

5  00 
1  12 

11  96 

4  40 
1112 
11  12 

11  12 

I  12 

12  12 
12  12 
12  12 

12  12 
11  12 

13  56 
11  56 
11  56 
11  56 

11  56 

5  22 

12  96 
1  12 
1  12 
5  00 

11  12 

14  12 
14  12 
11.12 
11  12 

5  00 
3  48 
1  12 
1  30 
1  36 

II  00 
11  00 

13  40 
12 
12 
92 
12 
12 


ki. 


66660  Julia  Swandarsky 


1 
1 
6 
1 
1 
10  12 
10  12 
10  12 
10  12 
10  12 
10  12 
14  9? 
14  92 
14  92 
1  12 
1  12 
14  92 
1  36 
1  36 
1  36 
20  96 
1  12 
1  12 


6  7  5. 'J 

6  I  559 

6V564 

07611 

67612 

67613 

67615 

67690 

67712 

6V792 

67797 

67800 

67801 

67802 

67803 

67804 

67808 

67813 

67814 

67823 

67825 

678J6 

67835 

67S39 

678  40 

67841 

678  4  2 
67843 
67814 
67845 
67846 
67883 
67884 
67885 
67886 
67887 
67899 
67901 
67902 
67903 
67940 

679  41 
679  4  2 
679  4:? 
67947 
67948 
67977 
67978 
67979 
67980 
679S1 
76982 
6798;: 
67984 
679S6 
679K7 
679S8 
67989 
68044 
68015 
68046 
68051 
68052 
68053 
68054 
68055 
6S056 
68180 
68211 
68633 
68657 
68806 
68S89 
6S902 
68928 
68932 
68938 
68960 
68964 
68983 
68992 
68993 
6S994 
68998 
69106 
69107 
f.9108 
69109 
69110 
69111 
69112 
70128 
70129 
70193 
70294 
71622 
71623 
71625 
71626 
71628 
71629 
71630 
71631 
71632 
71634 
71635 
71636 
71638 
71639 
71640 
71641 
71642 
71643 
71644 
71646 
71647 
71648 
71C49 


W.   A.   Maisters. 

John    S    McCormlck 

Andrew   S.   Wick 

Tom   Robinson 

Oscar  Nygren 

Cha.s.    Miller 

O.    H.    High  bee 

H.    E.   Tliompson 

E.  J.  Simons 

Hannah    .Aholar 

Gunine    Catitrell 

Chas.    .A.    Durheim 

Erick  .Anderson 

Gus    l>ah  ti 

W.  R.  Schmidt 

Josephine    Briembaugh  .  . 

John    Murr-ay 

Jas.    Sullivan 

Arvid    Xeu<iuist 

Andrew    Swanson 

.Ad.>li)li    BIysherl 

Roland  St.   Pierce 

Otto  Roise 

John  Sai'ka 

.lames    .Sullivan     

•Martha     Xewquist     

Arvid    Newguist    

David    Gay    

\\  .    R.    Schmidt     

.Max    Sever,    interpreter. 

.luma   Custadish    

Widak    Ivanish    

Masko   Redmeich    

Xawitza    Druskovich     .  . 

Bliiza    Absaminich    

Ivan    Custadich     

.Mi  I  OS     Kriskovlch     

A.  Schaiaeeatl    

Joseph     Gulla     

Leonard    Xaila    

Dominic    Gratta    

Frank    Williams    

John   Chune.    interpreter 

Fred    Walborn     

Albert   Abby    

Axel    Anderson    

J.    R.   Young 

Charles    P.    Web-li    

J.    N.    .Stariha,    interpre- 
ter     

W.    H.    .Sinallwood    

.1.    W.    Thompson    

William   .Anders  jn    

Albin   N.  Ostrholm 

F.    O.    Kling    

J  ini     .Manes     

Fred    Bloonr     

W.    R.   Schmidt    

Max   Sasnopski    

Niik    Kava«uvie    

Marie    Drobec    

Galur     Redlocich     

I>raga    Sawargich     

.Sava     Beyonich     

Mike    Danyocich    

Daka   Danyocicli    

J.   N.   Stariha 

Mike    .lenovich     

Nick    Chopecte     

Dr.    H.    E.    Webster 

Mary     Reccano     

Kate    Judnick     

Dennis    Madden     

W.    A.    Masters 

loon   Cu.stodich    

Jura  Custadich    

Whlok    Ironovich    

Blaza     .Muamovlch     .... 

Nick   Novitza    

Milan    Ru  :kovich    

Mike    Radovich    

Domnic    Gilla     

Frank     Williams     

Leonarda    Magol     

.loe    (julta    

.Aulonnie      Chearovetate 

Eugene    Fiskett     

Walter    GundewskI    .... 

Dan    Lang    

Peter    Wring    

F.   O.    .Adamson    

Wm.     Belda     

Dan    Lang    

Wm.     Belda     

Henr.v    Heiidricks.on    .  . . 

John    Steiman    

Harr.\-   Hendrickson    .  .  . 

John"  Steiman    

.\ugiist    Knute    

Dan   Long    

Walter   Gudunke    

.los.    Kalan    

Mike     Piobar     

A.   K.   Norton    

Henry   .Abraham    

Frank    Nelson    

liernard     Kummen     .  .  .  . 

Oscar    Johnson     

Albert    Breider    

Louis    I'ucell     

John    Zabinkovlc    

Albert  Callln    

John    Camer.jn     

Chas.    Johnson     

Iver  Makinen 

Ephriam     Makinen     .... 

.-Axel     Makinen      

Clias.     llebik     

Matt    Kargos    

Dan     Zubree      

Timothy    Slickey     

.lennie    Anderson    

Wm.    Johnson    

.Aida    Luecke    

Lottie   Douglas    

Wm.    Beem    

Julia  Beem    

Mrs.    Geo.    Ayatte    

Geo.    Bur  re    

David    Graham    

Chas.     Rebek 

Chas.      Rebek 

Chas.     Rebek 

Fred     Walblom 

Edward     Enright 

Chauncey     Morrison.  .  .  , 

Mrs.    John    Lavish 

Hugh     Stevenson 

Sarah     Collins 

Libble     Voice 

Susan     John 

.Adolph     Hamsten 

Chas.     Rebe 

Carrie     Tremmeling.  ... 

R.    E.   Cavanaugh 

Hans    Larson 

Mover     Witenberg 

Jas.    Orekowsky 

J.      Altman 

Thos.     Daniels 

Geo.     Dale 

Peter    P.    I-.apointe 

Gust     Bergeson 

M.   J.    Rof  kwell 

Arthur     Beatiy 

Chas.    Anton     

Wm.    Rameau 

Chris    Reamer 

Louis    De    Santo 

Dan     Donovan 

Mike     Zurbrowskl 

Oliver     Dinnell 

Frank    Miller 

W.    T.    Gillespie 

J.    P.    Murray 

Geo.    Studley     

Sam    Nelson    

A.  W.  Eiber   =  .• .  • ».. . . 


I  IS 
12  80 
12  S9 

12  8tt 

12  80 

11  12 

13  80 
1  12 
1  13 
1  12 
1  12 

1  12 
20  24 

2  60 
2  6(t 

12  56 
12  56 

12  56 
15  92 
15  9^ 

1  12 
11  60 

13  04 
1 9  00 
19  00 
19  Ot» 

19  00 
1  12 

20  24 
20  24 

1  36 
1  12 

1  12 

II  00 

7  00 
11  12 

8  64 

11  12 

13  40 
6  80 

2  12 

12  00 
11  00 
11  00 
11  00 
18  92 
18  92 
23  00 
15  40 
15  40 

1 5  40     ' 

14  56 

14  56 
1  13 
1  12 

16  56 

16  56 

17  40 
17  40 
17  40 
17  40 
77  40 
1 7  50 
17  40 

15  40 
1  12 

19  Oft 
1  12 

I  12 
3  12 

12  40 
12  40 

11  96 
21  60 
21  60 

19  6ft 

20  24 

1  12 

12  40 

2  12 

3  80 

1  12 

2  24 

1  12 

2  12 
7  64 
1  12 
1  12 

1  12 

2  12 

2  12 

3  40 

13  40 
17  36 
17  40 
17  40 
17  40 
17  40 
17  40 

14  40 
17  40 

II  12 
11  12 
1112 
11  12 

11  12 

15  OO 
19  2  4 
15  40 

1  12 

1  12 

17  52 

12  50 
1  12 

1  12 
1«« 

2  60 

4  CO 
19  48 

5  60 

14  10 

I  12 
13  4" 
24  68 
33  28 
28  70 
28  70 
33  28 
33  28 

15  00 
8  ;;6 
7  :;6 

5  00 

6  00 
4  2:5 

19  40 

19  40 

20  40 
20  40 
20  40 
20  40 
20  40 
20  40 
20  40 
18  12 
18  12 
18  12 

18  12 

19  56 
5  00 

13  80 
13  80 
11  56 

II  80 

11  80 
n  80 

•A  00 

5  76 

5  28 

17  96 

17  12 

18  SO 

12  80 

12  SO 

19  92 
19  92 

2  20 

3  12 
2  12 

4  12 
1  12 

27  12 
27  12 
39  68 

1  12 

13  00 
13  00 
13  00 
13  00 
13  0« 

2  50 
1 


12 

36 
60 
60 
60 
60 
60 
2  60 
S69 

1  60 

2  60 
1  72 
4  00 
1  75 

1  75 
23  24 

2  00 
2  00 
2  00 
2  00 
2  00 

00 
00 
21 
25 
00 
60 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
24 
24 
24 
24 
12 


2 

2 

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I 


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m^    m 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD: 


V       7 


Tht>ma«  Crimes 

David    Levin     

l>i.    i;.    P     Pearson 

Joseph    ('ustor     

<»eo.     Donahue     

Kuby    Carlson    

Stella   PJielps    

Dr.    n.    <■*.    James 

August  Knuti   

Jolm  \V.  Oart»r    

Coo      W.     Carter 

Henry    Krankel    

\Vm.    SoxaiiH-n     

J.    F.    Lavlck     

Neil    Beelon     ■ 

A.     R.    Siiipley 

i:.    hternbtrK    

Ktlis    Walsh     

Clara     Schmitz     

.Joel    Johnson    

1-:<I     Shanks     

I"r«Hl   Fran/.    

Geo      O'Toole     

John    O"    Toole     

Wallace     l^vp     

Hjalnioe    Sutlers     

II.     Steinb'TK     

Win.    Dolan    

Joe    Perdin    

Ambrose  Ba/.tcick 

John     Itichiven     

I.ouis    Me  Pike     

Jeannette    Holm    

.lohn    Kraker    

Hrrman    Uonson    

.lames   H.    IVtors    

M.   J.   Hawkins    

.lames    Cirlerson     

I  .    W.    Lunilall    

Isaae    Uewis    

Henry  StolberR    

Peter    Peslo    

I.  C.  Johnson    

Wallace  gulmby    

.las.    M.    Farlane    

John    McLennan    

A.    P.    Franden    

Louis  K.   Franden    

.Mex    McDonald    

Ilmma    West    

Louis   KalluK    

CuMi.    MoKneux    

H.  S.   MfCrt'Sor 

P.en     Aromovich     

Osi-ar    Larson    

WilMe    Peterson     

.1.    r:.    Kutth    

Uica    Bostwelle    

Farmola    Posqula    

.•^.   M.   Kelley    

Wm.    Perry    

C.    M.    Kunnon    

I..    A.    l>owdall    

.latob   Hill    

Stanley    Taft     

Victor    Brumala 

Dave    Mlnni   

Julius     .Abramson 

Nick    H.    Witt 

\\'n\      Brown 

.1.     ll.    Selleck 

Harry  Kansas 

Sam    Maki 

Andrew      I>ahl 

Chas.     Peterson 

H.    Sternberg 

.loin     Kamila 

H.     Abraliamson 

John    Van   Buren 

Mahol    itiley 

.Nora     Kiley 

.-Vugust    Kinengas 

T.   P.   Bradley 

J.    H.   Crowe 

i.'harles  Johnson 

Herman     Benson 

Will     Dolan 

Wm.    McLean 

H.    Slernbert: 

.\ngust   WaWierg 

K.  I ».  Abbotts 

Stanlev     Strand 

.Noil     Beaton 

Kinma     Wist 

Myrtle    Willard 

A    .\.   Callan 

ii.    B.    Freed y 

Kmil    Antila 

Peter  Pelsa 

James  Grierson 

James   H.   Peters 

Peter  Wring 

Wm.    Brown    

.lohn    Pfchevar    

Jas.    Perdin     

Cliarles    Dryer     

P.    P.    Parsall    

.lolin    (lirsich    

.lohn    S.    Kropa 

Dan     Lang     

August    Knuti     

n.   p.    Parsall    

Joe    Custer    

Dave    Levlne    

John     Jaroe     

H.     Hill     

Victor     Hakkries     .  . .  . 

Frank    Partor     

E)avid    Neimi     

Victor   Burmoli    

Tom    Kaunas    

Sam     Kakka     

Meyer    Whitenberg    .. 

Herman     Brown     

N.   H.    Witt    

Julius     .\brahamson     . 

John    Matt-^on    

W.  C.   Northy    

Stanley    Taft    

Albert    Brelder    

Jacob    Hill     

.lolin    Mattson    

Albert    Braider    

Anton   Maki    

W.    C.    Northy 

.lacob    Hill     

.\.    A.   Callow 

A.  W.   Filer 

Sam     Nelson      

Thos.    Grimes     

J.    P.    Murray    

Geo.    Studley    

Ivan    Benson    

M.     Bergman     

Wm.     Peterson     

Oscar  I>arson 

J.   W.    Parker 

Herman    Benson     . . . 
Hjalmer    Satliers    ... 

Wallace     Lapp     

.o4i»    Wallace    Lapp     

73470  James  McFarlane  .  . . 

73471  .lolin    McLennon    .... 

734S'1   Jos.    Perdic    

7.34H1   John    Pecliar    

734S7   Thos.   Jenson    

7;U!»i>  Gust    Lahte     

7;{4i»l    Meyer    Wertenberg    . 
7:{4!»j    Herman     Benson     .  . . 

7:U;>4   Chas.     Moork     

TSCtil   Albert    Moliaupt    

J.    C.    Johnson     

Mrs.   J.   C.    Johnson .  . 

K.    J.    Ketchum    

Andrew    Stovney    ... 

John    Peterson     

.\ndrew    Stovney    .  .  . 
Gilbert    Peterson     ... 

K.    J.    Ketchum    

J.   W.    Weir 

Jolin     Peterson 

I..   A.  La  Voie 

Matt     Kaugas 

.Mrs.    John     Benson.., 

M     J.    Rockwell 

Mrs.   -M.   J.    Rockwell. 

Gust      Borgstrom 

L.    A.    Barnes. 


71650 

71ft&l 
7l..ii' 

7i«e3 

71654 
716n& 
7lo»6 
71657 
TUSH 
71667 
7t«?»>S 
71«;«9 
7I6:«» 
71671 
7l«Ti 
71674 
7l67r, 

7 1  •>  V  Ii 
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7IH7H 

716  71* 
7l»iSrt 
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7i«S» 

7:t;si6 

71SS7 
7Mi'<s 
7ir,S'.» 
7169t» 

7it;!»i 

7M:5«J 
71719 
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7i:-'l 
717-.'-J 
7I7J;: 
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717l'6 
7 17. '7 
717-'H 

717  4:: 
71714 
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71747 
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71766 
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71770 
71771 
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717'<:: 
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72047 
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72060 
72061 
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72066 
720 1:7 
72070 
7  2071 
72100 
72101 
72102 
7210.-! 
72104 
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72i;?7 
72inR 
721  ::9 
72140 


722S4 
722S5 
722S6 

722:^.1* 
722.^7 
7  22.-.S 
7  22".  9 
7  2260 
73S.76 
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73:;s9 


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7:5710 
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7:5713 
7:5714 
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7:!73r. 
7::736 
7:;744 
7374:. 
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7:il48 
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7.".1.'.2 

7.''>L'..: 
7r.ir,4 

75150 
7'.156 

7r>i.'>7 

7r.i6i 

75162 
75163 
75164 
75165 
7*1S4 
751  S5 
751^0 
751H7 
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7519l» 
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T5:'02 
75203 
75201 
75219 
75221 
752  22 
I  »  J  .  .J 
7E224 
':r,226 
73229 
752:;  1 
75  J  32 
75233 
7523  4 
75235 
75240 


Mrs.    Charles    Anton. 

Cliarles     .Anton 

Jolin     Kraker 

M.    r^   Kraker 

[>!•.  Horace  France.. 

Mabel      Riley 

Norah      Riley 

Sixtus     Llndahl 

John     Pechevor 

.foe     Perdic 

Arthur    Realty 

Mrs.     Boatty 

.\lex     Vinables 

Chpvles      Hardin .... 

Alex      Randall 

Krnesl     .\lkln 

W     J.    Staple 

Jacob     Maki 

Plos      Patak 

Pete     Wring 

Thomas     Killorln... 

John      Pilson 

Slxlus     Llndahl 

.\ndrew     Anderson.. 

J.     A.     Feeley 

H.    C.    Nelson 

Joe     Taylor 

Fiiiev     Pastal 

E.     F.    Pastal 

l^    Kocinski    

lames    Muskaskl    . . 

S.    Kocinski 

James    Montzu     .... 

John     Sf\ai-l     

Htnrv   tun    

U«»M    .Mattson    

(•harles    Reblc    

Henry    Russell    .  .  .  . 

.M.    Osteman     

John   Walentine    . . . 

Akx    McKnight     ... 

J.    J.    ^ioe    

Mrs.    Bodine    

K.   W.   Fahy 

G.  L.  Hargraves   .  . . 

Helen  A.   Hartley    .  . 

Peter    Hanscm    

.lohn    Tolonen    

.Mrs.    Mattson     

Mrs.  Talonen    

-Mrs.    Sole    

James   McGovern    . . 

Allen  Pruder , 


2  20 

9  4U 

»  40 

9  40 

11  32 

15  40 

15  40 

11  08 

12  80 
20  00 
47  08 
20  00 
14  4S 
10  88 

1  12 
9  88 

10  60 
10  88 

2  72 
2  72 
2  72 
2  72 
2  08 
2  08 

25  90 
1  12 

10  60 
9  40 

13  40 

n  OS 

13  4t) 
12  08 
1  12 
»  70 
1  12 
9  52 
9  88 

8  92 

11  44 
11  44 
11  08 

9  8S 
1 
1 
3 
3 
1 
1 
1 
1 
2 


7  2 

12 

76 

76 

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12 

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11  08 
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12  56 

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2  12 
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12  36 
12  36 
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11  36 
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3  12 

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1  50 
10  24 
10  24 

15  2  1 

12  SO 
14  9^ 
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10  00 
10  00 

2  12 

13  80 
13  80 
13  80 
13  80 

13  80 
2  40 

16  20 
16  20 

4  00 
4  00 
4  00 

2  12 

14  40 
14  40 
16  80 
14  40 

1  12 

3  50 
12 
12 
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56 
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75247 
75248 
752  19 
75250 
75251 
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75255 
75256 
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7  5  2  5  H 
75259 
75260 
75261 
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75::«t; 

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75269 

75277 

75282 

75307 

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75  438 

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7  5  538 

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1 

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11 
11 

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11  56 

10  56 

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6  00 

2  44 

3  44 
3  44 
5  88 
3  44 

16  40 
16  40 
16  40 
16  40 

2  Vi 

3  00 
3  12 

27  90 
3  00 
2  12 
2  12 
5  00 


75:^7  4 

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7559S 

75599 

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75602 

75603 

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756J8 

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76973 

76974 

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77047 

76723 


Peter  Jurkonech  

Matt  Bergin  

Capt.    Charles  Trengrove 

Gust    Peterson     

i5ster   Peterson    

W.    G.    Hall    

Dan    Neville     

L.    I'sler    

P.    Blanchette    

John  Zantor    

.\'els    Anderson     

Andrew     NewQui.sl 

Fred    Johnson 

M»rcus     Ronoick 

Ivor    K     Johnson 

John    Juntilla.    interpre- 
ter     

Carl     Pelt       

Victo-     Maki 

Arvid     Jakinon 

Andrew     Mat  ilia 

Matt      Hiel 

L.    Ii.    Knight 

I>r.     Fvanney 

F.     Pasijitale 

Isaac     Friske 

lohn     Kraker 

Mike     Kraker 

lohn      Nosimark 

Joe     Kroll 

Win.    A.    Coventry 

Pas.iualle     Favoiclle. .  . . 

Kugene     Fiskett 

John    K     Cade 

T     .S.    Mitchell 

V.    K.    Williams 

Rudolph    .Xbraliam 

.lanio.^    McLeiuum 

.lohn     McLennan 

Heiirv      Russell 

Louis     Helslein 

Marcus     Ranovlcii 

1.    II.    .lolmson 

John     McClellan 

Jos.     McFarlane 

.lolin    McCiellan    

Jos.     McFarlane 

John     l>onson     

Totn     Killorin     

Gust    K.    Peterson    

lOsiella    K.    I'eterson .  .  . . 

.Mbert     Brudcr     

Peter    Wring    

John     Walan.skin     

Chas.    Ribik     

Henry     .Abraham     

Bios    Polok    

Helen    A.    Hartley    

.1.     P.    Carey     

Hllis    Walsh     

.lolin     Staples      

Wm.    Fitzgerald    

Jacob    Maki     

R.    O.   Claws    

J.    G.    Shaberg    

.1  .    E.    Knight    

P.    O.     Peters     

N.      Rosvvell      

.\ndrew     Llndquist      ..-• 
Peter    Hanson     


12  6S     66071 

12  6S  ! 

12  68 : 86170 

12  56  t 

12  56    66178 

2  12  i 

! 66370 


12 

56  i 

1?' 

12  ' 
11  00  I 
1 1  00  . 


2 

n 

12 
12 
11 

11 

11 


66423 
66492 
66792 
66869 
66899 
66960 
3 


67o: 


■049 
:o7i 


5  UO 

16  28 

i»;  28 

16  28 

16  28 

16  28 

3  76 

10  12 
3  00 

16  66 
20  60 

11  12 
11  80 
11  SO. 

1  06 

10  56 

2  50 
2  80 
1  06 
1  12 

1  06 

2  00 
2  00 

2  60 

11  08 
11  00 
11  00 

7  50 

5  50 

1  00 

1  00 
16  16 
11  5C 
11  56  I  67687 
11  56  ;  67799 
11  56 
1 1  56 
10  00 

3  62 
1  12 

1  60 
10  12 
10  12 
10  12 

2  12 


67073 

67181 

76184 
67186 
67191 
67230 

67235 

67319 

67320 

67321 


322 
480 


67578 

67678 
67686 


11 

1 

4  4 

12 

6 


Golberg      

D.    Kinstake    .... 

K.    Cotte    

Warner     

L.    .San ford     

F'.    Caii<|ui.-<t 

Geo.     Spalding      .  .  . . 

.Aug.    Rankin     

Wm.    A.    Mead 

K.     U.    Deiscliel     .  .  .  . 

G.     F.      Ueincke 

I.ouis  Buengcr  .  . .  . 
J.    F.    Lavick    .  . 

F..    L    Peck    

Dr.  G.  F.  Runke  .  . 
Wm.  Hoclihroth  .. 
Hanna'n    OHalla     .. 

Andv     Wick      

Vince    .Serlc    

Guine   CanfeU    .  .  .  . 

Honry   Graskcl    

J.    F.    L<jvic    

Wm.     Harris     

Wm.    Landraux    .  .  . . 

D.   M.    Ma::cy    

.A.   K.   .Slepley    

R.   L.  Sl.'pic'y    

Henrv   P'rankel    .  . .  . 

.\ndrew   Wick    

Geo.  Carter 

Guine  Cantrell  .  .  .  . 
llaunaii  .Ahula  .  .  •  . 
Geo.    Farrliigton     . . 

Vince  Serio 

Jas.    O'Toole     

Rudolpli  Massapust 

J  no.    Carter     

Marv  Carpenter  . . . 
Hallle  O'Toole  .... 
HtMlvig  Savalinin  .  . 
Wm.    Linkinen     .  .  .  . 

Kil     Porter     

Geo.    Lindsoy    

.Norman    Lindsey    . . 

David    Ahola    

Robt.    S.    Sessions    .  . 
John    Walentine    .  .  . 
Mar-us   <  )sterman.  . 
Gregor    Kalinik.  .  .  . 

Tony    Bobnik. . . . . . 

Marcus  Osterman.. 
Joiin     Wallentine.  . 

Fred   Kngle 

Dr    Mc».,'omb 

J.  'R.    Kulli 

Chas.    Arcli 

W.    .A.    Baune 

J.   L    Hey  nobis 

W.  C.   Smith 

1    B.  Gaskell 

r>avid   Moir 

John   Cameron 

D.  J.  Fargarty 

Wm.    Lelirkl 

Frank  Terrlll 

J.  W.  New 

W.    A.    Baune 

A.    B.    Walker 

C.    H.    Carhart 

John  Doe.  et  al.  . . . 

Mrs.     Cosa 

Dr.   K.   L.  Twohy  .  . . 
Dr.   S    H.  Boyer.  .  .  . 

J.  H.  S.-lleck 

Alex    McDonal'l .  .  .  . 
Louis   Engelson. . .  . 


12 

12 

85 

12 

75 
2  12 
2  12 

2  12 

6  60 
4  60 

3  44 

4  44 
4  60 

33  00 

35  44 

35  44 

4  60 

4  60 
10  12 
61  00 
25  00 
14  12 
73  06 

l::s  so 
33  80 

7  56 

5  00 
5  00 

10  00 

5  00 

10  12 

14  04 
38  76 
38  76 
23  10 
13  12 
22  92 
22  92 
27  92 

15  16 
20  92 
17  92 
22  92 
27  92 
44  80 

27  92 
20  00 

28  00 
20  00 
28  00 
28  00 
28  00 
28  00 
20  00 

16  00 

I  00 
1  00 
3  00 
1  12] 
1  12 

1  12 
10  12 
10  00 

10  00 

2  00 
1000 

«>  24 

11  36 
11  36 
16  12 
11  00 

II  00 
11  00 
1 1  00 
11  00 
11  00 
11  84 
16  20 

1  20 

6  05 

40  00 

25  00 

1  12 

3  12 
14  20 


67962 

68027 

68034 

68040 

68043 

68214 

68269 

08270 

168271 

j  68597 

68619 

j  68750 

■,68758 

68853 

6890S 

68914 

69105 

69174 

69248 

69249 


W.    H.    Taylor,   stenoyra- 

rapiier     tees 

Geo.  P.  Stllinian.  stenog- 
rapher    fees 

A.  A.  I'arrington.  stenog- 
rapher    fees 

W.    S.    Taylor,    stenogra- 
pher    fees 

Geo.    P.    Stillman.    tran- 
scribing testimony .... 
The    Miller    hotel,    meals 

for    jurors 

Geo.  P.  Stillman.  stenog- 

raplier  fees 

Geo.  P.  Stillman.  stenog- 
rapher fees 

C.    A.    McPherrin,    attor- 
ney fees . . . .  , 

W.    S.    Whiton.    attorney 
fees    

Geo.   P.  Stillman.  stenog- 
rapher fees. 

K.    l\    Blu.   attorney   fees 

C.     C     Cotton,     attorney 
fees    

J.    A.    Sinclair,    attorney 
fees    

H.    B.    Haraldson.    attor- 
ne.v   fees 

John   Browfi.  trier  fees.. 

Leo    A.    Ball,    trter   fees.. 

J.  A,  Sinclair,  trier  fees. 

A.  A.  I-"arringion.  stenog- 
rapher foea 

Geo.   P.  Stillman,  stenog- 
rapher fees 

M.      G.       Barrett.      tran- 
script  of   testlmon.^■ .  .  . 

A.    A.    Farrington,    tran- 
script  of   testimony... 

Walter    S.    Taylor,    tran- 
script    c.f    testimony.. 

F.    -A.    Scluilte.   services.. 

VV.    S.    Taylor,    stenogra- 
.pher   fees 

Geo.  P.  Stillman.  stenog- 
rapher fees 

C.  K.  Adams,  trier  fees.  . 

Harry    W.   I^nners.   trier 
fees    

Geo.   F.   Davis,  trier  fees 

Geo.  P.  Stillman.  stenog- 
rapher fees 

Geo.     P.    Stillman.    sten- 
ograplier    fees 

N.    H.     Wilson,    attorney 

fees    

l..aihers,  attorney 


118  50 

22  80 

110  00 

155  00 

9  00 

26  00 

31  50 

75  00 

20  00 

15  00 

55  00 
20  00 

20  00 

20  00 


Lathers,  attorney 

attorney 

slen- 

meals 

meals 

meals 

sten- 

orney 

sten- 


sten- 


sten- 


sten- 


taking 


sten- 


sten- 


sten- 


4  24 

1  12 

5  12 
4  50 

2  36 


■2 
72 
72 
72 
72 
72 
72 


Total  witness  fees $   7,981  9i 


MLSCELLANEOrs       EXPENSES. 
TRICT  COUICT. 


DIS- 


18  76 
5  72 
5 
5 
5 
5 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1  72 

1  12 
3  60 

2  12 
2  72 
2  72 
2  72 
172 
2  72 
2  72 

19  60 

10  00 

10  00 

2  00 

2  00 

1  12 
10  00 
10  00 

2  72 
2  72 
"  06 

06 
06 
06 
06 
06 
06 


63289 
63516 
63712 
63743 
63815 
63822 
63823 
63888 
63892 
63942 
63943 

63948 
64023 
64199 
64128 


W.  S.  Taylor,  stenogra- 
plier  fees    • 

A.  A.  Farrington.  sten- 
ograplter    fees    

Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fees 

Gec).  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ograplier    fees 

Austin  Letters,  attor- 
ney fees    

Geo.  P.  Stillman,  sten- 
ographer   fees 

C.  S.  Tremelling,  sten- 
ograplier     fees 

Warren  E.  Greene,  at- 
torney fees    

C.  A.  McPherrin.  attor- 
ney   fees    

Geo,  P.  Stillman,  sten- 
ographer   fees 

H.     Wilson,    attorney 


tees 

R. 
fees 

C. 
fees 
,  A. 


Folsom.    attorney 
Tearo.     attorney 
sten- 


1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

12  56 
12  56 
12  50 

1  06 

1  06 

1  60 

2  12 

2  12 

3  2S 
3  28 

60 

60 

60 

60 

•iS 

18 

28 

3  62 

2  60 

10  60 


1 
1 
1 
1 
3 
3 
3 


11  l: 


48 
12 
12 
12 
12 
60 


12  56 


Farrington, 

ographer    fees 

Geo.    P.    Stillman.    sten- 
ographer   fees 

64170  W.  S.  Taylor,  stenogra- 
pher fees    

64246  The   Miller   Hotel,   meals 

for   jurors    

64247  St.  Louis  Hotel  Co..  meals 

for  Jurors    

64409  Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fees 

64519  Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fees 

64623  Geo.  P.  Stillman,  sten- 
ographer   fees ^  .  . 

114814  Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fees 

64826  Walter  S.  Taylor,  sten- 
ographer   fees 

64887  Miller    Hotel,    meals    for 

jurors    

65114  Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fees 

65187  A.  A.  Farrington,  sten- 
ographer   fees 

65287  Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fees 

65426  Geo.  P.  S>tillman,  sten- 
ographer   fees 

65464  Warren  E.  Greene,  at- 
torney  fees    tr 

65521  Andrew  Nilson,  attorney 
fees    

65547  Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fees 

65563  Geo.  F.  Labrie.  stenog- 
rapher fees    

65585  O.  S.  Andresen.  attorney 
fees    

65587  A.  A.  Farrington,  sten- 
ographer   fees 

65686  A.  T.  Park,  attorney 
fees    

65691  Elmer  F.  Blu.  attorney 
fees    

65728  Warren  E.  Greene,  at- 
to''ney  fees 

65733  Geo.  F.  Labrie.  stenog- 
rapher    fees 

65781  The  Miller  Hotel,  meals 
for    Jurors 

65881  Geo.  P.  Stillman,  stenog- 
'apher     fees 


75  00 
100  00 
50  00 
15  00 
15  00 
55  00 
30  00 
30  00 
15  00 
50  00 
25  00 

20  00 

25  00 

175  00 

50  00 

224  25 
39  00 

130  00 
55  00 
35  00 
50  00 

50  00 

227  20 
39  00 
45  00 

110  00 
50  00 
60  00 
20  00 
50  00 
50  00 

110  00 
10  00 

195  00 
10  00 
40  00 
10  00 
50  00 
13  00 
50  00 


Austin 

fees 
Austin 

fees 
J.  .1.    Ftf»blnson 

fees    

Walter    S,    Taylor, 

ographer     fees .  . 
I>enox    Hotel    Co., 

for  jurors    

St.  Louis  Hotel  Co., 

for   jurors    

The    Miller   Hotel, 

for   jurors    

.A.    A.    Farrington. 

ographer     fees 

A.      T.      Park,      attorney 

fees    

Geo,     P,    Stillman, 

ographer     fees ,  . 
Geo.     1*.    Stillman, 

ographer     fees 

T.    J.    McKeon,    atlorne.v 

fees    

.A.      T.      Park.      Attorney 

fees    

Geo.     P.    Stillman.    sten- 
ographer   fees 

Clara    L.    Davis,    slenog- 

raplier  fees    

Dr.   S.    H.    Boyer.   profes- 
sional services   

Tlie   Miller    Hotel,    meals 

for   jurors    

St.  Louis  Hotel  Co..  meals 
for   Juroi-s    

69250  Totman   Bros.,   livery   for 

grand    jury 

69251  Jolm      H.      Norton,      ex- 

penses   Stale    vs.    Wil- 
scm      

69262    H.     E.     Webster.     M.     D., 
expert    testimonv 

69363  .\.    A.    1-arrington.    sten- 

ograplier    fees 

69364  .\.    .V.    Farrington, 

ograplier    fees .  . 
70119  Geo.     P.    Stillman. 
ographer     fees, 
70143   Fred    I..    Travers. 
testimony     ... 
70277  C.    S.     Tremelling, 
ographer    fees.  . 
70379  C.    S.    Tremelling. 
ograplier    fees.  . 
70695   Walter   S.    Taylor. 

ographer    fees 

71982  J.  Lewis  Ervin,  attorney 

fees    

71989  Geo.    P.    Stillman.    sten- 

c^grapher    fees 

72023   Cha.s.    T.   Murphy,   attor- 

I  nev  fees    

72029   Victor     Graw.     Attorney 

fees    

72061    A.  .K.  Callam.  interpreter 
72065   John 

fees 
72072  J.     A. 
fees 
72075  C.    A.    McPherrin. 

ney     fees 

72106  J.  T.  Pearson,     attorney 

fees     

72135   M.    A.     McMahon.    attor- 

tornev    fees 

72256   H.      S.      Clapp 

fees     

72315   W.    S.    Taylor. 

pher     fees .  . 

72345  C.     H.    Trayor. 

in    Sutlierland 
733G6  J.    P.    Vanderlin 
raplier     fees. 
73394   Geo.     P.     Stillman,     ste- 
nographer    fees 

73406  M.  G.  Barnett.  stenogra- 
pher   fees 

73420  W.  S.  Taylor,  stenogra- 
pher    fees 

73466  J.  A.  "Wliarton.  attor- 
vk  CI « r     r  ^  ^  S 

73583  Walter  S.  Wliiton,  at- 
torney    fees 

73625  J.  M.  Martin,  attorney 
fees     

73676  J.  J.  Cameron,  stenogra- 
pher    fees 

73715   W.     T.     Dacey.  attorney 

fees     

73767^A.     A.     Farrington 

nographer     fees. 
Geo.     P.    Stillm.an, 

nogiapher     fees 

W.    E.    Greene,  attorney 

fees     

A.    A.    Farrington, 

nographer      fees. 
A.    A.    Farrington. 

nographer     fees. 
Geo.    P.      Stillman. 

nographer     fees. 
A.    A.     Farrington, 

nographer     fees. 


Brown,      attorney 
Sinclair,     attorney 
attor- 


.    attorney 
stenogra- 


expenses 
case . . . 
stenog- 


20  00 
10  00 
10  UO 
10  00 

180  00 

50  00 

13  20 

8  70 

6  00 

7  18 

175  00 

71  30 
15  00 

15  00 
1 5  00 

30  00 

55  00 

15  00 

15  00 

10  00 

15  00 

220  00 

207  50 

149  50 

6  50 

350  60 

54  97 

25  00 

45  00 

20  00 

234  00 

20  00 

43  40 

15  00 

6  50 

91  00 

4  00 

56  16 

25  00 
23  60  I 
10  00 
46  00 
50  00 

5  00 
10  00 

230  00 
20  00 
35  00 
15  00 

15  00 

6  00 

20  00 
15  00 

15  00 

I 

20  00 
20  00 
20  00 

16  95 
18  00 

150  00 
65  35 
10  00 

196  05 
40  00 
20  00 
20  00 

110  00 


76648 
76649 
76659 
76682 
76701 
76755 
76768 
76811 
76900 
76916 
76949 
76955 
77030 
77038 


A.  A.  Farrington,  sten- 
ograplier    fees    >. 

M.  T.  Barrett,  stenog- 
rapher  fees    c  . 

J.  J.  Robinson.  attor- 
ney   f«tes    L . 

Hose  &  McKnight.  at- 
torney   fees    ; . 

Cameron  Hewitt,  sten- 
ograplier    fees    .....J. 

Geo.  P.  Stilln  an.'  stefi- 
ographer    fees    

F.  W.  Hargraves,  attor- 
ney   fees    ,  . 

Geo.  P.  Stillman.  sten- 
ographer   fef  s    

O.  S.  Anderson,  attorney 
fees     

Geo.  P.  Stillman,  sten- 
ographer   fees    4  . 


S. 


Searls. 


attorney 

i. 

stenogo 


J 
fees    

M.    T.     Barrett, 
rapher  fees   . 

A.    C.    Gillette, 
fees    

A.    A.    Farrington 

ographer    fees    

j  77046  ViGeo.    1".    Stillman.   sten- 
ographer   fees    


attorney 


sten- 


&&  00 
10  00 
20  00 

200  00 

195  00 
55  00 
15  00 

104  10 
10  00 
29  70 
15  00 
G  00 
20  00 

11000 


Total  Mis.  Dtst.  Court 

Expenses  I  9,346  34 


73768 
73769 
73772 
73819 
73845 
73953 
73973 
75011 
75012 
75013 

75014 

75015 

75216 

75276 

75331 

75333 

75496 

75509 

75510 

75519 

75522 

75523 

75532 

75541 

75627 

75639 

75662 

75726 

75736 

75829 

75883 
75884 
75885 
75966 

76400 

76412 

76636 


ste- 


ste- 


ste- 
ste- 
ste- 

ste- 


Walter    S.    Taylor,      ste- 
nographer    fec^s 

S.      F.      White,    attorney 

services      

Cameron      Hewitt,      ste- 
nographer    fees 

Norman    Terry.       expen- 
ses   in      arresting      G. 

Jolinson,     etc 

N.    B.    Pendergast.      ste- 

nograpJier     fees 

G.    E.    Hoople,   stenogra- 
pher    fees 

Elmer      F.      Blu.      attor- 
ney    fees 

N.      H.      Wilson,      attor- 
ney    fees 

H.    B.    Haroldson.    attor- 
ney    fees 

N.      H.      Wilson,      attor- 
ney    fees 

C.       E.       Adams,      attor- 
ney    fees 

Boyle    &     Dacey.    attor- 
ney    fees 

Boyle    &     Dacey.    attor- 
ney    fees 

J.  J.  Robinson,  attorney 

fees    

J.    A.    Sinclair,    attorney 

fees    

Geo.     P.    Stillman.    sten- 
ographer   fees    

T.      A.      Gall,      attorney 

fees    

T.    J.    McKeon,    attorney 

fees    

Geo.    P.    Stillman,    sten- 
ographer  fees    

J.  T.   Pearson,     attorney 

fees     

A.  A,  Farrington,  sten- 
ographer fees  

Walter  S.  Taylor,  sten- 
ographer fees  

Geo.  1'.  Stillman,  sten- 
ographer fees  

A.  A.  Farrington,  sten- 
ographer fees  

II.  S.  Clapp,  trier  fees.. 
AV.  D.  P^dson,  trier  fees 
J.  .A.  Keyes.  trier  fees,. 
Cameron  Hewitt,  sten- 
ographer fees  

Geo.  P.  ytlllman,  sten- 
ographer fees  

Thos.  J.  McKeon,  attor- 
ney fees 

Geo.  P.  Stillman,  sten- 
ographer fees  .  . .  1 4..  • . 


15  00 
12  75 

199  50 
10  00 

340  00 
65  25 
45  00 
25  00 

203  70 

75  00 

3  80 

21  15 

6  68 

8  00 

15  00 

20  00 

20  00 

15  00 

20  00 

15  00 

10  00 

15  00 

15  00 

45  00 

15  00 

15  00 

55  00 

15  00 

120  00 

55  00 

35  00 

45  00 
20  00 
20  00 
20  00 

4  00 

50  00 


63272 
63575 
63574 
63575 
63623 
63707 
63715 
63716 
63717 
637PI 
f3726 
6.;728 
63735 
63741 
(•3742 
63756 
63759 
63769 
63775 
6:1 1  18 
63779 
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MUNICIPAL 

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.McTaggert  . 
Gordon 
.Miller  


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John  Burnett  

H.  A.  Kiichll  

I..    N.  Lyden  

Paul  MakowskI  . .  .  . 

A.  Borgen  

L.  H.  Bondy  

A.  Bowman  

A.  H.  Burg  

W.  A.  .Seaton  

George  Farmer  . .  . 

Dan  Bishop  

W.  A.  Edan  

fill  McDonald   

Moble  King  

Louis  Spernal   

J.    P.    .Mason     

Olo    Hagen     

William  St.irford  .. 
James  D.  McGhie  .  , 
.M.   J.  Gleason    ...... 

C.  H.  Choppins    .  .'.  .  . 

A.    1.    Ribenack    

.August    Fitger    

Wm.  .lolinson   

Chas.  Kugler    

L.    A.    Gunderson    ... 

Jas.    Mc Bride    

W.  B.  Henderson  . . . 
Harry  Brown  .  . . .,. . 
R.    Stevenson     

D.  S.    McKay    

M.    Mathison     

M.    W.    Turner    . 

11.    H.    Doran     

.las.   Castliii    

Jno.     W.    Casllin     .  . 

P.    Neil  man 

Jonas   Straus    

J.    S.    McCormlck    . . 

C.   Sundby    

Clias.    Pierce    ...... 

.A.  T.   Ellswortli    .  .  .  . 

N.    H.    Nyhus    

Joseph  Miller 

Jno.    Wahl    

S.  II.  Breen 

A.     H.     Duke     

Albert    Black    

E.  Bjorlin     

U     It.     Birch     

O.   T.   Wick    

A.  N.  Cornelius  .  . .  . 
.lohn    Van    L>alen    .. 

Frank  Rup    

John   Ellingson    . . . . 

L.    E.    Smith     

E.  J.  Stewart 

W.    S<liwartz    

Ed    Schnbisky    

Wm.     Stewart     

J.    A.    Ctiro     

J.    C.    Kokman    

John     Wald     

W.    B.    I>ogan    

A.  F.  Swanstrom  .  . 
A.     Farrington      .  .  . . 

Tillle     Olson      

Mrs.  A.  De  Long... 
Mrs.  Nora  I'sher  .  .  . 
Albert     .lolinson     .  .  . 

A\'      E.    Porter     

E.    J.    Heath     

W.     R.     Webb     

.1.     B.     Erd     

Wm.    Lynn     

A.  J.  Anderson  ... 
R.   C.    Mitchell    

C.  H.   lAiomis    

Jas.    Magh.ie    

David     Rlalr      

Frank  Currier  .  . . 
Jas.    L.    McBride    .  . 

Ed     Haason     

v.  U.  Culbertson  . 
John  Schrooder  .  .  . 
N.     Voungblood     .  .  . 

D.  IT.    Costin     

Wm.  M'"Millen  ... 
.lohn    Zimelin     . . . . 

W.    E.    Wick    

Frank  Jackson  .  . 
Harry   Vanham    ... 

Geo.  "  Hyatt     

Sam     Magham 

John    McArthur.... 

Jas.      Miller 

A.    N.    Carnellus.  .  . 

Frank     Cox 

Charles     litis 

Jas.    E.    Fox 

E.  R.  Dunning.  . . . 
J.    \V.     Preston.  . .  . 

r>.    S.    McKay 

Hugh     McKlnzie... 

E.     Campbell 

Chiist     .Sundby.  . .  . 

J.     H.    Schuler 

John    A.    Wallen... 

R.     Dlnham 

,A.    M.    Lennon 

C.    W.    Ramshaw... 

Geo.    Bennlson.... 

John     Lowry 

Emil     Zauft 

Robert     Ferguson. 

J     P.    Pepper 

R.    H.    Haire 

Fred     AA'ilson 

H     W.     Knowles.. 

Anton     Borgen 

John     Bailey 

A.  F.  Rockwell .  . 
I.^  D.  Erspaner.  .  . 
Swan  Carlson.  .  .  . 
A'ictor     Juton 


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.August  Johnson  .  .  . 
Jolin     Nolan 

E.  Anderson 

J.  H.  Harman  ... 
T.     S     Corency     ... 

Anton    Hanson     

Tony  Androlish  . . 
N.    Youngblood    . . . 

Frank    Currin    

M.    Gilderman     

C.  A.  Gustafson  .  . 
G.    M.    Jenson     .... 

W.  H.  Pond   

Henry  Hewitt  ... 
John  J.  Cakes  .  . . 
Andrew    Costby     .  . 

F.  H.  Krouse  .  . . 
H.  S.  Patterson  . 
C.  M.  Normeniacher 

John   .Murpliy    

C     E.    Foster    

Herman    Bier    

Clias.  AVinters  .  .  . 
E.    J.    Ketchum.... 

A.     Tharen      

II.   F.  Fegeler 

M.   Sorenson    

John  McDonald  .  .  . 
A.    B.    Welander    .  . 

Richard    Wick    

Jos.  A.  .Miller 

L.    Ignasiak    

F     A.    Hoimberg    .  . 

M.    R.    Bush    

E.    Ii.    Toomey...., 

Frank    Brand    

P.    H.    Lewey    

N.    H.  Clauson    . . . . 

C.  S.   Carpenter   .  .  . 

C.     M.     Reub     

Fred    A.    Colbv    ... 

R     C.    MItcliell     .  . . 

Walter  McLean   .  . . 

Chas.    A.    Larson    . 

E.    W.   Markell    . .  . 

Joseph   Catlin    

A.  B.  Sievert   

J.    P.    Mason    

Geo.    BennJson     ... 

L.  A.   Birch    

Victor   Juten    

W.   B.   Logan    .  . . . . 

L.    D.    Erspamer 

Victor    Nieman    .  , 

J.    A.   Cura    

Jas,  D.  McCiIlle 


» » 1  f » f  I, 


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66256  D.   S.   McKay    

66260  James    Koen     

66261  Robt.    Blackwood    .. 

66262  Jos.    Miller    

66263  Jno.  H.  McGllllvray 

66264  F.    F.    Downing    

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S.    H.    Bruen 

W.    C.    Wright 

John  McAi  thur  .  . 
Moses    Shapiro     .  . . 

M.    H.    Nylius    

E.   B.  Dunning 

Jos.    Maghie    

David    McFadden    . 

W.    M.    Mullen    

A.  F.  Swanstrom.  . 
C,  .A.  (iustafson.  .  , 
Joseph  Miller  .  .  .  . 
Uichard  Wick  .  .  .  . 
.Anton  Hanson  .  .  . 
John  McDonald  .  . 
Louis    Sternal     . , . . 

.1.    W.    Rowley    

John    Wold    

C.   M.    Rust 

E.    C.    Heath 

S.    E.    Smith 

11.    A.    Hall 

Emil  BJorlin  

G.  A.  HJerpe  .... 
II.  E.  Cl'.ristian  .. 

Fred  RulT  

A.  N.  Cornelius  .  . 

Ed  McDonald  

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H.  Eppins  .  .  .- 

Matheson  

K.  Porter  

Zimmerman  

Igiiaxiak   

.Sohubiskey  

T.  Wick  

B.  Henderson  

.Mex  .Anderson  

Frank  Brand  

J.  .s.  Met  'ormick  

M.  Sorenson 

J.  C.  Bust  

Geo.  Williams  

Albert  Black   

A.  B.  Welander  

A.  H.  Dicks  

Wm.  Webb  

Jolm  J.  Oakes  

Cliristiaii   .^undby    

C.    E.    Foster    

Hugh    .McKen/.ie     

M.    W.   Turner    

E      I-.     Toomey     

A.     Fitger     

R.    A.    Folkerts    

Joseph     P.    Wier 

W     J     Lawrie 

George  McGurrin    

G     H.     Winchester 

A.      Ringsied 

.1.    Hailiday     

Duncan    McNee    

C     II.    Hoar    

.lohn     Nolan 

Wesley   Medd    

Anton     Ri>rgen     

Henry    P.ridgman    

Fred  .Stack    

D.  A.   Blackney    

H.  Lester   

Ford      

McG  ill  very    

Birch    

Mcl^wen     

.Antoine    

Al     Kibenack     

David    McFadden     

.1.     P.    Mason     

N.    Youngblood    

R.    A.    Folkerts    

.S.    H.    Bruen     

,loscph  MiUer 

Jno.    McDonald     

Jno.   H.    LaVa'iue    

J.    S.    McCormlck    

Richard  Wick    

John   Mc.Vrtliur   

Wm.  Stewart    

Jacob    Zimmerman     .  . .  . 

J.   ,1.   LeTourneau    

}{.   n.   McKlrcher    

M.   J.    Gleason    

.lohn    Wold 

Eustace    Raussain    .  .  . . , 
W.     B.     Henderscm     ... 

Jonas    Strouse     

E.    B.    Dunning    

D.    .s.    McKay    

M.     Hendrickson     

V.   E.    Resche    

Christ    Sundby    

.Ino.    P.    Miison    

.Aug.    Stalbrisli     

.lohn    Klosomsky    

David     Mair     

John    D.   McPhail    

Geo.    Oss    

Wm.    Linn     

W.    W.    Hoopes    

M.   McGillivray    

Wm.    Bennett     ., 

Martin    .Sorenson    

R.  G.  Chambers 

W.    H.   Carpenter    

Angus   McLeod    

A.    W.    Koors    

A.    R.    McDonald     

Jno.    Gates    

L.    Mostue     

W.    M.    McKay    

P.    J.    Hamilton    

J.    D.   McGhie    

Wm.   Craig    

Wm.     McEwen     

Jacob    Zimmerman     ... 

Chas.   D.  Campl)en 

P    Beclienbossell 

Anton    Borgen 

W.   H.  Stultz 

Frank    Cox 

Wesley    Medd 

Jno     Mcintosh 

M.    Zalk 

W.    A.    Eden 

George    McCJurrin 

1)    S.  McKay 

D.  S.  McKay 

August    Fitger 

El'oert    Bede 

J.  ^^■.  I'ee 

O.    H.   Simonds 

Ed   Totman 

P.   H.   Gratheim 

M.    Zalk  

John    Schlemls 

J    K  McBride 

R     1).    McKercher 

H".    Taylor 

John     Hoskins 

W.   A.   McDonald 

W?n.  A.   Hunt 

W.    J.    Suffel 

A    T.   AVlggert 

W     J.    Greenfield 

I).'  H.   AVilliams 

W.    B.    Henderson 

Martin    Sol  berg 

Wm.  Pierce 

R.   R.    Dieshsel 

R.   J.    Foot 

H     E.   Simons 

b:    W.    Hubbs    

J     II.    La   Vaquo    

Hugh    Dogheriy    

.M.    A.    Fedge    

J.    T.    .Morin    

P.arnev   Hintz    

Frank    T.    Downing    . 

Gus    Bush     

R.    P.    Dowse    

Ole    Jenson     

Duncan   McNee    

Willie     MacDonough 

S.   .M.   Chandler    

George  O'Brien 

A.  J.   Anderson    

Austin     Moody     

August    Kehtel    

E.    L.    Gregg    

M.    .    Durkan    

J.    H.   Talnlin    

Henry    Perault     

•J.    B.    AValker    ...,.., 

J.  T.  Dunphy 

Josepli   Donauer    .... 

.\ndrew    Clausen    

D.   J.    Dor.sey    

A.    Rlngsred     

J.  W.   Nelson    

Wm.    Fenstermacker 

S.    A.    Peaohey    

J.    W.    Parker    

James    Scully    

J.    C.    Eckman    

P.  H.  Gratheim  .  . . . 
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75695 
75697 
7 .5  7  1 .5 
75721 
75740 
7  5S65 
75S66 
76573 
76669 
76707 
7  67  OS 
76729 

7673 :: 

767:!5 

7673S 

76739 

76740 

7  6741 

76742 

767  5  7 

7  675S 

76764 

76770 

76771 

767  75 

7679S 

76S7S 

76903 

76904 

76905 

76908 

76913 

76914 

76925 

7  6953 

76954 

76967 

76975 

76997 

77003 

77004 

77005 

7700S 

77009 


Paul  Gillrup  ..... 

A.  A.  Fider  

Geo.  C.  O'Brien    . . 
.A.   J.   Hendrickson 

D.  S.  McKay 

.1.   Ij.    I'rosser    


4  12 


60 
12 
36 
24 
60 
12 
36 
36 
80 
60 
80 
24 
24 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12  12 
12  12 
12  12 
12  12 
12  12 
12  12 
10  12 
12  24 
10  12 
10  12 
8  12 
4  12 


4 
4 

4 
4 
2 
2 
4 
4 
5 
4 
5 
4 
4 

o 

6 

4 

12 


Walter   Thompson    ... 
.las.    E.    Cummlngs..., 

John  Flynn    

Harry    Armstrong    ... 

Wm.   Craig    

.loseph   Normandy  .... 

,1.   T.   Morgan 

Owen    Jones    

J,    P.   Weir    

(reo.  H.   Ebcrt 

J.    B.    (;ims 

Nicliolas   Collins    .... 
De    Witt    Soutiiwick. 

1!.   S.   Munger    

Wm.    A'oungblood    .  .  . 

Wm.     Lynn     

S.   H.   Brown    

John   D.  Schwelzer... 

H.    E.   Bartholdl    

O.  N.   Lindberg 

Wm.    M.     lOwen     

Anton    Borgen    

Chas.    Lutes    

Chas.    R.    Hoar    

CJeo.   H.    Winchester.. 
,Iohn    Burnett    

Jno.    McLennan    

.lim   McFarlane    

.1.   A.    Belliune    

.lacob    Zimmerman     . 

Frank    Horgan     

Geo.    Long     

E.    G.   Churdi    

.Jacob  .1.   Bizer 

J.    C.     Wcsenberg.  .  .  . 

W.    E.    Brown 

Fred     W.     Wieland... 

C.    T.    Plummer 

C.    .1.    Skoglund 

Geo.    J.    Bloedell 

Anton    Boigen    

N.    H.    Nyhus 

Wm.    Collins     

Clinton    Brooke    

C.    J.     Marshall 

.lohn    T.    Dow 

i:rd 

Dicker    

M.    Carter 

W.    Erickson .  . 

Morin 

Carson 

Judson    S.  Clark 

B.    W.    Hubbs 

P.     Weir 

T.    Morgan 

0'F]agiierty    

S.    Munger 

H.    Stultz 

Jno.   T.    Dunlop 

D.  II.    Williams    

A.   .1.  Gow    

Barnej     Hintz    

Thos.  Jenson    

A.     Kogers     

A.    R.    McDonald    .  .  .  . 
^^'.    H.    Abrahamson, 

J.   L.  McBride 

Weslev    Medd     

W.    J.    Greenfiehl     .., 

Fred   .Stock    

Angus  McLeod  .... 
Koberf  Stewart  .... 
I  ):iii    McDonald    .... 

E.  L.    (Jregg     

.1.  G.   Brink    

.lohn    Hariie.v    

S.     H.     Bruen     

Wask     

Webb      

Simmons    

Gillis    

H.    Carpenter    .  . 

F.  I-;.    Ijosche    

R.  G.  Chambers  .  .  .  , 

J.    H.    Tom  I  in    

P.   M.   Graff    

.lohn    Mil'hall    

.Ino.    B.    Gillman     .  . 

Wm.   McEweii    

Jacob    Druletl    

(5eo.  .Simms 

Ir.    G.    Chambers    . . 

P.   H.  Gratheim 

H.    I  (ougherty    

.losepfl     Donauer... 

John     P.    Mason 

Mui-dock  McLeiin.. 
Charles     A.     BrItts.. 

A.    T.    Wiggerts 

M.    A.     F<dge 

,Iohn    Mc.AiHlrews,  , 

.lohn      Burneti 

E.     D.     I'ield 

S.    E.    Peachy 

Ole     Jenson 

O.     P.    Stenson 

"7031  .Atigust  Kehtel .... 
'7010    R.     G.     Foate 


J.    B. 

<'lias. 
Thos. 
Chas. 
.1.  T. 
AN'.   J. 


J. 

J. 

T. 

R. 

W. 


Hen 
John 

f  jCO. 

.1.    1:. 
W. 


Total 
jun 


municipal 
>rs    


FEES. 


12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 


12 

12 

12 

6 

4 

4 

10  12 

4  12 

12  12 

12  48 

4  24 
12  48 
12  12 
10  12 
12  12 

2  12 
12  12 

4  12 
10  12 

8  12 

2  12 

2  OH 

2  12 

4  12 
12  60 

2  12 
10  12 

2  12 

2 

4 

4 

4 

4 

4 

4 

o 

4 
4 

4 

4 
4 

4 


12 
12 
24 
24 
•21 
12 
60 
12 
12 
12 
12 
60 
60 
60 
8  60 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
6  12 
8  12 
K  36 
8  24 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
8  60 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
2  12 
8  60 
8  60 
8  12 
6  12 
8  12 
8  12 
6  12 
8  60 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
8  21 
8  12 
8  12 
8  12 
2  12 
8  12 
2  12 
8  12 
8  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 


63271 
63  277 
63  2  S3 
63284 
63  290 
63291 

6:;292 

63297 

63  333 

63349 

635S4 

63695 

63740 

63901 

63902 

63910 

63961 

64004 

64'ilS 

64109 

61110 

64111 

64161 

64162 

64163 

64:!S1 

64486 

64523 

64557 

64642 

64642 

64644 

64053 

64654 

64673 

61674 

64707 

64S19 

64991 

64997 

65024 

65025 

65026 
65027 

65054 

65055 
65075 

65077 
65078 

65079 

65111 
65163 
65164 
65191 
65226 
6  5227 
65232 
65279 
652S0 
65321 
653  29 
65332 
65335 
65337 
65338 
65339 
65340 
65341 
65342 
65343 
6534  9 
65350 
65351 
65360 
65392 
65393 
65394 
65395 
65396 
65397 
65  448 
65449 
65450 
65453 
C5459 
65460 
65461 
65468 
65  4  85 
65499 
65508 
65513 
65528 
65530 
65531 
65532 
65533 
65510 
65610 
65611 
65687 
55709 
65736 
65737 
ta875 
S5874 
C5S75 
65886 
C5922 


W I  T.NESS 

Elvie   Olson    

J.  P.  Nolan 

R.   C.   Collar    

Jas.    Sanders    

.los.    A"  in  cent    

.Jos.    A'incent     

Husky   Sliamlio    

T.    Murayama    

.lacob  D.  Siegel    

Fred    Taylor     

Mrs.   Pear  .Stephens   .... 

Paul    Cusciatte    

Geo.   Deacc    

J.   O.    K i n n e >■    

Grace     Lincoln     

O.    A.    StenberT    

James    Grundy    

L.    Metzler     

Sfiphia    -Anderson    

Eust.ace    Rousman    

Mrs.  H.  Curmaii    

Geo.    McGurrin     

Jacob  Marmarsteen   .... 

.Abe    Wince    

.John   Kimper    

I'5slher    Anderson    

Mrs.    M.    J.    Mountray. 
Patrick    M.    Mullen    ... 

Ben    Mochidzatte    

lOrnest    (nasier    

Capt.  .Ell    ,Jac()ues     ... 
Mrs.  H.  H.  Myerma   . . . 

Mrs.     C.    Olson      

Amanda     Hendrickson.  . 
Mrs.    .John    Hanson    .  .  .  . 

.lohn      Hanson 

Mrs.      Okerlund 

Harry     Raymond 

Aaron      Fieldman 

Eleanor     O'Nell 

Mrs.    Mary   (.'harbonnea , 

Cynthia    Baum 

George     Baum 

Edith      Haburt 

Charles     Oberg 

W.    T.    Marten , 

L>r.      Sylvester , 

Henry     Hutlers 

John     Poselues 

Ella     Poselues 

<leorge     A.     Walen 

.lohn      Evenson 

Martin      Larson 

Rudolpli      Miller 

lOdward    Lapis 

.Andrew     Simonson 

E.  .A.    Frank 

Christ      Hayerdahl 

Ole     Cleveland 

Mrs.    R.    -A.    Shaw 

H.      Hanson 

George    Stegel 

Carrie     Holland 

.Morris     Paul 

Henry     Polonski 

Albert     AVilson 

Fred     Lofgren 

Louis    W.    Carlson .... 

J.      Fernboch 

Ed    Bergstrom    

F.  Colin      

Joe    Burr    

L.     Winer     

Jas.   Rich    

Andrew    Johnson     .... 

Frank    Nelson     

John     Rauha     

Kalle   Mattson    

.John    Weitainen     

Berhard    Kunman    

R.    A.    Carson     

August   Plerlng    

Jas.     Kelley     

Kale     Jankowsky     .... 

Frank    Kamerick    

Mrs.    Frank    Kamerick. 

.Anton   Kuharskl    

Rudolph     Miller     

Ricliard    Wick    

Herman    Johnson    ..... 

Anna   Hill    

T.    E.     White     

H.     Widdis     

John    Sanka    

Matt    Running    

Martin     Running     

Geo.    Dayhuff    

Elenor    O'Neil     

Minnie    AVagner     

Fred    AVagner     

Erick     »^rlckson     

Marie     Tanner     

Fr^d    Stein     

A.    Mcintosh     

.Adolph    Blychart    

Mike     Manella     

John     Battles     

Carl    Tapala     

E,    F,    ^Vaifner    


2  12 

2  12 
8  60 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 

4  60 

7  12 
12  60 

5  12 
12  4S 
12  60 
12  12 
12  12 

ion  2 

4  12 
12  12 
12  12 

2  12 
12  60 

2  4S 

2  12 
10  12 
10  2  4 
12  12 
12  12 

8  12 

6  32 
6  6j 
8  24 
8  3  6 
8  2  4 


4 
8 
6 
6 
6 
8 
6 
•» 

8 
6 
8 
8 
S 
6 
6 
8 
6 
10 
8 


6) 
12 
60 
12 
12 
24 
2  4 
12 
12 
60 
12 
48 
60 
12 
12 
12 


12 

12 

2  12 

2  12 

10  12 

10  60 

10  60 

10  24 

10  12 

10  12 

8  12 

X  60 

8  12 

10  12 

8  36 

2  12 

10  12 

•>   '>4 

8  24 
10  12 
10  60 
8  12 
4  12 
14  12 
12  12 
16  12 


17 
16 


36 
IJ 


16  12 
16  12 
16  12 
4  12 
16  4S 
14  12 
14  37 
8  12 
14  36 
12  12 
14  12 
16  12 
16  36 
2  12 
2  12 
8  12 
2  12 
2  2  1 
14  12 
2  12 
2  \1 
2  12 
2  12 
2  2I 
6  14 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 
2  12 


.1  3,207  27 


12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
1  12 
1  12 
12 
12 
12 
12 


12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
80 
12 
1  12 
1  12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 


12 

12 

12 

1  12 

1  12 


1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 


2 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

3 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 


65923 

6S986 

66004 

66005 

66006 

66007 

66008 

66<»09 

66018 

66019 

66020 

66041 

66043 

66044 

66068 

66069 

66070 

66076 

66077 

66078 

€6079 

66082 

66090 

(.6127 

66128 

66135 

66136 

66137 

66144 

66145 

661M 

66197 

66201 

66202 

66216 

66240 

66341 

66375 

665^0 

66600 

66635 

66681 

66708 

66709 

66800 

66S31 

66856 

66891 

66S92 

66897 

66S98 

66907 

6690S 

66909 

66910 

66911 

66923 

66924 

669K6 

67012 

67  209 

67210 

67221 

67227 

67228 

67229 

67  451 

67438 

67453 

67558 

67695 

67696 

67697 

67698 

67729 

67809 

67S16 

67831 

07S96 

67926 

67927 

679  28 

67929 

67930 

67931 

6793  2 

6799  1 

679  9  5 

679  96 

6S001 

6  S  0(1 3 

6Sii23 

6Stt59 

6S19S 

6Si;15 

6S6(»2 

6S603 

6Si;66 

6X667 

687 13 

6S714 

687  43 

68749 

6S7S0 

6S792 

6SS75 

68883 

68895 

6SS96 

6SS97 

68H98 

68899 

68990 

69160 

69  4  25 

69428 

70076 

700SS 

700S9 

70091 

7itllS 

701S6 

701S7 

70188 

70216 

70227 

70228 

70233 

70240 

70241 

70258 

702M 

702S2 

70291 

70292 

70293 

70291 

70324 

:o331 

70397 

705S3 

71665 

71683 

71693 

71763 

71769 

71816 

71S35 

71836 

71837 

71843 

71896 

71944 

179SS 

7  201  ; 

7  2<n8 

7  2027 

72(i37 

72038 

72039 

72050 

72051 

72055 

72056 

72"6H 

72120 

72237 

72212 

72243 

72244 

72245 

73359 

73360 

73371 

73458 

73509 

73567 

73568 

73569 

63567 

73  658 

73659 

73660 

73661 

73662 

73701 

7:' 70S 

73724 

73725 

73726 

73727 

73740 

73741 

73760 

73761 

73773 

73774 

73776 

73785 

73786 

73S24 

73825 

73952 

73974 

7  4  257 

7  4  258 

74259 

74260 

74261 

74262 

7  4  263 

74264 


12 
12 
12 
48 
60 

12 
4S 
12 
12 
13 
12 
12 
60 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
1; 
12 
12 
12 
12 

12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
24 
2  4 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
1-2 
12 
12 
12 
60 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
112 

1  12 

2  12 
1  12 

\   12 


Jacob  Kera  •• 

Otto  Roise  

Ed  Jackson 

Matt    Blawlen     

E.  C.  Osborne    

C.   W.   Hendrickson   .... 

Carl    Peterson     

George    F'pperson     

Oscar    Nolander • 

I'eter    Nolander    

John   Lindstrom    

P.  J.  Whelan    

Mrs.   P.  J.   Whelan 

N.    J.    Smitii    

Rowe    McCamers    

Walter   I'etit    

Carl   I.,arson    

E.    A.    Simi     

J.    A.    Little    

E.  Kable     

Max   Sosnowsky    

P.   G.    .Myers    

Louis     Slder      

Andrew    Peterson    

Nels    Jolinson     

Loita    Dauglass    

luli.i    Burr    

Wellin    Wilson    

Erick    Anderson    

Andrew    Anderson    

Louis   Sieders    

Mrs.     Wm.    Granquist... 

Dave    Polinsky    

Wm.  Massingill 

Sam   Bert i ling 

Harrv     Pringle     

F.  C.    Rudd    

l>r.   I>.  Tilderqulst   .... 

G.  Camia      

W.   P.    Harris    

Sidney     Ross     

T.     P      Bradley      

Fred    Rosseau    

Louis    Belden    

Alide     Lueck     

.Mrs.    .Mable   Ashby 

P.  J.    Wourberg 

L.    Tulman     

Sam    Oreckowsky    

Hilda     Peterson     

.Anna    Peterson    

Carl    Peterson     

i:.   C.  Osbourne    

C.  W.     Hendrickson.... 

Ed    Jackson     

Matt    P.owlen     

.Minnie     Babcock      

Grace    P.abcock    

Mike     Mainella     

-Andrew  .Andersen 

Jolin   Carter    

George    Carter     

J.    H.    Lavick     

D.  .M.    -Maxey    

Eric     Anderson     

Victor    Johnson    

Wm.   McCarthy    

Mar.v    V>  ilson    

Marie    Miller    

S.    Karson    

Frank   Dever    

Peter    -\nderson     

Mi-s.  .lohn   .Swanson    .... 
Victoria     .\nderson     .... 

Myrtle    Williams    

.lohn    Campbell    

Isadore  Colin    

T.     E.     McCarthy     

.lohn    H.   Thomasson    ... 

ICIiza    Johnson     

Will.  M:ihaupt    

.lolin     Peterson     

i:<lward  Adams    

-Ellen    Wickstrom    

.August     Hergeson     

1:.  r.  Wid.lell    

.Vug.    Hedlund    

M.   J.    Ko.kwell    

.Mrs.    .M.    J.    Rockwell.... 

A.    A.    Mahaupt     

Nl<-k   Chiisiopiier 

Chas.  Summers    

Kate    JankowskI     

F.  i).   .leskiip    

Tlios.  ,IelTerson    

Carrie  Butte  rfield 

Mrs.    Tom    White    

-Xtidrew    Barbo     

Kav'inond    Leveska     .... 

Rav    Quaglia    

Molli..   Ouaglia    

Wm.    .loiinson    

I  lavi.l     Polinsky     

Mai  ga ret     Heal  I y    

Benjamin     Wright     

.John     Make     

Chris     Heamis     

(Jeo.    Thatcher    

.Jessie    Farrington    

D,i\  id    Bowers    

Dan    Donovan     

I.ouis    de    Santo 

Sophia    Nuvald     

Abraham    .Silver    

Benj.     Wiight      

Kallic    Lainers     ........ 

I..    Ignaziak     

I,.(>na     Hlanchard     

Meyer   Witenberg   

Herman    Benson    

I  >r.    F.    A.    Groin 

Emma    Zimmerman    .  .  .  , 

Mike    Cliublc     

Mrs.     Rena     

James    Baron     

Mrs.    Matt    Krznarlck... 

Matt      Krznarick 

John    Boi>skl     

M.   Danenlavitz    

M.    Danenlavitz    

Mrs.    Adolph    t'arlson    . 

Wm.    Byron     

.las.    Orecvosky    

Clara   Sclimitz' 

Fred    Franz    

Ed    Slianks    

Joe    .lolinson     

George    Siegel     

Oiga    Laaksoner    

N.    (."hri-stopher     

-McComb.   C.    F..    M.    D.  . 

John    P.    Peters.^n    

William     Lappa     

L.   J.    Emery    

Louise    E.    Frauden    ... 

Eiuma    West     

P.    .AL    Edwar.ls    

D.   C    l'"eemiiig    

P.    V.   St.   Clair    

Cherry    St.    Clair    

J.    Salnovitz    

T.    P.    Bradley    

J.    R.    Kuth    

Louis    (ierde     

Fred    lOmerson     

O.    .N.    Brissett    

fJeorge    E.    Lindberg    . . 

H.  C.   Nelson    

Joe    Taylor     

Mike    Cioldstein     

.Mike    Zimbraski     

George    Brown     

Henry    .Mueller    

Arthur    Stack     

O.    H.    .Ia«"obson    

i:dv,'ard    Wilson    

.\.    .Mueller    

J.    A.    Feely     

J.  T.  Ah  reus    

Dr.    D.   L.   Tilder«iulst 
I'red    Lavltinsky     .... 

Hjalmer    Olson    

Lars     Nelson     

Morgan   Sweeney    

Sam   Smith 

Geo.   Gruser    

O.    Sigrvn     

Earl    Elliott    

A'erner    Elliott 

Morris    Colin 

W.    J.     Staples     

Frank  .Stine   

Wm.  Chase    

Mike    Rodman    

Mrs.     Ross     

C'arl    A.    Johnson    .... 

Jacob   Maki    

Iver  .Jolinson    

ole    Martinson     

C.   F.    Wiggerts 

Henrv  Thompsoti    .... 

P.  Mainella 

S.  .Salson    

Knute  Almos 

Julius  Klein    

.losepli   Hughes    

Lars   P.   Junick    

James     .Sione     

Mrs.    IC    J.    Thompson 

Anna    Jolinson     

Mrs.  J.   Hanson    

Ida     I>ayhofr     

Marcus    Austlnson     . . 

Geo.    Gay  son    

.las.    Coyle     

AV.  J.  Cayo   

Guv     Nettleton     

Ab.    Smith     

Morris  (Greenfield    .  .  . . 

John    Smith     

Eugene    My  re     

Win.    Doig 

Gregor  Kollisnak  ... 
John  Walantlne  .... 
\'.    R.    WiUiams    

Campbell 

McNamara     . . . 
Hai'.ey 

Kenney    

Larson     

Berg    

AVesner  Carlson  . . . . 
John   Lundstrom    . . . . 

John    Sampson     

J.   H.    Pratt    

Henry  Russell  

James  Cnaerwood  . . 

Delia  Pine  

Dr.  J.  R.  Kuth  

Hugo  Gus»,iif<,,jn  

C.  H.  ismith  


75159 

75160 

75197 

75228 

7530s 

75322 

75380 

75411 

75412 

75413 

75414 

75417 

7i4>l 

7542.^ 

75458 

75477 

75479 

75517 

75518 


D. 
P. 
C. 
J. 


M. 

B. 
M. 
W. 


7  96 
96  40 
7  84 
7  84 
1  13 
1  Ii 
I  13 
1 
1 


12 

12 
1  60 
1  60 
1  60 
19  00 
1  12 
3  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 

1  12 

2  24 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  60 
1  12 
1  12 
I  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  U 
7  96 
7  48 

11  20 

7  48 

8  92 
1  12 

1  12 
S  12 

3  12 
16  oe 
16  00 
10  00 

12  04 
19  80 

2  44 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  72 
1  72 
1  78 
1  72 
1  12 
1  12 
1  U 
1  12 
1  24 
1  60 
1  60 
1  60 
124 
1  24 
1  24 
I  60 
1  24 
1  24 
1  2« 
1  60 
1  12 
1  12 
1  IS 
4  24 
1  12 
1  24 
1  24 
1  60 
1  60 
1  12 
1  12 
1  60 
1  12 

1  24 

2  12 
1  12 


Nick 
Cha.«. 


12 

12 


1  12 


1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  60 
1  12 
1  24 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  13 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  60 
1  60 
1  60 
1  60 
1  21 
1  12 

1  12 
5  12 

2  20 
1  12 
1  IS 
1  13 

1  12 
4  12 

2  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 

1  12 

2  IS 
1  12 

1  IS 

2  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  60 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
8  12 
1  12 
1  60 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  60 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 

1  12 

2  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 
1  12 


12 

12 

12 

12 

12 

12 

1  12 

1  60 

1  60 

1  13 


12 

12 

12 

13 

12 

12 

12 

13 

12 

1  13 

1  12 

1  13 

1  12 

1  12 

1  12 

1  12 

1  12 

lis 

1  12 
1  24 

I  12 
I  12 
1  12 


XT  I  T^'~  T  rr  [!■  ^ 


=«= 


.= 


"•^W 


■»ri 


.. 


^ 


Of  I'  ^■'-^■■■^ 


i 


"n> 


"  F 


7B565 
75569 
76670 
7559»; 
7{i601 
75604 
75605 
76614 
75616 
7561 


H«'ssie 
Genie 
7B61S   C.    P. 
76611*   Frank 


76C21 

7062a 

75624 

75625 

75631 

75641 

75666 

75667 

7567S 

766SO 

76696 

76722 

755-54 

76*^5". 

75S'.C 

75S60 

75S62 

75S64 

75!>63 

75S68 

75S75 

76364 

76365 

7649;^ 

76404 

766-7 

7662S 

76630 

7668i> 

76706 

7676o 

7676r> 

7  690  6 

77i.'29 

77046 


H.     A. 
Gust 
John 
I.ouis 
J.    G. 


Chap.    Ehle    

Ole   Olson    

Eniil  Gnstafson 

Jack     Hanka     

Anth<iny    (\<!trom     .... 

Kriok    .\nderson    

Kniil  GustafKon 

Arvi<l    Ho^cn    

Nuiii  k     

Wltz    

Myers 

\Vheaton 

Nt-usir 

Hahn 

McKanna 

Osborn ' 

Ostby ■ 

Edward    H.    I.ee 

Peter     Johnson 

Tom     Pavis 

Max     Oreckowsky . .  .. 
Joseph     Oreekowsky. 

Carrie     Hamm 

C.etirjie     Gauner 

Max     Zaik 

Martin     Shandlan.... 
Dr.    Hobert    Graham.. 

Emil     Sabel 

Joe     Miller 

R     Bras-will 

Stanka 

I>i>hn 

Kandall 

Nelson 

WiU-trg 

Parker. 


12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
36 
S6 
S6 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
14 
12 
12 


6  14 

1  12 


John 

Carl 

-Mex 

Oscar 

Oscar 

Meyer 


Louis     Putchart .  .  .  ..• 
Florence    E.    Clark.  . . 

Chester      Beatty 

Judson     Clark 

Xavier     Boudin 

N.     Pavkovich 

.Vnna     Hevles 

Nellie      Barrett 

E.      .\helson 

Wm.     Newmonville. 
Otto     liolse 


6 
6 
1 
6 
6 
1 
1 


14 
14 
12 
14 
14 
I'J 
12 
1  12 
1  12 
IJ 
60 
12 
12 
12 

::: 

60 
12 


Total   municipal 
witness     fets. 


court 


779  40 


Jl-PGES' 
FEES. 

Cha<=      E      Nelson,    court 
fees.  Virplnia    ■••••:■• 

John    Lamuth.   constable 
fees.    Ely    •  ;  • 

Wm.  H   Oppel.  constable 
fees     Tower    

Chas.  '  Gronberg.        con- 
stable fees,  VirKinia.. 

John    I>amuth.    constable 
fees,    i:iy    ••.•• 

Municipal     court.        Vir- 
ginia,   court    fees    .... 

Municipal    court,    city    of 
Eveleth,   court    fees.  .  .   _ 

I>.    L.    Keissell.      witness 
fees.   Hibbing •  •  • 

John   Purtilla.    constable 
fees.     Virginia      ■••••■ 

Ellis     Walsh,     constable 
ftes.  Virginia 

VMn-i    I.andrant. 
fee.«.   Virginia 

P.    M.       Moxcy. 
fees.    Virginia 

Thos.    K.      Brady, 
fees,    nibbing 

Municipal    court. 
Eveleth.     coiJrt 

Municipal   court. 
Virginia,    court 


MUNiciP.M.   f>iy,^'r  <• 

CONSTABLE."' 
6S33S 

«8426 

C3427 

64272 

«4276 

64524 

66416 

66510 

67S51 

67362 

67853 

67354 

61769 

69017 

69032 

70561 

72346 

T841S 

76020 

76021 

76967 

76969 


AND 


witness 

witness 

court 

city   of 

fees. . 

city    of 

fees. . 

E.   Walsh,      police     fees, 

Virginia    

Helen      Ktnick.     witness 

fees.     Virginia      

James  P.      Carey,     court 

fees.     Virginia      

V.ni.    McCain,    constable 

fees.    Virginia     

Ellis    L.       Walsh.      con- 
stable fee.  Virginia    . . 
J.    C.    Morrell.    transcript 

of    testimony    

Louis  Arsneau.     witness 
fees     


178  96 

22  00 

10  45 

66  45 

19  70 

22  85 

1»»13 

2  00 

S  20 

42  50 

21  SO 

22  80 

385  30 

104  14 

107  40 

7  44 

1  12 

124  01 

7  90 

9  07 

6  85 

6  80 

Total  municipal  court 
judges  and  con- 
stables      11.305  8. 


63418 

63419 

63420 

63421 

€3422 

6S423 

63424 

63425 

64267 

6426S 

64269 

64270 

64271 

64273 

64274 

64275 

64277 


JUSTICE  COURTS. 

F.    O.    Adamson,    justice 
fees.    Aurora    i 

J.  B.  Flack,  justice  fees, 
West    Duluth    

August        Knute.       con- 
stable   fees.    Aurora.. 

Frank    Leslie,    constable 
fees,    .\urora 

Frank    Lampe, 
fees,   Aurora 

Victor   Jolmsim 

fees.    Aurora    

constable 


witness 


witness 


13  35 
1130 
43  70 
13  64 
112 


E. 


64278 

64919 

64920 

64921 

€4922 

64923 

64924 

64925 

64926 

64927 

64928 

64929 

64930 

C4931 

64932 

64933 

64934 

64935 

64936 

64937 

66825 

65826 

65827 

65828 

65829 

65830 

65831 

65S32 

66496 

66497 

6649S 

66499 

66500 

66501 

66502 

66503 


P.    Cosgrove, 

fees    Sparta    

J.    1*.    Murray,    constable 

fees.    I'roctorknott     .  . 

J.  B.  Flack,  justice  fees. 

West   Duluth    

H.    H.      Salmon,     justice 

fees,    Biwabili    

E.    A.      Barrett,      justice 

fees,    Bulil    

H.      Gilderman.      justice 

fees,    Proctorknott    .  . 

I.    Young,    justice     fees, 

Proctorknott    

J.    }'.   Murray,    constable 
fees,    Proctorknott     . . 
Ed    Le    Beau,      constable 

fees.  Buhl    

Dennis      Madden,      con- 
stable   fees.    Chisholm 
John    McLaughlin,    con- 
stable      fees,       Mount 

Iron     

Peter      Cosgrove,      con- 
stable   fees,   Sparta... 
J.  B.  Flack,  justice  fees. 

West   L'uluth    

A.  N.  Rowe.  justice  fees. 

Mount    Iron     

A.      Barrett, 
fees.    Buhl 

McKae, 
Mesal>a 
Adamson, 
Aurora    . 
Salmon. 
McKinley 

Bragg. 
Buhl     .  .  . 

constable 


12 
50 
90 
60 
40 
05 


10  44 
2  00 
7  75 


4 
7 

9 

22 
3 


65 


67326 

67327 

C732S 

67329 

67330 

67331 

67332 

67333 

67334 

67335 

67336 

67337 

6733S 

67.139 

6734U 

673  41 

67S42 

67343 

67344 

67345 

67346 

67347 

76348 

67349 

67350 

68298 
68299 
68300 
68301 
68302 
68303 
68304 
68305 
68306 
69252 
69253 
69254 
69255 
69256 
69257 
69258 
70537 

70538 
70539 
70540 
70541 
70545 
70546 

70547 

70554 

70557 

70558 

70563 

70564 

70565 

70567 

70569 

70570 

70571 

-0572 

70576 

70576 

70577 

70580 

72343 

72344 

75016 

75017 

73018 

75019 

75022 


Chas.  RanJberg  .justice 
fees,     Floodwood 

Aug.  Knute,  constable 
fees.     Aiirora 

J.  B.  McLaughlin,  con- 
stable   fees,    Mt.    Iron 

Hans  E.  Olson,  censla- 
ble    fees.    Waldo 

D.  \V.  Lang,  constable 
fees.     Aurora 

Dennis  Madden,  consta- 
ble   fees.    Chisholm.... 

R.  B.  Treedy.  constable 
fees,    Mt.    Iron •  ■  . 

Chas.  Olson,  constable 
fees,     Aurora 

Geo.  Johnson.  witness 
fees,     Floodwood 

Sam  Lvncli.  interpreter 
fees.    Chisholm    

D.  Rustudish,  witness 
fees.    Chisholm    

Toma  Vuksovich.  wit- 
ness fees.  Chisliolm   .  . 

Milos  Kreckovicli.  wit- 
ness   fees.    Chisholm.*. 

Erick  Koskey.  witness 
fees.    C;i!sholm    

Who  Kvangquist.  wit- 
ness   fees.    Chisholm.. 

Geo.  Viotovich.  witness 
fees.    Chisholm    

Benict.  Nickovich.  wit- 
ness   fees.    Chisholm.. 

Tek;-a  Nickohut.  witness 
fees.    Chisholm    

Baco  Bapaoibut.  wit- 
ness   fees.    Chisholm.. 

Nick  Kassovic.  witness 
foes.    Chisholm    ...... 

Blogais  Shamovich.  wit- 
ness   fees,    Chisholm.. 

Draga  Voratovich.  wit- 
ness fees    

Mike  Droskovich.  wit- 
ness   fees,    Chisholm.. 

Matt  Koherson.  wit- 
ness   fees,   Chisholm.. 

Rcdovan  Jocaiiovlch, 

witness       fees,       Chis- 


holm     

H.    H.    Salmon,      Justice 
fees.    Biwabik    

Dennis   Madden,   consta- 
ble   fees.    Chisholm    .  . 

Chas.    F.    Coffin,    consta- 
ble   fees,    Floodwood.. 

Aug.    Knute.      constable 
fees.    Aurora    

R.    C.    Knight,   constable 
fees,  Eveleth    

Wm.  OHara.     constable 
fees.  Biwabik 

Frank  Williams,  consta- 
ble fees.  Mt.  Irop   .... 

John      Korpi.        witness 
fees,    Aurora    

John    Mikkelson,        wit- 
ness fees,  .\urora   .... 

C.    A.     Atwater,    justice 
fees.  Ashawa   

B.  C.  Prout.  Justice  fees, 
Eveleth     

Dennis  Madden,  consta- 
ble fees   Chisholm   .  .  . 

John  P.  Murray.  con.sta- 
ble   fees.    Proctorknott 

A.     Peterson,     constable 
fees,  Ashawa 

R.    B.    Friedy.    constable 

fees.    Mt.    Iron     

Lang,    constable 

.Aurora    

Madden,      meals 
prisoners,      Chls- 


D.    W. 

fees. 
I>ennis 

for 

holm 
Henry 

fees. 
August 

fees. 
Peter 

ness 
J.      B. 

fees. 
C.        W 


Norman,  witness 
Midway    

.<tark,     witness 

Midway   

Gulbranson,  wit- 
fees,  Midway. . . . 

Flack.      justice 

.Midway 

Hendrickson, 


witness    fees,    etc 

Dennis  Madden,  meals 
for  prisoners,  Chis- 
holm     

Frank  F.  Slater,  wit- 
ness  fees.    Brookston. 

J.  J.  Dwyer,  sheriff 
fees,   Aurora    

Aug.      Knute,        servin.g 


etc.,    Aurora, 
justice    fees. 


juror  fees. 


A 
T. 
H. 


justice 
justice 
justice 
justice 
justice 


P. 
fees. 
O. 

fees, 

H. 

fees. 

B.      \\'. 
fees. 

Wm.    OHara, 

fees.    Buhl    

Dennis      Madden,      con- 
stable   fees.    Chisholm 

D.  W.    Lang,      constable 
fees.    Aurora    

E.  Le   Btau,     constable 
fees.    Buhl    

R.   B.    Freed  y.    constable 

fees.    Costin    

August  Knute,  constable 

fees,    Aurora    

Matt   Turk,     interpreter 

fees.    Aurora    

X.    G.    Peterson,    witness 

fees.   Mesaba    

Gust    Anderson,    witness 

fees,    Buhl     

John   Anderson,   witness 

fees.   Mesaba    

Rock    Slfonicr,      witness 

fees     Mesaba    Ml 

Oscar  Larson,  meals  for 

prisoner,     ^yinton 

J.  B.  Flack.  jiiPtice  fees. 

West     Duluth 

A.  N.  Rowe.  justice  fees. 
Mountain     Iron 

Jno.  Cameron,  constable 
fees,      FloocHvood 

Dennis  Madden,  consta- 
ble   fees.    Chisholm... 

Jno.  McLaugiilin,  con- 
stable   fees,    Mt.    Iron. 

B.  B.  Treedy.  constable 
fees.    Mountain    Iron.. 

Cha.^.  Hendrickson,  wit- 
ness   fees.    Buhl 

Joe  Krell,  witness  fees, 
Buhl     

J.  B.  Flack,  justice  fees. 
West     Duluth 

F.  O.  Adamson,  justice 
fees,     Aurora 

C.  A.  Barrett,  justice 
fees.     Buhl 

H.  H.  Solman,  justice 
fees.     BiwaV>ik 

Chas.  Sandberg,  justice 
fees,     Floodwood 

B.  C.  Prant.  justice  fees, 
Fayal     

W.  O.  Sparkling,  con- 
stable   fees,    Mt.    Iron 

Peter  Crasgrove,  con- 
stable   fees,    Sparta... 

66504  Louis   Larson,    constable 

fees.     Buhl 

66505  J.    G.    Quayle.    constable 

fees.     Biwabik 

66506  Wm.    OHara.    constable 

fees,     Biwabik 

66507  Peter   Paikala.   Interpre- 

ter   fees.    Biwabik .... 

66508  Frank     Faber,    Interpre- 

ter   fees.    Biwabik.... 

66509  Nick    Koviccovic,    inter- 

preter fees,  Biwabik. 
f7324  F.    O.    Adamson,    justice 

fees,     Aurora 

67225  A.  N.  Rowe.  justice  fees, 

Mt.     Iron 


30 

22  80 

4  35 

4  15 

6  00 

2  20 

3  85 
3  45 

17  70 

16  00 

15  SO 

13  79 

3  65 

2  24 

1  12 

1  40 

112 

1  30 

2  85 

8  40 
2  40 

9  75 
3103 
13  25 
13  50 

1  72 


warrant. 
I.     Young. 
Midway 
A.    E.    Olson. 

Biwabik    

John    Spoolar,    Interpre- 
ter fees.  Biwabik   .... 
Peter     Wing,     traveling 

expenses,    constable    . 
J.    A.    Talle,    juror    fees, 

Biwabik    

D.    J.    Eyer,    juror    fees, 

Biwabik     

Frank      Thomas,      juror 

fees,    Biwabik    

11.  G.  Seeley,  juror  fees, 

Bl-.vabik    

N.      B.      Shanks,      juror 

fees,   Biwabik    

Erick       Koskey,       inter- 
preter   fees,    Aurora.. 
D.     W.     Lang,      witness 

fee,    Aurora    

D.     W.     Lang,     witness 

foes.  Aurora    

T.    O.    Adamson,    justice 

fees.    Aurora    

H.    H.    Salmon.       Justice 

fees.    Auroia    

J.       P.      Flack,       justice 

fees.  West  Duluth .... 
J.      P.      Flack.       justice 

fees,  W.   Duluth    

H.  G.  Gilderman,  justice 

fees.    Proctor   Knott.. 
Chas.    Sandberg,    justice 

fees,    Floodwooil     .... 
I.    Young,     justice    fees. 

Proctor    Knott    

Chas.       Coffin,       consta- 
ble,   Floodwood     

75023  Wm.    OHara,    constable, 

Biwabik    

75024  J.     P.     Murray,    consta- 

ble.   Proctornott    

75025  Frank      Williams,      con- 

stable.   Mountain   Iron 

75026  Oscar  Larson,  meals  for 

prisoners     

750B7  Frank  Powers,  witness 
fees.    Proctornott    .... 

75028  Chas.    H.    Johnson,    wit- 

ness fees,  W.  Iniluth. 

75029  A.      Rinstrom.      witness 

fees,    W.   Duluth    

75030  I.      Amundson       witness 

fees.  W.  Duluth 

73031  Walter  Harklns.  witness 
fees.   West   Duluth.... 

75968  Jam*  s  l)oherty.  con- 
stable   fees.    Buhl    .... 

75970  Walter    Grudnoskl.    wit- 

ness   fees.    Atirora .... 

75971  U  H.  Hitchcock,  witness 

fees,    Aurora    

Total    justice   court... 5 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD: 


4  26 

16  10 

19  50 

4  20 

4  20 

41  19 

10  00 

8  73 

1  12 

00 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 
12 


1  12 

1  12 


12 
12 
12 

12 
55 


1175 

7  75 

13  75 

12  00 

2  40 


64578 

64579 

64612 

64627 

65042 

65215 

65235 

65247 

65248 

65319 
65320 

65336 

65344 

653  45 
6534  6 

C5357 
65412 
65413 

65124 

65428 

6.'.473 
65474 

65  181 
6548J 
65488 

65511 

65529 

65546 

65692 

65C93 
65697 


10 
1 
1 
1 
3 


11  69 
3  40 

12  53 

13  25 

8  70 

13  25 


66 
65 


r53 
^54 


3  16 


9  00 
6  32 
4  00 


1  45 


1 

1 

1 

9 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

4 

3 

4 

3 

3 

1 


80 
00 
00 


00 

00 

00 

00 

00 

12 

12 

60 

45 

60 

75 

65 

45 


t    I  o 


1 

18 

5 
6 


10 
35 

60 
05 


W  H.   Salter,   M.   D., 

fees  

R.  E.  Cavanaugh,  M.  D., 

fees  

H.    P.   Jeckell,  con- 
veyance   

Wm.J.  Bates,   sheriff, 

conveyance  

R.   E.   Cavanaugh.  M.   D., 

fees      

David    Graham,      M.    D., 

fees     

Wm.    J.    Bates,      sheriff, 

conveyance     

J.     H.     Carson,     M.     D., 

fees     

F.    C.    Drennlng,    M.    D., 

fees    

J.  H.  Tufty.  M.  D.,  fees 
Mary     McCoy.        M.      D.. 

fees    V  -.i 

Wm.    J.      Bates,      sheriff 

convevunce      •  •  • 

E.    B.    Dougherty.   M.   D., 

fees      

M  S.  Hirsclifiehl,  fees.. 
W.   A.    Coventry,   M.      D.. 

fees     

C  T.  McComh.  M.  D..  fees 
J.  H.  Jern.  M.  D..  fees.. 
T.    L.    Chapman,    M.    D., 

fees    ■  ■• 

Wm.    J.    Bates,      sherltf, 

conveyance     ••• 

Wm.    J.    Bates,      sheriff, 

i-onveyiuice      

F    A.  Grawn.  M.  D.,   fees 

D.  L.  Tilderquist,  M.  D., 
fees    • 

H.    Hovde.   M.    P..    fe^s.  . 

J.   B.  Weston,  M.  D.,  fees 

Wm.    J.      Bates,      sheriff. 

conveyance      ■  •  • -i- ••' 

E.  B.  Daugherty.  M.  D.. 
fees     W  ^' 

C.  W.  Taylor.  M.  D., 
fees     ;■■■/#■ 

Wm.  J.  liates,  sheriff, 
conveyance     •••••,-Vi* 

KoVit.  Graham,  M.  i->., 
fees     ■■■;■■■ 

J.  A.  McCuen,  M.  D^  fees 

Wm.  J.  Bates.  sheriff, 
conveyance     .  ...     •  •  •  • 

A    J.  Braden.  M.  P..  fees 

<;eo  W.  Pa  vis.  M.  P.. 
fees     

Elziard  Andette,  ser- 
vices     L"  ■ 'li** 

Wm.  J  Bates.  Bherlft. 
conveyance •  •  • 

F.  O.    Slierwin,    M.      P-. 

Wm.   J.      B»tes.      sheriff, 

conveyance     •  • 

W.   H    Salter,  M.  P..  fe^s 
Robt.    Graham,      M.      P., 

ffCS  •••    ••    •" * 

Mary  McCoy.  M.  P..  fees 
P.    E.    Seashore.    M.      P., 

fees     -.i"  •  't^' 

Frank     Lynam,     M.     D-, 

f€*^S       

Wm.  J.  Bates,  sheriff, 
conveyance     ....      •  •  •  • 

I»avid  Graham.  M.  P.. 
fees    ■•     ••■• 

Robt.  Graham,  M.  P., 
fees     ,V''iA' 

E.  W.    Fahey.      M.      P., 

feeu    Vt*  ■  ■  T^* 

F.  J.  I'atton,  M.  P-, 
fees    •,.•■•» 

Wm.     J.       Bates,  sheriff, 

conveyance     • • • 

W.    H.    Salter,      M.      P..   , 

fees    Vi"    "V.' 

C.  L.  Harvey.  M.  P., 
fees     ;•••.-• 

Wm.  J.  Bates,  sheriff, 
conveyance • 

R.  E.  Cavanaugh,  M. 
P..    fees 

E.  B.  Paugherty,  M.  P., 
fees 

Ramsey  county,  ex- 
penses insanity  of 
F.   B.   Poole   

Wadena  county.  ex- 
penses insanity  of  J. 
Nelson   Hart    

Peter  Dunnum.  witness 
fees    

Wm.  J.  Bates,  sheriff, 
conveyance    

A.  C.  Taylor,  M.  P., 
fees 

W    H.  Salter.  M.  P..  fees 

A.  A.  Deslauriers,  M. 
D..    fees    

Marv  Mc«'ov.  M.  P..  fees 

J.  A.  McCuen,  M.  P., 
fees     

67006  W.  H.  Salter.  M.  P..  fees 

67007  S.    C.    McCormick,    M.    P., 

fees .;.•  •  v;" 

67008  Robt.     Graham,      M.    P., 

fees    

67016  J.  J.   Eklund.  M.   P.,  fees 

67017  C.  W.  Taylor,  M.  P..  fees 
67038  W.      J.      Bates,      sheriff. 

convevance    

670C7   W.  H.  Salter.  M.  P.,*fees 

67068  Frank  A.  Grawn,  M.  P., 
fees    

67232  N.  L.  Llnneman,  M.  P., 
fees     

67323  Wm.  H.  Lamson,  serv- 
ices     

67428  Wm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

conveyance  

67429  P.    P.      Murray,    M.    P., 

fees     

67430  F.    C.    Prenning,    M.    P., 

fees  

67521  Wm.  J.  Bates,   sheriff, 

conveyance  

R.  E.  Cavanaugh,  M.  P., 

fees  

Wm.  H.  Salter,  M. 

fees  

McCuen,  M. 


65824 

66S72 

C5925 

66988 

66097 
66107 

66113 
66152 

66153 

66167 

66204 

G6205 

66206 

66207 

66245 

66346 

66347 

66379 

66398 

66399 

66493 

66494 

66495 

66652 

66745 

66746 
66857 

66983 
66984 


67525 
67526 
67533 
67539 


13  00 

4  00 

31  24 

1  36 

1  36 

1  36 

1  36 

Graham, 

Schiick." 

h!  '  Salter,' 

Lyman, 


M. 

m!' 

"m." 

'  M. 


D., 
P.'. 
P*. 
P.". 


P., 
P." 


17  35 

12  20 
7  52 


941 


12 

70 

80 

9  00 

5  00 

2  75 


45 
91 
75 

50 
35 
65 
00 
00 

ir. 

80 
40 


63280 
63281 
63414 

63415 
01416 

6:;4i7 

C3567 

63570 

53639 

63640 
63641 
63667 
63668 

63681 
>-,i747 
6375S 

63782 

63794 
<:3795 
63807 
63863 

G3891 

639S0 
C3991 
63995 
63999 
64124 
64125 
64182 

64183 

64210 
64211 
6424S 
G4353 
64354 
64444 

64477 
64492 

64525 
64578 
64544 

64545 


PROB.VTE    COURT. 
F.  J.  Pat  ton.  M.  P..  fees  \ 
N.   L.   Linneman,  fees... 
C.  E.   .-Vdams.  court  com- 

mis.sioner    fees     

AVm.  R.  Miles,  services. 
Losev  &  Dean,  services. 
I..  D."  Mattson.  services. 
James    McAu'iiff,    M.    P., 

fees     

Wm.     .T.     Bates,     sheriff 

conveyance  

Wm.     J.      Bates,   sheriff, 

conveyance  

S.    C.    McCormick.    fees .  . 

E.  L.  Cheney.  M.  P..  fees 
W.  H.  Salter.  M.  P.,  fees 
Robt.      Graham,      M.    P., 

fees     

J.    B.    Weston,    fees 

C     W.    Tavlor.    fees 

Wm.    J.    Bates,      sheriff, 

convevance    

Wm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

conveyance  

W.  R.  Bagley,  M.  P.,  fees 

A.   J.  Braden.   fees 

S.  H.  Bo'  r,  M.  P.,  fees.  . 
AVm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

conveyance     

Wm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

conveyance     

Dr  L.  Tiblerfiuist.  fees.. 
J.  A.  McCuen.  M.  D..  fees 

F.  J.  Patton,  M.  D.,  fees 
S.   H.  Boyer.  M. 
F.    C.    Dunning, 
Dr.    D.    Murray. 
Wm.     J.    Bates, 

conveyance    . . 
Wm.      J.     Bates, 

conveyance     

W.    H.    Salter,  M.  D.,  fees 

Robt.  Graham.  M.D.,  fees 

Meri.    witness    fees 

Patton,  M.  D..  fees. 

McCuen,   fees. 


15 
15 

00 
90 
17  50 
IS  00 

5  15 

31  00 

31  00 
5  15 


D..   fees 

fees. . . . 

fees. . . . 

sheriff, 

sheriff. 


Oiva 
F.  J 
J.  A 
Wm. 


J.    Bates, 
convevance.  . . 

J.  J.   Eklund.  M. 

Wm.    J.    Bates, 
convevance ... 

W.    R.  Bagley,  M 

W.  H.  Salter,  M. 

E.      W 
fees 


D.      P. 
fees 


Fahey, 
Murray, 


sheriff, 

P.,  fees 
sheriff, 

P.,  fees 

P.,  fees 

M.  P.. 

■  M."  P.*, 


48  47 

31  00 
5  15 
5  15 
5  15 

37  00 

31  00 
5  15 
5  15 
5  15 
5  15 
5  15 
5  15 

3100 

42  47 
5  15 

5  15 
10  00 

6  15 
5  15 

31  00 
10  30 

31  00 
5  15 
5  15 

5  15 

5  15 


67651 
67688 
67689 
67691 
67820 
67821 
67822 


67905 
68024 

6S025 

68092 
68093 

68095 

68175 

68196 

68197 

6821S 
68267 


68297 

68630 

68677 

CS678 

68708 
68744 


P.. 

mV  p.'. 

sheriff, 
sheriff, 
sheriff, 
sheriff, 
"  M.'  P.', 


P. 

P., 


M 


M. 


6  16 

6  15 
10  50 
31  00 

6  15 

6  15 
31  00 

6  15 

5  15 

6  15 

6  15 
81  00 


13 
15 

15 
15 
15 


6  13 
37  00 


31 

5 

6 
5 
6 


00 
15 

15 
15 
15 

00 

15 

15 


65  60 


6 
6 

68 
6 

6 

5 


31  00 

515 

81  00 
5  15 


15 
15 

15 

15 


31  00 
6  15 


68985 

68999 

69000 

69004 

69045 

69046 

69172 

69173 

69178 
69179 
69181 
69182 

69183 
69184 
69185 
69186 
69263 
69270 

69271 

69272 

69273 

70097 

70098 

70099 

70153 

70154 

70155 

70189 
70208 

70298 
70322 

70339 
70340 
70405 

70506 

717L2 

71767 

71986 
71863 
71987 

71990 
71991 
71997 

72020 
72026 
72036 

72098 
72099 
72119 


W.      J.      Bates, 

conveyance     . 
W.      J.      Bates, 

convevance     . 
W.      J.       Bates, 

conveyance 
W.      J.      Bates, 

conveyance 
S.      H 

fees 
J.      J. 


vBoyer, 

Eklund, 

Boyer. 

Linneman, 


sheriff, 
sheriff, 
sheriff, 
sheriff, 
M. "  P.". 


M. 
M. 

'  M. 


P., 
P.', 
P.'. 


lees 
S.      H. 

fees 
N.    L. 

fees 

C.  N.  Tavlor.  M.  P.,  fees 
A.  C.  Tavlor.  M.  P..  fees 
J.  A.  McCuen.  M.  D..  fees 
R.   E.  Cavanaugh,  M.  P., 

fees 

John  Jackola,  M.P..  fees 

C.  Bcrgrolh.  M.  P.,  fees 

D.  D.  Murrav.  M.  D..  fees 
F.   J.   Patton.  M.  D..   fees 

E.  N.  Fahev.  M.  P..  fees 
W.     J.       Bates,       sheriff, 

convevance    

W.  J.  Bates,  slieriff, 
convevance 

James  McAuliffe,  M.  P., 
fees    

C.  A.  Stewart.  M.  P., 
fees    

W.  J.  Bates,  sheriff  con- 
veyance     

W.  J.  Bates,  sheriff,  con- 
veyance     

W.  J.  Bates,  sheriff,  con- 
veyance      

W.  J.  Batt.s,  sheriff,  con- 
veyance 


31  00 

31  00 

43  00 

42  40 

6  15 

6  15 

5"  15 


sheriff,  con- 
sheriff,  con- 


5 
6 
6 
31 
6 


15 
15 
15 
00  I 
15 

5  15 
31  00 

6  15 
5  15 

48  93 

17  95 

12  60 
81  00 


15 
13 

15 
15 

15 
15 


6  15 


6 

6 
5 

73 
5 


15 
15 
15 

47 
15 


6  15 

6  15 

13  53 

124  10 


15 
15 


66  10 


15 


72134 

72240 

73358 

73374 
73377 
73473 
73474 

73493 

73503 

73513 
73565 

73605 
73o24 

73649 

736S9 

73728 

73788 
73821 

73823 
73827 
73828 
73833 

73834 
73[i47 
73957 

73958 

74756 
7il5R 
75218 

75220 

75263 
75264 

75334 

75449 

7.^575 
75576 

75577 
75640 

7.5043 
75673 

75674 
75682 
7  .-.683 
75686 


P. 

sheriff, 

sheriff, 

M.' '  P.', 

P..  fees 

r> 

D. 

M,    P. 


P., 
M. 


fees 
P.. 


P..  fees 
sheriff, 

P.,  fees 
sheriff, 

sheriff, 

m!  "  P.", 

M.' '  D.*, 


P.. 


fees 
P.. 


J.      A. 

fees 
Robt. 
fees 

67552  A.     F. 

fees 

67553  Wm 

fees 
67650   Frank 

fees     

S.   C.    McCormick.  M.  P., 

fees     

J.    H.   Carson,      M. 

fees     

O.    A.      Oredson, 

fees     

Wm.    J.    Bates, 

conveyance     . . 
AVm.    J.     Bates, 

conveyance     . . 
AVm.     J.     Bates, 
ecmveyance     .  . 
Wm.     J.     Bates, 
conveyance    . . 
67904  Frank      Lyman, 

fees     

J.  H.  Carson,  M. 
C.  E.  Hame!,  M. 
Robt.      Graliam, 

fees     

N.  R.  Bagley,  M.  I 
R.  E.  Cavanaugh, 

fees     

AA'm,     J.     Brstes. 
conveyance     . . 
AVm.     J.     Bates, 
conveyance    . . 
J."     A.      McCuen. 

ftes     

AA'm.    PL    Salter. 

fees     

T.   L.   Tilderquist.   M 

fees     

C.  E.  Adams,  court  com- 

mis.'sioner.    fees 

68268%St.  Marys  hospital,  care 

of   insane    patient 

R.      Miller,      intrepreter 

fees     

A\'.      J.      Bates,      sheriff, 

conveyance     

J.      A.      McCuen.    M.    P., 

fees     

Robert    Graham,    M.    P., 

fees     

J.  J.   Eklund,  M.  P..  fees 
Clarence     Taylor,  M.  P., 

fees  

Graham,  M.  P., 


6 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
6 
6 


15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 


31  00 
31  00 
19  10 
19  10 


fees 
fees 
.  P.. 

fees 
P., 


M. 

sheriff, 
sheriff, 
'  M. '  "p.", 

P.'. 

P.', 


15 
15 
15 

15 
15 


5  15 

31  00 

31  00 

5  15 

5  15 

5  15 
10  00 

6  00 
1  12 

62  00 
6  15 


75716 

75847 
75851 

75869 

75870 

75876 
75K77 
75880 
75964 

75965 

76367 

76544 
76545 

76577 
76578 
76589 

76627 
760G1 


76670 
76679 

7C6S6 

76915 

76960 
■('.961 

r7012 


AV.  J.  Bates, 
veyance 

AA'.  J.  Bates. 

veyance  

W.  R.  Bagley.  M.  P..  fees 

R.  E.  Cavanaugh,  M.  P., 
fees  

H.  Ho^vde.  M.  P.,  fees.. 

A\'.  J.  Bates,  sheriff,  con- 
vevance     

R.    Graham.    M.    P.,    fees 

AV.  H.  Salter.  M.  P..  fees 

AA'.  J.  Bates,  sheriff,  con- 
veyance      

C.   E.  Adams,  court  com- 
missioner,  fees    

W.  J.  Bates,  sheriff,  con- 
veyance     

F.    C.    Prenning,    M.    P., 
fees    

Mary  McCoy.  M.  P..  fees 

R.  Graham.  M.   P..  fees. 

John     Jackola,       M.     P., 
fees    

Dr.    J.    A.    McCuen,    fees 

Dr.   AA'm.  H.  Salter,   fees 

AV.  J.  Bates,  sheriff,  con- 
vevance     

N.  R.  Bagley.  M.  P..  fees 

Robt.  Graliam.  M.P..  fees 

AV.  J.  Bat*s.  sheriff,  con- 
vevance     

F.  J.  Patton.  M.  P..  fees. 

J.  H.  Carson,  M.  P..  fees 

AV.    A.    Coventry,    M. 
fees    

AA'm.     J.     Bates, 
conveyance    .  . 

AVm.     J.     Bates. 
conveyu4ice    .  . 

O.     A.     Oredson, 
fees    

J.  J.   Eklund.  M. 
AA'.    Courlnev^    services. 

E.  I^  Cheney.  M.  P..  fees 

F.  C.    Prenning, 
fees    

H.  H.  Hovde,  M. 
C.     A.     Stewart, 

fees    

J.  A.  McCuen.  M. 
AA'm,  J.  Bates, 
convevance  .  . 
AV.  H.  Salter.  M. 
AVm.     J.     Bates, 

conveyance    . .  , 
Wm.     J.     Bates, 

convevance    .  .  . 
IL     E.     AVebster. 

fees    

Pavid     Graham, 

fees    

J.  J.  Eklund,  M. 
P.     P.     Murray, 

fees    

AA'.  H.  Salter.  M. 
F.   J.    Patton.  M. 
H.   Hovde.  M.  P. 
Robt.    Graham. 

fees    

J.  A.  McCuen.  M. 

John  Jackola,  M. 

AA'm.     J.     Bates. 

conveyance    .  . 

Wm.     J.     Bates, 

convevance    .  . 

AV.  H.  Salter.  M. 

J.  J.   Eklund.  M. 

AVm.     J.     Bates, 

conveyance    . . 

Robt.     Graham, 

•  fees    

J.  A.  McCuen.  M. 
Robt.     Graham, 

fees    

AA'm.     J.     Bates, 
conveyance     . . 
F.    C.    Prenning. 

fees    

J.  I?.  AA'eston.  M. 
Robert    Graham, 

fee.s    

C.  F.  McComb,  M.  P..  fees 
AA'm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

convevance     

A.  J.  Bradtn.  M.  P..  feea 
AA'.      R.      Bagley,    M.    P., 

fees     

J.  A.  McCuen,  M.  D.,  fees 
P.  Graham,  M.  P..  fees.. 

D.  Graham.  M.  D.,  fees.  . 
R.  E.  Cavanaugh,  M.   P., 

fees     

S.  H.  Rover.  M.  P..  fees. 
J.  B.  AVeston.  M.  P..  fees 
AVm.     J.     Bates, 

conveyance     . . 
F.    C.    Prenning, 

fees 

AA'.    A.    Coventry. 

fees    

C.    L.    Hanev.  M. 

A.  L.  Braden.  M. 

J.  J.   Eklund.  M. 

C.  E.  Adams,  court  rom- 

mission<^r,     services..' 
St.        Mai*ys        hospital, 

board  and   care  of  in- 
sane   patient     

AN'm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

conveyance  

p.  D.  Murray.  M.  D..  fees 
R.   E.  Cavanaugh,  M.  P., 

fees     

AV.  H.  Salter.  M. 
Frank  I-\nam.  M. 
AA'm.     J.     Bates, 

convevance  . . 
E.  AV.  Fabry.  M. 
AA'm.     J.     Bates, 

conveyance     

Mary  McCoy.  M.  P..  fees 


P 
P. 


fees 
fees 

fees. . 

M.    P., 


P.;  fees 
1)..  fees 
sheriff, 

sheriff, 

P.,  fees 
P.,  fees 
sheriff, 

*  ii.' '  P.", 


P.. 
M. 


fees 
P.. 


sheriff, 
'  k.  ■  P.', 


P.. 
M. 


fees 
P.. 


sheriff, 

"  M. "  P.", 

M.'  P.", 

P.,  fees 
P.,  fees 
P..  fees 


P.,  fees 
P..  fees 
sheriff, 

P.,  fees 
sheriff. 


15 
15 
15 
15 


5  15 

6  15 
5  15 

5  15 

6  15 
5  15 

37  00 

17  60 

5  15 

E  15 

37  00 

19  60 

3100 

19  60 

31  00 

35  50 
5  15 

5  15 
5  15 

20  10 

5  15 

6  15 

31  00 

5  00 

42  47 


15 
15 
15 

15 
15 
15 


31  00 
5  15 

5  15 

67  10 

6  15 
5  15 

5  15 
81  30 
31  00 

6  15 
5  15 

50  00 
5  15 


6425S 

64259 

64260 

64261 

642G2 

64263 

64262 

64265 
64266 

64142 

64387 
64150 
64453 

64454 
64  4  57 

64476 

64482 

64502 

64902 

64903 

64904 

64905 

64906 

G4907 

64908 

64909 

64910 

61911 

64912 

64913 

64914 
64915 
64916 
64917 

64918 

65807 

65808 

65809 

65810 

65811 

65812 

65813 

65814 

65  M  5 

65816 

65817 

65818 

65819 

65820 
65821 


au- 


au- 


P., 

b.'. 


John  H.  Crane.  M.  P., 

deputy  coroner  fees.. 
G.  N.  Butchard,  deputy 

coroner  fees  

J.  J.  Gleason,   deputy 

coroner  fees  

A\.  P.  Abbott,  M.  P. 

topsv  fees  ...... 

E.  L.  Tuohy.  M.  P.. 

topsy  fees  

W.  R.  Schmidt,  M. 

autopsy  fees  .... 
P.  E.  Seashore,  M. 

witness  fef  s  

Ed  Pahl,   witness  fees   . 
Purkan      &       Crawford, 

burial    

C.    P.    Patterson,      juror 

fees 

Walter   AVy.    juror    fees. 
J.   J.    l-'arley.   juror  fees. 
Martin    Shannahan,    jur- 
or   fees 

Thos.    Feaks,    juror    fees 
R.    C.    McKinley, 

fees  

Hearst, 


15  90 
37  90 
6  4o 
6  20 
24  SO 
11  10 


W.   F. 

fees 
S.   H. 

fees 
P.   S. 

fees 
J.   A. 


Bruen, 
'  McKay,' 
McCuen, 


juror 
juror 
juror 
juror 
m!  '  i)'.'. 


M.  P., 

fees. . 

deputy 


M. 

'm. 


P., 
P.' 


deputy 

witness 

witness 

burial. . 
burial . .. 

burial 

Crawford, 


P.. 

ix,' 
,'  'm.' 
'p., 
'p'. 
'  M.' 

'm. 


au- 
au- 

•  •  •• 

P.. 
au- 
au- 

'P.'. 

'p.'. 


62  00 
b  15 

31  00 

31  00 

3  15 


6 
6 

15 
5 
6 
5 

6 
B 
5 


15 
15 

45 
15 
15 
15 

15 

15 
15 


37  00 

IR  10 

5  15 

6  15 

49  60 


15 
15 


6  15 
81  00 


5 
6 

5 
6 

66 
5 

6 
6 
6 
6 

5 
5 
5 


15 
15 

15 
15 

So 
15 

15 
15 

15 
15 

15 
15 
15 


62  00 
5  13 

5  15 

6  15 

5  15 
10  30 

6  00 

48  00 

31  00 
5  15 

5  15 
5  15 
5  15 

31  00 
5  15 

31  00 
5  15 


Dr.  David  Graham,  M.  P., 

fees   

AA'm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

conveyance  

E.   B.   Daughert.v,   M.  P., 

fees    

John  Jackola.  M.  P.,  fees 
John    B.    AVeston,    M.   P., 

fees     

AVm.     J.     Bates,     sheriff, 

conveyance     


5  15 
81  GO 

6  15 
6  15 

5  15 

31  00 


65822 
65823 
66115 
66116 
66199 
66478 

66479 

66480 

66481 

66482 

66483, 

66484 

66485 

66486 

66487 

66488 

66489 

GG490 

66491 

67306 

67307 

67308 

67309 

67310 

67311 

67312 

67313 

67314 
67315 
67316 
67317 
67318 
67514 
67609 

C7731 
67732 

67853 

67917 

68272 

68273 

68274 

68276 

68277 

68278 

68279 

68280 

6S281 

68282 

6S2S3 


M.  P., 

fees  . . 

.  M.  D., 

lees  . . 

M.  P., 

fees  .  . 
deputy 

deputy 

'm.'  "p.", 

P.,  au- 
P.,  au- 

M. 

au- 
au- 
au- 
and 
'  'p.'. 


au- 


M. 

M. 


P., 
P.," 
P.]  au- 


au- 


Crawford, 


Horgan,  burial 
Lavick,  burial 
&  Son.  burial 
burial.  . 


fees. . 
juror 

fees.  . 
juror 

juror 

juror 

■  P., 


M 


Total  probate  court.. $  4.019  07 


GS745  Robert 

fees  

68747  AV.      A.   Coventry,   M.   P., 

fees     

68748  A.  J.  Braden.  M.  P.,  fees 

68773  W      J.      Bates,      sheriff, 

conveyance     

68774  J.  B.   AA'eston.  M.  P.,  fees 

68775  F.    J.    Patton,   M.  P..  fees 
68S04  T.    L.    Chapman,    M.    P., 

fees     

68805   C.    L.    Codding,       M.     P., 

fees     

68828  AA'.      J.      Bates,      sheriff, 

convevance     

68900  Wm.    H.    Salter,      M.    P., 

fees     

68901  J.  A.  McCuen.  M.  P.,  fees 
68925  Jas.  M.  McAuliffe,  M.  P., 

fees     

68930  O.      A.      Oredson,    M.    P., 

fees     

68931  N.   R.   Bagley,   M.  P.,  fees 

68981  J.    M.    Tufte,    M.  P.,    fees 

68982  Pavid     Graham.     M.    P., 

fees     

68984  AA'.   J.   Bates,   sheriff, 
conveyance  


15 
15 

15 

15 

5  13 
5  15 

31  00 
5  15 

5  15 

6  15 
6  15 

31  00 


15 
13 


5  15 


6  15 
3100 


63399 

63400 

03401 

63402 

63403 

C3404 

63405 

63406 

63407 

63408 

63409 
63410 
63411 
63412 

63413 

63698 

63963 

63981 

64121 

64142 

6414S 

64144 

64257 


•AI.  P., 

fees . . 
.AI.  D„ 
fees. . 
P.,  au- 

b.,  au- 


CORONERS*  INQL'EST. 
J.  A.  -AlcCuen.  M.  P., 

coroner  fees  

John    H.    Crane,    M.    P.. 

deputy  coroner  fees. . 
J.     J.     Gleason,      deputy 

coroner    fees 
W.    R.    Sclimidt, 

deput.v   coroner 
Robert    i;  rah  am, 

deputy  coroner 
AN'.  P.  Abbott.  M. 

topsy    fees     .  . 
E.   L.   Tuohy,  M. 

topsy    foes    

A.  J.  Braden,  M.  P.,  au- 
topsy  fees   

Sandford       Southerland, 

witness    fees    

Evan      Hurty,       witness 

fees    

John  Mesburg,  burial.. 
J.  J.  Gleason,  burial  .  . 
P.  Hogan,  conveyance. 
John  Connolly,  trans- 
script  of  testimony... 
C.      Hewitt.       transcript 

of  testimony    

Matt   Malosovlch,     juror 

fees   .  .  •. 

A.    L.    Bergeson, 

fees    

Nealy, 


49  85 
11  10 
21  30 
16  75 
6  45 
6  20 

6  20 

7  32 
1  12 


P 

.'  'm'. 
'm'.  ' 
'm.' 

'm." 
'b.. 
'm".  " 

,  ^f- 
'  'm! 


cor- 


P.. 

b." 

P.'. 

b.', 

au- 
P", 
P.". 
P.', 


11 

4 


1  12 
6  53 

70 
00 


Charles 

fees 
E.     J. 

fees 
Peter 

fees 
L.    C. 

fees 
Clyde 
J.     A. 


Mellette, 

Mitchell',' 

Sililivan. 


juror 
Juror 
juror 


juror 
juror 


Blaugh. juror  fees 
McCuen,  M.  P., 


70 

10 

12 

12 

12 

12 

12 

12 
12 


68284 

682.i5 

622S6 
68287 

69008 

69240 

69241 

69242 

69243 

60244 

69245 

69246 

69247 

69267 

69268 

70075 

70309 

70321 

70542 

70548 

70549 

70550 

70551 

70559 

70566 

70574 

71942 

72316 


coroner  fees 


77  90 


coroner     fees. . 
Jno.     H.     Crowe, 

deputy    coroner 
G.    N.    Butchart, 

coroner     fees 

H.     G.     Seeley.      M.      P., 

deputy   coroner   fees.. 

W.      R.      Schmidt,   M.   P., 

deputy    coroner   fees.. 

J.     J.     Gleason,     deputy 

coroner     fees 

Pr.    B.    S.    Adams,      au- 
topsy    fees. . 
C.    G.    Shlpman, 
autopsy     fees 
E.      L.      Tuohy. 
autopsy     fees 
M.    E.    Gleason, 
coroner     fees 
Oscar    Wilberg, 

fees     

John     AA'oodley, 

fees     

Lundell    &   Son, 
John    Mesberg. 
W.  J.  Ryder, 
Purkan       & 

burial     •^"  ■  ■' 

W.    H.   Crawford   &   Son, 

burial     •  •• 

J.     A.     McCuen,      M.     P., 

coroner  fees   

Robt.    Graham,      M.     P., 
deputy   coroner   fees.. 
Geo.     N.     Butchart.    dep- 
uty  coroner   fees 

H.  G.  Seely,  deputy  cor- 
.  oner     fees. ... 
E.  AV.  Fahey,  M. 

topsy     fees.. 
P.    Graham,    M 

topsy    fees. . . . 
AV.    A.    Coventry 
autopsy     fees. 
E.    L.   Tuohy,    M. 
topsy     fees. . . 
O.      Parker,    M. 
topsv     fees. . . 
Chas.    F.   Nelson, 
autopsy    fees. 
Geo.    T.    Ayres, 

autopsy     fees •  •  • 

C.   Hewitt,   stenographer 

fees     ,••■-■* 

Purkan       &      Crawford, 

burial    

AA'.  J.  Rvder.  burial.  .  .  . 
tiiwabik    Hardware    Co., 

burial 

E.  Mathison.  burial.... 
J  Flemming.  burial... 
Piill    Plough,    juror    fees 

Ed  Casey,  juror  fees 

AA'm.  Kealy.  juror  fees.. 
J.      A.     McCuen,     M.     P., 

coroner  fees  .  . 

Jno.     H.    Crowe. 

deputv  coroner 

Geo.  N. 'Butchart 

deputy  coroner 

W.     R.    Schmidt. 

deputy  coroner 
M.     E.    Gleason, 

coroner    fees    . 
J.    J.    Gleason. 

coroner  fees   .  . 
W.   A.   Coventry, 

autopsy    lees 
E.   L.  Tuohy,  M. 

topsy    fees    . . 
A\'.  E.  Judson,  M 

topsy    fees    

Alexander     Barclay, 

P.,  autopsy  fees.  . 
S.   H.    Boyer,   M.   P., 

topsy    fees    

O.  A.  Oredson,  M.  P., 

topsy  fees  -tUW' 
n.  G.  Seeley,  M.  P., 

topsv    fees     

Alfred    Riff,    Juror 
witness    fees    .... 

J.     A.     McCuen.     M. 
coroner    fees    ........ 

Geo.   N.   Butchart.  M.  P., 

deputv  coroner   fees.. 

Jno.     H.    Crowe.    M.     P., 

deputv   coroner  fees.. 

M.     E.    Gleason,     deputy 

coroner    fees 
P.    Graham.    M 

topsv    fees 

E.  L.  Tuohy, 

topsy    fees 

H.   G.   Seeley, 

topsy    fees 

Purkan       & 

burial 
Flood   & 
Jas.     F. 
Lindahl 

John    Mesberg, 
Alex  McGilvray   .  . 
John  Clark,  juror 
Burt      Brusvick, 

fess     

Louis  Clous,  juror 
Fred       Aronson, 

foes 

Martin        O'Kjas, 

fees 

John     Brandvald, 

fees    

J.    A.    McCuen. 

coroner   fees    

Geo.  N.  Butchart.  M.  P., 

coroner    fees 

H    G.   Seeley.  ^I. 

oner   fees   .... 

John     H.    Crowe 

coroner    fees 
J.    J.    Gleason, 
coroner    fees 
Robt.    Graham, 
autopsy    fees 
Wm.    P.    Abbott, 
,    autopsy  fees   . 
"C.  AV.  Taylor,  M 
tonsy  fees    .  .  . 
C.    AV.    Parker, 

autopsy  fees   . 
Chas.    F.    Nelson 

autopsy    fees 
Geo.     F.     Ayre.s,. 

autopsy  fees  

Jas.   Powling.   burial.... 
Purkan       &        Cr.iwrorl, 

burial    

Lindau    &    Son. 
Chas.   Luiulberg, 

fees 

M.    E.    Fanning. 

fees    

J     A.    McCuen, 

coroner    fees     ••• 

W     P^.    Schmidt,      M.      P.. 

deiiuly    coroner    fees.. 

H     G.     Seeley.       M.       P., 

deputy   coroner   fees.. 

J.    J.      Gleason, 

coroner    fees 

M.     E.     Glea.son, 

coroner    fees 
Paul   Ashley,   M 
tojisy    fees     . 
E.       .Matheson, 

burial 

Biwabik  Hardware  com- 
pany,   burial     

Robt.    Graham,      M.      P., 

autopsy    fees     

J     AV.    Murphy,      witness 

fees    

Alexander  Rud.     witness 

fees    

Andrew     Haw  k  I  n  s  o  n, 

juror  fees    

Joseph      Backus,      juror 

fees 

John    H.    Crowe,    deputy 

coroner  fees   

Geo.    N.    Butchart,    dep- 
uty coroner  fees 

H.  G.  Seeley,  deputy  cor- 
oner   fees    

J.     A.    McCuen,    coroner 

fees     

J.     J.    Gleason, 

coroner  fees   . 
R.    L.    Burns,    M. 

topsy    fees     

Purkan  &  Crawford,  un- 
dertaker   fees     

A.     J.     Braden,     witness 

fees    

August     AA'alberg, 

ness    fees     

J.  A.     McCuen,  M 
coroner  fees  ... 


burial.  . 
,  witness 

witness 

'ii.  "b', 


deputy 

deputy 

P..  au- 

'm.  ■ '  b.'. 


1  12 

1 

10 

r, 

70 

1 

20 

2 

12 

2 

24 

20 

20 


1 

1 
1 
1 


deputy 
P.,  au- 


wit- 

■  ■  b.'. 


20 
20 
20 
20 
83  30 

10  90 

11  10 

9  10 
42  80 
26  80 

6  00 
6  00 

12  40 
15  00 

2  12 

1  12 
3B  00 
22  00 
17  50 

44  00 

12  14 

88  95 

17  90 

27  20 

8  15 

12  40 
6  20 
6  20 

13  52 
6  00 

10  90 

6  00 

16  50 

35  02 

7  00 

17  50 
54  56 
37  75 

1  12 
1  12 
1  12 

39  65 

64  10 

22  35 

21  35 
14  90 
60  50 
12  40 

6  20 

7  32 
6  20 
6  20 


72317 

72318 

72319 

72320 

72321 

72322 

72323 

72324 

72325 

72326 

;2327 

72328 

72329 

72330 

72331 

ft 

72332 
72333 
74192 

74995 

74996 

74997 

7499S 

74999 

75000 

75001 

75002 

75003 

175004 

75005 
75006 


P., 

b.'. 
b.', 
b.', 


M. 

'm. 

M.' 

'm. 

P.,' 

'm. 

P.. 
P..' 
P., 

interpreter 
witness 
witness 


II. 


au- 


P. 


au- 


au- 


au- 


7  5007 
75008 
75009 
75010 


W.    R.     Schmidt, 
deputy    fees    .  . 
John    H.    Crowe, 
deputy    fees    . . 
J.     J.     Gleason, 

deputy    fees    •  . 
Robt.      Graham, 

autopsy    fees    . 
E.    L.    Tuohy,   M. 
topsy  fees    ... 
AA'.    A.    Coventry, 

autopsy    fees 
Paul    Ashley,  U. 

topsy     fees 
J.   W.    Reggs. 
topsy     fees 
L.  Q.  Greeley, 
topsy    fees 
Elie     Maki. 
fees     .... 
Jack       Predos. 

fees    

Richard    Poraii. 

fees    

Mrs.        Anna        AA'alberg. 

witness    fee?     

H.       Sienberg.       witness 

fees     

Joseph     Le     Beau,     wit- 
ness   fees     

Flood  &  Horgan.  burial. 
R.  U.  Forward,  burial .  . 
Cha.«.     L.     Feriid,     juror 

fees    

J.  A.  McCuen,  M.  P.,  Cor- 
oner   fees     

John    H.    Crowe.    M.    P.. 
deputv    coroner    fees.. 
M.     E.     Gleasc  n.     M.     P., 
deputv    coroner    fees.. 
J.     J.     Gleasor,      M.      P., 
deputv    coroner    fees.. 
H.  G.  Seeley.  U.  P..  dep- 
utv coroner  fees   

E.   L.   Tuohy.    M  .P..   au- 
topsy   fees     

N.   L.    Lonlemjux,  M.    P., 

autopsy  fees    '. . 

Edward   Purkan,   autop- 
sy   fees    

Flood  &  Horgan.  burial. 
Durkan  &  Cran-ford,  bur- 
ial     

J.   Mesberg.   b  arial 

Frank      Faber,      witness 

fees    

Ely  Borach.  witness  fees 
Mike  Bande,  vltness  fees 
Joe  Rapich,  witness  fees 


18  16 

38  50 

6  45 

7  00 
18  60_ 

6  20 
6  20 
6  20 
6  20 
1  10 
1  10 


10 
10 
10 
10 


15  00 
13  50 

1  20 

100  70 

16  75 

23  60 

15  70 

16  35 

24  80 

12  40 

6  20 
30  00 

9  55 


Co 
Co 


Co 


Bande, 


wellness 


75240 
75271 

75330 

75340 
75346 
75362 

75376 
75422 
75459 

75460 

75461 


75462 
75474 

73475 


juror  fees 
Donovan, 


juror 


12  40 
■  5  65 
2  36 
56  10 
34  90 
10  90 
32  45 


C 
12 
12 


20 
40 


29  00 
45  00 
80  7  5 
17  50 
17  50 
2.25 
1  50 


Mary 

fees    

C.  G.  FIroved 
Capt.       John 

juror   fees    .... 
David       Hudson, 

fees    

E.  A.  Pierce,  juror  fees. 
G.  Persmich,  juror  fees. 
Anton     Ring}  rud,     juror 

fees    

P.  Hogan.  juior  fees.... 
John  T.  Paw    juror  fees 

F.  E.     Carpenter,     wit- 
ness  fees    

H.    J.    Griswold,    witness 

fees    

AA'.      J.     Smith,     witness 

fees    

Thos.  Lee.  w  tness  fees. 
Louis   Belanger,    witness 

fees    

E.    J.    Millet  te,    witness 

fees    

75483  J.  A\'.  Rowle\.  juror  fees 
75503  A.  Levine,  jv  ror  fees... 
75514   AVni.        Lawr.Miz,        juror 

fees    •. 

75535  C.  G.  Firovec  .  juror  fees 

75593  Leonard   Gi.tes,   juror 

fees  

75594  AA'.  E.  Browr .  juror  fees 
75632  P.  Bennett,  uror  fees.. 
75692  John  G.   Canpbell,  juror 

fees    

75848  John  Grochowsky,  Juror 
fees    

75942  .1.     A.     McCuen,     M.     P., 

coroner  fei's    

75943  A\'.     R.     Schmidt.     M.     P., 

deputy  fee'*  

75944  H.   G.   Seeley,   deputy 

fees  

75945  T.    L.    Chapman,    M.    P., 

autopsy    fees    

75946  E.    L.      Twohy,      M.      P., 

autopsy    f?es    

75947  E.  L.  Cheney,  M.  P.,  au- 

topsy   feef;     

L.      Tilderqi  ist,      M.    P., 

autopsy   f ?es    

C.    AA^    Bray,    M.    P.,    au- 

tops.v    fees;     

Mary    Talonen,    witness 

fees     ....    

Rose        Sal£,        witness 

fees     

Hilma   Mattson,    witness 

fees     

H.     J.     Huber,     witness 

fees    

John     Talonen,     witness 

fees      

J.     T.     Tern  :>le,     witness 

fees      

Henry      Ril"?y,      witness 

fees     

Albert    Temple,    witness 

fees     

E.   C.    Erick  son,   witness 

fees     

Durkan       &      Crawford, 

burial     

Flood  &  Horgan.  burial 
J.  J.  Gleason,  burial.... 
M.  E.  Gleason.  burial... 
E.  Matheson,  burial.... 
J.  A.  Gilson,  juror  fees 
Henry  Markel,  jurol-  fies 
Thos.        Olafson,       juror 

fees      

J.   A.    Linsbv,   juror   fees 
T.      M. 
fees 
A.   F. 
fees 


Puluth,    South    Shore    & 
Atlantic    railway    .... 

Antoniza  Rihar    

John    Blod    

Ed    Hicks    

Charles    Schaffer    

Alice   Borg 

James    Blair    

Frank  Anderson    

A.  Graliam.  M.   P 

M.    Haug    

Puluth   Public  Market   . 

Henry    Folz 

<^   Nelson    

John    Moir    

M.   M.  Gasser  Co 

Lundmark    &    Franson.. 

M.  M.  Gasser    

Rustad  &  Johnson 

C.  A.  .sioseliup 

R.    H.    Rathbun    

J.    AVest    &   Son 

A.    Amundson     

C.    AV.    Gallagher    

H.  R.   Patterson    

Neff   Bros 

Duluth    &    Iron       Range 
Itaiiroad    company     .  . 

Olson   &    Kauppi 

Jolinson    &    Larson 

Christensen.    Mendenhall 

&     Co 

Stone-Ordean-A>ells 
Stone-Ordean-AVells 
Fred    AV.    Erickson  .  .  . 
Fred   AV.    Erickson  .  . . 

F.   A.   Patrick  &  Co.  . 
C.    AA'.    Davidson 

Kellev    Hdw.    Co 

Dululli    Edison    Elec. 

St.    Germain    Br<'S 

J.    Kolling  &   Co 

G.    Ostby 

Lukes    hospital 

H.    AVitt   Co 

Mary's    hos-piial 

Devaney    &    Jordan 

Gust     Jarve 

Robert     Lueck 

Pittsburgh   Coal   Co 

Mrs.    M.    Hock 

C.    B.    Niinan 

10  00 '6^682  J.    P.    Flynn 

03683   Panton  &   Wliite  Co 

Gronseth    &    Olson 

T.    A.    Scarlett 

Belsey    &    Peterson 

Martin     Spellman 

AV.    B.    Logan 

AN'.    B     Logan 

Gvistafson      Bi'ts 

Swanson    k    St<  lire 

Wright -Clarkson      Merc. 
Co     

Mrs.   S.   L.   Johnson 

Elv  Finnish  Stock  Co... 

J.    S.    Rich. 

S.   Riokin    

Iron     Range    Cash    Gro- 
cerv    

Clyde   Iron   AA'orks 

J.  M.  Martin    

Northern   Elec.  Co 

Children's   Home    

Childrens   Home 

C.   F.   Jilmson    

Marshall -AVelis  Hdw.  Co. 

Mork  Bros 

M.  J.  Hoff  

Haldol  a  Olson  

Martin  Lavell  

P.  Mainella  

Mainelia  


63520 

63547 

e354S 

63549 

63550 

63551 

635.52 

6  3  5  5  o 

G3563 

635C4 

€3576 

63377 

C3578 

63579 

63580 

63581 

63582 

63583 

6  3  5  S  5 

€3586 

63587 

63591 

63592 

C3606 

baco  2 

63608 

63609 
63610 
63611 

63612 

63C13 

63614 

63615 

0:!616 

C3G22 

63624 

63625 

63626 

63627 

63628 

63G29 

63630 

63631 

636?e 

63633 

63634 

63635 

6o636 

63642 


200a 
25  00 

80  00 

20  00 

40  00 

60  00 

35  00 

40  00 

182  30 

111  25 

IC  00 

16  00 

4  00 

12  00 

8  00 

4  00 

4  00 

4  00 

4  00 

16  00 


wmt*t 


L 


■- 


00 

05 
00 
50 
00 

33 
00 
00 


"1^ 


12  10 
53  11 
43tt0 


11 

8 
73 
1; 

3 
57 


H. 
J. 
St. 
AA'. 

St. 


00 
70 

70 
70 

70 
20 


1  20 


20 
20 
20 

20 
20 
20 


2  12 

2  12 


63684 
63685 
63686 
63687 
63688 
63689 
63690 
63691 
63692 

63693 
63694 
63696 
63697 
63701 


2  12 
2  12 


20 
20 

20 
20 

20 
20 
20 

20 

20 


83  95 

27  65 

6  05 

12  40 


75948 

75949 

75950 

73951 

75952 

75953 

75954 

75955 

75956 

75957 

75958 

75959 

75960 
75961 
75962 
75063 
76969 
76970 
76971 

77000 
77001 

77002 


11 
6 
6 
6 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 


96 
12 
1  96 
196 

1  96 

1  96 

36  27 
15  00 
33  60 
11  85 


63702 

63720 

63721 

63722 

63723 

63724 

63725 

03745 

63746 

63754 

63761 

63762 

63763 

63764 

63765 

03766 

63767 

63768 

03770 

63771 

63772 

63776 

63785 

63780 

63787 

63788 

C37S9 

63805 
63858 
6S911 
63915 
04131 
64133 
04134 
64135 
64136 
64137 
64138 
64139 
r4140 
64153 
04164 
64168 
64169 
04172 
64184 
64185 
64186 

64187 
64188 
64189 

64195 
64196 
64197 
64198 
64199 
64207 


P. 

Dr 

M. 

C. 

E. 

J 


57 
1 


1 
1 

1 

1 

1 

60 

15 

7 

11 

21 

5 


50 
50 

50 

50 

50 

65 

70 


BrC'nson, 
Rocicwell, 


juror 
juror 


01 
20 
20 

20 
20 

20 

20 


Total   coroner 
quests  


s 


in- 


3.336  57 


6  20 
6  20 
6  00 
6  45 

fi  on 

17  30 

30  on 

17  50 
1  12 
1  10 

51  95 


IS- 


18.395  36 
11,946  14 
11;. 549  43 
12,645  00 

6.380  00 
14,798  71 

3.000  0(^ 
1.967  87 
6.224  50 
2.974  15 
4,500  00 

6.843  34 
8,400  00 

2.4  60  00 
3,306  00 

7.884  9S 


32 

S 

21 


90 
05 
35 


10  50 
-6  20 
95  00 


RECAPITULATION  OF  ORPERS 
SUED  ON  COUNTY  GENERAL 
FUND. 

Auditors  and   cle:ks $ 

Treasurers    and    clerks 

Clerk    of    court   and   clerks... 

Register   of   deedsi   and    clerks 

Examiner  of  titles  and  dep- 
utv register  of  titles 

Sheriff    and    depi.ties. .  . .  .  .  . . 

Superinte.ident  of  sch.ools 
and    cler  < 

Inspector   of   mines 

Probate   judge   and   clerks... 

Juvenile     court 

Judges   of   district   court 

County  attorney  and  assist- 
ants       

County    commiss  oners.  ...  .  . . 

Fireman,  janitor  and  watch- 
man      

Jailor    and    matrm ..•■ 

Fuel,  repairs  and  general  ex- 
penses    courthouse... 

Light,  fuel,  repairs  and  gen- 
eral exptnses  county 
jail      

Blanks,  books  and  stationery 

Printing     •••;•• \i- 1,' 

Register  of  births  and  deaths 

Election    expenses 

AVolf    bounty 

Fire     wardens 

Traveling  expenses  of  deputy 
sheriffs,    ?tc 

Boarding    prisoners 

Miscellaneous     expenses 

Courthouse    sinking*  fund.... 

Deputv  sheriffs,    Jistrict  court 

Grand'  Jurors,    district    court. 

Petit  jurors    district  court... 

AVitnesses.    district    court.... 

Miscellaneous,    district    court 

Jurors,    munkipcl    court 

Witnesses,   muni  :ipal   court.. 

Judges  and  constables,  mu- 
nicipal    court 

Justice    court 

Probate     court 

Coroner's     inque  st 


3.062  7 
11.714  2 
5.731  2 
1.377  50 
1,870  01 
4.199  00 
26  00 

5.686  14 

11.570  40 

20,983  17 

145,751  05 

624  00 

1.293  50 

19.1^2  00 

7.981  92 

9,346  34 

3.207  27 

779  40 


1.305 

941 

4.019  07 

3,336  55 


87 

57 


17 
11 
1 
1 
1 
1 


50 
65 
10 
10 
10 
10 


40  40 

33  50 

8  15 

78  70 

21  00 

12  00 

30  00 

1  12 

1  10 

88  80 


Add 
Add 


Total  -.varrants  is- 
sued on  revenue  fund  I3S8.8G4  45 

refunds ;l;.;.i;,  495  44 

refund    ord  E-r    No.    76977 

erroneously     charged  3  22 


64  20s 

64323 

64324 

64325 

6432^ 

64327 

64  3  28 

04330 

04331 

0  4  332 

04  333 

64336 

0433V 

04G3S 

64  339 

64310 

64341 

f  4  342 

04343 

rf345 

14348 

G4349 

04  350 

04351 

04  358 

6  4  3. '.9 

64360 

64361 

04  362 

04303 

0  4  301 

04305 

04306 

64367 

043.-S 

643u9 

04370 

64371 

04  372 

1:4:1 7  3 

(4374 

04:J75 

04370 

04377 

o  4 1  >  I  S 

64383 

0  4  ".8  4 

04385 

G438S 

64389 

04  390 

04  391 

04392 

64399 

64400 

04411 

64412 

64425 

64126 

64427 

64428 

64430 

64431 

64432 

64433 

64434 

64445 

64451 

64461 

C4462 

64463 


.  J.  H.  Crowe 

E.  Brown    

t'.    Berquist    

L.  Toomey    

E.   Foubi.<-ter 

(^oolidge-Schussler  Co... 

W.  J.   liyan    

First    Nat.    Bank 

Nels    .'.    Beiistn    

J.   E.   Carlson    

Thos.    Ji  nson    

Thos.    Jenson    

L.  R.  Martin    

Aurora    Hdw.    Ac    Furni- 
ture  Co 

Chas.  Buyck   

Gustafson  Bros 

Frank   Brand    

Mike  .\matuzio    

A.    P.   Cook    

Frank    Anderson     

Clias.    Schaeller    

Jos      Blair     

Anrle     Anderson     

Edward    Hicks     

Alice    Borg    

John     Blod     

Jos.    Legare     

Chas.    Sliogian     

^I.    Haug     

W.  L.  Lang 

AV.  L.  Long 

I.    Jent-.-.ft     

G.    A.   Hjupe 

Stone-Ordean-AVells 
Duluth     Universal 

company    

F.  A  Patrick  Co  . 
F.  AA'.  Erickson  .  . . 
Duluth      Universal 

company     

O.  F    Collier 

F.  A.  AVaUhousen   

Duluth     Public    Market. 

Nefi   Bros    

Haldora    Olson     

Duplex       Manufacturing 

company 

C.  AA'.     P.ividson 

Helmer    Hendrickson    . . 

D.  P.    McKay    

Kelley    Hardware    Co... 

Frerker  Bros    

Henry   Folz    ... • 

f-tewart    Transfer    Co... 

Norman    Johnson    

Nornuin    .tohnson     ••••■• 

Duluth   &  I.  R.  R-  R- 


00 

00 

73 

00 

66 

86 

60 

8  00 

4  00 

141  25 

2  87 

18  00 

1  75 

44  00 

4  00 

170  31 

4  00 

31  00 

4  00 

14  31 

8  00 

1  25 

4  00 

4  00 

8  00 

4  00 

4  00 

16  00 

20  00 
12  00 

4  00 
20  00 

4  00 

F  00 
6  25 

3  60 
6  00 

43  20 
69  11 

4  00 
25  35 

4  00 

4  00 
20  00 

4  00 

4  00 

4  UO 
10  80 

2  05 

4 

5 

4 
50 
17 

4 
12 
12 

4 


« 

J 


Co. 

Mill 


Mill 


See 


balance  sheet  for  total 
debit  entries  to  rev- 
enue   fund $389,363  11 

Deduct  warrants  for  court- 
house site  temporar- 
ily drawn  on  revenue 
fund     145,751  05 


Net 


charges 
nue 


to   County   reve- 

furd     $243.612  06 


Outstanding    warrants $     1,744  51 


63270 
03274 
63279 
63295 
63296 
63336 
03337 
63518 
63519 


COU'>JTY   POOR. 

A.  C.  Cook 

AV.   L.   Long    

Louis    Jertoff    

Carl     Mainella     

Carl   Mair  ella    

G.    A.    Eai  on     

Charles    Shogran    . .  . . 

O.  V.   Collins    

Charles  Euyck  


131 

842 

83 


30 

00 

75 

8  00 

4  00 

26  70 

95  00 

25  00 

8  00 


64464 
044G5 
64466 
64467 
64468 
64488 
64i89 
64493 
64  505 
6450S 
64512 
64513 
64514 
64527 
64528 
64542 
64546 
64547 
64548 
64549 
64580 
64646 
64670 
64693 
64805 
64809 
64820 


1 


i 


Co. 
Marshnll-AA'elis  Hdw.  Co. 
Marshall -AVells  H.'.w.  Co. 
Sundeen  &  Johnson  .  .  . 
St.   Luke's    Hospital    .  . . 

E    L.  Toomey    

Great    Northern  Railway 

Pittsl.urirl.    Coal    Cc 

Devancv    &    Jordan     . . . 

H.    R.    Patterson    

Zenith     Telephone    Co.. 

C.    B.    Nunan    

Carlson  &  Jolmson  .... 
•^arlson  &  Jolinson  .... 
Carlson   &   Johnson    .... 

Northern    Siio»     Co 

James   G.    Elder    

Duluth  Machine  Co 

Duluth    M.ncliine    Co 

Anderson    &   « 'gg    

P..    H.    liat!,!  un    

1:.  J.   Bunker    

C».   Toinling    

Johnson   &  Moe    

Eavha    &   Co 

Mrs.    .\I.    Hock     

Martin  Spellman    

J.   A.   J*  firey    

Robert     Lueck     

T.  A.  Scarlett   

P.    A.    Sj<  seli'.is    

P.   A.  Sjf'Selius    

Panton  &-  AVhitc 

(i'.onseih   &   Olson    

Wieland  Sioe  Co 

Smith  &  A'okes    

Duluth   Hardv.are  Co... 
Dr.  Robert  Graliam   .... 

J.    Reakin     

Johnson    &    I.avson    

Clvde   Iron    Works    .... 

C.  "F.   Johnson    

Nat.    I'aint    Co 

A.   C.   Rogers    

J.  H.  Finke 

F.   Tass»»ow  sky    

Mork  Bros 

Mork   P.ros 

Elv  Finnish  Stock  Co. 
M."  J.    Hoff    

Flood    &    Morgan    

Sylvester  La  Jace 

Rustad  &  Johnson 

O.  C.  Sovde   

Iron  Cash  Grocery  Co. 
Thos.  F.  Trevillion  .... 
Jolm  Mesberg 

AA'.    J.    Ryder    

Lundmark   &    Franstn.. 

J.   K.  Carlson    

AN'rlght-Ciarkson     Merc. 
Co 

A\'right-Clarkson     Merc 
Co 

C.    O.    Bergqulst     

M.   E.  Brown    

Thorpe  &  Peterson    

J.   E.   Evjen    

Swanson    &   Stahre    .... 

AA'm.  Orr    

M.    M.    Gasser     

J.    AVest    &   Son    

Bilsey  &  Peterson...... 

A.  H    Donald 

N.    J.    Benson 

N.    J.    Benson 

Thos.     Foublster 

Childrens     Home 

Peetz  &  Co 

Peter     Hendrickson 

Antovna     Rihar 

E.    L.'    Hogstad 

r>r.    J.    H.   Crowe 

L>ul.    News    Tribune    Co 

Harrv     Christian 

KelleV    &    Moses 

Dul.   S.   S.   &   A.   Ry 

C.  J.   Johnson  &  Co 

B.  Kanner 

Frank     Brand 

^k^.     tT.     ^OOK  •  •••••••••••• 


00 

55 
00 
00 
50 
Ow 
00 
00 
00 
12  00 
4  00 

17  50 
£  00 

4  00 

4  00 

4  00 

128  80 

40  00 

40  t>0 

35  00 

15  oO 

80  00 

50  00 

30  00 

250  00 

95  00 

lO.S  05 

199  55 

1  fO 

147  50 

7  00 

35S  82 

4  00 

45  se 

28  00 

135  25 

27  OO 

16  00 

4  00 

4  00 

20  00 

55  77 

16  f'O 
6  00 
1  83 
€  95 

6  25 
19  00 
39  7  5 

4  00 
4  ( f> 

1  5  4- 

17  24 

50  r.7 

27  00 

161  00 
14  20 

2  23 
140  14 

23  80 
1  3  .-.0 

18  (0 
16  CO 

8  00 
4  00 
4  00 

7  fO 
13  r.5 
62  00 


! 

> 

M 


i 


20 
00 
00 
71 
00 
75 


100  20 


00 
CO 
00 
00 
10 

00 

00 

86 

00 

mO 
.?3 
25 
45 

00 

1,0 
95 
I'O 


8 
4 
4 
4 
2 
4 
4 

8 
9 

175 
4 

4 

27 
4 

26  00 

30  00 

12  00 

24  00 

4  (0 

400 

4  0!) 

4  00 

3  75 

4  00 
8  00 

12  00 
8  00 

3  00 
14  50 
18  75 

8  00 
8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

4  00 
]  65 

7  00 
4  00 

12  o5 
12  00 
27  00 

8  00 
8  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
3  00 

27  74 
6  81 

3  00 
25  00 

4  00 
17  00 

1  05 

28  00 
15  00 
31  70 

2  00 

3  00 

4  00 
137  51 


-r 


=1=* 


I 


> 


-* ~t   ■    ■■«ir   — TTTMiM 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD  t 


a>. 


6493S 

fi4$29 
r.isno 

64*31 

»n«32 

«;4$34 

♦i43Sr) 

(USSR 

♦>»837 

6443S 

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64994 

H4995 

f.l996 

\;»99S  Chiis 

64999  I)..  S 

esooo 

«5002 
«5rt04 
65023 
6:.()2H 
65029 
«5030 
65031 
65044 
«504r, 
6401K 
65056 
65057 
,  ISO 5 8 
'  65059 
65060 
65061 
65062 
6506:? 
65064 
65065 

S50«6 
65067 
6506S 
65969 
65070 
65071 
65072 
65073 

«5074 

65080 
650S3 
65084 
650K5 
65086 
65087 

650^S 
65IJ89 
65090 
650>1 
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65093 
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651  IB 
65120 
65121 
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65124 
65125 
63166 
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65170 
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«51»2 


65193 

6&194 
65199 
65200 
65201 
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65203 

^5204 
65205 
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65209 
65210 
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652:^4 
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65253 
65265 
65266 
65272 
65276 
65274 
65275 
65282 
652S3 
652S9 
65291 
65297 
65:M3 
65:530 

<«.'.:'.  61 
65:;t;^ 
65:'.70 

65376 

65377 
65420 
65451 
65  4^0 
6  551  J 
6561*7 
65612 
65676 
65700 
6  5723 
65  7  24 
65740 
657  41 
657  42 
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6  5  4  4  4 
657  15 
657  4«» 
65747 
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65749 
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65752 

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tw 


Jos.    Blair 

Cha.s.     Schaffer 

.lohn     Hlofl 

Edw     Hicks    

Alico     Boiej 

Frank    Anderson 

FrfMl     Pope 

Antosn:\     Klhar 

John     Hlo.l 

Rdw.      Hifka 

S     M     KantT 

IM     Parniody 

M.     HaiiK 

O.    F.   Collier 

Fied   VV.    Erlckson 

Sliogran 

t;.   &   A.    Uy.  Co.. . 

l..oui.s     Jentof  t 

Dr.    U.   clraliam    

P.    Manella    

Thatcli»»r  &  Thatcher   .. 

n .  S.  .^.  &  A.   Ely 

Bruno   Kyferth    

I'ittiibnrKh  Coal  Co 

IMttsloiiBh   Coal   Co 

P     W.    Gallagher    

Duluth   Telephone   Co... 
Sylvester   &    I«i   Joie.... 

Fendell    &    Swope 

Dul.    Public-    Market.... 

J.    G.    Harri.s    

Henry    Foil/     

F.  A.   Walthousen 

Stewart    Transfer    Co... 

Panton  &  White  Co 

H.     H.     Patterson     

Dul.    Machinery    Co 

Wrigfla-Clarkaon      Merc. 

Co 

Oronsetii  &  Olson 

Branch    Bethel     

Dul.    New.s    Tribune    Co. 

Krank   Suech    

Smith    &     Volkes     

l».    A.    Sji)selius    

Anderson    &   Okk    

Standard  Salt  &  Cement 

Co 

n.   H.    Rathbun    

A.    H.    Outlaid    

M    M.  Gasser    

Marshall-Wells  Co.  .... 
Stonc-Ordean-WelKs  Co. 
Ku.«»tad  &  .Johnson  .... 
Cliri.itian.-^on.        Menden- 

hall   &  Co 

X.    White    

I.un.linark    &    Franson.. 

St.   Luke's   Hospital 

T.  F.  TreviUi<»u   

Duluth     Universal     Miil- 
luK  Co 

F.  A.    Patrick   &   Co 

E.  D.   Field  &  C» 

Duplex    Mfg.    Co 

J.   iliokitt    

Flood  &   Horgan    

Duluth    Hdw.   Co 

A.    C.    Rogers    

S.    Widdis     

Neff    Bro.s 

John   West  &  Son 

John    West   &  Son 

W.   B.   Pratt   &  Co 

G.  A.  Hjerpe 

C.    F.    .Johnson    

JohULJon  &    Larson 

P.    Mainellu    

N.  J.   Benson    

Iron     Ranjfe    Cash    Gro- 
cery  <  'o 

L.  C.  Sannlcola  &  Co.... 

O.  C.  Sovde    

Robt.   Lueck    

J.    P.    Flynn     

Nor.  Shoe  Co 

O.   Tomllng    

T.   A.  Scarlitt    

Ed   Dorniedy    

Johnson    &   Jlrmstad. . . . 

Polrier  &  Co 

J.   E.   Evjen    

C.   O.   Beniul.st 

Rockwell   Shoe  Co 

I'     J.   Bunker 

W.    .1.     Ryder 

Haldora    Olson 

A     O.    Swendby 

M.   J.    Hoff    

l>r.   J.    H.   Crowe 

Knudsen    Fnilt   Co 

Elv    Finnish   Stock   Co... 

Riisev    &     Peterson 

Chaniberlalti     &     Taylor 

C.   A.   Vnn  Order 

E.    .S.    Kempton 

Durkan   &   Crawford 

Durkan   &   Crawford 

Duluth  Iron  R.  Ky.  Co.. 

Martin      Lowell 

J.    H.    Finke 

Children's     Home 

Carl     J.     Hanson 

Armour    Packing   Co.... 

Thomas     Jenson 

C.    AUlnella    

E-lward     Olson 

Edward     Olson 

Grace    E.    Pattlson 

Edward     Olson 

Olson      &      Kauppl 

D.   Goldish   &   Son 

Charles     Buyflt 

A.    P.    <.*ook 

I..     Jenloft     

Edward     Olson 

O.    F.    Collier 

J.  O.   Peterson    

L>r.  Robert  Graham   .... 

c;.    -A.    Eaton    

lU.hai.l    rredt^rlck    

James    Legare    

Frank    Anderson     

AHot     B  >rg    

Charles  McCarthy 

('harles     Strom     

John     Blod     

John    Kindis!;     

Cliarles    Scha.fl"er    

i:,i    Hicks    

.M.    Haup:    

Charles   SlioKiaii    

C.    W.    Davids  Jii    

c!    W.    Davidson    

C.    W.    Davidson    

Plti.shurg  Coal  Co 

C.    B.    Xunan    

1'.  W.  Gallagher 

S\ivtstir   .&   La   Jole    ... 

c!    Nelson    

John    .Moir    

li.    R.    Patterson    

E.    L.    Tooiney    

Panton   &    White    

T.    A.  ■Siarlett    

L>uluih    .Mesaba    Co 

iJ.    H.    Rathbun    

R.    H.    Rathbun     

W.    B.    Logan    

Nortiiern     Shoe    Co 

WriS'it-Clarkson       .Mer- 
cantile   company     .... 

I'rank    Brand     

Mrs.   S.    L.    Johnson    

S.    M.    Kaner    

Lmluih     Van    &    Storage 

company    

Kellev   Hardware  Co 

Fendell     &    Swope 

Henry     F  >U 

Dulutli    Public    Market.. 

J.      Itiokin      

Stewart  Transfer  Co 

F      A.    Walthauseii 

Marshall  -  Wells       Hard- 
ware   company     

F    A.  Patrick  &  Co 

St     Luke's    Hospital 

Duluth     Universal     Mill- 
ing   company    .  .  .    .... 

I>uluth     Universal     .Mill- 
ing  company    ....  ■  .-• 

Christensen.    MendenhaU 

&  Graham 

Suffel    &    ^'o    

SutTel    &    Co 

tlronseth    &    Olson 

tliist    Jarvi     

Homer  Collins    

Johnson    it    Larson    .... 

C.    I'     .lohn.son     

Ru.-stad    &    .lohnson     .... 

Rusiad   &   Jolinson 

SuiKleen    iNi  Johnson    .... 
St.     Mary's     Hospital.... 

N.    H.    Witt    

Stone-Ordean- Wells    Co. 
Slone-Ordean-Wells      Co 

W.    B.    Pratt   &  Co 

Fred    W.    Erickson 

Haldora    Olson     

D.    S.    McKay    

Thatcher    &     Thatcher.. 

Xeff     Bros 

Maiket    Grocery    Co 

Standard   OH   Co 

Not  man    &    Johnson .... 

Duplex    Mfg.    Co 

F.    P.    Llvine 

Waugh.  Kealy  &  Co 

V.    Mainella 

Robt.      Lueck 

Dul.    Edison    Elec.   Co... 

K.      West  berg 

.1.    A.    Jeffrey 

O.    Tomllng 

J.    H.    Crowe.    M.    D 

Anderson    &    Ogg 

P.    A.    Sjoselius 

C.   A.   Van   Order 

J.     E.     Foubister     

Bilsey    &    Peterson 

Blisev    &     Peterson 

Calvin    &    Itol>b   Lbr.    Co 

M.    M.    Gasser   Co 

T.    F.    Trevillion 

N.     J.     Benson 

J  no.    West   A   Son 

Children's     Home 

Jas.     Blair 

r>evaney    &    Jordan 


35  00 
40  0  0 
30  00 
30  00 

50  00 
40  0  > 

21  no 

10  00 
30  00 
20  00 

53  00 
4  00 

107  75 

27  00 

2  4  00 

95  00 

8  4S 

145  25 

183  65 

4  00 

4  00 

54  40 
25  00 

8  00 

51  37 
20  00 

3  90 

4  Ot) 
4  OO 

16  00 

4  00 

16  00 

12  00 

20  00 

4  10 

40  00 

2  50 

12  00 
8  00 

1  80 

2  20 

4  00 
8  -^5 
8  00 

5  00 


,05919 
65920 
6'.!>26 
65;»3'i 

65937 
65lt3s 
6  5  OS  9 
65H40 
6  5-.M1 
65  t42 
65't43 
65951 

65952 
65953 
65954 

^65955 

65956 

65957 
65'.»5S 
65960 
659S9 
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65'.»93 
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65995 
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659i»7 
65998 
65999 
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66001 
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66012 
66013 
66014 
66015 
660  21 
66026 
C6027 
66030 
66031 
660. T  2 
66033 
bt034 
G6039 
660  45 
66046 
66047 
660  4  8 
66049 
66O50 
66051 
66052 
66053 
66054 
.^6055 
66056 
66057 
66064 
66080 
66081 
'•J088 


15  10 

••4  Oit 

8  00 

20  00 

20  5S 
53  SI 

8  00 

35  35 

30  25 

4  00 

254  50 

3  00 

21  50 
46  70 
60  00 

85 

4  0(1 

5  00 
90 

30  00 


66089 

66092 

66108 

66109 

66110 

66111 

66112 

66117 

6611S 

66119 

66120 

66121 

66131 

66177 

66180 

66182 

66183 

06184 

66185 

66251 

G636S 

66369 

66371 

C63S4 

66385 

66386 

60387 

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66389 

66390 

66391 

66:592 

66r.93 

66394 

66577 

66578 

66590 

66596 

06597 

666 15 

66626 

66627 

66654 

66657 

6665S 

66659 

6666G 

6666S 

66676 

66684 

66685 
6G6S6 
66687 
66692 

66693 
666i«4 
66695 
66696 
66697 
6669S 


N.    W.    Paint   Co .... 

Ely    Finnish   Slock   Co.. 

Jos.    G.    Elder 

Johnson    &    Jermstad... 

M.    E.    Brown 

J.     P.     Dailey 

Thorpe   &   Peterson 

L.    R.    Martin    

M.    J.    Hoff     

I'entilla    &    Nelson 

Arvld     Eklund     

First   National    bank    ... 

Tuppcr    &     Quigley 

W.    C.     Barrett     

t;reat    Northern    railway 

J.    P.    I-'lynn    

.lohn    Ketola     

Frank     Brand     

Mrs.    S.    L.    Johnson 

E.    S.    Kempton 

A.    P.   Cook    

Chas.    McCarthy    

Louis    Jentolt     

Robt.     Graham     

O.     F.    Collier 

Frank     Anderson     


00 

00 
t»0 

00 


12  ot> 


00 
00 
00 
00 
00 


S  00 
16  90 


00 
00 
00 
72 
00 
90 
00 
00 
78 
00 
00 
75 
60 
00 


4 
4 
4 
9 
4 

4 

8 
12 

4 

4 

3 

6 
25 
20  00 

4  00 

4  00 
18  00 

8  00 

4  00 

12  00 

70 

2  50 
27  37 
37  50 
25  00 

o  ;>", 
8  00 

4  00 

7  SO 
20  25 

5  0  0 
16  00 
12  00 
30  00 
30  00 
30  00 
30  00 

4  00 

70 

16  00 

127  95 

143  50 

20  70 
27  00 
24  OO 

1H5  45 

21  20 
12  4H 

1S7  50 
40  00 
50  OO 
30  00 
40  00 
3'i  OO 
15  OO 
40  00 

30  00 
89  00 
95  oO 
20  00 

4  00 
12  OO 
76  o5 
2S  00 
12  00 

8  OO 

4  OO 
10  00 

31  50 

9  4'> 
2  4i» 
7  5s 

5  OO 

25  0  0 

4  OO 

5  00 
7  62 

16  00 
4  (M) 
4  00 

26  00 


4  15 

13  85 
1  50 

24  00 

12  00 

1  oO 

14  00 

48  00 

20  58 

49  65 
224  25 


66699 

66700 

66701 

66702 

66703 

66704 

66705 

66706 

66707 

66711 

66712 

66713 

66720 

667  21 

6672  2 

66723 

66724 

66725 

66726 

66727 

66728 

66737 

66738 

66743 

66746 

66747 

66748 

66749 

66750 

66751 

66752 

66755 

66756 

66757 

6675S 

66759 

66760 

66761 

66762 

66763 

66764 

66765 

66766 

66767 

66768 

66769 

66770 

66781 

66793 

66794 

667!<9 

66S27 

r.6S2S 

66S30 

66S35 

66836 

66837 

66850 

66881 

66882 

66904 

66905 

66976 

66!«77 

66999 

67000 

67002 

670l'l 

670  48 

67053 

67176 

67231 

67437 

67438 

67  4:{!> 

674  10 

674  41 

67  4  12 

67443 

6744  1 

67445 

67  446 

67447 

67  4  49 

67450 

67485 

67  4  95 

67496 

67  197 

67508 
67509 
67516 
67517 
67520 
67524 
67  540 
67.55  4 
67562 
6756  5 
67569 
67580 
67582 
67583 
67584 
67585 
67586 


Edw.    Hicks     

Alton    Krause     

Richard     Frederick     

Chas     Schaffer     

John     Blod     

Ethel     Wentworth     

M.    Hang     

Hans    .lohnson    

.lohn     Ftndish     .^ 

A.    Goshaw    &    Co 

John    West    &    Son 

Norman     &     .lohnson.... 

F.    W.    i:rickson    

Tlios.    Jenson     

Chas.      Tupper 

Clias.     Tupper 

Market  Groc.   Co 

J.    H.   Crowe.    M.    D 

Bilsey    »%    Peterson     

V.    Suech    

Emll    St-hlender     

Flood    &    Horgan    

H.  F.   Davis  &  <'o 

Standard  Salt  <V-  Cement 

Co 

The    Bethel     

Mutual    Elei'.    Co 

Northern    Shoe    Co 

Marshall- Wells        Hard- 
ware Co 

Lundmark   &    Franson.. 

M.  M.  (Jasser    

F    A.  Patrick    

Stone-Ordean-Wells    Co. 

Xels  J.   Benson    

('lulslenson.   MendenhaU 

&    Graham     

Dul.  I'niversal  Mill  Co. 
Dul.   Universal   Mill.   Co. 

T.    F*.   Trevillion    

Zenith    Paper  Co 

.lolin    Moir 

IHinphv   Mfg.  Co 

Helmer  Hendrlckson .  . 
F.  .\.  Walthousen  ... 
Duluth  Public  Market 
Kellev  Hardware  Co... 
Thatcher  &  Thatcher    .. 

Panton    &    VVliite    

Chas.  Shograii    

Standard    Oil    Co 

Henrv  Fol/. 

K.   Westbiirg    

Stewart     Transfer    Co... 

M.   .1.    Hoff    

Rustad   it   Johnson 

St.    Lukes   Hosuital 

Devane.v  &  .Jordan 

Emil  Johnson   

H.  R.  Patterson   

C.   Nelson    

C.  C>.  Ber'iuisl 

(".    F".    Johnson    

Johnson   &   Larson 

Suffel  &  Co 

W.   B.   Pratt  &  Co 

Sylvester   &    La   .Joie.... 

Children's   Home 

.J.   E.   Carlson    

.1.    E.    Foubister    

Robt.    Lueck    

W.    B.    Ma  Ida  ugh    

Tl»)rpe    &    I'eterson    .  .  .  . 

Cook  &  .\msrud 

Anderson   &   Ogg 

T.    -\.    Scarlett    

Duluth    Machine   Co 

.lohnson  &  Moe 

E.    L.  Toomey    

R.  H.   Rathbun   

J.  .\.  Jeffrey    

Mrs.  M.   Hock    

O.   Tomling    

Xoflf    Bros 

Haldora  Olson    

Frank   Tarnawsky    

J.   FUokin    

.1.  P.  l>aily   

Mork    Bros 

Mork   Bros    

Ely    Finnish    Stock   Co.. 

Carlson   &    .Johnson 

Carlson    &    Johnson 

Carlson    &     Johnson.... 

L.    C.    Sannlcola 

F.     S.     Betz 

Frank     Rogers 

John     Ketola 

L.     P.     Highmark 

West    Dul.    Groc 

Pittsbur.^   Coal   Co 

Durkan    <Sr    Crawford... 
Durkan    &    Crawford.. 

Dr.    1 ».    C.    Rood 

Dul.  S.  S.  &  A.  Ry.  Co. 

Peter     Holten 

Martin    Lavell 

Wm.     Orr 

Frank     Brand 

Fred     Pope 

M      Hang 

\\  m.     Anilerson 

Ethol      Wentworth 

Frank    Anderson 

John     Blod 

Wm.      Holt 

lOdw.     Micks 

Chas.     .Schaffer 

Richard     Frederick .... 

Hans     Johnson 

A.     P.    Cook 

Chas.  Shogran 

Louis  Jenloft  

.Vlton  K  rouse 

O.  F.  Collier 

Mayhew  &  Sons 

Norman  A.  Johnson... 


99 
4 


lO 


00 


153 

4  00 

3  50 

4  00 

2  85 

4  00 

8  00 

20  00 

4  00 

16  00 

4  00 

8  00 

4  00 

182  50 

30  00 

8  00 

8  00 

4  00 

4  00 

20  »>3 

130  05 

15  00 

94  50 

186  65 

31  50 

40  00 

30  00 

25  00 

30  00 

40  00 

30  00 

50  00 

91  15 

10  00 

15  00 

24  00 

8  00 

12  00 

40  00 

16  00 

10  00 

10  00 

4  00 

66  OO 

16  00 

S  0  0 

8  00 

5  0\i 

4  00 

11  25 

67." 
67; 


87 
88 


">0 
0') 
50 
00 
00 


3 
3 
1 

12 

24 

20  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 

20  00 

3  00 

21  65 
32  00 

368  5:> 

4  i»0 
40  00 
20  00 

1  82 
4  00 
8  00 
8  00 
15  65 

8  00 

1  00 
6  00 

9  60 
8  00 
4  00 

114  66 

12  00 

8  Oi» 

4  00 

14  00 

12  00 

8  OO 

2  50 
12  00 

4  00 
12  00 

5  00 
20  00 

3  00 

12  00 
8  00 

25  00 
35  00 

13  85 


67589 

67590 
67  5  ft  1 
67592 
67593 
67595 

67596 
67597 
67598 
67601 
67602 
C7605 
67606 
67607 

67608 

67618 
67624 
67625 
67646 
67647 
67048 
67652 
67053 
67657 
67658 
67659 

67660 
67661 
67662 
67663 
67664 
67665 
67666 
67667 


Duluth 
Co     .  . 

Duluth 
Co     .. 

Devaney 

Devanej 


I'niversal 


15: 


80 
91 
00 


Charles     Schaffer 

Lundmark    &    Franson.. 

Mrs.    M.     Proolek 

.\.    Amundson     

E      Fieblger 

Robt.     Graham 

Swansoii    &    Stohre 

J.    G.    Forsyth 

Sylvester  &    La   Joie.... 

John    West    &    Son 

Zenith    Telephone    Co... 

Stan-lard    Oil    Co 

P.    W.     Gallagher 

M.    M.    Gasser    Co 

Great  Northern  R.  R.  Co 
Chrlstianson,        Menden- 
haU  &   Graham    

Martin     Miller.... 
Universal 


Mill 
MIU 


12  57 

8  00 

12  00 

15  66 

50  82 

2  4  00 

21  03 

28  75 

4  00 

3  OO 

7  33 

11  00 

27  ss 

16  00 

12  00 

20  00 

18  59 

4  00 

6  47 

95  00 

14  4:; 

20  00 

4  00 

15  00 

4  00 

8  00 

191  25 

8  25 

67705 
67706 
67707 
67708 
67709 
67734 
67637 
67739 
67740 
67741 
67742 
6:74:: 
67767 
67775 
67776 
67777 
67778 
67779 
67780 
67781 
67782 
67793 
67795 
6781S 
67819 
67  830 
67832 
6  J  Sou 
67918 
67924 
67925 
67916 
07997 
67998 
67999 
68037 
68060 
68761 
68771 
08778 
68779 
68781 
68782 
0S783 
0878  4 
68785 
08786 
68787 
0S7S8 
6S789 
68790 
08791 
687;»:; 
08794 
68824 
68825 
08820 
68829 
6S833 
6>'831 

68835 
6SS36 
6S837 
68838 
68840 
68841 

G8842 

68843 

6S844 
6884  5 

GS846 
68847 
58849 
68854 
68855 
68856 
68K57 
68858 


Co. 


Co. 
Co. 
Co. 


00 

50 
00 
00 
00 
00 
30 
00 
00 


Suffel  &  Co 

N.  W.  Paint  Co 

First  National  Bank 
First  National  bank  . 

W.  J.  Ryder  

.  W.  Lent  

Eveleth    Pharmacj'    . . 

Gust    Jarve    

B.   Erickson    

St.    Marys   Hospital 

N.   J.   Benson    

W.    B.    Pratt    &   Co 

Charles   Buyck    

Mrs.   Clara    Butler    . . 

James  G.  Elder 

Ed  Dormedy    

George  H.  Hunter   . . 

August  Stelner 

J.    E.    Evjen    

ttlson  &  Kauppi   .... 

O.    Tomling    

J.  Kiokin    

B.    Kanner    

R.   R.    Forward    

Cnlldren's    Home    ... 
Guslafson    Bros. 
Ely    I'Innish    Slock 
Dr.  J.  V.  Johnson 
Cf.    Goldish     

D.  Gibbons    

West  Duluth  Gro. 
I>ul.  &  I.  R.  R.  It. 
Duluth    Telephone 

E.  .S.  Kempton.  treasurer 

E.    S.    Kempton    

Durkan   &   Crawford.... 
Cromberg  &   .\nderson.. 

A.  P.  Cook 

Fred     W.     Erickson 

O.    F.    Collins    

R.    Cyraham    

Ed     Hicks     

Chas    Schaffer     

Wm.     Holt     

G.    Leithi    

Frank   Anderson    

John     Blod     

Ethel   Wentworth    

Richard     Frederick     .... 

Fred     Pope     

M.    Haug    

Wm.    Andei-son     

Chas.     Shogran     

G.    A.    Eaton    

E.  Sch.lender 

Zenith    Telephone 
S.  H.   Knox  &  Co.  , 
Haldora     Olson     .  . 
Norman    Johnson 
I..     W.     Lollhhead 

Co     

Neff    Bros 

F     A     Walthausert     

Dulutli    Public   market.. 

Duluth    Public    Market.  . 

M.  M.  Gasser  (,'0 

Christensen.  MendenhaU 
&  Graham    

Duluth  Unlver.sal  Mill- 
ing  company    

Duluth  I'niversal  .Mill- 
ing  company    

P.    Shea    &    Co 

Schultze     Bros      

F.  A.  Patrick  &  Co 

T.   F.  Trevillion    

J   West  &  Son 

C.  B.  Xunan  

Henry  I'olz  

Henry   Fol/.   

John  I'no  .Sebenius .  .  .  . 


Co. 


Drug 


16  00 
16  00 


4 
4 

4 
4 

8 
4 
1 
2 

3 


00 
00 
00 
00 

00 

85 

25 

50 

5  90 

12  00 

4  00 

8  00 

4  00 

16  00 

20  00 

26  00 

4  00 

4  00 

4  00 

4  00 

8  00 

4  00 

4  00 

8  00 

24  00 

30  00 

36  00 

8  00 

4  00 

4  00 

39  60 

55  00 

35  00 

15  50 


4  00 

8  00 
12  00 

4  00 
25  00 
113  20 
15  00 
50  00 
40  00 
30  00 
30  00 
:<o  00 
40  00 
30  00 
30  00 
128  94 
95  00 
87  50 
30  00 
56  00 
10  00 

4  00 
40  Oi« 

4  00 
1  6  00 
10  2  5 

13  ::o 
188  90 

12  00 
6  00 
4  00 
8  00 

19  00 
1  71 
4  00 
8  00 
3  00 


1 

26 


4  00 


&  Jordan .... 
&  Jordan 

Stor.e-Ordean- Wells  Co. 

Stone-Ordean-Wells     Co. 

Duluth  Grain  &  Produce 
Co 

Neff    Bros 

Fendel   &  Swope 

.Mrs.   M.    Hock 

Mrs.    M.    J.    Forgy 

C.     Nelson 

C.    F.    .lohnson 

Pittsburg    Coal     Co 

Marshall-Wells  Hard- 
ware  Co 

Fred    W.    Erickson     

C.    B.    Xunan    

Haldora    Olson 

C      W.     Davidson     

Stewart    Transfer    Co... 
Panton    &    White  Co.    .. 

Henrv     Folz     

M.    E.    Gleason    

W.    C.    Barrett     

Johnson     &     Jermstad.. 

O.     Jensen      

Wright -Clarkson     Merc. 

Co 

J.    A.    Jeffrey    

J.    H.    Crowe.    M.    D 

Martin    Spellman    

M.    E.   Brown    

Geo.    D.    Swift     

Wleland  Shoe  Co 

Northern   Shoe   Co 

Standard  Salt  &  Cement 

Co 

67668  T.  A.  Scarlett 

67069   W.   B.    Lof gren    

67670  Gronseth  &  Olson 

67671  Chamberlain     &     Taylor 

67672  R.   H.    Rathbun    

67673  J.   E.  Foubister   

67674  Bil.sey    &    Peterson    .... 

67675  Chas.   O.    Bergiiuist    .... 

67676  Robt.    Lueck     

67677  J.   A.    Jeffrey    

67679  A.     Wallln     

67680  N.    H.    Witt   Co 

67681  St.    l-uke's    Hospital..,. 

67682  Sundeen  &  Johnson   .... 

67683  Rustad  &  Johnson 

67084    Johnson  &  Larson   

67700   Fitzsimmons    

67702  J.   H.  Cavanaugh    

67703  Af.  J.  Hoff  

67704  Duluth  Edison  Elec.  Co. 


74  95 

4  25 

17  95 

350  80 

44  00 


3  83 
12  00 

2  50 

4  oa 

3  4  5 

4  00 
4  00 

42  54 

32  02 
36  00 

24  00 
20  00 
28  00 
18  50 

2  10 
16  00 

25  00 
75  00 

4  00 
4  00 


68859 
6SS00 
68861 
68862 
68863 
68864 
68865 
68866 
68867 
68868 
68869 
68870 
68871 
68872 

bSS  I  t* 

68874 

68876 

6SS77 

68878 

68K79 

68880 

68881 

68882 

68903 

6S904 

6M»05 

68906 

08907 

68910 

0X911 

68912 

6><916 

68917 

08919 

08920 

6S921 

0H922 

6H92:i 

6892  1 


68927 

68941 

689  15 

68946 

68947 

68948 

68949 

68950 

68951 

68»*2 

68953 

68954 

G8955 

6S956 

68ti57 

68958 

68959 

68962 

68960 

68991 

69002 

69038 

6904  2 

69043 

69155 

68161 

69162 

69393 

69394 

69395 

69396 

69397 

69398 

69399 

69400 

69401 

69402 

69403 

69404 

69429 

70024 

70070 

70071 

70072 

70077 

70078 

70079 

7  00  80 

70081 

70082 

70083 

70081 

70085 

70086 

70087 

70093 

70094 

70095 


2  00 

5  65 

4  00 
40  00 
25  00 

4  00 

1  35 
24  no 

4  00 

9  75 

8  00  j 

8  00  1 

8  00 

10  00 
4  50 
4  00  I 

8  00  ; 
4  37  I 

4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 

4  00 

5  00 
38  60 

8  00 
8  00 

1  00 
12  00 

2  50 
4  00 

6  70 
6  75 

12  64 

11  16 

35  00 
4  00 

125  00 

36  00 
27  00 

175  60  i 
30  00  I 
40  00  I 
30  00 
20  00  1 
40  00  i 
30  00 
50  00  1 
30  00  I 

25  00 
96  65  I 
15  00  1 

102  00  1 

26  74 
4  00 

18  00 
4  80 
00 


70184 
70185 
70190 
70191 
70192 
70197 
70200 
70221 
70222 
70229 
70230 
70231 
70232 
70230 
70242 
70266 
70267 
70268 
70270 
70289 
70320 
70325 
70382 
70398 
70399 
70947 
70584 
71299 
71300 
71624 
76633 
71659 
71660 
71663 
';  1604 
71673 
71685 
71696 
71697 
71698 
71699 
71700 
71701 
71702 
71703 
71704 
71705 
1700 
1707 
j 71708 
171709 
'71710 
!  7 1 7  1  6 
171717 
i71748 
171749 


4  00 

5  70 

8  00 

24  00 

3  00 

12  00 

12  00 

10  88 

62  00 

53  00 

50 

;i 


rii 
:i 

71752 
71753 
71754 
71755 
71756 
71757 
71758 
71759 
71760 
71764 
71765 


12  88  i\ll"' 

3  15  :Iiii 


70096 
70100 
70101 
70102 
70103 
70104 

70105 


70106 
70107 
70108 
70109 
70110 
70111 
70112 
70113 
70114 
70115 
70116 


Imluth    Grain       &      Pro- 
duce   company     

Kellev    Hardware    <'o... 
Ivelley     Hardware    Co... 

P.   Mainella    

Xeff    Bros     

J.    C    Harris     

Frank    Suech     

E.     J.     Bunker      

Gron.seth  &  Olson 

T.    A.    Scarlett     

John   J.    .Moe   &  Son 

J.    D.    Lowe    

Cook     Armund     

Chatnberlain   &  Taylor.. 

Smith     &    Vokes     

Dulttth     Telephone    Co.. 

J.  (Tilmore  &   Bros 

X.   H.   Witt  &  Co 

Pittsburg  Coal   Co 

Pittsburg  Coal  Co 

West   End   Livery    

Rustad  &   Johnson 

Johnson   &   Larson 

Russell    Com.    Co 

Dul.  &  I.  R.  R.  R.  Co 

.Stewart  Transfer  t'o.  .  .  . 

K.    ^^'estberg    

St.   tJermaln    Bros 

Louis   Jentoft    

Suffel    &   Co 

C.    F.    .lohnsoti    

H.     R.      Patterson      

Ely  Finnish  Stock  Co... 

.1.  Rankin 

Martin  Miller   

J.    P.    Dally    

L.  Sannlcola    

Devaney  &  Jordan    

X.  .1.   Benson    

Marshall  -  Wells        Hdw. 

Co 

Henrv  Cleveland 

.1.  W.  Lent    

A.  Koncezny    

L.  C.  Sannlcola  &  Co. . . . 

J.   E.   Evjen    

Ed  Dormedy   

O.   Tomling    

Ed  Dormedy   

Bilsey   &    Peterson 

M.    E.    Brown    

M.   E.   Brown    

Thorj)  it  I'eterson 

Wm.   Stewart    

E.  .S.  Kempton.  treas.  .  .  . 

P.   .\.  .*>jolins    

Frank    Brand    

Frank   Brand   

Mrs.  M.   Hock   

.1.     .\.     Finke     

M.    .1.     Hoff    

L.   U.  Martin  Timber  <'o. 

Fred  Block    

Mork   Bros 

Mork   Bros 

Mayl'.ew   &    Sons 

Thos.     Foubister     

Martin     Lavell     

Wm     Xewcomb    

John     Blod     

Edward    Hicks     

Riihard    Frederick    .... 

Chas.    Schaffer     

Wm.   Holt    

CfOttleib  Luther 

Frank    .Anderson     

p-red    Po!)e     

M.    Haug    

Ethel   Wentworth    

A.   V.  Cook    

O.    F.    Collins    

L»inham    &   Crawford    .  . 

R.   Vlraham    

Wm.    -Anderson    

Mork  Bros 

Stone-Ordean-Wells    Co. 

X.    H.   Witt   Co.    

P.    Shea    &   Co 

lUchardson    Elec.   Co.... 
St.   I-,uke's  Hospital   .... 

M.    M.    Gasser    Co 

Schultz  Bros.  Co 

John     Moir 

Mrs.   C.    W.    Davidson... 
Interstate    Packing    Co. 

M.     J.     Hoff 

Frank    W.    Erickson.... 

St.    Luke's    hospital 

Cli  r  Isle  nsen-Menden  hall- 
Graham     Co 

Marshall-Wells  Hdw.  Co 

K.     West  berg 

J.    A.    Jeffrey 

J.    A.    Scarlett 

Xorthern    Shoe   Co 

Standard  .Salt  &  Cement 

Co 

Standard  Salt  &  Cement 

Co     

Panton   &   White  Co.... 
J.  C.   McKinney,  agent.. 

J.    E.    Foubister 

P.    A.    Sjoselius 

L.    K.    Daugherty 

Peter    Sautre 

E.     J.     Bunker 

Robt.     Lueck 

J.   Gilman   &    Bros 

O.     Tomling. 


40  00 

4  00 

15  00 

4  00 

6  20 

5  00 

7  50 

12  00 

1  55 

12  00 

12  00 

16  00 

1  70 

8  00 

3  00 

12  00 

8  00 

8  00 

4  00 

4  00 

70120 

70121 

70122 

70123 

70124 

70125 

70145 

70146 

70147 

.0148 

<0149 

70150 

70151 

70152 

70168 


70  88 
284  25 

24  00 

12  00 
4  00 
4  00 
1  43 
4  00 

85  84 


70171 
70172 
70173 
7('174 
70175 
70178 
70179 
70180 
70181 
70182 
70183 


I 

' 

» 

> 

83  54 
4  00 
8  00 

28  00 

4  00 

8  00 

100  00 

,4  62 

26  43 

C  00 

4  00 

4  00 

4  25 

4  00 

23  «0 

4  00 

7  26 

00 

00 

00 

85 

45 

1 5 

00 

59  04 

49  56 

7  85 
2  50 

8  00 
4  Oi> 
4  79 
2  33 

15  00 
4  00 

8  50 
30  35 

9  50 

4  00 

5  00 
8  00 
4  00 

28  00 
4  00 
8  00 
2  90 
8  00 


•>i- 


'I 


1    society. . . . 
tile   i'o'.  .'.... 


6 

8 
3 
1 
7 
6 
4 


7  65 
15  00 

4  00 
4  »() 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 

8  00 
8  00 
8  00 
B  25  I 
2  00 
4  00  I 
4  00  I 
7  80  ! 

12  Ot>  I 


00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
tM) 
00 
50 


Rockwell   Shoe  Co 

70117  Wright-Clarkson      Merc. 

Co     

J.    Rloken 

Mayhew  &  Sons 

Henry     Folz 

F.    A.    Walthauser 

Neff     Bros 

Grom     Faliett 

Austad    &    Johnson 

C.    F.  Johnson    

Devaney  &  Jordan   .... 

Martin    Spellman     

St.    Mary's    Hospital    ... 

Jacob    Stoher     

Mrs.    Butler 

Bfnjamin    Kanner 

.„„..  John  West  &  Son 

70169  Iron  Range  Cash  Groc'y 
70)70   Lundmark   &    Franson.. 

W.    B.    Pratt   &  Co 

Stewart    Transfer    Co... 

Helmer    Hendrickson    . . 

Helmer  Hendrickson   . .. 

Norman  &  Johnson   .... 

N.  J.  Benson .• 

Johnson  &  Larson  

James  O.   Elder    

Olson  &  Kauppl 

Gustafson    Bros 

Johnson  &  Jermstad...* 


4 
4 

8 

4 

4 
24 
1 

4 

4 

9 

4 

4 

7 
3o  00 
30  0") 
30  00 
40  00 
30  00 
20  00 
40  00 
25  00 
90  70 
50  00 
132  13  i 
27  00 
45  00 
183  05 

7  50 
4  00 

333  22 
52  04 
10  64 
30  10 

189  75 

8  00 
6  97 
8  00 

32  00 
18  32 

4  00 
36  00 

285  75 

5  52 
29  01 

4  00 
8  00 
2  85 

5  65 


7  80 

1  80 

3  42 

4  35 
12  00 

4  00 
25  55 

8  00  1 
8  01 

16  00 
4  00 
8  00 

7  50 

40  00 
12  00 

2  50 

20  00 
1 2  00 

8  00 
4  00 
8  00 
4  00 

18  30 
4  00 

21  75 
8  00 

10  00 
4  00 
8  00 

12  00 
8  00 
8  00 

10  00 
8  00 

16  00 

4  00 

5  00 
4  00 
4  50 
4  00 
8  00 
4  00 


Branch  Bethel    

J.   C.   Kinney.  Agt. .1..  .j 
Carlson   &   Johnson*.. « 
Carlson  &   Johnson.).*  i  ,r: 
Carlson  &  Johnson.:.... 
A.    Amundson    {..•.• 

A.  H.   Donald    

Pcntila    &    Nelson    .j....' 
Cronberg   &   Andersbn    .i 

E.  L.   Toomey    

Bil.sey  &  Peterson   . '■ 

I>r.   J.   H.  Crowe • 

B.  Erickson 

Pittsburg   Coal    Co • 

Mrs     .S.    L.    Johnson  .f. .. . 
Ely    Finnish    Stock   Co.. 

Children's    Home     

Clilldren's    Home     

Chas.   fehogran    

M.     H.     Schussler 

F.  E.    Blanche,   agent... 

N.   W.   Paint  Co .... 

.Sylvester   &   La  Jole.... 

Frank      Brand      

E.  S.  Kempton.  treasurer 

A.   P.    Cook    

D.   A    Blakeney    

M.    Haug    

Chas.     Shogran     

Louis    Jentoft 

Dr.    R.   Graham    

M.  M.  Gasser  Co 

Fred  W.  Erickson 

Henry    Folz     

Norman    Johnson    

Virginia  .Stove  Co 

Join:     Moir     

Richard     Frederick     .... 

<;ott!eib    Lulhi     

Ethel   Wentworth    

.Matt     Mattes     

Wm.    O'Brien     

l^ugene     St. Arnold      .... 

.\.    Trombley     

I'"re<l     Pope     

I'rank    Anderson     

.\dolph     Peterson     

Jolin    Gonhonere     

John    Blod    

iOdwin    Hicks    

Alf     Ring'iui.'^t      

<  'has.     Schaffer     

Durkan  it  «'ra  wf  ord  .  .  .  . 
Durkan  <t  Crawford.... 
.Stone-Ordean-Wells  Co. 
Christensen.     MendenhaU 

&    Graham 

.'^cliulze    Bros 

I'.   .4     Patriik    

F.    A.     Patrick 

C.  F.  Johnson    

Suitdeen    &    .Johnson.... 

P.    Sher    &    Co 

Marshal-Wells    Hdw.   Co 

J.   Rioken   

XeiT     Bros      

Ed    Shanks    . 

McKenzle  &  McGhee..;. 
John  West  &  Son... ■.'..' 
A.  c.     Rogers,     supertn- 

icndent     

Duluth     Public     market. 
Kellev    Hardware  Co 
Panton    &    White 

71776  Henry     Folz     ....,_ 

71777  Duluth    Grain       &      Pro- 

duce    Co 

71785  James    Rowne    .....'.... 

71786  Ely    Finnish 

71787  Elv    .Mercant 

71788  First        National        Bank 

Chisholm    '.  . . . 

89   Dr     T.    P.    Raniiey , 

94  J.    E.    Foubister    ....'....' 

95  Zenith    Paper    Co    

96  Bayha    &    Co 

Resotli    Bros    '.  . . . 

P.   A.   Sjoselius   

Gronseth    &   Olson    

E.  J.    Bunker    

Mrs.  .M.  Hock 

Mrs.    E.    Brown    

Jas.    J.    Dow.    Supt 

.Suffel    &    Co 

St.    Mary's    Hospital 

Chas.    West     

St.   Luke's  Hospital    .... 

Knute     Larson     

Rustad    &    Johnson    .... 

N.    .1.    Benson    

Gust    .larvi     

(Just    Jarvi    

Rood    Hospital     

M.    .1.    Hoff    

Helmer    Hendrickson    . . 

Peter   Sautre    

Ely   I'innlsh  Stock  Co... 

(Jeo.    V.    Fifer    

Maiiley-McLennon  Agcy. 

.1.    E.  <'arlson    

Bilsey  &    Peterson    

Sand   (Jreek    Merc.    Co... 

I»ululh    Hospital     

Chas.     Bergquist     

O.    Tomling     

O.    Tomling     

Robt.     Lueck     

,T.     E.    Evejln     

F7d    Dormedv    

W.    P..    Logan    

Children's    Home     

J.    M.   Tate.    Supt 

O.    F.   Collins    

Pittsburgh   Coal   Co 

D.    M.   .Morrison    

.Martin   .Miller    

.Mrs.   S.   L.  Johnson    .... 
J.    F.   Thomas.    Agt • 

Wm.    Orr     

P.   George   Hanson    

T.    E.    Blanche.    Agt.... 

Carlson   &   Lind    

Ben    Erickson    

A.    P.    Cook     

Alf.    Ringiiuist     

Matt    Mathers    

Ed.     Hicks     

Ethel    Wentworth     

John    Bli>ck    

Frank    Anderson 

.loliM     Smith      .'  .  .  • 

Richard    I'rederick    .... 

•  "harl'^s    Schaffer     

ICugene    St.    Arnold     ... 

l-'red    Pope     

I'.    Fernandez    

Rood     Hospital     

M.     Levine 

I'rerker    Brewing    Co... 

.M.     Haug     

O.    F.    Collier    

Pittsburg    Coal    Co 

P.     Sher    &     Co 

Charles    Shogran    

Wm.    O'Brien     

Dr.     Robert    Graham     .. 

Erickson    &  Kjall   Co... 

A.    H.    Donald    

A."  H.    I>onald    

Mrs.   C.    W.    I>avidson  . . . 

Chas.     Buyclt 

M.     M.    Gasser 

Rustad    &    .lohnson 

Swansliom    Bros    

C.     B.    Nunan 

L.     Cohn 

Marshall-Wells  Hdw.  Co 

Suffel    &    Co 

St.    Luke's    hospital 

J.     McMartin 

C.    F.    Johnson 

Knute     Larson 

Christenson.  MendenhaU 

&    Graham 

Folz    Groc.    Co 

N.    H.    Witt    Co 

Dul.    Universal    Mill    Co. 
Armour    Packing    Co... 

Schulze    Bros.    Co 

.Ino.    Wost    &    .Son 

K.     Westberg 

PentlUa    &    Nelson 

Stewart    Transfer    Co... 

F.    A.    Walthausen 

Xefl'     Bros 

Kelly    Hdw.    Co 

Edw.    L.    Swope 

I>undmark    &    Franson.. 
Lundmark    &    Franson.. 

Wm.     Stewart 

J.    McKay    

M..    J.    Hoff 

Thos.     Jenson 

.lacob     Stalire.  . 
W.    B.    Proat   & 
Devaney   & 
Sylvester  & 
J.    Rloken    .  .  . 

!•:.  C.  Shanks 
Standard  Oil 
Consolidated     Elev.     Co. 

McKenzie     &     McGhee.. 

Robt.    Lueck    

Wright-Clarkson     Merc. 
Co 

Panton   &    White    

Bayha   &  Co 

Branch    Bethel     

Standard  Salt  &  Cement 
Co 

Ely    Merc.    Co.     . 

Ely    Finnish    Co. 

Dr.  R.  J-  Sway    . 

Dr.    J.    H.    Crowe 

Ed    Dormedy    . . . 

Knowlton    &    Co. 

E.  J.   Bunker    .  . . 

C.  O.  Bergquist  . 

Peter   Santere    . . 

M.  Flint 

J.  E.  Foubister 

J.    E.    Evjen     . 

J.    E.   Evjen    

N.   J.   Benson    

Children's   Home    

Iron    Range  Cash    Qroc. 
Co 

Wm.   Orr    

Burgess    Elec.    Co.    ...• 

Bilsey    &    Peterson    ...« 

John   Ketola    •••• 


5  63 
5  05 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
8  10 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  80 

12  00 

1 3  00 
8  00 

1892 
4  00 
8  00 

3  94 
22  97 
95  00 
84  00 
30  00 

39 

4  00 
4  00 

10  96 
127  80 

10  00 
101  96 

95  00 

37  50 

174  25 

00 


7U 
717 
71' 
71: 
71797 
71798 
71799 
71800 
71801 
71802 
71806 
71H19 
71820 
71821 
71822 
71823 
71824 
71825 
71826 
71827 
71844 
7184S 
71949 
71N51 
71852 
71S57 
71866 
71867 
71868 
71869 
71870 
71871 
71872 
71873 
71874 
71875 
I  71876 
71S77 
I  71892 
I  71906 
' 71931 
I  71948 
71957 
71966 
71970 
71977 
71978 
71998 
72080 
72121 
72124 
72261 
72347 
72318 
723  H 
72350 
72351 
72352 


723S4 
72355 
72356 


7  2:;  58 
72580 
73012 
7  i>  ■»  *i  •* 
73;5#>4 

™  o  •> .?  r 

7  1368 
73369 
73370 
73375 
73:i90 
733»3 
73395 
73396 

73407 

73414 

73415 

73416 

73  421 

7^422 

734  41 

73445 

73446 

7:;  147 

73148 

73  4  49 

73450 

73451 

73  452 
73153 

73454 

73455 

73450 

73457 

73459 

73460 

7:M61 

73462 

7;:463 

73464 

73465 

73476 

73477 

7i;478 

73479 

73484 

73488 

73495 

73497 

7349S 

73499 

73501 

73502 

73  504 

73505 

73506 

73515 

73516 

73517 
13518 
73519 
73520 

73530 

73531 
73540 
73545 
73546 
73547 
73548 
73549 
73550 
73551 
73552 
73553 
73554 
73570 
73572 
73573 

73617 
73618 
73626 
73627 


Co. 
Jordan 
La  Jole 


Co. 

Elev. 


>   •   «   •   I 


4  00 
4  00 
8  00 
30  00 
25  00 
50  00 
12  00 


:a 


'••»•■■ 

•  ••••• 

•  •••«» 


•   • 


00 
10  00 
21  00 
25  00 
40  00 
10  00 
10  00 
30  00 
30  00 
7  50 
40  00 
30  00 


73628  F.  E.  Blanche,  agent.... 
73636  Sand  Creek  Merc,  Co... 
78646  G.  A.  Eaton  

73651  Chas.   Buyck    

73652  Chas.  Buyck    

73663  B.  Kanner   

73682  E.  .S.  Kempton 

73683  E.  S.   Kempton    

73684  Gowan  -  Peyton  -  Twohy 
Co 

73685  Chamberlain  &  Taylor.. 

73749  J.   H.  Carlson    

73750  Carlson  &  Johnson 

73751  Carlson  &  Johnson 

73782  Frank   Brand    

73783  T.  E.  Blanche,  agent.... 

73784  T.  E.  Blanche,  agent.... 
73954   Mork   Bros 

73969  A.   P.  Clark 

73970  A.   I'.  Clark 

73971  Chas.   .Shogran 

74117   Adolf  Ringqulst 

74181  Fred   Pope    

74182  Ethel   Wentworth 

74183  Chas.    Schaffer    

74184  Frank   Anderson    

74185  Matt  Matterson    

74186  Edw.  Hicks    

174187   John    Blod    

74188  Richard    Fredrlcks    

74189  John  Smith    

I  74190   P.  Shea  &  Co 

t!>  WW  I  74191    A.  Peterson 

a  on  174193    M.  Haug 

"     '  175144   O.   F.  Collier    

75145  City  National  Bank 

75192   Totman  Bros 

75215   Dr.  Robt.  Graham 

A.    Amundson     

The  Victor  Co 

Standard     Oil    Co 

J.    West   &    Son 

Zenith    Telephone    Co... 

75279  "Mork    Bros 

75283   Mrs.   M.    Hock    

.-\.     H.    Donald     

M.    .J.     Hoff     

Helmer     Hendrickson  .  . . 
Norman  it  Johnson    .... 

.\.   C.    Rogers    

Pittsburg  Coal   Co 

Suffel  &  Co 

.Sundeen  &  Johnson 

Edw.    Shanks    

Edw.   Shanks    

Ericksou-Kjall    Co 

Fred  AN .  Erii  kson  .... 
Duluth     Univer.sal       Mill 

Co 

.Armour     Packing    Co... 

Schulz   Bros 

Homer  «'olliiis 

Christ  lanson.        Menden- 
haU   &    Graham 

St.  Mary's  Hospital.... 
Rustad  &  Johnson  .... 
St.    Mary's    Hospital .... 

Folz   Grocery   Co 

Folz    Grocery    Co 

M.   M.  Gasser   

N.   H.   Witt   &  Co 

Marshall-Wells  Hdw. 

Co 

Devanev  &  Jordan  .... 
Stone-Ordean-Wells  Co. 
Lundmark    &    Franson.. 

Knute    I.,arson 

<_".    F.    Johnson 

Gust     Jarvi 

N.   W.   Paint  «'o 

St.   Germain   Bros 

Elv  Merc.   Co 

McKinzle   &    McGhee 

Barthe-Martln     Co 

Neflf  FJros 

Jos.    J.    Elder 

Kellv  Hdw.  Co 

Martin  Miller 

J.   A.   Herl>ert 

W.   B.   Pratt   &  Co 

N.  J.  Benson 

I.,.   C,  Sannlcola 

F.    A.    Walthausen 

Dul.   Pub.  Market 

A.     Heimbach 

.Stewart  Transfer  Co. . . . 
Stewart  Transfer  Co.  .  .  . 

.1.     Rloken 

Panton  White  Co 

The  Dul.  Horse  Co 

Dul.  Edison  Elec.  Co... 

.S.vlvester  &  La  Jole 

("lustafson  Bros 

K.  Westberg...: 

P.  T.  .Sautere 

P.  T.  .Sautere 

Ely  Finnisli  Stock  Co... 

Dul.  Directory  Co 

Dili.  Marine  .Supply  Co.. 

Cons.  Elev.  (,'0 

Robt.  Lueck 

Mrs.  AV.  Smith  

Dul.  Telephone  Co 


47 
22 

9 

4 

41 

5 

4 

24 

15 

20 

4 

11 

4 

4 


50 
11 

07 
55 
19 
30 

00 

■  Ml 

16 
60 
00 
00 
00 
00 


75217 
75227 
75245 
75270 
75272 


175310 
j 75319 
175341 
I  75342 
I  75343 
'75347 
!  75348 
1  75349 
I  75350 
75;<5I 
75353 
75354 
75355 


8  00 

30  00 
8  00 
7  19 
6  19 
4  00 

4  36 


12  00 

25  00 

12  00 

3  05 
10  00 

4  00 
4  00 
8  00 

7  48 

8  00 
1  35 

26  26 
4  75 

13  50 


75356 
7  5 :5  5  7 
75358 
75359 

75360 
75361 
7.5362 
7536:! 
75304 
75365 
75366 
75367 


M5  7  5 
4  00 
8  00 
8  00 
20  00 
8  00 
45  00 
4  00 
K  00 
4  00 
4  00 

15  12 
80  00 

16  00 
8  00 
4  00 

15  75 
4  00 
4  00 

4  4  00 

16  00 
4  00 
4  00 

1 2  00 
19  34 
74  34 
27  00 
24  91 
10  00 
48  00 
1 6  00 

3  89 
12  00 
30  00 
30  00 

4  00 
16  00 

141  20' 
15  00 
15  00  I 
30  00 
50  00  I 
30  00  I 
40  00  i 
35  00  I 
30  00 
40  00 

3  00 

25  00 
20  00 
14  00 
70  00 
28  77 

118  05 

27  00 
8  SO 

26  52 
95  00 
1  5  00 

179  50 

28  00 

4  00 

4  00 
28  00 
24  00 
12  00 

5  00 
15  00  i 
24  00  ! 

5  00  1 

7  11! 

00 


75368 
7S369 
753  70 
75371 
75372 
75373 
75374 
75378 
75379 
7  5 :!  8 1 
75382 

75:^83 

75384 

75385 

75386 

75387 

75:t95 

75396 

75397 

75399 

75400 

75401 

75402 

75403 

75404 

75405 

75  406 

75407 

75408 

75409 

75410 

75418 

75419 

754  20 

75427 

754  28 

75429 

75430 

75131 

75432 

75433 

75  43  4 

75435 

75436 

75437 

7  5  4  5  5 

75456 

75457 
75466 
75471 
75472 


167  50 
9  00  I 
4  00  1 
8  00! 


!••••••• 


•   •   •   •   •   I 


17  72  I 

8  00  I 

36  35  I 

76  00  j 

7  20 
5  93 
8OO' 
4  Ool 

20  00  I 

11  ool 

24  00 

11  00 
1  28 
1  20 
4  00 
4  00 

8  00 
8  00 
4  00 

28  00 
8  00 

12  00 
8  65 

15  00 
8  00 
4  00 

73 

103  80 

«  00 

16  00 

44  00 

3  40 
8  95 

4  58 

1  80 
4  00 

8  00 
88  60 
26  00 

4  00 

3  00 
11  33 

4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
8  00 

32  00 

4  00 
8  00 
52 
800 
8  00 


75486 
75487 
7548!> 
75490 
75491 
75492 
75493 
75520 
7557H 
7. '.58  2 
7  5590 
75591 
75592 
75630 
75884 
7 .5  7 1 3 
75714 
75  71 9 
75821 
75835 
75836 
75837 
75838 
75839 
75840 
I  75841 
I  75842 
175813 
I  75844 
75845 

'  I'?'*i*i 

75857 

75S58 

75859 

75861 

75871 

75873 

76366 

76371 

76372 

76375 

76382 

76383 

76401 

76402 

76410 

76422 

76430 

76431 

76474 

70475 

76476 

76477 

76478 

76479 

70  480 

76481 

76482 

76483 

76484 

76180 

76487 


1  58 
8  00 

21  20 
8  00 
8  00 
4  00 
6  32 

2  96 

292  48 
1  4  5 
8  00 
8  00 
4  00 
8  00 
1  50 
4  80 
4  00 

3  10 
125  00 

95  00 
15  00 
25  00 
50  00 
40  00 
40  00 
15  00 
30  00 
30  00 
30  00 
30  00 
13  64 

15  00 
83  00 
27  00 

4  00 
1  00 

172  05 

11  15 

1  79 

18  38 

8  00 

18  00 
4  00 
8  00 
4  00 
4  00 

16  00 
8  00 

384  12 

25  77 

7  50 

19  00 
4  00 
4  00 

48  00 
4  00 


76590  Elv    Finnish    Stock    Co. 

76591  F.   A.    Walthousen    

76594   Chas.    AVest     

76623  John    McKay    

76624  John    McKay    

76625  John   McKay    

76631    P.  T.  Santere   

7663  2    J.  E.   Evjen    

76633   Olson    &    Kauppl    

70634   Bilsev    &    Peterson    

76637  Mrs.    S.    L.    Johnson.... 

76642  D..  S.  S.  &  A.   Ry.   Co... 

76643  Children's    Home    

7664  4  Stone-Ordean-AA'ells    Co. 

76668   J.  F.  Thomas   

76684   Durkan  &  Crawford.... 

76876  B.     Pirlckson     

76877  Frank  Brand   . 
76907   Great    Nor.    Ry. 


8  00 

12  00 

10  25 

8  00 

8  00 

39  00 

8  00 

4  00 

8  00 

8  00 

4  00 

1170 

56  55 

72  00 

3  00 

85  00 

74032  Andrew    Stenlund,    labor 

74033  Emll   Johnson,    team.... 

74034  Henry    Johnson,    labor.. 

74035  Ole    Peterson,    labor.... 

74036  Walter    Wutula.    team.. 

74037  Harman  AA'utula.  labor.. 

74038  Chas.    Tuorin.    labor 

74039  Ole    Olson,    labor    

74040  Lara    Olson,    labor    

74041  Fred    Nesbltt.    labor 

74042  John   BJorklund.   labor.. 

Total    \ 


.T 


Total,    poor 

slon    

Add    refunds 


Co.. 
commls- 


00 
00 
95 


.J34 
■  $ 


See  balance 
the    total 
tries    .... 

Outstanding 


sheet  for 
debit  en- 
$34 

warrants,    n 


67  60 

14  10 
6  07 

15  00 

15  90 

86  25 

8  00 

368  25 

4  00 

4  00 

11  00 

11  55 


36  85 
6  85 

12  11 
4  00 
8  00 
4  00 

36  00 

3  10 

4  95 
4  00 
4  00 
8  00 

1 1  00 
6  75 
2  89 

167  88 
2  00 
8  00 
8  00 
4  00 

12  00 
8  00 

10  00- 

36  00 

16  00 

4  00 

6  31 

2  00 

89  42 

8  00 

8  00 

4 

4 

4 

8 


ASHAWA   ROAD. 
Commissioner's   District  No. 
64282  B.    Erickson,      dynamite, 

etc 

Ole   Sassos,    foreman.... 

Ole  Olson,   labor 

Andrew  Soderlund.  labor 
Albert  Peterson,  labor.. 
John  Klintman.  labor.. 
Oscar   Magnuson,    labor. 

Fred    Larson,    labor 

John    Olson,    labor 

Ole  Sassos.  foreman .... 
Albert  Erickson,  labor.. 
John  Klintman,  labor.. 
Sam  Swanson,  labor.... 
Joh;i  Pearson,  labor.... 
Felix  Lemolne,  labor... 
Aliel  Pearson,  labor.... 
O.-car  Magnuson,  labor.. 
t.'harles  Johnson,  labor.  . 

John  Olson,   labor 

Albert  Peterson,  labor. 
Ole  Sassos.  foreman.... 
Charles   Nelsoti.   labor.... 

tJeorge    Bay.   labor 

Sam  Swanson.  labor.... 
AValter  Erickson.  labor. 
Fridalf  Sjostiom.  labor, 
.lohn  Owens,  team  work 
Andrew  .Soderlund.  team 

work 

Gust   •   Johnson,         learn 

work 

O.scar    Magnuson,      team 

work 

Knute  Swanson,  labor.. 
Albert  Peterson,  labor.. 
Chas.  A.  Johnson,  labor.. 
Ole   .Sassos.    foreman.... 

Chas.   Nelson,   labor 

Sam  Swanson.  labor.... 
Louis  Swanson,  labor.. 
Chas  A.  Johnson,  labor. 
Ahle'Pearson.  team  work 
Albert  Peterson,  labor.. 
Oscar     Magnuson,     team 

work    

70614  Gust        Johnson,        team 

work    

Ole   .Sassos,    foreman.... 

Chas.    Nels'm,    labor 

Paul    Leffler.    labor 

Oscar  Engstrom,  labor.. 
Able  Pearson,  labor.... 
John  Pearson,  labor.... 
Oscar  Magnuson,  labor. 
A'erner  Bergen,  labor... 
A'lctor    Bergren.    labor.. 


64304 

64305 

64306 

64307 

64308 

64309 

64310 

64311 

68321 

68322 

68323 

68324 

68325 

68326 

68327 

68328 

68329 

68:!30 

68331 

70025 

70020 

70027 

70028 

70029 

70030 

70031 

70032 

70033 

7003  4 


141  24 
109  74 


250  98 
one. 


12  60 

18  00 
20  25 
22  50 
12  00 

10  00 

11  50 
10  00 

12  00 
10  00 

2  61 


work 
team 

work 
labor 


11 
5 
4 
:i 

9 

o 

3 
3 
1 

19 

-•i 
7 

17 

10 
10 
27 

27 

31 


37 
25 
50 
62 
00 


I  ■) 
25 
62 
00 
50 
50 
50 
00 

00 

50 


BURNSIDE   ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
68370   Jno.    Dtnsmore,   foreman 

68377  Charles       Quigly.     team 

work      .... 

68378  Frank  Barlo.  team 

68379  Tony     Kotchwar. 

work     

68380  Matt    Makl.    team 

68381  Henry    Danielson. 

68382  Henry   i^ddle.  labor   .... 

68383  Henrv  Partlnen,  labor.. 

68384  Alex  Ojala.  labor    

68385  Ed    Rosbcck.    labor    .... 

68386  Gust  Makl.  labor    

68387  Henrv    Kivoe,    labor     ... 

68388  p:ii    Phillips,    labor     

68389  August     Pearson,     labor 

68390  Martin    Eber,    labor    .... 

68391  Dan   McClemmons.  labor 

68392  Matt  Kuutti.   labor    

69296  St.    Crol.x    Lbr.   Co..   ma- 
terial      

70005  Jno.    Dinsmore.    foreman 

70006  Charles      Quigley.     team 

work      

70007  Frank  Barto.  team  work 

70008  Tony     Kolcheva.       team 

work     

70009  Matt  Maki.  labor 

70010  Henry    Danielson.    labor 

70011  Henry    Eddie,    labor.... 

70012  Henrv    Parthlnen.    labor 

70013  Allen  Ojala,  labor 

70014  Ed    Rosbeck.    labor 

70015  Gust    Maki.    labor    

70016  Henry    Kivoe,    labor.... 

70017  Aug.    Pearson,   labor.... 

70018  Martin     lOber.     labor.... 

70019  Dan   McCremmons.  labor 

70020  Malt    Knutti.    labor    .... 

70021  Andrew  I'iemi.  labor.. 
7002  2  .Sam  Nixon,  team  work 
70023 


team 


70035 
70036 
70037 
70006 
70607 
70608 
70609 
70610 
70611 
70612 
70613 


72398 
72399 
72400 
72401 
72402 
72403 
72404 
72405 
72406 


Total 


33 


00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
37 


Zenith  Paper  Co. 

P.  A.   Sjoselius  

Gronseth    &    Olson     .... 

T.    A.   Scarlett    

Northern    Shoe    Co 

Bilsev    it     I'eterson     .... 
J.    H.   Crowe,   M.   D 

J.    E.    Evjen    

T.    K.    Blanche,    Agl 

Chihlreii's    Home     

Coolidge.      Schussler      & 

Co 

75473   Baker-Cameron  Co 

75484  Duluth   IIosi)ital    

75485  .Standard  .Salt  it  Cement 
Co , 

.Slv.vester  &  LaJoie    .... 

K.  L.  Tomy    

J.    E.  Carlson    

Frank    Suech    

.1.   E.   Foubister    

CJray-Tallant   Co 

Tlieo.  Bartholdi 

<'arlson    &    Lund    

M.    Amatuzla    

Wm.    D.    M.dr.    M.    D 

.1.    M.    Robinson.   M.    D. .  . 

Thos.    Foubister    

J.    A.    Jeffrey    

Northern    Shoe   Co 

Ben    Eriikson     

Durkan  &  Crawford.. 
Durkan  &  Crawford.. 
Mrs.    .^.    L.    .Johnson     .... 

A.     P.    Cook 

Frank     Anderson 

Ed     Hicks 

.Ino.     McDonald 

Ethel      Wentworth 

Oscar     Eck 

It.     Hanson 

Richard     Frederick 

Fred     Pope 

Martin     Miller 

Chas.     Shaffer 

Jno,     Blod 

L.    c'orcoran 

M.     Haug 

Dr.    Robt.    frraham 

O.    V.    Collier 

C.    L.    Nord 

P.    Sher   &   Co 

Louis     Jentoft 

F'lrst    National     bank... 

Jno.    D.    Larson 

C.     B.    Nunan 

Armour   I'acking  Co.... 

A.    H.     Donald 

H.    A.    Barnard 

Flood    &    Horgan 

M.    J.    Hoff 

Standard    Oil    Co 

A.     Eklund 

J.   G.    Forsyth 

West    Dul.   Groc.   Co 

Pittsburg    Coal    Co 

Pittsburg    Coal    Co 

.Sylvester   &   La  Jole.... 
Sylvester  &    La  Jole.... 

J.    H.    Thwlng    

N.    J.    Benson    

R.    L.    Burns,    M.    D 

Panton    &    White   Co.... 

Kelley     Hdw.     tJo 

John    Uno    Sebenius 

.St.    Germain     Bros 

Krickson-Kjall     Co.      ... 
Marshall    -    Wells     Hdw, 

Co 

C.     F.     Johnson 

Elv  Mercantile  Co 

M."  E.    Gleason 

Pentilla     &     Nelson 

Stewart    Transfer    Co... 
J.    Rlokin 


5  00 
12  00 

6  tH) 

7  2  5 

7  00 

8  00 
11  00 

4  50 
10  85 

8  00 
15  00 

4  00 

2  20 
50  80 

36  00 

121  20 

66  75 


60 

00 


3 
4 

6  25 
8  01) 
4  00 
12  00 
4  00 
2  00 
4  00 
20  00 
1 1  50 
45  00 
8  00 
4  00 
78  45 
4  0  0 
35  00 
45  00 
4  00 
125  00 
40  00 
30  00 
15  00 
50  00 
15  00 
30  00 
30  00 
25  00 
132  3  5 
40  00 
30  00 
5  00 

in  00 

177  95 

27  00 
4  00 

128  75 

60  00 

4  00 

4  00 

28  00 


72389 

7  2390 

72391 

72392 

72393 

72394 

72395 

72396 

72397 

76106 

76107 

76108 

76109 

76110 

76111 

76112 

701i:i 

76114 

70115 

70116 

70117 

70118 

70119 

70120 

76121 

70122 

76123 

76124 

70125 

70126 

76127 

76128 

76129 

•JO  130 

70131 

76132 

70133 

76134 

76135 
76130 

70O89 


.A.RKOLA  ROAD. 

Jacob  Hayen.  labor.... 

Matt  Hakala.  labor  .... 

Chas.  Myllyla.  labor.. 

.Alex  .Sarvari.  labor  ... 

Erland   Jakinen.  labor.. 

.Andrew    .Anderson,  labor 

Frank     Laliti.    labor.  .  .  . 

Gust    l..ahtl.    labor 

Tom    Kaivunen.    labor.. 

Frank    Laliti.    labor    .... 

Tom    Kaivunen.    labor.. 

Jacob    Harper,    labor.  .  . 

Matt     Hakala,    labor     .  . 

Chas.    Myuyen.    foreman 

Frank    Lahti,    labor.... 

Kustaa   Lahti.   labor 

Tom    Kaivunen.    labor.. 

Jacob     Harpi.     labor     .. 

Matt     Hakala.    labor     .  . 

Chas.    Nvelvla.    foreman 

Andrew    H.    Maki,    labor 

Erland  Jakinen.   labor.. 

Enoch   Johnson,    labor.. 

Matt     Rahkola.     labor.. 

Wm.  Makl,   labor    

Alfred    Taii>ale.    labor.. 

.Alex  Sarvari,   labor    .... 

.\rlond  Jakinen.  labor.. 

Santere     Sarvari,     labor 

Frank    Lahti.   labor 

Kustaa    Laliti,    labor    .. 

Jacob  Harpi,  labor 

Matt   Hakala.   labor    

Ciias.  Mvuvia,  foreman.. 

Andrew  H.  Maki.  labor.. 

Alex    Sarvari.    labor 

Erland  Jakinen.  labor 

Andrew     Sienbacka. 
bor     

Malt   Rahk.da,   labor.... 

Enock    Johnson,    labor.. 

Duluth  Engineering  Co.. 
exainlnation  and  re- 
port      

Total 


13  50 

3  50 

2  62 
10  50 

5  50 
15  75 
10  50 

3  50 

2  62 

6  75 

3  50 

4  50 

9  00 
12  00 
20  00 

6  00 
10  00 
15  00 
15  00 
1  5  00 
10  00 
10  00 

567  39 


2  4  00 
24  00 
24  00 
24  00 
24  00 
20  00 
20  00 
20  00 

20  00 
28  50 
14  00 

21  02 

21  02 
19  00 
52  00 
26  50 

10  00 
52  00 
52  00 
52  00 
23  40 

22  65 

11  55 
29  30 

2  00 

3  00 

4  00 
4  00 
2  00 


72369 
72416 
72417 

72418 

72419 
72420 
7  2  421 
724  22 
72423 
72424 
72425 
72426 
7  2  427 
72128 
72429 
72430 
72431 
72432 
72  433 
72434 
72435 

75123 


Jack       Bedford, 

work      

M.    E.    Gleason,    tools... 

Jno.    Dinsmore.    foreman 

Cyrille      Tostln.         team 

work      

Tony    Kotchewar.    team 
work 

•Aug.    Pearson,  labor.... 

Martin    Eber.    labor 

Jake    .Skoglund.    labor.. 

Matt    Makl,    labor    

Wm.  Makl,  labor    

Gust   Makl.  labor    

Henry    Danielson.    labor 

Jacob     Timlin,     labor... 

Henry  Kivoe,  labor    .... 

Robt.    Gummonen,    labor 

Matt    Knutti.    labor    .... 

Andrew   Niemi.   labor    .. 

Ed    Rosbeck.    labor    .... 

.Axel    Hermati.   labor.... 

Frank    Klobucher,    labor 

John   Kivoe,  labor 

R.     .s.     Miller,     boarding 
men    

Frank      Hodge.      black- 
smith  work    

Total     11.046  »T 


SI  sl 

10  &0 
10  50 
31  50 
10  50 
12  2B 
4  50 

3  50 
9  62 

4  37 

237  24 


1100 

13  50 
13  50 

13  50 
5  25 
5  25 
5  25 
5  25 
5  25 
5  25 
5  25 
5  25 

5  26 

6  IS 
5S5 

5  25 

6  25 

23  52 
40  50 

62  50 
50  00 

40  00 
25  00 

24  00 

25  00 
14  00 

14  (>«» 
24  00 

24  00 

25  00 
25  00 

24  00 
22  00 
28  00 
19  00 

25  00 

10  00 

5  8S 
22  56 

42  56 

47  50 
16  00 

11  56 

15  50 

18  00 

6  00 

19  00 

18  00 
1800 

19  00 
19  00 

8  00 
8  00 

19  00 
6  00 

1662 
6  25 

22  32 

20  10 


00 


la- 


!i  1 


52 
52  00 
52  00 
52  00 
52  00 
52  00 
35  50 
52  00 

18  50 
10  00 

52  00 


10  00 
.140  00 


BE.VTTA'  KO.\D. 

Commissioner's  District  No. 
64941  Ben  Erickson,  material. 

70015  Noble   Beatty,   foreman.. 

70016  Geo.    Otters,    labor 

70617  Frank  Wakemup.  labor. 

70618  Jack    Ztm.   labor 

70619  IM   Joice.   labor 

70620  Henry    Joice.    labor 

70621  Ingall    Holstad.   labor... 
70022   Axel    Helmgren.    lal>or.. 

70623  .lohn    Splague.    labor.... 

70624  Fred  AVlkely.  team  work 
70025   N.   .A.   Beatty,  team   work 

70626  I..udwig    Nelson,    labor... 

70627  Albert     Nelson,    labor... 

70628  John    Stenson,    labor.... 

70629  Thomas    AVlkely,   labor.. 

72407  .Axel    Helmgren.    labor... 

72408  Ingall  Holstad.  labor.. 
'72409  N.  .\.  Beatty.  foreman.. 
|72410   Norman    Llndsey.    labor. 

724  11    George    Llndsey.    labor.. 

72412    Vine    Svlc,    labor 

7' 113    .lohn    Rhen,    labor 

72414  Josejih   O'Tool.  labor.... 

72415  Leslie    Beatty.    labor.... 

73990  N.    A.    Beatty.    foreman.. 

73991  .Axel    Holmgren,    labor.. 

73992  Ingall    Holstad,    labor.... 

73993  Norman   Lindsey.   labor.. 

73994  George    Lindsey.   labor.. 

73995  Vine   .Svic.    labor 

7:!996   J.    .1.    liahn,    labor 

7:!997  Joseph  O'Tool,  labor.... 
7:!998  Leslie  Beatty.  team  work 
7:5999   Leslie        Beatty. 

work 

74000   George      Beatty, 

woik 

Stenson, 


21 
4 

21 
5 
4 
7 
4 


Al'RORA    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No.     6. 
61284    Continent       Bridge      Co.. 

contract    work    

Chas,   R.   Hill,  labor 

Chas.  It.  Hill,  foreman.  . 
Andrew  Skarbo.  labor.. 
Fred  Matlsi>n.  labor.... 
Chas,  Forsinan.  labor... 
Octave    Minor,    labor.... 

Ole    Reuborg.    labor 

John  Mickelson,  labor.. 
Beckman.  labor... 
Malison   No.    2.   la- 


68316 
6s:?:<8 
68:139 
083  40 
08341 
68342 
68343 
68344 
68345 
68346 


74001 

71002 
74003 
74004 
74005 
74  006 
74007 
740OS 
7  4  009 
7101O 

74011 
74012 
75104 


team 
team 
team 


76488 

76489 

.6  490 

70491 

76495 

76496 

76497 

76498 

76500 

76501 

76502 

76503 

76504 

76505 

76506 

76507 


P.  Manella  

Norman  &  Johnson  ... 

Rustad  &  Johnson 

The  Suffel  Co 

Lundmark   &    Franson.. 
St.     Luke's     hospital.... 

Folz    Grocery    Co 

Devaney    &    Jordan 

M.    M.    Gasser     

Duluth  Universal  Milling 
Co 

F.    A.    Patrick    &   Co... 

Chrlstianson,        Menden- 
haU &  Graham 

76510  Duluth     Grain     &     Pro- 
duce   Co 

Chas,    Shogran    

Baker-Cameron  Co 

Neff   Bros 

Neff   Bros 

Northern   .Shoe   Co 

Robt.  Lueck    

Bavha    &    Co 

Dul.    Marine    Supply    Co. 

Duluth    Hospital     

O.  Tomling   

A.    Janetha     

76524  Gronseth  &  Olson 

76525  Thos.    Foubister    

M.    W.    Turner    

W.   B.  Logan    

J.  E.  Foubister 

Frank  Tamosky 

M.  E.  Brown 


16508 
76509 


76511 
76512 
76513 
76514 
76515 
76510 
7G517 
76518 
76521 
76522 
76523 


76526 
76527 
76528 
76529 
6530 


76531  Knowlton   &  Co. 


60 

00 

25 

00- 

00 

58 

00 

2  00 

4  00 

38  85 

175  75 

4  00 

4  00 

25  00 

4  00 

13  52 

2  75 
4  00 

120  00 

I  60 
4  00 

30  74 
8  00 
4  00 

25  00 
8  00 

27  50 
8  00 

3  00 

4  00 

12  00 

3  50 

4  00 
535  50 

8  00 

13  00 
15  00 

9  90 
244  11 

74  69 

7  72 
95  00 

4  36 
4  00 

4  00 

3  60 
12  00 

287  50 

247  06 

39  00 

4  00 
4  00 

II  00 
4  00 
6  00 

12  00 

8  00 
33  00 

2  45 
4  00 


0S3  47 
08:14  8 
08349 
08350 
08351 
08^,52 
08353 
68354 
68  355 
08356 
68357 
683  58 
68359 

68360 
68361 
68362 

68363 

68364 

68365 

68366 

68367 

68368 

68309 

68370 

68371 

68372 

68373 

6837  4 

08375 

69277 

70038 
70039 
70040 
70041 
70042 
70043 
70044 
70045 
70040 
70047 
70048 
70049 
70050 
70051 
70052 
70053 

70054 

70055 
70056 
70057 
70058 


John 
Fred 
Ixjr 
Louis 
Chas. 
John 
Paul 
Chas. 
Chas. 
Gust 
Matt 
Fred 
Otto 
Sam 
Chas 


I'eterson.  labor. 

Swanson.  labor, 
Kaivo.  labor.  .  .  . 
Wiszaki.    labor.  . 

(Jlson.    labor.  .  .  . 

Peterson.  lal>or. 
Erickson.    labor. 

Make,   labor 

Ramsten,  labor.  , 

Pelto.    labor 

.Salom.  labor.  .  .  . . 

Norman,  labor. 


Llndell. 


team 


Oscar 

work    

Henry  Lentonen, labor.. 
John  Kastelo.  team  worh 
Isaac       Wiljam.s,       team 

work    

G.  .1.  Roof,  leam  work., 
.lohn  Lustick,  team  worlt 
Steve  Palrlc,  team  worit 
A'lctor  Waronen.   labor. 

Ja<k  Maki,  labor 

John   Happela.   labor... 

Louis   Oja.   labor 

Richard    Adams,    labor. 
John    AVelsh,    labor    .  .  . . 
Chas.    Aho,   labor    

Aug.  Mangouen.   labor.. 

John    Pauta.    labor    .  . . . 

Richard   .Adams,   labor. 

Dul.    &    Iron    Range    Ry 
Co..    hauling    gravel. 

Chas.    R.    Hill,    foremai 

Andrew     Sarbo.     labor. 

Louis   Peterson,   labor.. 

John    Kivoe,    labor    ... 

John    Beckman.    labor. 

Paul  A'iszoki,  labor   ... 

Octar   Minar.   labor.... 

Otto    Pelto,    labor     .... 

Chas.    Swanson.    labor. 

Emil    Jalo.    labor    

Ole    Ruberg.    labor     .  .  . 

Chas.     Johnson,    labor. 

John    Welsh,   labor    . . . 

A'lctor  A'aronen,    labor. 

G.    J.    Roof,    team    worl 

Isaac      AA'iUlams. 
work     

Oscar       Sundell. 
work     

Ivar  Ovala.  labor 

Kunsto    .Salomon. 

.Aug.  Magnonen,  labor. 

John    Ronla.    labor    . .  . 

Total     


tear 
tear 


labor 


.395  00 
16  55 
25  00 
27  00 

6  00 

10  00 
18  00 

8  00 
20  00 
20  00 

18  00 

14  00 

7  00 

5  00 
3  00 

20  75 

8  00 
8  00 

13  00 
13  60 
13  00 

11  20 

6  00 

I'j  00 
20  0., 

15  00 

33  50 

109  50 

10  00 

17  50 

2  20 

3  00 

4  00 

4  00 

5  60 

1  60 

2  00 
4  oO 
4  00 
2  00 

292  00 
36  25 
41  62 
33  40 
33  40 

12  00 
33  40 

28  00 

29  40 
17  40 
19  40 

2  00 
21  40 

3  00 
7  00 

24  00 

16  00 

13  50 
3  00 
5  80 
5  80 

■  5  80 


J  o  h  n 

work 

.lohn    Splangue,    labor... 

Tom    Wikely.    laboi- 

Frcil     AVlkely,  leam  work 

Lars    Nelson.    labor 

IiiK.iU    Holstad.    labor.  .  . 
Ax-'l    Helmgren,    labor... 

Ed     P.irter,    labor 

.lohn    Cooks,    team  work 

Tom    AVlkely.    labor 

.Slid wick    Larson,    labor. 

Fred    Ness,    labor 

Ben    i:ricksi>n.  dynamite, 

fuse      caps 

761371/2    Leslie  Beatty,   labor.. 

1'otal ' 


( 

6930O 
69301 
69302 
69303 
09304 
6930  5 
69306 
09:<o7 
69:!08 
09:!09 
69:'.  10 
69311 

69311 

69313 
09314 
69315 
69316 
69317 
69318 
69319 
69320 
69321 
69322 
69323 
69324 
69325 
69326 
69327 
69328 
69329 
69330 
69331 
69332 

09333 
693:M 
69335 

69330 
69337 
69338 


work, 
work., 
team 

team 


BURT  MINE  ROAD. 
ommlssioner's  District  No. 
John  Lambert,  labor.  .  . 
.Serartn  Custongo.  labor 
(Jeorge  Gilla.  labor  .  .  .. 
J.jseph  Logrell.  labor.. 
Lantori  Birarini.  labor. 
Joseph  Oley.  labor  .... 
Charles  Lund,  labor  ... 
Leonard  Tudesgo,  labor 
Danglos  Gillispi,  labor. 
C.  Foavder,  leam 
Nick  Hall,  team 
And.        Oakman, 

work 

John         Lambert, 

worit    

John    Lambert,    foieman 
Douglas    C.lllcspi,    labor 
Charles    Lund,    labor.  .  . 
Joseph    Oley.     labor     ... 

Nuole   Noru,    labor    

John  Lagrell.  labor  .  . . 
Pueri  Iroleo,  labor  .... 
Leonard  Tudesco.  labor 
Larozte    Dleorine.    labor 

.lohn    Parra.    labor    

Serapino   Casto,   labor... 

flio    (Julia,    labor    

Ben    Dull,    labor    

George  Gaddo.  labor.  .  . . 
Herman  Tenio.  labor  . 
Charles  Anderson,  labor 
John  Glaspy.  labor  ... 
C  Foarder,  team  work 
Nick  Hill,  team  work.. 
And.        Oakman,        team 

work   .'  ■ '  ■ 

\     Goulil,   team   work    ... 
Elmer  King,  team   work 
John        Trimble,       team 

work     ■  ■  • 

A     Gould,    team    work.. 

John  Torrlo.  team   work 

John        Lambert,       team 

work  

Total   ' 


7  65 

43  70 
14  8S 
12  26 
12  25 
1  76 

1  75 
10  50 

9  19 
16  73 

9  00 
12  37 

2  63 
14  75 

9  6S 
7  00 

21  00 

24  00 
33  00 
20  00 
20  00 
20  00 
14  00 
14  00 
12  00 
7500 

25  50 

10  00 

51  50 
2  00 

52  00 
50  00 

2  00 

1  00 

20  00 

20  00 

2:!  75 
14  0« 

10  00 

2  50 

3  00 
19  50 
10  00 

8  50 
5  00 

5  00 

r.  00 

G  00 

6  30 
5  00 

796  58 


10  00 


12,618  77 


76137 
76138 
76139 
76140 
76141 
76142 


ANDER.SON  ROAD 
Geo.  C.  Smith,  teain  . 
Jack    Stewart,    labor... 

John    Boom,    labor 

Matt    Koskinen,    labor. 
Towa   Lhadde.   labor.. 
Andrew  Jackson    

Total 


107  50 
25  00 
41  00 

38  00 
34  00 

39  00 

.%      284  50 


BYRNE   RO.AD 
Commi-ssioner's    District 
68311   C.    A.  Carlson   services 
7  4029   C,    A.    Carlson,    foremj 

74030  William    Hill,    labor.. 

74031  Alfred    Carlson,     team 


No. 
n 


25  00 
21  00 
14  00 
45  00 


BERKLUND  ROAD. 
Commissioner's     District     No 
634  4  4    I'rank    Anderson,    labor. 
c:{j45  Chas.     Haglund.     labor.. 

03446   H.  M.  Olson,   labor 

63447   .John    Week,    labor 

67376  Frank  Anderson,  lalior.. 

67377  Chas.     Haglund.    la^or.. 

67378  H.  M.  Olson,  laborr.  .... 
69291    Kelley      Hardware      Co., 

dvnamlte.  etc    

70630  Frank     Anderson,     fore- 

man     

70631  A'ictor    Erickson.    labor. 

70632  Chas.  Johnson,  labor... 
loess  Gust  fcundvlck,  labor.... 
70634  Chas.     Haglund.    labor.. 

74013  Frank     Anderson,     fore- 

man     

74014  W,   T.    Jenkins,    labor    .. 

74015  John    .Swanson,    labor... 

74016  H.    M.   Olson,    labor    

74017  Frank  Anderson,  team.. 
75092   Frank      Anderson.        for 

use      of       tools       and 

freight    on    dynamite. 

76095   Kelley      Hardware      Co., 

dynamite,   fuse.  caps.. 


00 

00 
00 
00 

00 

00 

8  00 

8  00 

15  00 

5  00 

5  00 

20  00 
13  75 
11  00 
11  00 
7  00 
11  00 
1100 
11  00 
11  00 
11  00 
11  00 

11  00 
7  00 
5  00 
3  00 
1  0I» 

1  00 
5  00 

27  50 
27  50 

27  50 

12  50 
12  50 

12  50 

2  50 
2  50 

27  50 

411  2Gi 


"5. 


Total 


37  12 

37  12 
36  00 
45  00 
41  62 
3100 
16  00 

16  05 

2SO0 
6  50 
6  50 

6  50 

7  00 

57  50 
38  00 
4  2  00 
42  00 
35  00 

6  30 

17  60 

..I55SI1 

» 

it  • 

I  t 


.. y 


r- 


t» — »fgg 


tm  '■»'  ■■■ 


K  .^ 


fS  ^rfm^v  As^m^*^mi  > 


—  r 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD: 


I     I 


■p«t"» 


10 


724o 

72437 

72438 

72439 

72440 

72441 

72442 

72443 

72444 

72443 

74018 

74019 

74020 

74021 

74022 

74023 

74024 

74025 

74026 

740;- 

7402S 

75104 

76143 
76144 


BROWN  ROAP. 
Commissioners    Distriit 
6  Olc  Sassos.   foreman... 
Swan   Brown,  labor.... 

Chas.    Hill,    labor 

.Taoob  Pala.  labor 

Eli  Makl.  labor 

Chas.   Hosin.  labor 

.Tohn  Mrtscu,  labor 

Aho.   labor 

I.untl.    labor 

P.  Johnson,  labor 
jSss-s.    foreman .  . 


No.    4. 


N'ck 
Otto 
John 
Ole 


Swan   Brown,    labor 

Charles  11111.  labor 

Isack  Alan,   labor 

Elias    Makl.    labor 

Charles  Uosen.  labor.... 
.iohn   Mattson.    labor.... 

Niik    Aro.    labor 

Otto  Snnd.  labor 

Thos.    Timwlre.    labor... 

Isack   Lower,   labor 

Ben   Krl'kson.  dynamite, 

etc 

Ole   SassoR.   foreman.... 
J.  P.  Johnson,  labor 

Total   ^ 


6  00 

23  00 

21  00 

13  0>^ 

IS  00 

18  00 

17  00 

14  OO 

6  00 

2  00 

18  00 

3  5  00 

34  00 

33  00 

33  00 

32  Oil 

31  00 

28  00 

32  50 

27  00 

16  00 

31  50 

Olo   Olson,    labor    

Richard  Lanberg.  labor 
H.  Lynstadt,  foreman.. 
John     Lynstadt,        team 

work     

76162  Olaus      Paulson.        team 

work     

Han.s   Olson,  team 


76158 
76159 
76160 
76161 


76163 
76164 


August 
work 

Total 


Person, 


work 
team 


>••••• 


8  00 

6  00 

12  50 

15  75 

17  10 

12  60 

13  05 
%  395  75 


BASSKTT    ROAD 

Commissioner's    I>istriit 
73976 


No. 


7397. 
73978 
73979 
739S0 
73981 
73982 
73983 
73984 
73985 
73986 
73987 
73988 
73989 


t'harles  Uiver.  foreman 
John  Berry,  labor  .... 
And.  Ktelainen.  labor 
Herman  Frandy.  labor 
Alex  Lindgren.  labor.. 
Alex  Nisula.  labor  .... 
Alf    Lassila.    labor     .... 

Emll    Karl.    labor    

John   Kari.   labor    

.Mex   Beckman.  labor   .. 

Victor   Beck,   labor    

.\.  Sahlman.  laV>or  .... 
D  Sukanen.  labor  .... 
\Vm.  .\hola.  labor 

Totals     ' 


BVHL  AND  LITTLE  I;OKK 
A  N  .Anderson  foreman 
John    Lor.svlst.    labor... 

John  Hill,  labor  .. 

.Andrew  Oardos.  labor   .  . 

John    Doff,    labor    

John    Ostlund.    labor 

John  Storhert.  labor   .  .  . 
A     N.   .Anderson,   board.. 


76145 
76146 
76147 
76148 
76149 
76150 
76151 
76152 


Total 


6  00 
5  50 

500  50 


6. 

21  88 
21  88 

20  13 

21  88 
21  88 
21  00 
21  88 

20  13 
16  63 
23  63 
23  63 

21  88 
10  50 
33  75 

300  6S 


ROAD. 
37  50 
29  60 
20  07 
16  00 
39  00 
20  00 
41  50 
1  93 

S       205  60 


CARLSON     ROAD. 
Commissioners   District  No. 
64942    E.    D.    Du    I'ont    de    Ne- 
mours   Co.,    dynamite, 

etc •  •  •  •  1 

Jacob      Bakka,    contract 

work    ;  ■    ■  1 

Ole       Peterson,    contraci 

work    ■ 

John    Holman,    contract 

work    • 

Louis   Johnson,   contract 
work    

Andrew      Stenland,   con- 
tract work    

Herman       Vitala,       con- 
tract  work    • 

John  Johnson,     contract 
work    

Henry       Johnson,       con- 
tract  work    •  •  •  • : 

F:mil      Jiajala.     contract 
work     • 

Walter   Vitala,    contract 
work    

Emll    Johnson,    contract 
work     • 

William      Hill,    contract 
work     

Andrew   Stenland.      con- 
tract   work     • 

Ole       Peterson,    contract 
work    

John      Hilman.    contract 
work     - 

Gust        Soari,       contract 
work     • 

Emil    Johnson,    contract 
work     

Charles  Stenhack,     con- 
tract work    


65834 

6  5  8  3  o 

65836 

65837 

65838 

65839 

65840 

65S41 

65842 

65843 

65844 

65845 

65846 

65847 

65848 

65849 

65850 

65851 


45  48 
42  02 
48  14 


51  67 
42  02 
49  88 
48  17 
38  57 


CALV.\RY  ROAD. 
Commissioner's  District  No. 
74043  Tliomas  Stock,  foreman 
John  Campbell,  labor.. 
John  Worsez.  labor.... 
Sam  HlKgans.  labor.... 
Alex  Supuske.  labor.... 
Frank  Harch.  labor.... 
Joe  Strawberry,  labor.. 
Ignatz   Wasinick.   labor. 

T.    Donlpan.    labor 

John    McDonald,    labor.. 

O.     Erickson.    labor 

Joe  Kozrick.  teaming.. 
R.  Langley.  teaming.  .  . . 
Wihi  t'osgrove.  teaming 
H.     Brainard.    teaming.. 

A.    Jutene.     teaming 

Tiiomas       Steele,         for 
boarding   men    


Total 


43  77 
42  02 

26  25 
111  52 
106  67 

20  34 

27  13 
47  50 
42  65 

122  19 
.?       99451 


65857 

65858 

66517 

66518 

66519 

66520 

66521 

69974 

69975 

69976 

69977 

69977*^ 

69978 

69979 

70704 

70705 

70706 

70707 

70708 

70709 

70710 

70711 

70712 

70713 

72530 

72531 
72532 
72533 
72534 
72535 
72536 
72337 
72538 
75104 

76220 
7C221 
76222 
76223 
76224 
76225 
76226 
76227 


Peter  Eugene,  labor   . . . 

Ole  HaHer,  labor    

Hans    Johnson,    foreman 

Ole   Holter,   labor 

A.  F.  Voss,  labor   

Erick    Rensla.    labor    .. 

Ole   Anne,   labor    

Hans   Johnson,    foreman 

.\xel  Johnson,  labor    . . . 

E.    E.    Kensto,   labor.... 

P.  McGraw,  labor 

.Axel   Johnson,  labor.. 

P    A.  Mvrhaug,  labor... 

Knule    Lien,    labor    

Hans    Johnson,    foreman 

Erick   Kanslo,  labor    . . . 

Pat  McGrath,   labor    .... 

Martin    Olson,    labor 

P.   A.   Myrhaug,  labor... 

Charles   Johnson,    labor. 

Joe    Mihm.    labor    

Alfred   Holter,    labor.... 

Fred  Ness,  labor 

Henry    Knutson,    labor.. 

Hans       Johnson,       fore- 
man     •  •  • 

Charley    Johnson,     labor 

Martin    Olson,    labor.... 

Fred    Ness,    labor 

Lewis    Ringdahl.   labor.. 

Henrv  Maines,  labor.... 

E.  N.  Everson.  labor.... 

Knute   Lien,   labor 

C.   L.  Johnson,  labor.... 

Ben       Erickson.        dyna- 
mite,   tools,    etc 

Hans    Johnson,    foreman 

Martin    Olson,    labor.... 

Charley    Johnson,     labor 

Fred    Ness,    labor 

I..ewls    -Aune,    labor 

I>ewls    Randahl.    labor.. 

Axel    Johnson,    labor.... 

Knute    I>ein,     labor 

Total    


13  13 
38  25 
28  75 


20 

<e 

4 

6 

23 

13 

10 


25 
75 
37 
12 
75 
12 
0 


72495 
72496 
72497 
72498 
72499 


10  50  I  72500 
10  50  172501 
10  50 

1  75 
18  7  5 
31  50 
31  50 
36  75 
15  40 

5  25 
13  65 
23  10 
15  75 

1  75 


37  50 
20  30 
36  05 

22  75 
24  50 

8  75 

23  10 
13  50 

38  85 

18  80 

32  50 

20  13 

20  13 

5  25 

8  75 

18  20 

5  25 

1  75 


72490  John    Matllla,    labor    ... 

72491  Jacob  Sori-ista,  labor   .. 

72492  Sam   Heikkala,   labor    . . 

72493  Joseph  Lahtonen.  labor. 

72494  .Andrew  Salo,  labor  ... 
Thomas  Silta,  labor  ... 
John  Kaunoner,  labor.. 
Jacob   Helkilla.    labor    .. 

Simon  Salo,  labor   

A.   B.   Koski.  labor   

Victor  Stromberg,   labor 

Kikolai  Kari,  labor 

Ely  Aho,   labor    

John  Mykkyla,   labor... 
John    Worleen.    labor    .. 

.And  Ranllo,   labor 

August  Agren,  laltor... 
Matt  Neimitala,  labor  .. 

Oscar  Aho.   labor    

Otto  Jarvinon.  labor  .  .. 
HjaLmar  Rantio,  labor. 
John  Heikkala,  labor.. 
Erick  Johnson,  labor... 
Mike  Smulter,  labor  ... 
Thoma.s  Salo,  team  work 
Erick     Melimark,      team 

work     


72502 
72503 
72504 
72505 
72506 
72607 
72508 
72509 
72510 
72511 
72512 
72513 
72514 
72515 


25  02 

23  92 
22  40 

22  22 
36  22 
25  02 

.>•>    O.J 

21  52 
36  22 
25  02 
18  37 
20  65 

24  85 

23  97 
23  80  I 
20  47  I 

22  05  I 
11  72  i 

17  85 

18  55  I 

13  47  I 

14  52  I 
11  37  ! 

8  57  ( 
27  00  : 

27  00 


72556 
77557 
77558 
77559 
77560 
77561 
76094 


Paul  Legarde.  labor.. 
C.  F.  Soderlnnd.  labor 
Andrew  Eskro.  labor. 
John  Poa.sek,  labor... 
Erick  Nelson,  labor.. 
John  Nelson,  labor 
O.  B.  Johnson,  mdse, 
freight    

Total   - . . 


and 


<> 

00 

2t 

20 

33 

20 

31 

20 

12 

00 

3  00 

4  15 


.$       903 


FISH    LAKE    ROAD. 
Commissioner's  District  No. 


70872 
70873 
70874 
70875 
70876 
70877 
70878 
70879 
70880 

708S1 
72364 


Total 


.1   1,999  62 


,|   1,076  34 


74044 

7404; 

74046 

7401'; 

74048 

74049 

74050 

74061 

74052 

74053 

74054 

74065 

74056 

7405 

74058 

74059 


21  00 
8  88 
7  68 
6  52 
5  52 


Total 


5  10 
7  50 

7  50 

8  50 
3  00 

12  90 
28  00 
25  50 
45  00 
35  00 

62  18 

.$  296  00 


COTTON    ROAD. 

Commissioner's  l>lstrict 

74101   Wm.  Peterson,  labor.. 

Louis   Jansan,    labor.. 

Oskar    Stanley,    labor. 


No.  5. 


74102 
74103 
74104 
74105 
7410G 
74107 
74108 
74109 

74110 

74111 

74112 
74113 
74114 
74115 
74116 
75124 


Peter  Peterson,   labor.  . . 

.Aug.  Soli,  labor 

John  Wingerst,   labor... 

John  Johnson,  labor.... 

Eric  O.   Erickson.   labor. 

C.  J.  Johnson,  labor  and 
team    

Andrew    Erickson.    fore- 
man   and    team 

Nels  Bedgvall,  labor  and 
team    

.Aug    Johnson,   labor.... 

Oskar  Carlson,  labor.  . . . 

R.  Olson,   labor 

R.    Holand.    labor 

Per  Iiardell.   labor. 

Kelley      Hardware 
tools,   etc 

Total  


32  00 

32  00 

33  00 
17  00 
32  00 
29  00 
20  00 
20  00 

16  00 

50  50 

40  00 
29  00 

34  00 
34  00 
34  00 
34  00 


67359 
69274 

69276 

69298 

69989 


69900 
69991 
69992 


CIIISHOLM   ROAD. 
Commissioner's  Distriit  No. 
W    H    Everett,  services. 
Dominic    Mature    &    Co., 

contract    work • 

Matt     Rierson,     contract 

work    ;  •  • ;  'i' ' 

The    Waters-Clark    Lbr. 

Co..     material 

Herman     Fetzlaff,     fore- 
man     ,■.•■■ 

Nestor  Neumalina.  labor 

Andrew  Nelson,  labor... 

Ernst,       team 


12  00 
357  00 
320  00 

19  44 

10  00 
8  00 
8  00 


EDHOLM   ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District  No. 
64952  John   McGivern.  contract 

work    

Eli     Hendrlckson.     con- 
tract   work    

Ole       Tarvas,       contract 

work    

Napila,  contract 


7. 


Co., 


492 


ta 


69993 
70598 

70635 
706;!6 
70637 
70638 

70639 

70G40 

70611 

70642 

70643 

70644 

70645 

70646 

70617 

7064* 

70649 

72370 

72377 


Ernst,  labor 

Ernst,  contract 


Herman 

work 
Herman 
Herman 

work    

M    Donahue,   foreman... 

Andy  Wilson,  labor 

Gust    Aho,    labor.  ....... 

J.     A.     McCarthy,      team 

work    ,•  •  • 

John  Duffy,  team  work.. 
M.  Danahy.  team  work.  . 
Scott  Kennedy,  labor... 
John  Kevernen.  labor... 

Andrew  Makl.    labor 

Vano  I.i\ivoncn.  labor... 

Victor   Lahtl.    labor 

.lack   Salme.    labor 

Pat    Hines.    labor 

Horace  Carl,  labor..... 
M.       Danahy.       boarding 

men    •  •  •  •  • 

Herman     Ernst,     et     ai, 

contract   work 

Dominic      Mature,      con- 
tract   work 


67363 
67364 
67365 
67366 
67367 
67368 
67369 
67370 
67371 
67372 
67373 
67374 
67375 


75109 
75110 
75111 
75112 
75113 
75114 
75115 
75116 
75117 
75118 
75119 
75120 
,„  76165 
84  «0  -^6166 


2  50 

9  00 

100  00 

33  00 

16  50 

14  25 

43  50 

47  25 

165  00 

14  25 

14  25 

14  25 

13  50 

14  25 

11  55 

9  80 

6  70 

Pukiln,  contract 
liarsila„contract 
Sauite,  contract 
contract 
contract 
contract 
con- 
contract 
contract 
contract 


380  00 
400  00 


Total 


%   2,128  69 


CRANE   LAKE   ROAD. 
Commissioner's   District    No. 
63493  Clarence       M.       Everett, 
foreman    

63493  Clarence       M.       Everett. 

team   work    

63494  Pete   Mandal,    labor...... 

63495  Felix  Gilfault,  labor.... 

63496  Henry    Hendrlckson,    la- 

bor    

63497  Dan   McLeod,   labor 

63498  Fred  Gray,   labor 

69282  W.    H.    Congdon    &    Son, 

material,  etc 

69994  Clarence       M,       Everett. 

foreman    

C9995  Clarence       M,       Everett, 

team  work  

Pete  Mental,  labor 

Mike  Gilbo.  labor 

George  Donahue,  labor. 
George  Dunn,  labor.... 
Rov  Carser.  labor 


24  75 

45  00 

18  00 

3  37 


14 
6 
4 


62 
75 
50 


74065 
74066 
74067 
74068 

74069 

74070 

74071 

74072 

74073 

74074 

74075 

74076 

74077 

74078 

74079 

71080 

740S1 
74082 
75133 


69006 
69f»07 
69998 
69999 
700O0 


CHISIIOLM  ROAD. 

Pat   Hvnes.   labor    

Andy     Wilson,     grader.. 

Scott    Kinney,    labor 

.August     Jutenan,      team 
work     

Oscar   Hill,   labor    

M    Danahy.  foreman .... 

Gust    Aho,    labor 

John    Ruenen,    labor.... 

Andrew   Makl.   labor.  .  . . 

Vanio    Fowanen.   labor.. 

Victor    Lahtl,     labor.... 

Jack   Shane,   labor 

:m.  Danahy.  team  work 
M  Danahv.  team  work 
M.  Danahy.  team  work 
W.    C.       Barrett,      team 

work 

J.   P.   Lind.  team  work.. 

M.    Danahy,    board 

.Matt     Rierson.     ditching 
and    grading    hills 


7  10 
17  50 

19  00 

27  90 
14  25 
57  00 
22  50 
22  50 

21  65 

20  66 
20  65 

22  50 
90  00 
90  00 
90  00 

10  00 

6  00 

123  30 

275  00 


70001  Nels  Ha  son.  labor 

70002  John  McKlnzie.  labor... 

70003  Julius  Block,  team  work 

70004  Clarence   M.   Everett, 

boarding   men    

70650  Clarence       M.       Everett. 

foreman    

70651  J.  Block,  team  work.... 
706."i2    George   Donahue,    labor. 

70653  John   McKinzle,   labor... 

70654  Knute  Larson,  labor.... 

70655  J.  Block,  labor 

7  06.''6   C.  yi.  Everett,  team  work 
70657   .Alex  McNealy.   labor.... 

7065S   Matt   Halko.   labor 

70659  «*harley    Hill,   labor 

7066U  Peter   Beanbo.   labor.... 

70661  Victor  Lund,  labor 

70662  George  Dunn,  labor 

70663  John  Izaikson.  labor.... 

70664  .Andrew  .Anderson,  labor 

70665  John      Clark,       boarding 

men    

72447  F.  •:.  C.  Clark,  labor 

72448  Ole   Peterson,  labor 

72449  John   King,   labor 

72450  Robert   Pinkerton.   laltor 
72461  Clarence  Chutes,  labor.. 

724n2   Alex    Quinn,    labor 

72463  Clarence       M.       Everett, 

foreman    

72454  Knute  I.,arson.  labor 

72455  Matt    Halko,   labor 

72456  C.  M.  Everett,  team  work 

72457  Chas.  Hill,  labor 

72458  Peter    Beaubo.    labor.... 

72459  Victor   Lind,  labor 

72460  John  Isaacson,  labor 

72461  Emil      DcCalgny,      team 

work    

Mike  Gilbo.  labor 

Jack   Clark,    labor 

Dan    McLeod,    labor. 


40  72 

31  62 

26  00 
13  67 
10  54 
7  17 
7  58 
3  22 
3  38 
3  07 
6  00 

45  86 

70  83 

12  97 

1 5  00 

6  46 

22  28 

6  02 

37  00 

1  8(ik 

9  91 

»  81 

5  81 
9  66 

6  88 
91 
91 

108  49 
12  08 

5  25 
20  12 

9  62 

6  25 
20  12 


Total 


.$  3,085  19 


616 
76168 
76169 
76170 
76171 
76172 
76173 
76174 
76175 
7C176 
76177 
76178 
76179 
76180 
76181 
76182 
76183 
76184 
76185 

76186 
76187 
76188 
76189 
76190 
76191 
76192 

76193 
76194 
76195 
76196 
76197 
76198 


74060 
74061 
74062 
74063 

74064 

75103 


CANOSI.A     RO.AD    BRIDGE 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
Victor   Johnson,   la 
Carl    .Anderson,    la 
Swan  G.  Dun  berg, 
Chas.     Bergquist, 

man     

Chas.    Bergqulst, 

work     

Swan   G.    Dunberg. 

ber  for  Canosia 

bridge     

Total     


bor. . 

4  00 

hor. . 

4  00 

labor 

4  UO 

fore- 

5  00 

team 

3  00 

tlra- 

Road 

5  00 

125  00 

E.AST  KELSEY   ROAD. 
Commissioner's  District  No. 

69299  F.   H.   Wade,  tools 

Nels  Nelson,  foreman... 
Wm.  M.  Johnson,  labor. 
Nels  Johnson,  labor.... 
Loren  Preston,  labor... 
Chas.   Edmund,  labor... 

Gust    Nelson,    labor 

Alfred  Cllngren,  labor.. 
Chas.  Hanson,  labor.... 
A.  D.  Makinster.  labor.. 
Louis    Mattson.    labor... 

69960  Edw.     Sutherlund.     labor 

69961  John    Wingart,    labor... 
William  Jameson,  labor. 


D. 


69950 
69951 
69952 
69953 
69954 
69955 
69956 
69957 
69958 
69959 


72462 
72463 
72464 
72465 
72466 
72467 
72468 
72469 
72470 
72471 
72472 

72473 


Bert  Everett,  team  work 
Andrew  .Anderson,  labor 
Clarence  Chutes,  labor.. 

Ole   i'eterson,   labor 

Chas.  Soueyes,  labor.... 
Chas.  French,  labor.... 
Frfd  E.  C.  Ciark.  labor. 
Fred    E.    C.    Clark,    team 

work 
Jack   C. 

men    . 


Clark,   boarding 


77  63 

9  40 

18  90 

112  00 

24  02 

24  70 

19  00 

24  78 

10  00 

1  75 

3  50 

175 

6  00 

22  65 

28  00 

28  00 

19  25 

12  25 

28  00 

12  00 

120  35 

Total 


.1     1,316  98 


CULVER    IIO.VD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
72374   E.     J.     Ketchum,     dyna- 
mite      

75124  Kelley      Hardware     Co., 
dj'namite     


30 
97 


69962 
69963 

70592 
70604 

70714 

70715 

70716 

70717 

70718 

70719 

70720 

70721 

70722 

70723 

70724 

70725 

70726 

70727 

70728 

70729 

70730 

70731 

70732 

70733 

70734 

707?5 

70736 

72539 
72540 
7-^541 
72542 
72543 
7  2514 
72545 
72547 
72548 


boarding 


Co.,  tools. . 
dynamite. 


Total 


$8  27 


CULVER    EXTENSION    ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No.  5. 

74083   Chas.    Peterson,    labor..  2100 

Ed    Mehlum,    labor    15  20 

Aug.    H.    Haldin,   labor..  16  00 

Levi    Haldin,    labor    15  70 

August  Person,  labor    ..  13  00 

.Iohn    Degerman.      labor  20  70 

B.    Wintergest,    labor...  4  00 

t^laus    Paulson.    lat)or.  .  14  00 

Hans    Olson,    labor    13  80 

Herman    Gustafson,    la- 
bor       11 

Wm.  Anderson,  labor   . .  5 

B.    Wintergest,    labor...  9 

Itichard    San  berg,    labor  1 

N.     Lyngstadt.     foreman  45 


74084 
74085 
74086 
74087 
74088 
74094 
Zt090 
-^4091 
74092 


254C 


74093 
74094 
74095 
74096 
74097 


80 
70 
00 
00 
62 


71118 
74119 
7  4120 
71121 
74122 
7412.'^ 
74124 
74125 

74126 
74127 


74128 
74129 


Nels    Nelson, 

men 

Kelley  Hdw. 
F.    H,    Wade. 

etc 

Nels  Nelson,  foreman... 
Wm.  M.  Jameson,  labor. 
Soren  Preston,  labor... 
<^lauH  Edmunds.  laV)or.  . 
H.  D.  Makinster.  labor.. 
H.  D.    Makinster.  labor. 

Nels  'Johnson,  labor 

Gust   Nelson,   labor 

.Alfred  Clingren,  labor.. 
Charles  Hanson,  labor.. 
Louis  Mattson,  labor.... 
Edw.  Sutherlund,  labor. 
John  E.  Wingart,  labor. 
AVm.  Falstrom,  labor.... 

Joe  Fesky,  labor 

John  Johnson,  labor.... 
Holland  Hollands,  labor, 
Oscar  I.,und«iuist,  labor.. 
Gustav  Berquist.  labor 
Jacob    Nyman.    labor... 

John    Davis,    labor 

William   Jameson,  labor 
Margaret         Jame  son, 

boarding    men     

Nels    Nelson,    labor 

Nels  Johnson,  labor  . . 
Gust  Nelson,  labor  .... 
Fred  Norberg,  labor  . . 
C.  Johnson,  labor  .... 
Peter  Pearson,  laltor... 
Willie  Jameson,  labor.. 
C.  Hoglund,  team  work 
Margaret         Jam  e  s  o  n, 

boardlg   men    

L.       Jacobson,         team 

work     

Nels  Nelson,  foreman.. 
Wm.  M.  Jameson,  labor 
Loren  Preston,  labor.. 
Gust  Nelson,  labor  .... 
Willie  Jameson,  labor.. 
S.  A.  Hoag.  labor  .... 
Henrv  B.iorkland.  labor 
Andrew    Moberg,      team 

work     

S.    A.    Hoag,    team    work 
L.      Jacobsen,  team 

work     

August  Hay,  team  work 
Nels  Nelson,  board  .... 


47  05! 
31  90  j 
23  20  I 
14  25 
22  20 
22  20 
13  63 

12  34 
11  78 

13  90 
8  48 
7  71 
6  91 

10  10 

42  10 
3  80 

21  05 
52  62 
36  20 
3  00 
5  00 
10  00 
39  60 
24  44 
12  34 

3  48 
14  52 

8  67 

4  10 
24  40 
18  43 

9  19 
12  11 
12  49 

3  48 

7  25 

7  25 

60 

18  60 


76199 

76200 
76201 
76202 
[76203 
176204 
76205 
76206 
176207 
176208 
j 76209 
•76210 
176211 
76212 
76213 
76214 
76215 
76216 
76217 
76218 
76219 


George 

work 

Victor 

work 

A'lctor 

work 
Henry 

work 

Matt   Bajala. 

work  

Alex  Mattsur. 

work 

Henry    Napela. 

work     

Saprick      Mattson, 

tract   work    . 
Matt    .Auntala, 

work 
Gust  Holmbers, 

work     

Ellas      Napila, 

work     

Eli     Hendrlckson.    labor 

Lsak   Hallila.  labor 

John  Santtl,  labor 

Olll   Tarvos.    labor 

Matt  Hautala,  labor... 
William  Isaacson,  labor 
Toivo  Halberg,  labor  .. 
Henrv  Nuapila,  labor... 
John  Hautala,  labor... 
Paul    Wattane,   labor    .. 

Matti    Tusa,   labor    

.Alax    Mutru,    labor    .... 

Wm.  Doyle,  labor 

Frank  Doyle,  foreman.. 

Pat    livan.    labor    

Alfred     Anderson,    labor 

Mike  Sang,  labor 

Victor  Makl.  labor  .... 
Olivlo  Forget,  labor  . . 
John  Qulnn,  labor  .... 
And.  Parkuavy.  labor 
Pete  Jonshak,  labor... 
Joe  FoushTr,  labor  .... 
Wm.  Willow,  labor  .... 
Ovlt  Colby,  labor  ,... 
Billy  Olllver,  labor  ... 
Geo.    Peterson,    labor... 

Fred    Hill,    labor    

Wm.  Hancock,  labor.. 
Gust  Carlson,  labor  .... 
John  Hanson,  labor  .... 
John  Williams,  labor.. 
Pronvost    &    Son,    team 

work     

Dave  Austin,  labor  .... 
Geo.  Peters.  labor  .... 
Frank  McCauley.  labor 
Dan  Mclntyre.  labor... 
John  Norcross,  labor... 
John  Helmer.  team  work 
Pronvost    &    Son,    team 

work    

Fred  Johnson,  labor.... 
Ed    Thompson,    labor... 

Wm.  Sullivan,  labor 

William  Erickson,  labor 
Nick  Rintela,  labor  .... 
Pronvost     &     Son,  team 

work     

Ed   O'Donnell,   labor.... 

Pat   Bower,  labor   

William   Kelly,  labor   .. 

Frank    Dugy.    labor 

Fred    Blngers,    labor 

Billy  Carson,  labor  ... 
Clifford  Demara.  labor. 
Alfred  Champlaln,  labor 
Paul  Valltsa,  labor.... 
Andrew  Jackson,  labor. 
George  Emond,  labor.  .. 
John  Hervalla.  labor... 
Sever  Ecketum,  labor.. 
Billv  Do  vie,  team  work 
William  Lindholm,  labor 
John    Kenvlch,    labor... 

Jack   Kain.  labor    

Charles    Keaton.    labor.. 
Mike    Dacalln,     labor.. 

Billy  Cery.  labor    

Ed    Thompson,    labor    .  . 


15  65 

29  40 
61  00 

30  75 
32  10 

34  £0 

29  40 
15  90 

30  75 
26  70 
64  30 

35  10 
32  10 


26  70 
45  11 
36  51 
38  66 
35  44 
22  56 

33  29 
38  66 
10  74 

27  92 
16  10 

9  66 

5  36 
54  00 
71  50 
20  00 
20  00 

28  50 
20  00 
32  00 
32  00 
16  00 
20  00 

34  50 
7  00 
9  00 

34  50 
34  50 
34  50 

6  00 
10  00 
10  00 

6  00 

126  25 
28  00 
28  00 
28  00 
26  00 
26  00 
20  00 


EVERSON  ROAD. 

A.  Hawkins,  material... 
Ole  Sassos.  foreman.... 
Albert   Peterson,   labor.. 

Pete  Moberg.   labor 

Ludvlg  Olson,  labor.... 
Oscar   Magnuson.   labor. 

Fred    Larson,    labor 

.Iohn  Kllntman.  labor.. 
Abel  Pearson,  labor.... 
Karl  Engdahl.  labor.... 
Knute   LJen.    labor 

B.  EIrkkson.  dynamite.. 

Ole   Sassos.   labor 

George  Beatty.  labor... 
Robert  Beatty,  labor... 
Noble  Beatty,  labor.... 
.Abel  Pearson,  labor.... 
Verner  Bergren,  labor.. 
Albert  Peterson,  labor., 
("has.  Tagelberg,  labor.. 

John    Olson,    labor 

John  Kllntman,  labor.. 
Gust  Johnson,  labor.... 
John  F:rickson,  labor... 
Oscar   Magnuson,   labor. 

Ole   Olson,    labor 

Knute   Lien,    labor 

Andrew  Scott,   labor 

Ole   Bvstrom.    labor 

Karl  Engdahl.  labor.... 
Felix    Lemalne.    labor... 

Ole   Sasso.   foreman 

Ole   Bvstrom.    labor 

Andrew  Scott,  labor.  .  . . 
Albert  Peterson,  labor.. 
Chas.  Fogelberg.  labor. 
Ludvig   Olson,    labor.... 

Nels    Holter.    labor 

Ress  Walker,  labor 

Knute   Lien,   labor 

John   .Anderson,  labor... 

Robt.  Beatty.  labor 

Ole   Sassos.   foreman .... 

Ole    .Aune.    labor 

Louis  Swanson.  labor... 
Sam  Swanson.  labor.  .  .  . 
Knute  Swanson,  labor.. 
John        Pearson,        team 

work  

68413  Abel  Pearson,  team  work 

68414  Chas.  A.  Johnson,  labor. 

68415  Oscar  Engstrom,  labor. 

68416  James  Sunby,  labor 

69285  Ben  Erickson,  labor 


63435 
63482 
63483 
63484 
63485 
63486 
63487 
63488 
63489 
63490 
63491 
64282 
64285 
64286 
642h7 
64288 
642S9 
64  290 
64291 
64292 
64293 
64294 
64295 
64296 
64297 
64298 
64299 
164300 
164301 
164302 
64303 
64962 
64963 
64964 
64965 
64966 
64967 
64  968 
64969 
64970 
64971 
64982 
68407 
68408 
68409 
6S410 
68411 
68412 


2  00 
18  00 
41  62 
13  50 


33 
12 
9 
7 
6 
3 


i5 
37 
00 
87 
50 
00 
81 
13  85 
30  00 
13  00 

13  00 
22  50 
38  25 
37  12 

14  00 
S  00  I 
7  00 

12  00 

15  75 
9  00 
5  OO 

10  1 


70502 
70844 
70845 
70846 

70847 
70848 
70849 
70850 
70851 

70852 

70853 

70854 
70855 
70856 
70857 
70858 
72373 
72581 

1 725S2 

I 

I  72583 

72584 

72585 


Kelley  Hdw.  Co..  tools 
Simon  Kararek.  labor.  . 
R.  H.  Williams,  labor.. 
H.     H.     Marshall.       team 


work     

And.  Jalmaluk.  labor.. 
Harry  Pearson,  labor. 
Michael  Crowley,  labor 
Karl  Johnson,  labor. 
Peter     Nicholson, 

work     

J.      A.       Johnson, 

work     

Chas.      Lindberg, 

work     

Casmer    Greepe 

Chas.  Olson,  labor 

George  Larsen,  labor... 
Otto  Wlgreen.  labor... 
Gust  Johnson,  foreman 
Kelley  Hdw.  Co.,  tools. 
R.     T.     Williams, 

work     •  ■ 

Marshall, 


::612 

6 10 ; 72613 

10  00  I  720U 

27  00  !  72615 

72616 

72617 

72618 

72619 


team 

team 

team 

.labor. 


team 


team 


team 


team 


team 


00 
00 
00 
00 
50 
50 
50 
50 
14  00 


32 
12 


72586 
72587 
72588 
72589 
72590 
72591 
72592 
72593 
7  2594 


A.       H. 

work     

I'eter      Nuklasen, 

work     

J.      A.      Johnson, 

work     

Karl        Johnson, 

work     

Andrew    Bruse.    labor... 

Chas.  Olson,   labor 

Ch.    Blomqulst.    labor... 

Chris    Olson,    labor 

Peter    Mattson,    labor... 

A.    Johnalek.    labor 

R  F.  AVllllams.  labor.. 

Otto  Wlgren,  labor 

Gust  Johnson,  foreman 

Total  ' 


29  25  1 

6  00 
11  80 

7  40  I 
20  40  I 

13  50 

;43  65 

9  00 
7  80 

10  40 
4  00 
6  00 

33  55 
95 

6  75 

675 

6 


2620 


72621 
72622 
72623 
72624 
72625 
72626 
72627 
76098 

76105 


Tom  Kallio,  labor  .... 
Matt  Wurronen,  labor.. 
Matt  Wurronen.  labor.. 

John    Makl.    laboi- 

Zakrl  Paulkalney.  labor 
Erick  Ravja.  labor  .... 
Charles  Keskl.  Is  bor  .  . 
Herman  Hill,  tean  work 
Richard    Wilson,      team 

work     

Uno  Lehrke.  la  Dor.... 
Coolidge-Schussler     Co., 

tools,    etc 

Henry  Johnson,  f  jreman 

Edw.  W.  Johnsor .  labor 
Matt   Wurronen,   labor.. 

John  Makl.  labor    

Zakri     Palikanen,    labor 

Zakrl    Palikanen.    labor 

E.    Lukonen.    labor 

Richard     Wilson,     team 
work     

Herman         Hill,         team 
work     

Peter  Kosky,  labor   .... 

Jacob    .''aari,    labor 

Erick   Ralya.  labor    

Alex     Koskl,     labor.... 

Alfred    Hill,    labor    

Sam     Hampra.     labor... 

T'aul     Hill,    labor -•• 

Coolldge-Sohuss  er     Co., 
merchandise    

Aug.      Wuotlla.        team 
work   and   repairs.... 

Total     


27 

00 

35 

60 

35 

60 

31 

60 

30  10  1 

14 

80 

19  60  1 

25 

20 

24  30 

2  00 

57  30 

30  00 

15  00 

20  00 

12  00 

1  00 

22  00 

IS  00 

2  25 

24  80 

16  00 

3  00 

10  00 

10  00 

8  00 

11  00 

4  00 

61  44 

10  00 


1722  19 


74173 

74174 

74175 

74176 

74177 

74178 

74179 

74407 

74408 

74409 

74410 

74411 

74412 

74413 

74414 

74415 

74416 

74417 

74418 

74419 

74420 

74421 

74422 

74423 
74424 
74425 
74426 
74427 
74428 
74429 
74430 
74431 
74432 
75105 


Onie 
John 

Nels 

Gust 

John 

Tom 

John 


It-aac 
Isaac 
Isaac 
Isaac 
Axel 


HALDEN  ROAD.  , 

j!  Commissioner's  Llstrlct  No.  o. 


11 


3  00 
5  00 
3  00 
3  00 

3  00 

4  00 

5  00 
1  00 
3  00 

6  88 


315  18 


FISH    LAKE    RO^D. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 


r'»r. 


24 
8 
6 
5 
6 
4 


00 
00 
00 
00 
50 
00 


42  88 
35  75 

5  25 
11  82 
19  08 
24  07 

1 3  50 

18  00 

13  12 

3  50 

6  57 
6  05 


562 

72563 

72561 
72565 
72566 
72567 
72568 
72569 
72570 
72571 
72572 
72573 
72574 
7257.5 
72576 
72577 
72578 
72579 


R.  T.  Williams,  team 
work    

A.  H.  Marshall,  team 
work     • 

Peter  Mikelson.  labor  . . 

J.  .\.  Johnson,  labor.... 

Karl    Johnson,    labor... 

Michael    Crowley,    labor 

Otto  Wlgren.  labor    .... 

Andrew  Brun.  labor   ... 

Chas.    Olson,    labor    .  .  ■  • 

Chas.     Blomkvist.    labor 

Walter  Lohulth.  labor.. 

Casmer  Grip,  labor 

Joe    Kasarik.    labor.... 

Claus    Carlson,    labor... 

peter    Mattson.    labor.. 

M      Marshall,    labor.... 

Peter   Mikelson.   labor.. 

Gust  Josnson,   labor    .  .  . 

Total  


31  50  j 

31  50 
31  50 
38  25 
21  00 
21  00 

19  00 
16  40 
18  60 
15  00 
12  40 
12  40 

6  00 

20  40 
10  00 

2  40 

5  00 

34  38 

$346  73 


72649 

7  2650 

72651 

72652 

, 72653 

I  72654 

I  726.5.5 

' 72656 

i  72657 

' 72658 

j 72659 

1 72660 
72661 
72662 
72663 
72664 
72665 
72666 
72667 

72668 
72669 
72670 


John   Smith,   labor 

Martin  Wuta,  labor.... 
Mike  Somero,  labor.... 
Fred    Manilla,    labor... 

Herman   Oja.    labor 

Abram  Helskar  labor.. 
John  H.  Saari,  labor.  .. 
William    Smith,    labor.. 

John    Wuta.    labor 

Jacob      Jurvelhi,      fore- 
man  

Fred        Manilla,        team 

work     

John    Helskari,    labor... 

John   Smith,    labor 

Herman    0.ia,    U  bor 

Matti    Wuti,   labor 

Mike    Samero,    labor... 

John    H.    Saari,    labor... 

Fred     Martilla.    labor... 

.Abraham    Helskari,    lab- 
or       

William   Smith,   labor... 

Jacob    Jurvelln.    labor.. 

Fred  Martilla,   labor 


50 
60 
50 
Oi) 
00 
50 
50 
50 
50 


12  38 


< 

7 
11 
11 
11 


88 
88 
20 
50 
20 


76242 
76243 
76244 
76245 
76246 
76084 


I^ke,    labor 

Roiko,  team   work 

Anderson,   labor... 

Anderson,    labor.. 

Tonia.    labor 

Tonla,  labor 

Roiko.    labor    

Erick    Ojakanga.    labor. 
Jack    Jobs,    teapi    work. 

Ed   Harberg,   labor    

.August  Frantz,  labor... 
August  Frantz,  labor.. 
John  Haglund,  labor... 
E.  Frantz.  foreman 
E.  Frantz,  foreman 
E.  Frantz,  foreman 
E.  Frantz,  for*  man 

F:klund,    labor 

August    Lax,    labor 

August  Lax.  team  work 
Jack  Jobs,  team  work.. 
Victor  Johnson,  labor.. 
.Andrew        G.       Johnson, 

labor     

Ed    Nordberg.    labor 

Eric    Jobs,    labor 

Eric   Jobs,  labor 

Otto    01qui».t,    labor 

Otto  Olqui.st,  labor  .... 
Albert  Frantz,  labor.... 
August  Frantz,  labor... 
Frank  Wisna,  labor  .  .  .. 
Jacob  Mattila.   labor    . .. 

Ed  Orn,   labor    

Isaac        Frantz,      black- 
smith   work,    etc 

John  Roiko.  team  work 
Gust  .Anderson,  labor.. 
Nels    .Anderson,    labor.  .. 

John   Neimi.   labor    

Victor  Able,  labor 
Colvin  &   Robb,  ties 
drayage     

Total    


•tl 


and 


7  90 
65  00 
28  OO 
27  00 
27  OO 
26  00 

17  18 


T 

J 


i 

I: 


797  29 


11  20 

11  20 

9  60 

11  20 

11  20 

15  40 

3  60 


Total 


.$       199  94 


HOWARD  AND  GNESEN   ROAD. 
Commissioner's    l.>istrlct    No.    2. 
64281   Duluth    Eglnecring    Co., 
services     


Total 


21  00 
21  00 


6431 

64313 

64314 

64315 

64973 

64974 

69929 

69930 

69931 

69932 
69933 
69934 
7(t991 
70992 
70993 
70094 
72716 
72717 
7271S 
72719 
72720 
72721 

7  o  -  't  •> 


LEANDER    RO.AD 
Commissioner's    District 


No.    4. 


Total 


740  70 


ELY  AND  FALL  LAKE  ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No.    4. 

69964  Jacob  Skoglund.  labor.. 

69965  Anton     Hatchevar,  team 

work 

Sam  Marvl,  team  work.. 

Steve  Huter,  labor 

Andrew  Janejlck.  labor. 
Abraham  Hill,  labor.... 

John   Koatila,  labor 

Victor   Helpatz,   labor... 

Chas.  Makl,   labor 

Anton    Hatchevar,   team 

work 

Jacob   Skyland,    foreman 
Anton    Katchevar,    team 

work 

70739  Anton  Katchevar,     team 

work •  • 

Sam  Narvi.  team  work.. 
Andrew  Janezick,     team 

work    

Abraham  Hill,  labor.... 

John  Koatila,  labor 

Victor  Helpak,  labor.... 
Chas.  Makl,  labor 


69966 
69967 
69968 
69969 
69970 
69971 
69972 
69973 

70737 
70738 


70740 
70741 


16 

27 

'2 
11 


70742 
70743 
70744 
70745 


Total 


50 

50 

00 

00 

11  00 

11  00 

11  00 

11  00 

2  50 

27  00 

45  00 

45  00  I 
20  00  I 

18  00 
18  00 
18  00 
18  00 
18  00 

353  00 


86  25 

7  00 

12  00 

40  50 

12  50 

12  50 

78  75 

33  50 

9  00 

9  00 

17  50 

17  50 

22  50 

16  00 

14  00 

15  00 

13  00 

10  00 

10  00 

10  00 

30  00 

11  00 

8  00 

10  00 

8  00 

11  00 

14  00 

12  00 

Total 


,$  2,107  40 


80  95 

4  12 

8  00 

6  33 

6  57 

6  38 

1  67 

6  00 

6  75 

15  05 

22  50 

22  00 

16  00 

16  00 

12  77 

4  50 

12  00 

14  00 

EMBARRASS  AND  PIKE  RIVER  RO.AD. 

Commissioner's   District  No.   6.        ^ 
70746  M.  R.  Hanula.  foreman..  ^J  ta 

Isacc  Lampa,   labor 3  .>0 

Herman  Robinaja.  labor  3  50 

John  Paivarlnta.  labor,.  7  <0 

Erick  Lehta,  labor 9  45 

Wm.    Paivarlnta ^^  t 

Sam  Norha,  labor ^V  „9 

John   Johnson,  labor....  5  9a 

Gust   Lehto.   labor 5  9a 

Erick  Erickson.  labor...  5  9a 

Coust  Abrehamsen.  labor 
Chas.  Sulhkonen,  labor.. 
John   Wattunen,   labor.. 

John  Pyk.  labor 

Oscar  Levanter,  labor... 
John   Gustofson,   labor.. 

John  Makl.  labor 

John  Nelimark,  labor... 
Matt  Johnson,  labor 

Jerrv  Johnson,  labor.... 

John    Ylinen,   labor 

Herman   Erickson,  labor 

M.   It.   Hannula,  foreman 

John   Palvaiinta,   labor.. 

Erick   Lehta.  labor 

Wm.   Paivarlnta.  labor.. 

Sam    Norha,    labor 

Gust  Lehta.  labor 

Erick  Erickson.  labor... 

Coust  Abrehamsen.  labor 

Chas.    Sulhkonen.    labor. 

John  I'yk,  labor 

Oscar  Levanter,  labor... 

John  Gustofson,  labor... 

John  Makl,  labor 

John  Nelimark,  labor.. 
Matt  Johnson,  labor.... 
Jerry  Johnson,  labor... 


27  70 
33  75 


22  50 
4  50 
7  03 


70747 

70748 

70749 

70750 

170751 

70752 

70753 

70754 

70755 

70756 

70757 

70758 

70759 

70760 

70761 

70762 

70763 

70764 

70765 

170766 

170767 

70768 

70769 

70770 

70771 

70772 

70773 

70774 

70775 

70776 

70777 

70778 

70779 

70780 

70781 

70782 

70783 

70784 

70785 

70786 

70787 

70788 

70789 

70790 

70791 

70792 

70793 

70794 

70795 

70796 

70797 

70798 

70799 

70800 

70801 

70802 

70803 


Total 


$997  24 


team 

team 

w^ork 
team 


John   Lyngstad, 

work  

74098  Olaus      Paulson, 

work     

74090  Hans  Olson,   team 
74100  August     Person, 

work     

76153  Aug.  H.   Haldin.  labor.. 

76154  Levi    Halden,    labor.... 

76155  John   Degerman.      labor 

76156  Wm.    Anaeraon,    labor.. 
76167  Ed   Mehlum,   labor    .... 


30  37 


19  57 

15  07 

9  22 

4  00 

8  00 

2  00 

8  00 

8  00 

EDI.V    RO.\D. 
Commissioner's   District  No. 

64955  Hans    Johnson,    foreman 

64956  Ole    .\nne,    labor    

64957  Louis  .Anne,  labor    

64958  Erick   Rensla,    labor.... 

64959  P.  A.   Mvrhaug,  labor    .. 

64960  A.    F.    Voss,    labor    

64961  Ole    Halter,    labor    

65852  Hans    Johnson,    foreman 

65853  Ole  Anne,   labor    

65854  Lewis  Anne,  labor 

65855- Erick    Renslaw,    labor.. 
65856  P.  A.  Myrhaug,  labor... 


37 

50 

19 

25 

19 

25 

17 

50 

17 

50 

20 

25 

18  00 

47 

50 

18  38 

19 

25 

20  13 

20  13 

72474 

72475 
72476 
72477 
72478 
72479 
72480 
72481 
72482 
72483 
72484 
72485 
72486 
72487 


John  Ylinen,  labor  .... 
Herman  Erickson,  labor 
Helmer  Johnson,   labor. 

Matt  Koskl.   labor 

Nick  Erickson,  labor  .  . 
John  Wattuuen.  labor.. 
Oscar  Manett,  labor  .  . 
John  Johnson,  labor  .  . 
.Andrew  River,  labor  . . 
Erick  Wutamaa,  labor 
Herman  Rapinaga,  labor 
John    Anderson,    labor.. 

Matt    Hill,    labor    

John    Holm,    labor     

Henry  Sipala.  labor  . . 
Andrew  Teppa.  labor  . , 
Emll  Saari,  labor  .... 
Erick  Lehto,   teamwork 

John    Pyfl.    labor    

Herman  Erickson,  team 

work     

Erick    Nelimark,      fore- 
man      

Gust  Hendrlckson.  labor 
Thos.  Haskela,  labor.. 
John  S.  Nelimark,  labor 

Tlios.   Salo.   labor 

Aug.  Sarvista.  labor.... 
John  Nleml,  labor  .... 
Wm.  Sepmurn,  labor... 
Matt  Mattson.  labor.. 
Otto  rikakko,  labor. 


Jacob  Lulkka,  labor.... 
Erick    Pulkkinen,    labor 

Isaac    Karpi,    labor 

Jacob    Pajala.    labor    ... 

72488  Alex  Norby,  labor  

72489  Saakrl  SlUanpa,  labor  * 


95 

20 

50 

95 

2  45 

2  45 

2  45 

2  45 

2  45 

2  45 

2  45 

2  45 

57  50 

18  37 

20  12 

33  25 
15  75 
30  97 

30  97 
25  72 
29  22 
25  72 
27  47 
35  00 
15  75 

31  50 
29  22 

34  47 
22  75 

17  85 

32  03 
19  42 
29  57 

19  00 
29  22 
14  00 

18  72 

20  47 

14  70 

18  73 

19  25 
23  10 
23  98 
13  47 

9  97 
29  25 
27  90 

15  75 


56  25 
36  22 
28  52 
35  87 
26  60 

25  02 

26  42 
34  12 
26  60 
14  00 
14  00 
20  47 
20  65 
25  02 
23  62 
22  22 


DULUTH  AND   LESTER 
RO.AD. 

Commissioner's    District    No. 
68393  George    Schwartz,    fore- 
man      

Frank     Erlcksen,     labor 

Grover   Brown,   labor... 

B.    F.    Brown,    labor.... 

Mike    Cosgrove,    labor.. 

Jack   Stanley,    labor.... 

Al  McDonald,  labor 

Frank    Erickson,      team 

work     •  • 

68401  George  Schwartz,  board- 
ing   men     

Thos.    Stock,    foreman.. 

August   Fritz,   labor.... 

J.   Bonner,   labor    

R.    Langley.    labor    

Mike     Cosgrove,       team 
work     

E.  Fieblger.  tools 

Thos.  Stock,  foreman,. 
J.  McDonnell,  labor.... 
A.  McDonnell,  labor.... 
L.  Normlski.  labor  .... 
M.    Sweeney,    labor    .... 

S.   Higglns,  labor 

J.   Wonszy,  labor 

C.    Brades,    labor    

F.  Barch.    labor    

J.    Campbell,    labor    .... 

T.    blvene.    labor    

W.  Johnson,  labor  .... 
II.  Pearson,  labor  .... 
W.  Grlezlen.  labor  .... 
Joe  Rosberg.  labor  .... 
C.  Kuockrock.  labor.... 

I>.    Lander,    labor    

Noal  Beaton,  labor  .... 
Egnus  Brunlck.  labor.. 
Egnes  Moslnick.  labor. 
Alex   Sepuskie,   labor... 

F.    Kehtle,    labor    

Ed   Hanson,   labor    

J.   Stoken.  labor    

AV.  Johnson,  labor  .... 
R.  Langley,  team  work. 
F.  Erickson.  team  work 
Joe       Kozarlck,         team 

work     

Axel  Jentlne.  team  work 
Joe  Kozarlck.  team  work 
Thomas   Stock,   boarding 

men     

B.  F.  Brown,  labor   

George  Brown,   labor    . . 

C.  A.  Medt.  labor    

.August    Fritz,    labor.... 

Arthur  Stock,  labor    

AV.    H.      Sargent,      team 

work     

E.  Fieblger,  tools 

Thomas  Stock,  foreman 
L.  Narnlmskl,  labor  .  . . 
Joe  Omers.  labor    

F.  Kehtle.  labor 

F.    Barck.    labor    

Joe  Straberg.  labor   .... 

J.  Marsz.  labor    

A.  McDonald,  labor  , . . 

.T.  Andrews,  labor  

F.  Erickson,  labor  . . . . 

M.  Hagen.  labor  

R.  Gratz.  labor 


EAST 


68394 
68395 
68396 
68397 
68398 
68399 
68400 


68402 
68403 
68404 
68405 
68406 

70605 

70667 

70668 

70669 

70670 

70671 

70672 

70673 

70674 

70675 

70676 

70677 

70678 

70679 

70680 

70681 

70682 

70683 

70684 

70685 

70686 

70687 

70688 

706S9 

70690 

70691 

70692 

70693 

70694 


RIVER 


20  00 

13  00 
17  00 
17  00 

14  00 
10  85 

15  50 

50  00 

5  65 

6  00 

24  00 
10  00 

2  00 

7  00 

1  85 
75  00 

29  48 

28  55 

30  18 

2  00 

25  15 
30  40 
16  00 
30  18 
14  40 

26  62 
18  50 
30  50 

7  00 

29  00 
7  00 
2  05 
S  70 

25  40 
40  00 

30  20 
18  70 
40  40 
13  50 

5  25 

85  50 

130  00 


FARMERS'  ROAD. 

Commissioners    District    No. 

0591   L    E.    Du    Font    Powder 

Co..    dynamite,    etc... 

C.  J.  Nygren,  labor    .... 

Peter  Erickson,  labor... 

Ernst    Erickson.   labor.. 

Carl   Rauta,   labor    

John   Carlson,    labor.... 

Matt  Maki,  labor    

Ed    Jacobson.    labor 

Isaac  Smith,  labor 

Henilng  Ranta.  labor   .. 

A'ictor    Hill,    labor    

Andrew   Hill,  labor    

.Anselen  Petili,  labor  .  . 
Charles  Nystrom.  labor 
Verner  Ostland,  labor.. 
Andrew  Smith,  labor.. 
William  Wlertola.  labor 

S.    Ostlund,    labor 

J.  Ostlund,  labor   

John  Johnson,  labor  ... 
Erick  Johnson,  labor    . . 

John   Carlson,   labor 

John  Johnson,  labor.... 
John        Johnson,       team 

work     ••• 

Erik  Johnson,  labor... 
John  Carlson,  foreman. 
John  Carlson,  team  work 
Nils  R.  Magnuson,  labor 

Otto   Brom,   labor    

Jacob  Rantamake.  labor 

Axel   Hario,  labor    

Ernest  Lindgren,  labor. 
Charles    Nygren,    labor. 

Carl    Ranta.    labor     

Andrew  Smith,  labor.. 
Peter  Erickson.  labor.. 
Warner  Ostlund,  labor.. 

I.     Ostlund      labor 

Henry  Ekrbos.  labor 

Albert  Anderson,  labor 
lsak  Tvniala,  labor.... 
Warner  Fleet,  labor.... 
Ed  Jacobson.  labor.... 
Chas.  Nystrom.  labor.. 
Gottfrid  Olson,  labor... 
Oscar   Ahlstrand.    labor. 

Anselm  Patlla.  labor 

P.    Foubani.    labor 

Chas.  Samson,  labor.... 
A.   Rouma    team   work.. 


6. 


70804 

70805 

70806 

70807 

70808 

70809 

70810 

70811 

70812 

70813 

70814 

70815 

70816 

70817 

70818 

70819 

70820 

70821 

70822 

70823 

70824 

74130 

74131 


74132 

74133 

74134 

74135 

74136 

74137 

74138 

74139 

74140 

74141 

74142 

74143 

74144 

74145 

74146 

74147 

74148 

74149 

74150 

74151 

74152 

74153 

74154 

74155 

74156 

74157 


Total 


r.9  67  ; 
14  00 
14  88 
14  88 
14  00 
22  50 
14  88 
12  25 
9  63 
10  50 
10  50 
10  50 

10  50 

11  38 

5  50 

6  48 
3  50 

12  25 
10  50 
12  25 
10  50 
27  00 

7  00 

90  00 
35  00 
37  50 
63  00 
25  38 
21  88 

21  88 

23  63 

22  75 
21  00 

21  00 

22  75 
22  75 

13  00 

24  50 
22  75 
22  77 
21  00 

14  00 
7  00 
7  00 

1400 
12  25 
14  00 
11  38 

14  00 

15  75 

966  95 


63436 
72372 

172628 
172629 
172630 
172631 
172632 
72633 
172634 
172635 
172636 
172637 
172638 
72639 
72640 
72642 
72643 
72641 
72644 
72645 
72646 
72647 

72648 
76094 


HER.MANTO'A.N  ROAD. 
City   Limits. 
O.  B.  Johnson,  material. 
Johnson       Lumber     Co., 

lumber     

F.  F.  Johnson,  foreman 
Gust  Norman,  labor  .  .  . 
Erick  Nelson,  labor  . . . 
Stans  I'oszkicNlz,  labor. 
Carl    Spanberg    labor    .. 

S.  Nordin,  labcr   

John  Peterson,  labor... 
Albert  Petersen,  labor.. 
Gvnoe   Malla,    labor    .... 

John   Olson,    Is. bor 

Erick  Locketl,  labor... 
Arthur   Johnson,   labor.. 

P.    Linnell,    labor 

M.  P.  Wellant'er.  labor. 
C.    L.   Johnson,    labor... 

John  Olson,  labor 

Charles  Norman,  labor.. 
W.  Elllnson.  team  work 
E.  Olson,  team  work... 
James       Lock;tt,      team 

work     

E.  Olson,  team  work.... 
O.    B.      Johnson,      bolts, 

spikes,  etc 


4  50 

206  92 
71  50 
50  00 
47  00 
49  00 
43  00 
31  00 
23  00 
43  00 
4  2  00 

31  00 

32  00 
6  00 

17  00 
6  00 
6  <iO 
4  00 
6  00 
110  25 
105  75 


72724 
72725 
72526 
74433 
74434 
74435 
74436 
74437 
74438 
74439 
74440 
74441 

74442 
75104 

76203 
76267 

76268 
76269 


Ole  Sassos.  foreman... 
Chas.  Johnson,  labor.  .  . 
Olof  Nelson,  labor  .... 
Steve  Todey.  material. 
Ole  Sassos.  foreman... 
Steve  Todey.  labor.... 
Ole  Sassos.  foreman... 
John  E.  Oberg.  labor.. 
John  K.      Oberg,   team 

work     , 

Claus  AVlnchell.  labor.. 
Isaac    Saari.    labor    .... 

Steve   Todey,   labor    .... 

Ole    Sassos,    foreman  .  . . 

Isaac   Loran.    labor    .... 

C.    B.    Winchell,    labor.. 

Fred    .Anderson,    labor.. 

Ole    Sassos.    foreman... 

John    E.    Oberg.    labor.. 

Axel     Nordstrom,     labor 

David    Nordstrom,    labor 

Steve    Todey.     labor.... 

P.    .A.    Mvrhaug.    labor.. 

Isaac  Lower,  labor    .... 

John     K.    Oberg,       team 
work     

Ole    Fourner.    labor 

C.    B.    Winchell.    labor.. 

.Alex    Holmsirom.    labor 

Ole     Sassos      foreman .  . 

C.    B.    Winchell,    labor.. 

Alex     Holmstrom.     labor 

Ole  Fourner.  laVior 

Steve     Todey.     labor.... 

P.    A.    Myrhaug.    labor.. 

Nels    Anderson,     labor.. 

Isaac   Lower,   labor    .... 

C.    B.      Winchell,      team 
work    

John    Edblom     labor.... 

Ben       Erickson,       dyna- 
mite,   etc    

Ole   Sassos.   foreman.... 

John       FJdblom,         team 
work     

John    Edblom.    labor 

Gust    Edblom. 'labor 

Total ' 


00 

50 
25 


60  00 
3  75 
5  00 

2  la 
25  37 

9  00  "^ 
16  62 
14  87 
37  50 

9  00 
35  00 
33  25 

3  50 
9  00 

31  50 

23  50 

9  00 

30  0« 

14  00 
9  00 

15  00 
8  00 
6  Oft 

2  00. 
6  Oi» 

32  00 
24  00 
24  00 
24  00 

3  00 
22  00 
28  00 


■ 


itit-lw- 


22 

r. 


31  5ft 
9  00 

20  00 

6  Oft 

12  50 

693  86 


94 

38 


■>o 


10  83 


IRON 


<4164 
74165 
74166 
74167 
74168 
74169 
74170 
74171 


O 


GRAND     LAKE     STATION 
Commissioner's    District 


ROAD. 

No.  5. 


70695 
70696 
70697 


70698 
70699 
70700 
70701 
70702 
70703 


72368 
72516 
72517 
72518 
72519 
72520 
72521 
72522 
!3 


7  2n 

72524 

72525 

72526 

72527 

72528 


Thomas  Stock,  labjr 
Total  


•  25  00  I 
76  00  , 
24  00  I 

I 

349  14 

34  50 
14  00 

6  50 
52  00 

6  00 

78  75 
12  95 
16  50 
14  00 
22  00 
6  00 
10  00 

10  00 
12  00 

11  65 
22  00 
30  00 
28  00 

12  00 
8  35 


684 17 
68418 
68419 
69291 

69940 
69941 
69942 
69943 
69944 
69945 
69946 
69947 
69948 
69949 

70859 
70860 
70861 
I  70862 
!  70863 
!  70864 
i  70865 

70866 

70867 
74158 
74159 
74160 
74161 

74162 


work 


Co. 


R.    C.    Berg,    team 
S    Larson,    labor    . 
Chris    Berg,    labor, 
Kelley     Hardware 

dynamite,    etc 

Ben  Hanson,  foreman.. 
Charles  Johnson,  labor 
.'^Irnon    Larson,    labor... 

P.  C.  Berg,  labor 

Israel  Renard,  labor  .. 
Gust  Thompson,  labor.. 
Chris  Berg,  labor  .  .  .  . 
R.  C.  Berg,  team  work 
Chas.  Peterson,  labor.. 
Henry     Hanson,        team 

work     

Ben     Hanson,     foreman.. 
Gust    Thompson.      labor 

Chris  Berg,  labor  .  • 

Chas.    Peterson,    labor.. 
Isaac  Beno,  labor 
R.    C.    Berg,    team 
R.      Rasmunson, 

work     

Marcus     Colvert, 

labor     ,•',•'■■■ 

.A  Rasmunson.  labor.. 
Ben   Hanson,    foreman.. 

Israel    Reno,    labor    

Marcus  Colvert.  labor.. 
Andreas        Rasmuns  o  n, 

team  work   

Henry      Hanson,      team 

work     

Total     


work 
team 

team 


56  25 
26  00 
8  00 

17  54 
35  25 

26  20 
21  20 

5  20 
21  20 

23  20 

24  20 
32  80 
17  70 

19  00 

27  50 
8  00 

13  00 

4  00 

21  00 

15  20 


W 
jng 
C.    T. 
O.  W. 


20  00  ! 

17  00 

6  00 

7  50 
6  00 
6  00 

12  00 

9  00 


GRANT  ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    ;No. 
762*^8  Frank   Garske.   foreman 
76229  Vincent    Garske,       team 
work     


$505  94 

6. 
56  00 

145  00 


Total 


JUNCTION       AND 
nOAD. 

Commissioner's    District 
74163  Chas.    Carlsor,    foreman 
Ole  Berg,  labcr  ...... 

Fred  Peterson,  labor 
Rangmar  Berg,  labor 
Peet  Stacke.  labor  .  . 
Chas.   Anderson,  labor 

Ed  Borg.  labor 

I>eonard   Lund,    labor. 

Chas.      Carlson,        tea 

work     

Total     


INDUSTRIAL  HOAD. 
Commissioner'!!  District  No. 

G9299  T.   H.    Wade,   tools.. 

O.  W.  ElliasDn,  labor.. 
August  Sweiison,  labor 
John  Svensoi,  labor... 
Pete  Johnsor.  labor.... 
John  Westlund.  labor  ■• 
Frank  Peteison.  labor 
John  Larson,  labor.... 
George  AVah  in,  labor.. 
John  M.  Wail  in,  labor. 
Carl    Peterson,    labor... 

Gust  AVester,   labor 

John    Petersen,    foreman 
Elliajon.    board- 
men     

Carlson,   labor 

Elliason,  labor.  .  . 
.August  Swe  ison,  labor 
John  Swanson,  labor... 
Pete  Johnson,  labor.... 
John  AVestlund,  labor.. 
Carl  Petersen,  labor... 
Frank  Peterson,  labor. 
John   Stenba<;k.   labor... 

John   Monsor,   labor 

Carl  Carlson,  labor 

John  M.     AVohlin,     team 

work     

70923   John      Peterson,        team 

work     ••  •• 

John  Larson,  labor.... 
George  AA'alilln,  labor.. 
John  Peterson,  foreman 
John  Peterson,  board- 
ing   men 

C    F.  Carlson,  labor 

Aug.  Swanson,  labor... 
O  W.  Elliason.  labor... 
C  E.  Carlson,  labor.... 
John  Swans  )n,  labor... 
George  AVal  lln,  labor.. 
John  Westlund,  labor.. 
Carl    Peterson,    labor.... 

Gust   Wester,   labor 

Erick  Nelson,  labor.... 
John        AVahlin,        team 

work     :• 

J.  Peterson,  team  work 
C.      E.      Carlson,      team 

work    • 

John  Peterson,  foreman 
John      Peteison,        team 

work     

72686  John       Peterson,       team 

work     • 

John  Peterson,     foreman 
O.    W.    Elllasen,    board- 
ing  men    


..1 

1,078  50 

EVELETH 

No 

.  7. 

in 

22  50 

18  00 

18  00 

16  00 

14  00 

12  00 

8  00 

3  00 

m 

26  00 

. . 

$137  50 

i0898 
70899 
70900 
70901 
70902 
70903 
70904 
70905 
70906 
70007 
70908 
70909 
70910 

70911 
70912 
70913 
70914 
70915 
70916 
70917 
7091S 
70919 
70920 
70921 
70922 


70924 
70925 
70926 
70927 

72671 
72672 
I  72673 
1 72674 
72675 
72676 
72677 
72678 
72679 
72680 
72681 


20  15 

IS  00 

18  00 

16  00 

13  50 

18  00 

18  00 

13  50 

12  00 

10  00 

12  00 

6  00 

24  75 

10  00 

14  30 

25  00 

24  50 

24  20 

23  50 

24  50 

14  20 

IS  21) 

8  00 

5  25 

15  30 

LAKEWOOD  EXTENSION  RO.AD 
Commissioners    District    No.    2. 

70928  Hugh    Eraser,    labor 

P.    McDonald,  team  work 

Ed    Kellar.    labor 

Al    Lind,    labor 

V.    Lind,    labor 

George  Nvgard,  labor.. 
Carl    Mattson.    labor.... 

M.    Mattson,    labor 

Bill    Block,    labor 

Tom  Chute,   labor 

Chas.  Lindquist.  labor.. 
AVm.  .Stewart,  labor.... 
John  Wilburg.  labor.... 
Carl  AVickstrom,  labor. 
Frank    Mlkola.    labor... 

ule   Numi,   labor 

AA'm.  Keenan,  labor.... 
Joe    Keenan.    labor..... 

I.    Salmi,    labor 

N.   Stone,   labor 

Jim    Stewart,    labor 

M.    McLeod,    labor 

J.    Molburg.    labor 

S.    Ol.'^^on.    labor 

Olaf   Olson,    labor 

M.    Engall.    labor 

I.    Hill,    labor •. 

Tom  Case,   labor 

Wm.    Watson,    labor.... 

AV.   II.   Sargent,   foreman 

W.    H.    Sargent,    board- 
ing    men 

J.    .Stewart,    labor 

M.    McLeod,    labor 

Tom    Case,    labor 

AVm.    Ke«  man,   labor.... 

J.    Molborg,    labor 

Joe    Keeman.    labor 

.S.    Olson,    labor 

Olaf    Olson,    labor 

M.    Engle,    labor 

I.    Hill,    labor 

F.d    Lessard.    labor 

Max    Lapschlese.    labor. 

John    Ward,   labor 

Wm.   Croskeary.    labor.. 

John    Brown,    labor 

Win.    Watson,    labor.... 

AVm.  Sargent,  foreman. 

P.  McDonald,  team  work 

AVm.  .Sargent,  boarding 
men  


i0929 
70930 
70931 
70932 
70933 
709.14 
70935 
70936 
70937 
70938 
70939 
70940 
70941 
70942 
70943 
70944 
70945 
70046 
70947 
70948 
70949 
70950 
70951 
70952 
70953 
70954 
70955 
70956 
70957 
0958 


5  10 
375  00 
5  60 
4 
3 
4 
4 
4 
6 
6 


1; 


72697 
72698 
72609 
72700 
72701 
72702 
72703 
72704 
72705 
72706 
72707 
7270S 
72709 
72710 
72711 
72712 
7271:; 

72714 
72715 


05 
95 

(^5 

60 

60' 

90 

90. 
10  10    , 
1  35 
3  15 
3  9ft 

3  9ft 

4  6ft 
14  55 

14  3S 
6  15 
6  1.'. 

15  2ft 
19  1ft 
15  25 

4  60 
4  6ft 
4  Cft 

4  85 
15  35 
19  00 
35  00 

188  10 

2  30 

3  05 

5  75 
3  20 
7  50  ■ 
5  65 

12  95 
12  "t.'i 
12  95 
12  95 

5  1ft- 

5  50 

B  ir^ 

5  15 

6  1.'. 
2  55 

41  00 

155  00 

91  15 


72682 
72683 

72684 
72685 


72687 
7268S 


27  67 

27  07 
8  30 
6  30 


1  75 
27  60 
31  60 

29  50 
19  60 

30  60 
8  00 

27  20 

1  20 
13  60 
21  20 

53  10 
51  97 

18  00 

17  25 

2  00 

7  00 
11  00 

18  50 


Total 


,$  1,212  60 


roio: 


LAURENS    ROAD. 
John     Tapso 

Total      


277  50 


LAVELL    ROAD. 
Commissioner's   District   No. 
634*^9   P.  J.   McDonald,  foreman 
J.   J.  McDonald,  labor... 

John    La  veil,    labor 

Oscar  Salomon,  labor... 
Steven   Toska.   labor.... 

John    Makl.    labor 

Jacob   Rockhi   labor 

John    Lavell,    labor 


63  500 
63501 
63  502 
63603 
63504 
63605 
63506 
63  507 


Total 


$201  00 


.1   1,894  85 


708 

70826 

70827 


0828 


70829 
70830 
70831 
70832 
70833 
70834 
70835 
70836 
70837 
70838 
70839 


70840 
70841 
70842 
70843 
72549 
72550 
72551 


FOND  DU  L.AC  ROAD. 
Commissioner's   District   No. 
5  Chas.   F.  Olson,   foreman 
Ed  Johnson,   team  work 
Albert      Overton,      team 

work    

J.      H.     Brigham,     team 

work    

Ernest  Olson,  labor 

Eddie  llogstad.  labor... 
Magnus   Johnson,    labor. 

Ole  Paulson,  labor 

Erick   Nelson,    labor.... 

John  Gurno,  labor 

Paul    Segard,    labor 

C.  F.  Soderlund,  labor.. 
Chas.   F.   Olson,  labor... 

Ed  Johnson,  labor 

Albert      Overton,      team 

work    

Ernest  Olson,  labor.... 
Eddie  Hogsiad.  labor... 
Magnus   Johnson,   labor. 

Ole  Paulson,  labor 

Chag.  F.  Olson,  foreman 
Ed   Johnson,    team    work 


3. 


74367 

74368 
74369 

74.'370 
74371 
74372 
74373 
74374 
74375 
74376 
74377 


56  92 
90  45 
^^  „J  74378 
76  9oi 74379 
'  74380 


72552 

72553 
72554 
72555 


Overton. 
Brigham, 


team 


team 


Albert 

work 
J.  H. 

work  

Ernest  Olson,  labor.... 

Ole  Paulson,  labor 

John  Gurno,  labor.. ••.•« 


27  00; 
32  60 

32  40 

33  60 
40  20  I 

32  40 ; 

23  00  1 

17  00 

10  80 

5  50 

9  00 

9  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 
El  15 
62  20 

45  00 

38  70 
13  00 
37  20 
80  4u 


<4381 
74382 
74383 
74384 
74385 
74386 
74387 
74388 
74389 
74390 
74391 

74392 

75129 


GOWAN  ROAD. 
John    Kannlanian,    fore- 
man     

Henry  Pcippa,  labor.... 
Abram       Kannianianan, 

labor     

Carl  Sv.anson.  labor... 
Hjalmar  Swanson.  labor 
.Alex  AVil.iams.  labor... 
Mike  AVilmanko,  labor 
Edward  Sukanan.  labor 
Oskar  Simalo,  labor... 
John  Matson.  labor.... 
Alfred  Kannianien,  la- 
bor      

Chaj'.   Hertanen.   labor.. 
Hankala,    labor. . . 
Lanhala.   labor.  .  . 

Kajo.    labor    

Lukanen,  labor.. 
Nels  Tolenen.  labor  .... 
J.  R.  Tolenen.  labor  .  . 
August  Koskala.  labor 
.Andrew  .Anderson,  labor 

Nels    Leln.    labor    

Erick  Kuskala,  labor.. 
Edward  Leln,  labor  ... 
Tahvo  Nevala.  labor.. 
Hantere  Kannienen,  la- 
bor      

Alarlc    Hlstanen,      team 

work     

Markannan  &  Haugs- 
rud,  tools,  dynamite, 
etc 

Total  


32  72 
23  80 

23  80 
19  80 
23  80 
1  60 
23  80 
19  80 
13  80 
23  80 


Total 


903  21 


I  I 


Joel 
Clias. 
Matt 
Otto 


72689 
72600 
72691 
72692 
72693 
72G94 
72695 
74393 
4394 
74305 
74396 
74397 
74398 
74399 
74400 
74401 
74402 
74403 
74404 

74405 
74406 
75104 
76230 
76231 
76232 

[76233 
76234 

I  76235 
76236 

176237 
176238 

76239 
176240 

76241 


JOHNSON    ROAD. 
Ole  Sassos    foreman.... 
John  P.  Johnson.  labor.. 

George  Bay,  labor 

Sam  Swanson.  labor.... 
Louis    Swar.son.    labor.. 

Ole    Jensen     labor 

Jack   Johns  jn,   labor 

Ole  Sassos  foreman .... 
Charles  Blemsten.  labor 
Charles  J.  Johnson,  labor 

Jack     Hill,     labor 

Jack   Johnson,   labor 

John  P.  Johnson  labor.. 

Sam   fev»-anson.   labor.... 

Louis    Swau.-son,    labor.. 

Ole    Jensen     labor 

Chester   Blomsten, 

Chas     A.    J(»hnson. 

Charles    Blomsten, 
work ;•,••• 

Henry   Km  tson,  labor 

John  Nplurd,   labor... 

Ben   Erickson,    tools 

Ole  Sassos.   foreman 

Ole  Jensen,   labor 

Sam  Swanson,   labor.... 

Chas.    A.    Jahnson,    labor 
Blomsten, 
Blomsten. 
Blomsten, 


3 
14 
10 

2 


labor 
labor 
team 


etc 


labor 
labor 
team 


Chester 
Charles 
Charles 

work    

Charles    N<?lBon,    labor 
Ole    Aune,    labor.  . 
Chas.    J.    Johnson. 
Johnson. 
John.son 


HARTLEY    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 

70868  Henry  Johnson,  foreman 

70869  Gllmore    Johnson,    labor 

70870  Eddie    Johnson,    labor.. 

70871  Zakrl    Saari,    labor.... « 


52  00 
25  80 
28  20 
84  60 


John    P. 
Chas.    J. 
work 


labor 
labor 
team 


Total 


JUDD    ROAD. 
Commission. !r*s   District  No. 
74172  Peter  Hoi  and,  foreman. 


00 
00 
50 
00 
2  00 
2  00 
2  00 

21  00 
19  50 
32  00 
13  00 

29  50 
8  oO 

26  00 

22  00 
47  50 
4  3  00 
42  00 

75  00 
5  00 

30  00 
3  00 

36  00 
38  00 
50  00 
41  00 
19  00 

8  50 

16  25 

44  00 

34  00 

3  00 

9  00 

23  75 
776  50 


6. 
10  00 


6350S 

63509 

63510 

67360 

68315 

70586 

7237S 

74443 

74444 

74444 

74445 

74446 

74417 

7444S 

74449 

74450 

74151 

74452 

74453 

74454 

74455 

74456 

74457 
74458 

74459 


W.      C.      Barrett,      team 
work    

P.    J.     McDonald,     team 
work    

P.    J.    McDonald,    board- 
ing   men    •  • 

P.  J.  McDonald,     board- 
ing  men •  •  •  •  • 

llasca       Mercantile    Co., 
material    

Ja'ob    Hellstrom.      con- 
tract work    

Eri"k      Maki        contract 
work     

Erick      Maki        contract 
work    

Vanio  Towanen.  labor.. 

Scott  Towanen.  labor   .. 

.'^cott    Kinney,    labor    ... 

,<c'>ti    Kinney,    labor.... 

Gust   -Aho,    labor 

Gust    .Vho,    labor 

Jcdin    Reinen,    labor.... 

John    Reinen.   labor 

.Andrew  Maki.   labor 

.Andrew    Maki.    labor... 


7. 
54  00 
28  12  • 
20  SI 
15  12 
11  7:* 
11  73 
11  73 
lt»  12 

60  00 

49  50 

2101 

9  10  . 

3  25 
125  00 
200  00      i 

400  00       I 

4  05  >  ' 

7  40,    ?.- 

r  I 


A'ictor    Lahti.    labor 

A'ictor    Lahti.    labor 

-Andrew  Nilson,  labor... 
Andrew  Nilson.  labor.. 
Mike         Danahy,       team 

work     

MiKe   Danahy.    foreman.. 


fO' 

6  55 
8  85 
7ii 
85 
75 
85 
75 
85 
75 
00 


'-t 


^^ 


74461 

74462 

74463 

74464 

75126 

76247 

76248 
76250 
76251 
76252 
76253 
76264 
76266 
76266 


Danahy, 
Danahy, 
Raymond, 
Raymond, 
McHaie, 
Mcilale, 


team 


team 
team 
team 
team 
team 


Mike 

work 
Mike 

work 
Julius 

work 
Julius 

work 
John 

work 
John 

work     ,•  •  V  ■' 

M.     l>anahy,     board    for 

men      

Eric  Makki  &  Co..  ditch- 
ing  as    per   contract.. 
P.     J.     McDonald,     fore- 
man     

John  Nakala,  team  work 
Rondo,  team  work 
Hill,   team   work. . 

Nasse,  labor    

Newman,  labor. . . 
McDonald,  labor... 


John 
Jaek 
Jack 
Maki 
J.  J. 


Ed  Bendall,  labor   « 

Dan  Cameron,  labor...*. 


10  GO 

125  00 
21  00 

15  00 

50  00 

30  60 

17  30 

4  60 

2175 

67  29 

600  00 

70  50 
112  50 
25  00' 
72  50 
31  80 
43  00 
47  00 
47  00 
4S00 


♦I 


I 


if 


• 

1          "" 

^  M«  k  '*' 

:  •-  ■  . ..:,-  ■  ^  ^T,    . 

I 


■fc' 


rr 


^    It 


19 


k 


i«— M 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD: 


It 


762S7 

762r.8 
7o2r.;» 

76.'*>0 
7  62'n 
762f.2 

7<>2t>;j 

76264 

T6265 
76090 


Gust  Dempkey,  labor   . . 

Nells  Johnson,   labor 

John  Antllla,  labor    .... 

Andrew   Kantola,   labor. 

Ed    Matson,    labor 

Sam    Hill,    labor 

Nestor    Herman,   labor.. 

V.  M.  McDonald,  fore- 
man      

Jack    Hill,    board    bill.. 

E.  I.  Dupont  Powder 
Co.,     dynamite,     capa, 


42  00 
26  00 
22  00 
24  00 
12  00 
12  00 
14  00 

70  50 
11  20 


83  88 


Total 


..%    2,878  10 


LOWRIE  ROAP. 
Commlssloner'-s    District 


No. 


€4»44 

«4915 

64946 

€4947 

6494S 

709:.9 

70960 
70961 
70962 
7096.-, 
70964 
70965 
70966 
70967 
7096S 
7096!« 
7  0970 
70971 
70972 
7097:5 
7097 » 
70975 

70976 
72752 

72753 
727.}4 
727.15 
72756 

72757 
7275S 
72759 
7276't 
72761 
72762 

7276.3 

72764 

727C5 

72766 
72767 
7276S 
7609S 


Joun      Hamalana,      con- 
tract  work, 

Mattl      Ollila,      contract 
work     

Mattl       Soarl.      contract 
work     

nmil         Wllianta.       con- 
tract   work    

John      Tepsa.      contract 
•»-  ^rk      

AuETiist    W'antlUa,    fore- 
riion      

Wildemar   Aho,   labor... 

Otto    Hvtoiies.    labor.... 

John  SIml.   labor 

Kia   John.soii,   labor 

AupTust    .Asulerson.   labor 

Kol>ert     Ttanta.    labor... 
Ynia  Kanaimen,  labor. 

Erick    Hill,    labor 

.\nti    "Wantilla.    labor... 
John   Hamalana.   labor.. 

.\nton    I>ahl,    labor 

Oscar  GotlK'berK,   labor. 

Harry   BerR.   labor 

^Valter  Gothebera:.  labor 

Niok    Sam*^ro.    labor 

.\ugust     Wantilla.    team 
work     

Atoff    Pakko.    labor.... 

Aiisrust     Wantilla,    fore- 
man       

Au^rust    Anderson,   labor 

.Vnton    Dahl.    labor 

John    Hamalana,   labor.. 

Otto        Hytonen.        team 
work      

Nick  .Somero.   labor 

o.scar  Gothebcrg,   labor. 

.•\talf    Pakki>nen.    labor. 

Yrra    Kanaimen,    labor. 

Hirrv   BorK.    labor 

A          Wantilla.           team 
work      

Hialmar    Lowrle.      team 
work      

Wnldf-mar      Aho,      team 
work     

John    A.    Hoiskari.   team 

work      

Erick      HI'!,   labor 

Jacob   L.ai!.i..>s.   labor.... 

Walter    G>thel>erj?.  labor 

Coolidffe-Schussler     Co., 
dynamite     


5. 

73  80 
95  12 
93  48 
90  20 
147  40 

18  42 
4  00 

^  00 
1100 
11  00 

10  80 
9  &0 

11  00 
11  00 
11  00 

11  00 

10  00 

10  00 
9  20 
9  2C 
7  50 

4  50 
10  6ft 

27  50 

20  oi> 
16  00 
20  00 

30  37 
20  00 

12  00 
15  00 
14  00 
10  00 

24  75 

19  12 
19  12 

19  06 
6  00 

12  00 
3  50 

12  75 


72769  E.  .\.  Beckman.  foreman 

72770  Hans  Olson,    team   work 

72771  Hans  Olson,   team  work 

72772  Jolin    Olson,    labor     .... 

72773  Robert  Mudie.  labor.... 

72774  Nick    Lyngstad,    labor.. 

72775  Ole    Olson,    labor 

72776  Richard    Sanbergr,    labor 

72777  Frank    Mabie,    labor.... 

72778  A.    H.    Hahlin.   labor 

72779  Levi    Haldin,    labor    .... 

72780  Q.  A.  Itlngrqulst,  labor.. 
727S1  Anton  Berktland.  labor 
72782  B.  M.  Av'lnterf?est.  labor 
727S3   G.    O.    Serabeck,    labor.. 

72784  C.    J.    Johnson,    labor... 

72785  B.      Wlntergest.        team 

work     

72786  Aug.       Pearson,         team 

work     

72787  G.     A.     RlnQulst,       team 

work     

72788  Nick      Lyngstad.      team 

work     

72789  C.     J.       Johnson,       team 
work     

Claus  Paulson,  team 
v.'ork     

Thos.  McArthur,  fore- 
man  

Thos.  Mc.\rthur,  fore- 
man      

P.  G.  Paulson.  team 
work     

E.  A.  Beckman,  fore- 
man      

John    Ne.ss.     labor 

Robert  Mudie,  labor... 

Richard  .Sanbers,  labor 
•Levi  Hahlin.  labor.... 

Ben  WinterKest,  Jal)OT. 

Claus  l'aul.=ion.  labor.. 
team 


12  50 

8  00 

4  50 

8  00 

8  00 

5  85 

20  00 

10  50 

18  80 

21  00 

22  00 

6  00 

20  00 

22  00 

7  00 

6  00 

2  00 

1  35 

72790 

72791 

72793 

72794 

74233 

722.'54 
742o5 
742:^6 
74237 
742:i8 
74239 
74240 


Olson, 


Hans  A. 

work   

74241  Nick  I..yngstadt, 
work  

Total  


team 


31  50 
1  80 
4  50 
4  50 

31  63 
3.75 

SI  uO 

17  50 
10  00 
14  00 

10  50 
14  00 
13  40 

11  00 

31  50 
22  50 


.$   4S6  99 


71060 
71061 

71062 

72915 
72916 
72917 
72918 
72919 
72020 
72021 
72922 

72923 
72924 

72925 

72926 

72927 

72928 
72929 
72930 
72931 

72932 

72933 
74211 
74212 
74213 

74214 
74215 

74216 
74217 
75104 
76270 
76271 
76272 
76273 
76274 
76275 
76276 
76277 

76278 


John  Bystrom.  labor... 
John       yjoQUist,         team 

work      

Ole     Sassos,        boarding 

men     

Ole  Sassos,  foreman... 
Chas.  Nelson,  labor.... 
Chas.  A.  Johnson,  labor 
Sam  Swan.Hon,  labor.... 
I^ouls    Swanson.    labor.. 

Ole     Jenson,     labor 

Frldalf  Sjostrom,  labor 
Walgren, 


team 


Johnson, 
Johnson, 


labor 
team 

team 

team 

team 


Total 


$ 


75093 
75094 

7C09r. 
7S096 


T.A    VAQUE    RO-\D. 

Ole  Brand,  one  day's 
work     on     culverts .  . . 

.\us;ust  Boniulst.  work 
on  culverts  and  skid- 
ding    timbers 

Ole  Johnson.  work  on 
on     culveris.  . 

C.   Folden,  work 
verts     

Total     


on 


cul- 


972  89 

2  00 

2  50 

S  00 

2  00 

9  30 


LONG    LAKE    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
CS445  Os'-ar      Llndquist      fore- 
man       

John  Saarinen,  labor.. 
i:rick  Latvela.  labor... 
Peter  Soderholm.  labor 
Otva  Latvela,  labor.... 
John  Wlrtanen.  labor.. 
HI.  Tamoninen.  labor... 
John  Mallola,  labor... 
Erick    Taskinen.     labor. 

John    Orni.    labor 

Erick     Lundquist.     labor 
C.irl    Lundqulst,    labor.. 


7. 


'C8446 
69447 
«S44S 
■68449 
€8450 
€8451 
68452 
€8453 
63454 
6845'. 
63456 
€8457 


Oscar     Lundqulst, 

work      

€8438    Crick     Lundquist. 
work     

Total     


team 
team 


33  75 
14  00 
16  Oi) 
14  50 

11  62 
8  00 

14  00 
6  00 

16  50 
4  00 

12  00 
12  00 

19  50 

15  00 


McCOMBEK  ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No. 
n8319   L.  K.  Daugherty.  tools.. 
69!^I4   Fred    Brown,    labor.... 

6i>915   Fred  Brown,  labor 

69911)   H.     Brown,     labor 

69917  P    E.  MitOiell  .labor.... 

69918  M.  C.  Williams.labor.  .  .  , 

69919  Wm.       Killoran.        team 

work 

69920  George    Llnqulst,    labor. 

69921  A      Pifut.     labor 

*'.9922   Fred   Brown,  team  work 

69923  H     Brown,    labor    

69924  II.   Brown.  Jr.,   labor 

69925  Fred  Brown,   labor 

69926  Johti   East,  labor 

69927  Aniara    .McOomber.   labor 
6992S   Wm.     McComber,      fore- 
man    

71 080  Andrew       Plfut,         team 

work 

71081  Robert     Rose,    labor.... 

71052  Fred   Brown,   team  work 

71053  A.   Brown,  labor    

71084  A.   Brown.   Jr.,  labor ...  . 

71085  Geo.  Linquist.  labor.... 
710SG  E.  Berger.  team  work.. 
71-OS7  Robert  Rose,  labor.... 
710S8  Wm.       Killoran.        team 

work     

71089  A.    Pifut.     team    work.. 

71090  A.   Brown,   labor 

71091  Fred  Brown,  team  work 
71U92    P'red  Brown,  labor 

71093  H.   Brown.   Jr..    labor.... 

71094  Geo.      Llndquist,      labor 

71095  Victor  Larson,  labor.... 

71096  P    E.   Mitchell,  labor.... 

71097  M.   C.    Williams,    labor.. 

71098  Rlcliard    Brown,    labor.. 

71099  John    Ea.st.   labor 

71100  Amasa  McComber,   labor 

71101  George   Linguist,  labor.. 

71102  Axel   Anderson,   labor... 

71103  Wm.      McComber,     fore- 

man     

Total     I 


18-25 

10  00 

2  50 

9  00 

13  00 

9  00 

15  00 

4  00 

10  00 

10  00 

6  00 

4  00 

2  00 

17  00 

19  00 

Peter 

work 
Renald 
C.      M. 

work     

John       Erickson, 

work     

Karl       Johnson, 

work      

John         Johnson 

work      

Ed    Jolce,    labor 

Bernhart  Sjoqul.st,  labor 
John  Pearson,  labor... 
Gust       Johnson,         team 

work    

Alfred      Johnson,      team 

work     t  •  • 

Oscar  Heglund,  labor.. 
Albin  Carlson,  labor... 
John  Sjoquist,  labor... 
Ole     Byslrum      building 

bridge     

Johan  Bv.strum  labor.. 
Peter    Walilgren,      team 

work     

Ed  Joyce,  labor 

J.  T.  Jovce.  labor 

Ben  Erickson,  spikes.. 
Ole  Sassos.  foreman... 
John  Owens,  team  work 
i^am    Swanson,    labor... 

Ole    Jensen,    labor 

Chas.  A.  Johnson,  labor 
Chas,    Nelson,    labor.... 

Ole    Aune.    labor 

Gust       Johnson,         team 

work      

Louis  Nelson,  labor.... 

Total 


4  37 

9  00 

3  95 
21  00 

15  00 
17  00 

16  00 

16  00 

17  00 
14  00 

35  00 
10  00 
«« 
10  00 

20  00 

20  00 

20  00 
8  00 
6  00 

10  00 

6  00 


7  50 

4  00 

25  00 

13  00 


71076  Ernst  Kush.  labor 

71077  Frank   Polzin,   .  team 

work     . . . .  ^  .  .  .j 

71078  Hans   Johnsoi^  l^por . . . . 

71079  Arthur   Olson,    lapor.. 
72S98   Otto    Bush,    foreman.... 

72899  Carl   R    Olson;  labor.... 

72900  Herbert    Wentloff;    labor 

72901  Frank   Petersort.  Vabor.. 

72902  Joseph     Hargin.    Tabor.. 

72903  Albert    Manske.    labor.. 

72904  Albert    Manske,    labor.. 

72905  Ludwig  -Manske,  labor.. 

72906  Ernst      Kush,!    labor.... 

72907  Gust    Kush.    team    work 
12908   Arthur   Wentiloff,     team 

work  .  .     .  .  •>■    ■,*.. .... 

72909  Nick  Hargin,  iteani  work 

72910  Arthua   Olson,    labor.... 
729 il   Andrew   Anderson^  labor 

72912  Iver  Peterson;  labor..,. 

72913  Otto     Busli.     labor 

72914  Gust    Kush,    Jabof 


14  00 

13  30 

6  Oo 

3  00 

27  50 

22  OO 

18  00 

22  00 

18  00 

9  00 

13  oo 

22  00 

22  00 

49  50 

72865 
72866 
72867 
72.S68 
72869 
72870 
72>>71 
72872 
76873 
72874 
72875 
72876 

76099 
75136 


Kale    Kaprince.    labor.. 

V.    M.    Hele,    labor 

John    Makl,    labor 

Cuvote  Canter,  labor  .. 
Nels  Lundstrom.  labor 
Martin    Larson,    labor. 


labor 


Martin     Karponlck. 

A.   Maskalach,   labor.... 

Joe     Kurla.     labor 

£•.    Hezuk.    labor 

Lewis     Mark,     labor.... 
Brindos    &   Hosied,    con- 
tractors     

A.   J.   Shea,    inspection.. 
A.   J.   Sliea.   Inspection.. 


7  80 
80 

2  00 

2  00 
20  85 

9  96 
46  24 
46  24 
46  24 
46  24 
26  90 

16  87 

90  00 

130  00 


40  50 

40  50 

5  50 

15  00 

3  50 
2  50 

4  50 


Total 


.%    3.417  00 


Total  ; $   696  08 


25  00 
16  00 

10  00 
6  00 
6  00 
1  40 
9  01) 

10  00 
6  00 
4  00 
4  00 
6  00 
4  00 

12  50 
6  00 


,$  1,063  30 


MARTZ  EXTENSION  RO-VD. 


LISMORE    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
72365    Dulnth    Hardware      Co., 
dvnamlte    

E.  Flebiger.  tools  .... 
Thos.  Stack,  foreman.. 
J.  McDonnell,  labor.... 
.M.  Hlgglns.  labor  .... 
J.    Marz,    labor    

F.  Barch.    labor    

H.  Pearsen.  labor 

L.    Normlskl.    labor 

Joe    Stroberie.    labor    . . 

F.    Kehtel.    labor    

Egnus  Prunik.  labor  . . 
Egnus  Misinik.  labor.,. 
J.    Campbell,    labor    .... 

Ed    Manson,    labor    

A.  Stock,  labor    

I».    .sKaken,    labor    

F.    Dunigen.   labor    

A.  Supenskle.  labor  .... 
M.  Sweeney,  labor  .... 
John    Koslakwioz,    labor 

P.    Sundeen.    labor 

E.   Marsen.    labor    

W.  Johnson,  labor  .... 
H.         Branard.         team 

work     

J.     W.     Murphy,       team 

work 

Thos.     Stack,      boarding 

men      

Thos.  Stock,  foreman... 
John    Campbell,    labor.. 

J     Barcli.   lab'ir 

j'    Worsz.    labor 

f'     Kehtel.     labor 

S.     Hlggins.    labor 

D.    Prunick.    labor 

I>.    Muslnick.    labor 

A.    Schubuski.    labor.... 

H.    Pearson     labor 

Walter  Johnson,  labor.. 
.1.  Strawberry,   labor..., 

L.    Norvltski.    labor 

E      Hanson,     labor 

W.  Schuifer.  labor 


196  87 


2. 


72366 
72727 
72728 
73729 
72730 
72731 
727.3  2 
7273:< 
7273  4 
72735 
72736 
72737 
7273^ 
72^39 
72740 
72741 
72742 
7274.3 
72744 
72745 
72746 
72747 
7274S 
72749 

72760 

72751 


30  70 

3  15 

6150 

2S  50 

16  05 

16  80 

17  75 

32  00 

4  00 

18  00 

16  25 

SO  00 

40  00 

22  75 

41  00 

4  00 

40  93 

24  75 

26  00 

22  50 

9  00 

8  15 

8  00 

81  70 

100  00 

15  00 

74843 
74344 
74845 
74346 
74347 
7434S 
74349 
74350 
74351 
74352 
74353 
74354 
74355 
74356 
74357 
7435S 
74359 
74360 
74361 
7  4362 
74363 


J.     McDonald,     labor.... 

.\.    (Jratz,     labor     

T      Dunnlgan.     labor.... 

E.  Eckart.  labor 

F  Erickson,  team  work 
J.'      W.       Murpiiy.     team 

work    

74346  Thos.     Stack,     boarding 

men 


324  47 
57  00 

23  20 

15  50 
6  50 

24  00 
20  50 

11  60 
28  38 
24  00 
24  80 

16  00 
13  00 

16  80 
28  00 
18  20 

1  00 

12  00 
24  50 

17  00 
93  00 

5  00 

203  02 


72365 

7236S 
72371 
72384 

72385 

72386 

72877 

72878 
72S79 
72S.S0 
728^1 
72SS2 
728S3 
72<;S4 
72S85 
72886 
72SS7 
72^88 
72889 
72*90 
72801 
72R92 
72893 
72894 
72895 
72896 

72897 

74265 
74266 
74267 
74263 
741-69 
74270 
74271 
74272 
74273 
74274 
74275 
74276 
74277 
74273 
74279 
74280 
742S1 

74282 


MoQT'ADE    ROAD. 

Duluth     Hardware     Co., 
tools     

E.    Fiebiger,   tools    

John   Hagberg,    labor... 

Seeley    Palmer,    survey- 
ing     

Thomas  Saxton,  survey- 
ing 

Saxton,  survey- 


Schwartz,    fore- 


Total 


.$    1.67695 


LAKKA  ROAD. 
Commissioners    District    No. 
70604    F.    II.    Wade,   material... 
Ernst   Kuhllng,   foreman 
Walter    Kuliling,      team 

work    

Walter    Kuhling,      team 

work     

Fred    Kuhlney.    labor... 

John    Paulson,    labor 

Aaron   Bell,   labor 

Axe  Birkeland,  labor.  .  . 
Ernest  Kuhlin,  Jr.,  labor 
William  Kuhlmey,  labor 
Martin    Peterson,    labor. 

Ed  .Vustad,   labor 

.Vxel       Birkeland,     team 

work     

70989  Ell   Austad,   labor    

70990  Wilhelm    Berberg.    labor 


7097 
70978 

70979 

70980 
70981 
71982 
709«:! 
70984 
70985 
70986 
70987 
70988 


14  19 
27  75 

4  50 

50  85 
22  00 
10  00 
21  60 
12  40 

21  50 

22  20 
21  00 
16  00 

4  50 

50 

1  00 


Charles 
Ing    . 
George 

man     

G.    Schwartz,    foreman.. 
O.   Schwartz.  Jr.,  labor.. 

G.    Schwartz.    Jr..    labor. 

T.   Stanley,   labor    

N.     Pohr,     labor     

W.    Dishman.   labor    .... 

W.   Dishman,  labor    

A.    Haberman,   labor.... 

D.    Docke,    labor 

L.    Datke.    labor 

J.  Majonak.   labor 

J.   Majonak,  labor    

C.  Wiokstrom.  labor.... 

J.    Anderson,    labor 

J.   Anderson,   labor 

C.   Dishman,  labor 

R.   Brown,  labor 

A.   Anderson,   labor    .... 

Tatmar        Bros.,        team 
work     

George  Schwartz,  board- 
ing   men    

.7.    Schwartz,    foreman .  . 

.T.     .Schwartz,    Jr..     labor 

J.    Schwartz.    Jr..    labor 

N,    Pohr.    labor 

W.     Dlttman.    Labor 

C.    Dlttman,    labor 

A.    Harberman,    labor... 

L.     Dotke.     labor 

T.     Majonock.     labor.... 

C.    Wii-kstrom.    labor.... 

C.     Wiokstrom,    labor... 

F.  Anderson,     labor.... 
R.     Brown,     labor 

G.  Ross,    labor 

A.    McKennon,    labor.... 

J.    Schomber,    labor 

Totman       Bros..        team 

work     ; 

J.     Schwartz,       boarding 
men      


25  00 

10  00 
4  00 

10  00 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 

34  00 

12  00 

40  00 
30  00 
12  00 
20  00 

4  00 
12  00 
12  00 

5  OO 
1 9  00 
22  00 

6  00 
4  OO 

2r60 
10  00 

7  00 

37  60 
523  85 


3  75 

10  75 

2  00 

27  00 

28  00 

26  00 

60  00 
18  00 
22  00 

14  00 

15  00 
33  00 
20  00 

8  00 
31  00 

17  00 
13  00 

15  00 

16  00 

50  00 

18  00 

6  00 

16  00 

17  00 
16  (iO 

96  50 

168  00 

51  00 

24  00 
10  00 
22  00 
16  00 

18  00 
16  00 

15  00 

16  50 

25  00 
5  00 

21  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 

7  00 

75  00 
118  50 


67361 

74194 
74195 
74196 
74197 
74198 
74199 
74200 
74201 
74202 
74203 
74204 
74205 
74206 
74207 

74208 

74209 

74210 
741^3 
745R4 
742S5 
742S6 
74287 
74288 
74289 
74290 
74291 
74292 
74293 
74294 

74295 
74296 

74297 

74298 


contract 


i-ay. 
foreman. 


N.    W,   Mur 

work 
Matt  Halli, 
Jacob  Lento,  labor  .... 
Wester  Haapala,  labor 
Sam  Johnson,  laboi.... 
.Mfred  Ki|>po,  labor.... 
Leander  Kipi)0,  !at)or.  . 
Stefania  Klppo.  labor.. 
Matt    ivaui)pi.    labor.... 

Emil   I.elito,    labor 

Malt  Tato.    labor    

Matt  Glelmola,  labor.. 
Olli  Peterson,  labor.... 
Adolf  Lehto.  team  work 
Chas.       Karjala,        team 

work     

Henry      Antllla,        team 

work     

Fred    Henrlckson,    team 

work     

Joseb  Weilta.  labor.... 
Matt  Halli.  foreman... 
Jacob  Lento,  labor  .... 
Wester  Haapaln.  labor 
Sam  Johnson,  labor.... 
Leander  Kippo.  labor. 
Alfred  Kippo.  labor.... 
Matt  Kauppl.  labor.... 
Sefania  Kippo.  labor.. 
Matt    Gleimola.     labor.. 

Olli    Peterson.   labor 

.\dolf  Lehto.  team  work 
Fred  Hendrlckson. 

work      

Emil   Lehto.   labor, 
Chas.      Karjala, 

work     

Henry      Antllla. 

work     

Matt   Talo,   team 

Total  


4  5  00 

19  25 
12  00 

5  00 
10  00 
12  00 
10  00 

«  OO 
8  00 
4  00 

6  00 
12  00 

fi  OO 
24  00 

20  00 
24  00 


MUNGER  RO.\D. 

Commissioner's    District    No. 

70590   Duluth    Engineering  Co., 

Inspection    work     .... 

Kelly    Hdw.    Co.,    tools.. 

Albert  C.C.Miller,   fore- 

.  man . 

Joe   flush,   labor 

X».  Benson,  labpr   ..,...,. 
G.    Leiste,    labor.-. v. ..... 

William   Sova,   labor ... . 

William    Nygard,    labor. 

N.  Morton,   labor    

Morton,   laV)or    

H.  Miller,  labor 

DIechert,    labor » 

Stevens,    labor 

Carlson,    labor 

71128   William    Miller,    labor... 
71139  Henry  Miller,  labor   .... 
74299  Albert  C.  C.  Miller,  fore- 
man  

William  "Nygard,   labor. 

.\ug.    Leader,    labor 

Fred    Morton,    labor 

J.ihn    Stevens,    labor.... 

Gu.«:t  Leister,   labor , 

William  Soua,   labor.... 
George        M.        Johnson,  , 

labor 

L.    Benson,  labor 

William    Miller,    labor... 

.^.    H.   Miller,   labor 

F.   Jaquin,   labor 

James      Anderson,    team 

work 

74312  Henry         Miller,        team 

work     

Aug.   Leader,   teamwork 

A.    H.   Miller,   team  work 

Albert       C.       C.       Miller, 

team   work  -: 


5. 


70592 
71126 

71127 
71128 
71129 
71130 
71131 
71132 

71133  F. 

71134  A. 

71135  F. 

71136  J, 

71137  C. 


74300 
74301 
74302 
74303 
74304 
7  4  305 
74306 

74307 

7430S 
74309 
74310 
74311 


74313 
74314 
74315 


74316  Albert       C 
foreman 
Joe     Roth 


Miller. 


team 

team 

team 

work . 


26  00 

8  00 

13  75 

10  00 

8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

7  00 

12  00 

12  00 

4  00 

8  00 

8  00 
2  00 


Total 


.$   1,255  00 


MILLER  TRUNK   RO.\D. 
Commissioner's     District     No.     6. 

63439    John   Hill,    labor 10  12 

A.    G.    Shea,    foreman..  2100 

Frank    Miller,    labor 8  20 

Lewi.s   Glover,    labor    ...  8  20 

Frank    Platuer.    labor..  8  20 

69908  Tony  Castall,  labor 8  20 

69909  Andrew    Cliner.    labor..  8  20 

John    crince,    labor 8  20 

A.    J.    Shea,    team    work  35  00 

A.  A.  Shea,  team  work  30  00 
A.       J.       Shea,    boarding 

Ing   men    22  80 

John    Owens,    lumber...  8  10 

Lemoine  Bros.,  tools..  2  25 
Continental    Bridge    Co., 

steel    bridge,   etc 3,300  00 


69904 
69905 
69D06 
69907 


69910 
69911 
69912 
69913 

70599 
7O602 
70102 


MORRISON   RO.\D. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
66513   E.    I.    Du    Pont    I'owder 
Co..    dynamite,    etc.... 

John   Makl.   labor    

i'eter  Soderholm,    labor. 

Ed  Vil.iams,  labor   

Thomas  Floni,  labor.... 
Frank  Koivista.    lai>or.. 

John    Lund,    labor 

Isaac    Wold,    labor 

Aug.  Lund,  foreman .... 
Du    Pont      Powder      Co., 

(Jvnamlte.    etc 

A.  J.  FillatrauU,  labor. 
Erick  Falkonen,  labor. 
Peter  Soderholm,    labor. 

Gust   Bloom,   labor    

Frank  Traver,  labor  .  . . 
Henr^'  Johnson,  labor.. 
Charles    Sundquist.  labor 

Ellas  Makka,  labor 

Victor   Solner.    lanor.... 

John   Korn.   labor 

Charles   Johnson,    labor. 

Ed   Noeberg,    labor 

Axel  Johnson,  labor.... 
David   Rowainen.   labor. 

John   Sircoff,  labor    

John   Oling,    labor    

Olva  Dolfala,  labor  .... 
Erick  Lolfala.  labor  . . . 
John  Lund,  team  work. 
Alfred    Johnson,   labor.. 

Isaac  Wolf,  labor 

And.        Johnson,        team 

work     

Isaacson,     team 


67397 
67380 
67381 
67382 
67383 
67384 
67385 
67386 
t)i:;79 

69857 
69858 
69859 
69860 
69861 
69862 
69863 
69864 
69865 
69866 
69867 
69868 
69869 
69870 
69871 
69872 
69873 
69874 
69S75 
69876 
69877 
69878 


Flom,   team 


69879  And. 

work 

69880  Thomas 

work     

69881  And.   Karo.    labor 

69882  Herman  Makela.  labor 

69883  Aug.    Lund,    foreman.. 

76279  Jacob    Forsman.    labor 

76280  Jack   John-son.    labor.  . 
762S1    Aug.  Lund,  team  work 

76282  Ed    Viljams,    labor.... 

76283  Erick    Luthvula.    labor 

76284  Thomas        Flom,        team 

vrork    

76285  And.  I.saaeson.  labor.... 

76286  Isaac  Volf.  labor 

76287  Harman  Hill,  labor 

76288  Herman  Holm,  labor.  .  .  . 

76289  Aug.  Lund,  team  work.. 

Total 


i 


393  00 


72  84 

12  60 

5  80 

6  00 
20  00 

6  00 
46  00 
44  00 
57  50 

64  02 

5  60 

17  20 

14  52 

14  00 

15  75 

16  62 
16  XO 
10  50 

13  12 
10  50 

7  52 

2  00 
9  62 

10  14 

13  12 
25  00 
12  80 

14  87 
78  00 
22  93 
22  93 

56  00 

50  50 

33  00 

19  77 
10  50 
S9  00 
12  07 
12  07 

22  00 
4  00 

12  80 

3  50 

4  00 

20  00 
4  00 
3  00 

23  65 


74317 
74318 
74319 
74320 
74321 
74322 
74323 
74324 
74325 
74326 
74327 
74328 
74329 
74330 
74331 
74332 
74333 
74334 
74335 
74336 

74337 

74338 
74339 

7J.340 
74341 

71342 


ji>»-     ivi.>Lii.     labor, 

Wm.    Nvgaai-d',    labor... 

Gu.1t     Leiste.  'MabVn- 

Wm.     Miller, ''labHr 

Herbert  Dahjp^n.'  labor 
ICdwin  Swaifson;'  labor 
John  Steven^.'  laHor.  ..  . 
Fi  ed    Morton;    1al)or .... 

A.   H.   Miller,  lab<ir 

Wm.     Sowa.     Jabc+i" 

R.     Walt,     laflrfr..' 

Geo.  M.  JoliiiBonr  labor 
Carl    Schilling,    labor... 

Ed     Schilling,     labor 

Carl    Larson,    labor 

Fred    Jaquin,    labt;»r 

Oscar  Carlson,  labor.. 
Au.gust  Leader,  labor.. 
L.  Benson,  labor. 
John      Johnson, 

wcrk     ....;...  ,^ 
James      Anderson. 

work      

A.   H.  Miller,  team 
August      Leader. 

work     

Wm.  Sowa,  team  work. 
Henry         Miller.         team 

woik 

Albert  C 


team 

team 

work 
team 


3?  50 

;1S82 

,1^25 
13  00 
12  00 
13.00 
12"  OO 

12  00 
10  00 

10' 00 

13  00 

10  00 
12.00 

7  20 

5  00 
.  2  00 

8  75 

6  00 

3  00 
2  00 
7-00 

7  00 

4  00 

6  00 
6  00 

6  00 
4  uO 

7  00 

1575 

11  25 

6  75 
4  50 

4  50 

43  73 

11  50 
85  00 

21  00  , 
34  00  I 

30  00 
81  OO 

31  00 
30  00 
29  QO 

24  00 

25  00 

22  00 
20  00 
20  00 

8  00 
20  00 

12  00 

7  00 
10  00 

13  50 


team 
team 


MORRIS    THOMAS    ROAD. 
Commissioner's   District   No. 
70592   Kelley     Hardware      Co., 
material,    etc 

71104  Otto     Witte,     foreman., 

71105  Aug.    Wagner,    labor... 

71106  Richard    Wagner,    labor 

71107  Julius    Jacroltz,    labor.. 

71108  Max    Wltte.    labor 

71109  Wm.    Grams,    labor 

71110  Leo    Wltte.    team    work 

71111  Albert    Zakowsky,    team 
work     

71112  Joseph   Mechalek.   labor 

71113  Frank   Wagner,    labor.. 

71114  Richard    Wagner,    team 
work     

71115  Louis      Wlttlch,        team 
work      

71116  Chas.    Zakowltz,    labor. 

71117  James    East,    labor 

71118  Chas.       Wittich, 
work     

71119  Chas.       Mlssall. 
work     

Paul  Zakowsky.  labor. 
Frank  Oi'ams.  labor... 
Chas.  Hilif^brand.  labor 
Henry  Wagner,  labor.. 
Joseph  Mechalek,  labor 
August  Wagner,  labor.. 
Rlcltard    Wagner,    labor 

James    East,    labor 

William  Grams,  labor.. 
Joe  Mechalek.  labor... 
Leo  WItto.  team  work 
Albert    Zakowltz,     team 

work      

Jull  Zakowltz.  labor.. 
Paul  Zakowltz,  labor.. 
Ci!as.  Hillebrand.  labor 
Frank  Grams,  labor.. 
C.  Missall,  team  work 
Otto  WItto,  foreman.. 
Leo  Witto.  team  work 
.\ugust  Wagner,  labor 
Richard  Wagner,  labor 
James  East,  labor.... 
William  Gi-ams.  labor.. 
Joe  M'-chalak.  labor... 
Leo  Witto,  team  work 
Otto  Witto,  foreman.. 
Al»)ert    Zakowltz,     team 

work 

Jul!  Zakowltz,  labor... 
Paul  Zakowitz,  labor.. 
Louis  Wlllich,  lai)or.. 
Chas.  Hillebrand.  labor 
Frank  Grams,  labor... 
C.   Missall,    labor    


71120 
71121 
71122 
71123 
71124 
72934 
72935 
72936 
72937 
72938 
72939 
72940 

72941 
72942 
72943 
72944 
72945 
72946 
72947 
72948 
72949 
72950 
72951 
72952 
72953 
72954 
72955 


13 
9 


:>o 

OO 


9  Oi) 
6  75 


work 
Total 


C.  Miller,  team 


50 
50 


,.$       832  27 


Total 


.$   3,478  47 


Total    $       249  99 


74242 

74243 
74244 
74245 
74246 

74247 
7424S 
74249 
74250 

74251 
74262 


74254 
74255 
74250 
75130 


McARTHUR    ROAD. 
Thos.     McArthur,     fore- 
man       

B.  Wintergerst,    labor.. 

Ole     Olson,     labor 

.\nton  Berkeland.  labor 
Frank  Mabie,  labor... 
A.  H.  Haldin.  labor.... 
C  J.  Johnson,  labor.... 
P.  G.  Paulson,  labor... 
Tiiomas     A.       McArthur. 

labor      

C.  A.  Ringquist,  labor. 
C.      J.      Johnson.      team 

work     

Ringquist.     team 


G.     A. 

work 
P.      G.      Paulson. 

work     

Olaus       Paulson, 

work     

Andrew     Broberg*. 

work      

Neal     Mack.       dynamite 

tools,    etc     

Total     


team 
team 
team 


24  75 

1  00 
18  00 

14  00 

15  00 
13  00 

4  00 
12  00 

4  50 
4  00 

32  40 

21  15 

10  35 

2  25 
3150 

11  53 


219  43 


McARTHUR    EXTENSION    ROAD. 
63432   Joseph    Gautliler.    dyna- 
mite,   etc 2  91 

72374   E.    J.    Ketchum,      dyna- 
mite,   etc 27  00 


MILLER  TRUNK  ROAD. 
Commissioner's  District  No.  4. 
63430   W.   H.   Congdon    &     Son, 

dynamite,    etc    

69285  Ben  Erickson,  dynamite, 

etc    

69884   Ole  Sassos.  foreman  .... 
69883  George  Bay.  labor 

69886  Chas.    A.   Johnson,    labor 

69887  Knut    Swanson.     labor.. 

69888  John  Owens,   team  work 
69SS9   Joe   Johnson     labor 

69890  Walter    Erickson,    labor 

69891  Gust.       Johnson.        team 

work    

69892  Sam  Swanson,   labor.... 

69893  Gut   Kaivanta,  labor.... 

69894  Fredolf    Sjostrom.    labor 

69895  Elof    Johnson,    labor.... 

69896  Renold  Johnson,  labor.. 

69897  Chas    Nelson,  labor 

69S98   C.  M.  Johnson,  labor.... 

69899  And.    Soderlund     labor.. 

69900  Oscar     Magnuson,     labor 

69901  Albert   Erickson   labor.. 

69902  Gust    Johnson,    boarding 

men    

69903  Ole   Sassos.   boarding 

men  

Ole  Sassos.  foreman.... 
Sam  Swanson,  labor.... 
Chas.    Nelson,    labor.... 

Henr.v  Joice.  labor 

Ed    Jolce,    labor 

John    Jolce     labor 

Walter  Erickson,  labor 
Fredolf  Sjostrom,  labor 
Clias.  A.  Johnson,  labor 
Renold    Johnson,    labor. 


MISCELLANEOUS. 

f.S962y2    Praznlk   &  Ouerza... 

68965i<;    John    France    

70244  Chas.     Buyck 

Total     


.?   1.007  16 


154  74 
175  57 
165  12 


495  43 


71042 
71043 
71044 
71045 
71046 
71047 
71048 
71049 
71050 
71051 
71052 
710.-.3 
71054 
71055 
71056 
71057 

71058 
71059 


Elof  Johnson,  labor.... 
Bernhart  fejoquist.  labor 
John  Owens,  team  work 
Oscar  Magnuson.  labor 
.Toe  Johnson,  labor.... 
Gust        Johnson,      team 

work     

Karl    Bystrom.    labor... 
Andrew  Sodei^iund.  team 

work  


North. 

12  20 

22  53 

44  00 
17  50 
22  50 

7  12 

45  00 
67 

8  17 

29  25 
6  47 

1  15 

5  52 

22  75 

13  13 
90 

19  68 

10  1-2 

9  00 

2  18 

23  25 

29  85 
42  00 

14  00 
19  25 

6  12 
4  37 

3  50 

12  17 

13  12 

14  00 

12  25 
14  87 

11  00 
31  50 

9  00 
14  00 

13  50 
1  50 

13  50 


MARTZ  ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
17  Oscar  Erickson.  foreman 
Axel     Erickson,    labor.. 
Harry    Larson,    labor... 
A.    G.    Peterson,    labor.. 
Thorvald     Peterson,     la- 
bor      

Chas.    Gronqulst.    labor. 
Alexander      Gronqu  i  s  t, 

labor     

O.    P.   Strom,    labor    .... 
Victor    Swanstrom,      la- 
bor      

74226  Aaron   Stark,  labor   .... 

74227  Clias.    Stark,    labor    .... 

74228  John    Farm,    labor 

74229  Arnold    Farm,    labor     .. 

74230  Erick    Johnson,    labor.. 

74231  Paul  Larson,  water  boy 

Total     I 


74 

74218 

74219 

74220 

74221 

74222 
74223 

74224 
74225 


5. 

24  50 

17  00 

15  00 

13  00 

16  00 

13  00 

15  00 

15  00 

15  00 

15  60 

12  00 

10  00 

8  20 

4  00 

7  00 

202  30 


MILLER  TRUNK    ROAD, 
r-ommlssloner's    District   No. 
69980   L.    T.    Haakenson.    fore- 
man      

79981  Carl     Austad.     labor.... 

79982  Walter    Kuhlmey.    labor 

79983  Arthur    Berbig.    labor.. 

79984  J.   Paulson,   labor    

79985  Alfred    Birkeland, 

work      

69986  Anton    Birkeland, 

69987  L.    T.    Haakenson, 

work 

69988  L.  T.  Haakenson,  board- 

ing men  


70995 
70996 
70997 
70^98 
70999 
710it0 
71001 
710O2 
71003 
71004 
71005 
71006 
71007 
71008 
11009 
71010 
71011 

71012 
71013 
71014 
71015 
71016 
71017 
71018 
71019 
71020 

71021 
71022 
71023 
71024 
71025 
71026 
71027 
71029 
71028 
71030 
71031 
71032 
71033 
71034 
71035 
71036 
71037 
71038 

71039 

71040 
71041 

72795 
72796 
72797 
72998 
72799 
72800 
72801 
72802 
72803 
72804 
72805 
72806 
72807 
72808 
72809 
72810 
72S11 
72812 
72813 
72814 
72815 
72816 
72817 
72818 
72819 
7  2S20 

72821 
Y  .>  g  o  2 

72823 
72824 
72825 
72826 

72827 
72828 
72829 


307  50 

14  86 

2  10 

12  04 

1  42 

10 

94 

49 

10 

25 

12 

07 


n 

6 

12 
13 
9 
14  33 


13 
7 
3 
5 


la- 


3  18 
9  26 
9  51 

29  90 
8  00 

8  25 
6  96 

83  06 

9  00 
1  00 

1  00 

4  57 
12  20 

2  08 
15  95 
14  15 
60  00 
10  14 

1  00 

28  14 

116  70 

48  86 

6  45 
87  00 
41  27 
25  25 

1  95 

200  00 

75  00 
10  00 

461  82 


team 

labor 
team 


22  50 
12  00 
12  00 
12  60 

7  00 

32  00 

8  00 

4  50 
15  40 


Total  I   126  00 


M.APLE  GROVE  ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No. 
70592  Kelley      Hardware      Co., 
tools    

71063  Carl   R.  Olson,   labor 

71064  Aug.    Olson,    labor 

71065  Herbert  Wentzloff.  labor 

71066  Frank  Peterson,  labor".". 

71067  Charles    Swanson.    labor 

71068  Gust  Kush.  team  work.. 

71069  Otto    Bush,    foreman.... 

71070  Arthur    Wentzloff,    team 

work    

71071  L.   Manske.    labor. 

71072  Frank    Gustafson. 

work     

71073  Nick  Hargin.  team 

71074  Oscar  Lindahl.  labor.. 

71075  And.  Sanstrom,  labor. 


5. 


team 
work 


21  48 

18  00 

18  00 

18  00 

18  00 

18  00 

45  00 

22  50 

36  00 

15  00 

30  60 

36  00 

18  00 

10  00 

MILLER     TRUNK    STATE    HIGHWAY 
7o5S9  Duluth  Engineering  Co., 
inspecting   work    

R.   Olson,   labor.... 

C.  Annola,  labor. 

Gust  Lindcjuist.   tabor... 

John  Hall,  labor... 

T.  Makl.  labor.,-.,...... 

M.   Belt,  labo.r.  .,«,)#►  .>!» 

J.   Aunty,  labor 

J.    Karl."   labor....' 

Otto  Norman,  labor 

John   Ma.gnuson,   labor.. 

Charles    MaUl.    labor.... 

A.    Saari,    labor 

E.    Engman,    labor 

Nels   Blomstrand.   labor. 

Ed.  Steven,   labor 

R.    Takala,    labor.  . . 

Herman  Blomstrand 
bor 

John   Makl.   labor 

Nick    Hill,   labor 

Martin    Olson,    labor.  .  . . 

Wm.  Peterson,  labor.  .  . . 

Magnus    Hosied.    labor.. 

L.   J.    Larson,   labor 

J.    McKay,    labor 

Roland  Rolandson,  labor 

Joe  Davis,  labor 

John    Pfeffer,    labor 

W.    Peterson,    labor 

W.    Jehrcn,    labor 

J.    Linberg,    labor 

Magnus  Hosied,  labor.  . 
Tom    Hopkins,    labor.  .. . 

Frank    King,    labor 

R.  McAlinder;'  labor.  . . . 
Ton.v  Carmen',  labor  . . 
Chas.    Haglund.    labor.. 

Ole    Mark,    labor 

Ed    Randall,    labor 

John  Harmol,  labor.... 
M.    N.   Nelson,   labor.... 

Wm.    Makl.    labor    

T.    Pearson,    labor 

Frank  Lano,  labor.... 
Sundeen      &        Johnson, 

merchandise     

Nelson   &   Peterson,   hay 

and    feed 

Lewis    Johnsoa.    labor.. 
Brundos  &  Hosied,  con- 
tractors       

Fred  Haka.  labor  .... 
Victor  ToumI,  labor... 
Jack    .Tackson.    labor... 

John    Hakal.    labor 

Werner    Wirta.    labor.. 

John    ilakl.    labor 

Frank  Lano,  labor.... 
Martin  Olson,  labor.... 
John  Garvls.  labor.... 
Anton  VIdlc.  labor.... 
Martin     Bakky.     labor.. 

Frank    Zaler.    labor 

Peter  Johnson,  labor.. 
Ed     Marlander.     labor.. 

G.   Johnson,   labor    

T.     Johnson,     labor 

Tom.  Johnson,  labor.... 

P.   Haglund.  labor 

Robert   .Sanford,   labor.. 

Wm.    Maki.    labor 

Ed    Johnson,    labor 

C.    Kaprince,    labor 

Frank  Adams,  labor.... 

Pete    McMan,    labor 

Joe    Parshai,    labor 

Chas.    Muyky,    labor 

Lewi    Hult,    labor 

Wm.   Subeyk,  labor 

Intr    Olson,    labor 

John    Pint,    labor 

M.    .Tohnson,    labor 

Chas.   Hagen,   labor 

Joe  Thompson,  labor... 
N.  M.  Nelson,  labor.... 
Magnus  Hosied,  labor.. 
John  Johnson,  team 
work      

A.  Saarl,  team  work.... 
Nick    Hill,    labor 

Anton  Wares,  labor.... 
Nastor  Naskrom,  labor. 
Ed    KarpI,    labor 

J.    Furkovis,    labor 

Gust   Hill,    labor 

O.  O.   Kerman,   labor.... 

H.    Nylund,    labor 

Kail   Huntule,   labor.... 

Pete     Pearson,    labor... 

Fred   Norbet,    labor 

Alfred    Kengren,    labor.. 

Otto    Norman,    labor.  .. . 

Rolland      Roll&ndaon. 
labor      

John    Erickson.  labor... 

I^ewte  Llndstrom,   labor. 

Edward  Johnson,   labor. 

Lewie    Midson,    labor... 

Chas.    Peterson,    labor... 

Ole     Mork.     labor 

N.    M.    Nelson,    labor.... 

Ed     Kanda.     labor. 

Andrew     Moberg,     labor 

Nels    Nelson,    labor 

Oscar    Lundquist     labor 

Wm.    Petersop,    lahor.. 

Anton     Maki.     labor.... 

Nels   Johnson,   labor.... 

John     Rokko.     labor.... 

Robert    Force.   Jabar.... 

Julius    Loam.     labor.... 

Rudolf  Llndstj-om    labor 


72956 
72957 
72958 
72959 
72960 
72961 


Total 


68312 
68459 
68460 
t;S461 
68462 
684  63 
68464 
68  465 
68466 
68467 
6S468 
69284 


L. 
J. 
R. 
J. 


7 

93 
lo 
66 


60 
60 
60 
60 
60 
00 


69835 
69836 
69837 
69838 
69839 
69840 
69841 
69S42 
6984  3 
69844 
69845 
69846 
69847 
6984  8 
69S49 
69850 
69851 
69852 
69853 
69854 
69855 

69856 

72962 
72963 
72664 
72965 
72966 
72967 
72968 
72969 
72970 
72971 
72972 
72973 
72974 
72975 
72976 
72977 
72978 
72979 
72980 
72981 
72982 
72983 
72984 
72985 
74503 
74504 
74  503 
74506 
74507 
74508 
74509 
74510 
74511 
74512 
74513 
74514 
74515 
74516 
74517 
74518 
74519 
74520 
74521 
74522 


J.  McNulty.  team  work 
Sam  Simpson,  labor... 

1>.  Stewart,  labor 

W.  McXulty.  labor 

D.  McCraig.  labor 

Smith  Croft,  labor 

Joe  Augustine,  labor.. 
R.  McQuade,   boarding 

men     •.:••• 

Gust     Banks.       boarding 

men     

L.  Mersnick.  labor 

D.  Stewart,  labor 

J.    Olson,    labor 

C.  Johnson,  labor 

E.  .Tohnson.  labor 

J.   Tl^.orson,   labor 

J.   Mersnick.    labor 

L    Mersnick.  latjor 

t;   Bobnick,  labor 

M.  Trezon,  labor 

J.    Olson,    labor 

E    Swanson.   labor 

A.'  Levay.  la>>or 

E.  Carr,  labor. 
G.  Banks,  team 
O.  Banks,  team 
G.  Banks,  team 


work . . . 

work . . . 

work. . . 
Wm.  Croft,  team  work.. 
C.  White,  team  work... 
Bushow,  team  work.. 
Craft,  team  work  .  .  .  . 
M'-Donahi,  team  work 

F    Gray,  labor 

McQuade,   foreman  .  . . 

Joh.nson.   labor 

Levoy,    labor 

F.  Gray,  labor 

Carr.    labor 

Mersnick.  labor 

Mersnbk.    labor 

Mersnick,   labor 

Bobnick,  labor 


C. 

J. 

D. 

T. 

R. 

C. 

A 

T. 

G. 

T. 

J. 

L. 

T. 

M. 

E. 

D. 

D. 

F. 

G. 

G. 

C.   Bushaw. 

Win.    Croft 


Tregon, 
.•Swanson 
Stewart. 
Stewart. 
Sclilund 
Banks 
Banks. 


Labor 

labor 

labor 

labor 

labor 

team    work. . 

team    work .  . 

team   work. 

team    work 


>830 


72831 
72832 
72823 
72834 
72835 
72836 
72837 
72838 
72839 
72840 
72841 
72842 
72843 
72844 
72845 

72846 
72847 
72848 
72849 
72850 
72851 
72852 
72853 
72864 
72855 
72856 
72857 
72858 
72859 
72860 
72861 
72862 
72863 


21  40 

6  98 

13  00 

12  85 

13  10 

13  20 
15  60 

14  50 
3  40 
3  35 
3  40 
5  60 
5  60 

20  15 
2  60 

10  40 
2  60 

2  60 
9  80 

13  60 

3  40 
5  10 

34  86 

10  50 

11  00 
11  10 
10  10 
30  00 
38  40 

55  40 
33  15 

35  40 
37  40 
44  40 
35  05 
86  80 
25  60 

25  20 

26  00 
25  35 
15  20 
20  40 

27  40 
24  00 


J  Croft,  team  work  .  .  . 

C.  White,    team    work.. 

D.  McDonnell,        team 
work     

74523  R.    McQuade     foreman.. 

74524  J     Grannls.    team    work 

74525  D     Swartz.     teamster... 
76086  Continental    Bridge    Co.. 

bridge     and     structure 
76086  Continental    Bridge    Co., 
grading    and      making 
fills    


Total 


2864  Gotfred   Lindi)|fK,^ilabor 


10  40 
13  40 
17  40 
17  40 

11  40 
2  40 

84  48 
20  00 
17  00 
10  00 
48  74 

12  80 
16  00 
IC  20 
16  80 
15  40 
15  40 
15  40^ 

7  40 
840 


74465 
74466 
74467 
74  468 
74469 
74470 
74471 
74472 
74473 
74474 
74475 
74476 
74477 
74478 
74479 
7  1480 
74481 
74482 
74483 
74484 
74483 
74486 
74487 
74488 
74489 
74490 
74491 


NELIMARK  ROAD. 
Erik  Nelimark.  foreman 
John  H.  Nelimark.  labor 

Thomas    Salo,    labor 

August    Sorvisto,    labor. 
Jacol)   Sorvisto.   labor... 

Matt    Matson,    labor 

Thomas  Koskela,  labor. 
Andrew  Lehtonen.  labor 
August    .\ngren,    labor.. 

Saki   .Angren,   labor 

OtiO    Jarvlnen,    labor... 

.Simon    Salo,    labor 

John  Hekkila,  labor.... 
Emil  Isaacson,  labor... 
Joseph  Lahtmen,  labor. 
Jacob    Rantlo,    labor.... 

Andrew   Salo.   labor 

Oscar    Aho,     labor 

Eli    Aho,    labor 

Jacob    Heikklla,    labor.. 

Arvld  .Salo,   labor 

John    Nieml,    labor 

John    Makkyla.    labor... 

John    MattUa,    labor 

Erik   Pulkinen.  labor... 

Isaac    Kospi,    labor 

Wm.  Sempum,  labor.... 


21  48 
30  00 

21  00 
5  00 

22  00 

21  00 
20  00 
54  00 

49  50 
16  00 

22  00 

38  25 

38  25 
8  00 

18  00 

4  95 

24  75 
12  00 

lo  00 


00 
00 

It 

00 
00 
00 
00 

00 

00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
50 
50 
12  00 
12  00 
12  OO 
12  00 
12  00 
27  00 
15- 00 


68335 
68336 
68337 

69279 

69365 
69366 
69367 
69368 
69369 
69370 

69371 
69372 
69373 
69374 
69375 
69376 
69377 
69378 
69379 
69380 
693S1 
69382 
69383 
69384 
69385 
69386 
69387 

69388 
69389 
69390 
69391 
69392 
69406 
69407 
69408 
69409 
69410 
69411 
69412 
69413 
69414 
69415 

G9416 
69417 
69418 
69419 
69420 
69421 
69422 
71533 
71534 
71535 
71536 
71537 
71538 
71539 
71540 
71541 
71542 

71543 


26  10 

11  80 

11  SO 

11  25 

11  60 

8  no 

9  00 

NORTH  SHORE  ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
64949   Ole    Johnson,    material.. 

Duluth    Hdw.    Co.,    tools 

Gust    Banks,    labor 

Tom     Mersnick.     labor.. 

Tonv    Bobnl<;k,    labor... 

It.     McQuade.  team  work 

Gust    Banks,    team  work 

G.    Banks,    team    work.. 
Mersnick,    team  work 

Mersnick,    labor 

McQuade,   t^am  work 
McNulty.     team  work 

Duluth    Hdw.    Co.,    tools 
etc      ,• 

Gust    Banks,  team    work 

Gust  Banks,     labor 

R.    McQuade,    labor 

R.    McQuade,    foreman.. 

Wm.    Croft,    team    work 

F.    Croft,    team    work... 

Sam    Croft,   labor 

J.     Olson,     labor 

R.     Glass,     labor 

T.    Mersnick.    labor 

J.     Mersnick.    labor 

L.    Mersnick,    labor 

T.     Bobnick,     labor. 


Octave     Minor,     labo 
Uno    Elfe,    labor 
Isaac      Wiljams, 

work     

Du    Pont    Powder 

dynamite,  etc.  .  . . 
Mike  Spuru^a.  labor. 
Stephen  Arbucel,  la' 
Louis  Blassetti,  labo 
Julius  David,  labor  . 
Leander  Gagne,  labo 
Leander     Gagne.       te 

work     

James  Peters,  labor. 
Waller  Conway,  la 
A.  Skariesala.  labor 
John  Lennon,  labor. 
John  Batiste,  labor. 
O.  S.  Karlesala.  labo 
Mike  Splrma.  labor. 
Stephen  Arbucci,  lab 
Louis  Bassetti.  labor 
Julius  Dahl,  labor... 
James  Peters,  labor. 
Walter  Cornway.  lab 
A.  Skariesala.  labor. 
John  Lennon.  labor.. 
Nick  Batiste,  labor.. 
Leander  Gagne.  forer 
Leander      Gagne,      U 

work    

Oscar   Johnson,   laboi 
Tonv  Daw,  labor.  .  . 
William  Fritz,  labor. 
Moses  Giteau.  team  w 
John   Wallace,   labor 
Stephen    .\rbucci.    lal 
Louis  Blassitti,   laboi 
Julius   Dahl,   labor.  . 
A.   .Skariesala.   labor 
Oscar   Johnson,   laboi 
Tonv    Daw,    labor.. 
William    Fritz,    laboi 
John   Wallace,   labor 
Moses   Gibeau.   labor 
Leander      Gagne,      V 

work    

I.,eander  Gagne,  forei 
Matt  Harry,  labor. 
E.  .Xquafoudata,  labi 
M.  .Aquafoudata.  labi 
Amile  Maieson,  labo 
Angelo  Blassiito,  lal 
Nick  Kero,  labor... 
Stejdien  Arbueci.  lal 
Louis  Blassetti.  labo 
Tony  Davy,  labor.  . 
Emlle  Fonda,  labor 
Mike  Fonda,  labor.  . 
Emil  Maltson.  labo 
Nick  Kt^ra.  labor.  .  . 
Chas.  lienfors,  labor 
Leander  Gagne,  fore 
Leander      Gagne,      t 

work    

M.  Glbeaux,  team  wt 

Total    


teim 
(Jo., 


>or 

r. . 


r. . 
am 


)OV 


or. 


or. 


lan 
am 


ork 


or. 


12  00 
10  00 

7  50 

7  53 
12  60 
10  60 
12  60 
10  60 
20  07 


31  50 

10  «0 

10  60 

12  60 

12  60 

10  60 

3  00 

89  00 

35  00 

35  00 

39  00 

16  00 

16  00 

30  00 

8  00 

39  00 

53  62 

82  50 

35  00 

35  00 

23  00 

45  00 

17  00 

34  OO 

4  2  00 

16  00 

19  00 

23  00 

42  OO 

22  20 

17  00 

17  50 

am 


nan 


)r . 
)r . 


>or. 


)or. 


nan 
eam 

)rk. 


57  75 
37  50 
12  00 

29  00 

12  00 

17  00 
15  00 

1  00 

22  00 
25  00 
25  00 
25  00 
25  00 

13  00 

18  00 

23  00 
34  35 

49  OO 

30  00 


.%   1,892  25 


OLD     HERMANTOWN 

Commi.'isioner's    I>istrl 

69935  A.    M.    Olmen,    labor 

l)ani«l    N.    Olmen,    li 

Jos<-nh    A. 

labor 

69938   A.       M. 

work 

Robert 


ROAD. 
:;t    No.    5. 


1,9936 
69937 


.    Olnien,    t 
Olmen, 


ibor 
earn 


team 


73 


21  00 

25  98 
13  00 
17  50 
17  50 
58  75 
47  50 
27  50 
17  50 
17  50 
45  00 

7  50 

102  94 
172  50 
15  00 
40  00 
57  00 
30  00 
30  00 

11  00 
23  00 
23  00 
35  00 
35  00 
35  00 

26  00 
13  00 

6  40 

19  OO 
9  00 

5  60 

6  00 
10  00 

12  00 

20  00 
35  00 


6 

7 
37 

3 
14 
34 
37 
37 
37 


00 
00 
00 
OO 
00 
50 
(to 
00 
00 


26  00 
28  00 

14  00 
9  00 

75  00 
70  00 
10  00 
70  00 
50  00 
60  OO 
60  00 

15  00 
6  00 

63  00 
19  00 

14  00 
45  00 

6  50 
44  00 
44  00 
40  00 
40  00 
40  00 

23  00 
18  00 

4  00 

1  50 

95  00 

32  50 

27  50 

24  00 
27  50 
35  00 

25  00 
72  00 

15  00 

16  00 

1,798  00 


50  00 


69939 
705S2 

70392 

70603 

70882 
70883 
70884 
70885 
70886 
70887 

70<5SS 
70889 
70890 

70891 
70892 
70893 
70894 

70)i95 
70896 
70897 

71140 
71141 

71142 

71143 

71144 

71145 

71146 
71147 
7114  8 
71  149 
71150 
71151 
71152 
71153 
71154 
71155 
71156 
72376 
72595 
72596 
72597 
72598 
72599 
72600 
72601 
72602 
72603 
72604 
72605 
72606 
72607 
72608 
72609 

72610 

72611 


Wise,    labor 
Hardware 


Hardware 

Lum 


Kelley 

tools 
Kelley 

tools     

Scott    -    Graff 

Co..  lumber  .  .  .  . 
A  M.  Olmen.  foreii 
.A.  M.  Olmen.  team  \ 
Dan  N.  Olmen.  lab 
Joseph  A.  Olmen,  1 
Robert  Wise,  labor 
E.       B.       Engren,       t 

work     

Fred  Johnson,  labo 
Joe  Miller,  labor.  . 
J.       T.       Brindos,       1 

w<»ik     

Peter  La  Vange  la 
H.  McCremmoii.  la 
P.  A.  Jordan,  laboi 
Louis      Anderson,      t 

work     

Henrv  Liltnian.  lal 
Fred  Littman.  lalx 
W.         C.         McCrlm 

labor     

Hans  I'gstad,  forer 
Chr.         Ugstad, 

work     

Peter      Johnson. 

work     

Charles    Wittich. 

work     

Geo.       Erickson, 

work     

Anton    Clasowsky. 

work     

llelmer  Hanson.  1 
Archie  .Tohnson.  1 
Otto  Sanipson.  lal 
Chas  SaniD.son  lal 
Arthur  Hansori.  la 
Jolm  East.  Sr.,  la' 
,Iames  Grady,  labo 
John  Poison,  labo 
John  East.  Jr..  lal 
Rongvald  Ugst.id. 
Gust  Lulek.  labor 
Mrs.  M.  Luck,  gra 
Hilmar  Hansen.  U 
Rangvald  L'g.'itad. 
Charles  Sampson. 
Otto  Sampson,  lal 
Arthur  Johnson,  h 
Wm.  Janzig,  labo 
Albert  l*ahl.  labor 
John  East.  Sr..  la 
Otto  Kiause.  labo 
Jfdin  East.  Jr.,  la 
Harry  Carlson,  la 
Cha.=!.*  WItteck.  lab 
Hans  Ugstad.  for 
George  Erickson, 
Chris         Ugstad, 

work      

Chas.       WItteck. 

work      

Anton    Klasowsky, 

work     


Co., 
Co.'. 

ber 

lan. 

ork 

or.  . 

ibor 

cam 


earn 

bor. 
bor. 

eam 

or. . 
«r. . . 
mon, 

lau . 
earn 

.eam 

eam 

earn 

:eam 

ab  or 
ahor 
or. . 
>or .  . 
bo  r . . 
)or. . 


)or.  . 
abor 

v'ei '. '. 
Lbor . 
abor 
abor 
)or.  . 
lbor. 


)or .  . 
r .  .  . . 
■)or . . 
lor . . 
-jr.  .  . 
?man 
labor 
team 

team 

team 


31  25 

22  00 

21  00 

7  50 

6  50 

7  66 
55  03 

15  58 
27  50 
27  OO 
18  00 

16  00 

12  00 

15  25 

14  00 

13  00 

16  95 
1  2  00 

2  00 
2  00 

15  00 

8  00 
8  00 


2  50 
30  00 


46  13 
39  37 


69788  John    Robinson,    labor.. 

69789  Dan    Sullivan,    labor.... 

69790  Pete  Shevlin,  labor   .... 

69791  John  Johnson,   labor..., 

69792  John    Rogers,    labor..... 

69793  John    Hammila,    labor.. 

69794  N.     B.     Shank,     boarding 

men     

69795  N.     B.  Shank,  foreman.. 

69796  N.       B.         Shank,      team 

work     " 

69797  A.    G.    Sanborn!    labor '.",  i 

69798  Mike   Guennan,    labor... 

69799  John  Reynolds,  labor... 

69800  Mike    Rojala,    labor 

69801  Salomon    Pellela,    labor.. 

69802  Matt    Hoist,    labor 

69803  Nestor   Heneka,    labor...' 

69804  Eli    Calista,    labor 

69805  Matt  Kamp.    labor 

69806  Dan   Sullivan,    labor 

69807  Pete  Shelvin,   labor 

69808  John  Johnson,  labor..., 

69809  AAMlliam  Webster,  labor. 
69S10  Martin  Linsted,  labor... 
69811  Jacob  Linsted,  labor... 
69S12   Jalmer    Hewitt,   labor... 

69813  John   Hammila,  labor... 

69814  John    Rogers,    labor 

69815  W.   J.   Schrater,   labor... 

69816  William    Hackett,    labor. 

69817  Peter    Cameron,    labor.. 

69818  John   Larson,   labor 

69819  Ed   Hoag,   labor . 

69820  Lee   Hoag,   labor 

69821  Chas.  Stevens^  labor.... 
69)<22  Albert    Belanger,    labor. 

69823   Bruse  Shank,   labor 

69S24  Prank  Couett.  labor.... 
69285   Ed   i'eterson,   labor    .... 

69826  Henry    Hanson,    labor.. 

69827  B.   -A.  Hoist,  team  work. 

69828  Henry  Kiuki,  labor 

69S29  Jack   Lakola.   labor    

69830  Charles     Johnson,     labor 

69831  B.   A.    Hoist,    labor 

69832  B.  A.  Hoist,  team  work. 

69833  B.    A.    Hoist,   labor    

69S34   N.    B.    Shaut.       boarding 

men     

70591   E.    I.     Du    Pont    Powder 
Co.,    dynamite,    etc.... 

70596  BIwabik   Hdw.   Co.,  tools 

70597  Colvln   &  Robb,   lumber. 

71157  Charle.s  Gustafson,  labor 

71158  Ralph  Zupin.   labor 

71159  Nels  Olson,   labor 

71160  Nels  Olson,   labor 

71161  Frank   Hanson,   labor... 

71162  Robert  Thi)mpson.    fore- 

man      

71163  Robert   Thompson,   fore- 

man     

71164  Robert  Thompson,  board- 

Itig   men    

71165  Robert  Tiiomi>son.V>oard- 

Ing  men    

71166  John    L.    Ljung.   foreman 

71167  Frank  Manila,  la1)or.... 

71168  John    Mattson,    labor.... 

71169  Jacob   Kivlhiana.    labor. 

71170  Leander    Fiiiila.    labor.. 

71171  Jasua    Finilla,    labor.... 

71172  John    Finilla.    labor 

71173  Nels  Svari.  labor   

71174  Emil  Saari.  labor 

71175  f^rick  Johnson,  labor.... 

71176  Alex   Skutta.    labor    

71177  Richard  Norl.  labor 

71178  Heikki    Hokannen,       la- 
bor      

71179  Albert  Nleml.  labor 

71180  Frank    HIM.    labor    

71181  Matt    Lakela.    labor.... 

71182  Heikki     Lakkela.     labor. 

71183  Henry    Kiniinkl.   laV>or.. 
711S4    Heika    Klqueka.    labor.. 

71185  Aapo    Hittunen.    labor.. 

71186  Atitis  Perala.  labor 

71187  Uuto   Mantila.    labor.... 

71188  Malt    Finiia.    lalior    .... 

71189  Matt    Portanen,    labor.. 

71190  Meikkl    .Anderson,    labor 

71191  Jolui    Vaisanen.    labor.. 

71192  John    Nori.    labor    

71193  John    Holm,    labor     .... 

71194  Victor    Hayen.    labor    .. 

71195  Sam    Norl.    labor    

71196  Jacob    Jukala.    labor... 

71197  .Alfred     Norl.    labor 

7119S   Matt    Klvitounen.    labor 
72367   E.    I.    I>u    I'ont    Powder 

Co.,    dvnamlte    

John  J.  Ljung,  foreman 
John  Mattson,  labor.. 
John  Peito.  labor  .... 
Mami     Ekola.    labor. 


50 

15 

50 
50 
20  00 

18  on 

3  S  0  0 
16  00 
18  00 
13  00 


31 
37 

31 

16 


30 
21 


74536 
74537 
74  538 
7  4539 
74540 
74541 
74542 
74543 
74544 
7  4  5  4  6 
74547 
74548 
74549 
74r.50 
74551 
74  552 
74  553 
74554 
74555 
74  556 
7  4557 
7455,S 
74  559 
74560 
74  561 
7  4562 
74563 
74564 
74  565 
7  4  566 
.50     74  567 

69 
74  570 
7  4  571 
7  4  572 
74573 
74574 
74  575 
7  4  576 
73102 


7 
14 
12 
11 
58 
14 
12 

5 

3 
14 
11 
12 
11 

8  50  I  '  1 

9  40  I  <•» 
1  00 

29  00 
33 


Matt 
Malt 
J  ere 
Jolin 


75 
20 
15 
15 


Total      %   1,088  55 


VD. 

ict.   No. 
tract 


O.AKMAN  RO. 

Commissioner's    Distr 

63487   Chas.    Oakman,    cor 

work      

75135  Autti     Sattela,     cor  tract 

w  ork      

75135  Autti     Sattela,      cor  tract 
work      

Total     


7. 

625  00 

150  00 

150  00 

..$       925  00 


.$    4.412  67 


21  25 
11  37 
13  47 
11  90 
11  37 
11  37 

7  00 
11  37 
11  37 
11  37 
11  37 

8  75 
11  37 
11  37 
11  37 
11  37 
11  37 
11  90 
11  37 
11  37 
11  37 

9  62 
10  50 
10  50 

9  62 
9  62 
4  37 


Total     f      299  03 


OLD    MESABA    RO.\D. 

Commissioner's   District   No. 
63434  Chas    R.    Hill,    contract 

work     

67338   E.     I.     Dupont     Powder 
Co..    dynamite,    etc... 

67410  Chas  R.  Hill,  foreman.. 

67411  Chas.    Wedlund,    labor.. 

67412  Fred    Mattson.    labor... 

67413  Andrew    Skarbo.      labor 

67414  Octave    Minor,    labor... 

67415  Herman  Gulllkson.  labor 

67416  Uno    Elfre.    labor 

67417  Isaac    Wiljams,    labor... 
78309  Aurora    Hdw.     &    Furn." 

Co.,  material    

68310  Colvln-Robb      Lbr.      Co. 
material       

68332  Chas    R.    Hill,    foreman. 

68333  Fred    Mattson.    labor... 

68334  Andrew  Skarbo,  labor.. 


6. 


11  50 

41  70 

13  50 

12  00 

16  00 

14  00 

16  0^ 

13  00 

16  00 

M.90 

12  73 

208  88 

12  50 

10  00 

8  0« 

6C 
69279 

69279 

69279 

69281 

69293 
69731 
69732 
69733 
69734 
69733 
69736 
69737 
69738 
69739 
69740 
69741 
69742 
69743 
69744 
69745 
69746 
69747 
69748 
69749 
69750 
69751 
69752 
69753 
60754 
69755 

69756 

69757 

69758 

69759 

69760 

69761 

69762 

69763 

69764 

69765 

69766 

69767 

69768 

69769 

69770 

69771 

69772 

69773 

69774 

69775 

69776 

69777 

69778 

69779 

69780 

69781 

69782 

69783 

69784 

69785 

69786 

69787 


OLD   VERMILION 

Commissioner's  Dlsti 
15    W.    T.    Scott,    servic 
Du  Pont  Powder  Cc 

namite.    etc 

Du  Pont  Powder  Cc 

namite,    etc 

Du  Pont  Powder  Cc 

namite.    etc 

BIwabik  Hardware 

tools      

Poirier  &  Co.,  mate 
Alfred  Lax.  forema 
Justus  Makl.  labor. 
Henry    Allen,    laboi 
Arvld  Jokinen,  lab( 
Alfred  Lax,  team  w 
Alex  Hovila.   labor. 
Matt  Hill,  labor.  .  .  . 
Victor  Lappainer,  1 
John  Lakari,  labor, 
Henry  Mattson.  lal: 
Isaac  Hi  Hi.  team  w 
William   Purtlla.  la 
Chas.  Pelt,  labor.  . 
Matt   Pelt,   labor.  . 
Henrv  SIpola,  laboi 
Gust  Elldl.  labor.  . 
John   Kestlla.  laboi 
Otto   I>arvi3ta,    lab( 
Eno  Ha  van  go,   labi 
Gust   Maki,   labor. 
A.  Adolfson.   labor 
J.  Jakola.  labor.  . . 
Mike  Talso.  labor. 
J.   Jolinson,   labor. 
Albert      Llndman, 

work    

And.   Elldl-i  team   w 
Alfred     Lax,     forei 
Justus  Makl.   laboi 
Henry   .Allen,  laboi 
Arvld    Jaklnen,    is 
Alex    Lax,   team   w 
Alex     Rovlla,     labi 
Matt    Hill,    labor 
Victor    Lappenan. 
John    Lakari,    labi 
Henry   Mattson.    l£ 
Isaac    Hill,     team 
William     Purtlla. 
Chas.   Pelt,   labor 
Matt    Pelt,    labor 
Henry   SIpala,   labi 
Gust   Eddie,   labor 
G.     Kestila.     labor 
N.    B.    Shank,   forei 
Sanborn,    1: 
Quennal.     Is 
Reynolds.    Ij 
Johnson,    l! 
Royala.    lab 
Solomon    Pelka,    1 
Matt    Horst,    laboi 
Nestor    Henneka, 
Eli    Kostila,    labo 
Matt    Kamp,    labo 
Gust     l.ashta.    lab 
William    Webster, 
N.       B.       Shank, 
work     


ROAD. 

•ict  No. 
es.  . . 
..  dy- 

.',  dy- 

.■.dy- 

'  Co.'. 

rial ; .' 
n.  . . . 


■r.  . . , 
ork. 


abor. 

or .  . . 
ork. . 
bor. . 


team 


7  00 
64  30 
38  25 


17  00 
29  25 
55  00 

40  00 
14  80 

41  00 
55  00 

36  00 

40  00 

41  00 
32  60 

37  00 
85  50 

38  NO 
40  20 

31  20 
35  00 

39  00 
39  00 
35  40 
35  00 
38  00 

32  0«) 
32  00 
14  20 

5  00 


r5108 


H<  ikki  Flokkanen.  labor 
Frank  Mannila.  labor.. 
Matt  Finnila.  labor.... 
John    Skylla,    labor    .... 

.lohn    Nori.    labor    

I.^^ak  Saarberg.  labor.. 
Andrew    Mlkelson.    labor 

John    {•^aaii.    labor 

Le.nnder  Finnila.  labor 
Albert     Nieml,     labor... 

Frank    Hill,     labor 

NVls    Saari.    labor 

Heikkia  Kilpela.  labor 
Matt     Kivlluonia.     labor. 

Larson,     labor.  .  . . 

Barlene.     labor... 

Ranta,     labor 

Lunkkomcn.  labor 
Hendry  Kininki.  labor. 
Nestor  Niemi.  labor... 
John  PeiamakI,  labor.. 
John    Vaisanen.    labor.. 

Tvar    Hyry,    labor 

Jacob    Kimluoma,    labor 

F^ank     Hill,     labor 

Mikko  Leik^nder,  labor 
Otto  Kaskela  team  work 
Alfred  Lax.  foreman... 
W.     Part  Ho,     labor 

A.  .Adolfson.    lal)or 

Gust     Elide,     lai>or 

Otto     Sorvisto.     labor... 

Nastor   Jarvl.    labor 

Alf  Lax.  team  work... 
And.     Elldi.  team     work. 

M.     Mattson,     labor 

Continental     Brige     Co., 

contract    for    bridge.. 

B.  A.  Hoist,  for  repair- 
ing approach  Holt 
creek     

Total     


2  00 
SCO 

5  00 

7  00 
2  00 

8  00 

81  60 
33  75 

400  00 

27  00 

6  00 
2  00 

2  00 

3  00 
8  00 

a  So 

8  00 
2  65 

4  20 

6  00 
2  00 

5  00 

2  00 

7  50 

3  00 

2  00 

3  00 

4  00 
2  40 
2  10 

28  00 
60 

2  00 

3  00 
12  00 

21  00 
11  80 
10  SO 
10  75 
27  50 

8  00 

10  00 

11  00 

9  00 

4  00 

6  00 

76  40 

71  58 

46  00 

44  48 

9  43 

22  00 

4  0«i 
11  20 

5  20 

22  00 

39  50 
5  05 

8  52 

40  00 
28  00 
28  00 
28  00 
17.50 
17  50 
24  50 
17  50 
1575 

17  50 
15  75 
26  25 

10  30 
28  00 

18  40 
10  50 
10  50 
15  75 
17  60 
15  75 
15  75 
15  75 
14  00 

14  00 
26  25 

15  75 
22  75 
24  50 
22  75 

8  75 

7  00 
15  75 

8  75 

20  39 

17  50 

12  25 

12  25 

12  25 

12  25 

12  25 

8  73 

8  75 

8  75 

12  25 

8  75 

8  75 

8  75 

8  75 

8  75 

8  75 

8  75 

25 

8S 

00 

00 

00 

00 

00 


12 
7 
7 
7 
7 
7 
7 
6 
7 
7 


00 

00 

8  75 
1  75 
175 

13  50 
38  75 

28  00 

29  00 
22  00 
28  00 
27  00 
35  00 
86  00 
22  00 

900  00 


115  00 
.1   4,726  66 


OLD   VERMILION    ROAD. 
76104    Fred     Williams,       dyna- 
mite       


10  10 


Total 


10  10 


A.    G. 
Mike 

John 
Felix 
Malt 


60  73 

ork.  . 

19  SO 

nan. . 

13  75 

11  00 

•  .... 

9  20 

bor. . 

9  20 

ork. . 

13  75 

»r. . . . 

7  20 

7  20 

labor 

7  20 

•r .  . . , 

7  20 

bor.  . 

7  20 

work 

18  00 

labor 

7  00 

7  00 

6  60 

)r. . . . 

6  20 

3  20 

2  20 

nan.  . 

10  00 

bor. . 

6  00 

lbor. . 

5  00 

lbor. . 

3  00 

lbor. . 

5  00 

>r.  .  . . 

1  60 

lbor. . 

1  60 

.... 

1  60 

labor 

1  60 

r 

1  60 

•  .... 

3  40 

3r. . . . 

2  60 

labor 

3  40 

team 

75  00 


67418 
67419 
67420 
67421 
67422 

70590 

71221 
71222 
71223 
71224 
71225 
71226 
71227 
71228 
7122* 
71230 
71231 
71232 
71233 
71234 
71235 
71236 
71237 
71238 
71239 

72986 
72987 
72988 
72989 
72990 
72991 
72992 
72993 
72994 
72995 
72996 
72997 
72998 
72999 
73000 
73001 
73002 
73003 
73004 
73005 
73006 

73007 

73008 

73009 
73010 

73011 
74622 
74623 
74624 
74625 
74626 
74627 
74628 
74629 
74630 
74631 
74632 
74633 
74634 
74635 


PRAIRIE  LAKE  ROAD. 
fommissioner's  District  No.  5. 
i  Marka  &  Haugsrud,  dy- 
namite, etc .5?X 

Henrv  Johnson,  foreman  15  00 

Ole  H.  Gjora.  labor 10  00 

Hans  C.  Gora,  labor 12  80 

P*»ter  Moherg.  labor....  12  00 
Gllmore  H.  Johnson,  la- 

bor    10  00 

Duluth    Engineering  Co., 

Inspection    work *i  52 

Ole   Berg,  foreman ?2  I^ 

Hjalmar  Swenson.  labor.  'J  "" 

Andrew   Haukala.    labor.  17  00 

Frank  Heitonen.   labor..  ^5 

Joe  Hongola.  labor 17  00 

Ole  H    Gora.  labor 15  00 

Erick  n.  .'Soronen.  labor.  8  00 

Alvin  Stageberk.  labor..  10  00 

r-has.  Heitonen,  labor...  Ji  "x 

Nels  Stageberg,   lal»or...  H  115 

Edw.  Lien,  labor 10  00 

Peter   Moberg.   labor....  10  60 

John  Lanlilla.  labor 8  00 

L.  M.  Skange.  labor 8  00 

Albeit  Stageberg.  labor.  4  00 

Joseph  Berg,  labor 2  00 

Hans  Gora.  labor *' ''^ 

Nels   Lieu,   labor 16  20 

Andrew  Stageberg,  team  _  ^ 

work    1^  i. 

Ole  Berg,  foreman 35  (;> 

Edw.  O.  I..ien.  labor 26  00 

Erick    Kaskala,   labor...  19  00 

Chas.  Heitonen,  labor...  14  00 

Chas.   Swanson,   labor...  '' fO 

Hjalmar  .Swanson.   labor  21  60 

Otto    Sukonr-n.    labor....  20  00 

Andrew   Makl.    labor 20  00 

Evert  Sukanen,  labor...  *' ^0 

Oscar  Lunlsala.  labor...  ^^  00 

Frank    Thitanen.    labor.  10  00 

Peter   Moberg.   labor....  14  00 

Claus   Stenberg,    labor..  13  00 

Aug.    Stenberg,    labor...  13  00 

Andrew   Karhonen.  labor  12  20 

Jake    Yllnen.    labor 13  00 

A.  Larson,  labor 13  00 

Victor    Merier.   labor...,  10  00 

George    Ylen.    labor 9  00 

Hans   Gjora.   labor 3  00 

Nels       O.       Lund,      team 

work    84  65 

Matt  Mattalamakl.  team 

work    24  75 

Nels  O.  Stageberg,  team 

work    18  45 

Ole   Gjora.   team   work..  21  lo 
-Andrew  Stageberg,  team 

work    13  05 

L.   P.   Graff,   team    work.  13  50 

Ole  Berg,  foreman 24  75 

Edw.    Lein.    labor 8  20 

on   H.   Gjora.   labor 17  00 

Peter  Moberg,   labor 16  00 

L.    M.   Skouge.    labor 16  0" 

Hans  O.   Gjora.   labor...  14  00 

Obert    Stageberg.    labor.  6  00 

August  Stenberg,  labor.  16  00 

Claus    Stenberg,    labor..  16  00 

Victor   Marrler,   labor...  16  00 

George    Ylen.    labor 15  00 

Jake    Yllnen,    labor 16  00 

Andrew   Korhonen,  labor  15  00 

Edv.    LArson.   labor 16  O* 


.. 


p<i.-n«T.    Ji|i^«iW 


1 


1 

r            1 

\ 

1 

t 

• 

1 

1 

I 

■ 

I  J 

K 

1 

M 


-  -  r- 


^L 


-'»r- 


\t 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD! 


74636  C.J.  Lehman,  labor 

74637  .loseph    Berg,    labor 

7463S   Andrew  StageberK,    team 

work    

76089  Dul.       Knglneering      Co., 

surveying  and  making 

plat    

7«098  Cooliilge    Pchussler    Co., 

tools  etc 

Total    


00 
00 


5  40 

88  75 
22  73 


.$   1,112  88 


PIKR  HIVER  ROAD. 
Commissioners    District    No. 


69e9S 
69699 

69700 

69701 
69702 
«703 
69704 

69706 
69706 
69707 
69708 
69709 
69710 
69711 
69712 
69713 
69714 

6&7ir. 

69716 

69717 

69718 

69719 

69720 

69721 

69722 

69723 

69724 

6972r. 

69726 

69727 

6972S 

•9729 

69730 

71200 

71201 

71202 

71203 

71204 

71205 

71206 

71207 

71208 

71209 

71210 

71211 

71212 

71213 

71214 

71215 

71216 

71217 

71218 

71219 

71220 

74578 

74379 

74580 


Chas.  Kangas,  foreman 
John   Villman,    team 

work     

John       Villman.         team 

work     

Auselin     Andelln,     labor 

('1)88.     .c;aari.     labor 

John     Kivela.     labor 

Carl    II.    NIklanaa,      la- 
bor      

Trho    Manty.    labor 

Urho    Manty.    labor 

Stephen  Ilkka.  labor.  . . 
August  IVttrson,  labor 
Tom    Karjala.    labor.... 

Tom    Karjala.    laVor 

Tom    Karjala.    labor 

Gabriel  Seppala.  labor.. 
Matt  Sarinen.  laV>or.... 
Oscar     Suhta.     labor.... 

Alex    Niemi.     labor 

Frank     .Maki.     labor 

Alex    l.uoma.    labor 

Manila,    labor.... 


John 

John 

Ellas 

Matt 

rhas. 

Malt 

Ellas 

Gust 

John 

John 

Ellas 

p:iias 

John 

Chr.s. 

Oust 

Mattl 

Chas. 

John 

("•scar 

Ellas 

John 

Ja4"ob 

Ellas 


r:\iha.    labor    

Karpplla.    labor.. 
I.aKanen.   labor. . . 

Maki.    labor     

Rayala.    labor 

Leppala.    labor... 

Eammi.   labor 

l.ahdenpera.    labor 

Lahampera,    labor 

Sukala.  labor      ... 

Sukala.    labor 

Koski.    labor 

Kangas.    foreman. 
Lammi.   labor 

Hiismaki.    labor.. 

Makl.    labor 

Maki.   labor 

Luhta.    labor 

Lukala.  labor 

Koski.    labor 

Antila.   labor 

Kauppila.  labor.  . 
Leo  Lundstrom.  labor.. 
Daniel  .Saarela.  labor... 
Aug.  Ojanpeia.  labor... 
Henrirk  Luoma.  labor.. 
John  D.  Erickst.n.  labor 
Malt  Saarlnen.  labor... 
Halmon    Manty.    labor... 

Tour    Karjala.    labor 

John   Mattlla.  labor 

Herman    Lahtl.    labor... 

Gust    Makl.   labor 

Chas.  Kangas.  foreman. 
Jacob  Antilla.  labor.  .  .  . 
Chas.  Kauppila,  labor.. 
74980  >4  Henvito  Luoini,  labor. 
Viotor   Lepannen,    labor. 

■Mex  Novila.   labor 

Henry    Kangas,    labor... 

Ja'oh    Finn,    labor 

.John    Villman.    labor...- 
John    Harpi.    labor.  ..... 

Henry  I'aalanen,  labor. 
Frans  Haavis^to.  labor.. 
Tom        Jacobson.      team 

work     • 

Tom  Jacobson,  labor 

\upusi  Yanfera,  labor.. 
John  Ktvela.  labor...  •■ 
Victor  Tliompson.  labor. 
J(^hn    Koski,    labor 

Sinkala,   labor.  . .  - 

Mattila.  labor 

Ijimm.   lai>or 

Havanko,   labor. , . 

I.i\kanen,   labor. ... 

Makl,  labor 

Luhta.  l.^bor. 


31  75 
2  00 

42  30 

18  90 
18  90 

18  90 

19  20 

18  90 

19  80 
18  90 
18  90 
10  58 

12  90 
22  95 
18  90 
18  30 
18  60 

16  90 

17  90 

17  90 

18  60 
17  70 
17  90 
17  90 
17  9l» 

13  80 
13  80 

20  00 
6  00 

17  60 


69G95 
69696 
69697 

71276 
71277 
71278 
71279 
71280 
71281 
71282 
71283 
71284 
71285 
71286 
71287 
71288 
71289 
71290 
71291 
71292 
71293 
71294 
71295 
71296 
71297 

71298 


Aod.  Gust,  labor  

A.  Olson,  labor 

Gust   Bank.   boarding 

men  •  •  • 

C.  Grenetrom.  labor.... 

J.  Hedberg,  labor 

Andrew  Gust,  labor.... 
J.  Carlson,  labor 

C.  Johnson,    labor 

D.  Stewart,    labor 

Tom   Mersnick,   labor... 
G     Mersnlck,    labor 

Mersnlck,     labor.... 

Robnlck.    labor 

McQuag.    labor 

Olson,    labor 

McNulty,    labor 

Glass,   labor.  .  .  • 

Augustine,   labor. . . 


4  00 
3  60 


L. 

L. 

D. 

A. 

W. 

R. 

Joe 


(lust  Banks,  labor • 

Gust  Banks,  team  worK 
Gust  Bankt,  labor  . .  ■  •• 
Ben  Chrlstenson.  labor. 
Sam  .'Simpson,  labor.... 
P.  McQuade.  team  work 
Gust      Banks,      boarding 

men     'J  '  '  '  \i-J.Jr 

Gust      Banks,     boarding 

men     


Total 


24  76 

21  00 

22  00 

24  00 

24  00 

24  00 

26  00 

8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

8  00 

6  25 

3  44 

2  84 

16  00 

16  00 

13  00 

40  00 

40  00 

1  00 

2  00 

42  00 

1  56 

1  16 

Bolland, 


team 


561  13 


T4581 
74582 
T4583 
74684 
74585 
74686 
74587 
74588 
14589 


T4?90 

?45t'l 

74S92 

74593 

74594 

74535 

74596 

74:.?7 

74598 

74699 

74  COO 

74601 

74602 

74603 

74604 

7  4605 

74606 

74t'i7 

746i'S 

746i,'9 

74610 

74611 

74612 

74613 

74614 

74613 

74616 

74617 

74618 

74G19 

T4620 
74621 
76122 

m25 


Ellas 

John 

Gust 

Eino 

Miitt 

G.:st 

Oscar 


Ed.lie  Lamm,  wat^-r  boy 

Otto    s^orvlsto,    labor... 

Xel^5    Johnson,    foreman. 

.loini    Neliniark,    labor... 

Herman    liabinoja.   labor 

.VUred    Johnson,    labor.. 

Sam    Aho,    labor 

Kalle    Johnson,    lal'or... 

Bror    BergPiad,   labor... 

John    Koski.  labor 

Kalle    Suikko,    labor.... 

Wm.    Palvarinta,    labor.. 

Matt   Makl.   labor....... 

Victor     Johnson,     labor.. 

O^i-ar    Manet,    labor 

Andrew   Tei^po,    labor... 

Matt    Johnson,    labor... 

Jack         Nelson,         team 
work     

Jack    Nehsion.   labor 

Atrey   Johnson,   labor... 

Hobart    Iron    Co.,    dyna- 
mite,   etc    

Isaac      Lamppa,       dyna- 
mite      


10  20 

8  20 

28  00 

19  40 

18  20 
22  10 
22  40 

21  40 

22  40 
16  40 
22  40 

22  40 

20  10  i 
20  40  ! 

19  10 

18  40 

15  40 
ir.  40 
11  40 
11  40 
13  40 
11  40 
11  40 
32  13 
25  50 
25  00 
25  50 

16  70 
24  60 
16  80 

13  00 
15  70 
15  10 

23  00 
23  00 

15  75 

8  50 
15  00 
15  00 

14  50 

19  00 
21  00 
11  30 
18  i>0 

9  00 
9  50 
P  50 
9  50 
4  35 

15  50 
26  25 
21  12 
18  37 


68319 
68469 
68470 
68471 
68472 
68473 
68474 
68475 
68476 
6S477 
6,S478 
68479 


68482 
68483 
68484 

68485 
68486 

68487 

68488 

692S3 

69284 

69286 
69293 
69643 

69644 

69645 

69646 


L. 
G. 
G. 
G. 
A. 
N. 
T. 
B. 


RICE     LAKE     ROAD. 
Commi.ssioner's    District    No. 
K.    Daugherty.    tools 
Schwartz,    foreman.. 

St. I  n  ley.     labor 

Dishman.     labor 

Harberman.     labor.. 

I'ohr.    labor 

Engels,     labor 

Quoglic.    labor 

John    Tuarva.    labor 

Bill    Subieet.    labor 

Joe     TackoVies,     labor... 

August     Kolli.    labor.,.. 

R  (in     68480  A.     D.    More,    labor..... 

^'"UmsiJ.     Schwartz.     Jr..     labor 

D.     McLane.    labor 

T     O.    Nelson,    labor.... 
Totman       Bros.,         team 

woik      ,• 

Sam     Miller,     teamwork 
T.         Cosgrove,         team 

work     

George   Kermosky,   team 

work     .•  ■  ■  ■  j" 

George  Schwartz,  board- 
ing    men      .....-.•••• 

Devaney  &  Jordan,  la- 
bor      

Duluth  Hdw.  Co.,  ma- 
terial,    etc ,-v- 

1,     K.    Daugherty.    labor 

Foirier    &    Co..    material 

George  Schwartz,  tore- 
man      1  •  • 

George  Schwartz,  Jr., 
labor      •  •  • 

George  Schwartz  .Jr., 
labor      ■•• 

George  Schwartz,  Jt., 
labor 

T 

C. 


2. 


18 
12 

18 
18 
17 
12 
12 
11 


12  25 
17  50 
14  87 
14  00 

27  25 
9  62 
8  75 

83  40 

8  00 


Total     »     174165 


PAYNE     AND     WHITE     FACE 

Commissioners    iMsirict     No. 
71199  Sam    Fredrickst)n,    et   al, 

labor     

:am    Fredrickson. 

labor     

.Sam    Fredrickson, 

culvert   

Sam  Fredrickson 


7457"; 
75106 
76106 


et 


et 

et 


al, 
al'. 
al. 


timber 
Total 


for  culvert. 


ROAD. 

5. 

241  05 

255  60 

25  00 

9  00 


.$   530  65 


69647 
69648 
69649 
6ti650 
69651 
6965:; 
69653 
69654 
69655 
69656 
69657 
69658 
69659 
69660 
69661 
69662 
69663 
69664 
69665 
69666 
69667 
69668 

69669 
6S670 
69671 
69672 

69673 
69674 

69675 

71240 
71241 
71242 
71243 
71244 
712^5 
71246 
71247 
71248 
71249 
71250 
71251 
71252 
71253 
71264 
71255 
71256 
71257 
71258 
71259 
71260 
171261 
171262 
71263 
71264 
71265 
71266 
71267 
71268 


.\. 
N. 
N. 

T. 

B. 

J. 

A. 

A. 

A. 

J. 

.i. 

R. 

J. 


labor. , 
labor. . 
labor, 
labor. 


jsianley,     labor.  .  .  . 

I>illm:in,    labor.  .  .  . 

Harberman.     labor 

Bohr,    labor 

Pohr,    labor 

Kauvawa.    labor... 

SuViject,    labor.  . . . 

Jackobes.    labor.  .  . 

Katli,   labor    

Rath,    labor    

D.    More,    labor.  .  .  . 

O.    Nelson,    labor.. 

Engels.    lai>or 

Maveski.     labor... 

Wold,    labor 
Martin   Sanders. 
John  Mayonock. 
Axel    Anderson. 
George   Kusouk. 

S.    Ntsgoda,    labor 

Chas.    Reaf,    labor    

TotTnan      Bros.,      team 

work      •-• 

Sain  Miller,  team  work 
J.  Cosgrove.  labor..... 
J  Cosgrove,  team  work 
Geo.      Kernosky.        team 

work     •  •  • 

T    Finskv,  team  work.. 

F.  Barquarlky,       team 
work     ;."  '.1 

Geo.  Cosgrove.  boarding 

men     

G.  Schwartz, 
gthwartz, 
Schv,artz, 
Schwartz, 
Schwariz. 
Stanley, 

Dishman. 


16  93 
54  00 

11  00 
10  00 

5  00 
10  38 

12  00 

3  00 
5  38 

4  38 
B  00 

5  00 
7  46 

18  00 
3  S4' 

12  00 

40  00 
22  50 

16  50 

19  00 
95  56 

17  25 

9  10 
B  00 

13  00 

78  00 
12  00 

10  00 

15  00 
30  00 
22  00 

24  00 

11  00 

18  00 
22  00 

10  00 
22  00 

14  00 

12  00 

11  00 
50  00 

15  50 
28  00 

25  00 

13  00 

16  00 
9  00 
8  00 

8  00 

9  00 

83  00 
85  00 
10  00 

75  50 

60  50 
65  00 

45  00 


73124  John 

work  

Henry  Hornman,  labor. 
John  O.  Munsey,  labor.. 
Martin  Bolland.  labor.. 
Joseph    Brlston,    labor.. 

Jim  Bacon,  labor   

John  Bolland,  labor.... 
Mike  Marvar,  labor.... 
Peter  Haugen,  labor.. 
Bernard  Clausen,  labor 
Eliaa    EUl.son.    labor.... 

Mike    Marvar,    labor 

J.      A.      Munson,      team 
work     • 

73137  Gust  I..eisner,  team  work 

73138  Robert  I'arkis,   labor... 
Chas.   Bolland,  boarding 

men     

Chas.    Gustafson,      fore- 
man      

A.  Joula,   labor 

Hill,  labor 

Kurke,    labor     

Makl,   labor    

Hendrlkson.     labor.. 

Bedaga.    labor 

Neimi,  labor 

Kivela.    labor    

Slermala.    labor 

Alabaret,   labor 

Louma,    labor    

Newman,     labor.,.. 

Virkala,    labor    

Aho,     labor     

Gratiot,    labor    

Hutunen,    labor 

Alaberet,     labor 

Oabak.  labor 


73125 
73126 
73127 
73128 
73129 
73130 
73131 
73132 
73133 
73134 
73135 
73136 


73139 
73266 


73267 

73268 

73269 

73270 

73271 

73272 

73273 

73274 

73275 

73276 

73277 

73278 

73279 

73280 

73281 

73282 

73283 

73284 

73285 

73286 

73287 

73288 

73289 

73290 

73291 

73292 

73293 

73294 

73295 

73296 

73297 

73298 

73299 

73300 

73301 

73302 

73303 

73304 

73305 

74725 

74726 

7  47  27 

74728 

74729 

74730 

74731 

73732 
74733 
75100 

76086 

76097 

76098 

76101 

74717 
74718 
74719 
74720 
74721 
74722 
74723 
74724 


A. 
G. 
M. 
P. 
11. 
A. 
A. 

f:. 

J. 

C. 

E. 

M. 

O. 

J. 

V. 

M. 

J. 


W. 

c. 

G. 

E. 

E. 

J. 

H. 

A. 

E. 

A. 

T. 

T. 

A. 

M. 

A. 

V. 

A. 

A. 

O. 

E. 

C 


Tueti,    labor    

Heiklla,     labor 

Perky,  labor 

Perky,     labor 

Kurky,    labor 

Kurky.     labor 

Hill,     labor 

Johnson,    labor 

Hill,    labor 

Slmi,    labor 

Laakonen,     labor .... 

Raihala,    labor 

Pederson,    labor 

Kaski,     labor.. 

Hill,    team    work.  , . . 

Seppala,     labor • 

Johnson,    team    work 

Slmi,     labor 

Aho,    team    work .... 

Hill,    team    work.... 

Luoma,  team  work,. 
Charlie  Jaaska,  labor.. 
August  Berkyo.  labor.. 
Henry  Koponen,  labor 
John  Malison,  labor.,. 
Mall  Koski,  labor..... 
Charles  Norberg,  labor 
John        Lapoija,  team 

work     

Fred  Wain,  foreman.. 
Fred  Wain,  team  work 
W.    H.    Coffin,    tools    and 

freight      •• ••• 

Continental    Bridge    Co., 

repairs        • 

Markannen         Haiigsrud 
Co  ,     spikes,     nails.  .  .  . 

Coolldge-Schussler     Co., 
dvnamile,     etc....... 

T.    A.   Trolander,    freight 

and     nails 

W.    H.    Ci>ffln,    labor.... 

C.    Coffin,    labor 

Hei  ry    Aho,    labor 

Leo     Park,    labor 

Nickio    Perry,    labor.... 

Matt     Kemp,     labor 

,1      M.     .Vndrews,    labor.. 
W.    II.    Coffin,    labor 


58  50 
24  00 
20  00 
24  00 
22  00 
14  00 

3  00 

6  00 
20  00 
12  00 
12  00 

6  00 

32  60 
18  00 

8  60 

18  00 

81  62 
17  00 

7  00 

9  00 
7  00 
7  00 

12  50 
15  00 

14  00 
7  00 
7  00 

13  00 
7  00 

9  00 

15  00 
7  00 
4  50 

12  50 

10  50 

7  00 

7  00 
3  00 

8  00 
6  00 
6  00 

10  00 

1  00 

3  00 

4  00 
8  00 

6  00 

8  00 

7  00 
4  50 
4  50 

18  00 

2  25 
4  50 

9  00 
9  00 

7  00 

10  00 
10  00 
10  00 

8  00 
13  00 

16  65 

16  25 

8  62 

15  65 

16  00 
SO 

6  26 


69601 
69602 
69603 
69604 
69605 
69606 
69607 
69608 
69609 
69610 
69611 

69612 
69613 

69614 
69615 
69616 

69617 

69618 
69619 
69620 
69621 
69622 
69623 
69624 
69625 
69626 

69627 

69628 

69629 

69630 
69631 
69632 

70587 

70588 
71319 
71320 
71321 
71322 
71323 
71324 
71326 
71326 
71327 
71328 
71329 
71330 
71331 
71332 
71333 
71334 
71335 
71336 

71337 
71338 

72379 

72380 

72381 

72382 

72383 

2388 


Frank  Lapper,  labor.. 
Ael  Lapper,  labor  .... 

Gust  Aho,  labor  

Jack    Alio,    labor    

(?has.  Lepper,  labor.... 
M.  Danahy,  team  work 
Andrew  Hillstead.  labor 
James  Wheatman,  labor 
.Scott  Kenney.  labor.... 
Scott  Kennev.  labor.... 
J.    A.    McCariiiy,      team 

work     

Gust   Vlok.    labor    

J.    A.    McCarthy,      team 

work 

John   l^uffy,   labor    

Matt    Aho,    labor    

W.     C.     Bennett.       team 

work     

M.      Danahy,      boarding 

men     

M.    Danahy,    foreman.,. 

John    Letto.   labor    

Frank    Lepper.    labor... 

Alex   Lepper.   labor 

Matt    Aho.    labor 

Aho.    lat)or    

Aho.    labor    

Lepper.    labor.  . . . 


25  60 

73104 

27  70 

31  70 

73105 

27  70 

27  70 

73106 

340  00 

73107 

13  05 

73108 

1  35 

73109 

4  00 

73110 

18  30 

74683 

97  40 
1  20 

74684 
74685 
74686 

?n^. 74688 
2«^n74689 
31  '0  1 74690 

80  00 

74691 
74692 

207  60 

74693 
74694 

33  00 

74695 

12  90 

74696 

10  90 

74697 

10  90 

74698 

10  90 

75104 

Bergen,       team 


Gusl 
Jack 
Chas. 
Mike 


team 


team 


team 
team 


8  37 
16  25 
27  00 

7  50 

9  50 
6  00 
6  00 

10  80 
3  60 


Total 


.%   2,144  79 


G. 

G. 

G. 

G. 

T 

W 

A. 

A. 

N. 

A, 

A. 

T. 

T. 


foreman .  . 

foreman .  . 
Jr..  labor 
Jr..  labor 
Jr..    labor 

labor 

labor . 


labor. , 
labor. 


PROCTOR    ROAD. 

Commissioners    District.    No. 
64436  O.    B.    Johnson,    material 


10  50 


Total 


10  50 


PAYNE     LAKE-NICHOLLS     ROAD. 

Commissioners    District    No.    5. 
63438    E.    M.    Redfield 

work      

63441  Fred  Rolland. 
C3442  Fred  Johnson. 
63443  John  Meroger. 
75124   Kellv    Hdw.    Co 


contract 

labor.  . . 
labor.  . . 
labor.  . . 
dyna- 


63  00 

7  00 

7  00 

15  00 


76290 
76291 
76i;92 
761:93 
76294 
76295 
76296 
76297 
76298 


mite,  eic 
Lars  Olson. 
Ed  Young, 
J.  Merogt-r. 
F.  Roland, 
Edd  Eddstrom 
Oscar    Hansen. 


labor 

labor 

laV)or 

labor 

labor., 
labor. 


Oscar    Hansen,    labor... 

Ed    Young,    labor 

F.    Roland,    labor 

76299  J.    Meroger.    labor 

76300  I'aul  Malison,  labor., 
Edd  Eddstrom,  labor. 
Lars     Olson,     labor.... 


76301 
7630: 


17  97 

1  00 

1  00 

1  00 

1  00 

6  00 

4  00 

39  00 

80  00 

41  00 

36  00 

12  00 

82  00 

30  00 


71269 
71270 
7i271 
71272 
71273 
71274 

71275 


Havberman. 
Havberman. 

I'ohr.    labor    

Roth,  labor 

Roth,   labor    

O    Nelson,   labor 

Ma ja nock,  labor 

\xel   Anderson,  labor... 
G.  G.  Kusant.  labor   .... 

S.   Nesgoda,   labor    

C    Reaf.   labor 

T     Hamburg,    labor 

Jasper    Wold,    labor 

L.  I'atke,  labor 

IMthman.   labor    

Dithman.    labor 

Jacobson,  labor    

Anderson,  labor  ... . 
Slephenson,  Sr.,  labor 
Patrick,  labor    

More,  labor    

Totman        Bros..        team 

work    ,■ 

7  Cosgrove.  team  work 
S  Miller,  team  work.  .  . 
J  Finsky.  team  work.. 
M  Stephens,  team  work 
M.  Flnsky.  team  work. 
G,       Grokowsky, 

work     

George  Schwartz, 

men  

Total  ,... 


C. 

W. 

J. 

A. 

M. 

M. 

s. 


team 


boarding 


217  50 

18  00 

60  00 

20  00 

6  00 

14  00 

32  00 

14  00 

24  00 

5  00 

32  00 

8  00 

16  00 

46  00 

26  00 

19  00 

14  00 

18  00 

18  00 

19  00 
10  00 
24  00 

14  00 
12  00 
24  00 
22  00 
12  00 
12  00 
16  00 

109  00 
33  00 

15  00 
40  00 
46  50 
27  50 

46  00 

165  00 


%   2.581  28 


SWAN    LAKE    ROAD. 
District   No. 


Total      I       393  97 


PROCTOR    ROAD. 
Commissioners    District    No. 
73013   Andrew    Johnson,     fore- 
man     

Vitalis  Helmer.  labor. 
Arthur  Helmer. 
R"  bert  Johnson 
Hugh  Johnson, 
Ernest  Helmer. 
Ernest    Siark. 


73014 
73015 
73016 
73017 
73018 
73019 
73020 
73021 
73022 
73023 
73024 

73025 

73026 

78027 

73028 
74639 

74640 

74641 
74642 
74643 
74644 
74645 

74646 

76080 


labor, 
labor, 
labor, 
labor, 
labor.  .  . 


12  50 
8  00 
8  00 

10  00 
4  00 

10  00 
6  00 


70585 

70604 
70604 
71370 
71371 
71372 
71373 
71374 
71375 
71376 
71377 

71378 

71379 


Commissioner 


"if. 


John 
In 
F 

F.    H 
Chris 
EUias 
Arthur 
Robert 
Henry 
Peter 


repair- 


Lanma, 

bridge    .•■• 

Wade,  dynamite. 
Wade,  dynamite. 
Bolland.    foreman 

Ellison     labor.  .  . 
Ellison,    labor.  . 

Parkers,   labor.  . 

Harneman,   labor 
Hagen     labor 


SAVANNA  ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No. 
2376   Markkancy        Haugsrud. 

tool.s    

Nels    Wuolilla,    foreman. 

Tenlor   Tabcl.    labor    ... 

John   Wuia,  labor   

Alix   Wuta.   labor    

Emil    Wensiran,    labor.. 

Hjalmar    Wenstrom,    la- 
bor     

Malakia   Johnson,   labor. 

Andrew    Wutilla,    labor. 

Robert    Rantia,    labor... 

Sam   Kivista,  labor 

I'etcr  Miller,   labor   

Isaac  Wurtilla,   labor... 

John    Ottilia,   labor    

Oscar  Ranvola,  labor... 

Harrv    Garrett,   labor... 

Amos  Garrett,   labor    ... 

Fred   Garrett,   labor    .... 

Sam   Holkonen,   labor... 

llenrv   Tabel,   labor    .... 

John"Pirila,   labor    

Matt    Alaspa,    labor    ,... 

John    Heikari,    labor.... 

Malakia    Johnson,    labor 

John  Garrett,  team  work 

Matt  Alappaa,  team  work 

Henry   Kangas,   labor    .  , 

Harry       Garrett,        team 

work    

Nels    Wuolilla,    foreman 

John   Oiilla.   labor 

Andrew    Woutilla.   labor 

R.    Ranta.    labor    

Oscar    Rauvola,    labor.. 
John     Heiskari.     labor.. 

Alex     Wiita,     labor 

Tlieodore    Tabell,     labor 

Henry  Tabell,  labor 

Emil    Wenstrom,      team 

work     

Malaklo    Johnson,    team 

work     • 

Sam  Klvisto,  team  work 
John    Pirila,    labor 


73029 
73030 
73031 
73032 
73033 
73034 

73035 
73036 
73037 
73038 
73(!39 
73040 
73041 
73042 
73043 
73044 
73045 
73046 
73047 
73048 
73049 
73050 
73051 
73052 
73053 
73054 
73055 

74661 
74«62 
74663 
74664 
746G5 
74666 
74667 
74668 
74669 
74670 


26 
50 
40 
40 
40 
40 

40 
40 
40 
40 
40 
40 
40 
40 
40 
6  40 
10  00 

8  40 

9  40 
9  40 


fc  — 

12 
9 
9 
9 
9 

9 
6 
9 
9 
9 
R 
8 
8 
8 


74711 
74712 
74713 
74714 
74715 

74716 
75128 

75131 


7C091 


Danahy, 

work      

J.    A.    McCarthy, 

work     

Andrew    Hillstead. 

■work     

John  Duffy, 

work     

Jas.     Wheatman,  labor... 

John    Duffy,    labor 

Mike    Danahy,    boarding 

men     

Louis    K.      Selberg.    con- 

tract    work    • 

J.    Olson,    contract   work 

M.    Danal.y.   foreman 

John    Lelito,    labor 

ArKlrew   Sepper,    labor... 

Jack   .Aho.   labor 

Chas.    Sepper,    labor .... 

Matt    Aho,    labor 

Gust    Ni<k,    labor 

Gilbert  Trempc,  lalior. .. 
Andrew    Wilson,   labor.. 

Victor    Lahto,    labor 

AUeck   Cassick,   labor... 

Ed   Jameson,    labor 

Gust   Alio,   labor 

John    Duffy,    labor 

Scott  Kennedy,  labor... 
John  Duffy,  team  work 
M.  Danahv,  team  work.. 
J.    A.      McCarthy,      team 

work     

Vaina  Towanen.  labor.. 
M.      Danahy,       boarding 

men      

Ole  Peterson, 

traci    work    . 
John    McAuley, 

work    

E.    E.    Brlndos, 

work    

Lais      Brude, 

work     

Odin   Massing, 

work    

Ed      Peterson, 

work     

Alex     McCormac,     labor 

Joe    Lewis,    labor 

Norman     Engells.     labor 

Jas.     Y'oung.     labor 

J.     A.     McCarthy,     team 

work     

Ed     Varity,     foreman... 
Itasca       Mercantile     Co., 

tools      

Edward  Oslenson  &  Co., 
graveling  as  per  con- 
tract,   to   lodging   men 

and     teams 

Joe  Hahn.  repairing 
bridgte    and    culvert.. 

Total 


Verner 

work 
Oscar     Magnuson,     team 

work    

Peter  O.  RIsbergel.  labor 

Paul   Seffler.   labor 

J.   Schejeldd,   labor 

Andrew  Johnson,  labor. 
Ole       Sassos,       boardlngf 

men    

Ole  Sassos,  foreman.  .  . . 
John  Anderson,  labor... 
Charles   Nllsoii.    labor... 

Nels   Holten.   labor 

J.    Schyeld.    labor 

Andrew  Johnson,  labor. 
John   Johnson,   labor.... 

Albert  Berg,   labor 

Gust  Johnson,  labor.... 
John  Peterson,  labor... 
Sam  Swanson,  labor.... 
John  Kllntman.  labor... 
Louts  Swanstrom,  labor 
P.  A.  Myrhaug.  labor... 
Albert   Peterson,   labor.. 

Knute   Lein.    labor 

Ben       Erlckson,       dyna- 
mite,  tools,  etc 


8  75 

10  00 

7  00 
4  00 

8  00 
2  00 

2  00 
30  00 
33  00 
84  00 
27  60 

26  00 
18  00 
24  50 

27  60 

27  50 

15  00 

28  00 
30  00 
27  50 

16  00 
8  00 
2  50 

24  45 


Total 


.%       637  70 


con- 
contract 
contract 
contract 
contract 
contract 


102  60 

37  65 

37  90 

21  10 
7  75 

2  80 

73  50 

231  75 

264  00 

45  00 

3  48 
3  48 
3  48 
3  48 
3  48 
3  48 

13  60 
13  65 

13  50 
11  50 

14  00 
18  70 
18  35 
17  95 
62  85 

217  50 

61  90 
13  65 

115  47 

20  00 

36  00 

2  31 

77  08 


SHIPLEY   ROAD. 
Commissioners    District    No. 
70590   I'ul.     Engineering       Co., 

inspection      

72374   E.    J.    Kelchum,      dyna- 
mite      

Fred     Smith,     labor 

A.    J.    Swanson.    labor... 

D.  Anderson,     labor.... 

H.    M.    Carr,    labor 

James   Poison,   labor.... 
Carl    Paulson,    labor.... 

O.     Swanson.     labor 

F.    O.    Truman,    labor... 

Otto    Dahl.    labor 

Nels    Poison,    labor 

Karl    Nordin.    labor 

Andrew    Johnson,    labor 
Chas.      Schellin,         team 

work     

A.    Shipley,    team    work. 

E.  J.      Erlckson      team 
work      • 

H.    M.    Carr,    team    work 
Jolm       Paulson,         team 

work      

73073   R.    W.    Mathison,      team 

work      

J.    H.   Carr.   labor 

Victor    Carlson,    labor.. 
Matt  Mathison,   foreman 


5. 


23  75 


73056 
73057 
73058 
73059 
73060 
73061 
73062 
73063 
73064 
73065 
73066 
73067 
73068 

73069 
73070 

73071 
73072 


61 
11 


73074 
73075 
73076 


42 

00 
10  00 

7  00 

4  00 
15  50 
12  00 

9  00 
12  40 

6  00 
10  00 
25  40 
25  00 

51  75 

25  40 

25  80 
4S  37 

21  40 

57  37 
19  00 
23  40 
33  10 


Oscar  Johnson,  fo -eman 
Henry     Hendri  :kson, 

labor  

Henry    Wuorl,    lab  jr.... 

John    Kataislo.    lajor... 

Andrew  Laitala,  labor.. 

A.    .Johnson,    labor 

Matt  Isaacson,  laoor... 
Erlck    Erlckson,    labor.. 

Matt    Koys,    labor 

Emil  Iliranen,  labor... 

.Santo    Saarl,    labor 

Jacob  Saarl,   labor 

Chas.    Perklo,   labcr 

Nick  Ophstad,  lator.... 
Chas.  Nort,  team  *'ork. . 
Claus       Donberg,       team 

work     

Oscar   Johnson,    fc  reman 

Chas.    Saarl,   labor 

Emil    Kalenen.    laoor.... 

Santel    Saarl.    labor 

Chas.  Perkkla,  labor.... 
Andrew  Laitala,  labor.. 
Henry  Hendrckson, 

labor     

John    Katlsto.    labor..,. 

74836'Matl    Kojo.    labor    

74837  Claus      Damberg,      team 

work 

Fred        Johnson,        team 

work     •  •  • 

W.   H.   Congdon    .'i      ^5on, 

tools    

75137  Fred      Williams,      dyna- 
mite    

Total    


73226 
73226 

73227 

73228 

7^229 

73230 

73231 

73232 

73233 

73234 

73235 

73236 

73237 

7S238 

73239 

73240 

74828 
74829 
74830 
74831 
74832 
74833 
74834 

7483; 


74838 
76099 


71  50 

44  62 
44  62 

44  62 
44  62 
11  37 

39  37 
44  62 

40  25 
42  43 
36  75 
36  V5 
18  80 

3  50 
5  62 

4  50 
27  50 

8  75 

14  87 

15  30 
8  75 

14  00 

14  00 

8  75 
7  43 


74801  Ed  Carlson,  labor   .... .. 

74802  Tom   Osmundson.    labor. 

74803  Nels  Olson,   labor 

74804  Charley  Anderson,   team 

work     

74805  Charley   Anderson,  team 

■work     

74806  Pat  Swanson,   labor    

74807  Gust  Hikkila,   labor    .... 

74808  John  Nygard,  labor    .  .  .. 

74809  John  Nuntla,   labor    .... 

74810  Nicholas     Nelson,     team 

work     • 

75098  Andrew    Bystrom,  black- 

smith work    

75099  W.   H.   Congdon  &   Sons, 

tools    

75101  Colberg  Bros,  dynamite 
76088  Claus  Damberg.    renting 

wagon     


38  25 

4  3» 
10  50 
17  0« 
I7.'i0 
17  94- 

e7S 

8  00 

3  «0- 
17  00 

1100' 


1 


Total    I       969  36' 


15 


i  a 


4  50 

6  60 

19  40 


TOWER    AND    ITA 
Commissioner's    Di 
68313   E.   I     du      Pont 

Co..    dynamite, 
75121   A,      Hawkinson, 
spikes,    freight 
76093   Martin       Johnsoi 
Andrew   Johns* 
tract  work 

Total    . .    .  . 


$2.327  40 

SCA  ROAD. 
strict  No.  7. 
Powder 

etc 169  88 

bolts, 
7  41 

I        and 

m    con-  „^  ,„ 
1.120  00 


.$     1,287  29 


Total 


31  00 

13  50 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 

40  00 
24  00 

7  20 

1,100  00 

19  00 

74699 
74700 
74701 
74702 
74703 
74704 
74705 
74706 
74707 
74708 

74709 

74710 


STAHLBRODT   ROAD. 
F.    T.    Johnson,    foreman 
Gust     Norman,     laVjor... 
Erik     Nelson,     labor.,.. 
Albert      Peterson,     labor 

Ignoe     Mala,     labor 

Sam     Paskuvis,     labor.. 
C.    A.    Johnson,    labor... 

S.     Nordin.    labor 

John    Johnson,    labor... 
\V.     S.     Elllngson,     team 

work     

Gines        Lackel,        team 

work      

E.    Olson,    team    work.. 

Total     


28  06 


15  00 

10  00 

8  00 

10  00 

10  00 

10  00 

10  00 

2  00 

5  00 

22  50 

13  50 
22  50 


%       138  50 


,$   4,368  45 


STONY^    BROOK    ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No 

69278  Continental     Bridge    Co., 

labor    and     material.. 

F.  A.    Truman,    labor... 
Homer     C'arr,     labor 

G.  A.    Truman,    labor... 
Roland    Malliison,    labor 


71366 
71367 
71368 
71369 


841  06 

8  50 

13  50 

8  00 

4  00 

Total 


.1   875  06 


7 


00 
40 
00 
00 
00 
00 

00 

00 
75 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 


74647 
74G48 
74649 
7  4  650 
74653 
746.">4 
74655 
7  4  6  5  6 
74657 
74658 

74659 

74660 


SAVANNA     BRIDGE. 

Herman    OJa,    labor 

Otto    Swen.    labor 

Kurlilla,  labor... 
Muslonen,  labor. 
Wenstrom.     labor 

Wuta,     labor 

I'erlla.    labor 

H.     Saarl,    labor.  . 

Kangas.    labor.. 

team 


Isaac 

Peler 

Emil 

Alex 

John 

John 

Henry 

Keo 

work 
Amos 

work 
Jacob 

man 


Johnson, 
Garrett, 
Jurvelln, 


team 
fore- 


11  00 
8  00 

11  00 
8  00 
8  00 
8  00 
8  00 
8  00 
7  00 

22  50 

4  50 

15  13 


Total      * 


ri339 


fore- 


4671 


74672 
74673 
74674 


team 


74675 

74676 

74677 
74678 
74679 
74680 
74681 
74682 


team 


team 


Matt       Alaspaa, 

work     

Harry       Garrett, 

work     

John       Garrett, 

work     

Otto  Swen.  labor  .... 
Isac  Kurlilla,  labor.  , 
Amos  Garrett,  labor. 
Henry  Kangas,  labor 
Peter  Miller,  labor.. 
Sam   Hokkonen.   labor 


Brlston. 
Bolland, 


Arnold    Farm,    labor.... 

Jolm    Farm     labor 

Ambros    Mills,    labor.... 

Conrad    Helmer.    labor.. 

Albin       Johnson,       team 
work     

Aaron          Stark.          team 
work     

Pete    Gulbranson.    team 
work    

Hugo      Johnson.        team 
Work     

Seth    Johnson,    labor.... 

C.     G.     Almgvist,       fore- 
man      

George       .S.         Almgvist, 
labor    

Jack     Johnson,     labor.. 

August     Leelig     labor,. 

Erick    Lundberg.    labor. 

Chas.    Nordstrom,     labor 

Carl    G.    Almgvist.    team 
work     

G  u  1  b  r  a  n     Gulbranson. 
team    work     

Lewis    Anderson,    point- 
ing   road    grader    .... 


00 
00 
00 
00 


22  50 

4  60 

13  50 


13 
5 


50 
00 


33  75 

25  00 
24  00 
23  00 

15  40 
8  00 

36  00 

31  50 

18  00 


71380 

71381 

71382 

71383 

71384 
71385 

71386 
71387 
71388 
71389 
71390 
71544 

71545 
71546 
71547 
71548 
71549 
71550 
71551 
71. -152 
71553 
71554 


Joseph 
John 

work     

Louis     Anderson. 

work     

Jacob     Anderson, 

work     

Bacon. 


labor. . 
team 

team 


team 


team 


John 
Mike 
Geo. 
Mike 


Total $352  15 


69  e 

69G77 
69678 
69679 
69680 
696S1 
69682 
69683 
69684 
69685 
69686 
69687 
69688 
69689 
69690 
69691 
69692 
69693 
«9694 


RY'AN    ROAD. 
Commissioner's   restrict   No. 
6   D.     McCralg.     labor 

Ben    Christensen.     labor 

D.    Stewart,    labor 

W.     McNulty.     labor 

Sam     Sompson.     labor.  . 

Joe  Anderson,  labor.... 

B.   Glass,   labor    

Gust   Banks,  team  work 

Gusl  Banks,   team   work 

T.     Mersnlck.  .  labor.  ..  . 

L.     Mersnlck,     labor.... 

J.    Mersnlck,    labor 

T.     Robnick.     labor 

Gust    Banks,    labor 

R.    McQuade.    foreman.. 
Johnson.    lal;c>r 


10  90 


9 

6 

5 

5 

1 

11 

28 

21 

7 


C. 

c. 
J. 
J. 


Grlnstrom.  labor. 
Hedberg,  labor.  .  . 
Carlstrom,    labor. 


50 
50 
18 
18 
26 
50 
75 
25 
00 
7  50 
7  50 

7  50 

8  50 
15  00 

5  50 
4  00 
4  00 
4  00 


James 

work 

Gust        Leisner,         team 

work 

Erick      feundvick.      team 

work     •  •  ■  •     ••••••;,•   „ 

Chr.     Bolland.     boarding 

men    • 

W      H     Coffin,     foreman 

Claude  Coffin,  team 
work     

Henrv    Aho,    labor 

Gust  "Stenstrom.   labor.. 

J.    M.    Ambrus.    labor... 

Tom    Campian     labor... 

Claude    Coffin.,    labor... 

Wm.  Gustafson,  fore- 
man     

Oscar     Aho.     labor 

Mike    Snvder.    labor 

Gratiot,    labor.... 

Maky,     labor 

Snvder.    labor 

Alabaret.     labor.. 

Andrew     Juola.     labor.. 

Veikko    Hutlanen     labor 

Erlck    Kurky     labor.... 

Erick     Perky,    labor.  .  . . 

71555  Gilmore    Perky,    labor... 

71556  Jacob   Luoma,   labor 

Chas.  Johnson,  labor... 
Emil   Slermala,    labor... 

Jacob    Oaback,    labor 

Constant  Luoma,  labor. 
Mike  Slermala,  labor... 
Albert    Johnson,    labor.. 

John   Kurkl,   labor 

John    Berg,    labor 

Henrv    Hill,    labor 

Constant    Luoma.      team 

work      ,•  • 

Oscar  Aho.  team  work.. 
Albert      Johnson,      team 

work     

Mike   Snyder,   labor 

John  Luoma,  team  work 
James  Collier,  lumber.. 
E.  J.  Ketchum,  dynamite 
W.  H.  Coffin,  foreman.. 
C.   Coffin,    team    work.... 

Henrv   Aho.   labor 

Matt    Kemp,    labor 

Nickie   Perry,   labor 

Leo    Park,    labor 

J.      M.      Ambrus,      team 

work      .  .  . ! 

Chris  Bolland.  foreman. 
John         Bolland,       team 

work     

Joseph  Briston.  labor.. 
Henry    Horenman,    labor 

Jim    Bacon,    labor ^ 

Chris  Bolland,  foreman. 


60  00 
38  80 

33  47 
37  12 

15  70 

13  86 

14  98 

16  18 

16  00 
18  00 

62  10 

13  50 

34  44 

17  60 
26  10 

6  70 

35  54 
16  01) 

18  00 
10  00 

6  00 
2  50 
8  00 
1  00 


Total 


SHERMAN    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
76303  Martin    Nelson,    foreman 

John     Llnd.     labor 

Ed     Carlson,     labor 

Gust    Olson,    labor 

Nels    Olson,    labor 

Albert     Johnson,       team 
work     ,• 

Nick  Nelson,  team  work 

Martin     Nelson,     board- 
ing men    

Andrew    Bystrom 
bolts,    etc     

Colberg       Bros., 
mite     

A.    G.    Sjostrom. 
timbers,     etc.  .  . 

Tower        Lumber 

lumber     

Total    * 


76304 
76305 
76306 
76307 
76308 

76309 
76310 

76081 

76087 

76100 

76103 


tools, 

dyna- 

bridge 

Co.'. 


12  00 

13  50 
13  50 

6  00 

13  50 
13  50 

13  60 

7  00 
6  00 
6  60 
6  00 
6  00 
6  00 

408  71 


27  50 
16  00 
15  00 
14  75 
14  75 

14  63 
11  26 

10  50 

2  50 

18  50 

20  50 

67  90 


ST.    LOriS    RIVER    ROAD. 
Commissioners    District   No. 
69299   F.   H.   Wade,    tools. 
Andrew   Johnson, 

man    

Vitalis  Helmer,  labor, 
liobert  Johnson,  labor. 
Arthur  Helmer,  labor. 
Seth  Johnson,  labor... 
Charles  Stark,  labor... 
Hugo  Johnson,  labor  . 
August  Stark,  labor... 
Charles  Jenson,  labor. 
Fred  Johnson,  labor... 

John    Farm,    labor 

William  Kroll,  labor  .. 
Ambross  Mills,  labor., 
Arnold  Farm,  labor... 
Ernest   Helmer,    labor., 


119  13 


26  00 


67362 

67387 

67388 

67389 

67390 

67391 

67392 

67393 

67394 

67395 

67396 

67397 

67398 

67399 

67400 

67401 

67402 

67403 

67404 

67405 

67406 

67407 

67408 

67409 

68310 

68489 

68490 
68491 
68492 
68493 
68494 
68495 
68496 

68497 


71340 
71341 
71342 
71343 
71344 
71345 
71346 
71347 
71348 
71349 
71350 
71351 
71352 
71353 
71354 


71355 

71356 

71357 

71358 

71359 
71360 
71361 

71362 
71363 
71364 

il366 


232  78 


Albin        Johnson,      team 

work     

Hjalmer      Nelson,    team 

work     

Peter   Gulbranson,    team 

work    

C.    G.     Johnson,       team 

work    

John    E.    Johnson,    team 

work    

Emil  Helmer.  team  work 
Aaron  Stark,  team  work 
Charles         Stark,       team 

work     

Seth  Johnson,  labor.... 
Leonard  Helmer,  labor. 
Herman    Gulbrandson, 

labor    

Arvid   Stack,  labor 


45  63 

34  50 

32  50 

12  00 

32  50 

12  00 

24  50 

26  00 

14  00 

26  50 

20  50 

16  50 

22  50 

18  50 

8  50 

77  63 

27  00 

27  00 

40  50 

TOWNLINE  RO.\D. 

Oliver  Mining  Co.,  dyna- 
mite,   etc 

Ole    Berg,    team   work... 

Raymond    Borg,   labor... 

Leonard    Lund,    labor... 

Jacob    I'eterson,    labor.. 

Jest    Mobraaten.    labor.. 

Ed   Paulson,   labor    

Tom    H.   Sharp,   labor... 

Andrew  Jolmson,  labor. 

Carl    Severson,    labor.  .  .. 

I'aul    Jacobson.    labor... 

Julius   Husled,   labor    .  .. 

Conrad  Gunderson,  labor 

Anton    Gunderson,   labor 

Louis   Qulst,  foreman... 

Louis   Qulst,   foreman... 

Anton    Gunderson.  labor. 

Conrad  Gunderson.  labor 

John    Mobraaten,    labor. 

Carl    Severson.    labor... 

Sam  Johnson,  labor    . .  .. 

Ragnard    Borg,    labor    .. 

Ole  Borg,  labor    

Ilookson   Hanson,    labor. 

Colvin   &   Robb  Lbr.   Co., 
material     

Jest      Mobraaten,      fore- 
man      

Paul  Jacobsen,  laVior    .  .. 

(Charles  I.iarson,  labor... 
Conrad  Gunderson.  labor 
Peter   Peterson.   lal>or    .. 

Ed  Paulson,   labor    

Ed  Paulson,  team  work 
John     Mt^raaten,     team 

work    

Jacob       Peterson,      team 
work     

Total    % 


29  00 

24  40 
12  25 

8  75 

6  00 

22  00 

64  oa 

35  20 
18  00 
17  50 

30  62 
28  87 
14  00 
17  50 

25  00 
25  00 
17  50 

17  50 
28  00 
14  87 

8  00 
10  50 
22  00 

10  50 

60  OO 

11  25 

7  00 

9  00 

8  00 
4  00 
1  00 

18  00 


70604 
71416 

71417 

71418 

71419 
71420 

71421 

71422 

71423 

71424 

71425 
71426 
71427 
7H2S 
71429 
71430 
71431 
71432 
71433 
71434 
71435 
71436 
71437 
71438 
72359 

73148 
73149 
73150 
73151 
73152 
73153 
73154 
73155 

73156 

73157 

73158 

73159 

73160 

73161 
73162 
73163 
73164 
73165 

73166 
73167 
73168 
73169 
73170 
73171 


Hedeei 
Johnso) 
Anderso 


Berg,   h 
Anders 

Anders 

Thorber 


18  00 
13  50 


646  71 


Total 


31  50 
41  63 
19  13 

41  63 
4  00 
4  00 

6  25 
3  00 

693  90 


TOWER    AND    ITASCA    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No.    4 
66535   Oscar   Johnson,    foreman 

John     Lahti,     labor 

Frank  Kumpela,  labor 
Henry  Laakonen,  labor 
Manna  Juutlnen,  laror. 
Claus      Damberg,      team 

work     • 

Jno.  Metsa.  team  work 
W.      H.      Bristol,      team 

work      

66543  Oscar      Johnson,       team 

work     • 

John  Lahtl,  team  work 
Frank    Kempela,      team 

work     

A.       Kirkhenen,        team 

work     

Claus      Damberg,      team 

work     

Oscar    Johnson,    labor.. 
John    Lahti,    labor...... 

Frank  Kumpela,  labor 
A.  Hulkkonen,  labor.. 
W.    H.    Congdon    &    Son., 

tools     

08320   Tower   Lumber  Co.,   ma- 
terial      

Oscar  Johnson,  foreman 
Henrv  Wuoli,  labor.... 
H.  Hendrlckson,  labor 
John  Kataislo,  labor... 
Robert     Asbar.    labor... 

Victor    Lund,    labor 

Matt     Isaacson,     labor,. 


66536 
66537 
66538 
66539 
66540 

66541 
66542 


66544 
66546 

66546 

66547 

6C548 
66549 
66550 
66551 
67357 


71557 
71558 
71559 
71560 
71561 
71562 
71563 
71564 
71."i65 
71566 

71567 
7156S 

71569 
71570 
72363 
7  2:;64 
73111 
73112 
7311S 
73114 
73115 
73116 
73117 

73118 
73119 


73120 
73121 
73122 
73123 


31  62 

7  00 
12  50 
21  00 
21  00 
14  00 
12  00 
21  00 

8  00 
20  00 
19  00 
18  00 

12  00 

13  00 
13  00 
18  00 

8  00 
17  00 

6  00 
10  00 

1  50 
1  50 

2137 
21  37 

31  50 
8  00 
4  50 
66  82 
13  87 
41  25 
59  62 
28  00 
20  40 

25  20 

26  00 

19  57 

2  75 

4  50 
2  00 
2  00 
2  00 
4125 


SHORT    LINE    BRIDGE. 
Commissioner's   District  No. 
64283  Wiita    Antilla   Co.,      ma- 
terial     •■•■  I 

Henry    Antilla.    contract 

work     

Adams    McAdams.     con- 
tract   work     


37 


64910 
64951 


00 
7  08 
73  00 


SEVILLE   ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District   No, 
70592   Kelley     Hardware       Co., 

tools    

70604   F.    H.    Wade,    dynamite, 

etc 

Peter    Hansen,    labor    . . 

A.    W.    Kra^l.   labor 

Edward  Larson,  labor 
Peter  Larson,  labor.,. 
Peter   Larson,    labor.... 

Carl  Olson,  labor 

John  Mattlson,  labor.. 
Adolf     Mattison.     Ibor.. 


68551 
68552 
68553 
68554 
68555 
68556 
68557 
68558 


team 


71301 
71302 
71303 
71304 
71305 
71306 
71307 
71308 
71309 


Total  $457  08 


SCHULTZ  ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District   No. 

69633   Joe    Kaenski,    labor 

Martin   Usik,  labor    

H.  P.  Steuberud,  labor. 
Frank  Maleska,  labor.. 
Arnold  .Vnderson.  labor. 
Oluf  Kagerud,  labor.  .  . . 
Peter  Novak,  labor. 
Stanley 

man 
H.    P. 

work 
Frank 

work     

Joe   Kanesky,   labor 

Martin    I'siak,    labor 

Arnold  Anderson,  labor 
Olaf  Kogerud,  labor  . .  . 
Peter  Novak,  labor  .... 
Stanley  Malosky.  labor, 
team 


69634 
69636 
69636 
69637 
69638 
69639 
69640 

69641 

69642 


Maleska,  fore- 
Stuberud,   team 
Maleska,   team 


21  00 

21  00 

6  00 

6  00 

1 1  00 

11  00 

12  00 

26  25 
29  25 


71310 

73077 
73078 
73079 
73080 
73081 
73082 
73083 
73084 
73085 
73086 
73087 

73088 
73089 
73090 


Bergquist, 
Carlson, 
Hanson, 


fore- 


team 


labor 


71311 
71312 
71313 
71314 
71315 
71316 
71317 


71318 


H.    B 

work 
Frank 

work 

Total 


Stuberud, 
Maleska, 


team 


.$       400  00 


29  25 

73091 

22  00 

22  00 

73092 

20  00 

10  00 

73093 

21  00 

28  75 

73094 

49  50 

73095 

54  00 

73096 

STURGEO.M     LAKE     ROAD, 
Commissioner's   District   No. 
69275   Theodore  Hall,   contract 

work     

69290  Itaaca     Merc.     Co.,     ma- 
terial      

Poirier    &    Co.,    material 


69293 
69295 

69599 
69600 


Rock    Lake 

material 
M.    Danahy, 
John   Letto, 


Lbr.      Co., 

foreman. . . 
labor 


7. 

145  11 

9  25 
64  50 

18  25 
78  00 
27  70 


Chas. 

man 
John 

work 
Peter   A. 

W.     Krall,     labor 

D.    I..arson.    labor    

Carl    Olson,    labor 

Adolf  Mattison,  labor. 
John  ,\nderson,  labor. 
John  Carlson,  labor... 
Peter  Hanson,  labor  • 
O.  M.  Nyberg.  labor... 
Martin  Carlson,  labor. 
Chas.      Bergquist.    fore 

man     

L.    Hendricksen.   labor. 
I'arl    Larson,    labor 
John        Carlson, 

work     

John      Makisen, 

work     

Charley     Johnson, 

work     

Chas..    Bergquist, 

work     

Chas.     Berg<iuist, 

work     

Chas.   Johnson, 

work  

L.   Sandstrom, 

work  

Total  


team 
team 
team 
team 
team 
team 
team 


5, 

12  35 

17  70 
8  00 
7  00 

7  00 

8  00 

3  00 
8  00 
8  00 

4  00 

11  25 

4  50 
16  00 
31  00 
28  00 
30  00 

13  00 
3  00 
2  00 

26  00 
28  00 
24  00 

37  50 

14  00 
14  00 

64  00 

18  00 

45  00 

4  00 

43  25 

13  50 

58  50 

601  55 


68559 

68560 

69280 

69282 

69576 
69577 
69578 
69579 
69580 
69581 
69582 
69583 
69584 
69585 
695S6 
69587 

69588 

69589 

69590 

69591 
69592 
69593 
69594 
69595 
69596 
69597 
69598 
70591 

70002 

71459 
71460 
71461 

1462 


& 


team 

team 

dyna- 

Soii.', 


team 
team 
team 
team 


SIVERSON    ROAD. 
Commissioner's  District   No. 

73^f<7   Ole   Sassos.    foreman 

John    Anderson,    labor.. 

Victor  Berger,   labor 

John    Johnson,    labor.... 

Nels   Holler,    labor 

John        Pearson.        team 

work 

73103  Able        Pearson,        team 
work    


73098 
73099 
73100 
73101 
73102 


12  00 
15  00 
15  00 
12  00 
10  00 

20  00 

12  50 


71-;63 
71464 
71465 
71466 
71467 
71468 
71469 
71470 
71471 
71472 
71473 
71474 
71475 
71476 

71477 

71478 
72361 

72387 


Claus   Damberg, 

work   

John       Johnson, 

work      

John    Samuelson, 

work     

Nels    J.    Benson, 

mite,    etc     .  .  . 

"W.    H.    Congdon 

material      

Oscar  Johnson,  foreman 
Henrv  Vuola.  labor.... 
H.  Hendrlckson,  labor 
John  Kalansto  labor... 
Victor  Lund,  labor.... 
Matt  Issacson.  labor.. 
Victor  Kustola.  labor.. 
A.    Abramson,    labor.... 

Chas.     Kaski.     labor 

Elias    Maki.    labor 

Henry  I^oakko.,  labor.. 
Claus"      Domberg, 

work    

John     Samuelson. 

work 

William       Mitso. 

work    ....    •  •  ,•  • 
Valentine    Takala. 

work     

Claus  Olson,  foreman.. 
George   Olson,    labor.... 

Halvor    Berg,    labor 

Emil  Johnson,  labor... 
Fred  Gustafson,  labor.. 
Chas.  Johnson,  labor... 
Frank  Fredund.  labor.. 
Toni  Happe.  team  work 
E  I.  du  Pont  Powder 
Co.  dynamite  etc.  .  .  . 
Fred  Williams,  dyna- 
mite,  etc    

Oscar  Johnson,  foreman 
A  Abrahamson,  labor.. 
Matt  Isaacson,  labor.. 
Henry  Hendrlckson. 

labor     ♦ 

John  Katarka  labor... 
Henrv    Wuoli.    labor.... 

A.    Hill,    labor     

Chas.  Simonson,  labor.. 
Frank  Seimola.  labor.. 
H.  Saakonen.  lal>or.... 
Chas.  Pugkio.  labor.... 
Erick    Erlckson.    labor.. 

Matt    Koys,  labor 

Andrew  Laitala,  labor.. 
Andrew   Johnson,   labor. 

Oscar    Seller,    labor 

William  Matso,  labor... 
William    Takala,       team 

work     

John    Samuelson,      team 

work     

John  Owens,  labor..... 
W.   H.  Congdon   &      Son, 

material     /••,■; 

J.  H.  Sherman,  material 


22  00 
16  00 
16  00 

9  50 

9  50 

10  00 

5  00 

12  50 

16  50 
12  00 

12  00 

4  00 

11  25 
11  00 

8  00 

6  00 

8  00 

7  73 

4  15 

33  00 
16  62 
16  62 
16  62 

3  50 
7  00 
7  00 

9  00 

9  00 
11  26 
20  01 

5  13 
71  50 

34  55 

35  00 
35  43 
34  55 

33  68 

34  55 
31  93 
31  05 
27  55 

11  80 

6  75 

41  62 

73  12 

69  62 
20  00 

12  00 

10  00 
10  00 
12  00 
10  00 
12  00 
24  75 

14  25 


17  00 
71  50 
40  25 
37  62 


THOMPSON 

Commissioner's  Di 
F.  H.  Wade,  dyn 
Oscar  M.  Lackit 

work  

Adolf     Thorberg 

work     

Albert        Ekroot, 

work 
Kris   Wailen.  te{ 
Robert  Samuelsc 

work     

Aug.      Magnusoi 

work 

Andrew 

work 

Charlie 

work 

J.    A, 

work     

J.    A.  Anderson, 
.\ndrew   St  rid,    h 
S.    M.    Samu€;lsoi 
Oscar  Ekroot.  U 
Andrew    Hedin, 
Kris   Wollen,    la 
Nels    Berglund. 
Oscar  <'arlson. 
Axel   Slrid,  labo 
I».   E.  Noidtn,  la 
Nels    Malmsten, 
Ole  Larson,   lab 
John    Erlckson. 
Albert   Eckroot, 
John    A,  Anders( 

mite    

D.  P.  Thorberg. 
Charles  Wallin. 
P.  C.  Nordin,  la 
Axel  Strid,  labo 
John  Erlckson, 
Andrew  Strid,  1 
August 
John  A. 

man 
John   A. 
work 
Adolf 

work     

Charles    Johns< 

work 
Aug.     Magnuso 

work 
A.     G.     Peterso 

work      

L.    P.    Thorberg 
Oscar    E.    Krol 
Christ    Walleer 
P.    E.    Nordin, 
Robert    Samuel 

or     

Aug.  Magnuso 
Axel  Strid,  la 
S.  M.  Samuels 
John  Erlckson 
Andrew  Strid 
John   A.  Ander 

man      

Adolf     Thorbei 

work      

Charles     Johns 

work      

Robt,     Samuel.' 

work      

Aug.     Magnusc 

work 
A.      G. 

work 
John   A 

work      

F.  T.  Johnson 
Gust  Norman, 
Erlck  Nilson. 
Stan  Paskesvi 
Charles  Nelso 
Jgnea  Mala, 
Peter  Johnsoi 
Chas.  Visnick 
Arthur  Jelan 
Gust    Marsk,    t 

E.  Olson,    tea 
Henry       Nilso 

work      

F.  T.    Johnsor 
Gust    Norman 
Erlck 
Stan 
Chas. 
Chas. 


ROAD. 

pirict    No. 
amite.  . 
team 

team 

team 

.m  work 
n,  team 


team 

team 

1,     team 

,      team 

labor.  ., 
ibor  . .  . 
labor, 
lior  .... 
labor  . . 
hor  .... 
labor. . . 
abor    .  .. 

bor    .... 

labor.  ,. 
)r    

labor.  .. 

labor  .. 
m.  dyna- 

labor    .. 

laV)or. .. 

bor   

r   

labor  . . 
jibor  .  . . 
ibor  .  .  .. 
on,  fore- 

on,  teana 

g,  team 

team 

team 

team 


37  85 

33  75 

18  00 

22  50 
22  50 

27  00 

20  25 

2  25 


9  00 
18  75 
15  00 

14  00 

15  00 
10  00 

5  00 
12  00 
14  CO 

12  00 

13  00 

4  00 
3  50 

6  00 

5  00 

16  68 


C 

63511 
63612 
64943 
68275 
68536 

68537 

68538 

68539 

68540 
68541 
68542 

68543 
68544 
68545 
68M6 
68547 
68548 
68549 
68550 
69279 

69279 

69289 

69292 

69559 

69560 

€9561 

69562 
69563 
69664 
69565 
69566 
69567 
69568 
69569 
69570 
C9571 
69572 
69573 
69.'.74 
69576 

70591 

70591 

70592 


TOWER  AND  ELY  ROAD. 

ommlssioner's    District    No. 
Ben     Jenson.      labor.... 
N.    S.    Erlckson,    labor.. 
M.   E.   Gleason,   tools. 
M.  E.  Gleason,   lools. 
John      Dinsmore. 

rnan 

Chas.   Quigley. 

work  

Bai  to. 


15  76 
13  50 


00 


fore- 
team 
team 
team 
work 
ia- 


00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 


10  00 

13  60 

9  00 


73172 

73173 

73174 

73175 

73176 

73177 

747  85 
74786 
747S7 
74788 
74789 
74790 
74791 
74792 
74793 
74794 
74795 
74796 


Peters 
Andei 


76311 
76312 
76313 
76314 
76315 
76316 
76317 
76318 
76319 
76320 

76321 


Nelson. 
Paskesv 
Nelson, 
Visnick 
Arthur  Jelant 
Gusl  Marsh,  i 
E.  Olson,  teai 
Henry       Nilso 

work 
E.    Olson,    tea 


labor.  . 
h,  labor. 
.  labor. . 
labor.  .  . . 
son,    lab- 

1.    labor. 

bor 

on.    labor 

labor. . 

labor,  . . 

5on,  fore- 

g,      team 

on,     team 

on,     team 

III'      team 

on,     team 

son,  team 

,  foreman 
labor.  . . 
labor.  . .  . 
.  labor... 
n.  labor.  . 
labor 

I,  labor. . 
labor.  .  . 

ey.  labor 
eam  work 
m    work.  . 

II,  team 

,  foreman 
,    labor. . . 

labor.  . . . 
I,     labor,  . 

labor. . . . 
.  labor.  . . 
y.  labor.  . 
eam  work 
n  work  .  . , 
n,    team 


m  work. 


9  00 

4  60 

9  00 
8  00 
8  00 
8  00 
8  00 

2  00 
2  00 

8  00 
€  00 
6  00 
6  00 

10  00 

13  50 

13  50 

9  00 

13  50 

4  60 

18  00 
CO  00 
36  00 
34-00 
35  00 
34  0« 

14  00 
29  00 

23  00 

15  00 
83  2  5 
78  75 

81  00 
21  00 
12  00 
12  00 
12  00 
12  00 
12  00 
12  00 
27  00 
27  00 

24  75 
4  50 


71459 
71440 
71441 
71442 
71443 
71444 
71445 
71446 
71447 
71448 
71449 
71450 
71451 
714  52 
71453 
71454 
71455 
71456 
71457 

71458 

72267 

72366 

73178 
73179 
73180 
73181 
73182 
73183 
73184 
73185 


Frank 

v.'ork     

Toney    Kotchwar, 

work     

Johi   Skanlz.   team 
Matt    Maki.    labor, 
Henry      Dar.iclson, 

bor    

Herry    Eddie,    labor 

Henry    Partlnen.   labor.. 

AlexOjala.    labor 

Ed  Rosbeck.  labor 

Sam    Nervy     team    work 

Gust     Maki.     labor 

Henrv    Kivoe.    labor.... 

Eli   Phillips,  labor 

Du     Pont     Powder     Co., 

dvnamite    etc 

DuPont      Powder      Co., 

dvnamite.     etc     

Frank       Dodge,       black- 
smith     

J.  D.  Murphy,  room  rent 

for  tools •••■  • 

John      Dinsmore,      fore- 

inan    

Chas.       Quigley,       team 

work    

Jack        Bedford,        team 

work    

Matt   Mackl,   labor 

Gust   Macki.   labor 

Ed     Rosbeck.     labor 

Henry    Kivoe.    labor.... 

Martin     Eber.     lalKir 

Harrv  Eddie,  labor.... 
Henrv    Danielson.    labor 

Win     Macki     labor 

John  Kivoe,  labor..  ...  • 
Frank  Klobutcher.  labor 
Robert    Sumonen,    labor. 

Matt    Knulti,    labor 

August  Pearson,  labor. 
R    S.      Miller,      boarding 

men     A' '  '  ', ' " 

E.   I.   du     Pont     Powder 

Co.,    dvnamite.    etc.... 

E    I.    du      Pont      Powder 

Co..   dvnamite,   etc.... 

E.   I.   du      Pont      Powder 

Co..    dynamite,   etc.... 

John  Dunsmore.  foreman 

Cvrlll  Fortia.  team  work 

Jack  Bedford,  team  work 

Harrv    Eddie,   labor 

Martin    Eber,    labor 

August    Pearson,    labor.. 
Matt    Knutii.    labor, 


Gust    Makl,   labor, 
William    Mackie,   labor.. 
Matt   Mackie,     l.-'bor.... 

Eu    Rosbeck,   lal'or 

Frank    Klobutcher,  labor 

Henrv    Kivoe.   labor 

Robt.  Sumn.onen.  labor. 

John    Kivoe.    labor 

Henrv  I>anieison,  labor. 
Jacob  Timlia.  labor.... 
Alex  Keilana,  labor.... 
Tony    Kotchewar,      team 

•work     ;.•  •  • 

R.    S.      Miller,      boarding 

men    ;^-  •    ; '  ' 

E.  I.   du      Pont      Powder 

Co.,     dvnamite 

E.     1  du     Pont     Powder 

Co.,    dvnamite 

John  Dinsmore,  foreman 
Cvrlll  Fortia,  team  work 

Martin    Eber,    labor. 

Angus*    Pearson,    labor 


73187 
73188 
73189 
73190 
73191 
73192 
73193 

73194 
7  3195 
73196 

74771 

74772 

74773 

74774 
74775 

74776 
74777 
74778 
74779 
74780 
74781 
74782 
74783 
74784 
75107 


Total     

TOWER    AND    H 

Commissioner's 
63430  W.  H.  Congd 
dvnamite. 
Wni.  Hill,  la 


.  .$  1,299  03 


37  62 

35  87 

33  25 

11  37 

15  75 

30  62 

35  00 

26  25 

15  7  5 

15  75 

15  75 

7  00 

5  25 

3150 

X 

13  50 

60  75 

4  50 

3  55 

19  88 

69288 
69516 

69517 
69518 

69519 
69520 
69521 

69522 
69523 
69524 
69525 
69526 
69527 
69528 
69529 

69530 
69531 
69532 
69533 
69534 

69535 

69536 

69537 
68538 
69539 
69540 
69541 
69542 
69543 
69544 
69545 

69546 
69547 
69548 
69549 
69550 
69551 
69552 
69553 
69554 
69555 
69556 

72360 
73140 
73141 
73142 
73143 
73144 
73145 
73146 

73147 
74797 
74798 


Thorr 
Hendr 


74799 
74800 


Martin 

man 

Henry 

Henry 

bor    

John   Katrais 
Robert   Asbor 
Claus       Damb 
work     .... 
John     Kotola. 
Chas.     Hill.     : 
Henry     Leek. 
I'elus    AJakar 
John.    Horn, 
Ed    Carlson 
John    Lind.    It 
Charles   Ande 

work     .  . . 
Sam    Jobec 
T    Osinundsoi 
Gust     Swansc 
John    Swanso 
Martin 
man 
Claus 

work 
Charley 
work 
Henry 

John  Holm. 
Ed  Carlson, 
John  Lind,  1 
Sam  Jobec, 
T.  Osmundso 
Jolin  Swans 
Gust  Swans 
Nicholal  Ne 
work  .  . .  • 
Tom  Sandre 
Jens  Osmun 
John  Nygaat 
F^rnst  Silver 
Charles  Park 
Gust  llakke 
Nick  Strock, 
John  I'almqi 
Pete  Swanso 
C^harles  Jars 
Martin  Nelsc 

men     

Nels  Benson, 
I'^rnest  Sllve 
John  Nygart 
John  Lind,  1 
John  Holin. 
Ed  Carlson, 
Martin  Nels 
Charley  Anc 
work  .. .  • 
Nick  Nelson 
Martin  Nels 
Albert       Job 

work 
Tom    Sandre 
John  Llnd,  1 


INSDALE 

District   N 
on    &    Son, 

tc     

bor    

Nelsjn,        fore- 


go AD. 
o.  4. 


e.  labor.  . 
ickson  la- 
ta labor. . 
labor.  . . . 
erg.     team 

labor. . . . 
abor 

labor.  .  .  . 
men.    labor 

abor 

abor 

bor.  . 
rson. 


team 


labor 

I.  labor.  .  . . 

n,     labor. . 

n.   labor.  . . 

Nelson.       fore- 

Damberg,     team 

Anderson,   team 

Leek      labor,... 

labor 

labor 

ibor 

labor 

1.  labor.  .  . . 
in.  labor. . 
in.  labor. . 
Ison.     team 

to  labor.  . 
Ison.  labor 
d.  labor.  .  . 
oerg.  labor, 
enen.  labor 
a,    labor. . . 

labor    

,ist,  labor. . 
n,  labor  .  .. 
ala,  labor., 
n,  boarding 

lools   

■berg,  labor 
,  labor   .... 

abor    

labor 

labor 

)n,  foreman 
erson,   team 

,  team  work 
on,  foreman 
nson,      team 

tto,  labor  . 
abor • 


19 
3 

S 

3 

11 


6 
6 
5 

13 
4 
4 
6 
6 

50 

29 


Gusl     J!akl,     labor 

W'n.     Mackie,    labor.  .  . . 

Malt     Miickie.     labor 

Ed    Rosbcrg.    labor  •  ••  •  ■ 
Frank    Klobutcher,    lab- 
or       ,••,■■■ 

Robt.  Summonen,  labor 
Henrv  Kivoe.  labor.... 
John  Kivoe.  labor..... 
Henry  Danielson.  labor 
Jacob  Timlin,  labor.... 
Axel  Henana.  labor.... 
Tony     Katcliwar,       team 

work     ;••;••. 

Jack    Skoglund.    labor.. 

Matt     Knutii.     labor.... 

Jack  Bedgard,  team 
work 

John  Dinsmore.  fore- 
man  

Syrell  Tort  la.  team 
"  ovvrk      

Toney  Kotchwan.  team 
work     •• 

Martin     Eber.     labor.... 

Frank  Klobutclier,  lab- 
or      ■  •  ■ 

Matt    Mackie,    labor 

Gust     Mackie,    labor.-.. 

Henrv    Danielson.    labor 

Jacob    Timlia,    labjir 

Ed    Rosbeck.    labor..... 

Robt.    Summonan.    labor 

Henrv     Kivoe.     labor... 

Sam  "Nixon,    team    work 

R     S.    Miller,    groceries. 

M.    E.    Gleason,    tools,.. 

Total 


29  56' 

48  87 

46  12: 

46  12 
20  38 
18  82 

17  94 

17  07 

18  82 
18  82 
16  19 
27  OC 

9  61 
9  6S' 
4  38 

14  01 

7  53 

16  96 

32  50 

16  40 

30  91 

40  00 
16  00 
16  80 
16  80 
16  80 

6  90 
16  00 
16  00 
14  80 
11  10 
11  10 
14  80 
11  SO 

S  00 

27  29 

19  13 

9  09 

13  59 

58  57 

104  32 

116  26 

3  00 

32  67 

43  50 
16  00 
4  6  00 
46  00 
46  00 

45  00 
40  26 

46  00 
46  00 
40  26 

44  00 
36  OO 
36  OO 

52  76 

39  29 

7  96 

16  04 
48  00 
75  00 

29  00 
20  00 
24  00 
20  00 

28  00 

30  00 

26  25 
30  00 

29  00 
17  50 

30  00 
30  00 
20  00 

120  OO 

12  00 

6  00 

25  00 

30  40* 

80  90 

95  00 
17  9*) 

19  2S 
22  OO 
10  00 
22  00 
22  00 
22  00 
22  00 

20  00 
6  00 

12  30 
4  15 

.$   2,784  54 


25 

25 

25 
50 

50 
50 
37 

00 
62 
62 
00 
87 
25 
25 
25 

50 
38 
38 
12 
12 

19 

25 


TISCHER   ROAD, 
Commissioners    I'lstrict    No 
63431  E.     Fiebiger,     dynamite, 

etc     • 

Thos.    Stack,    foreman.. 

B     Carlson,     labor 

Wilson,    labor 

McDonald,     labor 

Wayaz.     labor 

Scuilen.    la'uor 

Latori,    labor 

Gratz.    laiKir 

Haldtrn.    labor 

Latari.    labor 

Hadorn.    labor 

Hasarn     .labor 

Hansen,    labor 

Latare.    labor 

Hadorn,    labor 

Branard.     labor 

F.    Latture.    labor.... 
Slack.       boarding 


2. 


63448 
6:;4  4  9 
63450 
63451 
63452 
63463 
63454 
63455 
634  56 
63457 
63458 
63459 
63460 
63461 
6:2462 
634C3 
634  64 
63465 


F. 
C. 
J. 
L. 
«j 

F. 

S. 

w 

J. 

A. 

Ed 
M. 
H. 
H. 
B. 


59 
15 
28 
28 
28 
14 
27 

14 

o 


7 
18 


9 
3 
1 
9 

2 

12 
24 
3 
3 
3 
3 
3 
5 


63 
94 
44 
4t 
44 
00 
13 
00 
63 

50 
25 
00 
38 
50 
63 
62 
60 
32 
62 
63 

60 
46 
60 
50 
50 
07 
50 
»0 


63466 

63467 

63468 

63469 
63470 
63471 
63472 

63473 
63474 
63475 
63476 
63477 
63478 
634  79 
634  SO 
63481 

65859 
65860 
65861 
65802 
65863 
65864 
65865 
65866 
65867 
65868 
65869 

66522 
66523 
66524 
66525 
66526 
66527 
66528 
66529 
66530 
66531 
66532 


Stark,  boarding 
Schwartz.  fore- 
Schwartz,   Jr., 


board- 
ftireman 


9 

13 

63 

40 

7 

33 


00 
50 
62 

50 
00 
69 


Thos. 
men 

Thos. 
men 

George 
man 

George 

labor  :■:•■•' 

T.  M.  Anderson,  labor.. 

W'^  Diliman,  labor 

C      liiitman.     labor..... 

Anton    Yankowsky.    lab- 
or      ;  ",1*  ■  ■ ' 

A.  Hupperman.  labor.. 
C  Wicks-trom.  labor... 
C  Foulkner.  labor..... 
Al  Lundstrom.  labor... 
Mike  Curryah.  labor... 
Jack     Stanley,     labor... 

S    Termlnka,    labor 

George    Tlscher,    labor. 
Geo.    Schwariz, 

ing    men     .  .  . 
Thomas    Slack, 

B.  Amos,  labor   

Joe    Plant,    labor 

B.    Latture.    labor 

H.  Hagadore,   labor 

B.    Hagadore.   labor 

Hagadore.   labor    .... 

Campbell,  labor 

Schwariz.   iaiior 

Beckert,    labor 

Thomas  Stack,   boarding 

men     

Thomas    Slack,    foreman 

R.  Amos,    labor    

Joe    IMant.    labor 

T>.   Campbell,   labor    .... 

Becker,  labor 

Latture,    labor    

Stack,    labor     

Car.son,    labor    ...... 

McKinna.   laV>or    

Schwartz,  labor 

oDi..>..    ^..   Latture,    labor    ••■••• 
66533   Thomas  Stack,  boarding 

men    •  •  •  • 

6€j34   Thomas  Stack,  boarding 

men     

E.    Fle"biger,    tools 

N.  Anderson,  blacksmith 
Ed  Totman.  team  work 
H.  Branard,  team  work 
B.  Latture.  team  work. 
R.    Laugley,    team    work 


- 


\' 


A 


i 


^l-W  TT 


1 


A. 
D, 
G. 
H. 


H. 
B. 
A. 
W. 

A. 
G. 
B. 


68314 
68318 
68498 
68499 
68500 
68501 


15  55 
48  00 
17  25 
13  16 
15  25 

11  20 
13  BO 

7  87 
17  55 
19  12 

9  95 

5  00 

12  53 
.10  OO 
26  56 

25  00 
80  00 

26  50 

91  99 

50 

42  OO 

23  12 
18  95 
16  87 
12  «« 

15  8T 

16  !t7 
.*>1  50 

16  87 
25  8T 
25  87 

8  80- 

3  C4 
15  00^ 

67  70 

48  00 
25  00 

25  oa 

24  7SV 
13  50 

13  50 

15  7S 

9  30 
48  5^ 

17  50 

42  19 
36  00 
12  2S 

16  7& 

4  80 

17  50 
2  2S 

14  29 

15  00 
9  OO 

12  75- 

5  OO 

55  57 

4  50 
138  85 

26  29 

6  00 
75  5tf 
50  ..♦ 
39  3» 


*'. 


<^"~ 


— T: 


< 


I 


5»*" 


u-^ 


J-— 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD: 


18 


l>s»u^ 


p— — 


•I 


6$^03 
b&505 

6S513 

fe85l'i 

"68517 

ts»is 
So  19 
ff8S20 
6S521 
68r.22 
ttS523 

•>8525 
6852« 

«!»r.2: 

6852"< 
6-S529 

<v,sr)3<) 

68^31 
68. ',3  2 
6>».>33 
i>8r.34 
6S035 

G9297 

6948S 

e94S» 

694<»') 

e»491 

fi94':>2 

69493 

69494 

6949;^ 

694;5t) 

69497 

6919S 

6SH99 

69500 

69501 

69502 

6»»t)3 

69504 

635*15 

60506 

69507 

69508 

«9dd9 

69510 

6H511 

6)'.12 

69513 

69514 

69515 

79590 

70593 

7'V3'»5 
7'U»5 
71  '.il 
7 1  1^12 
Tl  ;;*J 
7'.:;:)  I 

7 ;  VI 
7i  f  ''> 
71401 
71402 
71403 
71404 


Thomas)  iitaoJc.  boarding 

men     

Tho-s.    Slack,    foremaa.. 


J.  McDonnell,  labur.... 
A.   AlcOonnell.    labor.... 

J.   Moycz.  labor 

U.    Koss,    labor 

<;.    Matisou.    labor 

A.    Arui-irs'jn.    labor    .... 

A.  J\I<-Kenneri.    labor.... 

H.     Becker,     labor 

F.    Barch     labor 

M.  Sweeney,   labor 

M.    Sweent-y.    labor 

Steve  Backat.  labor.... 
•Martin  (Jawzien.  labor.. 

W.  Nohnian,   labor 

T     Bach'^wski     labor.... 

J.     Hased  ini.    labor 

H.     Hagedom.    labor.... 

I..    Norinlski.    labor 

S.    Leovock     labor 

A     Mol'tnnol!.    labor.... 

J     Campbell,    labor 

C.    Lunt.    lalior     

Joe     ResbetK.     labor.... 

B.  Hagedoin.  labor.... 
All.    McDiMinell.    labor.. 

F.    Konte.    labor 

T.    Dunisran.    labor 

Walter  Johnson,  labor. 
Harry  Pear.son  lal>or.. 
•  "has.    Kuarock    .labor.. 

raul     Pu.-5h.     labor 

Thaa     Stack.       boardingf 

men     

To*  man        Bro.s..       team 

work      

Tho3.    Stack,    foreman... 

J.    McOxnaid,    labor 

Alex  McOonalJ.  labor.. 
L.    N.>rm!skitf.    labor.... 

M.    Sweeney,    labor 

Sam   Higglns.   labor 

,Iohn    Sta:it'>n.    labor.... 

J.    Maresz.   labor 

H.    Beckman.    labor 

F.    Baroh.    labor.  ..^ 

J.    Campboll.    labor 

\V.    Baxby.    labor 

B.  Hagadore,    labor 

T.    r»unnikcan,    labor 

Walter  Johnson,   labor.. 

H.    Pearson,    labor 

W.    Gruewzien,    labor... 

Joe   Ro-^erier,   labor 

J.     Rush,    labor 

C.  Knossook,    labor 

L.     L.;\udrla.    labor 

Neal    Beaton,    labor 

K.  Lanjfley,  team  work 
H.  Branarl.  l^am  work 
B    Lature,  team  work... 

Hexman  Fiiz.  labor 

Ed    Totman,    labor 

Thos.     Slack,      boarding 

mt^n    

Duluth    P^ngineerlng  Co., 

inspectivm    work    

Clonieiitson  I'.rus.,  tenia 
E.  Fiehl^er.  dynamite... 
E.    Fiebig-r.    dynamite... 

M.    Shanhan.   labor    

John    Saw,    labor    

K.  Carlson,   labor    

il.  Swerney.  labor    

,    Sanu.<trom.    labor.. 

Charles  Has?ain.  labor.. 
B.  B.  Ander^^on.  labor.., 
J.  W.  Thompson,  labor.. 
George  Riley,  team  work 
Jamed  Miskell.  labor... 
James   Miskell,    labor... 

Matt    Park,    labor 

Charles  Hagen.  labor  .  . 
John        Cosgrove.       team 

work     

71405  J.   W.   Thompson,    labor. 

71406  John    Carr.    labor 

71407  Gust   Lundbt-rg,    labor... 
7140S  .   Vcrgon.  team  work 

^1409   M.   Gunn-y.  labor    

71410  Jack    Hill,    labor    

71411  John   Tischer.  team  work 

71412  John    Ti.^ch^^r.    foreman. 

71413   .    Bolding,   labor    ... 

71414  E.   Hanson,   labor    

71115   John    Tischer.    boarding 

men     

T:"';^   Clemont.«»on   Bros..  tent.s. 

K.    Fiebiger.    tools 

John       Cosgrove,      team 

work      

T319S   George  Riley,  team  work 
73199  John       Langley.        team 

work     

Jack    Hill,    labor    

A.   .*!undst!om.  labor.... 

Matt    Parko,   labor    

K.   Riley,   labor    

M.  Sweenev.   labor    

Gust    Lundberg.    labor.  . 

J.)hn    Saari,    labor 

Nel.=    Samon.son.    labor.. 

.John     Jackson,     labor... 

.fi-.o.  Tischer.  team  work 

73210  John   Tischer.   foreman.. 

»s.«T,    Q     i^eskey,    foreman.... 

Balduc.     labor 

.lack    Johnson,    labor. . . 

M.    Gaunnis.    labor 

A.    Olgren.     labor 

.^.    Roniann,    labor 

.->ani    Laodo.    labor 

.v.   Svlan.   labor 

Ei     Carson,    labor 

John     Balduc,     labor.  .  . . 
Ciiarles    Kush,   labor.... 

H.    Tischer.    labor 

Napoleon     Bishop,     labor 
John     Tischer.     boarding 

men     

Nick   Sorri.   labor 

Sam     Lehto.    labor 

A    Romann.    labor 

.Tohn   Simson.   laV>or 

C     Cush.    labor 

John    Carr.    labor 

M.    Olgren.    labor 

Chas.    Leske.    labor 

Napoleon    Bishop,     labor 

8.    Bolduc.    labor 

J.    Bolduc.    water    boy.. 

A.    Carlson,    labor 

H.   Tischer,   labor 

John    Tischer,    foreman. 

Jno.  Tischer.  team  work 

labor.  .  . 

am    work 

team    work  .  .  . 


8  62 
60  00 
19  55 
12  00 
18  50 
14  40 
Iti  00 

5  50 
17  95 
29  50 
17  22 
21  50 

4  00 

10  60 

11  40 
10  60 

10  60 
3  92 
3  92 

14  76 

11  20 

6  25 

12  90 
10  55 
10  55 

13  12 
3  46 


74533 
74534 
74535 


Robt.     Thompson, 

man     

Duluth      Marine    Supply 
Co.,     supplies 

Robt-  Thompson,   board- 
ing    men 


62  50 
7  15 
7  08 


Total 


.1   1,234  30 


Tl: 
T 

71" 
71. 


7  J    I'.N 

78197 


7324)0 

T32'>1 

fM">4 
7.iM-- 
7 ;  J  »•; 
7  '.  Ji'7 
7  .^'>S 
,7iJ09 
73210 

Hill 

'7;!  21 2 
73213 
7"214 
73-215 
73216 
73217 
7521'< 
7J219 
73  220 

7,:22i 

7  "  ■'  2  2 
7:!  J  2  3 
73224 

'r4734 

74735 
717.56 
747::T 
7  '.  7'.? 
74739 
T4740 
74741 
74742 
74743 
74744 
7i745 
74746 
74747 


7M 

1  45 

56 

56 

62 

62 

244  00 

244  00 

8  00 

34  5(! 

8  20 

11  50 
14  50 

12  75 
10  45 

13  00 

14  70 

19  70 

13  50 
10  12 
10  00 

14  70 
13  30 

13  75 

14  00 
13  GO 
13  40 

13  00 

14  00 

10  50 
5<» 

43  30 
60  00 

4  00 

20  00 

5  00 

190  03 

37  bO 
30  00 

114  20 
64  00 

21  25 
13  15 
43  Oi* 
28  35 

38  6<> 

11  a5 
20  50 

12  10 
43  50 

8  50 

6  80 

15  75 
10  90 

32  20 

10  60 

4  75 

4  75 

32  50 

25  00 

4  75 

103  50 

56  93 

49  00 

10  40 

143  00 

22  00 
92  35 

3S  50 
118  23 


60  00 

2  50 

25  00 

15  50 

12  00 
9  Oil 

16  25 
3 1  00 
29  60 
15  50 

125  00  I 
68  75 
35  05 
44  00 

13  65 
34  Oi) 

13  00  ! 

14  00  I 
13  00 
13  55  I 
38  0.1  I 
13  00 

9  50  i 

13  00  I 

7  SO 

163  85 

20  50 

5  40 


VERMILION    ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District   No. 
71485   Alfred     Lax,     foreman.. 

Ju.stus    Maki,    labor 

Henry    Allen,   labor 

Arvid    Jakinen.    labor... 
A.    Lax,    team    work.... 

Alex    Havila.    labor 

Matt    Hill,    labor 

\'ictor    Lepenen,    labor.. 

J.     Lakari,     labor 

H.    Mattson,    labor 

Isaac   Hill,   team  work.. 

Will    I'urtilo,    labor 

Ciias.  Pelt,  labor 

Matt  Pelt,  labor 

H.  Sipola.  labor 

Gust  Kldi,  labor 

J.  Keskila,  labor 

Otto  Sorsiska,  labor... 
Eno  Hovanka.  labor... 


71486 
71487 
71488 
71489 
71490 
71491 
71492 
71493 
71494 
71495 
71496 
71497 
71498 
71499 
71500 
71501 
71502 
11503 
71504 
71505 
71506 
71507 

7150.8 
74S41 
74842 

74843 
74844 
74845 
74.>;46 
74847 
74848 
74849 
74>*50 
74851 
74852 
74853 
7485  1 
74855 
74S56 
74857 
74858 
7  4859 
74860 

74861 
71862 

75099 
76348 
76349 
76350 
76351 
76352 
76353 
76354 
76355 
76356 
76357 
76358 
76359 
76360 
76361 

76362 

76363 
76081 

760S1 

76081 


33  75 
25  00 
24  00 

22  00 
33  75 

23  00 
18  00 

6  00 

5  00 
21  00 
51  76 ! 71580 


69354 
68355 
69356 
69357 

69358 
69359 
69360 
69361 
69362 
70591 

705J2 
71571 
71572 
71573 
71674 
71575 
71576 
71577 
71578 
1579 


Gusi     Maki.    labor 

A.     Adolfson.     labor 

J.     .lokala,     labor 

Albert    Lindman,      team 
work     

And.     F.ldi.     labor 

<>.«<-ar   .Jolin.'=on,    foreman 

Henry  Hendrickson   lab- 
or       

John    Katalsto,    labor... 

A.    Laitala,    labor 

Santos    Saail,    labor.... 

John    .fohnson,    labor... 

Cno    Huttula.    labor.... 

Mike    I'uli,    labor 

Tilll    Ktiosman,    labor... 

Henry    Hommer.   labor.. 

Matt    Wieonen,    labor... 

Cluis.    Tarkman,    labor.. 

Matt     Lehto,     labor 

Ole    Maata,    labor 

H.     Simonson.     labor.... 

Chas.    Niemi,    labor 

Fred   .Johnson,    labor.... 

John    Mnkela,    labor.  .  . . 

Tiireanus    Lahti.    labor.. 

Jolin       Johimon.         team 
work     

Matt    Lehto,    team    work 

Claus      Damberg,      team 
Work      

W.    H.    Congdon.    tools.  . 

Oscar   .Johnson,    fiireman 

H.    Hoiirickson,    labor... 

John    Katuisto.    labor... 

Uno   Huttula.    labor 

Mike     Nuti.     lal>or 

Henry    Hammas.    labor. 

Malt     \'ironen.     labor... 

Chas.     Tarkeman.     labor 

Man    Lehto.    labor 

Teulian     Lahti.     labor... 

John    Hammas.    labor... 

John    Jolmson.    labor... 

Fred    .Anderson,    labor,. 

Claus      Damberg.      team 
work      

John       Johnson.        team 

work      

Matt    Lehto,    team    work 
Andrew  B.vstrom,  sharp- 
ening    tools 

Andrew  Bystjrom.  sharp- 
ening   tools 

Andrew  Bystrom,  sharp- 
ening    tools 


23  00 
6  00 
8  00 
6  00 

24  00 
6  00 

24  00 
6  00 

5  00 
22  00 

6  00 

4  50 
54  00 
44  00 

28  00 
28  00 

7  00 
87 
55 
93 
12 


1581 
71582 
71583 
71584 
71585 
71586 
71587 
71588 

71589 

71590 
71591 
71592 
71593 
71594 
71595 
71596 
71597 
71598 
71599 
72367 


7 

12 

24 

20 

18  37  173329 

27  55 

21  43 


73328  E 


24  93 

17  05 
16  IS 

18  80 
20  55 
14  43 

6  12 
11  37 


73333 
73334 
73335 
73336 
73337 
73338 
73339 
73340 
73341 
73342 
73343 
73344 
7334  5 
73346 
21  00 '73347 
21  00 173348 
•Zl  00  I  73349 
21  00  173350 


24  75 
11  25 

14  62 
3  60 
38  50 
22  30 
22  30 
20  12 


12 
21 
19 
5 
11 


00 
25 
25 
37 


14  62 

24  75 
16  87 

2  55 

8  95 

6  35 


Total 
VIRGINIA 


.$   1,211  63 


AND        INTERNATIONAL 
ROAD. 

Commissioners    District    No.    6. 
66516   A.    Hawkin.^on,     tools... 

66552  John     Keonla,    labor.... 

66553  Oscar    Myntti,    labor 

»Jtj."">4   Stephaiius     Yeka,,    labor 

66555  Keb.'n    Sebbalo,    labor..  3100 

66556  Cals    Jyringe.     labor....  3100 

66557  Matt    Jacobson,    labor..  30  00 
6ii5S8  Jolin     Maltala,     labor...  27  00 

66559  Louis    Koski.    labor 20  00 

66560  Olaf    Jacobson.    foreman  40  00 
66610  Leander     Mattson,     con 

tract     work 

A.  Hawklnson.  tools. 
N.    O.    Johnson,    labor. . 

•John     Maki,     labor 

Oscar  Mlnti.  labor.... 
Hiski  Koski.  labor,... 
Malt,  Jacobson.  labor. 
.Jocol)  Asola,  labor,  ,  . . 
Erick  Metonen,  labor. 
Nestar    Walin.    labor.. 


William    Mattson.    labor 

John    Maki,     labor 

Jack  Untlnen.  labor.... 
John       Bouska.         team 

work     

John  Bou.ska.  labor 

John   Hernesmaa,   labor. 

Fred    Suoga,    labor 

Isaack  Niemi,  labor 

Thos.  Mattson,  labor.... 
E.    S.    du     Pont    Powder 

Co.,  dynamite,  etc 

M.  E,  Gleason,  tools 

Ed.  Nlckson,  foreman... 
Aug.  Bouska,  team  work 

Isaac  Niemi,   labor 

Joe  Bouska,  team  work. 

Oscar   Maki,    labor 

Ed  Jarvl,   labor 

Oscar  Tieva,  labor 

Jacob  Tuhkanon,  labor.. 

Aug.    Hulla,    labor 

Wm.  Mattson.  labor 

Fred  Souja,  labor 

Fratik  Anderson,  labor.. 
Jacob  Untinen.  labor,... 

John  Maki.  labor 

Chas.  Luomi.  labor 

.John  Hermesm.ia.  labor. 
Thos.  Mattson.  labor.... 
Thos.       Mattson,        team 

work    

Isaac  Jarvl.  labor 

John   I.,ounen,   labor..... 

Hy.   Manila,    labor 

Sam  .Vlckson,  team  work 
And.   Esterberg,  labor... 

John    Bouska,   labor 

Frank  Lelitlii;akis,  labor 
Matt  Kangas.  Jr.,  labor. 
Matt  Kangas,  Sr.,  labor. 
Anion  Kolchewar,  labor 
Ed  Nlckson,  foreman. . . 
E.   I.   du      Pont      Powder 

Co.,    dynamite    

Ed  Nickson,  foreman... 
Thosas     Mattson,      learn 

work 
August 
August 

labor 
Frank 

work     

John  Hernesman,  labor. 
Andrew  Mattson,  labor. 
William    .Mattson,    labor 

Fred    Suoja,    labor 

Hans    Nienii.    labor 

.Matt  Kaiigas,  Sr.,  labor. 
Matt   Kaugas,   Jr.,  labor. 

Mall    Mantilla,    labor 

Oscar    Maki.    labor 

August    I'iekala.    labor,. 

Oscar    Tleva,    labor 

Gust    Hill,    labor 

Andrew   Esterberg  labor 

Chas.    I..uomi,   labor 

Gust   Niemi,   labor 

John   Maki,   labor 

Isaac    .larvi,    labor 

.\xel    Slarkman,    .labor.. 

73351  Hy    Mattila.    labor 

73352  John   Banka,  team   work 

75353   Gust    Niemi,    lab<'r 

73354  John  Saminen,  lab(jr.  ... 
74X98  Ed,  Nickson,  foreman... 
7  4899    Til  OS.        Mattson,        team 

work    

74900  Aug.    Hahlu.    labor 

74901  Jolin  Souniinen,  labor... 

74902  Wm.    Mattson,    labor.... 

74903  Clias.  Suonii.   labor 

71904   Isaac   Jarvi.    labor 

74905  John  Hennesmaa,   labor. 

74906  John   Maki.    labor 

74907  And.   Esterberg.  labor... 

74908  Aug.    Hendrickson.   labor 

74909  I'led  Sevvja.  team   work. 

74910  Frank    Ander.^on,    labor. 

74911  Hans   Niemi.   labor 

74912  Bust  Nurnii.   labor 

74913  John  Bauska,  team  work 

74914  Gust    Piekkola,    labor... 

74915  Gust    Niemi,    labor 

74916  Oscar  Tleva,   labor 

Gust    Hill,    labor 

Slarkman,  labor... 
Nickson,    labor.... 

Maialii,    labor 

Vllmonen,   labor... 
Bauska,    labor 


73330 
73331 

73332 


Hulita,   labor.  . . 
Hendrickson, 

Anderson,      team 


29  30 

25  80 
20  55 

68  62 
6  25 

26  25 

20  12 

17  50 
6  12 

15  46 

4  35 
55  50 

27  50 

28  50 
86  25 
32  50 

24  00 

32  50 

27  50 
35  60 

30  50 

25  50 

33  50 

29  50 

31  60 

32  50 
•33  00 

18  50 

21  25 
32  50 

24  50 

28  00 
66  25 
20  50  i 

3  00; 

10  50  ! 

11  50 

6  so! 
3  75  ; 

5  01  I 

15  82  i 

39  00  ■• 

60  00 

26  00  I 

I 

25  00  , 

60  00  ' 

22  00  j 
22  00 
22  00 
20  00 
22  00 


74826  Ole   Mattson.  teaiit  work 

74827  Charley  Anderson,  team 
work     •< 

76328  Martin    NelsoB.    foteman 

76329  John    Lind,    labor. 

76330  Ed   Carlson,    labor 

76331  Gust    Hekkela,    labor... 
76333   Matt   Mattsoniiabbr 

76333  Fred    Anderson,    labor.  .. 

76334  John   Salmela,  l«ibor.  . . . 
76U5  John  Salmela,  teai*  work 

76336  John    Halloppa,    labor,.. 

76337  Sam   Halloppi,   labor.... 

76338  Matt    Halloppa,    la^or... 
176339   Ole   Mattson,   labor 

76340  John    Makela,    labor.... 

76341  John   Johnson,   labor ...  . 

76342  Ole   Mattson,    teamwork 
•76343   Matt    Knuti,    labor 

176344  Matt    Hill,   labor.  „ 

176345  Frank    Fleaneen.:. 

176346  Gust  Malander,  labor.. 
76347  David  Kosmun<S.  tabor. 
76083  Nels     J.      Benson,     fuse. 

caps     

76088  Claus      Damberg,      rent- 
ing   wagon 


118 

2  25 

16  50 

9  63 

9  63 

10  50 

10  50 
8  76 

6  13 

11  25 

7  00 
87( 

8  75 


road. 


Old  Mesaba  road. 
Old    Hermantown 

Oakman     road 

Old    Vermilion    road 

Old    Vermilion    road 

Prairie  Lake  road 

Pike    River    road 

Payne  and  "White  Face  road. 

Proctor    road 

Payne   Lake-Nicholls   road..., 

Prector    road 

Ryan    road • 

Rice    Lake    road . 


1,892  25 

1,088  66 

925  00 

';4.726  56 

10  10 

1,112  88 

1,741  65 

630  66 

10  50 

393  97 

352  15 

561  13 

2.581  28 


Swan    Lake    road 2,144  79 


Total     . . . . , 

WEST    KNIFE 

Commissioner's 
3256  Clias.    Rosen, 
Chas.     Rosen, 
Hans  Olson. 
H.    E,    Olson 


274  85 


73257 
73258 
73259 
73260 
73261 
73262 
73263 
73264 

73265 
74885 
74SS6 
74887 
74888 
74889 
74890 
74891 
74892 
74893 
74894 


RIVER 

District 

foreman. 

foreman 

labor 

labor. 


ROAD. 
No.    2. 


1 75  I  Savanna     road 
9. 63  I  Sherman    road 

Short   Line    bridge. 

Schultz    road    

Sturgeon   Lake    road 

Stony    Brook   road 

Savanna     brldg'e 

St.   Louis   River  road 

Seville   road    

Slverson    load ■ 

1  Shipley    road 

I  Stahlbrodt    road 

Townline     road 

Tower    and    Itasca    road. 

Tower    and    Itasca    road. 

Thompson 

Tower  and 

Tower   and 


9  63 

18  00 
7  00 
7  00 
1  75 
4  38 

4  38 

1  65 

5  00 


..... 


<  0  ; 

25 
00  . 


Sidney    Chllds,     labor... 
Lewis    Brown,    labor,.., 

E.  Brown,    labor 

F.  Peterson,    labor 

H.        Halvorson,        team 

work  .... 
J.  L.  Brown, 
Chas.  fiosen, 
Chas.  Rosen, 
H.  E.  Olson, 
H.  Olson. 
Sidney    C 


team  work 
foreman. . 
foreman. . 

labor 

labor 

hilds,    labor. 


Sidney   Chllds.   labor.... 

E.  Brown,    labor 

A.    Larri vee,    labor , 

F.  Pelterson,    labor 

H.       Halvorson,         team 

work      

74895  M,        Martinson,        team 

work      

74896  R.    Dodge,    labor 


8  00  !  74897   R.    Dodge,    labor. 


13  50 

31  00  , 

31  00  i  T4917 

3100  74918 
74919 
74920 
74921 
74922 
75123 


74749   A.    Lundstrom. 
71750  Goo.     Kilev.     te: 

54751   Le    Tuer, 
4752    J. 


>hn    jrischer, 
men     

Total     


boarding 


TOWER      AND      EMBARRASS 

74753  John     Pylka,     foreman.. 

74754  Isaac  Lamppa.  labor... 
7475f>  Sami  Hannula,  labor.. 
VI757  Matt  Matj>on.  labor.,., 
747;*s    Ele.s    I'akk:i!a,   labor.... 

74759  John     Worlin,     labor.... 

74760  Cale     Matson,     labor.... 

74761  Oskari    Smuntter,     labor 

74762  John    H.\rju.    labor 

74763  Erik    Sikkila.    labor.... 

74764  John  Heinonen,  labor.  . 
7  4765   Jalmari     Lamppa.    labor 

74766  William    Ranta.    labor.. 

74767  Jaakob    Rantala    labor.  . 

T4768   John    Ko.^ki.    labor 

74769  Matt  Hakkara.  labor.  .  . 
T4770  Victor    Erkilla.    labor... 


19  40 

21  75 

19  75 

21  75 

21  75 

23  70 

18  75 

38  00 

14  00 

34  00 

36  00 

52  25 

95  00 

12  00 

5  00 

10  00 

102  25 

5,608  27 
ROAD. 

46  25 

7  53 
16  98 
25  90 

25  20 
10  50 

«24  6^ 
10  50 
22  23 
22  93 

26  43 
6  00 

8  60 
12  7S 
10  50 
12  7S 
10  15 


Total     I      299  94 


VERMILION     ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No. 
63440   Robt.      Thompson,      con- 
track     work 

Tho..i.  Stack,  foreman,. 
J.  McDonald,  labor.... 
Alex    McDonald,    labor.. 

Chas.    Sands,    labor 

L.    Normiskie. 
M.    Sweeney, 
Sam    Higgins. 


69434 

69435 

69436 

♦.9437 

6<M38 

69439 

<>9440 

S»i41 

69442 

6»443 

69444 

69445 

69446 

69447 

69448 

694  49 

63  450 

62«451 

69452 

69453 

69454 

69455 

69456 

694  57 

69458 

69  459 

6.4460 

6'»46I 

69462 

69463 

69464 

69465 

69466 

70605 
71479 
71480 
71481 
714S2 
71483 
71484 

74526 

74527 
74528 
74529 
74530 


74532 


labor. , 
labor.  . 
labor, 
labor. 


H.     Beckmaii 

F.    Barch.    labor 

J.    Campbnil.    labor 

B.    Hagadore.   labor 

F.  Dunnigan,  labor.  . . . 
Walter  Johnson,  labor. 
Harvey  Pearson,  labor. 
Walter    Griewlen.    labor 

Joe    Rosine     labor 

C     Knorock.    labor 

Louis     Landta,     labor... 

John     Miller,    labor 

Joe  Sudtiskie.  labor... 
John  Suduskie.  labor.. 
Egnes  Prunick,  labor.. 
Aleck  Slpuskle.  labor.  . 
Egner  Masinick,  labor 
Swan  Magnick,  labor.. 
Chas.    Branat,    labor.... 

John    Jacobs,    labor 

R.  Langley.  team  work 
F.    Erlckson.   team   work 

Alex    Juter,    labor 

Joe  Kozarick,  labor... 
J.      W.      Murphy,      team 

work     

Thos.      Slock,      boarding 

men      

E.  Fiebiger,    tools 

Thos.  Stock,  foreman . . 
.->wan    Magnuson,    labor. 

H.     Norell.     labor 

J.    Madz.    labor 

Victor  Magnuson.  labor 
Thos.     Stock.       boarding 

men      

Nels    Olson,     labor 

Frank  Hanson,  labor... 
Nels  Johnson,  labor.... 
H.     Hagmrlchl.    labor... 

F.  S'.appan,    team    work 
Robt.     Thompson,     fore- 
man       

Stewart      Transfer     Co., 
team     work 


50  00 
43  50 
19  38 
19  50 

8  00 
17  60 
19  25 

13  63 

14  83 
17  28 
17  28 

12  50 
16  00 

16  $3 

17  28 
17  23 
17  10 
17  28 
17  18 
10  60 
10  60 
10  60 

15  72 
15  60 

13  00 

9  25 
4  00 
8  00 

64  68 
70  00 
34  00 
41  00 

32  00 

255  55 
8  90 

3  00 

27  25 
6  00 

17  60 
23  00 

12  75 

13  00 

4  91 

28  00 
12  86 

4  00 

15  00 

16  00 


68317 
6SI20 
6S421 
68422 
68423 
6S424 
68425 
68426 
68427 
684*2  8 
68429 
68430 
68431 
6843  2 
68433 
68434 
68435 

68436 
6S437 
68438 
684  39 
6S440 
68441 
68442 
68443 
68444 
69287 
69467 
69468 
69469 
G9470 
69471 
69472 
69473 
69474 
69475 
69476 
69477 
69478 
69479 
69480 

69481 

69482 
69483 
69484 
69485 
694S6 
69487 
70595 
71509 
71510 

71511 
71512 
71513 
71514 
71515 
71516 
71517 
71518 
71519 
71520 
71521 
71522 
71523 
71524 
71525 
74492 

74493 
74494 
74495 
74496 
74  497 
74498 
74499 
75121 


Sam  Luima.  labor 

Ab.-aham  Pelkl,  labor.. 

John     Pertu.     labor 

Leo    Waline,     labor 

Victor  Ralio.  team  work 

Simon     Koskl.    labor,... 

Chas.    Uring.    labor 

Louis       Malison,         team 
work     

John    Harvln.    labor..., 

Helmar  Mikima.   labor.. 

Sam    Lundquist,    labor.  , 

Matt    Chergla.    labor.... 

.Salmon     Tibo.     labor.... 

Olaf    Jacobson.    foreman 

Herman    Mattson,    labor 

John    Kiski,    labor 

John     Jacobson.     labor.. 

A.    Hawkinson.    material 

N.    O.    .Tohnson,    labor... 

Oscar    Neuti,    labor 

Nestor    Waline,     labor., 

Abraham    Pelki.    labor.. 

John    Kosky,    labor 

Hesie    Kosky,    labor.... 

Salmon    Tebo,    labor.... 

Jacob    Esala.    labor 

Herman    Mattson.    labor 

.Samuel    Lund<4uist,  labor 

Sam    Lugmo.    labor 

Matt     Jacobson,    labor.  . 

John    Petru,    team    work 

John        Jacobson.      team 
work     

Louis      Mattson.        team 

■work     

J.    P.    Maki,    team    work 

Chas.    Jurine,    labor 

Ole    Johnson,    labor 

John    Haryn,    labor 

John   Koski.   labor 

Olaf  Jacobson,  foreman 
A.  Hawkinson,  dynamite 
John  Peter,  team  work 
Louis      Mattson,        team 

work     

Alex    Jaison,    labor 

Jacob    Esala,    labor 

Kesci    Koski.    labor 

Herman  Mattson,  labor 
Chas.  Jyrnen.  labor..., 
Salmon,  Tebo,  labor..., 
John  P.  Maki,  labor.... 
Matt    Jacobson,    labor.  . 

John     Koski.    labor 

Abraham.     Pakio,     labor 

Sam    Liioma,    labor 

Nestor    Walin,    labor..., 

John    Haryn,    labor 

John    Kosky,    labor 

Olaf  Jacobson.  foreman 
C.    L.      Jacobson,      team 

work     

John  Perttu.  team  work 
Abraham    Pelkl,    labor.. 

Chas.    .Tyrin,    labor 

Matt   Jacobson,    labor... 

Tan    Sarrala,    labor 

Louis  Mattson.  labor... 
Olaf  Jacobson,  labor. . . 
A.     Hawkinson,     powder 

Total   


300  00 
74  55 
33  00 
30  00 

28  00 
30  00 
30  50 

29  00 
27  00 

30  00  ' 
19  00  ■ 

30  00 ; 

31  00  ' 
30  00  i 
81  25  164321 


Axel 

John 

Malt 

John 

Jo^ 

Frank  Hodge,  black- 
smith work  and  mer- 
chandise   


12  00 
18  00 
20  00 
20  00 
20  00 
20  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
18  00 

13  00 

14  00 
14  00 
30  00 
10  00 

8  00 
24  00 

40  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
14  00 
12  00 
16  00 
14  00 
40  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
40  00 
16  00 
12  00 
14  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
16  00 
6  00 
4  00 


6  00 


75097 


Knute 
smitli 

Total 


Berg, 
work 


black- 


!4 
17 
17 

83  00 
32  00 
26  00 
22  00 
6  00 

62  50 
12  50 
15  00 
20  00 
20  00 

4  00 
14  00 

9  00 

26  00 

27  00 
26  00 

32  50 

25  00 

12  00 

»00 

3  25 


Itasca 

road 

Hinsdale    road. . . . 

Ely    road 

Tischer    road 

Tower  and  Embarrass  road.. 
Vermilion  road.  District  No.  2 
road,  District  No.  4 
and 


408  71 

232  78 

437  08 

400  00 

4,368  45 

875  06 

119  13 

693  90 

601  56 

537  70 

628  06 

138  50 

646  71 

2  327  40 

1.287  29 

1.299  03 


Vertnlllon 
Virginia 

road     

Virginia         and 

road     

While   Iron    road 

\^'^akely    road 

Willow    River   road 

West   Pike   FMver  road. 
West  Knife   River  road 

Walhalla     road 

Willow    River    road.... 

Total     

Total    refunds    

Add   orders  No.   74651.. 
Add  orders  No.  74652. 
Add  error  in   fooling 

register,   page   71.. 


International 
Pike       River 


969  35 
2.784  54 
5,608  27 

299  94 
1,234  30 
1,211  05 

2.999  30 


21  75  1 

2,844  35 

1,266  67 

477  37 

274  85 

495  75 

201  65 

1,378  05 


66397 

66595 

66736 

66831 

66372 

66885 

67036 

67070 

67172 

67204 
67205 

67223 
67579 

67735 

67876 

67976 

67985 

68033 

68047 

68216 
68634 

68658 

68753 

68929 
69027 

i  ; 69180 


F.   R.   Schuman,   District 

trict   No.    32    8S9  72 

F.  R.  LindBtrom.  Dis- 
trict No,  58    S9  54 

John     M.     Wallln.     Dl.^- 

trict    No.    15 189  74 

A.     M.    Olmen,       District 

No.    10     110  91 

T.  C,  Peterson,  Dis- 
trict   No,    51 50  89 

Chas  F.  Nelson.  Dis- 
trict   No.    13 1.260  29 

M.   E.  Gleason.     Distrk  t 

No.   12    15.962  40 

N.   N.    TrlDlett,      Distrlt  t 

No.     19     1.697  61 

Matt    Kanslsta,    District 

No.    61    360  67 

J.  J,  Le  Tourneau,  Ind.  ..   40.000  00 

Robt.    E.    Bailie,   District 

No.    22    10.000  00 

J.  J.  Tourneau,  Ind 20,000  00 

Wm.  McComber,  Dlstrht 
No.    55    

Be.TJamin  Ledaux,  Dis- 
trict. No.   40 


314  95 
16,000  00 
10,000  00 


warrant 


.115,710  04 

171  04 

11  00 

8  00 

79  20 


Total  debits,  see 
ance     


ledger     bal- 


Outstanding   warrants 


,115,979  28 
3,712  33 


495  75 


WALHALLA    ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No, 
68561   J.   A.   Carlson,    labor.... 
Alfred  Hakonen.  labor.. 
Ole    Hanson     labor     .... 

Joel    Wolf,    labor    

Pelfer  Swanson,  Ibbor.. 
Oscar  Johnson,  labor.. 
Chas.  Sellnian-  fiireman 
Peter  Swanson.  fore- 
man     -  . .  ^ 

O.    C.    Hanson,    labor..., 
A.    E.    Anderson,    la'bor.. 

Joe     Wolf      labor 

E.    G.    Norberg.    labor.. 
Jolin     Jolinson.      labor.. 

Nels    Lee,    labor 

Carl    J.    Larson,    labor., 
John   McKay,   tools    .... 

Total S 


6S562 
69563 
68564 
68565 
68.".66 
68.".67 
74863 

74864 
74865 
74866 
71867 
74868 
74869 
74870 
76096 


00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 


Total 


.i    2.S44  35 


64316 
64317 
64318 
64319 
64320 


30  00 
26  00 


60  00  I 
21  00 
20  00 
23  00  I 
20  00 
20  00  : 
41  25  i 
20  00 
20  00  ! 
18  75i 
12  60  1 

18  50  I 
33  60  \ 
41  20  1 

45  20 

39  40 

46  80  ; 

40  80! 
45  20  ' 
43  60  1 

41  80 
45  20  I 
43  20  ■ 

104  00  i 

70  00 

114  00  j 

49  20  , 
43  20  I 
43  20  ' 
39  20 

31  20 
59  00 

32  50 

50  00 

50  00 
20  00 

19  50 

20  00 

19  50 

20  00 
19  50 

24  00 
19  54) 
19  50 
19  50 
19  50 

18  00 

19  50 
16  00 

25  00 

22  50 
22  50 
8  75 
8  75 
8  75 
8  75 

8  75 
11  25 

9  00 

.1   2,999  30 


con- 


con - 


WAKELY    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 
63430    W.    11       Congdon   ii   Son, 

d.vnamite,    etc     

Ole    Sassos,    foreman.  .  .  . 
John   1'.   Johnson,   labor, 

OI"   Bystrom,    labor 

Steve    Toley,     material. 
Chas.    J.    Johnson,      ma- 
terial      

Fred  Anderson,  material 

64975  Ole    Sassos.    foreman.... 

64976  Albert    Peterson,    labor. 

64977  Steve    Todey,    labor 

65870  Chas     J.     Johnson,    con- 
tract    work 

65871  Steve      Todey,      contract 
work     

66575  Fred       Anderson,       con- 
tract    work 

66576  Chas.     J.     Johnson,    con- 
tract  work    

68568  Ole   Sassos,    foreman.... 

68569  Chas.    J.    Johnson,    labor 

68570  Fred   Anderson,   contract 
work     

69430  Ole    Sassos,     foreman.., 

69431  Geo.    Bay,    labor 

69432  Charles    Johnson, 
tract     work 

69433  Fred        Anderson, 
tract     work 

70600  E.   T.   Johnson,   engineer 
expense     

71526  Ole     Sassos,     foreman... 

71527  George    Bay,    labor 

71528  Chas.    J.    Johnson,    labor 

71529  Sam  Swanson,   labor.... 

71530  Louis    Swanson.    labor., 

71531  Chas.    A.    Johnson,    labor 

71532  Kenaold    Johnson,    labor 

73243  Ole    Sassos,     foreman... 

73244  Jack    Hill,     labor 

73245  Oscar    Slue,    labor 

73246  Louis    Swanson,    labor., 

73247  Sam    .Swanson,    labor... 

73248  Chas      J.     Jolinson,       la- 
bor      

73249  Chas.    A.     Johnson.      la- 
bor     

73250  Henry    Palvola.     labor.. 

73251  Fred    Anderson,    labor.  . 
75252  George     Bay.     labor..., 

73253  Pete     Pederson.     labor.. 

73254  Jack    Johnson,    labor... 

73255  Ole       Sassos,       boarding 
men      

74871  Ole    Sassos,     foreman... 

74872  Fred    Anderson,    labor.. 

74873  Peter    Pederson,    labor., 

74874  Henry    Pawala,     labor.. 

74875  Chas.     Nllson,     labor..,, 

74876  Sam    Swanson,     labor.  .  . 

74877  Chas.    J.    Johnson,    labor 

74878  Fred       Anderson,     team 
work     

74879  Loulsi  Nelson,  team  work 

74880  Nils    Socknes,    labor.... 

74881  L.    G.    Larson,    labor 

74882  Louis    Sundloy,    labor.., 

74883  Nels     Larson,     labor.... 

74884  Ole    Jensen,    labor 

75104   Ben       Erlckson.       dyna- 
mite,    tools,    etc 

76322  Ole  Sassos,    foreman.... 

76323  Chas.    J.    Johnson,    labor 

76324  Ole    Aune,    labor 

76325  Chas.  Nilson,  labor.... 
76326*John  P.  Johnson,  labor 
76327  Clias.   A.    Johnson,   labor 


4. 


11  40 

6  25 

5  00 

6  OO 

20  00 

44  00 

66  00 

5  00 

2  00 

20  00 

33  00 

5  00 

99  00 

55  00 

5  50 

27  50 

27  50 

5  50 

10  50 

79  75 
110  00 

25  02 
18  00 

26  68 
12  25 
17  50 

17  50 

12  25 

6  12 
21  00 
46  00 

27  50 
36  00 
36  00 

39  00 

13  00 

18  00 
20  00 
13  50 

11  00 
6  00 

10  50 
6  00 
30  00 
29  00 
16  00 
15  50 
6  00 


WILLOW   RIVER   ROAD. 

Commossloner's  District  No. 
64950  Marshall  -  Wells        Hdw. 

Co.,    tools » 

06514  Marshall  -  Wells        Hdw, 

Co.,   tools 

66561  Pat    Greaney,    foreman.. 

66562  Pat  Greaney.  team  work 

66563  Fred   Larson,    labor 

66.")64   John  Gregorlss,   labor... 

66565  Steve  Hackett.  labor.... 

66566  George    H.    Paul,   labor.. 

66567  Frank    Vesel,    labor 

66568  Pat   Greaney,    labor 

66569  Pat   Greaney,    labor 

66570  Casper  Meluck.    lal)or... 

66571  Fred    Larson,    labor 

66572  John  Gregoriss,  labor... 

66573  John  Heduke,  labor 

66574  Joe  Skolskey.  labor 

72366   B.   Erlckson,   material... 
72366    E.     I.     du     I'ont     Powder 

Co.,     dynamite 

73306  Robert    Barto.    foreman, 

73307  Robert    Barlo,    foreman. 

73308  John  Shaspausky.  labor. 

73309  Ed    Kennedy,    labor 

73310  Dan   Kennedy,    labor.... 

73311  Joseph  Judd,  labor 

73312  Leo    Demo,    labor 

73313  Andrew    Johnson,    labor. 

73314  Edw.   Haro,   labor 

73315  Mike  Donahue,  labor.... 

73316  Mike  Donahue,  labor.... 

73317  Saul   Friend,   labor 

73318  Peter   Kobe,    labor 

73319  John      Bennarjarvin,    la- 
bor    

73320  Wm.   Forsle.   labor 

73321  Andrew  Tesleth,   labor.. 

73322  Matt    Halupha,    labor... 

73323  Matt    Halupha.    labor... 

73324  Wm.    King,   labor 

73325  A.    W.   Erlckson.   labor.. 

73326  Gust    Johnson,     labor.., 

73327  S.    M.    Friend,    labor 

74923  Robt.   L.   Barlo,    foreman 

74924  John    Shapansky.    labor. 

74925  Edward     Kinney,     labor 
;  74926   R.     P.     Risbergst.     labor 

174927  Peter  Risbergst.   labor.. 

174928  Peter    Koble,    labor 

74929   John    Ruomayrul,    labor 

174930  And.     Johnson,     labor... 

174931  Adolph     Ferber.    labor.. 

174932  Hugh    Curry,    labor 

74933  Mike     Donohue.    labor.. 

74934  Dan    Kenney,    labor.,,. 

74935  Gust    Johnson,    labor. . . 

74936  A.   W.   Erickson,   labor.. 

74937  John   Shapanslcj',   board- 
ing   men    : 


11  00 

33  00 
18  00 

17  00 
14  00 

18  00 
13  00 

16  00 

17  00 

12  65 

201  65 


7. 


6  07 

18  00 
20  00 

3  50 
14  00 

5  25 


COUNTY    SCHOOL    FUND. 
68083  C.      C.      Dinehart,      stale 
treasurer,      fines      col- 
lected  county   school..         ,25  00 
M.arch     apportionment   4.4,715  56 
October  apportionment  68,793  57 


Refunds     .  .  . . 
Total    debits. 

ance    sheet 


see 


%      153  80 

bal- 
$113,687  93 


DITCH    FUND. 
Judicial  Ditch   No.    1.  and   state  Ditches 

63,  54  and  55. 
71715  Geo.    A.    Ralpii,    judicial 
ditcli      No.       1      Itasca 

county     liiO  18 

71949  S.  G.   Iverson.  slate  aud- 
itor,     judicial        ditch 

No.    53,    54,    55 

McDowell,    judl- 


5 

1 

9 

12 

8 
7 
6 
7 
6 


71958 
72230 
73258 
7358S 
76414 
76415 
76416 


W.     A. 
cial 
H.    E. 


75127  E.  Matheson,  teamwork 
75132  P.  J.  Ryan,  freight  on 
grader    and    horses. 


76079   Austin        Western 
Ltd..   heavy  blade 
76085  Capt.    Cody,    hay... 
76082   Brose     Merc.     Co,, 
blng,    groceries. , 

Total   ■ 


Co.. 
comp 


Hlb- 


25 
75 
00 
00 
75 
87 
12 
87 
12 
38  00 

35  30 
67  00 

21  00 
62  00 
60  00 
62  00 

8  00 
43  00 

50  00 
38  00 
16  00 

36  00 
16  00 
46  00 

51  00 

27  00 

37  00 
6  00 
4  00 

25  00 
10  00 
10  00 

28  00 
45  00 
28  00 
18  26 

6  20 

6  20 

16  90 

12  20 

22  00 
24  00 

24  00 
18  25 
18  25 

34  00 

32  00 

45  75 
10  00 

33  60 

25  00 
18  00 

35  05 


ditch  No. 
GrafCam. 

ditch.  No.  1. 
J.       S.       Gale, 

ditch.  No.  1. 
A.    J.    McGuire. 

ditch.  No.  1.. 
Geo.    A.    Ralph, 

ditch.  No.  1.  . 
O.     F.     Doyle. 

ditch,  No.  1.. 
M.    A.      Spang. 

ditch.    No.    1.  . 

Total   debits 
ance    sheet) 

Outstanding 


judicial 
judicial 
judicial 
Judicial 
judicial 
judicial 

(see   bal- 
$36,840  05 

warrants?      618  55 


35,93200 

67  17 

7  14 

7  14 

7  14 

43  50 

618  85 

1  93 


.%   1,378  05 


<••••«•< 


4 
12 


00 

50 


12  50 
5  00 


VIRGINI.\    AND    PIKE    RIVER    ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District    No.    6. 

64953  Sam         Hill,  contract 

work      4  50 

64954  Virginia    Hdw.    Co.,    dy- 

namite,   etc 17  25 


Total 


WHITE   IRON    ROAD. 
Commissioner's    District    No. 

68571  Ed     Nicksen,     foreman.. 

68572  August       Banka,       team 

w  ork     

Hv    Mttila    team  work.. 

Hv.   Mattila.   labor 

Isaac     Niemi.     labor.... 

Malt    Kangas     labor.... 

Gust   Pukola,    labor 

Jacob    Pyhola,   labor.  .  . . 

Mike    Hiiva.    labor    

Chas.     Luomi,     labor.... 

Du  Pont  Powder  Co.. 
dvnamite    etc   

Du  Pont  Powder  Co.. 
dvnamite      etc      

Du  Pont  Powder  Co.. 
dynamite    etc   

M.    E.    (rleason.    tools... 

E.  Nickson,  foreman.... 

Aug.  Bronska.  team 
work    

Kusti    Bikala,    labor.... 

Kace     T.,uomi.     labor.... 

Aug.    Huhta.    labor 

I)avid    Abo     labor 

Yako    Bykala,    labor.... 

K.     Jarvi.     labor     

Frank     Anderson,     labor 

John    Vilmanen.    labor.. 

Heike  Mattila    labor.... 

Wento    Ojala.    labor.... 

Aug.  Hendrickson,  la- 
bor      

69352  Yaisak  Jarvl.  labor.... 

69353  John  Bouska.  labor.... 


68573 
68574 
68575 
68576 
«S577 
68578 
685  79 
68580 
69279 

69279 

69279 

69294 
69339 
69340 

69341 
69342 
69343 
69344 
69345 
693  46 
693  47 
69348 
69349 
69350 
69351 


;i  75 


26  12 

42  75 
33  75 

1  75 
16  62 
16  62 
16  62 
16  18 

2  62 
1  75 

8  67 

22  57 

14  32 

27  56 
60  50 


00 
00 
00 


2  00 

6  95 
12  00 

7  00 
6  00 

4  00 

5  50 
4  00 


Total   I  1.266  67 


WILLOW   RIVER   ROAD. 

Commissioner's    District   No. 

64978 

64979 


96  75 

34  12 

34  12 

33  25 

32  37 

12  68 

5  25 

32  80 

13  55 

9  00 

28  87 

30  62 

28  43 

31  50 

64980 
64981 
64982 
64983 
71600 
71601 
71602 
71603 
71604 
71605 
71606 
71607 
71608 
71609 
71610 
71611 
71612 
71613 
71614 
71615 
71616 


74811 
74812 
74813 
74814 
74815 
74816 
74817 
74818 
74819 
74820 
74821 
74822 
74823 
74824 
74826 


foreman. . 
team  work 

labor. . . , 

labor. 


Pat  Greaney. 
Pat  Greaney, 
John  Heduke, 
Joe  Skoskey. 
Casper  Mundich,  »abor. 
Fred  I.«irson,  labor.... 
John  Sapansky,  labor.. 
Robert  Barto,  foreman 
Ed  Kennedy,  labor.... 
Dan  Kennedy,  labor.... 
Joseph  Duds,  labor..., 
Leno  Deno,  labor..  ^... 
Andrew  .Johnson,  labor 
Edward  Havo.  labor... 
Mike    Donohue,,    labor.. 

Saul    Friend,    labor 

S.   M.   Friend,  labor 

Peter    Kobi.    labor 

J.    Rummavayroe,    labor 

Wm,    Tocsi.    labor 

Walter    King,    labor 

Chief    Drift,    labor 

Capt.   D.   Coty.   labor 

Total   1 


48  00 
66  00 
35  87 
31  60 
3  50 
3  60 
28  00 
42  00 
20  00 
IS  00 
19  00 

22  00 

15  00 

16  00 
10  00 

8  00 

8  00 

9  00 
9  50 
9  60 
2  00 

23  00 
30  00 


567  39 
1  ,140  00 

2.618  77 
284  50 
237  24 

1.048  97 
796  53 
411  25 
553  81 
500  50 
300  68 
205  60 
296  00 
492  75 

1  316  98 

8  27 

395  76 

994  51 

3  085  19 

25  00 

997  24 

1.076  34 

2,107  40 

1.999  62 
740  70 
363  00 


477  37 


WEST    PIKE    RIVER   ROAD. 
Martin    Nelson,    foreman 
Gust   Malander.   labor... 

John    Lind,    labor 

Ed    Carlson,    labor 

Gust    Hekkela,    labor... 

Matt    Matson,    labor 

Matt  Hill  team  work.,, 
Fred  Anderson,  labor... 
Frank  Gleason,  labor.  . 
John  Salmela.  team  work 
John  Halloppa,  labor... 
Sam  Halloppa,  labor.... 

Ol-:;    Mattson.    labor 

John     Makela,    labor.... 
Matt   Halloppa^   labor... 


15  13 

2  63 

7  00 

7  00 

6  13 

6  13 

12  38 

4  38 

4  3S 

11  25 

3  50 

3  50 

3  50 

3  50 

3  60 

RECAPITULATION      OF      COUNTY 
RO.;VDS. 

Ashawa     Road     , 

Arkkola     Road 
Aurora    Road    .  . 

Anderson   Road    

Byrin    Road    

Burnslde    Road    

Realty    Road    

Brunt    Mine    Road 

Berklund    Road     

Brown    P.    Road    

Bassett    Road     

Buhl   &   Little   Fork   Road.... 

Calvary     Road     

Cotton    Road    

Crane  Lake   Road   

Culver      Road      

Culver   Extension   Road    

Carlson    Road    

Chisholm     Road     

Canosla   Road   Bridge    

East  Kelsey   Road 

Edin    Road    

Edholm    Road    

Embarrass  &  Pike  River  Road 

Evenson    Road     

Ely  &  Fall  Lake  Road 

East    Duluth    &    Lester    River 

Road      

Fond  du   Lac  Road    

Fish    Lake    Road,    Dlst.    No.    5 

Fish    Lake    Road,    Dist.    No.    2 

Farmers'    Road        

Grand    Lake   Station   Road    .... 

Grant   Road    

Gowan    Road    

Hartley    road     

Halden    road    

Howard    &   Gnesen    road 

Hermantown    road     

Iron  Junction   &   Eveleth   road 

Industrial    road     

Johnson    road    

.Judd     road     

Leander    road    

Lakewood    extension     

Laurens    road    

Lavell     road     

Lowrle  road    

LaVaque  road    

Long    Lake    road    

Lismore    road    

I..akka     road      

McArthur     road 

•McArthur    extension    

.McComber     road     

McQuade    road     

Miller    Trunk      road.      District 
No.    6 

Miller    Trunk    road.       District 
No.    4     

Martz    extension     

Morrison   road    

Miscellaneous     

Martz  road    

Miller    Trunk    road.       District 

No    5    ;-.... 

Maple  Grove   road 

Munger     road 

Miller     Trunk       state       "high- 
way         • 

Morris    Thomas    road    

North    Shore    road    . 

Nelimark    road 


63293 
63711 
63773 
63856 
63941 
639S3 
64003 
64209 
64329 

64  339 
64347 

64460 

64493 

64506 

64507 

64520 

64577 

64583 

64588 

64650 

64666 

64667 

64824 

64847 
65260 

65301 

65304 

65371 

65400 

65463 

66465 

65495 

65548 

65567 
65609 

65710 
65721 
65722 
65727 
65729 
65877 


SCHOOL    DISTRICTa 
John    Fredrickson,    Dis- 
trict   No.    44 133  57 

Robert     E.     Bailie,    Dis- 
trict   No.    22 13.545  49 

L,     G,     Jochlm,     District 

No.   50    136  03 

F.    R.    Lindstrom,       Dis- 
trict   No.    58 5179 

F,   C.    Peterson,    District 

No.  51    120  00 

Abraliam     Wicks  t  r  o  m. 

District    No.    29 579  00 

M.    N.    Triplelt,    District 

No.   19    762  98 

Thomas    Quade,    District 

No.  63    26  00 

W.  A.  Holgate,  Co.  Treas. 
St.    Louis   Co.   Board   of 

Education    751  04 

J.  J.  Le  Tourneau,  Ind..    25,000  00 
Frank        G.       Sandstedt, 

District   No.    30 836  77 

M,  R.  Hannulla,  District 

No.    11    1,13101 

Charles    Buyck,    District 

No.    47     211  18 

M.    S.    Hawkins,   District 

No.    21     19.818  85 

Wm.     Carmechay,      Dis- 
trict No.    24    10,303  57 

Olof      Shirley,      District 

No.    38     237  65 

Nick    Ara,    District    No, 

59     2291 

George   Trader,    District 

No.    8    153  43 

N.    N.    Naslund,    District 

No.    31 30123 

George   H,   Danner,   Dis- 
trict No.   39    31,134  89 

John    A.   Gustafson,  Dis- 
trict   No.    4  5    254  69 

Robert     E.     Bailie,     Dis- 
trict   No.    22     2,172  22 

James     Anderson,     Dis- 
trict No,   43    343  99 

J.  J.   Le  Tourneau.  Ind..    30,000  00 
C.     O.     Eklund.     District 

No.    28     254  00 

Hans  L.  Carter,  District 

No.    49     94  03 

John  M.  Wallln,  District 

No.    15     455  44 

Charles    F.    Nelson,    Dis- 
trict   No.    13    433  52 

Wm.   McComber,  District 

No.    55    291  36 

L.    T.    Haskinson,      Dis- 
trict No.   14    203  00 

Peter  Burtness,  District 

No.   53    237  49 

Abraham     Wick.s  t  r  o  m. 

District   No.    29    39  54 

Matt  Knoesista,  District 

No.    61     92  90 

J.  J.  Le  Tourneau,  Ind.  .106,823  50 
George    Trader,    District 

No.  8    139  27 

White,       District 

1     

Eklund,     District 

og 

Wlckstrom. 

No.     29 

Ledoux.    Dls- 
40   .  . 


70200 
70207 

70208 

70209 

70210 

70212 

70213 

70220 

70238 

70247 

70250 

70253 

702G3 

70265 

70271 

70278 

70279 

70283 
70286 

70287 

70288 

70299 

'  70317 

7031S 

70328 

70329 

70333 

70335 

70336 

70343 


Robt.  F:.  Bailie,  District 
No.   22    

Gust  Cronberg,  District 
No.     35   

George  Trader.  District 
No.    S    

Peter  Burtness.  District 
No.    53    

George  E.  Church,  Dltt- 
trlct   No.   36    

J.   J.  Le  Tourneau,  Ind.. 

Benjamin  Ledaux,  Dis- 
trict No.  40 

Antoine  Panpoie,  Dhi- 
trict   No.    26 

Marion  Tenske.  District 
No.   5    

J.   J.   Le  Tourneau,   Ind.. 

Benjamin  Ledaux.  Dis- 
trlct   No.    40    

August    Lund,       Distri  :t 

No.   52    234 

J.  J.  Le  Tourneau.  Ind    .102.288 

Nelson  K.  Coffman.  Dis- 
trict   No.    22 

M.  N.  Trlplett.  District 
No.      19    

John  E.  Goldberg,  Dis- 
trict No.   65    

John  Frederickson.  DiJ- 
trict  No.  44    

Wm.  Carmichael,  District 


76996 
77045 
76792 
76793 


Hill, 


Matt 

46 
Mike    Seirmala. 

No.  23    

Aaron      Stark, 

No.    7     

Dewltt   C.    Hackett, 

trict  No.  40 


District    No. 

bistr'ict 

District 

Dls- 


141  «l 

239  OS 

663  57 

31,659  61 


Total     warrants. 
Add     Refunds.  . . 


:!'■ 


177,306  88 
1,790  28 


see     bal- 


Total      Debits. 

ance   sheet    

Warrants     outstanding. 


:|"' 


9.097  OS 
239  05 


1,000  00 

60  33 

220  71 

291  01 
40.000  00 

10.000  00 

76  61 

278  50 
35.000  00 

5.000  00 


J9 


CITIES.    VILLAGES   AND   TOWN3._ 
63294   Fred    Williams,    town   of 

Breltung     1.418  68 

63298   W.      A.      Holgate.       Co. 

Treas..  village  of  Dul.  .., 

bond   int 61  €8 

Lutlier       B.      Brockway, 

city   of  Ely    11,22164 

Charles     Johnson,      An- 
gora       86  61 

Lars  Olson,  town  of  Mc- 
Donald       13  21 

Richard     L.    Gill. a.     vil- 
lage  of  Hibbing    4.765  20 

Gilbert     Lee,     town       o£ 

Morcom    10  80 


63351 
63530 
63590 
63709 
63710 
63748 


Holgate,      Co, 


town  of  Cano- 


63749 


63793 
63857 
63958 
63964 
63982 
64200 


Holgate. 
town     of 


Co. 
Fre- 


clty    of 


No. 
Chas. 

No. 
A.    J. 

No. 
George 

No.  8 
Olaf 

No. 
C.   O. 

No. 
John 

No. 
Thos. 

No. 
Halvor 

trict 
James 

trict 
Mali's 

trict 


Olson. 

13    

Sullivan, 
18    

Trader, 


District 
District 
District 
District 
bis  trict 
bhstriat 


1,900  3C 
85  82 
732  38 
4,957  21 
1,266  43 


>•••••• 


1,894  85 
903  22 
315  18 
346  73 
966  95 
506  94 
201  00 
526  41 
722  19 
199  94 
21  00 

1,078  50 
137  50 
903  21 
776  50 
797  29 
693  86 

1,212  60 
277  50 

2,878  10 

972  89 

9  50 

196  87 

1,676  95 
249  99 
219  43 
486  99 
523  85 

1,255  00 

3.478  47 

1,063  30 
393  00 

1.007  16 
495  43 
202  30 

126  00 
696  08 
832  27 

3,417  00 
722  73 

4,412  67 
299  06 


65878 

65398 

65901 

65959 

66010 

6C016 

66017 

66022 

66023 

66024 

66023 

66038 

66040 

60072 

66093 

66122 

66193 

66241 

66254 

66349 

66361 

66365 

66367 


J.     J. 

No. 

C.     O 
No. 

Abraham 
District 

Benjamin 
trict  No 

Gust  Cronberg,  Dis- 
trict   No.    35 

W.  A.  Holgate.  county 
treasurer.  St.  Lould 
county  board  of  edu- 
cation          942  57 

Robt.  E.  Bailie.  District 
No.    22     

Aaron  Stark,  District 
No.     7      

Alfred  Swenson,  District 
No     20 

John  Fredrickson,  Dis- 
trict No.  44    

James  Anderson.  Dis- 
trict   No.    43 

Larentz  Berg,  District 
No.    34     

Nat.    N.    Naslund. 
trict    No.    31     .  . 

James  -     Greirson, 


Dis- 

'  bl3- 

District 

District 


John       Oberg, 
No.    42     

Isaac         Hill, 

No.    37     

Christ      Hendrickson. 
District    No,    62 

Richard    Geary,    District 
No.   27    

Hans      Carter,      District 
.No.  49    

Mike    Slermala.    District 
No.    23     

Halvor    Halvorson     Dis- 
trict    No.     6 

L.  T    Haakinson,  District 
No.    14     

Matt     Hill.     District    No. 
46 

John   A.   Gustafson,  Dis- 
trict No.  45    

Elisha       Morcom,       Dis- 
trict  No.    9    

F     O.    Truman     District 
No.    33     

A.    J     Sullivan.      District 
No.    18     

L.    G.     Jochim.    District 
No.    50     

Noble    A.     Realty       Dls- 


7,698  90 

633  28 

1,633  31 

149  81 

362  6S 

149  2a 

229  33 

777  03 

847  56 

407  16 

447  50 

16.871  95 

28  32 

366  91 

1,791  86 

163  OO 

140  87 

517  94 

8  51 


70346 
70490 
70666 
71618 
71620 
71778 
71781 
71793 
71807 
71808 
71831 
71832 
71941 
71972 

71995 
72011 

72032 

72131 

72231 

72246 

73485 

73486 

73510 

73581 

73586 

73698 

73844 

75142 

75327 

75498 

75513 

75572 

7  6374 

76394 

76411 

76426 

76427 

76  428 

76429 

76432 

76433 

76434 

76444 

76448 

76450 

76451 

76453 

76470 
76471 
76472 
76538 
76542 
76542 
76576 


Sherley, 

38    

Eklund, 

28    

M.    Walin, 

15    

Mc.Vrthur,  District 

14    

Halvorson,    Dia- 

No.   6    

.\nderson,     DIs- 

No.    43    

.V.   Fridlund,  Dis- 

No.   48    

Gu.st    Cijonberg,    Dlstrct 

No.    35    

G.   Huber,   District  No.  60 
Nat      Naslund,      District 

No.    21     

A.    M.    Olmem,      District 

No.     10 

Abraliam  Wickslrom, 

District   No.    29.  .  .  .    .  . 

Mina    Finstead,    District 

No.     47 

Peter   Burtness,    District 

No.      53 

DeWitt  C.  Hackett,  Dis- 
trict   No.    40 

J.      J.      White,      District 

No.     1 . . 

John  A.  Gustafson,  Dis- 
trict   No.    45 

Geo.     H      Dormer,       Dis- 
trict   No.    39 

Christ  Hendrickson,  Dis- 
trict   No.    62 

Aaron      Stark,      District 

No.     7 

Matt    Hill,    District    So. 

46      

Martin    Fenske,    Disti  let 

No.     5 

Albert     Aaron,       Distiict 

No.      17 

Lorentz    Berg,      Distiict 

No.     34 

Erick  N.   Holmerud,  L-is- 

trict    No.    30 

Richard    Geary,    Dlsti-ict 
No.     27 


30.510  01 
3.173  02 
973  60 
468  02 
17.453  72 
15,491  74 
14.987  41  64424 
1.337  80 
3,853  47 
609  25 
1,500  95 
380  30 
1,844  48 
2,009  91 
373  63 


64201 


64216 


64346 


64429 


644S7 


64494 


64495 
G4496 
64497 
64  500 


Isaac 

37     . 
Hen  ry 

trict 
John 

No. 
Claus 

trict 
T.    C. 

No. 
M.    E. 

No. 
L.     G. 

No. 
F.     R. 

trict 
Elisha 

No. 


Hill, 

"  w". 

No. 
Oberg, 


District    No. 

Kruse,     I>is- 

bist-ict 

i>'i3- 

"ict 
let 


Larentzon, 

No.    49 

Peterson,    Dlst 

51 

Gleason,    Dist 

12 

Jochlm,     Dist  let 

50 

Lindstrom,     lUs- 

No.    58 

Morcom,  Dlst-ict 

9 


Nick  Ara,   District  Nc.  59 

Fr.ank  E.  Johnson,  Dis- 
trict   No.    33 

Mike  Scinnala,  District 
No.     23 

Alfred  Swenson,  Dis- 
trict   No.    20 

Jalmar  Wuakka,  Dis- 
trict   No.    61 ... 

John  Malmstrom,  ]>l3- 
trict    No.    66 ... 

Jacob  Carlson,  District 
No.     56 

Sam  Norl,  District  No. 
57     

W.  A.  Holgate,  county 
treasurer  St.  Louis  Co., 
board   of  educatior  .  .  . 

Wm.  McComber,  Dis- 
trict  No.    55 

Jacob  Forsman.  Dis- 
trict   No.    64    

Abbie  French,  Di.s- 
trict  No.  54 ... 

Noble  A.  Beatty,  Dis- 
trict   No.    41 ... 

M.  R.  Hannulla    District 


Dia- 


]D13- 

"iDls- 
Dis- 


Dlstrict 
bistr'ict 
bislrict 
bi. St  Vict 


No.    11     

Nelson  K.  Coffman 

trict    No.    22 

Edwin    R.    Cobb.       It  de- 
pendent  district    .    ... 

Elisha    Morcom     District 
No.    9     

Peter      Burtness, 
trict    No     53 

Wm.     Carmichael 
trict  No    24    ... 

Thos.       McArthur 

trict    No.    14    

George  Trader,  District 
No.    8     

Jacob    Carlson 
No.    56    

Sam        Norl. 
No.    57     

L     G.    Jochlm, 
No.    50     

Chr.       Olson, 

No.   13    

E.  R.  Cobb.  Indep«md- 
ent  district    . 

Andrew    Kerra. 

No.    52     

Nat  Naslund.  District 
No.    31     

Isaac  Hill.  District 
No.    37     

A.  Wlckstrom.  Dls'.rict 
No.    29     

M.  N.  Trlplett  Dis:rict 
No     19     

John  E.  Gottherg.  Dis- 
trict   No.    65 

W.  A.  Holgate  county 
treasurer.  St.  Louis 
Co..  board  of  educa- 
tion     

Marion    Fenske. 

No.    5 

Cronberg. 

35     

Sullivan, 

18     

Eklund. 

28    

i  s  t      Hendricli  son. 


5,725  04 
1,311  32 

813  24 

682  56 

1,231  74 

1,072  88 

1.254  41 

9  49  71 

1.703  92 

872  33 

35  064  65 

1,576  33 

996  07 

418  68 

860  79 

2,180  16 

1.370  32 

1,188  55 

30,658  50 

626  83 

2,315  44 

2,051  69 

651  26 

904  62 

23,781  90 

954  14 

819  52 

6,599  08 
608  29 

1,358  10 
863  51 
930  39 
366  79 

1.435  09 
869  28 
763  45 

6.342  56 

653  45 

509  53 

394  80 

1,240  54 

2,579  41 

15,000  00 

36,772  87 

2,216  56 

230  89 

15,757  58 

262  01 

263  41 
214  93 
194  60 
206  42 

15.225  40 


64543 
64365 
64649 
64071 
64709 
64793 
05040 
65046 

65047 

65302 
65568 
65569 
65570 
65719 
65725 
65730 
65732 


66025 
66029 

66063 

66073 

66091 

66168 

66194 
6625S 

66259 

C6593 
66594 
66599 
66683 
66807 
66810 
66890 
66901 
66906 
66919 


W.        A. 

Treas 
sla    . . 
W.      A. 
Treas 
der.berg 
Wm.    J.    Davey 

Eveleth    

Gust    Johnson,  village  of 

Fall   Lake    

Thomas    W.    Richardson. 

town   of  Fern    

John   F.   .Vnderson,   town 

of   Midway    

Abraliam      Wlcksl  r  o  m. 

town  of  Cotton    

W.    .\.    Holgate,    county 
treasurer,     village     of 

Dul.    bond    int 

W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer,    village      of 

Dul.    bond   sinking    .  .  . 

W.     A.     Hoi  gale,     county 

treasurer,       village    of 

Dul.    bond  sinking.  .  .  . 

Frank        G.        Sandstedt, 

town    of    Rice    Lake.. 

John      Samuelson,    town 

Canosla     

W      A.    Holgate.    county 
treasurer,     town     of 

Canosha     

W.     .\.     Holgate,    county 
treasurer,     town     of 

Fred.-nberg    

M.    S.     Hawkins,    village 

of   Mt.   Iron    

Lars    Grinderlng,      town 

of   Lakewood    

A.    T.    Gordon,    town    of 

Nichols    

Charles   Buyck,   town   of 

Buyck    

J.    W.    Reynolds,     atty,, 

village   of   M.'rritt 

Nicholas    Cowling,    town 

of    Morse     

John  M.  Wallln,  town  of 

Grand  Lake   

Georgi-  H.  Danner,  town 

of  Faval    

S.     H.     bale,    village    of 

Flood  wood    

Frank       A.     Troland  e  r. 

town   of   .VI born    

Gu.sl   Ander.son.   town    of 

Moadowland.^      

John    W.    Borman,    town 

of    Kugl.-r    

W.    A.    Holgate.    county 
treasurer,     village     of 

Dul.    bond   int 

W.    A.    Holgate.    county 
treasurer,      village     of 

Dul.    bond   Int 

John  M.   Wallin,  town  of 

Grand    Lake 

F.    J.     Voss.     city    treas- 
urer, city  of  Duiuth    .  . 
F.    J.    Voss,    City    treas- 
urer, city  of  Duluth.  . 
F.    J.    Vo.s.s.    city    treas- 
urer,  city   of   Duluth.. 
C.    o.     Eklund.    town    of 

Culver     

Abraham    Wlckstrom, 

town  of  Cotton  .  .  . 
George  Olson,     town 

Sturgeon     

Wm.    B.    Pratt,      city 

Virginia    

W.    A.    Holgate.    county 
treasurer,     village     of 
buluth,    bond    interest 
I.«aac  Hill,  town  of  Pike 
Christ    He  n  d  r  i  c  k  s  o  n, 
town    of    I^akewood  .  . . 

A.  C.  C.  Miller,  town  of 
Solwa'y    

John  Fenskl,  town  of 
Gnesen    

Halvar  Halvorson.  town 
of    Herman    

H.  H.  Peyton,  village  of 
Proctorknolt 

B.  Erlcson,  town  of  Field 
John     Werner     Bowman, 

town  of  Kugler 

F.  A.  Trolander.  town 
of    Alborn 

John    Wallace,    town    of 

Mesaba      

M.    S.    Hawkins,    village 

of    Mountain    Iroti.... 
J.    A.    Iverson,    town    of 

Ault     

N.     O.     Slageberg.     town 

of    Prairie    I..ake.  .  . 
Chas.    Johnson,    town 

Angora     

Chas.     R    Hill,    town 

White    

E.    J.    Whalen,    town 

DululJi      

John  T.   Anderson,   town 

of     Midway 

Gust    Anderson,    town   of 

Meadowlanil.s 

Wm.     Burke.       town     of 

Mesaba     Mountain.... 
John    E.    Cosgrove,    city 

Ely 

Blomqulst, 
Fredenberg. , 
A.  Ronning, 
Normanna 


270  68 

269  6S 
136  2*2 
4S3  28 

67  65 
106  OS 

17  31 

3,054  11 
45,907  31 

41  25 
499  58 
465^ 

23  24 

42  83 
237  35 
SOI  63 

2.606  70 

S12  24 

446  98 

1,921  90 

156  18 

3.187  41 

413  74 

10  93 

61  11 

92  71 

1,302  34 

36  00 

10  81 

4,251  28 

149,847  71 

3.504  92 

59  62 


of 
"of 


77  70 

15  30 

4,416  91 

6  00 
54  56 

144  18 

66  37 

121  99 

260  09 

1,034  20 
326  44 


55 
69 


32 
78 


79 
58 


of 
of 
of 


Dis^frict 
bis  trict 
bis  trict 
bis  trict 


Z.'i 


trict  No.  41. 


135  96 

.996  9<J 

609  65 

744  69 


J.   J 

No. 
7662  Peter 

No. 
76640 

76653 

76685 

76700 

76898 

76923 

76924 

76964 

76966 


.115.992  42 
District 

546  87 

535  86 

366  08 

338  08 

1.452  57 

534  56 

2.028  44 
363  99 
6.763  28 
11.136  24 
336  37 
849  23 
136  29 
1.997  65 
592  91 
1.533  35 
206  70 
326  17 
692  82 
942  14 
169  45 
643  35 


Gust 
No. 

A.  J. 
No. 

C.  O. 
No. 

C  h  r 

District  No.  62 

John  W.   Carter,   Dis- 
trict No.  63  

White.   District 

1  

Burtness     Dl.strict 
53     

H.         Halvorson.         Dis- 
trict    No.     6 

A.     M.     Olmen,     District 
No.   10 

Albert     Aaron.     District 
No.   17    

Henrv    W.     Kruse,    Dis- 
trict   No.    32 

James      Anderson,      dis- 
trict   No.    43 

John    Frederickson.   Dis- 
trict No.  44    

John     Malmstrom.     Dis- 
trict No.  66    

Geo.     H.     Downer,      Dis- 
trict    No.    39     31,859  14 

M.    E.    Gleason,    Diiitrlct 

No.  12  24.839  46 


67031 
67188 
67234 
76501 
67626 

67627 

67694 
67699 
67711 
C7851 
67865 
67906 
67957 
67974 
67975 
68032 
68035 
68042 

68048 
68072 

68073 

68087 

68201 

6S203 

68204 

68636 

68680 

68701 

68769 

68770 

6S962>4 

6S965H 

69176 

70063 

70064 

70198 

70199 


of 
Chas. 

of 
John 

of 


town 


town 


town  of 


town 

town 

of  bti- 


vil- 
vll- 
'  "of 


Oscar  Hanson 

Buyck   

W.     A.     Holgate,    county 

treasurer,    int.    village 

of    Duluth    bonds 

W.    A.    Holgate.    county 

treasur<*r.         cancelled 

coupons         village      of 

Duluth     bond     Interest 
Ed      Haman.      town      of 

Northland     

Nickolas   Cowling,    town 

of      Morse 

Herman    Hanson, 

of     Industrial. 
M.     R.     Hannella. 

of     Embarrass. 
F.    J.    Voss.    city 

luth      

Matt   Matzele,  village  of 

Chisholm      

John    .Samuelson.      town 

of    Canosia 

Edward      Johnson. 

lage   of   Buhl .  . . 
Edward      Johnson. 

lage    of   Buhl 

Lars     Nelson,       town 

Btatty     

Albert    Wemzln.   city    of 

Tower      

Thos.     McCarthy,     town 

ot    New    Independence 

Geo    E.   Cliurch,   town  of 

St.     Louis 

L.      Mejidenhall.     village 
of    Duluth.    bond    sink 

Ing     fund 

L.    Mendenhall.       village 

of    Duluth    bond    int... 

John     E.    Cosgrove.    city 

of    Ely    

R.    W.    Martin,    town    of 

Great    Scott    

Jean    W.    New,    town    of 

Flood  wood     

John     Bacha,     town     of 

Lavalle     

Thos.      W.      Richardson, 

town     of     Fern 

Gilbert       Lee,       town    of 

Morcom     

Wm.     B.     Pratt,    city    of 

Virginia      

John     M.     Wallln.     town 

of   Giaiid   Lake 

R.    W.    Martin,    town    of 

Great     Scott 

Pragmich    &    Omerga. 

town     of     Missabe     Mt 

2    John  France.s.  town  of 

Missabe     Mountain... 

Geo.   M.   Gleason.  village 

of     Biwabik. 
Fred    Williams 
Breitung     .  .  . 
John     Garrett, 

Halden      

M.  R.  Hannula,  town 

Embarrass 
George  Olson 
Sturgeon  . 


16i 

495 

139  31 

92  61 

307  58 

467  21 

26171 

228  46 

128  08 

1.042  14 

6,187  27 

32  41 

126  80 

765  78 

4  50 


00 

56 


town 


town 


town 


150 

84 

1,041  18 

292  24 

42  31 

150.000  00 

25.000  00 

135  25 

4  000  00 

490  35 

114  87 

747  63 

60  77 

260  02 

2.SO<i.0O 
170  52 
10.000  09 
1,600  00 
141  75 
65  21 
322  90 
40  78 
20,000  00 
70  50 
2,000  00 
164  74 
176  57 
10,000  00 
429  04 
163  98 
156  04 
76  78 


of 
of 
of 
of 


! 


I 

I 

'»  .    I  - 

■ 


■w 


1 


■ 
>     ■      ■    * 


1 


e-*^ 


-.»'"».  ^'rn^   (-1^- 


-  rr   '  ■    ■    ■  " 


**s-tl 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD: 


702(1 

70203 

70205 

70211 

70214 

70215 

70217 

70218 

70224 

70225 

70226 

70237 

70243 

70245 

70246 

70248 

70249 

70251 

70252 

70254 

70255 

70256 

70257 

70259 

70260 

70261 

70262 

70264 

70269 

70276 

70280 

70284 

70290 

70297 

70310 

70311 

70312 

70332 

70334 

70400 

70403 

70404 

70486 

70495 

71619 

71666 

71714 

71779 
71933 

71SS5 

71952 

71991 

72031 

720C9 

72074 

72133 

73367 

73410 

73413 

73472 
73771 

74979 

75317 

75497 

7550S 

76390 

76396 

76406 

76408 

76409 

76413 

76418 

7«421 

76424 

76425 


*:"^°f.''":i33.160  16 
town 


F.  J  .Voss, 

luth  

John  W.  Boman, 

of  Kuglur -. • 

H.  H.  Peyton,  village  of 

I'roctoi  knott  

Barney   Kinney,   town 

of    Hiwabik 

Chas.    R.    Hill,    town    of 

Wliite     

Geo.  M.  Glea.son.  village 

of    Blwabik    

Nicholas    Cowling,    town 

of   Morse    ■  ■  • 

John    K.    Cosgrove.    city 

of     Kly •,•••• 

Alfred  I>.  Smith,  village 

of     Hihbln^ 
Ben    l^ricksun 

Fitld     

Fred    William 

Breitung     

John    A.    Konning,    town 

of     Normanna 

Wm.    R.    Pratt,   city   of 

Virginia     • 

Chas.     Buyck.     town     of 

Buyck     

Chas.     Blumciuist,     town 

of     Fredenberg 


town 


of 
town    of 


231  59 

2,299  14 

6,329  05 

10,177  67 

4,018  SI 

1,722  12 

3,397  58 

75,503  24 

160  82 

1,148  57 

2,460  02 

16,932  32 

165  12 

829  73 


68028 
68029 

70304 
70305 

75467 
75468 

76438 
76439 


C.  Dinehart.  state  treas- 
urer,   state    taxes 150,000  00 

C.  Dlfcehart.  state  treas- 
urer, state  school 
taxes     

C.  Dinehart,  state  treas- 
urer,  state   taxes 

C.   Dinehart,   state  treas- 


75,000  00 
114,392  71 


urer,        state        school 

C. ^Dinehart'. 'state  treas- 

urer,   state    taxes 12j,000  00 

C.  Dinehart.  state  treas- 
urer, state  school 
taxes     • 

C.  Dinehart,  state  treas- 
urer,   state    taxes 

C  Dinehart,  state  treas- 
urer, state  school 
taxes     


70,045  27 


75,000  00 
82,401  26 

38,457  40 


town 


town 
town 


town 


of 
of 
of 
of 


town 
of 


of 


of 

o"f 

v'i'l- 


of 


of 


of 


town  of 


A.   C.   C.   Miller, 
Solway      .... 
C.    O.    Kklund, 

Culver     

Juhn     Fenske, 
Gnesen     .... 
John    M.    Walin 

Grand     Lake. . . 
Archie    McFayden, 

of     Stuniz 

E.    J.    Whalen,    town 

Duluth      

W.    J.     Davey,      city 

Kveleth     •, 

John     W.     Lang,    village 

of     Aurora • 

Matt    Matzele.   village  of 

Chisholm      ■ 

John     Bacha.     town     of 

La  veil     ; 

Lars      Olsen.      town      or 

McDavitt    • 

Tho.'*.     McArthur,     town 

of  New  Independence. 

Halvor  Halvorson,  town 

of     Herman 

F.     A.     Trolander,     town 

of    Alborn 

Wm.      Burke,      town 

Missabe     Mountain. 
W.    H.    Martin,    town 

Great     Scott... 
Kdward     John.«on 

lage   of   Buhl 

Abraham         Wickstrom. 

town    of    Cotton.       ... 

0.«car    Hanson,    town    of 

Buvck      ;. 

Gilbert    Lee,      town       ot 

Morcom      -. 

I      A.     Iverson,    town    oi 

'  Ault      

John   F.   Anderson,  town 

of    Midway 

Geo.     H.     Dormer,    town 

of     Fayal 

C.      Hendrickson.      town 

of    Lakewood • 

Gust   Anderson,   town    oi 
MeadowlaiKls    ......■• 

M.    .'^.    Hawkins,    village 
of    Mountain    Iron.  .  .  . 

N      O.     Stageberg,     town 

of    Prairie   Lake 

Herman    Hanson,      town 

of     Industrial 

Lars     Nelson.       town 

Boatty     •• ■ 

Erick        N.        Holmsrud 

town   of  Rice  Lake 
John    Wallace,    town 

Mesaba 

Thos.      W.      Richardson, 
town    of    Fern  .  .  .  .... . 

Isauo  Hill,   town   ot  Pike 
Ed     Hanson,       town       of 

Northlar.d     ••••• 

John    Samuelson,      town 

of   Canosia    • 

V.    W.    Chapin,    town    or 

Kelsey     ;,■  ■ ' ' 

Thc«    Thompson,  village 

of     McKinley - 

John    Garrett,    town    of 

Halden    • ■ 

Jean   W.   News,   town   of 

Floodwood     

A     T.    Gordon,    town 

* 'Nichols • 

Karl     Fredrickson,     ^  U 

lage   of  Sparta 
James  Greeson, 

Clinton     • 

Gu.-;t   Anderson,   town   of 

Mi  ado w lands    

^Y.     -\.     Ilolgate.    county 
treasurer,       village    ot 

Di'.luth      .•.,•■•• 

Gust     John.'=on.       village 

of    Fall    Lake 

The  American  Exchange 
Bank,    villas'e    of 
luth   bond   ."Inking. 
Clia.s.    Johnson,    town 

Angora      .:,•  "  "  " 

Geo.  M.  (Meason,  village 

of     Biwabik 

F     J      Voss.    city    treas- 
urer   citv   of  Duluth.. 
John    E.    Cosgrove,    city 

Ely 

McArthur.      town 
Independence.  . 
C.   Miller,  town 

Solway     •••:•••••:•• 
F      I      Voss.    citv    treas- 
urer,  citv   of  Duluth 
John     Packa,      town 

Lavell      

John     Fenske.     town 

Gnesen      •  •  • 

E     J.     Whalen.    city 

Duluth      .•• 

\V.     J.      liavev.     city 

kveleth     •• 

Albert     Weinzlerl. 

of    Tower .:,••• 

Geo.   M.   Gleason.   village 

of     Biwabik 

Barney  Kinney,  town 

Biwabik     

Chas.     R.    Hill,    town 

White    ;•■•.„•• 

Wm.     B.     Pratt,    city 

Virginia     .  .  •  ■ 
John     W.     Lang 

of     .\urora ;  •^,-,: ' 

Isaac  Hill,  town  of  Pike 
Abraham         Wickstrom. 

town    of    Cotton.  .  . 
Fred    Williams,   town 

BreiUing     ..•• 
Alfred    I>.   Smith 

of     Hibbing 

Oscav    Hanson    .town 

Buvck      ....•■•• 
W     H.    Cummlngs, 

of    French • 

John    Samuelson,      town 

of     Canosia 

C.    O.     Eklund.    town 

Culver     •  •  •  • 

Chas.     Blomqulst. 
of     Frodenburg 
C      Heiidrlckson. 

of     Lake  wood.  . 
John    A.    Ronning 

of     Normanna 

I     A     Iverson,    town 

'  Ault      

John  F.   Anderson. 

of    Midway. 

George    Olson. 

Sturgeon     .  • 

I>     W.    Martin, 

Great     Scott 

Wm.     Burke. 

Mountain     Iron.....-- 
Archie    M»  Fayden.    town 

of     Stuntz 

Matt     Matzele,    town 

Ciiisholm      

H.     Halvorson.    town 

UfTinan      ••••,•,;•••■  '  > 
II.   H.   Peytcn.  village  ot 

Proctorknott      •.  •  • 

John     F.    f'osgrove.    city 

of     Ely 

Herman     Hanson, 
of     Industrial .  .. 
N.    O.     Stai;'eberi<. 

of    Pritirie   Lf.ke.  . 
Lars     Nelson,     town 

Boatty 

Edward      Johnson. 

lage    of    Buhl 
Chas     Johnson. 

Angora      

Geo.     H.     Downer 

of     Fayal 

John    Wallace,    town 
Mesaba      


Total    warrants... 
Add     refunds........ 

Add       school       funds 
from    state 


$747,811  37 
743  36 

39.430  70 


Total      debits.       (see 

balance    sheet) ?787,98»  43 


525  54 

393  24 

561  82 

1.133  17 

23.696  13 

3,096  01 

42.971  22 

14,237  6i 

13,950  02 

884  98 

303  33 

246  74 

1,052  35 

184  35 

10,986  61 

2.434  51 

4.422  24 

719  84 

3,455  57 

lj2  97 

1,462  43 

fOO  76 

3.407  30 

6S9  65 

245  59 

987  73 

251  02 

1,104  77 

100  75 

1,268  29 

1,097  55 

55S  SO 
165  98 


RT\TE  LANDS  AND  INTEREST. 
6605i>   W.    A.    Holgate.    county 
treasurer,    exchange    . 
C.       Diiii'hart,      state 
treasurer,    state    land. 
C.      Dineliart,      state 
treasurer,   state  school 

lands     •  •  •  • 

C.     Dinehart.     state 
treasurer,   state  school 

lands    

C.      Dinehart,     state 
treasurer,   state  school 

lands     

C.      Dinehart, 
treasurer,    state 

interest     

C.      C.      Dinehart. 
treasurer,    state 

interest     

C.  C.   Dinehart, 
treasurer,  state 
W.  A.  Holgate, 
tion  fees  .... 


66059  C. 
69052  C. 


69053  C. 


69558  C. 


r0306  c. 


70307 

76440 
76441 


27 

53  51 

3.138  66 
15  82 
10  00 


73438 
73439 
73440 
75284 
75285 
75286 
75287 

75288 

75289 

75290 

75291 

75292 

75293 

75294 

75295 

75296 

75297 

75298 

75299 

75300 

75301 

75302 

75303 

75304 

75305 

75306 

76454 

76455 

76456 

764  57 

76458 

76459 

75460 

76461 

76462 

76263 

7C464 
76465 

764C6 
7G467 
76468 


Co. 
■  Co. 


state 
lands 

state 
lands 

state 

lands 

collec- 


3.996  69 


20  08 
162  49 


82 


76469  J 


P.  A.  Kams    

J.   J,   Wangensteln    

J.    H.    Robinson    

Lanquist  &   Illsley  Co., 
Ramstad  &  McAdams   . , 
Ramstad  &  McAdams   . . 
The    Westinghouse    Ma- 
chine  Co 

E.  Baggott  Co 

Ole    Hanson     

J.    J.    Wangensteln    

Neil    Mclnnes     

P.  J.  Ryan    

Chas.    B.    Aske 

Tribune  Co 

Western    Union    Tel 

Northern  Hdwe.  Co. 

Northwestern   Fuel 

J.  H.   Robinson    

Frederick   Zanders    

P.    A.    Kams    

Wm.    J.    Stevenson    .... 

Katherine  L.  Dolan   .... 

Duluth    Evening   Heraid 

Geo.   H.   Claypool    

Providence  Impt.  Co.    .. 

Duluth   News   Tribune.. 

Wm.  J.  Stevenson    

Frederick     Zander     .... 

Ole    Hanson    

J.  li.   Robinson 

P.    A.    Karns    

Kathrine     L.     Dolan 

Geo.     E.     Claypool... 

Providence    Impt.    Co... 

Lanquist   &    Illsley    

Marshall-Wells       Hard- 
ware Co 

E.     Baggott     Co.      .  . . . 

Remington      Typewriter 
Co 

A.  S.  Schulman    

Dixon    Steam   Co.    ... . 

The    Westinghouse    Ma- 
chine   Co 

J.  Wangensteln    


225  00 
884  03 
125  00 
108.517  79 
980  07 
54  60 


RECAPITI LATIOX. 


1,36(T00 

2,722  55 

25  00 

1,703  71 

175  56 

134  20 

2   00 

18   40 

7  98 
S  56 

8  00 
130  00 

14  00 
252  25 

83  33 

85  00 

3  00 

150  90 

35  00 
3  00 

83  33 

16  66 
100  00 

95  00 
251  35 

85  00 
150   00 

35  00 
56,323  12 

5.100  00 
3,485   00 

1  50 

2.125  00 
2,125   00 

850  00 
1.050  12 


AUDITOR'S  WARRANTS  ISSUED 
County  revenue  fund    (Including  warrants 

loan  for  purchase  of  courthouse  site) 

County   poor  commission   

County  special  roads   

Refunding    

Redemptions    

State   school    fund    

Ditch  fund   

School   districts    

Cities,  villages  and  towns   

State   inebriate  hospital    

State    funds    

State  lands  and  interest   

State    loans 

Courthouse 

.Surplus    — 

Inheritance 

Courthouse 

Courthouse 


DURING  THE  YEAR  1908. 
of    $145,751.05    temporary 


bond    Interest 


fund... 


tax    

site    and    bulldlnj 

construction    •■ 

County  road  and  bridge  bond   interest  and 

Railroad  bond   interest  and   sinking 

Accrued    interest    

Mortgage  tax  collection   

Hunters'   licenses    


sinking   fund 


Total    . 
Errors 

Total 
Error  in 
Error  in 
Error  in 

Total 


corrected    

on    warrant   register 

refunding   fund    

road    fund    

revenue  fund  


388.864.45 

34.141.24 

115,710.04 

3.845.04 

36,729.43 

25.00 

36,840.05 

1,177,306.82 

1,279,930.72 

60.00 

747,811.37 

7,398.34 

25,787.29 

43.62 

15.22 

24,877.94 

160,052.26 

325,613.80 

36.973.76 

40.60 

36.327.50 

124.21 

3,012.56 


75296 

75297 
75301 

75303 
75306 
76454 


Hardware  Co, 
Co! 


coal  hod,  etc,  for  office  of  superlnten- 


'*> 000   lbs.  nut  coal,   carried a'TV 

lees  as  attorney    for   board   for   October, 


Northern 

dent     

Northwestern    Fuel 
William  J.  Stevenson, 

igos  ,•  • 

Duluth  ■Evening    Hjrald.    publishing   notice    for   proposals 
Duluth   News   Tribune,   publishing    nonce   for   "  a^.  ■•.•^••;-_   ,aag 
William  J.  Stevenscn.  salary,  attorney  for  board.  November.  1908 


Total 


&6C 

8.00 

83.33 
3.00 
3.00 

83.33 


/ 


$      2,568.33 


OFFICE  EXPENSE. 


I 


4,441,531.26 
150.51 


.$  3.22 
.  98.20 
.    49.09 

.$150.51 


4,441.681.77 


ASSETS. 
Assessed  valuation   of  taxable   real   property    .... 
Assessed  valuation  of  taxable  personal  property 


Total  debits    (see  bal- 
ance sheet)    


68217 
71973 


STATE  LOANS. 

C.  C.  Dinehart.  state 
treasurer,    state    loans 

Elisha  Morcom.  state 
loans  to  School  Dis- 
trict   No.    9 


7.398  34 


25.613  64 


173  65 


80 


Total  warrants  Issued. 325, 613 
Transfer    court    house 

sinking    18.898  yz 

Transfer  county  reve- 

fund    106.852  13 


County 
County 
County 
County 


taxes  1908.  now    dwe    (current). 

taxes  1907,  outstanding    

taxes  19«K),  outstanding     

taxes  1905.  outstaViding 


$209,965,640,001 
12.043.001.001 


.$27,386.07 
.  8.728.65 
.  6.601.03 
16.104.34 


nue 

Total    debits, 
ance   sheet 


see  bal- 


451.364  85 


Total  warrants 
Add  refunds    .  .  . 


.$25,787  29 
46  92 


Total 
ger 


debits    (see 
balance)    . 


led- 


,$25,834  21 


COURTHOUSE     BOND    INTEREST. 
76078  W     A.    Holgate.    county 


COUNTY    ROAD    AND    BRIDGE    BOND 
INTEREST    AND    SINKING. 


County  taxes  1904,and   prior   years,   outstanding     ..  ib.m.J* 

Total    back   taxes   outstanding 

Total   taxes  now  due   ••••,••:: — :'  ,\ 

Penalty    and    interest    uncollected    (estimated)      

county    taxes    in   treasury,    apportioned 

County   taxes   in    treasury,    unapporlioned     ••••• 

County  poor   farm   buildings   and   personal    propeiiy 

County    courthouse    square    and    buildings 

Furniture  and  records   In  courthouse  and    onice    — 

New   courthouse  sites    

New   courthouse    


ro39: 


treasurer,  exchange  . 
W.  A  Holgate.   cunty 
treasurer,  exchange  . 


Warrants  issued 
Transferred  to 
crued  interest  . . 


ac- 


10  15 

70062 

33  47 

43  62 

71601 

13.500  00 

73411 

$13,543  62 

74840 

76391 

63515 

64202 

64203 

64217 

63958 
68705 

69261 


SCRPLI'S. 
65346  Severt   Aune,   supplies 
(see  debit  ledger 
ance)  


bal- 


182  50 

985  71 

383  23 

508  20 

367  59 

374  24 

714  91 

403  40 

646  02 

Du- 
of 


of 
Thos. 

of 
A.  C. 


of 


of 
of 
of 
of 
city 


76486 

76437 

76442 

76443 
76446 

76452 

76473 

76483 

76492 

76519 

76532 

76540 

76541 

76543 

76570 

76574 

76593 

76595 

76596 

70601 

76602 

76639 

76645 

76647 

76658 

76709 

76710 

76724 

76899 

76963 

77010 


of 
oi 
of 
village 


242  80 

500  63 
366  27 

1,135  02 
245  22 
6,000  00 
35.000  00 
10,000  00 
31  03 
06  23 
99,141  31 
52  48 
64  49 
892  03 
30,134  11 
613  65 
5,411  62 
3,246  54 
9,691  18 
25.128  08 


INHERITANCE    TAX. 

66"37   C     C.       Dinehart,      state 

"treasurer,     inheritance 

lax.  estate  of  Jas,     M. 

Anderson     •  •  •  • 

G79'^3  C  C.  Dinehart.  state 
treasurer,  inheritance 
tax.  e.stale  ot  Jos.  M. 
Potter •  • 

68-^09  C  C.  Dintfhart.  state 
treasurer,  inheritance 
tax.  estate  of  L.  P. 
Swantrom •  • 

687''7  C  C.  Dinehart  state 
treasurer,  inheritance 
tax  estate  of  Mar- 
shall  Field •  •  •  • 

73571  C.  C.  ]>inehart.  folate 
treasurer,  inheritance 
tax.    estate   of    F.      NN . 

Higgins    •  •  •  • 

C  C.  Dinehart.  state 
treasurer,  inheritance 
tax    


:6761 


15  2: 


3  81 


450  00 


412  9S 


143  08 


18.145  00 


5.723  01 


W.      H. 

Treas.. 

celled 
W.       A. 

Treas.. 

celled 
W.      A. 

Treas.. 
W.      A. 

Treas.. 

W.      A. 

Treas., 
W.       A. 

Treas.. 
W.      A. 

Treas., 

celled 
W.      A. 

Treas., 
W.       A. 

Treas., 
W.       A. 

Treas., 
W.      A. 

Treas., 


Holgate 
coupons 

Holgate, 
coupons 


Co. 
can- 

■ '  Co. 
can- 


Holgate. 
exchange 
Holgate. 
exchange 

Holgate. 

exchange 

Holgate. 

exchange 

Holgate. 

coupons 

Holgate. 

exchange 

Holgate, 

exchange 

Holgate, 

exchange 

Holgate. 

exchange 


Co. 
"Co. 

Co. 

■  Co. 

■  Co. 
can- 

'  Co. 

'  Co'. 

"  Co. 

Co". 


2,973  42 

900  00 

14  10 

4  50 


34 


26 


33,054  75 
05 


05 


Total   assets 


570,.-.62.21 


48,720.09 
lO.COO.OO 


$222,008,641.00 


619,282.36 

108.131.68 

2.67S.59 

60,000.00 

60.000.00 

50.000.00 

4.5<\434.46 

182,l.'S4.02 


$•223,541,252.05 


LIABILITIES. 


County  roads  and 
County  roads  and 
County  roads  and 
Municipal   railroad 


bridge 
bridge 
bridge 


bonds 
bonds 
bonds 


maturing 
maturing 
maturing 


aid   bonds  maturing  In 


In 

In 

In 

1923 


New  courthouse  bonds  maturing  in  1918. 


Total  warrants 


Transfers 
interest 
Refunds     . 


to    accrued 


.$36,973  76 

10,305  00 
44  13 


Total 
Interest 
Interest 
interest 
Interest 
Interest 
Bonds  interest 
t^'ounty   orders 


bonded  Indebtedness  .. 
on  bonds  maturing  1909, 
maturing  1910, 
maturing  1916, 
maturing  1923. 
maturing    191S, 


on 
on 
on 
on 


due  Jan.  1, 

due  Jan.  1. 

due  Jan.  1, 

due  .Ian.  1, 

due  Jan.  1, 

coupons   outstanding  Jan.    1,  1£ 
outstanding   and   unpaid.. 


bonds 
bonds 
bonds 
bonds 


Total  "assurance  fund  on  hand 


Total    liabilities    

Assets   over   liabilities 

Total  assets   


1909 

$        30,000.00 

1910 

.'^,000.00 

1916 

147.000.00 
2.50,000.00 

600,000.00 

$              675.00 

$    1,077,000.00 

1909 

3909 

i.rJ.-..oo 

1909 

2,940.00 

lti(.>9 

3.125.1JO 

1909 

4,500.(XI 

)09    

142..-.0 

15.607.69 
2,762.10 

30,877.29 

$    1.107.S77.29 

222,433,374.7ff 

$223,541,252.05 

51876 

53910 

.53911 

55580 

56188 

56191 

.'7439 

.^91 03 

5itl04 

60453 

60455 

C2946 

62947 
63792 
6.5155 
651  i>7 
G5949 
6U625 
67620 
6MH9 
0?-J52 
6S1.54 
68655 
7(.'131 
70136 
70137 
71735 

71738 
71739 
71740 

71741 

71742 
73427 
73428 

73431 

73432 
73433 
73434 
73436 
75299 
75300 
7.-302 
7r)304 

7rao5 

76458 
76459 
764C1 

76465 


Wendtland  Bros.,  tlanks  and   books    

French  &  Bassett,  office  furniture 

Providence   Improvement   Co.,    office   rent 

Providence  Improvement  Co.,  rent 

Providence  Improvement  Co.,   rent 

Eva    H.    Hewett,    t:pewriting 

Providence   Improvement  Co..    office   rent   — 
Providence  Itnprovi^ment  Co,  rent.  September 

Geo.   B.   Aske,   desk    

J.   J.   Le  Tourneau.   printing   

Providence  Improv>'ment  Co..  rent.  October    .. 
Providence  Improvi»ment  Co..  rent.  I>ecember 

Improv>?ment  Co..  rent.  November 

Improvement   Co.,    office 

Improvement   Co..    office 

Improvement 

Improvement 

Improvement 

Improvement 


Co.. 
Co., 
Co., 
Co, 


office 
office 
office 
office 


rent 
rent 
rent 
rent 
rem 
rent 


for 
for 
for 
for 
for 
for 
•.sk, 
for 


January,  i9o8. 
February.  1908 

March.  1908 

April    19)8 

May.  1908 

June.  19;iS 

chair  and  supplies 
July.  19lS 


of  May 
etc.    ........ 

for  montn  of 


and  month  of  June 

Augiist!  idos!.!.. 


&    Printing    Co..     office 


for  blue  prints,  repair-) 
supplies,    cabinet. 


Providence 
Providence 
Providence 
Providence 
Providence 
Providence 

Providence    ^..m >•  - -  -    -  ..         , 

Remington  Typewriter  Co     typewriter,  d 
I'rovidence    Iinpro\ement   Co..    office  rent 
Katherine  L.  Dolan,  salary  lor  part 
Geo.   H.  Claypool,    express,   postage^ 
T'lovldence  Imiirovement  Co.,  rent 
Katherine  L.  Dolan.  July  salary.. 

3toyiSer^^lZ^o.'i^S:r  C^'im.erent  for  month  of  Septem- 

\y^  \*  , ' 

Katherl'rie    L.    Dolan,    salary    for  August 
Geo.   H.   Claypool.    office   supplies    etc.    .. 
Anderson  &  Gow.    ?arpenter  work,  table 

ing.    etc 

Christie    Lithograph 

flies,    etc 

F.  H.  Lounsberry  & 
Alexander  Marsha. 1, 
Christie    Lithograph 

office    supplies    ••• 

J.    J.    Le    Tourneau    Printing   Co 

Remington  typewriVer 'Co.'.'rental  of  typewriter  October 

Providence   Impro.ement    Co..    office  rent  for  month  of  Octooer 

Duluth  Telephone  Co.,  rentals  and  long  distance    

Katherine    L.    Dolan.    salary    'oi' September    ....^j,.-...    

Frederick  Zander,  salary  as  office  boy.  Oct.  8  to  isov.  i 

V.    A.    Karns,    starips,    etc .......    ...^. 

Katherine    L.    Do  an.    salary    for  October,    1908    

Geo.  H.  Claypool,  one  journal..... •    :---i;-v.'"    i\" V""i««"' 

Providence    Improvement   Co.,   office  rent  for  November,   ivja... 

P.   A.  Karns,   stamps,   etc ••■ 

Katherine    L.    Dolan,    salary    for   November 
Providence   Improvement   Co..   office  rent 

Remington  "'^- "--'  ".•<"i"«"-i-'  "r=,V ' "  "..Thi.'nli's '  'for'  'tv'tje  writ  ing   machine . . 


Co.    1-60  folio  page,  register 
one  oak  roll-iop   typewriter 
&    Printing    Co.. 


one 


of  voucliers.. 

desk 

top     desk     and] 


roll 

500  secoiid  sheets  and  1.000  let- 
to' M'arcli' ii! '1909 


1908    .... 
for   month 


of  Decem- 


'Type'v.rller'Co!,'  r'ibboiis  for  typewriting 


Total 


16.00 
95.40 
67.50 
65.00 
105.00 
5.75 
35.00 
3.5.  GO 
25.00 
37.25 
35.00 
35.00 
35.00 

:«;.oo 

S-xOO 
35.00 
3.=i.00 
3.->.<"»0 
35.00 
142.20 
ST..  00 
67.60 

1.70 
35.00 
50.00 

2.23 

35.00 

oO.lO 

5.2S 

2.45 

11.75 
22.50 
15.00 

26.25 

8.75 
15.00 
35.00 

5.96 
50.00 
14.00 

2.25 

8:..oo 

.90 

35.00 

1.35 

{■5.0O 

35.00 
1.50 

1.678.43 


\»  , 


* 


t« 


t 


r 


iSECRETARYS  SALARY. 


Total 
ledger 


debits, 
balance 


see 

sheet. $47,322 


89 


RAILROAD 

63638 


75091 


BOXr>      INTEREST 
SINKING. 
W.    A.    Holgate,    County 

Treas.  exchange    

W.    A.    Holgate.    County 
Treas.    exchange    


AND 


Total  warrants • 

Transfer     to     accrued 

interest   acct 

Refunds    


On  motion  of  Commissioner  Tischer    the  forego  Ing  Anntml   F^^.^^'-^^^f^^^^f 
ment    was    accepted,    approved   and    ordered  published  b>    the  (ouni>    i^oa 
St.   Louis  County.  Minnesota,  this,   the  5th  day^of  Bebruan^^igoa^^jj^,^^,^^^ 

Chairman    of    the    County    Board. 


.5.V.79 

.56190 

57440 

59100 

60452 

62944 

62945 

63791 

6.')153 

65156 

65944 

66619 

67623 

68655 

70137 

71739 

73435 

7.'304 

70460 


(SEAL) 


Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

(Jeo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 

Geo. 


H.    Clavpool     salary. 
H.    Clavpool     salary. 
H.    Clavpool     salary. 
H.  Claypool,   .salary, 
H.  (Clavpool.   salary, 
H.   Claypool,    salary, 
H.  Claypool,  salary. 
H.   Claypool,    salary 
H.  Claypool,   salary 
H.  Clavpool,    salary 
H.  Claypool,   salary 
H.  Claypool,  salary 
H.   Clavpool     salary 

H.   Claypool,   salary 

H.   Clavpool,   salary   for  July 

H.  Claypool.   salary  for  August 

H.  Claypool,  salary  for  September 
H.  Claypool,  salary  for  October  . 
H.   Claypool,   salary   for  November 


August 

September    

,   November    

October 

for  December,  11«)7 
for  February.  1908 
for  January.  1908  . 
for  March,    1908    ... 

for  .\pril 

for  May 


1908 


Total 


235.00 

60.00 
150.00 
1.50.00 
150.00 
150.00 
150.00 
l.V^.OO 
l.'iO.OO 
150.00 
150.00 
l.'.-^.OO 

ir^t.'^io 

i.vi.'O 

Kit'.OO 
l.Vi.ftO 
150.00 
150.00 
150.00 

2.845.00 


*    »      lirTTITI    •    m  , 


T 


ARCHITECT  &  EXPENSE  AND  SUPERINTENDENT. 


County  Auditor. 


$25,000  00 
31  80 


Total   debits 


.$25,072  40 


COURTHOUSE 


65153 
65154 
65155 


65156 
65157 

63791 
63792 

65944 
65945 

65946 
05947 
65948 
65949 

66616 
66619 
66620 
60621 
66622 
66623 


Total    debits    (see      bal- 
ance    sheet)      . .  . 

SITE    AND 
FUND. 

Geo.   H.   Claypool ■■  ■ 

Duluth    Engineering   Co. 
i'rovidence  Improvement 

Co • 

Geo.    H.   Claypool • 

Providence  Improvement 

Co • 

Geo.   H.   Claypool 

Providence  Improvement 

Co •, 

Clavpool 

News      Tribune 


,    $24,877  94 
BUILDING 


Geo.    H. 
Duluth 

Co.    .  . 
Wm.   J. 
Duluth 
John    A. 


10.605 
17 


78 
65 


of 
village 

of 

town 


of 


31  30 

860  79 

69,911  62 

1.119  62 

1.587  9» 

192  88 

82  97 


666 
666 


town 
town 
town 
"of 


66821 

67211 

67619 
67620 

67621 
67622 
67623 

68649 

68650 
68051 
68652 

68653 
68654 
68655 
68656 
70130 
70131 


83 


town 


town 


town 


town 


town 


of 
'of 

'of 


of 
'of 


town 

town 

'of 

vi'l- 

'of 


town 
■"of 


317 
541 

74  29 
169  87 
45  68 
4,240  55 
9.452  93 
17.305  01 
32,258  45 
326  25 
657  12 
2.020  42 
387  67 
67  67 
29  77 
8.184  83 
108  38 
2,914  55 
456  70 


70132 
70133 
70i:'.4 
70135 
70136 
70137 
70138 

70i:;9 

7til40 
70141 
7<il42 
71S3X 
71S34 
71861 
75321 


Stevenson 

Engineering   Co. 

^.,....    ...    Johnson • 

I'rovidence  Improvement 

Co , 

Samuel   L   Levin 

Geo.   H.  Claypool.  .  .... . 

i:onstruction  News  (o.. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald. 
Duluth      News     Tribune 

Co • 

Pioneer    Press    Co • 

Providence  Improvement 

Co 

Jas.  Cash,  administra- 
tor of  estate    ........ 

Alexander  Douglas 
Thomson    A'  '  '  ' 

Journal    Printing    Co... 

Providence  Improvement 

Co ■ 

The  Tribune  Co....--. 
Duluth   Engineering  Co. 

Geo.   H.   Claypool ... 

Remington      Typewriter 

Co.     

J    J.  Le  Tourneau 

r)uluth  Telephone  Co... 
Providence  Improvement 

Co 

Duluth    Evening    Herald 

Katherine  L.  Dolan 

Geo.    H.   Claypool.  •••••• 

Western   Union  Tel.  Co. 

M.   C.   Palmer    • 

Providence  Improvement 

Co •. ■  •  • 

Duluth  News  Tribune  Co. 

Wm.    J.    Stevenson    

J.    H.    Robinson 

P.    A.   Karns    

Katherine    L.    Dolan.... 

George  H.  Claypool 

The  .lohn  Miller  Co 

F.  H.  Lounsberry  &  Co.. 
Lanquist  .»fc  Illsley  Co.  . 
Ramstad  &  M<Adams... 

J     .).    Wangensteln 

First  Natl.  BanK  of  Dul. 
American  Exchange  Bk. 
Citv  National  Bank  Dul. 
\lexander  McDougall... 


150  00 
12  50 

35  00 
150  00 

35  00 
150  00 

35  00 
150  00 

5  25 

29  10 

107  50 

145  00 

35  00 

789  66 

166  47 

18  00 

11  60 

2  20 

11  60 
8  80 


35  00 

20,000  00 

29,228  44 
11  84 

35  00 


63637 
64204 
68704 
70060 
71662 
73412 
74839 


6393 


ACCRUED  INTEREST 
W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer    

W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer    

W.    A.    Holgate.    county 

ti'easurer     

W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer    

W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer    

W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer    

W.    A.    Holgate.    county 

treasurer     

W.    A.    Holgate,    county 

treasurer     


12,500  00 

4.740  00 

135  00 

5,402  50 

20  00 

100  00 

20  00 

13,410  00 


SUPPLEMF.\T\RY    REPORT    NEW    COURT    HOUSE    SITE    AND 

CONSTRUCTION     ACCOUNT     WITH     COURT 

HOUSE  COMMISSION. 


From    March   5th.   1903,   Date 


of  the   First 
Jan.  1,  1909. 


Cr.   to    Court    House    Fund   to 


COURTHOUSE  SITE. 


Total  debits,  see  ledger 

balance    36,3-7 


50 


43 


MORTGAGE   TAX   COLLECTION. 


44453 
44451 

44452 
446U9 
44920 
44921 
44922 
44923 
45065 
45214 

45215 

4ra98 
4,->599 
4.'.6flO 
45613 


^."l^ofk^er^^^^'^a^rerrNew    ^r^^;^r.n,   lot  69.    West 

West  First  street. 


lot  C9    West  First  street  1$ 
F     J.    Voss,    city    treasuri-i-    iv.-avoo...^..w  loi  ^..j,    >>  c-av  *  ..        ^  i-r 

W.  A.  Holgate.  county 

First    street    

W    A     Holgate.   county   treasurei 
Edward   S.   Coe,    lot   70.    )\  est 

'j'nith   &   Vokes.    estimated    -.  ,  ,. 

John  Grandv^   estimated  value  of  houses  on  site 

i-onsoHdated    Abstract    Co..    abstracts   on   site    .. 

bultitl.   Nevv-s  Tribune,   publishing  legal    notices 

Ena  M.  Round,  lot  72,  West  Second    street 

W.   A.   Holgate,    treasurer,   lots 

First'' NkXnal '  Ban'k.' ' Dtiiut h! '  lot's '66'  and ' esi  west  Second  s Ireet 

(Wadhams)    ;    '///, 

Edward   D.    Field,   appraiser 

i:dward  C.  Little,    appraiser    

Sryke?M\'SlejTB'u'ck;'ln'su'ra'nc'e'on'b'uiid'rng''o^ 


tax,  lot  69, 

Second   street   

value  of  houses  on  site 


66  and    68.    West    Second    street 


25 

o 

162 

142 
14 

7 


00 
50 
39 

20 
00 
05 


65582 

73241 

75318 
76688 


p  C.  Holden.  treas- 
urer Lake  Co..  mort- 
gage tax  collections.. 

S  S.  R.  Adair,  county 
treasurer  mort  gage 
tax    collections    

A.  A  Krenler.  mortgage 
tax    collections    .... 

P  Ehe,  county  treas- 
'urer.  mortgage  tax 
collection 


Ill 


Total    debits      (See 
ance    sheet)     . .  •  • 


bal- 


64038 
76651 


HUNTERS'   LICENSES. 
A.    J.   Wasgatt.    hunters' 


is- 
11- 


35  00 

6  80 
67  50 

151  70 

8  46 

26  00 

35  00 

3  75 
65  76 
45  00 
28  80 
50  00 

152  23 

4  88 

7  ?5 
11.350  23 

2,384  72 
206  02 
750  71 
740  71 
221  64 
49,000  00 


76650  C. 

76651A. 
76652  A 
76926  C 


licenses    

A.    Otterson    salary 
suing        hunters' 
censes •  •  -  • 

C.      Dinehart,      state 
treasurer,    hunters'    li- 
cense fees ■ 

Otterson.      salary      is- 
suing licenses    •  • 

Otterson.      salary      is- 
suing licenses    

C       Dinehart.      state 
treasurer,    hunters'    li- 
cense fees    

Total  debits   (See  led- 
ger   balance    sheet) 

Outstanding  war- 
rants  


3  25 


124  21 

94  56 

75  00 

2.756  70 

9  50 

75  00 

1  80 


3.oi; 


51101 
52443 
52444 

66616 

6C821 

66887 

67238 

67241 

68976 

71833 
71834 
T1S61 
75321 


pure 

and  abstracts 

of  lot  74 


and   88, 
lots  7 


"^lots  82  and  84,    block 


lots  85 


$   2.758  50 


Total      warrants 

stied    

Refunds 

Transferred 

acct.     for 

of   site    . . 
Transferred 

acct.    for 

of    site    .. 


.".  .$160,052  26 
135  32 


to    Rev. 

purchase 

to    Rev. 
purchase 


38.898  92 


23.668  87 


Total       debits        (see 
balance    sheet). 


$222,755  37 


COI'RT    HOUSE   CONSTRUCTION. 


Total    of    warrants 

drawn     

Add    refunds 


$1,279,930  72 
1.163  75 


Total    debits,      (see 

ledger  bal.  sheet)$l.-Sl,094  4/ 


HOSPITAL 
state 
treasurer,      state      in- 
ebriate    fund 


STATE   INEBRIATE 
68050  C.       C.       Dinehart 


60  00 


STATE   FUND. 

«4584  C.  Dinehart.  state  treas- 
urer, tax  sale  Nov.  11, 
1907    state    taxes 

•4585  C.  Dinehart.  .state  treas- 
urer, state  school 
taxes      

66060  C.  Dinehart.  .etate  treas- 
urer, state  school 
taxes     '. . . . 


879  61 


702  89 


15.932  17 


71729 
71730 
71731 
71732 
71733 
71734 
71735 

71736 
71737 
7173S 
71739 
7174M 
71741 

71742 
73424 

73425 
73  4  26 
73427 
73428 

73429 
73430 
73431 
73432 

73433 

73434 
73435 
73436 
73437 


Ramstatl   ifc   Mc.Vdams 
Lanquist   &   lilsley.   Co... 

J.  J.   Wangensteln    

P.   A.    Kams    

J.   H.   Robinson    

Western   Union  Tel,   Co., 
Providence           Improve- 
ment  Co 

D    H.   Burnham   &  Co 

Wm.  J.  Stevenson 

Katherine  S.   Dolan    

George  H.  Claypool    

Anderson    Jt   Gow    

Clnistle     Lithographing 

\;   Printing  Co 

F.  H.   Lounsberry    

Ramstad  &   McAdams    .  . 

Lan<|uist  &    Illsley  Co.... 

Linden    &    Danielson    .  .  . 

Alexander    Marshall     ... 

Cliristie     Lithograpliing 
&  PrlDtirg  Co.,    

H.   Popkin    

Korbv  Piano  Co 

J.   J.   Le  Tourneau    

Remington      Typewriter 
Co.,     

I'rovidence          Improve- 
ment  Co 

Duluth  Telephone  Co.,    . 

George   H.   Claypool   .... 

Katherine   L.   Dolan    .  ... 

Wm.   J.   Stevenson 


1,494  30 

44,972  86 

697  00 

150  00 

130  00 

64 

35  00 

28,463  20 

83  33 

)0  00 


165 


r.  25 
45 


11  75 

22  50 

143  86 

58,791  92 

4  23  50 

15  00 

26  25 
9  45 
2  50 
8  75 

15  00 

35  00 

5  95 

150  00 

50  00 

83  33 


Do  You 
Know  That 

Real  estate  is  cheaper 
today  in  Duluth  than 
in  any  town  of  its  size 
in  the  United  States  ? 

And  that  in  percentage  of 
gain  in  building  last  year 
over  1907,  Duluth  was  one  of 
the  few^  American  cities  that 
blossomed  to  the  top! 

And  that  there  are  fewer 
vacant  houses  in  Duluth 
than  in  any  city  of  its  size. 
The  city  is  growing  faster 
than  the  residences  go  up. 

Taking  these  things  into 
consideration,  do  you  fully 
realize  what  a  splendid  in- 
vestment Duluth  real  estate 
is  today? 


M  H.  Stanford, attorney 
AVilson  G.  Crosby,  costs 
J.  T.  Michaud,   purchase 

Samuel    i! "Levin,    lots    86 

division     ■••:••.•     ••;•■■ 

James    Cash,    administrator, 

proper.    Third    division 
Electa  W.  Spalding, 

J^|iii'^ll^r:'io{s'8f;a:nd'^'i;u;cu;2s 

Alexander  'Do'u'gla'.s'  'Thomson, 
proper.     Third     division. 

"'^itnli   pr'o'peV'Third  division, 
luth    proper,    Firgt   division 
First    National    Bank    of 
^merlcU^Exi^lVnge'Ban'k'ofbuluth,   Interest 

cSf  klth^al   1  lank 'of  •  Dtiiui:!!;'  "iniei^^sV '  on  '  'waVranl 

issued    for   site    ••••,•,• 'Tl'^'-c 
Alexander  McDougall,   lots  (8 
Third   division,    and   lots    i8 
Second  street,  Duluth  proper,  Urst 

Total 


Miller  and  Annie   K.  Miller,  lots    . 


and  E»,i  lot  76,  West  Second 

bl'(jc"k'20,' 'Diiiiith'  'pr'oper,  "Third 

'7 '  'aiid ' '79, '  block'  29',    Duluth 

'26,     "Duluth      proper, 

b ill utli  proper.  Third 

87,"  biock  "2'8'.'  Duluth 

'ami' '75',' ' i)lo'ck'  '29,'  'l')u- 


and 

"3 


and  lot  23,  West  Second  street,  Du- 
'b'uiuth'.iiite'r'e'st'oTi  "warrant  No.  67238, 
Bank  ' of ' 'b'uiu'th,'  "inter'e.s't  'on  warrant 


No. 


and  80, 
and  SO 


block    19, 

and    WV^ 
dlV'ision    , 


No.    G8976, 


Duluth    proper, 
of    lot    76,    West 


99  35 

22,247.67 

152.98 

7,500.<K) 

20.00 

24.00 

(k'1.75 

6.75 

9,800.00 

207.27 

20,992.73 

52.50 
52.50 
52.50 

5.75 
11,700.00 

5.850.00 
5, 8.')!'.  00 

40.090.31 

13.363.44 

5<i.0O 

1.40 

4,750.00 

2.375.00 

2,375.00 

17.35 

13,250.00 

43,789,66 

20,000.00 

51,527.10 

59,462.40 

29,228.44 

34,761.55 
750.71 
740.71 
221.64 

49,<:oo.co 


.9101 
59102 
7(H34 
7(tl35 
70142 

71731 

71732 
71733 
71736 

73438 

73439 

73440 

75289 
75290 
75298 
7.'>30O 
76455 

76456 
76457 

7645S 
76469 


John 
John 
J.  H. 
P.  A. 
J.  J. 


Miller.    tra<-eling   expense 

Wangensteln,  travelinr  expense • 

Robinson,  services,  nine  days  at   $0  per  „"/*y-.v  ••,•••,•  •••;iA^- 
Karns,  services.  3-26ths  of  one  month  at  iZJ),  J"'y',J*2,Va- 
Wangenste  n,  si^pervislng  architect.  July  estimate,  $13,734.9^ 


lii  per  cent  ou  estimates,     $46,467.16. 


at  1  \<i   per  cent    . 
J.  J.  Wangensten, 

■'''*^"  Kar'n.s' ' S-'s't lis  ot  'a  'mon't'li' se'i'vl'ce' 'as'  'sujierinl'endent 
Robinson,   26  days'  service  as  insp^H;tor  n t  $:,  per 
Burnham  .i  Co.,  3\-i   per  cent  on  $,9:,,2.n..1;.. 

$028.47  traveling  expense ...• 

Karns.  services  as  superintendent 

per  month    

Wangenstein,    IV2    pei 

T*^h'  Roi)inson;  Ueivi'ces 'as' iKsiiecVcir.  25  days  at  $5  per  day 

Ole  Hansen,  live  days  as  inspecior  at  to   per  day 

J    J    Wai.gpnstein,  1%  per  cent  on  (.iclober 

1     H    Robinson,   services  as  Inspecmr  ^^   .    i    .. 

•'•  "•  /alary   for  .superintendent    for    October.... 


P.  A. 
J.  H. 
D.  H. 

and 
P.  A. 

$250 
J.    J. 


cent  on 


supervi 

"at"  $250 

day 

contracts  closed, 

9-ioths    of   a    month    at 

est'i'niates"  'of  '  $58',79i.92   antl 

"'^^  da'ys'a't'$5  per 


estimates 

Octol>er,  20  days  at  $5 


P.    A.    Karns, 


as 


office     boy     for     superintendent. 


Frederick   Zander,   services 

four   weeks  ard   one  day    ••••• -j 

Ole    Hansen,     services,     inspector,  iO  days   at  ?» 
1     H     Robinson,   services,    inspector.  19  days  at 

\'    Karns     sJ  rvices.    superintendent,    for   November 
1    'WangenstJ'ln,  supervision,  li*.  per   cent 
mates,    $70,008.12     

Total    


P 
J. 


in   November 

$6.  in  November. 


on    November   estl- 


34.60 
3*1.80 
4r..fK) 
28.80 

206.02 

697.00 
150.00 
130.00 

28,163.30 

22.5.00 

<;M.n3 

25.08 

1.71 '3.71 
13i'.f« 
250,00 

16.r-6 
10fi.no 

96.00 
2.50.00 

1,050.12 


-  - 


$     34,63.9.94 


GENERAL  CONTRACT. 


70140 
71730 
73425 

75284 
764C2 


and 


i„.,^.„;<.f    jc.    111. lev    Co      estimate  for  work   June  and  July.  1908.1$ 
I'an    u  s     &  Illsie^-   Co  ."  AugiJ^t  estimate   on   general   contract 
Linqul'st    &    llh'ley    Co'.,    estimate   on     materials     in     place 

work    done   in    September... i"  •  •  •  W  . '  » :.'.: '        

Lanquist    &    111 'ley    Co..    estimate  for   October,^ 
Lanquist  &  Ill.sley  Co.,  estimate  on  contract 


1908   

for  November, 


1908 


Total 


11,350.2s 
44,972.86 

58.791.93 

10S..M7.79 

5«>,323.12 

$    279.9.">5.9a 


SEWERS. 


70141 
71729 
73424 

75285 
75286 


Ramstad 
Ramstad 
Itamstad 
Ramstad 
Ramstad 

Total 


& 
& 

& 

& 
& 


Mc\dams    estimate  for  work  done  in 

McAdams",   August   estimate  on  sewer 

McAdams,    estimate    sewer  cont^ract 

M<  Adams,    estimate    for  October,  1908  •••■••••■; 

Mc.\damB    back  filling  54.6  cubic  yards  at  $1  per 


July,  1908 

cont  r.tct . 

for  Sepien 


$ 

2.3!'4.78 

1.494.30 

iber. 

143.S6 
980.07 

yard 

54.00 

t 

5.057.56 

STOKERS. 


75''87    The    Westingh  >use 

76468    The    Westingh  >use 

vember.    1908    

*       Total    


Ma<hine 
Macliine 


Co. 
Co. 


estimate 
estimate 


for   October, 
on   contract 


1908 

for  No- 


1.360.00 
S&0.00 


2,210,00 


PLUMBING. 


75288 
76464 


E.   Baggot 
E.   BawTtJot 


Cor  ipany, 
Coripany, 


estimate 
estimate 


for  October, 
on  contract 


190R     

for  November, 


1908. 


2.722.55 
8.4>C..<,0 


i 


Total 


6,207.65 


$   450,434.46 


GENERAL  EXPEN.SE. 


51872 
51873 
,",1874 
r)lS75 
,-.3909 
o.%77 
5557  s 
56189 
60454 
62948 
65154 

6.5945 
059  4»j 
0.5947 
fi.-!U8 
66619 
6C«20 
66621 

66622 

66C23 

66624 

67619 
67621 
67622 
117623 
G8t;50 

6S651 
6N653 
C8656 
70130 

70132 

70133 

7013S 

70139 
71734 

71737 
73426 

73429 
73i;«) 
73437 
75291 
75292 
75293 
75294 

175295 


traveling    expense 


draft  of  Toledo  plan; 

'  g 

of  lots 

'Fiif't'li 


of  Second    street    and 


ave- 


O     Halden     county   auditor 

Vohn    Wangensteln,    traveling    expense 

Neil    Mclnnis,    traveling    expense 

John    Sundeen.    traveling    expense 

John    Miller,    traveling   ^''P^«^"se ..•,.. 

l^""]^   ^Sl:-^''trtfe^  nl   iSen^selVn'd     ..„     . 
SultUh-Engineering  Cof  -ryey  and  piat  ot   grounds 
Duluth    Engineering   Co.,    plats    and   survej 

Diiluth  Engineering  Co.,  plats    etc.       

Duluth    Engineering    Co.,    P'^t         .  ,  

nue  courthouse  sewer  and  vvateimanis..^  "contract... 

Duluth  New.s  Tribune  Co..   adveitising   prop.  .  a  ^.^^^        ,^ 

William    J.    Stevenson.    t'"a^«""?  "^^^j"  jUng    blue  prints 

Dululh    Engineering  C«--    «"' J^>A""-„^/   ^r  ning 

John  A.  Johnson,  digging  test  pits  antl    aiiiiing 

George    H    Claypool     ty pevvriting  ^. ---^^-(i- " of"  courthouse 

'^;:ii^r'i^r^uri^^  ^^^^^^  -^«"'  '^•-  ^--^'p""^^^^ ""'{ 

Dtnuth'°Evening''H'era'rd','''p'u'blis'hin'g'n'otice    for    proposals    forj 

Difuith'^Newf  Trii>'une:"pubilsi:i'n'g'pro'pos'ai'  notice,   construction 

Pi*:fne;\"'piess' Go'.: ' pu'bii'si.'ing' 'proposal ' 'n'otice,    construction    of 

J^;?J^y;V'^r^ting'Co:;'a:dvei^^  

K.?u?h''Knre^rg"l.o.^^!^i r^blt^^pri^'ts  of  courthouse 

Geo^  H^  Cla ypool^,^off  ice.  statk>nery .  .^ .  •  •  -  •  ^j^^  •  •,•  •  ^^a"  "500  second 


^irirB 


BOILERS. 


761 63 


site. 


com- 


■pubTishing  notice  for  bids  for  sewer 


July  8  to 
telephone 


31,   1908 

messages. 


May    and 


estimate 


blanks    

to  Burnham 


&  Co.,  Chi- 


sheets    •••    — .'V  ■iii'iV-'i'to  Sept.  3    IMS.  long  distance 

TTpai:ner  re|lsfer^^enfe;'inrm>nute'«    ot    courthouse 

mis'slon   to   May   22.   l^'S 
Duluth  News  Tribune  Co 

contract    one  time   .•••• 

William   1   Stevenson,    services 
The  John  Miller  Co..  telegraph. 

June.    1908    ••    •  —  ••!!• 

F.  H.   Lounsberry   &  Co.    l.ooo 

Western  Union  Telegraph  Co..  message 

cago,    Aug.    l^..........-.--------- j-^;.;^g      fQ^  board  for  August 

T'ri?'une  company,   financial   advertisement, 

^e'ste'iru'nion ''T'elegr'a'ph  "c'o.',"uiegrap-h  services  for  Septeml^er 
October,  190S   .... 


66.05 

06.05 

(■.6.tj5 

54.82 

]37.1»5 

350.(r5 

42.50 

23.00 

3.<X» 

12.r;0 

.i.-:5 

29.10 

K17.0) 

IVM 

16.47 

18.00 

11.6) 

2.20 

11.60 

8.S0 
11.84 
2F..00 

2..% 
12.39 

14.00 
7.05 
c.SO 
8.46 

26.00 

3.75 
65.76 

4.8S 


.64 
83.33 

423..5:» 

9.45 

2.50 

<;3.33 

17.5.56 

134.20 

2.00 

18.40 

7.98 


Marshall 
vember 


•  Wells    Hardware 
1908    


Co.,   estimate    on    contract    for    Ko-J 


5.100.00 


ELECTRIC    WIRING. 


76406    A.    S. 


Schulman,   estimate  on  contract   for  November.  1908 


.|$      2,125.00 


HEATING. 


76467 


Dixon 

19(JS 


.Steam    System    Co..    estimate   on 


contract  for  November, 


2.125.00 


MIW   COUUT  HOUSE  SITK 


WD  fOXSTRl  CTI<»> 
ilOVSI-:    CO.M.'HiSSHf.'' 

UKCAriTTLATION. 

paym]:nts. 


Courthouse  site  ... 
General     expense     . 

Office   expense    

Secretary's  salary  . 
Architect's  expense 
General  contract    ... 

Sewers    

Stokers     

numbing    

Boilers 


aiiil   .siipcrintendent. 


l-:iectric 
Heating 


wiring 


ACCOtNT    WITH     COLKT 


450,434.46! 

2,568.33 

1.678.13! 

2,845.001 

34.639.94! 

279,9,".5.92 
6,'k'>7.55 
2.210.00 
0,207.56 
6.100.00 

2,ir\00 

2,12.5.00 


Total    

Cash  balance  in 


$   794.947.19 


hands  of  treasurer  January    Lst,   19C'9.. 


RECEIPTS. 


Tax   Levies    

Bank    interest    

Bonds     •••■■■• 

Premium    on    bones    ... 
•Sale  of  house  on  lots 


35S.470.<2 
7.755.38 

COft.fr^O.OC 
9.780.W 
1,025.00 


794.947.18 

182,084.02 


$   977,'J31.aO 


Total 


'$    977,031.20 


$   977.0SL3O 


•iTr.r  additional  crefilts  of  sales   of  buildings 
site^$:[34^.^^..    see   receipts   into  county  revenue  account. 
Jan.  1st.   1909. 


and  shrubbery  on  Qourthous* 


^:5^-^ 


County     Audilur* 


and 


tutmam-maitt 


ITh 


«■ 


_,,, .,  ^  ,-^— — J" 


m 


Wr 


DULUTH  KVENING  HERALD 


|. 


TWENTY-SIXTH   YEAR. 


LAST    EDITION. 


TUESDAY,  MARCH  16,  1909. 


TWO  CENTS. 


F  TINKERERS  GET  DOWN  TO  BUSINES 
TAFT  SENDS  MESSAGE  TO  EXTRA  SE 


THE  STEEL  CORPORATION 
HAS  MADE  PLANS  FOR  A 


$25,000,000  PLANT  HERE 


PRESIDENT 
FOR  SPEED 


House  Committee  Says 

Corporation  Is  Acting 

In  Good  Faith. 


Getting  Ready  for  $10,- 

000,000  Plant  to  be 

Enlarged  Later. 

Expected  Ultimately  to 
Give  WorK  to  Ten  Thou- 
sand Men. 


<F>uiii   a    Statt   Correspomleut.) 

St.  Paul.  Minn.,  Maroh  16. — (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.) — The  unanimous  report 
of  the  special  committee  of  the  houee 
which  went  to  I>uUith  to  Inquire  into 
the  progress  made  on  the  steel  plant 
was  made  to  the  tax  committee  last 
night.  It  was  unanimously  adopted 
and   was   presented   to   the  house   today: 

To  the  Chairman  and  Members  of  the 
Committee  on  Taxes  and  Tux  Laws  of 
the  House  of  Representatives:  Gentle- 
men: Your  sub-committee  appointed 
to  examine  into  our  report  as  to  the 
progress  made  by  the  United  States 
Steel  corporation  toward  the  con-struc- 
tion  of  a  steel  plant  at  Duluth.  and  to 
make  such  further  investigations  and 
recommendations  as  in  its  Judgment 
seem«-d  wise,  begs  leave  to  report  as 
follon  s: 

Your  committee  visited  Duluth  on 
Mondav.  Marcli  S,  1909.  Several  repre- 
sentatives of  the  United  States  Steel 
corporation  appeared  before  your  com- 
mittee, among  wliom  was  Kinnle  C. 
Hoxie,   engineer  in  charge  of  construc- 

(Coniinued   on    pag»    7.    first  column.) 


STRIKE  IS 


Wants  New  Tariff  Bill 
Passed  With  All  Prop- 
er Celerity. 

A  FIZZLElChanged  Conditions  Re- 
quire an  Early  Read- 
justment, He  &eys. 


NEW  TRIAL  IS  DENIED  TO 
SCHREIBER,  CONVICTED  OF 
MURDER  OF  MASSAPUST 


French  Government  Em- 
ployes Fail  to  Act 
In  Unison. 


JOHN   DALZELL, 
High  Priest  of  Protection,  and  One  of 
the    Most    Ardent    Boosters   of    the 
New  Tariff  Bill. 


HALL  BILL 
IS  PASSED 


SHOOTS  A  HUGE 
MOUNTAIN  LION .. 

California  Farmer  Lays 

It  Low  With  One 

Shot 


Senate   Favors    Taking 

the  Lid  Off  Campaign 

Expenditures. 


Full  Crew"  Bill  Killed 

After  a  Brisk 

Fight. 


Telegraph  and  Telephone 
Service  Is  Badly  Crip- 
pled, However. 


Paris.  March  10. — The  strike  of  the 
telegrajih,  telephone  and  postal  em- 
ployes of  the  state  voted  with  so  much 
enthusiasm  last  night  is  turning  out 
today  to  be  anything  but  effective,  and 
unless  there  shall  come  some  sudden 
change  for  the  worse  it  promises  to  be 
of  short  duration. 

An  overwlielming  majority  of  the  day 
sJiifts  in  all  branches  ol  the  service  re- 
ported for  duty  this  morning.  Hun- 
dreds- of  men  present  at  the  meetings 
last  night  concluded,  after  sleeping 
over  the  matter,  that  they  would  not 
run  the  risk  of  losing  permanent  em- 
plovment.  * 

Nevertheless,  the  various  services 
are  more  or  less  crippled  or  demoral- 
ised today.  The  main  defectinns  oc- 
curred in  the  telegraph  and  railway 
mail  services.  At  tlie  Central  Tele- 
graph offices  most  of  the  opeiators  are 
today  sitting  beliind  their  keys  with 
crossed  arms  on  the  pretense  tiiat  tiieir 
instrumtnts  are  out  of  order.  The 
telephone  svstem  appears  to  be  work- 
ing normally,  but  the  deliveries  of  mall 
occurred  wiih  some  delay. 

The  govt-rnment  shows  no  signs  of 
yielding.  On  the  contraiy.  Mr.  Simyan. 
undersecretary  of  posts  and  telegraphs, 
announced  this  morning  that  such  a  re- 
volt on  the  part  of  the  servants  of  the 
state  cannot  be  toleiated.  Every  offi- 
cial refusing  to  work  or  disobeying 
,  the  regulations  will  b.-  dismissed. 

BASEBALL  PRESIDKNT.  WHO 
DISAPPEARS.  IS  Fill  ND. 


Declares  the  Republican 

Pledge  of  Revision 

Must  be  Kept. 


Washington.  March  16. — President 
Taft  this  aiternoon  sent  to  congress  liis 
much  anticipated  message  on  tariff  re- 
vision. He  did  not  t>egin  writing  the 
document   until  this  morning.     It  reads: 

"To  the  Senate  and  House  of  Repre- 
sentatives: 

•'I  have  convened  the  congress  In  this 
extra  session  in  order  to  enable  it  to 
give  Immediate  consideration  to  the 
revision  of  the  Dingley  tariff  act.  Con- 
ditions aft'ecting  production,  manufac- 
ture and  business  generally  have  so 
clianged  in  the  past  twelve  years  as  to 
refiuire  a  read.iustni*nt  and  revision  of 
the  import  duties  imposed  by  that  act. 
More   than    this,    the    oresent    tariff   act, 


(From   a    Staff    C'orrespoudent.) 

St.    Paul,    Minn.,    March    16.- 


Chlc:tgo.  March  16.— Charles     H.  .Mor- 
ton,   former      president    of   the      Ohio    & 
I'ennsvlvaiiia      Baseball        league,      who 
"*."'     •    ,  Ulisappcarcd    from       Cleveland,    .Ian.    12 

^  ,   ,  ^   ,       xf.^^i.     ifi       V    Pali  •  '•    ' "' '^P*''''''^'!last.  has  been  found  by  his  brother,  H. 

Petaluma.    Cal..    March     it).— A    i^aii-    n,  The  Herald. )— The  senate  tliis  morn-    V.    Mortort    of    Chicago.         The    former 
fornia    mountain    lion    measuring    sev-  j  massed   the  Hall   bill    taking  the  lid  !  baseball   official   was   not   In    possession 

^^^1    f.^t    froTYi    nose    to    tall    was    shot         ^  passto   ine  wan    vui,   laning  tue  iici  proper   senses   and    was    wander- 

eral    feet    fiom    nose    to    tan    was    -^'ioi|^^  campaign  expenditures  by  repealing    j^^  aimlessly  about  the  streets  of  Ciii- 

that  part   of  the   corrupt   practices   law    cago. 
which    fixes    a    limit    upon    the    amount 
j  of  money   candidates   can   spend    to  get . 
themselves    elected.      As    originally    In-    »»»»»*»»**»»■* **)K**i> »)»■»-*»*»*- 


on  a  ranch  near  here  today  by  Robert 
Cook.  For  some  lime  the  farmers 
have  been  Using  calves,  sheep  and 
other  stock  and  the  depredations  liave 
been  laid  to  coyotes.  Cook  was  out 
with  his  pack  of  hounds  looking  for 
three  animals  when  he  trailed  the  lion 
to  its  den.  One  shot  which  lodged  in 
the  neck  of  the  big  beast,  killed  It 
lustantlv.  The  lion  wore  an  Immense 
mane    like   its   African   relative. 

SALVADOR  KNTEHTAINS 

AMERICAN  SAILORS. 

Washington.  March  16. — Minister 
Melia  of  Salvador  has  received  a 
cablegram  from  President  Figueroa. 
stating  that  the  American  armored 
cruiser    squadron    is    at    anchor   off    the 

§ort     of     Acaiutla,     and     that     Admiral 
wlneburne  and   liis  officers  are  guests 
of   the   nation   at    the    criMJtal. 

CONCILIATE 
INSIJRGENTS 

Older  Senators  In  Min- 
ority on  Selection  of 
Committees. 

Six  of  Nine  Members  Are 

Prom  tne  West, 

Too. 


(Contiruu-d  on   page  Si.  f.fth  column.^ 

AUTHORESS  DIES 
ON  HEALTH  TRIP 

Mrs.  Lane  Wrote  "Kath- 

elean"  and  "Mills  of 

God." 

Lynchburg,* Va..  March  16. — Mrs.  Eli- 
nor Mac»"artney  Lane,  the  novelist, 
died  iiere  late  last  night  She  had 
been  ill  for  several  days  and  was  on 
her  way  South  with  her  husband.  Dr. 
Francis    R.    L,ane,    to    recuperate. 

Mrs.  Lane  was  born  in  Washington. 
I)  C,  about  forty-five  yeais  ago.  and 
her  body  will  be  taken  to  that  city  for 
interment.  ,  ^,.  ..    , 

About  five  years  ago  she  established 
her  reputation  as  a  writer  by  publish- 
ing "The  .Mills  of  tJod."  The  success 
of  this  novel  prompted  her  to  write 
".Xancv  stair.  '  which  waa  subsequently 
dramatized.  "Kathelean,"  Mrs.  Lane's 
last  novel,  which  she  considered  her 
masterpieec,    had    juet    been    finished. 


TARIFF  BILL 
OVERA  DAY 

Delay  Made  to  Await  New 

Committeeman's 

Approval 

Cannon  Says  "Tommy- 
rot;"  Clark  Says  Speaker 
Has  Paresis. 


Washington.  March  16. — The  new 
tariff  bill  will  be  introduced  In  the 
house  tomorrow,  the  delay  In  its  pre- 
sentation being  to  secure  the  approval 
of  a  new  Republican  member  on  the 
ways  and  means  committee  whom  the 
speaker  will  appoint  to  succeed  Mr. 
Bonynge  of  Colorado,  whose  term  has 
expired 

The  second  days'  session  of  the  house 
of  representatives  found  the  members 
In  »  much  calmer  mood.  The  ques- 
tion of  the  amendment  rults  having 
been  settled  yesterday,  the  tension  was 
notlceablv    relaxed    and    a    feeling    of 


Judge  Dibell  Finds  That 

Proof  of  Murder  Was 

Established. 


Had  Fair  Trial  and  Ver- 
dict of  Guilty  Was 
Justified. 

Sentence  of  Death  or  Life 
Imprisonment  is  Post- 
poned. 


(Continued  on  page  8,  third  column.) 

INDIAN  IS  SENT 
TO  PENITENTIARY 

District  of  Columbia  Court 

Punishes  Him  For 

Murder. 

Washington.  March  16— For  the  first 
time  in  the  annals  of  the  criminal 
court  of  the  District  of  Columbia,  an 
Indian,  Robert  McCullc  has  been  sen- 
tenced by  Justice  Gould  to  twenty 
years  in  the  penitentiary  on  his  plea 
of  Second  degree  murder.  Ho  was  in- 
dicted for  murder  in  the  first  degree 
In  connection  with  the  killing  of  Carl 
Fink  last  October  by  hitting  the  lat- 
ter over  the  head  with  a  billet  of  wood. 


WILLIAM  SCHREIBER. 

Who  is  now  25  years  old.  was  born  in 
Rus.'-ian  Poland,  coming  to  the  United 
.<?tates  with  his  parents  in  1897.  The 
familv  settled  in  Wisconsin  and  Charles 
Schreiber.  the  father  of  the  murderer, 
now  lives  at  Underbill  in  that  state. 
As  soon  as  lie  attained  liis  majority, 
in  March,  1904.  William  ivhreiber  went 
into  the  Ashawa  district  and  filed  on  a 
homestead.  He  was  married  in  Maich. 
iSuD.  and  lived  on  his  h  jmestead  with 
his  wife  until  arrested  for  the  crime, 
of  which  he  was  convicKd  by  a  Jury  In 
December.      He  has   two    children. 


HE  SPURNS 
LIONTRAPS 

Roosevelt  Will  Rely  Upon 

His  Accuracy  of 

Aim. 


-)j(  )|;  j|^  j|(.  ^  )|{  )|^  j^  ]^{.  )m|(  )|^.)i( 

*  CIlIUJXOIXMiY  OF  THE  C.\SE. 

*  

1908 — 


troduced  the  bill  repealed  the  entire  | 
corrupt  practices  act.  but  so  much  op-  | 
position  developed  to  it  In  this  shape 
that  it  was  changed  so  as  to  preserve 
the  present  regulations  as  to  the  pur- 
poses of  campaign  expenditures  and 
(Continued  on   page  ^.  sixth  column.) 

DENIES  GUILT  AT 
ELECTROCUTION 

Italian  Put  to  Death  for 

the  Murder  of  His 

Cousin. 

Auburn,  N.  Y.,  March  16. — Salvatore 
Randa^zio,  who  was  convicted  April 
3,  190b,  of  the  murder  of  his  cousin, 
Pletro  Randazzlo,  at  West  Salmanaca. 
Jan.  11,  1908,  was*  electrocuted  in  Au- 
burn  prison  this  morning. 

Randazzio  claimed  to  the  la.si  that 
ho  was  not  guilty.  In  a  letter  to  his 
father,  written  yesterday  morning,  he 
said  the  murder  was  the  work  of  Silvio 
Baretta. 

Baretta  and  Randazzio  were  section 
men  at  West  Salmanaca,  occupying 
bunks  in  a  box  car.  It  was  shown  at 
the  trial  that  the  murder  was  a  part 
of    a    plan    to    rob    Pletro    Randazzio 

of  $:o. 


jjtofc  ik  ifc  )li  JHH 

^p  ^T*  •'^  ^  ^n  ^  ^'  ' 

UP  fiGRINST  IT. 

l^iK-le  Joe:        "Fiuiiiy.   I  lia<l    no  trouble  putting   this  puzzle  togetht-r  before!' 


I^*)l(»***»»»»*»*»**»*»»»»»**************^*^*^^^'^^ 


»»i|c»»»)|()H*»»»»»»»*»*i 


Washington.  March  16. — The  com- 
position of  the  senate  committee  on 
committees  as  announced  by  Senator 
Hale,  chairman  of  the  Republican 
caucus  of  the  senate,  i.s  generally  ac- 
cepted as  indicating  a  distinct  pur- 
pose to  conciliate  the  "youngsters'  of 
the  senate,  as  the  band  uf  insurgents 
Is  called. 

Senators  AUlrich,  Kean.  .McCumber 
and  <'rane  of  the  old  guard  form  but 
a  minority  of  the  nine  members. 
Senators  Flint,  Southland,  Curtis, 
Borah  and  Dixon  all  being  of  the 
younger  element,  yet  it  is  realized  that 
In  this  membership  there  is  enough 
conser\;ttivt:;  sentiment  to  prevent  any 
domination  on  the  part  of  radicals 
should  an  effort  have  been  made  by 
them   to   do   so. 

The  fact  that  the  WcPt  predomi- 
nates in  the  committee  is  al.«o  notice- 
able, six  of  the  nine  members  being 
from  beyond  the  Missouri  river. 


WINS  TWO  DUELS; 
KILLS_HIS  FOES 

German    Civilian    Puts 

Army  Officers  to 

Death. 

Eisenach.  Germany,  March  16. — A 
civilian  fought  two  duels  here  today 
with  officers  of  the  army  and  killed 
both    opponents.      Pistols    were    used. 

The  civilians  name  Is  Schutzbar 
Milg.  and  he  is  a  wealthy  land  owner 
residing  near  Hohonaus.  His  oppon- 
ents were  a  lieutenant  named  Von 
Buttlar  and  an  army  surgeon,  whose 
identity    has   been    culcealed 

Herr  Milgs  wife  is  an  American. 
.Jealousy  prompted  lum  to  challenge 
and  fight  both  officers  on  the  same 
day. 


Residents  of  Oyster  Bay 

Vicinity  Invited  to 

Recepticm. 

Oyster  Bay,  N.  Y.,  Ms  rcb  16. — A  fel- 
low passenger  of  ex-President  Roose- 
velt and  the  other  members  of  the 
Roosevelt-.Smithonian  j'.frlcan  expedi- 
tion on  their  voyage' Irom  Naples  to 
Mombasa  on  the  steamer  Admiral,  Is  to 
be  the  noted  naturulist,  Richard 
Tjader,  who  has  already  left  New  York 
for  Europe.  He  is  going  Into  about 
the  same  country  as  Air.  Roosevelt's 
expedition,  but  will  not  Join  that* 
party.  His  work  will  bo  for  the^Amer- 
Ican  Museum  of  natural  history  of  New 
York.  Mr.  Tjader  will  sjend  six  months 
in  Africa  and  hopes  to  make  a  collec- 
tion  of   rare  animal    specimens   for   the 

(Continued  on  page  8,  third  column.) 

REMOVES  TllOR 
FROM  A  BRAIN 

Clever  Feat  in  Surgery 
Performed  in  George- 
town Hospital. 

Washington.  Marcli  1( . — What  is  pro- 
nounced a  feat  in  surgery,  is  an  opera- 
tion on  the  brain  of  Rassell  Dolin.  an 
11-year-old  lad,  performed  in  George- 
town   hospital. 

The  boy's  brain  wan  seriously  im- 
paired because  of  a  tumorous  growtii 
and  this  produced  something  akin  to  a 
paralvtic  condition.  The  surgeon  made 
an  incision  in  the  scalp  and  drilled  an 
orifice  in  tlie  bone  of  sufficient  size  to 
enable    him    to    use    his    forceps. 

The  tumorous  growth  was  removed, 
and  it  is  said  the  cliild's  brain  may  as- 
sume   its    normal   funct  ons. 

KILLS  MAN  WHO 
STOLEJIilS  WIFE 

Coloradoan  Says  He  Would 

Not  Tell  V/here 

She  h. 

Trinidad,  Colo.,  Maich  16. — Edward 
Buller,  a  saloon  keeper,  was  sliol  and 
Instantly  killed  today  by  J.  M.  Justice. 
Justice  immediately  gave  himself  up 
to  the  officers  and  stated  that  Buller 
had  stolen  his  wife  from  him  and  re- 
fused to  reveal  her  wlereabouta. 


* 
* 

i» 

1* 
1* 

I* 

I* 

* 
* 


Fob.  ». — lYanU  Massapust's  cabin 
on  Sc<-iion  12,  To\\Ubhi|>  U2, 
norlli.  l{an;;c  20  west,  burux  to 
the   ground. 

Feb.  I<». — Cliarretl  trunk  of  b«Kly 
found  in  ruins  uf  cabin,  hcmi, 
having      lieeii 


* 


arms   and    Ic^.s 
burned   away. 

Feb.  12. — Hod>  found  In  ruins  of 
.Ma>sa|'U!-i'!«'»-ubin  buritnl  at 
New    I  Ini.   .Minn. 

.V|«ril  9-11.  —  William  Sclirelber .  * 
visits  Wasliburu.  Wis.,  nogn-  ♦ 
tialcs  for  purchase  ol  piec«'  of  * 
land  and  forges  Ma.ssapust's  ^ 
UHiue  to  t'crtificate  of  deposit  ♦ 
f«)r  S32.>.29.  * 

.\pril  28. — William  !>elireilK'r  ar-  * 
rested  at  Ix  i  b  homestead,  * 
eliarj-c'tl  with  forgery.  ♦ 

Scpi,  «. — William  Sclirelber  In-  ♦ 
diete<l  on  a  charjie  ol  murd«-r  in  ■# 
the  lir^t   det;ree.  ^ 

l>,.t..  1. — Trial  of  bchrelber  lie-  * 
ftun.  ♦ 

Dee.  9. — Case  given  to  the  jury       * 

l)^^.,  11. — \  cKlict  of  guilty  of  ¥f 
nniriler  in  thi'  lirst  di-irree  re-  ^^ 
turned  alter  forty-seven  liourts'  •* 
deliberation   by  the  jury.  * 

l»e<'  19. — Motion  for  new  trial  ♦ 
»rgue<l.  ^ 

1909 —  * 

March  1«. — New  trial  denie<l  in  * 
decision  handed  down  by  Jmlge  * 
H.  B.  Dibell. 


By  an  order  handed  down  sliorlly 
after  noon  today.  Judge  H.  B.  Dibell. 
In  district  court  denied  the  motion  of 
■William  Pchreiber  for  a  new  trial. 
Sciireiber  was  convicted  Dec.  11  of  the 
murder  of  Frank  Massapust  in  a  settle- 
ment about  twelve  miles  from  Ashawa, 

now  Cook,   Feb.  9,  1908.  ^    , 

Schreiber,  who  was  in  court  attended 
by  G.  W  C.  Ross,  of  Ross  &  McKnight, 
his  counsel,  was  present  in  court  when 
Judge  Dibell  gave  his  decision.  He  was 
affected  in  a  slight  degree.  Tears  came 
to  his  eves,  but  lie  did  not  break  down. 
Assistant  County  Attorney  Warren  K. 
Greene  moved  for  an  Immediate  sen- 
ten<e.  Mr.  Ross  objected  and  asked  for 
a  stav.  Count  v  Attorney  John  H.  Nor- 
ton contended  that  sentence  could  be 
passed  and  an  appeal  taken  after  sen- 
tence if  the  defense  so  wished,  but 
Judge  Dibell,  without  granting  the  stay, 
said  that  the  matter  of  sentence  coulu 
be   taken   up  at  a   later  date. 

Mr.    Ro.ss    said   after    the   proceedings 
that    the    future   action    in    the   case    Is- 


(Continued  on  page   11    first  column) 

warW 

YEUOME 

Austrian  -  Servian  Crisis. 

Has  Reached  Acute 

Stage. 

Turkey  Wants  to  Know 

About  Storing  of 

Supplies. 


Berlin,  March  16.— Advl<  es  recelveO' 
at  the  foreign  office  today  concerning, 
the  strained  situation  between  Austria- 
Hungary  and  Servla  indicate  that  the 
crisis  Is  still  in  an  acute  stage. 

It  is  affirmed  that  .Austria-Hungary 
is  about  to  make  anotlier  effort  at  Bel- 
grade with  a  view  to  bringing  Servias 
views  into  accord  with  her  own.  The- 
nature  of  these  representations  is  not 
disclosed,  but  it  can  be  said  tliat  tlie 
dual  monarchy  will  demand  a  clear  ex- 
planation  of  .Servias  Intention. 

Officials  say  that  if  .Servla  concedes 
this,  the  negotiations  will  pursue  a 
peateful  course,  but  if  not  hostilitlea 
are  inevitable,  and  the  only  task  of  the 
powers  will  be  to  localize  the  conflict. 

The  report  that  Turkey  will  demand, 
an  explanation  of  Servias  intention 
with  regard  to  the  large  quantity  of 
war  supplies  now  lying  at  Saloniki  has 
been  officially  ctmflrmed.  Should  the 
reply  be  unsatisfactory  sn  embargo 
will  be  placed  on  the  supplies  at  .Sa- 
loniki. In  the  meanwhile  S«rvia  has 
arranged  to  procure  munitions  of  war 
and  stores  via  Fiulgaria,  but  pressure 
wil  be  brought  upon  Turkey  to  prevent 
the  passage  of  military  t>upplle» 
through  the  Dardaoiclles. 


m 


It 


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■w-l  1^ 


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'mtiT  limi    r- 


»«V^P#V^>^»> 


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—    K 


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T                                                                  "1 

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1 

THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      TUESDAY.    MARCH    16,    1909. 


WEATHKlt  Fair  fn- 
nl^lit  iri-1  W-lm-s.lav: 
brbk  p.»rt;i«''^t  tvliuU. 
Ivoiinirin       Unht       ami 


^n^^^ 


We're  ready  as  never 
before  for  St.  Patrick's 
Day  with  Green  Ties, 
Hosiery,  Shirts  —  green 
shades;  and  Green  Suits. 

A  Fact 

To  be  well  dressed  does 
not  mean  extremes  in 
style,  but  simply  good 
taste,  good  judgment, 
good  clothes  in  every  de- 
tail. It  involves  no 
more  effort  and  compar- 
atively little  more  ex- 
pense to  get  the  right 
kind  of  a  Spring  Over- 
coat than  it  does  to  get 
an  ordinary,  unsatisfac- 
tory, every-day  sort  of  a 
garment.  It  is  merely 
knowing  where  to  get  it. 

THIS  LABEX 


A  SHORTAGE  ELM  TREES 
INTHE^FlNDi  AREJlllNED 

Fire  Hall  Improvements '  No  Protection  to  Trees 
Will  be  Limited  This    |    Along  East  Superior 


Year. 

Lakeside  About  the  Only 

Place  Money  Will 

be  Spent 


Tlie  fact  that  the  council  last  night 
authorized  the  board  of  fire  commis- 
sloners  to  purchase  a  site  for  a  Are 
hall  on  Park  Point,  not  farther  down 
than  Twentieth  street,  and  that  the 
was  also  authorized  to  plan   for 


Street. 

Horses  and  Wagon  Wheels 

Getting  in  Their 

Work. 


George  M.  Smith,  general  agent  of 
the  Omaha  railroad  at  Duluth,  as  a 
taxpayer  of  the  city  of  Duluth.  asks 
why  the  city  and  property  owners  have 
been    so    negligent   in    the    care    of    the 

board   was  also   auinorizeu   lo   pi^.L    l^^     trees    that    have    been    brought    to    this 

a  nre  hall  there  not  to  cost  more  than  |  eity    and    planted    witli    so    much    ex- 

|2,fiO0.    does   not    necessarily   mean   that    pense, 

the  lots  will  be  purchased  and  the   hall         ^i,. 


ARE  LUCKY 
IN  [SEATS 

The  Minne^t^  Congress- 
men Far«  Vy^ll  in  the 
Drawljig. 

Miller  Has  Good  Place  to 

Hear  and  be 

Heard. 


Oak  1)911,  Dulutb 


LS  YOLR   CUE. 

New  Spring 
Overcoats 

Our  Top  Coats  and 
Overcoats  are  just  what 
well-dressed  men  will 
wear  this  spring.  They 
are  intended  for  the  man 
who  in  justice  to  himself 
and  to  those  who  are  in- 
terested in  him  is  partic- 
ular about  his  attire. 
Prices  range 

$10  to  $30 


built  this  year. 

In  fact,  there  is  said  to  be  practical- 
ly no  chance  thai  the  building  will  be 
erected  during  1909.  because  of  a  short- 
age of  funds.  Not  only  this,  but  there 
Is  such  a  small  amount  of  money  avail- 
able for  improvements  of  this  char- 
acter that  it  is  considered  extremely 
doubtful  If  improvements  planned  for 
tire  halls  in  tlie  city  proper  will  be 
possible  this  season.  The  money  tor 
work  of  this  kind  comes  from  the  per- 
manent Improvement  fund,  and  as  I 
there  Is  only  $5:J,000  available  for  this  | 
fund  where  last  year  there  was  J8,  .OOO  | 
in  the  permanent  Improvement  fund, 
an  uncomfortably  close  limit  will  be 
placed  on  Improvements. 

There  is  not  a  fire  hall  in  the  city 
tliat  is  not  in  need  of  some  Improve- 
ment, and  there  is  urgent  need  of  two 
new  buildings.  It  was  lioped  to  build 
a  new  hall  in  the  vicinity  of  the  cor- 
ner of  Eighth  avenue  east  and  Fifth 
street,  this  vear,  and  it  seems  impera- 
tive that  the  liall  at  Lakeside  be  rebuilt 
during  the  summer.  It  Is  in  such  con- 
dition that  It  Is  almost  falling  to  pieces, 
and  is  said  to  be  beyond  all  hope  of  re- 
pair. Halls  -Vo.  2  and  i  are  also  in 
very  bad  n-^ed  of  repair,  and  the  other 
hulldings  used  for  housing  the  tire 
fighters  are  more  or  less  in  need  of  re- 
pair. 

Probably  the  first  step  will  be  the 
reconstruction  of  the  lakeside  build- 
ing. If  that  isn't  taken  care  of  this 
siiinmer  it  is  claimed  that  the  depart- 
ment in'  that  end  of  the  city  will  have 
to  be  abandoned  altogether.  With  the 
1)1  her  urgent  demands  beiner  made  upon 
tlie  permanent  improvement  fund,  such 
as  the  construction  of  a  city  h.ospitai 
for  contagious  dlsea.oes.  it  looks  as  if 
tlie  fire  dtpartment  would  get  no  more 
improvements  than  tlie  one  at  l^ake- 
side.  if  it  gets  any  at  all.  Iini)rove- 
ments  along  this  line  have  been  put 
off  so  I'uig.  that  they  now  all  come  in 
a    bunch. 


Smith  points  out  that  most  of 
the  elms,  the  trees  that  line  Superior 
street,  from  Eighth  avenue  east  to 
Twenty-fourth  avenue  east,  were  pur- 
chased at  the  Rose  Hill  nursery,  near 
Chicago,  brought  to  Duluth  at  con- 
siderable expense,  planted  at  more 
expense,  and  now  are  utterly  neglected 
by  the  city,  and  in  many  cases  allowed 
to  be  ruined. 

Mr.  Smith  savs  he  has  ridden  along 
Superior  street,  from  Twenty-fourth 
avenue  to  Eighth  avenue  east,  and  has 
observed  that  nearly  half  of  the  tall 
elms  along  the  street  have  been  barke.l 
and  otherwise  injured,  some  of  tliem 
already  ruined,  and  others  nearly 
ruined,  by  horses  gnawing  at  the  bark, 
scraping  wagon  wheels,  where  the 
trees  are  set  close  to  the  curb,  or  in 
otlier  .ways. 

In  raising  the  question,  Mr.  Smith 
discusses  the  question  of  how  much  a 
large  elm  tree  is  worth,  alter  it  has 
attained  a  growth  of  ten  years  or  more- 
It  has  probablv  cost  the  city  |3  or  *4 
at  a  conservative  estimate,  to  plant 
the  sinall  trees.  When  that  tree  has  at- 
tained a  large  growth.  Mr.  Smith  says 
it  is  not  exaggerating  the  matter  to 
sav  that  the  tree  is  worth  over  »1UU. 

He  says  It  would  cost  but  a  tritle  for 
the  city  to  provide  guards  for 
trees.  In  this  way  hundreds  of 
lars  wortli  of  property  could  be  saved. 
Some  of  the  trees  along  Superior 
street,  Mr  Smith  asserts,  have  been 
ruined  simply  because  of  the  fact  that 
the  city  has  taken  no  precautions 
against     their     destruction.  He     says 

that  some  of  these  trees  are  the  tinest 
and  largest  that  liave  been  planted 
along  the   street. 

••Most    of    tha    citizens   are    extremely 
anxious   to   see    Duluth   beautified."   said 
Mr.   Smith.        "I    am    one    of    those 
as    a    citizen,    would    do    all    that 


the 
dol- 


The  fiidding  Opoiiiiig  Popular. 

Much  Interest  Is  being  displayed  In 
spring  fashions  as  shown  at  the  Gid- 
ding  opening,  and  very  many  well- 
dressed  women  havp  made  it  a  j>oint  to 
view    the    styles.*** 


Suyerlor  St.  ■!  Fourth  Ave.  West. 


Sec  the  New  Gloves 

Sp.'iMal  opening  of  all  the  new  glove.s 
In  the  correct  styles,  newe.«t  colorings 
find  superior 
qualities,    at 


Hotel   Superior 


SLPEKIOK.    WIS. 

fjadlre  H'.tel  of  the  city.  Flue  Cafe  Srrr- 
Icl^t^pa^TVric^-  L»r«'=  Sample  Uocm*. 
Biu    mcr'.s    itU    Tiilm. 

European  PIm.  75e  to  12.50  per  day. 
Special   Weekly  Rates. 


BOY  CANNOT 
COLLECT  CLAIM 

Settlement  With  Drake  & 

Stralton  Company  Must 

Stand. 


PERSONAL  INJURY 
SUITS  SETTLED 

Workmen     Injured    on 

Courthouse  Adjust  Claims 

Against  Contractors. 

The  personal  injury  suits  brought 
by  Hans  E.  Hansen  and  Thomas  Hai>- 
sen  against  the  Landqulst  &  Illsley 
company  have  been  settled  and  dis- 
missals were  filed  with  the  clerk  of 
the    district    court    this    morning. 

Thomas  Hansen  sued  for  $10,000 
and   Hans  E.  Hanson  for   $:;,000. 

The  two  men  were  hurt  by  the  fall- 
ing of  a  derrick  on  the  new  court- 
house. Nov.  2  last  year.  It  was 
claimed  the  accident  was  due  to  the 
improper  setting  of  th»  boom,  which 
fell  on  a  number  of  workmen,  who 
were  directly  bi  low  it   when  it  fell. 


court, 
Strat- 
the 
C.   New- 


By  an  order  of  the  probate 
ail  Older  directing  the  Drake  & 
ton  company  to  show  cause  why 
proceedings,  by  which  Lewis 
comb  was  appointed  guardian  of  Dom- 
inick  Mazzittello  should  not  be  set 
aside,  was  vacated  on  account  of  the 
court  having  no  jurisdictiim  over  the 
Drake  &  Stratton  company,  a  \\  est 
Virginia  corporation. 

.Mazzittello.  who  is  now  22  years 
old  was  injured  while  in  the  employ 
of  the  Drake  &  Stratton  company  in 
ISOtt.  in  his  petition  for  the  set- 
tinf  aside  of  the  proceedings,  he  said 
the  company  offered  to  settle  with 
him  for  $200,  telling  him  they  could 
not  be  held  responsible  in  the  courts. 
He  says;  the  settlement  was  totally  in- 
adeiiuate.  but  he  did  not  know  it  at 
the  time. 

He  savs  Lewis  C.  Newcomb  was  ap- 
pointed "  his  guardian  and  negotiated 
the  settlement  without  his  knowledge 
or  consent,  and  Newcomb  acted  for 
the  Drake  &  Stratton  company  and 
not  for  him.  He  wanted  the  court 
ti>  set  aside  the  procedings  so  that  he 
might  sue.  The  court  having  no 
Jurisdiction  over  the  Drake  &  Stratton 
comi>any,  the  proceedings  mu.st  stand 
unle.<>  the  boy  proceeds  in  some  other 
manner  to  collect  the  claim  he  be- 
lieves  he   has  against   the   company. 

• 

Folev's  Kidney  Kernedy  will  cure  any 
rase  of  kidnev  or  bladder  trouble  that 
Is  not  bevond  the  reach  of  medicine. 
Cures  backache  and  Irregularities  that 
if  neglected  might  result  in  Brlghfs 
dis«  ase    or    diabetes. 


WANT  QUARTERS 
IN  COURTHOUSE 

Local  Spanish  War  Vet- 
erans Outgrow  Their 
Present  Home. 

Camp  John  G.  McEwen,  No.  6,  Depart- 
ment of  Minnesota.  United  Spanish  War 
Veterans,  mustered  a  class  of  recruits 
at  their  hall  in  the  Kalamazoo  block 
last   evening 

The  camp  has  been  growing  so  rap- 
idly of  late  that  larger  quarters  must 
be  secured.  There  has  been  an  im- 
pression among  the  comrades  of  the 
camp  that  the  county  commissioners 
will  provide  a  room  in  the  new  court- 
house the  same  as  has  been  planned  for 
the  G.   A.   R. 

Commander  Simon  was  Instructed  to 
confer  with  the  county  board  and  as- 
certain their  attitude  toward  the  propo- 
sition. The  camp  will  entertain  the 
members  of  Camp  Hector  Smith  of  Su- 
perior at  an  early  date. 

The    general    committee    on    Memorial  | 
day    arrangements    Is    making    plans    to' 
hold  tlie  memorial  service  of  the  United  ; 
Spanish  War  Veterans  in  all   the  ceme- 
teries   adjacent     to     Duluth.       and       tl.e 
graves    of    all    the    dead    are    being    lo- 
cated.    The  camp  will  offer  its  services 
to   the   G.    A.    R.    in    assisting    them    on 
Memorial  day. 

The  camp  appointed  a  committee  to 
await  on  the  G.  A.  R.  posts  and  offer 
an  escort  of  a  Spanish  war  veterans  to 
accompany  the  G.  A.  R.  speakers  to  the 
schools. 

The  resignation  of  Quartermaster 
William  L  Peirce  was  accepted  and  .1. 
K.  Gibson  was  appointed  successor.  Mar- 
tin C.  Miller  was  elected  trustee  for  a 
two-year   term. 


who. 
I  am 
able  to  help  make  Duluth  a  beautiful 
city  I  believe  that  we  should  save 
what  beauty  we  have,  and  1  think  It 
nothing  less  than  a  shame  tliat  such 
negligence    should    be    permitted. 

"A  ride  over  the  city  will  reveal 
manv  cases  where  neglect  has  resulted 
in  tile  destruction  of  trees.  It  is  not 
onlv  wasting  money;  it  is  wasting  trees 
tliHt  have  required  years  to  attain  their 
growth  and  whicli  it  will  require  years 
to  replace.  It  is  a  matter  that  would 
only  require  simple  means  to  prevent, 
and  the  department  that  has  charge  of 
this  matter  should  be  made  to  adopt 
these    protective    measures. 

"If  these  protective  measures  are  not 
adopted,  the  city  will  have  to  replace 
manv    of    these    trees." 

INSISTS  ON 
HAVING^JOKE 

Judge  in  Cooper  Trial 

Not  Ready  With 

Cliarge. 

Dismisses  Crowd,  Declar- 
ing tie  Wants  Larger 
Audience. 


FROM  THE   HER.\LD 
WASHIXGTOX    BUREAU. 

Washington,  March  16. — (Special  to 
The  Herald. j — The  drawing  of  seats 
In  the  hou.se  of  representatives  was 
concluded  at  1:45  this  afternoon,  and 
was  accompanied  by  many  humorous 
incidents,  which  greatly  amused  the 
crowded  galleries. 

The  first  name  called  was  that  of 
Cy  Sulloway  of  Vermont,  the  tallest 
and  heaviest  man  in  the  house.  The 
last  name  to  come  out  of  the  box 
was  that  of  Charles  R.  Davis  of  St. 
Peter,  Minn.  Being  ia.st,  he  iiad  to 
take  a  '"way  back"  seat  in  the  sec- 
tion set  apart  for  the  Republican  over- 
flow on  the  Democratic  side  of  the 
chamber. 

Hammon%  the  only  Democrat  in 
the  Minnesota  delegation,  was  Ju^'ky 
and  secured  a  choice  seat.  "Jim" 
Tawney  was  lucky  and  retained  his 
old  seat.  Fred  C.  Stevens  drew  well 
and  has  one  of  the  best  seats  in  the 
hall.  Clarence  B.  Miller  of  Duluth 
was  fortunate  and  lias  an  advan- 
tageous seat  to   hear  and  be   heard. 

Steenerson  did  not  fare  so  well,  but 
Nye,  Lindbergh  and  Volstead  all  fared 
very  well.  In  fact,  taking  all  in  all, 
the  Minnesota  delegation  has  no  cause 
to    complain. 

GIRL  TELLS 
HERSTORY 

Edna  Stahbrodt  Relates 

History  of  Alleged 

Assault. 

State  Is  Presenting  Its 

Case  Against  Alphonse 

Laurin. 


^p 


Our 
Formal 
Opening 

of 

Garments  and 
Millinery 

Continues  Tomorrow 

It  is  a  display  of  flawless  apparel,  in  models  that  do  honor  to  the  creative 
genius  of  their  designers.  The  exquisite  beauty  of  the  garments,  as  well  a3 
the  authoritative  style  information  which  they  express,  are  proving  to  be  of 
special  interest  to  women  who  are  alert  to  the  season's  style  developments. 

Three-Piece  Suits  will  be  extremely  fashionable  for  spring  wear.  These 
stunning  Princesse  Fashions  with  long  hipless  coats  to  match  are  very, 
effective. 

Rich  Evening  Gowns  and  Wraps  of  foreign  and  domestic  origin. 

Two-Piece  Suits  in  every  well-accepted  class  and  color.  Charming 
Dresses  in  jaunty  street  styles,  or  gracefully  trailing  evening"  models. 

Beautiful  Hats  in  a  gay  profusion  of  becoming  shapes,  masses  of  small 
flowers  and  great  (luantities  of  ribbon. 

Smart  Coats,  Dainty  Waists,  rare  and  exquisite  Jeweled  Novelties, 
Gloves  to  match  the  gowns,  Jaunty  Junior  Suits,  Pretty  Tub  Frocks,  Lacy 
Underwear,  and  Perfect  Corset  Models  are  some  of  the  thmgs  that  go  to  make 
this  interesting  display. 

Such  garments  as  these  are  things  tha;  must  be  seen  to  be  appreciated, 
for  word  pictures  do  not  do  them  justice. 

A  broad  and  cordial  invitation  is  extended  to 
everyone  interested  in  correct  apparel. 

This  Store  will  now  remain  open  uniii  6  o'chxk, 
"''Correct  Dre.sa /or    Wohie/i'^ 


1 


Nashville,  Tenii..  March  16. — Although 
no  definite  time  had  been  set  for  the 
delivery  o£  Judge  Hart's  charge  to  the 
jury  in  the  Cooper-Sharp  trial  for  the 
murder  of  Former  United  States  Sena- 
tor Carmack,  there  was  a  large  crowd 
in  attendance  this  morning  wlieii  Hart 
arrived.  He  announced  that  he  would 
not  be  prepared  to  begin  his  charge 
until  2   p.  m.,  if  then. 

"I  will  excuse  you  all  until  2  p.  in.." 
he  sail  to  the  audience.  "Those  who 
have  other  business  to  attend  to  may 
go  until  tliat  hour,  but  come  back  then 
and  111  tell  you  when  lo  return  again. 
\iiyway  the  crowd  is  too  small  for  me 
to  "  deliver  the  charge.  1  want  at 
least  as  large  an  audience  as  the  other 
fellows   had." 

Counsel  for  the  defen.se  were  repre- 
sented, but  there  was  no  one  at  the 
state's  table.  The  Jury  was  not  brought 
in. 


NOTES  OF  THE  BOYS' 
DEPARTMENT 


Pleased  to  Announce  the 


Showing  of  Spring  Styles 

Greatest  variety  and  quality  of  fine  tnoolens 
for  melt's  icear  ever  displayed. 

May  ive  have  the  pleasure  of  serving  youf 


Wolvin 
Building. 


W.  F.  Mies, 


110-112-114 

Third  Avenue  W. 


Wednesday  evening  the  cabinet  of 
the  boys"  department  of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
will  act  as  hosts  to  the  parents  and 
friends  of  the  boys.  Parents,  whether 
they  have  boys  in  the  boys'  department 
or  not,  are  invited  to  drop  Tti  and  see 
the  work  of  tlie  club.  The  orchestra 
win  give  it  program  of  music  In  the 
main  clubroom,  and  a  siiuad  from  each 
class  in  tlie  gymnasium  will  give  a 
number.  The  physical  director  will 
run  off  some  class  games  suitable  for 
schools,  Sunday  schools,  entertain- 
ments, etc..  and  the  evening  will  close 
with  a  basket  ball  game.  The  whole 
building  will  be  turned  over  to  the 
parents  on    this   evening. 

•  •      • 

Tlie  boys  who  have  attended  Camp 
Miller  are  looking  forward  to  the  an- 
nual camp  reunion,  which  will  be  held 
Wednesday.  March  24.  The  reunion 
this  year  will  be  held  at  the  Spirit  Lake 
branch  of  the  boat  club.  The  boys  will 
go  out  at  5:;J0  and  return  the  next 
morning.  Some  of  the  boys  are  going 
to  hike  back,  so  as  to  get  In  shape 
for  the  big  hike  to  St.  Paul  in  June. 

•  •  • 
Wednes'lav  afternoon.  In  the  inter- 
scholastic  basket  ball  series,  the  fol- 
lowing games  will  be  played:  Jack- 
son vs.  Franklin,  Emerson  vs.  Wash- 
ington. These  are  the  four  strongest 
teams  in  the  league,  and  the  games 
promise  to  be  very  exciting,  as  all  four 
are  confident  of  winning.  The  teams 
will  play  promptly  at  4:30. 


Stahbrodt,  on  the  stand  In  district  court 
this  morning  told  the  story  of  the  as- 
sault she  alleges  Alpllonse  l.aurin  com- 
mitted on  her  on  the  Hermanlown  road 
Feb.  19  of  this  year.  Laurin,  who  Is 
20  year  old.  Is  on  trial  before  Judge 
Cant  on  an  indictment  charging  tlie 
as.sault.     The  girl  is  23  years  old. 

She  told  of  meeting  Laurin  on  the 
road  on  the  evening  of  Feb.  19,  when 
slie  was  wanting  to  her  home  on  the 
Hermantown  roa,d.  He  accompanied 
her  for  some  distance,  slie  said,  and 
then  he  suddenly  threw  his  arm  around 
her  neck,  at  the  same  time  striking  her 
on  tlie  right  ternple.  She  fell  down 
and  was  unconscious  for  a  few  minutes. 
When  she  came  to  consciousness,  she 
said  slie  struggled,  but  Laurin  assault- 
ed her.  ,  ,  ,     ,  ,  J 

When  she  arose,  -she  said,  he  would 
not  let  her  prodee-l  home,  but  made 
her  walk  with  him  toward  the  city. 
\bout  100  feet  along  the  road,  she  said 
iie  again  knocked  her  down  and  as- 
saulted her.  The  jingle  of  bell.s  on  an 
approaching  sleigli  frightened  him 
awav  she  said,  and  he  ran  through  the 
fields'  toward  Duluth.  She  ran  toward 
the  sleigh  and  found  that  the  Decker 
girls  occupied  It.  They  took  lier  home 
where  she  told  the  story  to  her  father. 

She  said  liet  face  was  swollen  where 
her  assailant  bad  struck  her  an.l  there 
were  linger  naarks  on  her  throat.  He 
also  bit  her  on  the  hand  and  she 
showed  the  marks  of  teeth  to  the  jury. 

Dr  J  B  Weston  testified  to  the 
marks  on  the  girls  body.  Indicating 
violent  assault  and  Chief  Trover  told 
of  the  report -of  Jtlie  case  to  him  and 
Laurin's  arrest.  ,    w      * 

Laurin  was  arrested  on  the  night  of 
the  alleged  assault.  He  was  home  in 
bed  when  arrested.  After  the  girl  had 
told  the  storv  to  ,her  father,  he  gave 
chase  with  a  shot  gun.  He  met  Laurin 
on  the  road  and  attempted  to  nre  the 
gun  at  him  but  it  failed  to  explode 
and  the  young  fellow  escapeci.  Mr. 
Stahbrodt  then  re^jorted  the  affair  to 
the  police.    -  

FIREMAN  WANTS 
HEAVY  DAMAGES 


Hip  Broken  When  Engine 

Passed  Over  Uneven 

Rails. 

Before  Judge  Dibell  In  district  court, 
the  suit  of  John  L.  Madden  against  the 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  railroad  was 
taken  up  for  trial  yesterday  afternoon. 
The  plaintiff  was  still  engaged  in  put- 
ting in  his  side  of  the  case  up  to  noon 

°Madden  sues  for  $30,000  for  Injuries 
he  alleges  he  sustained  through  the 
negligence  of  the  defendant  while  he 
was  employed  as  a  locomotive  fireman 
Dec.  19,  1907^  .  He  was  firing  on  a 
train  carrying  rock  between  Allen 
Junction  and  Biwabik.  The  engine 
was  backing  up  and  he  claims  was  pro- 
ceeding at  an  excessive  rate  of  speed. 
He  was  shoveling  fire  Into  tlie  firebox 
and  he  says  the  engine  passed  over  a 
roug'h  spot  In  the  track,  causing  the 
engine  to  lurch  and  throwing  him 
against  the  bench  In  the  fireman's  side 
of  the  cab  with  such  force  as  to  frac- 
ture his  hip  bone.  ,..,,., 
He  claims  that  > he  has  been  disabled 
since  the  accident  and  will  be  a  cripple 
for    the   rem&'lnder    of   his    life. 


STREET  FIGHT 
FOLLOVfS  GAME 

Rivalry  Between  Superior 
SctiooisCouses  Demon- 
stration of  Rowdyism. 

A  street  fight  which  look  place  last 
evening  in  Superior,  following  a  bas- 
ket ball  game  between  the  Nelson 
Dewev  and  Blaine  high  schools,  played 
at  the  normal  school,  was  so  violent 
and  vicious  that  three  members  of  the 
city  police  force  were  called  to  the 
scene   to  disperse  the  mob. 

The  Nelson  Dewey  team  defeated  the 
Blaine   five   by   a   score   of   17   to   13.     It 

was  the  biggest  ^'^'"^\  "^''^f,.r?l?ween 
tween    the    teams,    and    rivalry    between 

the   two   schools    was    very 

victors    in    the    game 

represent    North 

pleton    state    ba 

Supe 


Telephone  Your  Wants 

If  you  want  to  sell  anything:— Furniture, 
Rugs,  Phonograph,  Automobile,  Horse, 
Buggy  or  anything  that  still  has  a  value 

Telephone  324 


keen.        The 

won    the    right    to 

Wisconsin    in    tlie    Ap- 

basket    ball     tournament. 

The  game  was  witnessed  »)y  the  largest 


The 
plaving  was   in- 
evident    that    there 
both   s 

and 

the  build- 

a     inob     of 

either   side 


nue,  one  of  the  oldest  residents  of 
Superior  and  well  kno^^•n  tlirough<mt 
the  citv,  died  today  at  the  home  of 
his  son  John,  witli  wliori  he  had  made 
his  home  for  a  number  of  years.  The 
<-ause  of  death  was  c.incer  of  long 
standing. 

Mr.  Sullivan  was  66  years  old,  and  is 
survived  bv  a  wife,  one  daugliter,  Mrs. 
John  Staniev  of  IMckford.  Mich.,  and 
four  sons,  Samuel,  Williiim  and  Joseph, 
all  of  Duluth,  and  John  of  Superior, 

The  funeral  will  be  hdd  Wednesday 
afternoon  at  2::{0  from  the  undertak- 
ing rooms  at  Sixth  strfet  and  Broad- 
way. 

Music  Company  Must  Pay. 

It  was  decided  by  the  jury  in  the 
superior  court  yesterday  that  the  Hall- 
Kreidler  Music  Compary  of  Superior 
.sliouid  pay  Hlof  Kionlund  $S0  for  re- 
pairs he  had  made  on  i  piano,  which 
he  had  bought  from  tlie  music  com- 
pany  and    then    returned. 


Registration  Day. 


crowd    that    ever    gathered    at    a 
rior   basket    ball   game,    fully    800    loot- 
ers  and   spectators   being   present, 
excitement  during   the 

K-.TKt'      and    it    was    ev 

was    ve?v    bitter    feeling   on    both   sides. 

While'  the    Dewey      supporters 
school  children   were  leaving 
ing,     following     the     game, 
Riainn    students    formed    cm 
of  the  steps  and  sidewalk,  and  entered 
?ntn    a    free-for-all    coinbaj    with    their 
rVvals      Thtlr    attack    was    indiscrimin- 
ate   and   fell   upon   di^in^,'^:-?,^^^,^^  ^^'"'"*^" 

-i\  I'^L^  a=^fmrsr"ro^.^i;  Vo"-'-^^\'''^. 
The  fighting  was  not  confined  to  using 
lists    but   stones   and   clubs   are  said   to 

have     been     h"'!*^**;      ,^Vf"  rd'^j   "treel    are'  preparing     declams  tions     for     the 
visiting     rooters      had     hoa,rde^d^  street  i.^^^^^!^^,      j^^,,       ,i,.eiamatory      contests, 


Today  is  registration  day  for  (he 
Superior  municipal  eleciion,  the  prim- 
aries of  which  will  be  held  on  March 
2:!.  The  polling  boot!  s  opened  this 
morning  at  6  o'clock,  and  will  remain 
open   until   9   o'clock   this   evening. 

Preparing  Spteehes. 

Several  .Superior  uormil  school  pupils 


a 

game, 
of    the 
escape 


Only  One  "BROMO  CiVJWINE."  that  U 

Laxative'  Rromo  Oninlne 

CuresaCoIOir  Oije  Day,  Gnp  in  2  Day» 


<S!^A 


on  evary 
«.  25« 


rooters  had  boardt 
cars  for  the  East  enil,  they 
sHfe  from  attack,  for  the  ruffians  pulled 
off  the  UoHeys  and  tlirew  missiles  into 
the  car  One  of  these  missiles  struck 
.Miss  Jeanette  Vlnje,  daughter  of  Judge 
ViniP  and  it  was  feared  for  a  time 
that  lier  nose  had  been  broken.  Severa 
other  persons  were  slightly  bruised 
with  stones.  Referee  Thompson  of 
Duluth  whom  the  Blainites  claim  gave 
number  of  unfair  decisions  in  the 
had  to  be  spirited  through  one 
school's  basement  windows  to 
the  vengeance  of  the  mob. 
Lieut  .Scoon.  Sergeant  O.sbourne  and 
Detective  -Meade  answered  the  hurry 
call  and  succeeded  in  scattering  the 
crowd,  though  tliey  made  no  arrests. 
. m 

Old  Man  ^^  eeps  in  Court. 

When  Joe  Huck.  71  years  old,  was 
confronted  in  the  Superior  municipal 
court  yesterdav  with  the  charge  of  as- 
sault and  battery  brought  against  him 
"bv  his  wife,  who  is  but  a  few  years 
younger   than    he,    tears   streamed    from 

ills   eyes.  ,      ,     ,  .         .  ,       i 

Judge  Parker  asked  him  to  plead 
but  the  old  men  explained  that  he  nev- 
er before  had  been  in  court  and  did 
not  understand  its  proceedings.  The 
judge  explained  what  was  required  of 
him,  and  Huck,  still  trembling  from 
his  grief  denied  that  he  had  ever  mis- 
treated liis  wife,  though  oftentimes  she 
imagined  that  she  was  badly  used.  He  , 
said  that  he  feared  that  his  aged  wife 
sometimes  acted  "queerly." 

Huck  had  his  wife  examined  for  In- 
sanitv  some  time  ago.  but  the  phy.sl- 
clans"  then  reported  Mrs.  Huck  to  be 
mentally   sound.  ^        , 

A  plea  of  not  guilty  was  entered 
yesterday,    and    the    case    went    over    a 

week. 

■ 

Joseph  Sullivan  Dies. 

Joseph   Sullivan   of   152J   Tower   ave- 


wliich  will  be  held  at  Minneapolis 
about  May  1.  The  .Stanley  hall  contese 
is  one  of  considerable  importance  la 
interscholastic  circles  in  the  Northwest. 

HEGEMAN  MUST 
GOTO  TRIAL 

Court  Decides  He  Stiail 

Face  Ctiarge  of 

Perjury. 

Albany,  X.  Y.,  -March  16.— Tha 
court  of  appeals  today  decided  that 
John  I*-  Hegeman,  president  of  the 
Metropolitan  Life  Insurance  company, 
must  stand  trial  on  the  charge  of 
perjury  in  connection  with  alleg^^d 
misstatements  in  his  annual  report  ot 
the  Metropolitan  Life  Insurance  com- 
pany  filed    with    the   .state   superinten- 


dent of  insurance.  Jan.  1.  190o. 

. • 

Read     the    want    ads     tonight, 
neighbor  does.     It  pays  too. 


Vour 


WE  CVRC 


VAllICOCELK, 
XKKVOUS 


STRICTVUF.,   BLOOD    POISON. 
Di:i5IIJTY,   CHUOMC   and 


UEFI.EV  DISF.ASK.S  of 


St  r>ina<li,  1 
K  dney,  i 
Bladder.  I 


MEN 


'  Rupliirc. 
Rh('uiiiuti>in, 
Skhi  Dlscas*'s. 


We  have  had  nany  years'  experience  in  hospital  work  in  Germany 
and  the  United  States,  thoroughly  familiarizing  ourselves  with  dlsea.s#s  of 
this  nature.  We  do  not  ask  you  to  take  treatment  until  you  have  proof 
of  our  abllltv  to  cure  you.  Our  methods  are  common-sense,  up-to-date, 
and  succe.ssful.  If  y^u  are  weak,  nervous,  debilitated,  run  down,  lack  the 
vim  and  vigor  that  go  to  make  perfect  health,  or  are  sutT-ring  from  any 
dLsease  peculiar  to  men,  why  not  come  and  get  the  benefit  ot^  our  ex- 
perience" It  will  c(.st  you  nothing  to  TELL  YOUR  TROUBLES  TO  L.^, 
and  if  vou  place  yourself  under  our  care,  our  .charges  will  be  no  niore 
thV^n  vo\i  are  willing  to  pay  for  the  benefits  received.  \\  E  W  ILL  TLEAl 
YOU  AS  WE  WOUI.D  WANT  TO  BE  TREATED.  We  can  prove  to  you 
by  cured  patients  that  we  are  able  to  make  good. 

We   are   permanently   located    here   and    see   and 
personally.     Consultation  and  examination  free  from  » 
Sundays.  10  to  1. 

PROGRESSilVE  MEDICAL  SPECIALISTS, 

>  0.  1  WEST  SVPEKIOU  STREET. 


treat    each 
a.   m.   to 


patient 
8   p.   m. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,     MARCH    16,    1909. 


§ 


HARRY  MITCHEirS  EDITORIAL 


Fit  is  the  Main  Thing 

The  difference  between  tailor-made  and  ready- 
made  clothes  is  in  the  fit.  Most  of  the  clothing 
stores  have  beautiful  pictures  of  men's  clothes  in 
their  advertisements.  Good  pictures  are  all  right 
— I  use  them  myself — but  don't  be  guided  by  good 
pictures  alone. 

Many  a  man  has  gone  into  a  clothing  store  with 
'a  splendid  fashion  drawing  in  his  pockets,  but  has 
come  away  with  a  "gunny"  sack  on  his  back.  For, 
unfortunately,  the  m^an  who  makes  the  pictures  does 
not  m.ake  the  clothes. 

No  man  can  be  perfectly  fitted  except  by  having 
his  clothes  made  to  his  own  measure.  No  ready- 
made  clothier  can  carry  the  assortment  of  styles, 
materials,  etc.,  made  possible  in  clothes  made  to 
measure. 

A\'hy  should  a  man  buy  hand-me-down  clothes 
anyway — and  more  especially  when  he  can  get  his 
clothes  made  to  order  with  a  guarantee  of  perfect 
fit  and  satisfaction  in  eVery  respect  or  no  pay,  for 
the  same  price  or  even  less  than  he  can  get  in  a 
ready-made  store. 

For  $15,  $20  and  $25.  Fll  make  a  suit  that  will 
equal  any  other  tailor's  $30,  $40  and  $50  kind,  and 
you  can't  get  their  equal  in  a  ready-made  store  at 
any  price. 

I  carry  more  fabrics  and  more  styles  than  all  the 
clothiers  or  tailors  in  Duluth  put  together.  I  have 
more  satisfied  customers  than  all  the  other  fellows. 
My  new  Spring  Materials  are  now  in  and  ready  for 
your  inspection.      Come  and  take  a  look. 

Yours  truly, 

HARRY  MITCHELL, 

Store  18  East  Superior  St. 

OrT-OF-TOWX-:SIEX:  I  can  make  your  clothes  no  matter 
where  you  live  and  guarantee  fit  and  satisfaction.  All  you  have 
to  do  is  to  write  mt  a  letter  and  tell  me  the  kind  of  clothes  you 
are  thinking  of  getting,  and  I  will  send  you  by  return  mail,  latest 
8t>'le  samples  and  my  perfect  system  of  self  measuring,  together 
with  fashion  plates  and  tape  line.  For  $15,  J20  and  $25,  I  will 
make  you  a  suit  as  good  as  you  can  order  from  your  local  tailor 
for  130,  $40  and  $50.  and  you  can't  buy  their  equal  In  a  ready- 
made  store  at  any  price.  Write  me  a  letter  today.  Address 
your  letter  to  Harry  Mitchell.  18  East  Superior  street,  Duluth,  Minn. 


THE  ANNUAL  SKUNKS  AS 
ASSESSMENT    WOLF  BAIT 


8ILBER.STEIN    &    BONDY   CO. 


SKLBERisTEIN   &    BONDY   CO. 


City  Assessor  Is  Planning 

to  Value  Personal 

Property. 


Lakewood  Man  Captures 


Wolf  Within  the  City 
Limits. 


Coal  on  the  Docks  May  Used  the  Body  of  Skunk 


be  Included  This 
Year. 


city  Assessor  Rakowsky's  force  Is 
getting  ready  for  the  regular  sprmg 
personal  property  assessment  work. 
The  assessors  will  not  start  on  their 
rounds  until  the  Iirst  of  May,  but 
everything  is  being  arranged  early 
enough  so  they  will  not  be  handl- 
cappad  when  they  do  get  started. 

Last  spring  there  were  thirteen  per- 
sonal property  assessors  employed. 
Rakowsky  says  he  does  not  know  yet 
just  how  many  men  he  will  need  this 
spring.  That  detail  will  be  decided 
upon  later. 

The  real  estate  valuations  are  fixed 
every  other  year,  but  personal  prop- 
erty must  be  assessed  every  spring. 
The  assessments  ihis  year  will  be  upon 
practically  the  same  basis  as  190>».  it 
is  expected.  In  1908  personal  prop- 
erty was  assessed  at  one-third  its  real 
value. 

The  Wisconsin  supreme  court  re- 
cently handed  down  a  decision  where- 
by it  is  made  possible  in  Superior  to 
assess  all  the  coal  on  the  docks  as  per- 
sonal property.  The  coal  companies 
claimed  that  the  coal  on  the  docks 
should  be  exempt  on  the  ground  that 
It  was  in  transit.  The  supreme  court 
decision  knocks  out  this  contention. 
The  understanding  in  Duluth  is  that 
coal  on  the  docks  can  Vjc  assessed  in 
the  same  manner.  Up  to  the  present 
time  it  has  been  unnecessary  to  take 
the  matter  into  the  courts. 

An  effort  will  be  made  this  year  to 
get  as  complete  a  personal  property  as- 
sessment as  possible.  It  is  a  difficult 
task  to  secure  an  equitable  assessment 
of  all  personal  property,  for  the  ma- 
jority of  people  seem  to  think  they 
have  a  perfect  right  to  dodge  a  tax  ol 
this  kind  and  do  so  at  every  oppor- 
tunity. They  generally  tell  the  as- 
sessor >)f  only  about  half  their  personal 
property  and  usually  he  is  luck\  if  he 
gets  that  much  from  large  holders  of 
stt)cks,  bunds,  etc. 

Rakowsky  is  still  hoping  that  the 
city  council  will  allow  him  a  large 
enough  appropriation  to  prepare  a 
complete  revaluation  of  Duluth  real 
estate  before  the  spring  of  1910.  lie 
feels  that  a  much  fairer  valuation  can 
be  obtained  than  that  now  on  the  rec- 
ords m  this  office.  The  idea  is  to  have 
a  practical  real  estate  man  visit  in- 
dividual pieces  of  property  throughout 
the  city  and  learn  their  real  values  so 
I  the  assessments  may  be  lixed  in  a  man- 
ner fair  and  just  to  everybody  con- 
cerned. 


To 


Bait 
Trap. 


His 


"Skunks  make  the  best  kind  of  wolf 
bait,"  said  Walter  Grey  of  Lakewood, 
In  making  out  an  affidavit  before  City 
Clerk  Cheadle  this  morning,  that  a 
wolf  pelt  In  his  possession  was  shot 
inside   the   city    limits. 

"I  caught  this  fellow  in  a  trap  bait- 
ed with  a  skunk.  You  probably  have 
noticed  the  tendency  of  dogs  to  roll 
in  offensive  smelling  things,  at  certain 
seasons  of  the  year.  Wolves  are  the 
same  way.  They  never  miss  an  op- 
portunity to  roll     around     on  a  dead 

skunk,  and  the  more  offensive  its 
smell,   the   better   they   like   It. 

"I  caught  some  skunks  during  the 
warm  spell  last  month,  and  kept  them 
to  bait  my  two  wolf  traps  with.  I 
caught  this  fellow  by  placing  one  of 
the  dead  skunks  in  a  cleft  in  the  rocks 
and  covering  my  trap  in  such  a  way 
that  an  animal  could  not  get  to  the 
skunk  without  setting  off  the  steel 
springs. 

"This  is  a  brush  wolf,  somewhat 
smaller  than  ih.^  timber  variety.  I 
caught  him  half  a  mile  this  side  of 
Lakewood.  There  are  quite  a  num- 
ber of  brush  wolves  in  that  vicinity, 
but  they  are  very  wary  and  hard  to 
catch  or  shoot.  I  could  tell  by  the 
tracks  in  the  snow  that  two  others 
were  with  this  one  at  the  time  he  was 
caught  in  my  trap.  Oft<  n  they  travel 
In  bunches.  They  seem  to  like  to 
hunt   in  packs " 


A    RrliK:i«>u«    Aiithor'tt    Stateiiirnt. 

litv.  Jusepii  II.  Fesperlian.  t-alisbiiry, 
N.  C,  who  is  (he  autlior  of  several 
books,  writes:  "For  several  ytars  I 
was  afflicted  with  kidney  trout)le.  and 
last  winter  I  was  suddenly  stricken 
with  a  severe  pain  in  my  kidneys  and 
was  confined  to  bed  eitjht  days  unable 
to  get  Ud  without  assistance.  My 
urine  contained  a  tliick  white  sediment 
and  I  passed  same  frequently  day  and 
niglit.  I  commenced  taking  Foley's 
Kidney  Remedy,  and  the  pain  gradual- 
ly abated  and  finally  ceased  and  my 
urine  became  normal.  I  cheerfvilly  rec- 
ommend Foley's  Kidney  liemedy." 
Sold    by    ail    druggists. 


IS  EXTR.4I)ITKI>  TO  FACE 

EMBEZZLEMENT  CHARGE. 


PUT  PLATFORM 
ON  THE  BRIDGE 

Aerial  Ferry  Will  Operate 

on  Forty-Minute 

Schedule. 

To  allow  the  workmen  an  oppor- 
tunity to  buii<l  a  platform  along  the 
top  of  the  aerial  bridge,  from  one  side 
of  the  canal  to  the  other,  the  ferry 
will  be  put  on  a  40-minute  schedule 
tomorrow,  from  D  a.  m.  to  12  m.  and 
frc^m  1  I',  m.  until  5  p.  m.  The  re- 
mainder of  the  day  the  car  will  oper- 
ate as  formerly,  giving  a  10-mlnute 
service  morning,  noon  and  night. 

Two  or  three  weeks  ago  the  council 


authorized  the  construction  of  a  plat- 
form at  the  top  of  the  bridge,  along- 
side the  trucks,  so  attendants  could 
more  easily  work  at  the  top  of  the 
bridge,  and  walk  from  one  side  of  it 
to  the  other.  The  platform  will  be 
lifted  into  place,  section  by  section, 
and  probably  a  week  will  elapse  be- 
fore the  work  \s  complete.  The  4  0- 
minute  schedule  will  continue  until 
the  platform  is  all  in  place. 

^Veiitun   In   AValklnijc   .\Kain. 

Tarrytown.  N.  Y..  March  IC— Edward 
Payson  Weston  started  from  Tarry- 
town  at  S  a.  m.  today  on  the  second  lap 
of  his  walk  to  the  Pacific  coast.  A 
large  crowd  cheered  him  as  he  started 
from  in  front  of  the  hotel.  He  was  in 
fine  condition  after  lils  walk  from  New 
York,  having  arrived  in  Tarrvtown  at 
12:20  this  morning.  He  expects  to  reach 
Poughkeepsie  tonijrht. 

Conductor    In    Injured. 

New  Y'ork.  Marth  16. — A  conductor 
was  slightly  wounded  and  a  trainload 
of  passengers  shaken  up  when  the  rear 
car  on  an  Incoming  New  Haven  rail- 
read  train  jumped  the  track  at  the 
Grand   Central   station    today. 


Kansas  City.  Mo.,  Manh  16. — A 
charge  of  embezzling  $15,000  awaits 
R.  M.  Nichols  in  Corydon.  Iowa,  ar- 
rested here  last  night  by  Iowa  officers. 
Requisition  papers  have  been  honored 
by  Governor  Hadley.  and  M.  J.  Evans, 
deputy  sheriff  of  Wayne  county.  Iowa, 
will  take  the  prisoner  to  Corydon  to- 
morrow. R.  G.  Mullen,  who  was  as- 
sociated with  Nichols  at  Corydon,  was 
extradited  from  New  Mexico  and  passed 
through  Kansas  City  last  night  bound 
for  Iowa. 

Until  three  months  ago  the  two 
men.  it  is  charged,  lived  in  Corydon. 
and  represented  themselves  as  agents 
of  tlie  Southwestern  Smelting  &  Re- 
fining company,  capitaMzed  at  $1,000,- 
000. 

After  they  had  been  in  the  city  a  year 
and  had  sold  $15,(»00  in  stock,  the  com- 
pany went  into  receivership,  it  is 
claimed.  Botii  men  left  Iowa  and  a 
grand   jury   Indicted   them. 


COMMITTEE 
HARD  AT  WORK 

West  End  Hillside  Im- 
provement Club  is  Busy 
Taking  Names. 

The    committee        appointed     by     the 
West    End    Hillside    Improvement    club 
to   secure  the   additional    signatures    to 
i  the    petition    for    the    grradlng    of    Pied- 
jniont  avenue  has  started  its  work.  The 
j  members      are      making      a      housc-to- 
;  house  canvass  and  they  expect  to  have 
1 300    names    on    their    lists    by    a    week 
I  from    Friday,    which    is    the    time    they 
'will   report  and   turn   in   the  signatures. 
I      The        committeemen        secured       ten 
'names   yesterday   and   are   well    pleased 
with  the  showing.        The  club     has  al- 
ready secured  a  majority  of  the  signa- 
tures  and    it   is   the    work   of   the    com- 
mittee  to   bring   some   of   the   property- 
owners,    who   have   been   hanging    back, 
into   the    project. 

I'roperty      owners   will    bear  a   small 

share    of    the    cost    of    the    grading,    but 

i  most  of   them  are   willing   to  do   so,   so 

anxious  are  they  to  get  an  easier  grade 

Ion    Piedmont    arid    the    extension   of   the 

,  West    Tliird    street    ear    line. 

!    HALF  DOZEN  HAVE  FEVER. 


ENOlTiH  ANTHRACITE  TO 

LAST  FOR  EIGHT  MONTHS. 


Reading,  Pa..  March  16. — Figures 
comituted  here  show  there  is  today  suf- 
ficient anthracite  coal  on  the  surface 
to  supply  the  trade  for  the  next  eight 
months.  It  is  claimed  the  Reading 
company  has  at  least  2,500,000  tons 
of  coal  in  its  storage  yards  at  Abrams, 
Langdingvllle,  and  Mahoney  City,  and 
that  nearly  1,000.000  more  tons  will  be 
added   by  the   end   t>f  March. 


PILES    CIRED    IX    «    TO    14    DA%  S. 

P.\ZO  OINTMENT  is  tuarantced  to  ru:c  any 
ca«-'  of  Itchint;.  Blind,  bleeding  or  Protruding 
Piles  in  6  to  14  days  or  money  retunded.    ;0^. 


J 


r 


Ability,  Integrity  and  a  Desire  to  Serve  You. 


■> 


Thats  what  we  believe  you  will  find  if  you  become  a  patron 
of  the  Northern  National  Bank.  And  behind"  this  desire,  there  is 
a  strength  and   financial   solidity. 

Resources  to  the  amount  of  $800,000.00  to  protect  the  account 
you    place    in 

THE  NORTHERN  NATIONAL  BANK. 

CAPITAL        :        :      ;        :        12  50,000.00 
220    WKST    SUPERIOR    STREET. 


REV.  MEWAN  (ANDIDATE 
FOR  THE  MODERATORSHIP. 


AH  A.  R.  Chevalier's  Cliildreii  kv^ 
Suffering  With  the  Disease. 

All   of  A.    R.   Chevalier's   six    children 

are  suffering  with  scarlet  fever  in   the 

<juaraniined   home    on    Eleventh    avenue 

west.      Firtt,    three    of    the    youngsters 

'came   down   with    the   disease   and    now 

I  all    of   them    have    it.    necessitating    tlie 

I  quarantine    of    the    home    and    keeping 

the   head  of   the   house     from   iiis  work 

land,    consequently    from    his    wages. 

;      The  oldest  child   is    lii   years   old  and 

the  youngest  is  3. 

WOMAN  KEEPS  MONEY. 

Fails  to  Prodiue  Purse  She  Picked 
Up  in  Street  Car. 

,       David   Davidson  of  Piedmont   avenue 

t  put  a  purse  containing  quite  a  sum  of 

i  money    in    his    trouser's    pocket,    where 

tliere  was  a  hole,  pernulting  the  purse 

to  fall   through.     He  dropped  it   on  the 

floor  of  a  street  car  in  the  West  end. 
and  a  woman  picked  it  up,  and  has 
dei-amped  with  it. 

He  did  not  notice  his  loss  when  he 
(".ropped  the  purse.  He  got  off  the  car, 
and  then  he  discovered  his  coin  was 
missing.  He  waited  for  the  same  car 
to  come  ba«  k.  and  when  it  did.  he  was 
informed  that  a  woman  had  picked  up 
tlie  pocketbook  and  had  refused  to  let 
go  of  it.  The  woman  told  the  conductor 
she  was  going  to  turn  the  purse   in  at 


F'ittsburg,  Pa..  March  1€. — Announce- 
ment is  made  here  that  Rev.  W.  L.  Mc- 
Ewan,  Third  Presbyterian  cliurch,  will 
be  a  candidate  for  the  moderatorship 
of  the  next  general  assembly  of  the 
Presbyterian  church  of  the  United 
States.  McEw  an  has  been  pastor  here 
fifteen  years.  The  assembly  meets  in 
Denver,  in  Ma.v. 


CHICAGO  HEARINO  SI  IT 
AGAINST  HARRIMAN  OPENS. 


Chicago,  March  16. — The  Chicago 
hearing  in  the  government  suit  against 
Edward  H.  Harrlman  and  his  asso- 
ciates, the  T'nion  Pacific  railroad  and 
subsidiary  railroads,  to  break  up  the 
monopoly  of  transportation  between 
the  Missouri  and  the  Pacific  opened 
today  before  Special  Examiner  Wil- 
liams. The  government's  first  witness 
was  J.  N.  Wentz,  a  retired  railroad] 
man.  1 


r 


BILL  TO  CREATE  TOWN 

OF  TAFT  IN  WISCONSIN. 


Madison.     Wis..     March     Ifi. — The    as-  . 
semltdy    branch    of    the    legislature    to- 
day    passed    a    bill    to    detach    territory 
from    the    town     of    Roosevelt.    Taylor  ' 
county,  and  create  the  town  of  Taft.       I 
•  I 

Duliithiun  Opens  Store.  j 

New  Duluth,  Minn..  March  16. —  I 
(Special  to  The  Herald  ) — Harry  Ellis! 
of  Duluth,  has  opened  a  clothing  store  ! 
in  New  Duluth  in  the  building  owned  1 
by  Andrew  Wilsoi^  on  Hurd  street.      j 


LOOKING 
OVER 

the  entire  field  of  science,  no- 
where has  there  been  such  prog- 
ress as  in  the  science  of  Optics 
and  Glasses.  Our  success  is  due 
to  our  fine  optical  department. 
A  graduate  optician  in  charge. 


'V 


BAG  LEY  y 
COMRANY 

Jewelers  and  Silversmiths. 
315  West  Sopertor  St. 


6ILBERSTEIN   &   BONDY   CO. 


orma 


Spring 


penmg 


o 


4 
I 


D 


ays 


An  exposition  of  the  accepted  modes  for 
spring  as  interpreted  by  the  foremost 
makers;. 

Wcnien  of  foresight  are  making  early  se- 
lections from  our  many  exclusive  lines,  rec- 
ognizing the  advantages  of  having  first 
choice  from  the  accepted  creations  of  noted 
design"M-s. 

We  invite  your  careful  inspection  of  the 
new  fashions.  We  feel  justly  proud  of  this, 
Dulutl.'s  foremost  fashion  show. 


5V^|^ 


the  car  starter's  office,  but  thus  far  she 
lias   failed   to  do   so. 


Entei'taiiis  Friends. 

Albert  Woods  entertained  a  number 
of  friends  at  his  home  at  Thirty-ninth 
avenue  west  and  Superior  street  Sunday 
evening.  They  spt-ut  a  most  enjo>abltf 
evening.  Among  those  present  were; 
A.  Poissant.  A.  St.  George,  A.  Robli- 
tallle,  F.  Blais.  T.  Chamberlain,  W. 
Lemay,  J.  Renauld,  J.  Genereau,  E. 
Beaurivage  and  J.    Helanger. 


Mayor  Is  Stared. 

The  mayor  and  otlier  officers  of  the 
cit.v,  who  signed  a  petition  to  the  legis- 
latiu'e  to  have  longer  liours  for  the 
.saloons,  came  in  for  a  scoring  at  the 
jneeting  of  the  deacons  and  trustees 
of  Bethany  Swedish  Lutheran  church, 
m  the  West  end,  last  evening.  "Is  It 
possible  that  our  lid  ma>or  has  turned 
out  this  way?"  asked  Rev.  C.  G.  Olson 
of  the  meeting. 


the 

the 

the 

be 


West  End  Shortiails. 

Rev.  G.  H.  Young  pastor  of  the  First 
Baptist  church  of  isupcrlor.  will  speak 
at  the  revival  services  in  the  Central 
Baptist   church    this   evening. 

The  Ladles'  Foreign  Missionary  so- 
ciety of  tlie  First  Norwegian-Danish 
M.  E.  church  met  last  evening  with 
Mrs.  John  Sorenson  of  Piedmont  ave- 
nue. 

Miss  Ethel  Goldsmith,  who  has  been 
visiting  friends  In  the  West  end  for 
the  past  week,  has  returned  to  her 
home    at    Monticello,    Minn. 

The  Bema  club  will  hold  its  regular 
meeting  this  evening  in  Dr.  Oredson's 
office. 

The  debating  teams  of  the  Adams 
and  Franklin  school  alumni,  will  de- 
bate on  the  Japanese  cjuestlon  at 
meeting  of  tlie  Adams  alumni  In 
school  house  this  evening.  After 
debate,  a  musical  program  will 
given. 

Frank  Baldwin  has  gone  to  Buffalo, 
where  he  will  remain  until  the  open- 
ing of  navigation  on  the  lakes.  He  has 
signed  as  engineer  on  one  of  the  big 
freighters   which   is   laying   up   there. 

The  Mens  society  of  Bethany  Luth- 
eran church  will  meet  Thursday  even- 
ing in  the  church  parlors.  "Christian 
Brotherly  Love"  will  be  the  topic. 

Miss  Agnes  Brady  of  West  First 
street,  has  gone  to  Minneapolis  to  visit 
relatives. 

The  Zenith  Ski  club  held  a  meeting 
last  evening  in  President  George  M. 
Jensen's  office.  It  was  the  last  meet- 
ing   of    the    season. 

The  Thimble  bee  of  the  Second 
Presbyterian  church  will  meet  Thurs- 
day afternoon  with  Mrs.  John  McPhail. 

Rev.  Theodore  Fossum  has  returned 
from  Winnipeg,  where  he  went  to  in- 
spect his  farm  which  lies  near  the 
Manitoba  metroplis.  His  son,  Magnus, 
is   in    charge  of   the   place. 

Rev.  A.  F.  Elmquist.  pastor  of  St. 
John's  English  Liitlieran  church  In 
Minneapolis,  but  for  many  years  pas- 
tor of  Bethany  Lutheran  church  In  the 
West  end,  will  speak  in  Bethany 
church  March  24. 

Paul  Doltz.  for  many  years  a  Pres- 
byterian missionary  in  the  Philippines. 
will  speak  at  a  special  meeting  In  the 
Second   Presbyterian    church,   March    24. 


and    Maj.    John   M.   Cft  rson.   guartermas 
ter.     told     them     that     unless     they     re 
turned    to    work    witiiin    the    next 
days   their  places  would   be  filled, 
strikers   returned   to    th^ir   homes. 


few 

The 


UTAH  CAMELOIPES  NO 

LONGER  AN  EXPERIMENT. 


Ogden,    Utah,    Mart 
Fruit   Growers'   assot 
on    a   plan    to    have 
clnity    next      season 
acres    of    canteloupes 
carloads  to  New  Yorl 
that   forty   members 
have    agi  eed    to    de\ 
five    acjes    of    grounc 
It   Is  claimed  the  rai 
loupes   in   this   sectio 
experiment,    either    s 
Quality. 


h  IC. — The  Ogden 
iation  is  at  woik 
raised  in  this  v)- 
upwards  of  15<' 
to  be  sliipped  In 
t.  It  Is  announced 
of  t.|ie  association 
ote  from  two  to 
.  to  this  purpose, 
fing  of  the  caiite- 
1  Is  no  longer  an 
s    to    quantity    or 


HALL  BIL  IS  PASSED 


(Continued  from  page  I.) 


the    present    requlren 
of  campaign   expense 

The  so-called  "fu. 
quiring  railroads  to 
brakeman  on  all  trai 
size,  was  killed  In 
morning.  IIO  for  and 
has  been  a  brisk  fig 
part  of  the  railroad 
for  It  and  part,  notal 
being  opposed  to  it.  f 
Laybourn  of  Duluth 
and  Senator  Vail  was 

The  house  spent  m< 
flgiiting  over  the  N^ 
street  railways  undei 
warehouse  commiss 
opposition  has  devel 
present  form,  in  the  ' 
ly  Minneapolis,  an 
Burn(iuist  asked  tha' 
the  Judiciary  commi 
hearing  and  for  ame 
sary. 

Part    <.f    the    Tv.-lr 
favored    the    motion 
It    as   dilatory   and   ol 
author    of    the 
its    defenders, 
opposing    this 
bill, 
tax 


lent 

a. 


as    to   reports 


Jacobson 
earnings 
the  same 

Finally 


ANCiELL.  FRIEND  OF  DIME 

ANIMALS.  PASSES  AWAY 


Boston.  Mass.,  March  16. — George 
T.  Angell.  friend  of  dumb  animals 
and  leader  in  the  humane  educational 
movement  in  the  United  States,  died 
here  today,  aged  86.  Mr.  Angell  was 
president  and  one  of  the  founders  of 
the  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Pre- 
vention of  Cruelty  to  Animals,  and  for 
twenty  years  had  been  president  of 
the  American  Humane  Educational  as- 
sociation. Angell  was  educated  for 
the  law.  In  1866,  after  seeing  two 
horses  run  to  death  in  a  race,  he  be- 
came interested  in  humane  work  for 
dumb  animals,  and  established  the 
publication.    "Our    Dumb    Animals." 

ITALIAN  WORKMEN  ON 

STRIKE  AT  >>  EST  POINT. 


bill,  { 
said  t 
bill  a 
lucres 
on  1 
methods. 
L.  H.  Jo 
apolis,  who  favors 
that  it  was  poss 
ment  miglit  be  m 
satisfy  the  oppositior 
referring  It  to  the  c 
finally  decided  by  tl 
the  measure  with 
public  hearing  be  lia 
ported  back  by  Satu 
the  meantime  it  wil 
on    the    calendar. 

Representative  Ro^ 
deavored  to  kill  tlie  ) 
to  dispense  liquor  1 
without  paying  a  .« 
moving  its  Indefini 
The  motion  was  los 
against,  so  the  bill  i 
place    on    the    calend 

On  motion  of  Rep 
of  Duluth.  the  house 
pension  of  rules,  th 
lowing  the  cit.v  of  Di: 
000  In  bonds  to  pavi 
which  is  in  bad  sha 
fixed  under  ordinary 
so  much  of  the  prop 
on    is   railroad   prope: 


1  crew"  bill,  re- 
have      an      extra 

IS  above  a  certain 
the     senate     this 

il'  against.     There 

ht  over  this  bill. 
employes    asking 

ly  the  conductors. 

ienators  Pugh  and 

voted  for  the  bill, 
not  present. 

>st  of  the  morning 
>lan  bill  putting 
•  tlie  railroad  and 
on.  Considerable 
oped  to  it  In  its 
Fwin  Cities,  main- 
;]  Representative 
It  be  referred  to 
ttee  fc;r  a  public 
ndment.    If   neces- 

Clty  members 
and  part  opposed 
(Struct  Ive.  Nolan, 
iid  Wells,  one  of 
!iat  the  cities  are 
5  they  did  the 
tsing  the  gross 
ail  roads      and    by 

hnson  of  Miiine- 
the  bill  said 
ible  an  amend- 
fide  that  would 
so  he  advocated 
ommittee.  It  was 
le  house  to  refer 
lirections  tlat  a 
d  and  the  bill  re- 
•day  morning.  In 
1    retain    its    place 


k-e  of  St.  Paul  en- 
jill  allowing  clubs 
o  their  members 
aloon  license  by 
e  postpfmement. 
t,  39  for  and  54 
etains  its  present 
ir. 
« 

rcsentatlve  Grant 
passed,  under  sus- 
e  senate  bill  al- 
luth  to  Issue  160.- 
•  Garfield  avenue, 
^e    and    cannot    be 

methods  because 
f-rty    it   fronts    up- 

ty.    and   therefore 


The  New  $1.50  Glove 

Is  a  superb  masterpiece  of  the  glcve- 
makere"  art  With  the  stylish  new 
out-seams  in  all  the  advance  spring 
shades,  with  a  stunning  clasp.  They 
are  In  a  class 
by  themselves. 
See  them  at 


exempt   from   paying  assessments.     Th« 
bill    now    goes    to    the    goverjior. 

•  •      • 

The  house  judiciary  committee  rec- 
ommended the  bill  prohibiting  the 
h.arriage  of  first  cousins,  with  an 
amendment  making  It  effective  Jan.  1. 
probably  with  a  view  to  taking  care 
of  pending  contracts  of  that  character. 

•  •      * 

The  senate  passed  the  Dorsey  house 
resolution  asking  congress  to  establish 
a  ship  canal  from  Lake  Supei  lor  to  the 
Mississippi. 

•  •       • 

Sullivan  and  Canfield  joined  in  a  bill 
which  Is  a  compromise  on  the  Canfield 
primary  election  system.  Leaving  all 
other  officers  to  be  nominated  by  the 
people,  the  bill  j.roposes  that  state  of- 
ficers and  congressmen  siiall  be  nom- 
inated by  conventions  made  up  of  dele- 
gates selected  at  primary  elections 
held    under    the    Australian    ballot    law. 

•  •      • 

The  Cashman  distance  tariff  bill 
will  come  up  for  final  action  In  the 
senate  Friday,  l.aving  been  made  a 
special    order    for    tliat    day. 

Senator  C.  A.  Johnson  offered  a  bill 
providing  half  jiay  pensions  for  all 
employes  of  state  institutions,  who  are 
70  years  old,  who  have  served  thirty 
years  and  who  are  not  getting  over 
$50   a   month. 

The  following  bills  came  into  the 
senate:  Fosseen.  prohibiting  the  pur- 
chase of  grain  from  minors,  wlio  have 
obtained  it  unlawfully;  Fosseen.  allow- 
ing couits  to  bring  before  them  for 
to  punishment  those  who  have  contri- 
buted to  the  deiinquenc.v  or  dependency 
of  children:  Thorpe,  autliorizing  the 
board  of  grain  appeals  to  grade  and 
sample  grain  screenings:  Thorpe. 
prohiViiting  the  manufacture  and  sale 
of  adulterated  and  misbranded  goods, 
aimed  especially  at  dealers  In  stock 
foods. 

STILLMAN    H.    BINGHAM. 


PRETENDS  FRIEND  IS 

HKiHWAVMAN.  KILLS  HIM. 

Pensacola.  Fla..  March  If. — In  the 
midst  of  merrymaking  A.  B.  Gebhart 
accidentally  shot  an<l  killed  .lolin  Max- 
well here  early  today.  Get-hart  was 
host  at  an  entertainment  and  wfis  giv- 
ing an  imitation  of  how  he  would  de- 
fend himself  from  the  attack  of  a  high- 
wayman, using  Maxwell  as  the  sup- 
posed   highwa.vman. 


0!d    BrainenliK's    I»«a«l. 

Erainerd.  Minn  .  March  IC. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald  i — Mrs.  Caroline 
Melius,  aged  8  8.  and  Pierre  Dechainc, 
also  very  old.  both  veteran  repident." 
of  this  place,  are  dead.  Mrs.  Melius' 
<-dy  was  sent  to  I'e«  r  Creek  for  In- 
terment. 


Heuo    Ttiiiken   In   Drnd. 

San  Diego.  Cai.  Man  h  K.  —  Henry 
Tlmken.  th*-  Clev*-iand  and  St.  Louis 
capitalist  and   man jfacturer.  is  dead. 


I 


Highland  Falls.  N.  Y..  March  16.— 
Five  hundred  Italian  workmen  em- 
)loyed  on  the  new  construction  at  West 
'oint  are  on  strike,  declaring  the  gov- 
ernment order  that  they  must  use  the 
back  road  on  the  reservation  In  going 
to  and  from  their  work  to  be  a  dis- 
crimination against  their  nationality. 

There  was  a  gathering  of  strikers  at  , 
the   entrance  of  the   resftrv&tion   today  1 


ONE  AFTDt  ANOTHER 


Of    our    customers 

with    the    remark 

coal    seems    to    la.' 

purchased  elsewh 
the  same,  but  the 
we  handle  the  b 
market,  and  can 
What  we  sell  you  i 
— no  dirt,  no  duf 
weight,     too,    at     1 

"PITISTOX" 


have  come  to  us 
that  somehow  our 
t    longer    than    any 

?re.  The  price  is 
coal    is   not.      Well. 

est  grades  on  tht 
guarantee    quality. 

8  all  perfectly  ch-an 

t.    no    waste.      Full 

owest     prices. 

AXTHKACITE. 


PITTSBURGH  GOAL  CO, 

306  West  iJuperior  St. 
Both  'Phones,  2100. 


r 

' 

« 

J 

> 

■ 

\ 

» 

MMM 


^tmm^mtmmi^^^, 


■wr 


■^51 


I 


^ 


>  \^  A^fc  gtHti^J 


L 
■I 

I 

I  I 


.^—  r. 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY.    MARCH    16.    1909. 


OF  THE  IQBTIHIW 


1 


SOO  PLANS 
NEWDEPOT 

Substantial  Structure  to 

Be  Erected  at  Thief 

River  Falls, 


To  Enlarge  Roundhouse, 

Preparing  For  Duluth 

Business. 


TJiU'f  Fiiver  lalls.  Minn..  March  16.— 
(Special  to  The  Hitald.  >— Xothinpr  In 
tlie  wav  of  railway  improvement  In 
tlis  portion  of  the  state  carries  greater 
signiticaiice  than  the  announcement. 
jual  made  pul>lic,  of  the  intention  of 
the  Suo  railway  to  construct  a  modern, 
two  story,  hrick  depot  here,  to  replace 
tiie  present  wooden   one 


TIm'  new  depot  will  he  constructed 
this  sprinK.  and  will  be  ::00  feet  long 
bv  r...  r.et  wide.  Tlie  ttrst  Moor  will  be 
uViliz-d  for  tlie  ticket  office,  the  wait- 
ing ro..nis.  freipriil  and  express  rontns. 
Wiiile  Hi«  second  story  will  provule 
offlc-  rooms  for  the  train  dispatchers 
road  masters  and  superintendent  and 
ma.sier  nu-chanic  and  other  offichtis. 
-who     make     this    city     tlieir    headquar- 

^il"  is  also  authoritatively  given  out 
that  t^-ii  additional  stalls  will  be  added 
this  .sun.mer  to  the  present  roiind 
hoi!--*e.  Ail  these  improvements  are  but 
preliminary  to  the  lonstrucllon  of 
conneeiing  link  between  this  city 
the  H-iui  of  tiie  Lakes.  This 
brand,  win  not  be  constructed  until 
next  vf-ar,  I'Ut  these  conieinnlated  im- 
pjovem-nts  will  be  necessities  before 
that  t!ine  arrives,  and  will  be  ready 
•when    til-    line    is    built. 


the  towns  will  be  and  what  they  may 
get  out  of  the  rush  for  claims  in  the 
ceded  portions  f^f  the  r'-servationa. 

TWO  VETERANS 
m  SUMMONED 

John  Lanson  and  Leon- 
ard lllifr,  Both  of  Iron- 
wood,  Dead. 

Ironwood.  Mich.,  March  16. —  (Spe- 
cial to  Tho 'Herald.)— John  Sanson,  a 
pioneer  resident  of  this  city,  died  here 
F'riday  morning.  Sanson's  death  wa.s 
caused  by  asthma,  from  which  he  had 
been  a  sufferer  for  many  yeura.  He 
was  67  vears  of  age  and  leaves  a  wile 
and  three  grown  up  children.  He 
was  a  veteran  of  the  t'ivil  war.  having 
served  in  Tompany  D,  Eighty-second 
Illinois  infantry  tor  three  years.  The 
funeral  took  place  from  the  home  on 
Mansfield  street  Sunday  afternoon,  at- 
tended bv  the  local  post,  G.  A.  K..  of 
which  the  deceased  was  a  member. 

Leonard  llUit.  an  old  resident  of 
this  citv,  died  at  his  home  on  South 
Suffolk  street  Sunday  of  heart  failure 
He  had  worked  all  day  Saturday  and 
felt  as  well  as  usual  upon  retiring 
Salurdav  evening,  and  had  talked  to 
Mrs    llliff  shortly  before  his  death. 

uiifC    was    born    in    England    during 
the    year    of    1S36,    and    emigrated    to 
country    some    time     before 


miles    from    here.        He 
vears   old  aiul   single. 


was    about    24 


th^ 
and 
last 


this 


the 
Civil  war,  during  which  he  enlisted  in 
the  Union  army.  IHiff  had  been  a 
member  ol  the  G.  A.  R.  since  its  in- 
stitution in  this  section.  He  was  b., 
years  of  age  and  leaves  a  wife  and 
grown  up  family  to  mourn  his  sudden 
death.  The  funeral  will 
this  afternoon  from 
church. 


th( 


take    place 
Methodist 


(iREAT  NORTHEilN  ON  P.\N. 

Road's  Affaii*s  Beinj?  Looked  Into  at 
Rate  Law  Hearing. 


INDIANS  READY 
FOR  INVASION 

Will  Welcome  Whites  in 

Settling  of  Standing 

RocK  Reserve. 

Stamling  Rock  Agency.  N.  D..  March 

16 The    .■.,000    Sioux    who    get    their 

mall   and    magazines   at   this   agency — 
where  they  were  wont  to  draw  rations 

Hre    spending    their    last    winter,    as 

segregated  people,  in  making  plans 
for  the  reception  of  the  w  hite  invasion 
of  thH  reservation  next  summer  or  fall 
wh«n  the  immense  tract — nearly  3,- 1 
000  OOo  acres.  Including  the  t'heyenne 
rJver  res  rvatlon — will  be  thrown  open 
for  settlement. 

NVarly  all  the  Indians  here  have 
relatives  on  the  lower  Missouri  river 
if.serv«tb«i)s  which  have  already  been 
opeiud  and  they  are  quite  wise  to 
v-hut  the  coming  of  the  whit"s  means 
to  them.  They  now  subsist  them- 
selves bv  freighting  for  the  govern- 
ment, and  for  private  parties,  by  chop- 
ping wood  and  by  .loiiig  such  other 
chorea  as  they  can  get  paid  for.  but 
they  are  not  without  information  as 
t(.  the  possibilities  of  the  Immediate 
future  when  the  greater  part  of  their 
Inlieritance  will  be  given  to  whites. 
Tb'-y  expect  and  will  probably  get 
their  ..^liare  of  the  nu>ney  that  will  be 
brought   in  by  the  whites 

Devflop  Bustiie-s   S<Mise. 
They    have    developed    a    good    deal 
of    business    sense:     they    are    sons    of 
the   men   who   fought   the  best   soldiers 
In    the    United    States    up    to    the    last 
quarter  of  the  last  century.      With  the 
I>a!«siMg  of  Sitting    Bull.   Gall,    Rain-in- 
the-F.ic-   and    the   other      chiefs      who 
icalned    national    fame    on    the    battle- 
field   or    about    the    council    fires    there 
pas.-   d  the  last  vestige  of  >^avngeiy  from 
th.se    people   and    th<\    came    to    know 
th-y  must  live  on  terms  with  the  white 
man   and   get   their  share  of  the  fruits 
of    th.-    earth    by    the    sweat    of    their 
brows.        Tiiey  did    not   take  to  sweat- 
ing raj>idly,   but   the    rising  generation 
retains  a  good  share  of  the  high  order 
of  intt-lligence   which   for  so   long  dis- 
tinguished   the   Tettm   Sioux,    after   the 
other     idains    Indians    had    laid    down 
bef.re  the  tide  of   white  j.r ogress  and 
the    intelligence    is    being    applied    to 
questions   af   ways  and    means. 

Heiv.  at  the  agency  thty  gather  in 
groups  and  discuss  the  prospects.  Over 
yonder  lust  outside  tite  abandoned 
post  of  Fort  Vates,  Sitting  Bull  lies  at 
rest,  but  he  Is  not  more  dead  than  the  I 
npirit  he  .strove  to  keep  alive.  These 
liiiii-)ns    at    the    agency    talk    of   where 


St.  Paul.  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Special  Master  C.  E. 
Otis,  who  IS  conducting  the  rate  law 
I'.enilng  case,  is  hearing  testimony 
relative  to  the  Great  Northern  rail- 
road. 

A  V.  Hogelan.l,  the  chief  engineer, 
was  on  the  stand  all  yesterday  morning, 
under  examination  by  Hale  Holden  of 
Chicago,    attorney    for    tlie    road. 

His  testimony  was  reUilive  to  the 
value  of  the  company's  property  In 
Minnesota,  and  dealt  largely  with 
what  It  would  cost  to  reconstruct  the 
road.  He  placed  the  total  figure  at 
$57,348,8.56.  and  stated  it  would  have 
taken  eight  vi-ars  of  work  if  it  had 
been  started  June  30.  190S.  This  figure 
is  about  50  per  cent  higher  than  the 
estimate  of  value  placed  on  the  prop- 
ertv  by  the  state. 

In  Minnesota  the  road  has  2,'i.)ii  miles 
of  main  track  and  siile  track  sufficient 
to  raise  the  mileage  to  2.779  miles  for 
a  total. 

THE  JAMESTOWN  FAIR 


JinCJE  Pljim  COMING. 

Reappointed  Federal  Judge  Expect- 
ed in  Minneapoli.s  Saturday. 

Minneapolis,  Minn..  March  16. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Judge  Mil- 
ton D.  Purdy,  whose  reappointment  to 
the  Minnesota  federal  judgeship  was 
made  by  President  W.  H.  Taft  last 
week,  is  still  in  St.  Louis,  where  news 
of  the  recess  appointment  reached  him 
last  Monday.  He  is  to  return  to 
Minneapolis  Saturday  of  this  week,  ac- 
cording to  LTnited  States  Marshal  \V  . 
H.    tirimshaw. 

Judge  Purdy  took  the  oath  of  office 
in  St.  Louis.  He  served  a  rece.ss  ap- 
pointment under  President  HDosevelt, 
and  when  his  term  expired  March  3. 
left  for  a  vacation  in  the  .South.  His 
reappointment  by  Mr.  Roosevelt's  suc- 
c.'.ssor  was  made  known  to  him  last 
.Monday.  ,„  ,, 

The  federal  court  in  Minneapolis 
has  been  without  a  Judge  since  his 
,lel)arture  for  the  .South.  Judge  Page 
Morris  of  Duluth  was  in  Minneapolis 
for  a  few  days,  but  was  called  to  Du- 
luth. The  spring  term  of  federal 
court  in  Minneapolis  begins  April  6. 
The  calendar  contains  thirty  civil  suits 
mil  two  criminal  cas<s. 

DETROIT  MAN  INJURED. 

Receives  Bad  Scalp  Wound  in  Col- 
lision at  Blue  Earth. 

Blue  Earth.  Minsi.,  March  16. — A 
wreck  occurred  at  the  junction  of  the 
Omaha  and  Nortliwestern  roads  here 
Mon<lay.  A  combination  mall,  hag- 
gage  and  smoking  car  were  thrown 
from    the    track    and    overturned 

Carl  llosewall,  a  passenger,  of  De- 
troit. Minn.,  received  a  bad  scalp 
wound  and  his  back  was  injured.  I-  ve 
oiher  passengers  were  more  or  loss  In- 
jured. .  ^.^^     ,ft 

North-bound  passenger  tram  ^o  AO 
had  just  left  the  station  and  aftei 
whistlin.g  for  the  crossing  had  gotten 
under  good  headway,  when  the  combi- 
nation car  was  struck  by  an  engine 
and  boxcar  that  were  backing  over 
the    crossing.  _  ,      „^ 

The  mail  sacks  caught  fire  and  one 
was  consumed.  One  man  standing  on 
the  roof  of  a  car  was  thrown  several 
feet  and   alighted    in    a    nearby    ditch. 

IMPROMN(rnVIN  OAKS. 

Chicago  Man  Spending  Much  on  His 
Crow  \>  ing  Summer  Home. 

Bralnerd.  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
to     The     Herald.) 

k-ns   one   of   the   finest   sum 

returned   to 


WE  imSh  YOU 

For  any  bill  of  froodt  and  make 
special  easy  payment  terms  to 
suit  \-our  Incomes.     We  want  you 

to  open  an  account  with  us    Our 

.a 

prices  are  right.  Our  furniture 
the  best.     Give  xia  a  call. 


•^sJt  %l^.  ^^rawti^ 


Wt  TKUM  1 


K(II!LI^ 


107  W«8t    Superior 
StfOt. 


TWO  STORES 


18i8-30-d2  V^est 
Superior  St. 


OUR  TWO  STORES 


One  down  town,  and  the  other  at 
the  West  end  makes  it  extreme- 
ly convenient  for  We.^t  end  and 
down  town  shoppers.  There  are 
alway.s  good  bargains  at  both  of 
them.  Specials  in  our  ads  are 
shown  at  both  stores  unless 
otherwise   stated. 


IF  YOU  SEE  OUR 
FURMUiffi,  GET  OUR  PRICES,  MAKE  COMPARISONS, 
Will  BE  CONVINCED  THAT  THIS  IS  THE  PEACE  TO  TRADE 

ece  that  corresponds  closely,  compare  it 
y  the  results  we  are  positive  that  you  will 

the  lowest/the  furniture  the  best.  .     Let  us  prove  it. 

GO.CARTS  AND  BABY  CABS 


be  Forwat^^'s  furniture  customer,  because  our  prices  aie 

EXTRA 
SPECIAL 

$1.50  SCREEN  ONLY 

75c 

These  screens  are  high  grade, 
three  folds  oak  frames,  beauti- 
ful patterns,  all  colors,  always 
sold  at  $1.50.  but  we  .struck  a 
snap  on  them  and  took  ail  the 
factory  had.  We  cleaned  them 
up  and  offer  them  to  our  cus- 
tomers at  about  cost  price. 
Come  early  If  you  want  one — 
they  won't  last  long. 


UK- 
TRIC 
LAMPS 


—J.  C.  Barber,  who 
owns  one  of  the  finest  summer  homes 
In  Crow  Wing  county,  has 
Chicago,  after  a  brief  visit  at  Twin 
Oaks    as   his  summer  place  la  named. 

Mr.'  Barber  last  season  spent  about 
SIO  000  In  Improvements  on  his  places 
in  the  town  of  Nokay  I>ake.  and  will, 
\vh»-n  completed,  have  a  model  farm  as 
well  as  a  verv  commodious  summer 
home  Surveyor"  G'Hare  of  Aitkin  coun. 
ty  and  a  crew  of  men  are  at  work 
doing  some  surveying  preparator.v  to 
the    season's    improvements. 

,.-ni    ri»tiirii    fr(im    his   home    m    v 

tlie     im- 


D(mble   burner,    solid    bra.s8    base-— 
hand-painted    «lobe — regular    5-| -'0 

—special ,-> »«»••»** 

Oak  base,  mis.sion  style,  leather 
stained  glass  t<^P.  beaded  f^^^^^f_~ 
regular  $  1  li-r— special  .... 
Keg.  $.").00  Elactrlc  Lamp 
Reg.  $")..') 0  Klectric  Lamp 
Reg.  $6.50  Klectric  Lamp 
Reg.  $7.00  JCiectric  Lamp 
Heg.  $ii.00  EUtcylc  Lamp 

Brass  base,  green  globe — regularly 
$3.9.5 — at  thia  sale  only  ....  S2.7o 
Brass  base.,  gre^n  globe — regularly 
$2.95 — at  this  sale  only    ....    S2.20 


.>0 

.$:j.90 

.$  I.S.J 
.81.95 
.$6.25 


Steel  frame,  wood  seat  and  back 
Folding  Go-Cart,  only  $1.85. 

Steel  frame,  upholstered  feat  aiid 
back,  with  parasol.  Spec  al  sale 
$4.75. 

Black  enameled  steel  frame,  up- 
holstered in  dark  green  leather 
cloth.  C'illapsible,  compleie  with 
hood.  $6.50. 

Brown  ones,  collapsible  with 
hood.  $10.50  and  $12. OO. 

Black,  collapsible,  with  canopy. 
.>?11.50. 

W'c  have  on  hand  storm  hoods 
for  all  go-carts. 


FELT  MAHRESSES— 30  NIGHTS'  FREE  TRIAL 


Our  "North  Star"  Cotton  Felt  Mattresses,  45  pounds,  made  of  a 
good  white  cotton  felt  This  mattress  we  will  gttarantec  m  every 
respect      Nothing  like  it   shown  in  Duluth  for  the  price. 

You  can  sleep  on  it  THIRTY  NIGHTS,  and  if  not  satisfactory 
may  be  returned. 


OUR  PRICE  IS  IN  ONE  PART— $7.50 

We  have  Felt  Mattresses  as  low  as  $5.75. 


WE  WANT  YOU  TO  OPEN  AN  ACCOUNT  WITH  US     YOUR  CREDIT  IS  G00», 


Will  be  Held  in  July— New  Offiters 
Are  Elected. 

.Tamestown.  N.  D..  March  ItV — .\t  the 
annual  meeting  of  the  Jamestown  Fair 
association  it  was  decided  to  hold  the 
fair  this  year  on  .July  12  to  16, 
the  following  officers  were 
President,  A. 
dent.  A.  .M 


and 

elected. 

\V.  Grant;  first  vice  presi- 

Halstead:  second  vice  presl 


Power   to   Resist 

Infectious  and  conlagioua 
diseases  depends  most  of  all 
on  the  health  and  strength 
of  the  white  blood  corpuscles. 

They  are  microscopic  bodies  whoa« 
Important  ftiDCtion  is  i.o  destroy  disease 
genii?  that  itivude  tr.e  system  ihrougli 
tbe  ii.i  we  breathe  lb»-  waier  we  drink, 
Ibe  food  we  eat,  and  otherwise. 

1/  you  are  pale,  ut-rvous.  easily  tired, 
with  liti.e  or  no  appfiite  or  if  yo'..  are 
tronl.iea  with  Mjv  bumoi  your  while 
blt'Od  cor])ntjclfc*  are  iiOt  bfcalihj*  and 
Urotig  und  yoo  s-^oald  beg'n  taking 
liooQ  9  Sttr^Kparilla  ai  ouce. 

Hoods  Sarsaparliia  effect*  Ita  won- 
aerfui  cures,  iiol  slmpiy  because  it 
contains  sarsaparliia  but  because  it 
combines  the  utmost  remedial  values 
of  more  than  20  different  Ingredients, 
eacb  greatly  strengthened  and  en- 
riched by  this  peculiar  combination. 
These  Ingrcdjenta  are  the  very  reme- 
dies that  successful  physicians  pre- 
.scrtbe  for  the  same  diseases  and  ail- 
m»nts  There  is  no  real  substitute  for 
Hood's  Sarsaparliia.  If  urged  to  buy 
any  preparation  said  to  be  "Just  as 
g-ood"  you  may  be  sure  It  Is  Inferior, 
■tosts  less  to  make,  and  yields  the 
dealer  a  larger  profit 

Get  Hood's  Sarsaparliia  today.  In  nsual 
liquid  or  t%blet4  called  S&rsatabs    100  dosesU. 


dent.  C.  A.  Klaus;  third  vice  presldeiit. 
J.  J.  Nierllng;  treasurer.  C  F.  HatH; 
man:  secretary.  C.  I..  Yeaton:  board  of 
directors,  A  D.  Grant.  George  Kurtz. 
(-  B.  Buckley.  D.  H.  Brockmaii.  I- . 
Lenz.  E.  E.  Clark.  M.  Toay,  F.  Picard 
and   P.   Range. 

COLLEITOK'S  PAUKNTS 

LIVING  IN  STILLWATER. 

Stillwater.  Minn.,  March  16.— -fSpe- 
cial  to  The  Herald.)— E.  W.  Durant. 
Jr.  has  been  appointed  C(dlector  of 
custums  of  the  port  of  Charleston.  t>. 
C  hy  President  Taft.  The  position  is 
a  lucrative  and  responsible  one.  and  the 
appointment  Is  an  e.xcellent  one  in  all 
respects.  •  cs-^- 

Mr.  Durant  Is  the  only  son  of  Sen- 
ator and  Mrs.  E.  W.  Durant  of  this 
citv  and  was  born  and  brought  up  in 
Stillwater.  He  is  a  graduate  of  \  ale 
college,  and  has  been  in  the  lumbei 
business    for    a    number    of    years. 

Senator  and  Mrs.  Durant  have 
spent  the  winters  for  several  years 
past  with  their  son  and  his  family  at 
Charleston,  and  are  there  now. 

Harvey  Sullivan,  formerly  a  resident 
of  this  city,  where  he  was  born  and 
reared  to  manhood,  but  who  has  for 
past  ten  vears  been  living  at  Nome. 
Alaska,  is  an  applicant  for  the  position 
of  t'nlted  States  marshal  at  Nome. 
Alaska,  and  that  .Senators  Nelson  and 
Clapp   have    recommended    the   appoint- 

The    applicant    Is    a    brother    of  Sen- 
ator   George    H.    Sullivan.      He    la  now 
in     Wasliington.     having    left     for  that  i 
city  a  couple  of  v.eeks  ago. 

NORTH  DAKOTA  VOTING. 

Bismarck  N.  D.,  March  16. — (.^^pecial 
to  The  Herald.) — Elections  are  being 
held  in  many  of  the  ti>wns  and  vil- 
lages of  the  state  today.  In  these 
elections,  members  of  the  boards  of 
trustees  are  to  be  named,  and  judging 
from  the  amount  of  discussion  that 
has  been  raised  in  several  of  the  places, 
it  would  appear  that  the  elections 
have    become    rather    interesting. 

HANCOCK  POLl'cE  CHIEF 

RESIGNS  IN  DISGRACE. 


^.=.^. *^'-  ^^^.' 

li'er  wlTl  Veturn  from  his  home  In  Chi- 
cago about  April  1  to  give  the  im- 
provements his  personal  supervision. 
\bout  May  1  he  expects  to  bring  a 
large  countrv  car  from  Chicago  for  the 
u.se    of    his    fumlly   and    guests. 

HOUGHTON  COUPLE  VISIT 

VVitl!  >fontjina  Relatlve.s  Fii'st  Time 
ill  Thirty  Seven  Years. 

Helena,  Mom..  March  16.— .losepli 
Carrier  and  hl.s  wife  of  Houghton, 
Mich.,  have  arrived  in  Helena  for  a 
visit  with  friends.  Mr.  Carrier  has 
two  brothers  and  a  sister  in  Helena. 
John  B.  Carrier.  Steplien  Carrier  and 
Mrs.  AVilllam  Cadwell.  He 
a  brother  an.l  sisti>r  living 
Sulphur  Sprlng.s. 
.Mrs.    .1.    C. 


the    world, 
to   get    one 


greatest  wheat  ceritefs  in 
stands  an  excellent  chance 
of   the   bran,  h   factories. 

Thomas  Shepherd,  wno  has 
communication  with  the  mill- 
received  a  lettw  in  which 
states  that  after  it  gets  Its  hom.^heU 
thorou^fhlv  developed.  It  will  orancn 
out  ami  that  MInot  will  be  considered 
as    a    point    for    a    branch    factoi  >  ■ 


been    in 

has  Just 

the     firm 


has    also 

in    White 

Frank     Carrier     and 

IJaverd.       After    a    stay    in 

Helena    they   will    go   to    Whice  Sulphur 

.-;prli;gs    for   a    visit. 

This  Is  Mr.  Carrier's  first  visit  to 
Montana,  although  his  relatives  have 
been   here   for  thirty-seven   years. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Carrier  will  spend  about 
six  weeks  in  Montana.  They  are  at 
I)resenr  stopping  with  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Cadwell. 


CROOKSTON  FEELS  LID. 

New  Pool   and  Billiard   Ordinance 
in  Effect  Last  r^nnday. 

Crook.ston.  Minn.,  March  16.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The -recently  adopted 
po.d  and  billiard  hall  ordinance  was  in 
eftoet  Sunday,  and- the  result  was  very 
apparent.     The  pool 


rooms  were   closed 
and   no   e f - 


tight  during  the  entire  .laN  ,  ^  .  ^„,. 
fort  was  made  to  run  counter  to  an> 
of  the  provisions  of  the  Wright  ordi- 
nance! 'Time  and  time  former  patrons 
nf  the  several  places  tried  the  doors, 
onlv  t^o  walk  awky  disgusted  and  some- 
what disappointed.  . 

'    room  men  even   went  so   rar 


The  pool 


nx  lo  close  their  cigar  stands  and  coun- 
as  to  Close  iiiei^^^b^^  avoid   any   chance 


their   front. 


e 
side 


counter 


-(Special 


MEANS  NE^^   INDUSTRY. 

Making  Linen  From  Flax  Straw  May 
be  Tried  in  North  Dakota. 

Minot.  N.  D..  -March  16. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  mammotli  linen  mill 
which  will  manufacture  linen  from  llax 
straw,   may   be   located   here. 

The  Oxford  I..inen  mills  of  North 
Brookfleld.  Mass.,  which  has  been  in 
correspondence  with  Minot  parties  for 
some  time,  l-.as  discovered  a  process  by 
which  the  finest  grade  of  linen  can  be 
made  from  tlax  straw,  which  goes  to 
waste  in  such  large  quantities  in  North 
Dakota.  ,  ,      ^      ^ 

The  firm  has  established  a  plant  at 
North  Brookfleld.  Mass..  and  at  present 
is  bending  all  its  energies  getting  the 
home     factory     on     the     be.st     business 

After   the   liome   field   is   developed   to 

the  fullest  extent,   branches  will  be  lo- 

I  cated    in    other    sections    of    the    T'nited 

States,   and    Minot.    which    is    «oie    of    the 


ters.   and  In   orde 
I;?dS'^;:<^-^-V^^andthj;ctutain^ 

place   being  -losod..    It  i.s  I'.-o  >aMe  that 
no  effort    will    be- wia^e    to    lun 
to  the  ordinance. 

Cloaurt   "^lan  Visit  lug. 

Hallock.  -Minn.,  March  16.- 
to  The  Herald.)— Ralph  Demars  of  (.lo- 
nuet.  Minn.,  spent  a  few  days  hero 
visiting  with  friends  and  relatives.  Mr. 
was  for  a  long  time  manager 
Kittson  Telephone  company  at 
He  resigned  his  position 
with  this  company  last  fall  and  accept- 
ed a  position  as  manager  of  the  tele 
phone    company    at    Clo.,uet        H'^    f^s 

ke    nosition    a-s^s^lrintendent    ot    the 
the    "«^'^'»\^^jrt,.ic.al      P.^wer      company. 

he     now     li'>lils. 


mains  were  taken  to  Emmetsburg, 
Iowa,  for  interment  in  the  family  lot 
In   the  city  of  his   lirth. 

Bismarck.  N.  D — Senator  E.  S.  Neal 
of  McLean  county  has  left  for  Ari/.ona 
where  he  is  interested  in  mining  and 
townnltea.  He  i.s  iulerestod  In  a  gold 
and  copper  n  Ine,  and  in  a  mlne^  which 
produces  a  valuable  metal,  a  by-pro- 
duct of  lead  ore.  that  la  used  for 
tempering  steel,  and  commands  about 
tlO    a    pound.  „ 

Grand  Forks.  N.  D.— P.  R.  McDonnell 
and  Pastoret  &  Lawrence  were  here 
from  Duluth  to  l>id  on  the  sewer  con- 
tract to  be  let  Monday  evening  by  the 
city   counctl. 

Fargo.  N.  D. —  I.  B.  Adams  was  elect- 
ed recording  secretary-  of  the  Fargo 
Trades  A  Labor  asseru'jb'  at  tlie  reg- 
ular semi-monthly  meeting  ot"  that  or- 
ganization. He  will  fill  the  vacanc.v 
in  the  assembly  executive  board  caused 
by     the     resignation    ol     William     Puar- 

Aneta  N  D. — Fire  which  started  in 
the  Moulton  poolroom  from  unknown 
origin  early  Saturday  totally  destroy-ed 
four  frame  buildings  in  Aneta  and  for 
a  time  a  large  part  of  the  Ini.siness 
district    was    threatened    with    destrue- 

^Grand  Forks.  N.  D.— The  United  Com- 
mercial Travelers  have  elected  officers 
as  follows:  W.  W.  Fegan,  pa.^t  coun- 
cilor; .1.  C.  Grothe,  senior  cotiuclloi-; 
William  Raymond,  .lunlor  councilor;  A. 
J  Sorley,  secretary;  Charles  Lazier, 
conductor;  Fred  Kedick,  sentinel;  Dr. 
Tavlor,    plivsiclan.  ^    , 

Amenla,  N.  D.— Violet  Matilda  T..1- 
lefson.  the  ;i-vear  old  daughter  ol  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Laurance  Tollefson  of  Amenia 
died  at  the  home  of  her  parents  here 
on  Thursday  from  infantile  convul- 
sions. The  body  was  shipped  to  Moor- 
head,    Minn.,    for    Inteimcnt. 


A  few  years  after  he  purchased  the 
business  which  lie  carried  on  success- 
fully   up    lo    the    time    of   his    death 

\it^.i(.v — The  fourth  annual  conven- 
tion of'  tlie  Hubbard  County  Sunday 
Scliool  association  met  at  the  Metho- 
dist EpI.scopal  church  ht  re  Tuesday 
and  Wednesday.  The  convention  vvas 
well    atended. 

Crookston— A  Brotherhood  cltd)  has 
been  formed  here  wtili  tle.se  officers: 
President:  Prof.  William  Robertson; 
first  vice  president,  W.  1 
second  vice  president,  H  .,,,,„,,„. 
third  vice  president.  Dr.  H.  H.  Hodgson. 
secVetary.     H.    S     Newberry;     treasurer. 

^LUtle'  Falfs— .1.  .McAuley  of  St.  Cloud 
is  making  preparation.s  for  the  opening 
of  a  quarry  about  twelve  miles  north- 
east ot  this  city.  The  quarry  wluch 
Mc\uley  is  to  open  is  owned  by  James 
Roan  of  Si  Paul,  and  is  said  to  con- 
tain as  fine  a  quality  of  granite  a«  can 
be  found  In  this  part  of  the  stale. 

St  Hilaire — Gust  Koniskson  and  fam- 
ilv  loturned  last  week  from  Washing- 
ton where  they  have  been  for  the  past 
weeks.  Mr.  Konlskscn  is  not  par- 
well  pleased  with  the  \Ve8t- 
and  savs  thiit  Red  Lake 
better    than    ever    to    him. 


Nicholson; 
R.     Jones; 


two 

ticularly 
ern    country 
county    looks 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


of      Alex 


Demars 
of    the 
this    place 


Cloquet 

which     position 


BURDENS  LIHED. 


For    Colfr»U»*'     T""^"*"'-,  snecial 


to 
Minneapolis 


MINNESOTA  BRIEFS 


IProm  Duluth     Backs — Relief 
by    Lapse   of   lime. 


Proved 


Hancock.  Mich.,  March  16.^ — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Chief  of  Police  L.  .An- 
drew of  this  city  has  resigned  in  dis- 
grace. For  some  time  past  rumors 
of  an  ugly  nature  have  been  circulated 
aga:nst  the  police  official,  but  not  until 
Thursday  night  were  they  credited  by 
those  in  authority.  At  about  midnight 
Thursday  the  chief,  who  Is  a  married 
man,  is  said  to  have  been  found  In  a 
Houghton  hotel,  registering  with  a 
woman  as  man  and  wife.  Sheriff  By- 
ers  immediately  had  Andrews  stripped 
of  his  commission  as  deputy  sheriff  and 
Saturday  the  Hancock  council  took 
steps  to  institute  proceedings  against 
the  chief,  but  the  sending  In  of  his 
resignation  resulted  in  the  proceedings 
being   dropped. 

LAST  TWIN  TAKES  LIFE. 

Stevens  Point.  Wis..  March  16. — Al- 
bert Krueger,  Jr..  a  papermaker  at  the 
Wisconsin  River  mill,  committed  sui- 
cide in  front  of  the  Bruce  hotel.  Fol- 
lowing a  quarrel  at  his  home.  Krueger 
bought  a  38-callber  revolver  and  later 
shot  himself  In  the  left  temple  dying 
instantly.  His  twin  brother  was  acci- 
dentally killed  while  hunting  near  here 
three    years    ago. 

. ♦ 

Train    KHIm   Young    .Man 

Black  River  Falls,  Wis..  March  16. — 
George  Olson  of  the  town  of  Brockway 
was  Instantly  killed  by  a  train  on  the 
cut-off  of  the  Omaha  road,  about  two 


Backache   la  a  h«avy  burden; 
Nervousness    wears    one    out; 
Rheumatic    pain;    urinary   His; 
All  are   kidney   burdens — 
Daily  effects  of  kidney  weakness. 
No  use  to  cure  the  symptoms, 
Relief  is  but  temporary  If  the  cause 
remains. 

Cure  the  kidneys  and  you  cure  the 

cause.  . 

Relief    comes      Quickly — oomes       to 

Doan's     Kidney     Pills     ovire     kidney 

ill*;  ^      . 

Prove  It  by  your  neighbor  s  caae. 

Here's  Duluth   testimony 

The  story  of  a   permanent   cure. 

Mrs.  M.  McGilllvray,  122  8  V4  Supe- 
rior street,  Duluth.  Minn.,  says:  "The 
statements  I  have  previously  given  in 
favor  of  Doan'3  Kidney  Pills  have  fully 
expressed  my  opinion  of  this  remedy 
and  at  this  time,  I  gladly  confirm 
all    I    have    previously    said." 

On  Oct.  20th.  1904.  Mrs.  McGill- 
vray  gave  the  following  statement: 
■Kidney  trouble  clung  to  me  for  a 
vear  or  more  and  I  suffered  from  dull, 
•lalns  through  the  small  of  my  back. 
I  also  had  headaches,  did  not  rest  well 
•and  was  annoyed  by  the  irregular 
passages  of  the  kidney  secretions. 
Doan's  Kidney  Pills  helped  me  from 
rhe  first  and  soon  freed  me  from  my 
trouble.  I  have  had  no  need  of  a 
kidney  remedy  since." 

For  sale  by  all  dealers.  Price  BOo. 
Foster-MUburn  Co.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y., 
sole    agents   for    the    United    States. 

Remember  the  name — Doan's — and 
take   no    otlxer. 


I.Hniborja<k.s  ileiurninif. 

Cloc.uet  Minn..  Mftrch  16.  — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— A  sure  harbinger  of 
ijnl  the  rSiurn  Ol  the  lumberjack 
■frorn  Ills  Winter's  w^ork  in  the  woods, 
f  i n  ev?dence  They  are  drifting  in 
bv  Jwos  three;4  and  even  by  dozens 
und  ienerallv  head  for  Dtiluth  and 
iargef  centers.  Kesslar's  big_  camp 
near  Independence.,  in  ^^-^^•J'^ 
broken  up  and  the  men  are  drifting 
this    wav.  ^ 

Miiuiesota   PJoiM-er  Dead. 

Stillwater.  Minn..  March  !•> — (Spe- 
..laTto  The  Herald. )-WilliamStrath- 
ern,  aged  80.  father  of  Mrs.  John  Q. 
Mackintosh  of  this,  city,  w^ho  has  re 
sided  in  Minnesota  since  1S^2.  i.s  dead 
at  his  home  at  Rich  Valley,  near  Ha.st- 
ings  The  funeral  will  be  at  his  liome 
Wednesday    under  Ma.sonic  auspices. 


Hawley — A  committee  has  been  ap- 
pointed by  tlie  local  A.  F.  &  A.  M. 
lodge  to  investigate  plans  and  specifi- 
cations for  tlie  erection  of  a  building. 
One  of  the  favorable  plans  received 
calls  for  a  brick  structure  30x80  feet, 
two   stories. 

Crookston — J.     N.     Kirsch,     formerly 
published    of     the     Crookston     Journal. 
I 
i 

Du - 

He     states     that     he     not     as     yel     made 
his    mind    as    to    what    he    will    do 


Tlonehton — The  residence 
McDoiSaU  now  located  on  tl^  *  "P^i' 
nMisre  dock  ea.st  of  th ;  Houghton 
vaiis  Is  to  be  moved  th  s  week  to  a 
.site  across  the  track,  wh«re  It  will  be 
given   extensive   repairs.  r^^mh 

Hancock-The       f»"^Jf/,,.«^  .r'ondav   i 
Binglnl.       who     was       killed      ,Monda.\,  1 
March    S.   in    the   Quincy   nine    by   a   fall 
of     rock    was    held     from     St.     Josephs 
,  lunch  at  2  o'clock.     The  body  was  laid  : 
At  rest   In   Lakeside   cemetery.  i 

"'south  Range-Dr.  W.  ^^ ,."l^'« "J "•,'"« 
of    Rev.    R.    L.    Hewson    ol    I'ainesuaie,  i 

I 


town  voted  dry.  The  indications  are 
that  the  city  will  go  no  license  by  a 
larger    mnjoiitv    than    last    year. 

Janesvllle — Charles  L.  liurpee,  of 
Denver,  who  with  his  wife,  attended  a 
family  reunion  at  the  home  of  Former 
City  .Vttorney  Fred  C.  Burpee,  here 
yesterdav,  dropped  dead  at  the  home 
of  his  sister,  Mrs.  Charles  Brantlng- 
ham,  in  Rockford,  while  dressing  Mon- 
dav.  He  was  born  in  Champaign.  HI., 
in  "18  12. 

Milwaukee  —  Clinton  Austin,  a 
wealthy  retired  farmer  and  his  daugh- 
ter. Stella,  were  held  up.  bound  and 
gagged  by  two  armed  and  masked  rob- 
bers in  their  home,  Oklahoma  and 
Howell  avenue,  Saturd.iy  night.  For 
more  Ihan  seven  hours,  they  were  held 
captives  while  tlie  roblx-rs  ransacked 
the  house  completely,  securing  jew- 
elry and  money  to  the  value  of  Jl'iO. 
Shebovgan-  Having  doubled  its  capi- 
tal slock,  it  Is  expected  that  the  Hand 
Knit  Hoslerv  company  will  erect  a 
new     factory"  building     this    summer. 

Manitowoc— After  two  years  of  study 
of  the  subject  and  experiments.  James 
B.  Worthington  and  Arthur  FIshbeck 
of  this  city,  believe  they  have  set  u red 
the  perfect  gas-gasoline  engine  and 
models  have  been  submitted  for  pat- 
ents, and  the  plan  Is  lo  establish  a 
manufacturing  plant  In  this  city  or 
elsewhere    at    once. 

Marinette — Gen.  Charles  King,  after 
In.specting  Company  I  of  Marinette, 
complimented  Capt.  Bresnahan  on  the 
splendid  showing  made  by  his  com- 
pany. 


of 


has  been  appointed  physkian  at  one   o 
the    .nines    on    the    iron    range    In    Mln 

McDougall.    for 


nesota.  ,    , 

Tike    Linden — John       ■-  , 

^^^       resident   of  Lake     Y'\^^'\  Vut 
of    the    stables    of    the    Lake 

Linden    Co-operative     «"','«V' Jjfi^K '';[* 
for    Minnesota    towns,    af  ei     v\  hicii    lu 
go    to     Detroit    and    complete     his 
as   veterinary  doctor. 


years   a 
in    chJirge 


will 


las  returned  to  Crookston  after  spend-  /='^M'?f, mp.JLur  Fred  Tice  of  Chicago 
ng  several  months  in  the  Twin  Cities,  ,.„_  ,',  !»,„  upst'  known  wcrkers  against 
Julutii   and    towns    on   the    Iron    Range.    ""^  great  white  plague  in  the  country 


up 


Crookston    for    a 


DAKOTA  BRIEFS 


Fdgerlev  S.  D. — The  Midland  Con- 
tinental railroad  will  begin  grading 
between  here  and  Jamestown  early  in 
the  spring.  The  work  will  be  rushed 
so     that     trains     will     be     running     by 

^  *Giand    Forks.    N.    D.— Manager 
Courtney    of     the     Northwestern 


but    will     remain     in 
short    time,    at    least. 

Aitkin— The  office  forces  of  the 
countv  auditor  and  treasurer  are  still 
working  on  the  March  apportionment, 
which  totals  $2  2,267  The  money  for 
the  various  towns  and  school  districts 
will    be    available    on    March    20. 

{•t  Cloud — The  Watab  Pulp  &  Paper 
company  of  Sartell  has  recently  made 
a  large  purchase  of  timber  land  in 
the  northern  part  of  the  state,  which  is 
said  to  be  the  second  largest  transfer 
recorded    in    Koochiching    county. 

Moorhead— Chief  of  Police  O.  H.  Mal- 
vev  has  received  a  letter  from  relatives 
in  Norwav,  informing  him  of  the  death 
of  his  father,  lirick  Malvey.  at  the 
age  of  64  vears.  Besides  Chief  .Malvey 
two  other  son.s.  P.  E.  Malvey.  K.  E. 
Malvey  and  a  daughter.  Mrs  Andrew 
Frederlckson    reside    in   Moorhead. 

Bralnerd — Stephen  A.  Rowcliffe.  the 
father  of  Mrs  W.  B.  Gwalhmey  of  Ait- 
kin, died  Friday  night  of  a  paralytic 
stroke  after  an  illness  of  about  four 
d^y*  '  He  was  81  years  of  age  and  the 
remains  were  taken  to  Dsceola,  ^^  is., 
Iiy  .Mr.  and  Mrs.  Gwathmey  for  inter- 
ment. „    .    .  e 

St  Cloud — M.  J.  Kotshaver.  one  of 
the  best  known  residents  of  St.  Joseph, 
died  .Saturday  The  deceased  was  born 
In  Austria  In  the  year  1862.  and  in 
1880  came  to  St.  Joseph,  where  he 
took    a    position    In    the    .Maurin    store. 


at    the   Calumet 
auspices     of       the 
Anti-tuberculosis 


of    .Miss 


Isa- 
and 
to  I 


tbe   grea-  . 

spoke   Monday   evening 
theater     under     the 
Houghton       County 

society.  , .,    „ 

Laurlum— The  wedding 
belle  Richards,  daughtei  "J  »f'^_^ 
Mrs  Edward  II  chards  ol  I'a"''^"\-  ,.  , 
W-ilter  Norden  was  solemnized  by  Re^ . 
lutliei  K  Long  of  the  Jalumet  Con- 
gSaiion^l  chtfrch  at  the  home  of  the 
bihfe's   parents  Thursday   evening. 

Ne-aunee— The    Negauree    branch    of 
the    Pfnnish    Brothers'  .Temperance    a-.-  1 
sociation     celebrated     its     twentx -tlilid  , 
anniversary  Sunday  evening  at  its   hal 
on  Ca«e  street.     A  pleasing  program  ol 


lain  office  here,  has  resif.-ned,  to  accept 
he  "ashkrship  of  the  Cvdahy   Packing 


Neb.,     which 


re 
tiie 


B.    H. 

Tele- 


phone exchange  recently  underwent  an 
operation  at  St.  Michael's  hospital.  He 
is  getting  along  very  well,  according 
to    Information    glveu    out    at    the    hos- 

^'L^herwood,  N.  D.— The  United  States 
board  of  appraisers  sustained  P.  J. 
Dalton's  prote,!Jt  against  being  com- 
pelled to  pay  ^a  duty  of  2^  c^nt.s  a 
bushel  on  feed  imported  from  Canada 
in  February.  19p8.  and  the  duty 
amounting  to  »25  Has  been  refunded  to 

*'*Buxton,  N.  D.— Katheryn  Knudsberg 
I  of  Buxton  attempted  suicide  .>5unday  at 
1  Minneapoli.s.     ,  The    woman     turned     on 

the  gas  at  a  i*oom«ig  house.  Mrs.  Mil - 
I  ler.  the  owner  of  the  house  noticed  the 
i  odor  and  called  XXie  police,  who  had 
I  to    break    Into  JHhss    Knudsherg's   room, 

■  the   door   belnS  'o^^^- .  ,  ,         , 

Dickinson,     N.    &— The      funeral      of 
i  RepresentalhV  Ba*et    took    place    here 
Sundav.      The  :fun^al    was    a    inllitary 
I  one    lii  charge  "Of  Cvmpany  K.  of  which 
1  deceased  was  t»rst  ^ituttnaat.     The  re- 


The 


mesa 

Oil 

Great  Family 
Liniment 

For  Rheumatism,  Lumbago, 
Sprains,  Bruises.  Sore  Throat,  Cold 
In  Chest,  Asthma,  Bronchitis,  Diffi- 
cult Breathing.  Cold  in  Head  and 
Catarrh.  A  simple  rubbing  with 
Omega  Oil  is  often  all  that  la  re- 
quired to  stop  the  worst  pain. 


ant 
m 

th.    

C(jmi>anv    of    (Jmaha. 

centiy    "establislied     a     branch     in 

Marquette— Leo      Rose,     one 
leading     young     business     men 
citv     who    for    several    y  ^ars 
associated  with   his  faUur.  Jacob  Rose, 
fn    the    management    of    the    Marquette 
store,     has     gone     to     Marshfield.     \N  is 
where  he  will  assume  management  of  a 

"^   Houghton— Capt.    Johnson    Vivian 
Houghton,     who     is     one     of     the 
widelv    known    residents    of   the   Coppe 
country,    has    been    serlo  jsly    ill    at 
for    the    past    several    da>  s, 
hope    is    heli     for    his 


of      the 
of     the 
has    been 


of 
most 


his 
home  for  »»"  tmjet  H»^vi'in.i  wci>.i.  ann 
but    slight 

"'calumet— The  storage  house  of  the 
new  ly  organized  Crysta  ^^e  Company 
of  Cal'imet  has  been  completed,  it  is 
rocated"?n  tlie  Copper  jtange  railroad 
varil  The  building  is  oO  by 
. — • 


90   feet. 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS 


n_jw_»ip*  i>0  r'>rf~fcrf''^rf~x'N^'V"W*n~M"^ 


Lake    Nebagamon 


li'rank    Hanson, 


the  janitor  at  the  publ  c  schools,  met 
with  a  painful  accident  recently  while 
at  work  filling  the  furnace  with  cord- 
wood,  that  will  take  him  several  weeks 
lo    get    over.  . 

Eau  Claire— While  engaged  in  re- 
nalrlng  an  awning  in  front  of  Culvers 
shoe  store,  on  South  )3arstow  street, 
William  G.  McCumber.  the  South  River 
street  harness  man.  had  a  narrow  es- 
iape  from  fatal  injuries,  when  a  lad- 
der on  which  he  was  standing,  slipped, 
precipitating  him  to  tie  hard  cement 
sidewalk. 

Mondovi— There  have  been  two  con- 
victions here  for  allege!  linuor  .selling 
and    running   a    "blind   pig,"    since    the 


When  to  Use 
Dr.  Williams' 
PINK  PILLS 

These  pills  were  originally 
a  prescription  used  in  the 
doctor's  private  practice  and 
their  benefit  to  mankind  has 
been  increased  many  thousand 
fold  by  their  being  placed  on 
general  sale  with  the  doctor's 
own  directions  for  use.  They 
are  entirely  safe  and  contain  no 
opiates  or  other  habit-forming 
drugs. 

Dr.    Williams'    Pink    Pills 
are  the  remedy  to  use  when 
the  blord  is  thin  as  in  anaemia; 
or  impure,  as  in  rheumatism ; 
or  when  the  nerves  are  weak, 
as  in  neuralgia ;    or  lifeless,  as 
in  partial  paralysis  ;    or  when 
the   body  as  a   whole  is   ill 
nourished,  as  in  general  debil- 
ity.    They  build  up  the  blood, 
strengthen  the  nerves  and  have 
cured  troubles  of  women  and 
growing  girls  and  many  forms 
of  weakness.     That  hundreds 
of  people  have  tried  the  treat- 
ment   with    good   results    is 
shown  by  the  increasing  num- 
ber of  cures  reported. 


Dr  Wlllianu'  Pink  Pills  are  sold  by  all 
dnig«ist-*.  or  will  b*.  sent,  postpaid,  on 
rtsceipt  ol  price.  50  ceiiu  per  t>ox ;  gix 
boxes.  $2.50  by  the  Dr.  WilUanu  Medicine 
Company.  ScJituectady .  S   Y 


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^^^^^^^_ 

THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,    MARCH    16,    1909 


8 


Put  On  Flesh 

A  Pound  A  Day 


Rrmnrkable    Builder   of    FlesU.    Proton*-, 

rrudiicfx     AMtoulNliinie     UeMiiItti     On 

Thin    Men   and    \\  uiueu. 


Prove     It     fly     Sendlns     Coupon     Below 
Today  for  50c  I'sckajse,  Free. 

We  want  every  man  ami  woman  who 
Is  run  down,  or  who  wants  to  put  on 
more  flcph,  no  matter  how  much  or 
how  little,  to  prove  the  semarkablf 
effects  of  the  new  flesh-builder  any\ 
nerve  strengthener.  Protone.  Nothing 
like  It  has  ever  been  produced  before. 
It  will  cost  you  nothing  to  try  It  and 
prove  ltd  remarkable  effects  on  your- 
self, s 


A    PH<>TO>K    Fltil  Uli. 


Prutone  induces  nutrition,  Increases 
oell-g:rowth.  makes  perfect  the  assimi- 
lation of  food,  strengthens  nerves,  in- 
creases blood  curpustles.  builds  up, 
safely  and  quickly,  muscles  and  solid, 
healthy  flesh,  and  rounds  out  the  fig- 
ure. 

For  women  who  never  appear  sty- 
lish in  anythlnj?  because  of  thinness 
Proti>ne    inav    prove    a    revelation. 

It  costs  you  nothing  to  prove  the 
remarkable  effects  of  Protone.  It  is 
non-injurious  to  the  most  delicate  sys- 
tem. The  I'rotone  Company,  1112  Pro- 
tone  Bldg..  Detroit.  Mich.,  will  send 
you  on  receipt  of  your  name  and  ad- 
dress, a  free  50c  package  of  Protone. 
■with  full  Instructions,  to  prove  that 
't  does  tlie  work;  also  their  book  on 
•■\Vhv  You  Are  Thin."  free  of  charge, 
giving  facts  wiilch  will  probably  as- 
tonish you.  Send  coupon  below  to- 
day  with    your    name   and   address. 


J 


JAMES  SEVILLE 
PASSES  AWAY 

One  of  Duluth's  Pioneer 
Citizens  Dies  in  Minne- 
apolis. 

News  was  received  in  Duluth  today 
of  the  death  of  James  Seville,  one  of 
L>uluth"8  earliest  settlers,  who  passed 
away   in  Minneapolis  Hunday. 

Mr.  Seville  was  one  of  the  rnost 
prominent  of  the  early  pioneers  in  Du- 
luth. and  WHS  very  well  known  among 
the  earlier  settlers  here.  He  served 
several  terms  as  alderman  from  the 
First  ward,  and  was  a  prominent  mem. 
her  of  the  First  M.  E.  church.  He 
started  what  is  now  (he  National  Iron 
works,  and  later  had  a  coal  and  wood 
buslnes.".  He  left  Duluth  about  eight 
vcars  ago.  ,  „  ,  ,     . 

Mr  Seville  had  ten  children,  but 
onlv  one  .•survives  him.  his  son  Charles, 
at  whose  home  he  died.  Mrs.  Seville 
died  about  twelve  years  ago.  Mr.  Se- 
ville also  leaves  a  grandson.  Frank  Se- 
ville,   who    lives    In    Duluth. 

The  funeral  is  being  held  today  in 
Minneapolis,  and  later  the  body  will 
be  sent  to  Milwaukee  for  Interment  in 
the  family  lot  tliere. 

HOLIDAYS  TOO 
MUCH  FOR  HIM 

Mrs.    Undcrferlh    Says 

Husband  Celebrates 

Too  Freely. 

Mrs.  Theresa  Underferth  alleges 
that  her  husband.  A.  F.  Underferth, 
has  a  habit  of  celebrating  holidays 
by  getting  gloriously  drunk  and  beat- 
ing her  on  arriving  home  with  his 
load.  She  filed  suit  for  divorce  in 
district    court    yesterday    afternoon. 

In  her  complant,  Mrs.  Underferth 
says  thty  were  married  In  Duluth, 
and  their  married  life  has  been  mar- 
red by  I'nderferth's  love  for  the  flow- 
ing bowl.  On  Ohrlstmas  eve  of  1908. 
she  alleges,  he  came  home  with  a 
jag,  threw  her  against  a  sink  and 
tried  to  hit  her  with  a  glass.  On  Labor 
day  of  the  same  year  he  carried  a  load 
home  and  chased  her  with  a  razor. 

Mrs.  Underferth  wants  an  absolute 
divorce  and  alimony.  She  also  asks  a 
restraining  order  to  prevent  her  hus- 
band from  selling  property  worth 
about  $1,000.  He  Is  a  collar  maker 
and  able  to  tarn  $15  a  wtek,  she  says. 


FKl.i;    l"lU)TO\E    COUPON. 

The    Prulcne    Ccnipany.     1112    Protone    Bldg.. 
Detroit,    llich. 

I  waot  to  put  cai  mire  dcsh.  so  please  send 
ma  a  free  5(c  package  of  your  remo rkable  Pro- 
tone.  »I1  cliargts  prepaid,  alin  yuar  free  Lt^ok 
telUiig  me  why  I  fcm  tliin.  As  evldenre  cf  gvoii 
faith.  I  eiiclof*  lie  to  help  pay  postage  ami 
packinf. 


Name. 
Street 

riu:  .  . 


state. 


I    mySEiiEiTS    j 

WHERE  TO  (iO  TOMGHT 

LYCEUM — Margaret  Wycherly  in  "The 
Thief."      (See  notice   below.) 

BIJOU — New  vaudeville  bill.  (See  no 
tlce  below.)      » 


"THE  THIEF." 


PRODIGALS  RETIRXING. 

Prominent  People  Who  Let  Roose- 
Telt  Alone  Flock  to  White  Honse. 

Washing-ten,  March  16. — It  is  like 
homecoming  week  in  the  old  town,  or 
a  spectacular  production  entitled  "The 
Prodigal  Sons." 

All  the  "undesirables,"  the  "in- 
bads"  and  the  "Ananlases"  are  flock- 
ing to  the  White  House. 

A  "partial  list  of  recent  visitors,  all 
post-dating  the  departure  of  Theodore 
Roosevelt  from  Washington,  reads 
like  this: 

Mr.   and  Mrs.   Bellamy  Storer. 

Senator   Joseph  Bailey  of  Texas. 

Senator  Knute  Nelson  of  Minnesota. 

Senator  Isldor  Rayner  of  Maryland. 

Senator  Nathan  Bay  Scott  of  West 
Virginia. 

Admiral    Wlnflcld    Scott    Schley,    U. 

6.  N..  retired. 

Theodore  P.  Shonts,  late  of  the 
Panama  canal. 

Representative  James  A.  Tawney  of 
Minnesota. 

Others  are  on  the  way.  No  one  at 
the  White  House  will  be  surprised  to 
6ee  E.  H.  Harriman  present  his  card 
at  any  time. 


Old  People 
MadeYoung 


Hill  s  Hlieumatic  Pills  are  a  Godsend 
to  any  person  over  50  years  old.  By 
their  gentle,  natural  stimulation  of  kid- 
neys, liver  and  bowels  they  throw  off 
the  poisons  which  clog  the  system, 
causing  tlie  twinges,  aches  and  pains 
which  make  old  age  hard  to  bear. 
When  these  jioisons  are  removed  there 
is  no  more  pain — the  muscles  and  joints 
become  supple — you  eat  and  sleep  bet- 
ter and  feel  thirty  years  younger. 

When  old  age  comes  the  sewers  of 
the  body  become  clogged — kidneys  are 
Inactive — the  liver  i.'--  torpid — the  bowels 
do  not  act  freely.  Tlie  waste  matter  is 
kept  in  the  system.  Its  POISON.  The 
result  Is  the  same  as  though  the  house 
pipes  had  clogged  and  the  sewerage 
was  backing  into  the  cellar. 

Hills  Rheumatic  Pills 

lemc\e  these  pulfoiis  by  restoriiiB  these  vital  organs 
to  health.  TTiey  are  purely  vegetable — they  contain  no 
ralycltaws.  no  loilldes.  no  mineral  polsorui  of  any 
Wnd.  These  ihli^gs  Injure  the  stomach  and  cause  In- 
digestion. Htir»  Hheumatic  Pills  stimulate  the  ap- 
petite and  strengthen  dlKeytlon.  These  wonder- 
working pills  are  made  the  same  today  as  they  were 
73  years  ago.  We  have  letters  in  our  files  fn^ni 
over  18.000  grateful  people  wlio  have  been  relieved 
from  pain  ami  made  to  feel  young  again  by  tlds 
marvelous  prepuratlc  n  of  lifuUng  herlw  and  roots. 
Yet  during  all  tills  73  years  Hills  niieumaUc  PiUs 
have  nticr  been  advertised  until  now.  They  have 
l>e«i  rMon-mendeil  from  "ne  to  another  unUl  today. 
by  their  own  merit  alone,  they  are  used  in  thousands 
cf  homes,  to  be  taktn  orraslonaliy  as  means  of  pre- 
Tcntlon  by  those  who  were  iJi  agony  from  Hheumatlsm 
%  nd   have   be«n   lured. 

TEST  THEM  FREE 

We  rejilize  that  there  nie  hundreds  of  wortlili-ss 
nostrums  on  the  rftarket— that  you  may  have  bten 
deceiMd  into  Irjiiig  them  and  der!\<?d  no  benefit.  If 
«o.  y.u  have  a  right  to  be  suspiclciis.  To  all  «u<h 
we  will  five  a  liberal  sized  package  of  Hill's  Rheu- 
««tic  Pills  for  a  letter  or  postal  describing  their  case. 
Address  the  littiT  to  HfWtii  &  <'opp.  the  makcrj.  Dipt. 
108.  Minneapolis.  Minn.  The  package  will  >mc  pre- 
paid. Pay  nothing  then  cr  at  any  Ume.  When  you 
find  tlie  acl.es  and  pains  going,  and  see  yourself  I*- 
eomlng  better  and  ftroiiger  each  day— then  you  will 
KNOW  and  BELIEVE,  and  will  be  as  anxious  to 
contlnuj  the  r>me<ly  and  be  cured  as  we  are  to 
reliere  your  sufTirlng. 

You  can  tectire  these  Pills  from  your  home  drtigglst. 

Leaox   Drug  Store.   Lyeeun   Pharmacy. 


Bernstein's  Masterly  Play  Presented 
by  Capable  Frolinian  Company. 

■'Man's    love    is    of    man's    life    a    thing 

apart. 
"  Tls    woman's    whole    existence." 

Every  woman  who  loves  her  hus- 
band wholly,  and  whose  happiness  Is 
dependent  entirely  upon  the  love  of  her 
husband,  is  constantly  haunted  by  the 
spectre  of  losing  his  love.  No  matter 
Tiow  secure  she  may  be  In  his  affec- 
tions and  how  complete  her  liapplness, 
this  spectre  is  constantly  In  the  bacK- 
ground.  The  man  witli  his  business, 
and  his  outside  interests  plays  the  gaine 
of  married  life  with  a  trump  hand.  Tne 
woman.  who.<5e  love  is  her  whole  exist- 
ence, has  laid  her  curds  upon  the  table. 
It's  not  a  very  pretty  idea  this,  but  It 
is  the  theme  tliat  Henri  Bernstein  has 
taken  for  his  play.  "The  Thief."  which 
was  presented  at  the  Lyceum  last  even- 
ing by  a  Frohman  company  headed  by 
Margaret  Wycherly. 

"The  Thief"  has  apparently  lost  lit- 
tle in  the  translation  from  the  original 
French.  The  logical  climax  of  the  play 
Is  reached  in  a  simple,  direct  manner, 
without  waste  of  meaningless  words, 
and  without  lialt  of  the  action. 

In  writing  the  play,  the  author  has 
pictured  a  young  woman  married  to  a 
man  of  charming  personality,  who  has 
had  his  little  fling  before  his  marriage. 
Tins  his  wife  knows,  but  she  is  des- 
perately in   love  with  her  husband 

She  sees  with  the  sharp  eyes  of  love. 
She  studies  her  husband  as  ortly  a 
woman  will  study  the  man  she  loves. 
Always  in  the  background,  haunting 
her  driving  a  shadow  across  her  life, 
is  tlie  fear  that  she  will  lose  the  af- 
fection of  this  man;  the  man  who  rep- 
resents life,  love,  everything  to  her— 
her  husband.  , , 

She  sees  when  other  women  would 
not  have  seen.  She  observes  lier  hus- 
band comparing  her  appearance  with 
that  of  other  women  whom  he  meets. 
She  knows  that  these  women  are 
dres.«ed  better  than  she.  and  she  knows 
that  her  husband  observes  this,  bh-- 
is  t«ht'.ng  her  own  battle;  she  Is  as- 
sailed by  a  thousand  fears.  Goaded  to 
dtlperalior.  by  the  fear  that  she  will 
lose  the  love  of  her  husband,  she  be- 
comes a  thief  in  order  that  she  may 
be  better  gowned— not  for  the  love  of 
fineiv  but  from  a  desire,  to  be  more 
attr.ictive    in    her    husband  s    eyes. 

Tlie  play  is  logical.  interesting, 
well  written.  Its  ending  is  strong,  in 
keep  I'i?  with  the  action  of  its  thret 
acts.  Were  Henri  Bernstein  less  a  mas- 
ter oi:  his  craft,  he  would  have  por- 
iraved  the  erring  wife,  a  ^yeaker  wom- 
an "with  less  sentiment,  with  le.ss  vir- 
tue. As  it  Is.  you  have  a  pity  for 
Marie  Vovsin,  a  feeling  that  at  heart 
the  Is  a  good  woman.  You  feel  that 
her  aci  \\;is  net  an   ignoble   one. 

There  has  not  been  a  play  In  IJu- 
luth  this  season  that  has  been  bet- 
ter presented  than  has  "The  Thief. 
The  greater  part  of  the  work  falls  up- 
on the  shoulders  of  those  two  excellent 
artists  Margaret  Wycherly  and  Charles 

^^Vls"  verv  doubtful  if  Mr.  Bellew  or 
Margaret  Illington  gave  any  tiner  pre- 
sentation of  the  two  leading  charac- 
ters    than    did    Mr.    Dalton    and    Miss 

^Misl' Wycherly'B  work  is  repressed, 
arUsUc  Her  voice  is  beautiful,  ex- 
pressive, svmpathetic:  her  enunciat  on 
clear  She  has  before  her  work  In  the 
present  play,  forced  her  acceptance  as 
one  of  the  artistic  actresses  of  the 
modern  stage,  and  her  work  n  the 
present  play  only  serves  to  add  to  that 

"^^knss' Wycherly  depicts  Marie  Voysin 
as  a  woman,  tender,  true,  sensitive;  a 
woman  of  strong  love,  of  deep  and 
subtle  feelings;  a  woman  haunted  b> 
a  goading  fear;  a  woman  who  errs,  yet 
wlio  In  the  end  redeems  her  fault  t)y  a 
sense  of  tfuth  and  decency  that  lifts 
her  above  petty  meanness.  „.   ,_ 

Charles  ^  Dalton  portrays  Richard 
Voysin  as  a  sturdy,  strong  man.  who 
loves  truth  and  honor  as  d^ly  strong 
men  do.  He  is  a  man  who  is  tender, 
yet  hard  as  iron;  a  man  who  is  master: 
a  man  of  the  world,  a  man  who  has 
had  his  fling;  a  man  who  loves  his  wife 
deeply;  yet  the  kind  of  a  man  whom  a 
woiTian  instinctively  feels  must  be 
charmed;   must   be   kept  interested. 

Edward  R.  Mawson.  as  Raymond  La- 
gardes,  is  all  that  the  role  requires. 
H-^-  Is  natural,  has  a  most  pleasing 
voice,  and  fits  Into  the  artistic  atmo- 
sphere that  pervades  the  play.  Mrs. 
Hillary  Bell,  as  Isabel     Lagardes,     the 


Complete  Outfit  for 
Little  Money 

Oh,    what    joy — when    the    day's 

work   IB  done,  to  draw  up  to  the 

fireside    for    an    hour    or    so    and 

listen  to  the  phonograph   while  It 

sings  comic  songs,  reels  off 

vaudeville     skits     or     gives 

you    grand    opera — and    all 

for    so    little    cost. 

WB  OFFER  *OU 

the  famous  No.  2 
Victor,  with  the 
new  19-lnch  flower 
horn,  like  cut.  with 
10  of  the  large  new 
double-faced  rec- 
ords, giving  you 
20  musical  selec- 
tions of  your  own 
choosing    for    only 


$58.50 


COMPim  HOVSERHUOSIEM 


A& 


t«£«4livi.W.M4Rr«l«. 


We  Trust  You 

When  you  haven't  the  ready 
cash,  remember  we  have  fur- 
nished hundreds  of  happy 
homes  on  our  easy  payment 
plan,  and  will  be  glad  to  fur- 
nish   yours    on   the   same   terms. 


Closing  Out 
Sale  of 
Office 
Furni- 
tare 


Our  Guarantee 

We  handle  only  good  goods 
and  our  guarantee  Is  back  of 
every  thing  we  sell.  "Your 
money  back  if  not  suited"  is 
the  motto  upon  which  we  have 
built   up  our   business. 


E  .erythlng  Id 
our  splendid 
liie  of  o  ff  i  c  e 
fi  rnlture  and 
e(  ulpment  go- 
ing at  manu- 
facturers'   cost. 

Roll  top  and 
flit  top  desks, 
Ir      fact      every  ,      ,     , 

k  nd   of   desk,    office   suites,    filing   cabinets  and   chairs 
gilore. 

Business  and  professional  men  who  appreciate  the 
b  ;tter  things  in  this  class  of  goods  should  not  fail  to 
"jjet  In"  on  this  sale. 


A  $38  Value,  $2 1.75 


Values  That  Savor  of  Unusualnessl 

Our  Early  Spring  Selling  a  Boon  to  Slim  Purses 

Witli  "House-Cleaning"  and  tlie  sprins^  "Fixing-Up-Time"  just  around  the  corner,  tlie  un- 
usual bargain  opportunities  now  presented  at  the  "Big  Store"  should  be  of  more  than  passnig  in- 
terest to  home  makers.  Lots  of  new  spring  things  are  on  display  for  your  consiceration,  and  the 
price  concessions  in  many  instances  are  on  the  newest  arrivals. 


Dining  Ctiair 
Specials 

This  chair  is  practically  like 
cut;  it  is  made  of  genuine 
quartered  oak  in  a  beautiful 
golden  finish;  box  seat  cov- 
ered with  Boston  leather; 
curved  French  legs;  this  is  a 
fine  chair  and  worth  regtilar- 
ly  $3.00  in  any  store;  as  a  big 
March  leader  we  ff -f  Cfi 
offer  it  at  just >pi»  •/ V 

$4.50  DINING  CHAIR— This  chair  is  also  very  similar  to 
above  cut  in  design,  but  is  made  of  very  selected  quartered 
sawed  oak  in  the  dark  hucd  Early  English  ^""'^i,-  '*  ^as 
French  legs  and  a  box  seat  covered  witii  genuine      ff ^   QO 

No.  1  leatlier;  going  during  this  sale  at ^/fc*.^ V 

$2.50  DINING'CHAIR— Solid  oak,  golden  finish,  cane  seat, 
high  and  prettily  designed  back,  well  braced,  ff-f  /VO 
extra  strong  and  well  made;  sale  price tff  A»i%J 

This  $2t  Dining  Table,  $13.75 

This  dining  table  Is 
made  of  selected  quar- 
ter sawed  oak.  linished 
In  a  handsome  golden 
color,  highly  polished — 
It  has  the  latest  design, 
large  size,  non-dlvldlng 
pedestal;  wide  44-ineh 
top;  6-foot  exten.sion — 
almost  exactly  like  cut 
except  the  feet  are  a 
little  different  shape. 
It  Is  the  biggest  dining 
table  value  In  town,  at 
our  spring  sale  price  ot 


$13.75 


tf-fC  C/1  n'nimrt  T-^hlo  BoUd  oak;  quartered  golden 
^ID.^U  Uining  lauie  oak  finish;  large  8-inch,  non- 
dividing  pedestal;  42-lnch  top;  6-foot  extension;  very  similar 
to  above  cut  except  the  pedestal  is  more  elaborately  carved, 
and  the  feet  are  of  a  different  design —  Cfl  gO 

You  can't  beat  it  at   '^    * 

This  Dining 
Table  $5.95 

This  i.s  a  solid  oak  six- 
foot  extension  table,  like 
cut,  in  golden  finish  — 
has  a  42-lnch  top  when 
closed  —  is  well  and 
strongly  made,  and  sells 
regularly  at  $10.  You'll 
look  a  long  time  before 
you'll  get  so  much 
dining  table  for  so  little 
money  again — 

Sideboard  and  Buffet  Bargains 

You  cannot  afford  to  buy  anything  in  buffets  and  side- 
boards without  first 
seeing  the  splendid  bar- 
gains we  are  offering; 
space  will  penr.it  only 
the  quotiutj  of  a  fev/ 
prices.  All  have  line 
French  plate  mirrors: 

922  Solid  ftolden  Oak 
Sideboard  for  918.88. 

9.10  Solid  Golden  Oak 
Sideboard  for  «18.95. 

928  Solid  .4merioaa 
Oak    Sideboard,    917.7S. 

927.r>0  Buffet — genuine 
quartered  golden  onk, 
918..10. 

93n  Buffet — quartered 
onk — lOarly  ICnsllMb  fln- 
iMb   9I».00 

942.no  Buffet  —  quar. 
tered  oak  —  Karl>-  Kns- 
llsh    flulsh,   925.00. 


Over  a  Quarter  Ton  Weight 

Easily  Supported  by  Our  New 

Princess  Oo-Cart 

E.  A.  Swenson 202  lbs. 

John   Brown,  Jr 185  lbs. 

A.  L.  Sturgis 175  lbs. 

Total 562  lbs. 

Is  There  Another  Folding  Go-Cart  in  the 
World  That  Will  Stand  This  Strain  ? 

And  withal  the  little  Princess  is  no  heavier,  but 
lighter  than  many  other  folding  go-carts. 

True,  a  baby  go-cart  need  never  be  called  upon  to 
stand  such  a  strain.  BUT— when  a  cart  WILL  stand 
such  a  strain  is  it  not  indicative  of  good  material  and 
correct  mechanical  construction?  Is  it  not  indicative 
of  durability  and  lasting  qualities? 

The  new  Princess  is  the  most  scientifically  con- 
structed folding  go-cart  in  the  world— its  folding 
mechanism  and  the  autoinobile  ball  and  socket  wheel 
brace  construction  have  all  other  folding  go-carts 
backed  off  the  boards.  - 

The  new  Princess  has  a  number  of  important  and 
exclusive  features  which  we  shall  be  glad  to  explain  if 
you  will  call  and  look  over  this  "LITTLE  WONDER." 

It  comes  in  all  desirable  styles  and  colors,  and  the 
price  range  will  fit  any  purse.  Why  not  have  the  best 
when  it  doesn't  cost  any  more  than  the  ordinary? 


New  Goods  and 

Big  Values  in  Our 

Drapery  Dept 

Surely  :/ou  need — everybody 
needs — something  new  at  this 
season  of  the  year  in  rugs,  or 
curtains,  or  draperies,  or  por- 
tieres, or  carpets,  or  bedding,  or 
some  other  of  the  numerous 
things  to  be  found  in  our  dra- 
pery department. 

Come  in  and  see  the  pretty  new  things  for  Spring,  even 
if  you  ha\  e  no  intention  of  buying.  They  are  so  attractive 
and  handsome  that  we  just  want  everybody  to  have  a  look. 

For  this  week  we  offer  you  the  following  Money-Savers: 
MUSLIN  BEDROOM  CURTAINS— 2!2  yard;-  long,  full 
ruffles,  have  four  neat  tucks,  Baltenberg  edtre;  they  are  pretty 
and   well    made   curtains,  easily   worth  85c   the   pair}     C^^ 

come  buy  this  week  at •/*/i. 

WOOL  SMYRNA  RUGS — 30x60  inches;  come  in  well  as- 
sorted designs  and  colors;  good,  thick,  well-wearing  rugs  and 
fringed  at  both  ends;  they  are  cheap  enough  at  tf  4  TQ 
$2.85;  going  while  they  last  at i^I.I-/ 

We  Save  You  Money  on  Beds 

Just  n<HV  wc  are  of- 
fering several  attractive 
bed  proptsitions.  And 
if  you  are  gonig  to 
need  any:hing  new  in 
beds  this  spring,  it  will 
be  to  yoar  interest  to 
come  and  look  us  over 
while  this  salt  is  on. 
We  mention  one  of  the 
specials: 

METAL  BED— This  is 
a  handsome  green  and 
white  enamel  bed, 
beautifully-  trimmed 
with       brass       spindles  j^^    ^m, 

and  brass  ornaments;  not  just  like  cut,  but  fully     ffiT   QC 
as  pretty  and  desirable ;  a  $12  value  for ^ W» ••/ 

Little  Needfuls  Underpriced 


98c 


India    Sest — Just   like   cut — solid 
oak — 5-p;y       veneer    top — either 
gold*  n  oak  or  mahogany 
finish:  a  |2  value,  for    . 

India  Seat — Similar  to  cut.  with 
3 -ply  ver.eer  top — golden  oak 
finish — a  $1.00  value —  iiQf 
special    for    i  •C 

Clothes  l*in  Bag  —  Just 
like  cut.  made  of  good 
quality  ticking.  with  a 
steel  wire  frame  hand-hole 
and  steel  wire  hooks  for 
hanging  on  line — together 
with  six  c  ozen  good  clothes 
pins — worth  27c 
— going    for     .... 

FoUllng     Clothes     Bars  — 

Thi.s  is  a  large  size  rack — 
well    male    and    will    hold 
a    lot    of    clothes — regular 
price     51  25— on 
sale    at     


15c 


78c 


Folding   Ironing  Board  — 

The  large  size  and  a  good 
one  —  sells  regularly  at 
$1.75 — special  Qflf 

sale     prioe     ^sj\t 

Carvct    IJeater — Made      of 
steel   wire      with      a   wood 
handle — a  15c 
article    f  :>r    


9c 


wife  of  Ravmond.  does  all  that  a  role 
which  calls  for  but  little  more  than 
straight  acting,  demands.  Mrs.  Hillary 
Bell  lias  acted  many  roles  and  has 
done  few  Inartistic  things. 

Leonard  Ide  was  at  times  too  "ranty 
as  the  son  of  Raymond  Lagardes,  but 
in  his  more  quiet  moments,  was  good. 
Arthur  Lawrence,  as  Mons.  Gondin.  the 
magistrate,  had  a  neat  bit  of  work  In 
the  first  act,  and  for  the  way  he  did 
this  he  received  a  generous  hand. 

The  mounting  was  in  keeping  with 
the  work  of  it's  artists.  "The  Thief" 
will  be  presented  tonight  and  tomorrow 
right,  with  a  Wednesday  matinee. 

"THE  BRITISH  EDISON." 


"Wizard  of  the  North"  Heads  Good 
BiH  at  Bijon. 

Carl  Herman,  known  as  the  "Brit- 
ish Edison"  and  "the  Wizard  of  the 
North,"  Is  certainly  the  human  live 
wire.  He  .iust  plays  with  electricity. 
He  heads  the  bill  at  the  Bijou  this 
week,  and  his  novel  act  is  a  whole  card 
in    itself. 

His  performance   Is  marvelous.  Some 


Mutual  I>lfe  Insurance  Co., 

Boston.   Mau. 
Standard    roUcies.      Low    Xel   CosL 
H.  GIDDINGS,  Ueneral  AKent« 

311  Lyceum  Bldg.,  Duluth,  Minn. 


of  It  Is  comedy  and  more  is  mystify- 
ing. He  lights  tissue  paper  with  hl« 
fingers,  ear  or  tongue.  He  allows 
strong  electric  currents  to  pass  through 
his  body  without  so  much  as  a  tremor. 
He  lives  In  an  electric  atmosphere  and 
seems  to  like  It. 

Cal  Stewart  is  very,  very  funny.  He 
sings  his  farmer  songs  and  tells  stories 
In  the  quaint  dialect  of  "Uncle  Josh," 
and  he  does  It  all  well.  There  isn't  a 
dull  moment  during  his  act. 

Williams'  and  Walker's  "Chocolate 
Drops,"  four  colored  women,  and  King 
and  Bailey,  have  a  singing,  dancing  and 
talking  act  that  combines  good  comedy 
with  real  music.  Dick  Richards  and 
Mildred  Grover  do  a  comedy  musical 
act.  In  which  Mr.  Richards  drags  music 
from  a  piano  without  any  effort,  and 
Miss  Grover  does  a  few  clever  Imita- 
tions. Cowboy  Williams,  a  juggler  with 
some  new  stunt.s,  is  entertaining  dur- 
ing the  few  minutes  he  occupies  the 
center  of  the  stage. 

Isadore  Silver  sings  "It's  Always 
Nice  Weather  Indoors,"  and  the  usual 
moving  pictures  close  a  very  entertain- 
ing   bill.  _ 

"The  Girls  From  BerHii." 

Corinne  will  be  seen  at  the  Lyceum 
on  Friday  and  Saturday,  matinee  and 
night,  in  her  new  play,  "The  Girls 
From  Berlin,"  by  John  McNally.  Will- 
iam Jerome  and  Jean  Schwartz.  Cor- 
iime's  part  is  a  tjuaintly  humorous 
character,  strictly  within  the  straight 
comedy  lines.  The  musical  numbers 
consistently  belong  to  the  situation  in 
which    they    are    placed.        There    are 


many    catchy    songs,    and    a    large    cast 
and    beauty    chorus. 

Emma  Eames. 

To  be  heralded  as  an  American 
singer  has  Its  advantages.  It  arouses 
one's  patriotism.  To  be  an  American 
singer  who  has  triumphed  in  the 
world's  musical  centers  is  an  honor 
ttiat  seldom  comes.  Emma  Eames, 
who  is  to  sing  here  on  Thursday  even- 
ing, has  claim  to  both.  She  is  queenly 
In  appearance.  Her  voice  Is  beautiful. 
Gounod  it  was  who  leaped  with  pleas- 
ure the  first  time  he  heard  ser  sing 
and  declared  her  to  be  the  ideal  he 
nought  for  his  "Marguerite."  Had  she 
visited  Bayreuth  in  Wagner's  day  he 
would  assuredly  have  chosen  her  for  a 
Wagnerian  role,  notwithstanding  she 
has  gained  many  triumphs  in  Wagner 
music  and   in   the   French    school. 

PRESIDENT  FOR  SPEED 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


n 


with  the  other  sources  of  government 
revenue.  does  not  furnish  income 
enough  to  pay  the  authorized  expendi- 
tures. Bv  July  first  next  the  excess  of 
expenses  over  receipts  for  the  current 
fi.scal  vear  will  equal  |100. 000,000. 
PledK<^d  to  RevlMion. 
"The  succe.ssful  party  in  the  late 
election  is  pledged  to  a  revision  of  the 
tariff.  The  country  and  tlie  business 
community  especially  expect  It.  The 
prospect  of  a  change  In  the  rates  of  im- 
port duties  always  causes  a  suspension 
or  halt  In  business  because  of  the  un- 
certaintv  as  to  the  changes  to  be  made 
and  their  effect.  It  is  therefore  of  the 
highest   importance   that   the  new    bill 


should  be  agreed  uptn,  and  pa.ssed  with 
as  much  speed  as  possible  consistent 
with    its    due   and   thorough    considera- 

"•For  these  reasons  I  have  deemed 
the  present  to  be  ar  extraordinary  oc- 
casion, within  the  meaning  of  the  Con- 
stitution, justifying  and  requiring  the 
calling  of  an  extra  session. 

"In  my  inaugural  address  I  stated  in 
a  summary  way  the  principles  upon 
which,  in  my  Judgm  ?nt  the  reyis  on  of 
the  tariff  should  proceed,  and  indicated 
at  least  one  new  source  of  revenue 
that  might  be  properly  resorted  to  In 
order  to  avoid  a  fi  ture  deficit,  it  is 
not  necessary  for  me  to  repeat  what  i 

then  said.  .    .r,    *    .v,«   „i*oi 

"I  venture  to  suggest  that  the  vital 
business  interests  of  the  country  re- 
quire that  the  attention  of  the  con- 
gress in  this  session  be  chlelly  de- 
voted to  the  considiratlon  of  the  new 
tariff  bill,  and  that  the  less  time  givf" 
to  other  subjects  of  legislation  in  this 
session,  the  betUiMor  the-  -umr^ .,  .. 

"White  House.   Man-h   16.   1909." 

KILLS  SELF  Be!  Al  SE  HE 

COULD  NOT  FIND  WORK. 


Indianapolis.  Ind.. 
Powers,  19  years  ol 
liis  room  by  drinl 
He  could  not  find 
little  daughter  of  th 
fast  friends,  and  Gi 
the    following    note 

"Mv  dear  Tittle  "^ 
1  cannot  look  into  y 
again.  Honey,  goo 
place   on   earth   for 


March  16. — Guthrie 
d,  killed  himself  In 
ting  carbolic  acid, 
work.  He  and  the 
e  housekeeper  were 
ithrle  left  the  child 

'^erna:      I   am    sorry 

our  dear  sweet  face 

3-bye.     There  Is   no 

me.     You  are   ray 


dearest  and   only   friend.     What  is   life 
wltliout    friends    or    home?" 

The  vouth  left  his  home  six  weeks 
ago  after  a.  quarrel  with  his  step- 
father. 

L«\vis   ^fcClougli    Ip    Dead. 

New  Britain,  Conn..  March  16. — 
Lewis  McClough.  formerly  president 
of  the  state  agricultural  college  of 
South  Dakota,  died  here  yesterday, 
aged    73    years. 

• 

Horse  Being  Trained   for  Taft. 

Oklahoma  <;ity.  okla..  March  16. — 
A  big  horse,  purchased  for  the  army, 
is  being  trained  at  Fort  Reno  for  Pres- 
ident Taft.  The  animal  will  be  shipped 
to  Washington  in  a  few  days. 
• — 

How  can  any  person  risk  taking 
some  unknown  cough  remedy  when 
Folev's  Honey  and  Tar  costs  them  no 
more?  It  is  a  ««afe  remedy,  contains  no 
harmful  drugs,  and  cures  the  most  ob- 
stinate coughs  and  colds.  Why  experi- 
ment with  vour  health?  Insist  upon 
having  the  genuine  Foley's  Honey  and 
Tar.      Sold    by   all    druggists. 


afi^firi^  JJI-  mn*i  I 


A  Glove  Sensation 

Is  the  new  $1.50  Glove  we  have  juFt 
received,  absolutely  the  most  stunning 
and  best  fitting  glove  made.  All  the 
I  very  advance 
shades  for 
spring  Every 
pair  St  r  I  c  t  ly 
guaranteed  — 
For    $1.50.    at 


/' 


i 

„  V. -_- ~ ~- "   —     <   ■       -' • *    •*     '      ■  •■■" 


«/ 


1 

1 


— - 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING 


THE  EVENING  HERALD 


AN  INDEPEXOKXT  NEWSPAPER. 


Published  ta  Herald  Bldff..  First  St..  Opposite 
THE  HERALD  COMPANY. 

Counting    Koom.    324,    Editorial 


Square. 


Telephones: 


Rooms,    1126. 


SUBSCRIPTION  RATEsIpAYABLE  IN  ADVANCE. 

lotted  state-  und  Canada.  Pontaue  Prepaid. 

per  year.   In  advance 3.00 

si.\  montha.  in  advance j[qq 

three  montha,   in  advance '^^ 

one    month.    In    advance 

Second-Class  Matter. 


women 

men  to  give  women 

it  or  not 


Dally, 
Dally. 
Dally. 
Dally. 

Entered 


In 
at  Duluth 


advance.  . 
Postofflce 


as 


DULUTH  WEEKLY  HERALD 


Per   year.   In    advance 

Six    months.    In    advance 

Three-   months.   In  advance 

Kntered  at  Duluth  Postofllce 


as 


$1.00 

; , 50 

.25 

Second-ciass  Matter. 


BY  CARRIER,  IN  TBE  CITY.  TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

KVEHV    K\K:>iI.>0— OKLIVERED. 

dally 


move   restrictions   which    prevent   a  large   proportion    of 
our  best  citizenship  from  voting? 

The  question  of  woman's  suffrage  is  a  question  which 
themselves  must  settle.  It  is  not  so  much  for 
the  ballot  as  it  is  for  women  to  take 
to  take  it,  as  they  shall  determine.  But  as  to 
whether  the  ballot  shall  be  confined  to  women  who  are 
mothers  and  to  men  of  adjudged  fitness  is  a  far  broader 
and  a  far  more  difficult  question.  Certain  it  is  that  re- 
strictions exist,  and  that  the  pressure  is  rather  for  still 
other  restrictions  than  for  more  universal  suffrage.  The 
best  government  is  the  government  in  which  the  greatest 
number  intelligently  and  honestly  participate  and  it  is  to 
such,  and  such  only,  that  the  ballot  ought  to  extend. 


HERALD : 


TUESDAY,    MARCH    16,    1909. 


HOTEl^  GpSSlR 


"Gilbert     is     going 
than   any  of   the  ■in 
ing     year,     for     t 
is    moving    bag    an^ 
our  town. "  said  C. 
hotel    yesterday 
exodub  of  the  citl 
bert,    la    that    tl 
ha.s    been    Increas 
as    a    matter    of 


to  grow  faster 
t«^)vn8  the  com- 
wn  of  Sparta, 
ggage  over  to 
et  at  the  Lenox 
effect  of  this 
f  Sparta  to  QU- 
erty  In  Gilbert 
still  increasing, 
and    that    many 


Slngrle  copy. 
One  nK>nth  .  .  . 
Three  montlis 
Six  months..  . 
One  year 


TO  SUBSCRIBERS: 

It  is  important  when  d.  =<irln«  the  address  of  your  paper 
changed,  to  give  both  the 


firing  tilt 
old  and   new 


addresses. 


THE  ENTERING  WEDGE. 

the  "insurgents"  in  the  house. 


Yesterday's  victory  ot 


whereby  the  house 


several 


rules  are  to  be  amended  in 
important  particular...  is  more  decisive  than  appears  on 
its  face.  It  was  achieved  in  face  of  the  opposition,  either 
expressed  or  taken  for  granted,  of  President  Tatt  to  any 
fight  which  would  result  in  embarrassment  to  his  pro- 
for  tariff  revision.  In  view  of  this  fact  the  insur- 
to  hang  together  as  firmly  as  they  did. 
was  not  secured,  the  country  is 
not.  The  changes 
any  member  to 


IT'S  SORRY  SHOWING 

No  measure  which  has  been  made  a  matter  of  general 
public  thought  has  ever  made  so  sorry  a  showing  in 
Minnesota  as  the   proposed   tonnage   tax  law. 

The  tonnage  tax  proposal  comes  up  in  the 
morrow  for   final  discussion,  and  it   comes  up 
discredited    measure    ever    seriously    proposed 
floor   of  that   body.      .Although   it   has   now 
the   people  of  the  state  for  four  years 
presents  a  method  of  securing  money  for  the 
penses    that    is    very    alluring   and    greatly   desired    by 
large  portion  of  the  state  because  it 
of  the   people   of   the 
state  purposes,  every 
it  has  been  sought  to  justify 
died    through   and    through   in 


house  to- 

thc  most 

upon   the 

been   before 

and  although  it 

state's  ex- 


a   proportion 
whatever  for 


gram 

gents   did   well 

While    radical   action 

probably  as  well  satisfied  that  it  wa 

made  in  the  rules   make  it  possible 


tor 


secure    reojgnition 
call   up  any  bill   in 


to 


floor,   for  any  member 

interested   and  for   any 

measure  upon  which 


is 


he 

were 

do 


demands   it. 

at  the  pleasure  of 
any  of  these  things. 


consent   of   the 
great    powers, 
business, 


speak 


er. 


upon    the 
which  he 
member  to  secure  a  vote  upon  any 

Under   the  old  rules  all  these   matters 

the  speaker.     For  a  member  to 

he  must  tirst  have  secured  the 

The   speaker  is   still   left  with 

more  than   simply  the  power 

it    is   generally    believed,   but    he    is 

absolutely  despotic. 

A-  to  the  main  contention,  that  the  speaker  oe 
of  his  power  to   appoint  committees,  such  power  being 
to  a  committee  of  the  house,  the  country  is  not  yet 
wisdom.     The   plan   has  certainly   not 
'       ■        in  the  senate  than  the  plan 
the  committees  as  in  the 


to  expedite 
no    longer 


be  shorn 


of 

more 
the 


Its 

satisfaction 

speaker  appoint 


will  relieve  so  large 
state  from  any  tax 
argument  by  which 
this  measure  has  been  rid- 
discussion  and  has  been 
abandoned  by  its  proposers,  until  the  bill  for  a  tonnage 
tax  now  comes  up  in  the  house  for  final  disposition  sup- 
ported only  by  desire,  by  prejudice  and  by  the  pledges 
of  those  who  promised  their  constituents  to  vote  for  it 
before  they  knew  of  its  injustice  and  unwisdom. 

The  Herald  realizes  perfectly  the  difficulty  of  many 
representatives    in    the    house.      The    tonnage    tax    as    a 
measure  of  justice  or 
proved    and    there   are    very,   very 
legislature   who   are    today   in 


new    buildings    are    under    construction 

at    the   i're.sent   time. 

■'Most  of  the  business  men  who  have 
moved  ever  to  Gilbert  have  alrtsady 
construcli^d  their  stores  and  business 
buildings,  or  they  have  thtm  under 
course  of  construction.  Many  of  the 
people  who  have  transferred  their 
business  to  Gilbert  have  made  ar- 
rangements to  construct  homes  there. 
All  the  citizens  who  at  the  present 
time  are  conducting  tjie^r  business  in 
Gilbert,  have  not  comsfructed  homes 
there.  However,  tliey  will  this  sum- 
mer, when  the  real  growth  of  Gilbert 
will    begin. 

"Tlu're  won't  be  •  very  much  left  of 
Sparta  bv  next  Lall.  The  Steel  cor- 
poration owns  the  entire  site  of  the 
l:jv\n  and  will  use  It  for  exploration 
pi-rpces.  What  is  Sparta's  loss  will 
be  Gilbert's  gain.  The  fact  that  all  of 
Sparta  la  going  to  move  over  and  Juin 
us,  will  make  us  one  of  the  hustling 
toWD.s  of  the  range.  It  will  Inciease 
our  business,  advance  the  value  of  real 
estate,  and  In  general  work  for  the 
betteiment  of    Gilbert. 

story  thfti  W.  P.  Plant,  who 

a    Chicago     clothing    house 

St.    Louis   last   night: 

••n^Vit»rr.  ■EriiH  an   attorney   by  tlie  name 

Suddenly     be     was     taken 


,\,  Schneider,  St.  Paul;  F.  J.  Murphy. 
Hlbbing;  J.  G.  Johnson.  St.  Paul,  M. 
Kolllner,  Stillwater;  Miss  Dora  Hass. 
Two  Harbors;  Charles  Hoagg,  New 
York;  William  Browshead,  Eveleth;  W. 
Gardner.  Cass  Lake;  J.  W.  Bates,  Bos- 
ton; A.  P.  Kirsch.  Crook-ston;  F.  E. 
Wallls,  St.  Paul;  D.  S.  Irwin,  Minne- 
apolis. 

THE  WEATHER 

The    Palm    Beach 
weatlier  sneaked 

away  last  uigiit. 
leaving  Duluth 
colder  than  It  haa 
been  for  quite  a 
little       while.  It 

was  8  degs  above 
zero  hera  last 

night.  This  morn- 
ing the  wind  whis- 
tled around  the 
cornerti  and  many 
Superior  street 
show  Windows  boast  coats  of  frost. 
The  temperature  was  8  degs.  below 
zero  In  Devils  Lake  and  Mlnnedosa 
registered  20  below  last  night 
The  weather  was   pretty 


TWENTY  YEARS  AGO 

Taken  From  the  Columns  of  The  Herald  of  Thk  Date,  1889. 


wisdom  has  been  completely  dis- 
few  members  of  the 
favor  of  the  proposition. 
But  the  state,  and  The  Herald  grieves  to  state,  its  news- 
papers have  not  been  so  thoughtful.  The  sentiment  for 
a  tonnage  tax  in  Minnesota  is  not 
it  was  two  years  ago,  but  it  is  still 


as 


given 
convinced 
given  any 

of  having 
house. 

The   insurgents   have 
the  house  is  today 
it  has   been   for  years 
secured   are  the  entering  wedge   for 
the  rules  as  will  make  the  house  an  actual  representative, 
deliberate  body. 

Incidentally,  the  failure  of  Congres 
of    this    district,   to    give   any   support 
insurgents  in  their  fight,  will  be  a  great  surprise  to  the 
people  ot  the  district.     Mr.  Miller,  during  the  campaign, 
committed   himself  unreservedly  to 
rules.     His  total  repudiation  of  the 
he   stood   during  his   campaign   will 
the  people  of  the  district. 


secured   a   decisive   victory  and 
more  of  a  representative  body  than 
The    changes    that    have   been 
such  a  revision  of 


?man  C.  B.   Miller 
whatever    to   the 


strong  today  as 
strong.  Many  peo- 
ple have  looked  into  the  matter  and  have  become  con- 
vinced of  the  folly  of  the  tax  but  many  others  have  given 
no  thought  to  it  beyond  its  desirability  and  have  disposed 
of  every  argument  showing  its  injustice  with  the  com- 
forting thought  that  nobody  is  concerned  but  the  steel 
trust,  which  ought  to  be  "soaked"  on  general  principles. 
A  good  many  newspapers  have  prated  of  the  desire  of 
the  state  and  of  their  own  desire  to  "simply  do  justice" 
in  this  matter,  but  most  of  thpm.  when  confronted  by 
arguments  showing  the  injustice  of  the  tax,  immediately 
resort  to  loose  assertions  about  the  "state's  heritage," 
"diminishing  wealth,"  "the  strange  persistency"  of  the 
newspapers  of  the  iron  range  country  and  Duluth  and 
the  iniquity  of  the  steel  trust.  Thus  public  opinion  is 
inflamed  by  prejudice  and  by  a  total  ignoring  of  the  real 
facts  in  the  case,  so  that  it  still  demands  in  many  dis- 
the  enactment  of  a  tonnage  tax  law  and  imputes 
man  who  has  the  courage  to  stand 
that  the  law  is  unjust.  The  position 
a  difficult  one  for  many  members  of  the  leg»/ 
need  to  be  men  of  courage  to  vote 


the  revision   of  the 

principles  for  which 

come   as   a   decided 

It  is  impossible  for 


shock  to  .      . 

a  man  to  be  more  rationally  zealous  for  reform  than  was 
Mr.  Miller  during  the  campaign;  yet  it  is  impossible  for 
any  man  to  more  thoroughly  repudiate  reform,  root 
and  branch,  than  did  Mr.  Miller  by  his  complete  and 
unequivocal  alignment  with  the  standpatters  in  the  house 
yesterday.  That  which  he  denounced  upon  the  stump, 
he  now  embraces.  There  can  be  some  excuse  for  Mr. 
Miller's  vote  for  Mr.  Cannon,  because  the  latter's  re-elec- 
tion to  the  speakership  w.i3  a  foregone  conclusion,  but 
when  he  voted  against  the  revision  of  the  rules  which 
made  Cannonism  possible,  he  betrayed  the  trust  reposed 
in  him  by  the  people  of  the  Eighth  congressional  district. 


cts 
tricts 

dishonesty  to   any 
by  his  convictions 
is  certainly 
lature  and  they  will 
as   they   think. 

The  tonnage  tax  bill  will  be 
such  gross  injustice,  supported 
iota    of    legitimate    argument, 

upon  the  statute  book  of  Minnesota.  The  Herald  cannot 
blame  those  who  have  advocated  the  tonnage  tax.  The 
proposition  certainly  did  "look  good."  It  asks  nothing 
but  an  honest  and  earnest  examination  of  the  question; 
those  who  have  given  it  suclran  examination  have 
abandoned  the  tminage  tax  as  an  unjust,  unwise  meas- 
ure and  it  has  today  not  a  single  sound  leg  to  stand, on. 
The  people  of  Minnesota  will  never  shame  themselves  by 
enacting  into  law  such  a  measure. 


beaten, 
by  not 
will    ever 


No  measure  of 

so  much  as  one 

be    permitted 


suf- 
alike; 
the  best   wisdom 
has   decided,   shall 


MAKING  THE  DEFICIT  A  BOGY  MAN. 
There    is    a    very    deliberate    attempt   being   made 


use 


BABIES  AND  THE  BALLOT.' 

There  is  no  such  thing  as  a  free  and  unlimited 
frage.      The   ballot    does    not   belong   to   all    men 
it  belongs  only  to  certain  men   who. 
of  which   we   have  yet 
vote  for  all  of  us. 

The  rights  of  the  ballot  do  not  extend  to  women, 
except  in  certain  limited  cases;  the  male  kind  under  21 
years  of  age  are  not  allowed  to  vote;  most  black  men 
do  not  vote,  the  Fifteenth  Amendment  to  the  Constitu- 
tion of  the  United  States  notwithstanding;  and  even  white 
of  lawful  age.  may  exercise  the  right  of 
upon  certain  conditions.  It  is  apparent, 
there 
there  never 
that  the  ballot  may 
have  it.  , 

Among  the  contributions  to  the  discusion  of  woman  a 
suffrage  in   this   country  is  the  declaration   of  "a   cour- 
"  as  the  Outlook  calls  her.  that  suffrage 
to  woman,  but  that  it  should  be  given 
women   who   are   mothers.     First   pro- 
ballot!     The  reasoning  of  the  "cour- 
that    suffrage   is   already   too   widely 


the  deficit  of 
justifying  only  a 
tempt  is  not  yet 
the   necessity  for 


to 

of 

at- 


as  a  means 
tariff.     The 
comment  upon 
is  being  judic- 


the  current  fiscal  year 
partial  revision  of  the 
been  made  openly,  but 
wiping  out   the   deficit  i 
iously     encouraged    and   a    statement    of 
usually   found   in   close  juxtaposition   to  £ 
the  difficulties  of  tariff  revision. 

In  this  connection  it  is  well  to  know  just  how  alarm- 
ing the  deficit  is.  A  deficit  is  naturally  always  alarming. 
To 


the    deficit 
statement 


is 


men, 
only 
that 


13 


is 
no   free   and   unlimited   suffrage, 
will  be.     In  fact,  there  are  reasons 
in  time  be  denied  to 


franchise 

not  only 

but   that 

to  believe 

many  who  now 


ageous  woman, 
should  be   given 
only   to  married 
duce  a  baby  cxr  no 
ageous    woman"   is 


have   one's   income    running   behind 
cause  for  immediate  thought  and  action, 
that  the  nation  has  a  deficit  is  not  necessarily  proof  that 
i*-  has  been  given   over  to   reckless  expenditure  or 
it  is  going  helter-skelter  to  the  demnition 

In  fact  in  the  past  ten  years  we  have  had  almost 
of  deficit  as  we  have  had  of  surplus, 
are  the  figures  for  the  decade: 


finance 

as  many  years 


one  3    expenses 
But  the  fact 
•oof 

that 
bow-bows  of 
Im 
Here 


•  •  •  •  • 


Year  Receipts. 

iYo9 ; I  5^2  ??^o?2 

1900! 
1901. 

1902 

1903 

1904 

190d ........... 

1906 

1907 

1908 

the  New 


of 
are 


a 

who  desires 
start    from    the 


extended  and  that  the  highest  good  of  the  whole  people 
demands  that  suffrage  be  restricted,  not  extended.  Th* 
state  should  be  governed  by  those  best  fitted  to  gov- 
ern, she  declares.  Mothers,  having  a  deeper  sense 
responsibility  than  other  women  can  possibly  have, 
the  only  women  who  should  have  the  ballot. 

But  whether  the  baby  should  be  the  sine  qua  non  of 
the  ballot  for  women,  the  suggestion  touches  nearly 
matter  which  is  of  concern  to  every  one 
good  government.  We  may  safely 
assumption  that  suffrage  will  always  be  restricted;  there 
will  always  be  some  who  may  vote  and  some  who  may 
not  vote.  By  what  rule  shall  those  who  are  to  have  the 
ballot  be  separated  from  those  who  are  not  to  have  it? 
If  the  wisdom  of  time  has  shown  us  that  some  restric- 
must  be  made,  it  is  possible  that  with  greater 
we  shall  decide  on  still  further  restrictions.  For 
conditions  under  which  the  right  of  suffrage 
exercised,  as  was  recently  pointed  out  by  The 
are  such  as  to  make  it  practically  certain  that 
gnorant  and  the  most  corrupt  shall  cast  their 

the  country, 
each  election 
shall  be  largely  prevented  from 
v(jting.  Commercial  travelers  and  men  whose  business 
fre<iucntly  take  them  away  from  home  lose  their  votes 
by  the  thousand  in  every  election,  but  the  bum  and  the 
loafer  is  right  on  hand  with  every  opening  of  the  polls. 
If  a  man  is  known  to  be  an  enemy  of  good  government, 
ought  he  be  allowed  the  ballot?     Ought  we  not  to  re- 


567;2  10.852 

687,685,338 

, 562.478.233 

, 560.396.674 

540,631.749 

544.274.6S5 

594.4r>4.122 

663.140.334 

699.895.763 

York  Sun:  "Here  are 
four  years  of  deficit,  with  a 
$200,000,000  for  the  term.     The  probability  is 
congress  shall  indulge  in  inexcusably  extravagant  appro- 
priations or  unless   there   shall   come  an   unusually   pro- 
longed series  of  crop  failures,  the  revenues  of  the  coun- 
try will  be  adequate  for  all  proper  purposes.    The  deficits 
ill   be  balanced  by  the   surplus  of   fat 


Says 
plus  and 


Disbursements. 
%  605.072.180 
487.713.792 
609,567.353 
•  471.190.858 
506,099  007 
582.402:321 
567,278,913 

r.t;s,7S4.7;'9 

578.903,748 
659,552. l;;4 

six  years  of  sur- 

surplus  of  about 

that  unless 


Here  is  a 
represents 
told   at   the 
'There  was 

of    Strange.       .       -- 

seriously  111.  He  grew  worse,  and 
theie  was  a  consultation  of  physi- 
cians. Th'j  verdict  came  forth  that 
there  was  little  chanoe  here  below  for 
Strange. 

•Then  Strange  oajle.l  his  attorney  In. 
He  Informed  him  wliat  he  wanted  upon 
his  tombstone,  the  conditions  of  his 
will.  etc.  Strange  insisted  that  the  fol- 
lowing should  be  Inscribed  upon  his 
tombstone: 

"  'Here  lies  an  attorney,  who  was  an 
honest    man.'  " 

••  But  wiiy.  insisted  his  attorney,  do 
you  want  suoli  few  words  upon  your 
tombstone?  No  name,  have  you,  or 
anything  definite.' 

••  'Wiien  people  read  that  Inscription, 
they  will  remark,  that's  strange,'  re- 
plied   tile    sick    attorney." 

An  Englishman  was  telling  the  same 

story.  .  ._        ,   . 

"There  was  an  American  barrister, 
don't  you  know,  old  chap,  who  was 
blooming  sick,   old    f-ellow. 

"This  chaj?'s  name  was  Strange,  don  t 
you  know.  Strange  name,  I  say  ha. 
ha,   ha,   ha. 

"He  was  very  ill.  old  fellow,  and  he 
sent  for  this   lawyer,  cliap. 

"HI  say.  lawyer,  fix  out  me  will  and 
place  me  tombstone  one."  He  lies  an 
attorney   who   was  an   honest   man. 

"  'But  why  not  something  more,  a 
name,  something  definite,  old  chap?" 
asked    his    attroney. 

"  'Because,  when  they  .^ee  that,  they 
will  say.  that's  extroardlnary.  don  t 
you   know,   old  fellow."  " 

"Tommy"  Mlchand  ye.sterday  received 
a  letter  from  ♦'Jtm?'  Sargent.  In  his 
letter  Mr.  Sargent  unfolded  the  fact 
that  ho  was  some  pumpkins  before  the 
state  legislator**.-  He  informed  the 
manager  of  the  St.  Louis  that  he  was 
garbed  out  in  a  brown  derby  hat.  pat- 
ent leather  kickers,  a  suit  of  clothes 
tiiat  could  almost  talk,  and  an  open 
faced    smile.  ,     .    «         *,  .. 

Mr.  Sargent,  you  know,  is  before  the 
state  legl.>!lature  In  th.e  iutere.«t3  of  the 
people.  That  Is.  he  is  down  there  to 
tell  the  solons  certain  things  about  tlie 
railroads.  There  are  certain  rallioad 
bills  pending,  sa  the  officials  of  the 
Northern  Pacific.,  with  a  natural  solici- 
tation for  the  Welfare  of  the  people, 
believod  that  It  would  be  expedient  to 
have  some  practical  railroad  man  be- 
fore tl»e  legislature  to  dispense  in- 
formation  as   \o   the   art   of   running   a 

train,   etc.  ■  ^    .       *    *i,.> 

If  such  a  man  were-  needed  at  the 
legi-slature.  why  not  have  thU  man 
an  emidoyo  of  the  Northern  Paciilc. 
Sure,   why   not? 

■Some  p^-ople  don't  know  it,  but  wo 
have  the  biggest  lumber  mill  In  the 
world,  riglit  at  Virginia,"  said  Harry 
Sander  of  Virginia,  at  the  Lenox  hotel 
yesterday.  "The  mill  owned  by  the 
consoUaated  Kulny  Lake  &  Virginia 
eompany  is  now  the  largest  lumber 
mill  in  the  world.  Taking  into  consid- 
eration the  amount  of  lumber  con- 
trolled by  tliat  company.  and  the 
amount  of  lumber  that  will  be  cut  at 
the  mill  at  Virginia,  tliat  city  ni^y  be 
said  to  or..'  of  ,  the  big  centers  of  the 
fast  vani.-hing  Nortliweslern  timber 
belt  Then-  will  be  an  immense  amount 
of  timber  cut  at  Virginia  in  tlie  near 
future,  because  of  the  immense  amount 
of  lumber  controlled  by  tlio  ivalny 
Lake   company." 

•      •      * 

A  N  Miller  of  La  Cro-sse.  Wis.,  one 
of  tlie  towns  In  the  new  Minne.sota- 
Wisconsln  league,  is  of  the  opinion 
tl;at  the  new  group  of  towns  will  prove 
a  financial  success  to  the  backers  of 
the  league.  Ho.''.a»>»s  La  Crosse  is 
ereatlv  enihu.sed*over  the  new  leaguo, 
and  that  Winona,  where  lie  was  tlie 
other  day,  is  greatly  worked  up  oyer 
tlie  prospects  of  some  tast  ball  tins 
jiummer.  ,  ,  ^^^ , 

Winona  has  always  been  a  good 
baseball  town,  ar\d  Mr.  Miller  is  ot  the 
opinion  that  If  lli%t  city  is  given  good 
ha.seball.  it  wjU  plove  one  ot  the  best 
drawing  town*  in  the  circuit. 
■;  •       •      • 

At  the  Spalding:  F.  E.  Rogers.  New 
York;  Frank  U  Burnett.  New  York; 
F  Mengel,  Chicago;  L.  S.  Wensole,  La 
Crosse-  F  W.  Ho'ward,  Bruhton.  Mass.; 
A  L  McCarthy.  %i  Paso;  H.  V.  Lux, 
Minneapolis;  Arth*  S%veeney.  St.  Paul; 
F  W  Forsee.  St.  Louis:  Charles  bpind- 
ler  New  York;  J.  W.  Houtz.  t^hicago; 
George  W.  Garvin  New  \ork;  «•  «• 
Williams  Mount  Vernon;  C.  J.  L>nch 
and  wife;  Chicago;  M.  Lueders,  Cincin- 
nati; Charles  M.  ^^'ew.  Minneapolis.  H. 
W  Hill,  Minneapolis;  G.  R.  Clark.  \  ir- 
einia-  J.  A  Robinson  and  wife,  Hib- 
bing;'  George  R.  Barrett  and  wife; 
Bulfl;  Mrs.  W.  Moulton,  Two  Harbors; 
J  B  Patterson..  Minneapolis;  C.  L.  Lui- 
k'in'^'  Chicago;  Mrs.  J.  W.  Uorsey,  Two 
liriboi-s;  S.  D  De.Mers.  St.  Paul;  S  R 
Kh-by  Hibblng;  Charles  M^  Murphy. 
Trmwood-  G.  H  Ttiompson.  Hlbbing;  F. 
J  Webb  Eveleth;  G.  J.  MoGraw.  Min- 
neapolis; L.  A.  Cha.se.  Chicago. 

At  the  McKay:  Myrtle  Nichols. 
Prlncoton-  Logan  Nlcliols,  Princeton; 
V  Balfanz.  Princeton:  J.  B.  Sammis, 
Ciiicagot  Mrs.  H  C.  Hansen. 
Mr.s.  Edward  H^rera. 
Kilborn.  Mlnn^^apolla; 
Minneapolis;  Rudolph 
apoUs;  George  Nelson, 
Klebo.  Minneapolis: 
Holvoke:  Mrs.  Charles 
C.  "w.  Berry.  Two 
Schulck.   Aitkin;   A 


crisp  a  year 

ago   today.  ,  „„,„„ 

This     morning    the    sun    came 
6:19    and    is    3che<iuled      to      go 

**  Mr.  Richardson  says  of  weather  con 

'"The"  central  high  pressure  area 
overspreads  the  Middle  W  est  from 
katchewan    to    the     gulf,    with    centers 
over  the  Texas  coast,  Kansas  anc 
katchcwan  and  Manitoba.        During 
past    twenty-four    hours,    light 
snow     has     fallen     over 
Manitoba     the    lake 
Missis.slppi.    Missour 


up    at 

down 


still 
Sas- 


••*The  Duluth  Minstrels  will  give  a 
performance  at  Cloquet  torlght.  J.  K. 
Persons  Is  Interlocutor,  a  id  the  end 
men  with  bones  and  tambns  are  Fred 
A.  Lewis.  W.  E.  Perry.  W.  W.  Robert- 
son. A.  M.  Miller.  Jr..  C.  H.  Eldrldge. 
W.  H.  Wilson.  C.  M.  Strlcl:land,  T.  H. 
Moore,  A.  E.  Gilbert  and  Charles  T. 
Abbott.  The        program         includes: 

Zylophone  solo  by  Harold  Overbeck; 
baritone  solo.  "Night  Birds  Cooing."  by 
T.  C.  Connors;  "Mary's  <ione  Wld  a 
Coon,"  by  A.  E.  Gilbert;  tenor  solo. 
"Old  Red  Cradle,"  by  F.  T.  Buenenan; 
duet.  "We're  Giddy  Young  Dudes,"  by 
C.  H.  Eldrldge  and  W.  H.  \rilson;  bari- 
tone solo.  *^Baby's  Laughing  in  Her 
Sleep."  by  A.  S,  Porter;  song.  "Oh. 
Girly.  Girly."  by  C.  H.  Bllrldge;  bass 
solo.  "King  O'er  the  Land  iind  Sea.  by 
Fred  Sigrist;  .song.  "We -e  1  a  Mil- 
lionaire." by  W.  H.  Wilson;  grotesque 
acrobatics  bv  Green.  Graff  and 
Grochau;  high  class  diama.  ■Pig- 
malion  and  Gal-atea."  by  B  nino  Eyferth 
and  C.  E.  Jones;  song  and  dance. 
•What  Shall  We  Name  the  Boy?"  by 
A.  M.  Miller.  Jr..  double  horizontal  bar 
act.  by  Charles  Johnson  and  Raymond 
Moore;  original  specialtiej.  by  Harr>' 
L.  Burns;  afterpiece  with  Charles  T. 
Abbott  and  J.  J.  C.  Davis  in  the  lead- 
ing  roles. 


Sas- 
the 
liglit    rain    or 
Saskatchewan, 
region,    the    Upper 
and    Ohio    valleys 
and  over  Florida,  due  to  the  movement 
of    th«    low   pressure   area    now    central 
over   Upper    Michigan    and    overspread- 
ing   the    entire    lake    region.        ^^'i^'^e'' 
disturbance    is    approaching    ov-er    Bi  it- 
ish   Columbia.      Temperatures   have    not 
changed   much   since   Monday   morning, 
except    over    the    North    Central 
states     whore    the    weather    is 
erably    colder    this    morning. 


ture.  It  increases  the  Judge's  salary 
to  52,500  and  gives  him  the  appoint- 
ment of  the  clerk.  It  is  understood 
that  Judge  Morris  will  reappoint  Cleric 
G.   A.   Holden. 


••♦Joseph  M.  Goist  is  having  plans 
prepared  for  a  brick  and  stone  build- 
ing to  occupy  the  .site  of  his  je^weiry 
store  on  Superior  street.  It  will  b« 
four  or  five  stories  high. 


•••The  bill  waiving  the  forfeiture  of 
the  Duiuili  &  Winnipeg  swamp  land 
grant,  wliich  was  passed  by  the  house 
a  week  ago,  was  billed  by  the  senate 
comraitleo    on    public    lands    last    night. 


•••Early  in  April  the  Duluth  Nation- 
al Gas,  Oil  &  Mineral  company  will  re- 
sume the  work  of  boring  Its  gas  well 
near  Fond  du  Lac.  The  well  is  now 
down  1,570  feet,  and  they  propo.se  to 
go  down  3.000  feet  if  necessary.  So 
far  the  only  thing  struck  has  been  a 
spring  of  mUieral  water  at  a  depth  of 
1.250    feet. 


•••A.  C.  Rlcheux  and  N.    F.  Hui 
open     a     drug     store     on 


soon 
street 


ro  will 
Fourth 


and  Fourth  avenue  oast. 


•••Mrs.  F.  E.  Stauff  and  children  ar- 
rived from  the  East  yesterday  after- 
noon. 


border 
consid- 


.44 

.24 
.34 
.  6 
.14 
.2*1 


Following    were 
temperatures: 

.\i)lliiie     

Alievlllo     

.\tlaiila    

Ualtleford      

Illiiuarck     

r.^tolon   

Huffalo    26 

f'alro    38 

ralgary    22 

C'liarloston   42 

Cliltauo    24 

Clncliinatt    32 

I'CTiriirdla    26 

l)A\<mport    20 

nMi?er    26 

nelr»lt     28 

I)e\lla  Lake 
Uixige 


last    night's    lowest 


20 

40 

18 

24 

....—20 

28 

38 

2 

44 

32 

86 

4 

JO 

30 

24 

60 

_8   llerre    22 

.22   PltlBburg    30 

Duluth   8   Port    Arthur    4 

Edmonton   24    Portland.    Or ♦* 

Kl   Paso    46  ;Uu'AppcUe    —14 

1':8ranaba   20    Uapld    City 

Galveston     ^ 48    St.    I/OliU    .. 

tlraiul  Haven   26    St.    Paul    ... 

Cmm  Bay   20   San   Antonio 

Havre    1"    San 


MciUdne  Hat 

Slemplili    

MUes  nty  .. 
Milwiiukae  . . . 
Mliineduaa   . . . 

Modtna 

Moiilgiimery    . 
Moiirliead    ... 
I  .New   Orleans 
!  New    York    .  . 

!Norfi>'k     

■Nortlifleld  ... 
lN(,rth  Platte 

Oklahoma 

.Omaha   

iPlineull    


•••The    municipal    court 
luth    has    been    passed    by 


bill 
the 


of    Du- 
leglsla- 


•••C.  F.  Rickart  will  open  a 
store  In  West  Duluth  the  first 
week. 


jewelry 
of  next 


•••The  annual  ball  of  the  Hebrew 
congregation  of  Moses  Montefioro  will 
take   place   tonight   at   Turner   hall. 

•••Mrs.  P.  H.  Kershaw's  mother  and 
sistor.  who  have  been  visiting  in  Du- 
luth for  the  past  month,  left  yester- 
day for  Milwaukee. 


•••W.  H.  Cramer  of  St. 
ing   his   son   of   the   firm 
Ryan  at  the  West  end. 


Paul   is  visit- 
of  Cramer   & 


MINNESOTA  OPIMONS. 


to 


going 
whis- 
•"var- 
lol  of 


.20 
.34 
.30 
.42 
Francluoo   46 


Clay  County  Herald:  They  are 
amend  the  penal  code  so  that 
ky  can't  be  shipped  labtled  as 
nl.«h,"  In  spite  of  the  fact  that  a 
it  ought  to   be. 

Virginia  Enterprise:  Tie  worm  may 
turn,  but  in  a  few  weeks  more  lie  will 
not  turn  quick  enough  to  escape  the 
watchful  eye  of  the  man  who  Is  hunt- 
ing  for   flsh    bait. 

Wlllmar  Journal;  Ic  is  a  fact  to  be 
commended  rather  than  one  to  criti- 
cise, that  Theodore  Roosevelt  had  high 
Ideals.  That  he  did  not  reach  his  ideals 
is  not  a  disgrace,  either.  He  was  the 
kind  of  a  person  that  kept  his  Ideas 
so  high  that  the  striving  to  attain  them 
resulted  in  bettering  of  conditions. 
Just  think,  If  one  ever  attained 
ideal,  there  would  be  nothing 
strive   after. 


MEANT  TO  BE  FrNNY. 


Chicago  Herald:  *!  see  tliat  the  Chi- 
nese court  will  go  into  mourning  for 
tliree  years  owing  to  tlie  deaths  of  the 
emperor   and    the   empress    dowager." 

•rhere  must  be  a  lot  of  people 
around  tiie  court  who  think  mourning 
is  becoming  to  them." 


New  York 
begin  to  tell 
I  can't  make 
first  on  one 
oilier." 

"Madam,  your  husband 
I  want  to  know  about  his 
dllion.  not  Ills 


Globe:      "Doctor, 

you  how  restless 

him  rest  quietly. 

side      and    then 


I    can't 

John   is. 

He  lies 

on    tlie 


Is  a   lawyer, 
physical  con- 
professional  liabits." 


his 
more  to 


Helena 
U'lugiiton 
HiiPm      ... 
Jai-ksoiivlUa 

lvamloi>p9    32 

Kansas  City   24 

KuoxvlUe    30 

La  Cn>sse   20 

Lander     14 

Little  Rock 
Lo«  Alleles 


28   .HanU    Fe    82 

..18,Sault  .s;e.   Marie 16 

..16  ;shrt.vbport   .40 

.  .50  iSpoltane   32 

Swift  Current   l'> 

Wasliingtoa    26 


WlrhlU    26 

WllUsUin   14 

Wliinemui'c*  40 

.86  ,Wliiidpc-g     —18 

.  48  .Vellowstuno   18 


ilanjuetle 


.18  1 


Little  Falls  Herald:  To  be  sure. 
Taft  won't  talk  about  Judges  the  way 
Roosevelt  did.  He  was  one  himself. 
Y'^t  Roosevelt  had  the  jrreat  example 
of  Lincoln  and  Jeffersoi,  who  never 
criticise  the  highest  court 
when   In   their  judgment  It 


he.sitated  to 
In  the  land 
was    wrong. 


Cleveland  Leader: 
You  will  succeed, 
genius. 

riie  Inventor — No,  I'm  not. 
a  real  genius,  practical  men 
would  consider  me  a  darned 


The     Magnate 
sir — you      are 


If  I 

Ilka 
fool. 


were 
you 


Kansas  City  Journal:  "Do  you  be- 
lieve in  Inspiration?" 

"Oh,  yes.  Gounod  probably  wrote 
his  brilliant  'Jewel  Song"  Uie  day  the 
new  cook  arrived." 


Moorhead 
Its  only  a 
will  have  to 


Independent:  Brace 
matter  of  l  me  until 
buv  a  straw    lid. 


up: 
you 


London  Plck-Me-Up:  Maud — I  under- 
stand that  you  have  a  new  typewriter. 

Author — No — second-hand.  She's  a 
widow. 


Department  of  Agriculture,  Weather 
Bureau,  Duluth.  Minn.,  Tuesday  March 
16. — P'orecasts  for  twenty-four  hours 
ending  at  7  p.  m.  Wednesday:  Duluth, 
Superior  and  vicinity.  Including  the 
Me.saba  and  Vermilion  Iron  ranges: 
Fair  tonight  and  Wednesday.  Brisk 
northwest  winds,  becoming  light  and 
variable. 

H.  W.  RICHARDSON. 

Local   Forecaster. 

Chicago,  March  16. — Forecast  for 
twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  p.  m. 
Wednesday:  Upper  Michigan — Threat- 
ening with  snow  tonight  and  near 
Lake  Superior  Wednesday:  colder  to- 
night. 

Wisconsin — Generally  fair  tonight 
and  Wednesday;  colder  in  north  por- 
tion   tonight. 

Minnesota — Fair  tonight  and  Wednes- 
day; colder  in  southeast  portion  to- 
niglit. 

North  Dakota — Partly  cloudy  tonight 
and  Wednesday;  warmer  in  west  por- 
tions   tonigiit. 

Uad'M  Trupliies. 

You   long   to    be   an    atlilcte,   &'on. 

An    agile    lad    of    brawn; 
You    long   to   bowl,    to    box,    to    run. 

And    wui    a    Marathon? 

'T   would   be  a  satisfaction,    yea. 

'T   would   bring  you  some  renown; 
But  nature  might  not  stand  the  stress. 

And    then    you    would    break    down. 

I'm    not    atiiletic — never    was. 

And    never    longed   to    be; 
The  man  who  follows  nature's   laws 

Keep.s    well  and   muscle-free. 

But  he  who  trains  to  tight  or  run. 

For    trophies    or    for    gold. 
Soon    tiiid.s    it    work    Instead    of    fun. 

And   soon    grows   stale   and    old. 


Winona  Independent:  0r.  Roosevelt 
is  reported  to  be  out  with  an  ax 
chopping  down  trees  every  day.  Some 
one  will  be  certain  to  f  ccuse  the  ex- 
president  of  Inconsistency  In  thus  re- 
fusing to  conserve  his  natural  re- 
sources. 


Two  Harbors  Iron  N(ws:  The  bill 
abolishing  capital  punishment  was  de- 
feated by  a  very  narrow  margin  in 
the  house  this  week,  ant.  legal  killings 
will  continue  for  a  short  time  longer. 
Barbari.sm  in  the  humar,  family  has  a 
slow  death. 

A  prominent 
accept  the   de- 

and  eat  what 
tlie    free    soup 

in     the     bread 


Tatler:  Employer  (to  clerk) — You 
say  you  feel  as  hungry  as  a  wolf  and 
drink  like  a  fish  and  yet  you  feel  as 
weak  as  a  cat;  you'd  better  see  a  vet. 


Judge:  Miss  Jones — When  lovers 
quarrel  they  turn  tlieir  backs  to  eacli 
other. 

Mi.ss  Smith — Yes.  and  when  married 
couples  quarrel  they  fly  at  each 
other. 


Montlcello       Times: 
phvslclan   advises   us   to 
mands    of    our    appetites 
we    want.       Patrons    of 
kitchen     and     followers 


line  should  take  notice  and  act  accord- 
ingly.   

Cannon  Falls  Beicon:  This  Is  Lent. 
If  you  can't  be  good,  be  as  good  as  you 
can ! 


Nashville 
succeed?" 
"Too    mu 
"I  didn't 
"Didn't 

American 

ch    money, 
know  you 
Other   fell 

"Why  didn't 

•  * 

had  any." 
ow    had    it." 

you 

Plilladelphia  Record:  Scribbler — The 
arti.-^tic  temperament  Is  such  a  com- 
monplace expression.  Give  me  a 
synonym   for  it. 

Scrawler — How   w>ul.l   "hard  up"  doT 


When  I  was  young 
A    brawny    youtli 

With  physique  pink 
Quite  the  reverse 


I  had  a  pard — 
was    he; 

and  muscles  hard; 
of  me. 


He    was    an    athlete,    beyond    doubt — 

A  giant  lithe  and  strong. 
But  his  exertions  wore  him  out — 

Ho  didn't  thrive   for   long. 

When  he   was   full   of  life   and  vim. 

He    many    times    did    claim 
Because   I    was   not   strong  like   him 

I    had    myself    to    blame. 

I    was    a    bloodless    looking    chap; 

Pany  and  short  of  breath  — 
A   sickly    atom    on    the    map 

attlvlng   to   side-step   Death. 


At  least,  that's 
Yet.   I'm   now 

I've  reared  you 
And   still   am 


what   the  athlete 
sixty-five — 
and    nine    others, 
much    ailve. 


As   for   my   pard   of   long   ago. 

Who    medals    w^on   and    wore. 
And     of    his    strength     made    so 
show — 

He  died   when   twenty-four. 


said, 
Ned, 

much 


Waverley  Star:  The  Belle  Plaine 
Hfrald  trulv  remarks  :hat  ''no  com- 
munity is  so  small  bt  t  that  It  can 
boast  of  the  best  hone  talent  per- 
formers ever  seen   on    tl  e   local   stage. 

—m 

Pointed    Paragrnphs. 
Chicago  New.s:     None  are  so  blind  as 
those   who   imagine   thej    see   it   all. 

Only  an  artist  can  paint  a  town  red 
with    water   colors. 

It's  easier  to  grasp  same  opportuni- 
ties   than    it    Is    to    let    Ko.  ,  .       , 

A  man  goes  back  on  ils  best  friends 
when   he   kicks   himself.  ,.  .     j, 

Poverty  is  no  di.sjrracs,  but  It  Is  dis- 
graceful   to    be    asliamed    of    It. 

To  the  industrious  man  a  painful  sit- 
uation  is    better    than   nj   Job   at   all. 

Some  men  lose  sight  of  great  things 
because  of  their  attention  to  insignifi- 
cant details.  ,     ^  .^  .      ..   ,,      4. 

Riches  have  wings,  b'lt  It  Is  folly  to 
Pit  on  a  park  bench  ancl  wait  for  them 
to   fly   your  way.    ,,,         ^  .  . 

A  married  man  likes  to  go  to  a  wed- 
ding for  the  purpose  of  gloating  over 
the   coming   misfortunes    of    anotlier. 

\nd  a  father  Is  as  ar  xlous  to  repeat 
the  smart  sayings  of  his  children  as 
other   people  are  not  to   hear  them. 

A  man's  Hd  may  nol  be  a  thing  of 
beauty,  but  he  can  wear  It  in  the  rain 
without  getting  the  curl  out  of  the 
feathers. 

. -• 

ReflcctioiiN   of   a    naoholor. 
New  York    Press:      E\  en   tlie   dreamer 
attracts   attention — when    he   snores. 

You  can  never  hear  riarried  men  say 
that   figures  cannot  He.  .,      . 

It  takes  a  lot  of  polish  to  enable  a 
man  to  shine  In   socletj. 

One  way  to  avoid  the  disappoint- 
ments of  love  Is  to  avoid   love. 

Lots  of  talk  that  sounds  well  is 
nothing  but  sound  that's  unsound. 

The  assistance  we  get  is  seldom  sat- 
isfactory. The  best  way  Is  uot  to 
need   It. 


Senator   Smith'M   Strauice   MImhIob. 

Boston  Transcript:  (.)ne  of  the  new 
Senators  comes  into  office  with  a  dis- 
tinctive mission.  E.  D.  Smith  of  South 
Carolina  Is  not  likely  to  be  as  Incon- 
sjiicuous  as  Tilman's  colleagues  usually 
have  been,  since  his  mission  Is  to  se- 
cure "15-cent  cotton"  by  Federal  legis- 
lation, and  to  tliat  attainment  he  will 
bend    all    his    energies. 

He  l.s  said  to  be  a  man  with  one 
Idea.  By  talking  on  it  In  .season  and 
out,  he  has  reached  the  senate.  That 
idea  is  that  tlie  government  ought  to 
"do  enough  for  cotton"  to  put  It  to 
15  cents  and  keep  it  there.  Mr.  Smith 
will  represent  In  tlie  senate  a  movo- 
ment  which  has  stirred  Southern  agri- 
culture for  years.  Its  effort  has  been 
to  raise  the  price  of  cotton  by  reducing 
the  acreage  or  by  forcing  a  scarcity. 
Human  nature  being  pretty  much  tlie 
same  everywhere,  so  many  have 
planted  cotton  in  the  br>llef  that  thoy 
would  get  thp  advanced  price  that  the 
"movement"  has  had  Just  the  opposite 
effect  from  tliat  Intended.  .So  much 
cotton  has  been  raised  that  the  price 
sticks  in  the  negliliorhood  of  10  cents 
for  spot,  and  will  not  advance  above 
that    figure. 

The  law  of  supply  and  demand  Is 
one  of  those  statutes  that  obstinately 
refuse  to  be  repealed,  and  the  Cotton 
Growers'  association  cannot  see  that 
If  the  staple  is  raised  to  a  very  high 
price  here,  the  price  itself  will  tempt 
other  nations  to  stimulate  Its  cultiva- 
tion with  the  result  that  their  last 
estate  will  be  worse  than  their  first. 
Their  idea  Is  a  survival  of  the  old 
belief  on  which  the  South  wa."<  once 
wrecked,  that  cotton  Is  King,  a  despot 
whose  fiat  rules.  As  an  exponent  of 
their  creed  in  the  senate.  Senator  Smith 
may   be   interesting   but  "not   Influential. 


Carlton 
Carlton;  A.  B. 
C.  J.  Dickson. 
Halldln.  Mlnne- 
Minneapolls:  H. 
A.  J.  Willcuts. 
Guild,   Holyoke; 

Harbors;    John    W. 

Fairchild,   Scahlon; 
Mrs.  Foran. 


of  lean 
years." 


years    wi 


country 
there  is 
over  a 
thirty  years  the  expenses 
In  the  same  time  the  popu- 


tions 

wistlum 

instance, 

is   now 

Herald. 

the  most 

ballots,    but    that    the    best    intelligence    of 

the  men  whose  influence  is  most  desired  in 

for   good   government, 


o 


quadrupled.     With 
able  today  to  meet 


wealth 
at   our 


f 


the  country 
disposal  we 
great  as  the 


has 
are 
ex- 


n 


A  brief  view  of  the  actual  condition  of  the 
as   to   population    and    wealth,   will    show    that 
absolutely    no    reason    to    be    seriously    alarmed 
deficit   in   any   one  year.     In 
of  the  country  have  doubled, 
lation  has   doubled,  and   the 

the   means 
expenses  twice  as 
penses  we  are  having  and  yet  be  no  mooe  heavily  bur- 
dened than  was  the  preceding  generation. 

The  expenses  of  a  nation  increase  quite  steadily  with 
its  growth,  but  a  nation's  income  increases  irregularly. 
By  reason  of  poor  crops  or  a  financial  panic  the  revenue 
of  one  year  may  even  fall  below  that  of  the  preceding 
by  reason  df  particularly  favorable  conditions 
rapidly  as  to  create  an  undesirable 
During  the  past  decade  we  have 
average,  leaving  us  at  the  end  of 
the  period  with  a  sufficient,  but  not  too  large. 
We  may  expect  that  history  will  repeat  itself 
respect. 


M    M    T  ivens    Two  Harbors 
Hibbine-    M^s.     C.     Erickson.     Hibblng; 
"'^F     Nelson     Minneapolis;      P.    Spina. 
Hlbbing'     Charles     Rudd,     Minneapolis; 
Hart, 


C.     S, 
Led  by 
wood. 
Paul; 


year,  or 
it  may  increase  so 
temporary  surplus, 
struck  a  pretty  fair 


...   ^i 


Ledby,     Minn.;       S.     Hart, 
Mac    Hart.    Led  by;    S.    O.    Sher- 
Frederlc,  Wis.:   E.   Fitzgerald,  bt. 
Y     L.    Scully.    Hibblng. 
•      •      • 

At  the  Lenox:  W.  T,  Johnson.  St. 
Paul'  D  E.  Ehle.  Chicago;  R.  H.  Doh- 
erty  Virginia;  H.  J.  McEllen.  Minne- 
apolis- A.  R.  Kramer,  Minneapolis;  J. 
R  Ort on.  Minneapolis;  J.  A.  Barnes, 
Ash  Lake;  A.  S.  Graham.  Minneapolis; 
Robert  Stanwowl,  Minneapoli.i;  E.  H. 
Porter  Oshkosh;  R.  C.  Pickering  and 
wife.  Virginia;  H  L.  \ritchell,  St.  Paul. 
S  W  Gilpin,  Virginia;  C.  H.  Nash. 
Minneapolis;  R.  Thompson.  La  Crosse, 
A  W  Elofson  and  wife.  Minneapolis: 
Charles  Johnson,  Iron  Mountain;  M.  D. 
Kelly  St  Paul;  William  Werden,  Ash- 
land-"F.  M.  Baker.  Chicago;  J.  M.  Brill, 
Milwaukee;  .jf.  J-  Gorens  Coleralne; 
E  Hickey.  ^.  Paul;  William  Eman- 
'    -     '      -      "       *  '  St. 


D 


surplus, 
this 


in 


te 


Percy  Augustus  Gardner  certainly  had  his  nerve. 


uel      Minneai^olisi     C.     R.     Adams 
Paul;   E.   A.   C.llHngjast,   Hibblng;   C.  D. 
Brown.   Mlnne«.p«?|lls. 

• ,  *  * 
At  the  St.  Xouis:  F.  R.  Noble,  Min- 
neapolis: wmiarrt  Hartage,  Roy;  H.  A. 
Hagstrum,  ^t.  .Paul;  A.  J.  Arrivee, 
Grand  Forks;  Jojiu  Gran,  Minneapolis; 
Bell  Smith.  Minneapolis;  A.  C.  Rex. 
Helena;  George  Wesberg.  Eveleth; 
William  Alle>n.  Oloquet:  Howard  Bus- 
son  Cloquet;  C.  S.  McCurdy,  St.  Paul; 
W  E  Richards;-  Minneapolis;  E.  R. 
Gaylord,  Mlhneapolis;  A.  B.  Coates, 
Virginia;  Jacob  iSaarl,  Eveleth:  J.  C. 
Cornell.  St  ^aul:'John  Larson,  Menom- 
inee; P.  M.-  Stevens.  Menominee;  J. 
Stallman.  Mlnneaoolls;  M.  A.  De  Long. 
Hibblng;    Charles  Spangler.    Marquette; 


No  trophies   did   he  long  enjoy — 

I    hadn't   any    then. 
But  I  have  plenty   now,   my   boy. 

You    are    but    one    of    ten. 

-VV    F.   S.MITH    in    Pittsburg   Dispatch. 

—•■ 

Scare    Head    Prefildeat. 

Springfield,  Mass..  Republican:  Mr. 
Roosevelt's  salutatory  as  an  editor  as- 
sociated with  Doctors  Abbott  and  Mabie 
contained  too  much  fine  scorn  for  the 
editors  he  does  not  like  to  seern  like  a 
truly  fraternal  greeting  to  the  journal- 
ists of  the  land.  Nothing  was  said 
about  the  craven,  the  weakllrig  or  the 
mollycoddle,  but  the  yellow  editor  and 
the  high  brow  scoffer  in  the  sanctum 
that  emits  wit.  cynicism  and  mendacity 
in  equal  parts  were  drawn  and  quar- 
tered. Several  amusing  comments  on 
this  deliverance  have  been  called  forth, 
and  some  doubt  has  been  expressed  as 
to  the  purity  of  Mr.  Roosevelt  s  Eng- 
lish «<tyle.  It  Is  surprising,  perhaps, 
that  the  vellow  editors  have  not  yet  re- 
torted with  a  very  obvious  tu  quoque. 
How  easy  It  Is  to  show  that  of  ail  the 
nresldents  of  the  United  States  since 
No  1  Mr.  Roosevelt  was  most  conspic- 
uous and  successful  In  using  the  prin- 
ciples of  yellow  journalism  in  his  meth- 
ods of  administration  and  government. 
If  we  ever  had  a  "scare-head"  presi- 
dent. It  was  No.  26. 

Regret. 

When    I    remember    something   which    I 

had. 
But    which    is    gone,    and    I    must    do 

without. 
I  sometimes  wonder  how  I  can  be  glad. 
Even      In      cowslip    time   when    hedges 

sprout. 
It   makes   me   sad  to   think   or   III — but 

yet 
My  days  will  not  be  better  days,  should 

I  forget. 

When  I  remember  something  promised 

me,  ^    ^  , 

But  which  I  never  had,  nor  can  nave 

now. 

Because   the   promlser   we   no   more   see 

In    countries     that    accord    a    mortal 

When  I  member  this.  I  mourn — but  yet 
My  happier  days  are  not  the  days  when 
forget.      __j^j^   INGEL.OW. 


The    Gang'*    all    Here. 

Philadelphia  Times:  Not  very  long 
ago  several  high  scliool  girls  living  up- 
town formed  a  sewing  circle.  Every- 
thing went  along  swimmingly,  and  oc- 
casionally, when  goss  p  and  refresh- 
ments were  exhausted,  the  girls  did  a 
little  sewing.  But  th.i  other  day  a 
void  began  to  make  Itself  felt  in  the 
circle — the  club  was  Incomplete — the 
girls  had  no  yell!  ,    .   .. 

'Our  Dick  belongs  to  a  club,  re- 
marked Edna,  a  chart*  r  member,  'and 
they  have  a  bully  yell.  Something 
like  this.  Hail,  hail,  the  gangs  all 
liere  Wliat  the' — er — well,  I  don't  re- 
member all  of  it,  but  that's  the  way  it 

The  other  girls  had  leard  .something 
of  the  sort,  too,  and  it  was  unanimous- 
ly agreed  that  a  bettor  pattern  could 
possibly  be  selected.  A  dozen 
pretty  heads  were  pu ;  together, 
this   startling  effect: 

Stitcli.  stitch,   the    gang's  all   here, 

What  the  hem  do   we  care. 

What  the  hem  do  we  care, 

Stltcli,    stitch,    the    gang's    all 

What  the  hem  do  we  care, 


very 
with 


here, 
tuck! 


Mr.   DickiuMon  and  <lir  Canal. 

Chattanooga  Times:  Mr.  Dickinson 
surrenders  a  lucrative  position  of  great 
responsibility  to  accept  public  service, 
sacrificing  his  own  personal  Interests 
In  the  exercise  of  a  high  patriotic  re- 
solve to  devote  himself  to  the  welfare 
of  his  country.  He  has  shown  him- 
self to  be  a  man  of  large  attainment!*, 
keen  perception,  and  sound  judgment, 
and  is  eminent  as  a  lawyer  and 
viser  in  the  management  of  one  of 
largest  railroad  properties  of  the 
try.  Especially 
of   tremendous 


ad- 
the 
coun- 
therefore.  will  he  be 
service  In  pushing  for- 
ward the  Panama  canal,  the  enterprise 
of  supreme  Importance  to  the  South, 
coming  directly  under  his  supervision 
and    care. 


M'eot     Off     All     KlKht 

PItt.sburg     Gazette-Times: 
ately   the   Inaugural    ball    was 
ture   of  the   celebration   that 
for   snow.shoes  and   ulsters. 


Fortun- 

one   fea- 

dldn't  call 


AMUSEMENTS. 


Traveled   an   Lniitunl   lloute.  . 

Nebraska  State  Jouinal:  George  T. 
Oliver,  the  new  senator-to-be  from 
Pennsylvania,  has  accomplished  the 
rare  feat  of  prying  his  way  into  high 
office  with  a  paper  lever.  Mr  Oliver 
was  originally  a  lawyer,  but  left  the 
field  for  the  more  remunerative  steel 
business.  Twenty  years  of  that  leav- 
ing ..im  ready  to  contuer  new  wDrlds. 
he  bought  the  Pittsburg  Gazette,  and 
now  he  goes  to  the  s?nRte.  Were  his 
success  not  known  to  be  exceptional 
we  should  have  milir^nalres  in  every 
<?tate  buving  newspapers  to  blow  them 
into  .TJoiltical  office.  Unfortunately! 
for  them  it  is  only  Ir  the  least  wide- 
awake communities  ;hat  this  plan 
works.  Among  knowing  people  a 
rewspaper  loses  its  iifluence  when  It 
Is  known  to  represent  a  particular 
business  or  political  in<erest.  There 
the  man  who  buys  a  live.  Influential 
newspaper  to  use  for  other 
Journalistic  purposes  finds 
sea  apple  In  his  bar  ds 
Chicago  Chronicle  in  the 
R    Walsh.     Anywhere 


LYCEUM 


TONIGHT 


with 


LAST  TIME  TOMORROW   NIGHT. 

Matinee  Tomomw. 
The   Great    Dramatle   Sentatlon. 

THE  THIEF 

Cha«.    Dalton    and    Mariaret    Wycherty. 


EMMA 


Ttiurtday    Evenint   at  8:15. 
EAMES.    Prima    Donna,    and 
Gotorza.    Baritone. 


Emilie    de 


Friday   and   Saturday, 
The    Singing     Comedienne 
GIRLS 


Matlnea    Saturday, 
CORINNE,    in    "THE 
FROM   BERLIN." 


than 
It  a  dead 
like  the  late 
hands  of  John 
but  In  Pennsyl- 
vania the  people  wou  d  feel  obliged  to 
buy  some  other  paper  than  Mr  Olivers 
In  order  to  get  some  other  estimate  of 
him   than  his  own. 

If 


—SEAT  SALE  THURSDAY— 
March    22     23.    24— Three    Night*    at    8    O'etoak. 
'     Matinee  Wednesday  at  2. 
— KL\W  &  KlU-JkNOKllS  .STl  PK-NPOUS— 

BEN-HUR 

AV   AWT.-INSiriRlNG    LENTEN   nRAMA. 
Prteee  50o.  (i.  «!.»>  and  $2.00. 


1 

.-/■."ill." 

■ 



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^^ 

^^^^ 

DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


nmrni, 


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THREE  DISPENSATIONS 
NECESSARY  SO  ETHEL 
BARRYMORE  COULD  WED 


Boston,  Mass..  March  16. — Mies  Ethel 
Barrymore,  the  actress,  appearing  In 
"Lady  Frederick"  In  the  Hollls  Street 
theater,  and  Russell  Griswold  Colt  of 
Bristol.  R.  I.,  son  of  Col.  Samuel  Pome- 
roy  Colt,  for  many  years  president  of 
the  United  States  Rubber  company, 
•were    married      at    tlie    rectory    of    th© 


THE  STEEL  CORPORATION 
HAS  MADE  PLANS  FOR  A 
$25,000000  PLANT  HERE 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


ilon  of  th©  new  plant  to  be  located  at 
lew  Duluth;  Mr.  McOonagle,  consult- 
ing engineer  and  director  of  the  two 
transfer  railway  companies,  the  Spirit 
Lake  and  Inter-state  Transfer  com- 
panies, and  also  vice  nresldent  and 
general  manager  of  the  Dulutli,  Mis- 
Babe  &  Northern  railway,  and  Joseph 
B.  Cotton,  the  general  solicitor  of  tlie 
eubsidiary  companies  of  the  United 
States  Steel  companj*  in  Minnesota. 
Wisconsin  and  Michigan,  general  so- 
licitor of  the  Inter-state  Transff-r  com- 
pany and  the  Spirit  Lake  Transfer 
company,  and  vice  president  of  the  two 
rai!r<ads.  Each  of  the  gentlemen  ap- 
peared before  the  committee  and  were 
sworn  upon  oath.  The  shorthand  re- 
porter (Mr.  Farmer)  taking  tlie  testi- 
mony, was  also  sworn  to  take  down 
such  testimony  as  the  committee 
deemed  material  and  transcribe  tlie 
same  into    longliand. 

Mr.    Iloxle'n    Satement. 

Mr.  Hoxle  was  the  first  witness  ex- 
amined. He  came  before  the  commit- 
tee with  between  500  and  600  large 
sheets  of  drawings  and  gave  a  detailed 
Statement  of  what  had  been  done  to 
•stabiisli  the  new  plant  by  his  depart- 
inent.  The  first  set  of  drawings  he  was 
Instructed  to  prepare  was  for  a  plant 
which,  he  said,  would  meet  the  re- 
quirements of  the  agreement  or  pledge 
made  to  the  people  of  Minnesota  at  the 
session  of  the  legislature  of  1907,  and 
which  was  to  cost  about  15,000,000  or 
16,000.000;  that  he  was  working  in  con- 
Junction  with  John  Reis,  assistant  to 
the  prt'Sldent  of  the  corporation,  and 
whose  duties,  among  other  things,  was 
to  determine  the  market  territory 
tributary  to  the  Duluth  plant;  that 
after  the  plans  had  been  partially  pre- 

§ared,     through    Mr.     Reis      report,     the 
teel    corporation    came    to    the    belief 
that    the    market    tributary    to    Duluth 
was    greater    than    was    first    believed, 
and  thereupon  he  (Hoxie)  was  instruct- 
ed   to    prepare    new    plans    for    an    en- 
larged plaht.  to  he  double  the  capacity 
of    the    one    first    planned,    and    whicij 
would   cost    |10,OoO,000:    that    thereupon 
the    first    prepared    plans    were    abon- 
doned  and   the  plans   for   the   enlarged 
plant   were   put  under   process  of  prep- 
aration;   that   the    instructions   to    prO' 
cetd  with  the  preparation  of  plans  for 
the  enlarged  plant  were  received  by  Mr. 
Hoxie  from  President  Corey  of  the  cor- 
poration:   that    on    land    purchased    by 
the  company  in  the  vicinity  of  New  Du- 
luth   he     (H.>xie)    commenced    a    topo- 
graphical    survey;     that    the     intention 
was  to  locate  the  plant  on  the  part  of 
the  land  nearest  to  the  city  of  Duluth, 
bjit     an     investigation     at     that     point 
showed  that  it  was  impracticable;  that, 
thereupon,    a    topographical    survey    of 
the    land    near    to    New      Duluth      and 
borings   to   test   the   soil  every    100   feet 
were    made    over    a    space    of    over    190 
acres,   and   that    the   result   proved   that 
It   was   an   ideal   ]c>cation   for   the    plant: 
lying    sixt.v    feet    above    the    St.    Louis 
river    and    being    so    level    as    to.    prac- 
tlcaiiy.     require     no     grading:     that    In 
making     the     borings     they     discovered 
that     under     the     surface     were     large 
banks    of   sand    and    gravel,    which    was 
very    Important    to    them,    as    the    plan 
of   the   buildings    Is    to    De    of    steel    and 
concrete    construction.       Since    making 
this  discovery  of  sand  and   gravel,   the 
company    lias    purchased    five    concrete 
block-making  maciiines.  with  the  capa- 
city of  1,000  blocks  per  day.  and  which 
are    to    be    used    in    the    making   of   the 
concrete    block.s    for    the    buildings. 
A  «S'S,000,000  Plant. 
After  he,    (Hoxie)   had  partially   pre- 
pared   the    plan.=;     for     the        $10,000,000 
plant.    Duluth    was    visited    by    a    large 
number  of  the  officers  of  the  Steel  and 
eubsidiary    corporations    and    thev    ar- 
rived  at   the  coneliision   that   conditions 
justified  the  building  of  the  plant  with 
the   view   of  increasing  it    to  a  $25,000,- 
000    I'liint    In    the   near      future    and    he 
(Hoxie >    was   instrncted   to   prepare   the 
plans    along    the    line    providing    ulti- 
mately  for  the   $25,000,000  plant,   which 
plans    your   committee    obtained    a   copy 
of   with    the    privll'^pe    of    showing    the 
same    to   the   whole   committee;   that   to 
prenare  all  plans  to  ultimately  enlarge 
the    plant    to    the    capacity    ordered,    re- 
quired a  rearrangement  of  the  location 
of  the  various  buildings,  and  since  that 
time    he  has   been    bu'sy   developing   the 
plans    and    specifications,    according   to 
the    lines    of    the      Instructions      herein 
specified.      In   answer   to   the      question 
as  to   what  progress  would  bo  made  In 
the    cons^tructirin     of    the        new    plant, 
Hoxie  stated,   "I  think  that  work  could 
be  done  this  jear  to  the  extent  of  $1.- 
OOO.OOO  If  they  would  give  me  the  work 
to    do   and    let    me   go    ahead:    the   plant 
would    be  practically   completed    in    two 
years,    our    gravel    and    sand    will     be 
right    at    hand    and    our    railroads    will 
be    ready    before    construction    is    com- 
plete."     In    answer    to    the    question    If 
the  advlsorv   committf^e  and   Mr.   Corey 
had    approved    the    plans    for    the    $10,- 
000.000   unit   which   had  been  shown   us, 
Mr.    Hoxie      answered,      ".ves      sir,    Mr. 
Corey    told    me    to      proceed    with      the 
plans,  that  is  the  first  and  second  unit.'' 
This    unit    is    described    in    the    evidence 
of  Mr.  H'^'Xle,  v.liich  i.s  htreto  attached. 

Can  BcflTln   tn  May. 

"We  iiiterrogated  Mr.  Hoxle  as  to  his 
qualifications.  His  statement  was  that 
he  had  bten  connected  with  this  class 
of  business  for  fourteen  years  and  had 
been  with  several  Independent  corpor- 
ations before  becoming  connected  with 
the  Steel  corporation.  He  answered 
your  committees  questions  in  a  can- 
did manner,  and  from  his  statements  we 
learned  that  his  department  will  have 
the  plans  ready  so  building  can  com- 
mence the  first  of  May  next:  that  It 
was  the  piirpose  of  the  corporation  to 
have  the  plant  completed  by  the  be- 
ginning of  the  year  1911:  that  when 
finally  constructed  that  it  would  be 
of  more  up  to  date  construction  and 
would  be  constructed  faster  than  any 
other  plant  of  like  capacity,  as  the 
railroad  facilities  and   sand  and  gravel 


Roman  Catholic  church  of  the  Most 
Precious  Blood,  In  Hyde  Park,  accord- 
ing to  the  announcement  by  the  ac- 
tress' manager. 

Several  church  dispensations  were 
necessarj',  as  Mr.  Colt  is  not  a  Catholic, 
his  bride  is  a  resident  of  another  dio- 
cese, and  it  is  not  the  custom  of  the 
church   to  marry  In  Lent. 


the 


ORRINE 

Cfclioil!  HABIT 


CI'Kk    Eri-T:CTE1>    or    MOXEY 
ItEFTNDEI). 

The  ORRINE  treatment  for  the 
cure  of  the  Drink  Habit  can  be  used 
with  absolute  contidence.  It  de- 
stroys all  desire  for  whisky,  beer  or 
other  alcoholic  stimulants.  Thou- 
sand.s  have  successfully  used  it  and 
havf  been  re.stored  to  lives  of  so- 
briety   and    usefulness. 

Can  Be  Given  Secretly. 

ORRIXE  COST.S  OXLY  $1  A  BOX. 

Guarantee  in  f^ach  Bo.t. 

M'rite  for  Free  ORRINK  Booklet 
(niail'd  in  plain  sealed  envelope)  to 

ORRINK  CO..  ORRINE  Building, 

Wasi.ington,   D.  C.     ORRINE  is  sold 


by   lea<ling  druggists  everywhere. 
■■"^^™^"^— Special    Agentaa^^i^^^HMa 

W.  A     ABETT, 
201    \\>st  Superior  St.,  «32  Eawt  Sec- 
ond St.,  and  101  AVent  Fourth  St. 


conditions     would     greatly     hasten 
construction   of   the    building. 

The  Railroad  Situation. 

VV.   A.    McGonagle    was   the   next   wit- 
ness   examined.      After    stating    hla    po- 
sition   and    duties    he    produced    a    map 
a   copy   of    which    will    be    found    hereto 
attaciied,     showing     the     railroad     situ- 
ation  around   Duluth   and   Superior   and 
pointed   out    the   proposed    line   of   rail- 
ways  now   under   consideration,   one    of 
which    is   a   Minnesota   corporation   run- 
nig    from    Adolph    station    on    the    main 
line    of    the     Missabe    road     to    the    St. 
Louis  river  near  New  Duluth  and  other 
a    Wisconsin    corporation   connecting   at 
the  St.   Louis   river  with   the    Minnesota 
railway    and     extending     to     Wlscon.sin 
Point    where    the   corporation   has    three 
miles   of  dockage;    that   when   the   Steel 
corporation    concluded    to    put    up    the 
plant   they   found    it   necessary   to   have 
this    road   for    the    purpose    of    bringing 
the  ore  down   to  the  plant  and  also  for 
the  purpose  of  connecting  with  all    the 
roads    running    into    Duluth   or     Supe- 
rior and   that  these   two  proposed  rail- 
ways,  when   finished,   would   make  such 
connections;     that     the     cost     of     these 
railways,      Including    the      bridge    that 
connects  them  at  St.   Louis  river,  would 
be    $2,500,000,    the    bridge    alone   costing 
$500,000.      Further  details  of  other  con- 
nections    of     these     railroads     will     be 
found  In   his  evidence  as  well  as  other 
reasons    why     these    railroads     w«re    a 
necessity.       He    also    detailed    to     your 
committee    the    difficulty    and    expense 
of    construction    caused    hy    topograph- 
ical conditions,  the  surface  of  the  land 
between    Adolph    station    and    the    loca- 
tion of  the  new  plant  being  very  rough 
and    much    of    it    being    of    solid    rock; 
that  the  delay  which  might  be  apparent 
about  the  construction  of  the  road  was 
on  account  of  the  necessity  of  securing 
an     act     of     congress     permitting     this 
bridge   to   be  constructed,   and   securing 
the  approval  of  the  bridge  plans  by  the 
war  department;   that  it   is  being  built 
of  the   double-deck,   double-track   com- 
blnatlon     steam     and     electric     railroad 
bridge    construction,    allowing    accom- 
modations   for    pedestrians    and    teams 
as    well    as    for    steam    railroads.      The 
grade    has    been    made    from    I'okegama 
station    to    the    St.    Louis    river,    and    a 
portion    of    the    track    has     been    laid. 
The  Wisconsin  abutment  to  the  bridge 
Is  partially  complete,  and  work  is  now 
going  on,  although  It   will   take  a  year 
to  complete  the  bridge,  as  at  least  nine 
months    is   necessary    in    which   to    fab- 
ricate   the   necessary    steel.      The    main 
span    01    the    bridge    is    to    be    300    feet 
long,   and   a   clear   arm   of   125   feet   on 
each   side   of   the   center   pier,    and   will 
be  50   feet   from   the  water  to   the  base 
of    the    rail:      the    entire    structure,    in- 
cluding   main      span      and    approaches, 
when  completed  will  be,  approximately, 
2,400    feet   long;    that    there    is    already 
running  through   one   part   of  the   land 
the  Fond  du  Lac  branch  of  the  North- 
ern Pacific  railway,   and  a  new  branch 
more    than    two    miles    in     length    has 
been  built  from  this  line  to  where  the 
buildings  aro  to  be  erected;  that  these 
railroad    companies    have    already    ex- 
pended $300,000  In   cash  in  the  railwav 
propositions,   and   that   he   (McGonagle) 
has  authority  to  purchase  such  further 
necessary    rights-of-way    and    terminal 
grounds  as  the  entire   project   may   re- 
«iuiie,   and   that   work   is   now   proceed- 
ing   in    a    systematic    manner    on    both 
railways,    and    that    the    entire    project 
has   been   fully  approved   by  the  execu- 
tive   committee    of    the    United    States 
Steel   corporation. 

Mr.  Cotton's  Statement. 
Thereafter.  Joseph  B.  Cotton  was  ex- 
amined,    and     In     connection     with     his 
examination     it     was    agreed     that     he 
rhould    reduce    to    writing  a   statement 
in   the    form   of  a   letter,    which    should 
be  historical  in  Its  nature,  of  the  work 
done    about    securing    the    real    estate 
for  the  use  of  the  corporation,  both  for 
location  of  the  plant  and  right-of-way 
fr    the    two    connecting    belt    line    rail- 
ways.   Mr.   Cotton   stated   that   the   site 
of     the     plant     consisted     of,     approxi- 
mately.   1,600    acres,    and    that    he    was 
the  party  who  directed  the  negotiations 
for  the  purchase  of  the  same    and  was 
also  familiar   with   all   things  tliat   had 
been  done,  and  which   was,  in  the  near 
future.    Intended   to   be   done  about   the 
construction  of  the  proposed  plant  and 
railways;   that  his  letter  goes  Into  de- 
tail  to  such  an  extent  tiiat  we  believe 
that    the    committee    will    find    it    more 
valuable    to    attach    the    letter    to    this 
report,   and  which   is  done;   that   in  his 
examination    Mr.    Cotton    testified    that 
the>    were   not    only   to   give   to   Minne- 
sota  what    they    had    agreed    to,    but    a 
great    deal    more,    including   the    initial 
plant    and    railway,    an    investment    of 
$12,500,000,   within   two  or  three   vears, 
and    an    ultimate    expenditure    of,    ap- 
proximately,    $25,000,000;     that    if      the 
plant   be   once  located,   no   tonnage  tax 
tax      being    Imposed,    they    would      en- 
deavor,      by       all       fair       means,       to 
break       down         the         so-called     post- 
age    stamp  rate  which  for  many  years 
past  has  been  the  main  barrier  against 
large    manufacturing    Industries    locat- 
ing at  the  head  of  Lake   Superior;   that 
the  Initial  unit  of  the  plant  would  em- 
ploy approximately  4,U00  hands,  result- 
ing  in  a   gain  of    approximately.    15,000 
population,     not     counting     such     other 
labor  and  increase  of  population  which 
would    naturally      follow      by    building 
other    plants,    which    It    is    natural    to 
suppose    would    be   established   In   close 
proximity    to    the    steel    plant,    for    the 
purpose   of   obtaining   part   of   its   prod- 
uct  without   reshlpment   of  freight  ex- 
pense.       In  explanation   of  the  postage 
stamp    rate    your    committee      was    in- 
formed   that    for    a    good    many    years 
past    a    rate    of    75    cents   per    hundred- 
weight has  prevailed  between  Pennsyl- 
vania points  on  Lake  Erie,  Lake  Michi- 
gan    and     Lake     Superior     points,     and 
from    most    points    on    the    Mississippi 
river   to  the   Pacific   coast.     Thus  while 
the    head    of    Lake    Superior    is    several 
hundred  miles  nearer   the   Pacific  coast 
than   any   other   points   east   of  Chicago 
herein    named,    all    the    freiglit   charges 
liave  been  exactly   the  same,   thus  rob- 
bin.g    this   westerly    location    of   the    na- 
tural benefits  it  for  years  has  been  en- 
titled   to.        By    having    this    advantage 
re-established,     we    are     informed     that 
Lake   Superior   points   of   shipment   will 
come    into    their    own,    thus    gaining    a 
large  advaneage  over  a  great  many  lo- 
calities  east  of   the    St.   Croix   and   Mis- 
sissippi   valleys. 

Would   Vnc  Low   Grade   Ores. 
Mr.  Cotton  also  testified  that  by  hav- 
ing  a    system    or   roiling    mills    located 
at    the   head   of   the  Lake  Superior  and 
In    close  proximity    to  millions   of   tons 
of   low   grade   ore,   both   on    the   Mesaba 
and    Cuyuna    ranges    In    Minnesota,    for 
which  ores,  there  had.  In  the  past    been 
no  market,  these  ores  could  be  used  to 
good    advantage  and  at   a   considerable 
profit    both    to    the    holders    of    the    ore 
lands    and    the    Steel    corporation    and 
other   manufacturers.        The   low  grade 
ores    on    the    Cuyuna    range    are,    to    a 
large  extent,  held  in  small  holdings  and 
by    people    residing    in   Minnesota.      Mr. 
Cotton    also    stated    another    particular 
reason  why  the  enactment  of  a  tonnage 
tax    law    at    this    time      would      be    in- 
expedient is,  that  the  Steel  corporation, 
as    well    as    the    people    of    Duluth,    are 
very    anxious    and    desirous    of    having 
the  full  complement  of  mills,  as  well  as 
all  by-product  plants  and  other  plants 
naturally  coming  in  the  wake  of  a  sys- 
tem of  mills   such   as   it   is   Intended  to 
construct,  be  located  on  the  Minnesota 
side  of  the  St.  Louis  river    thus  creat- 
ing   in    Minnesota    an    additional    large 
amount    of    taxable    property    and    such 
advantages  as  the  increased  population 
and   trade   would   naturally    produce 
Visit  to  the  Site. 
After    the    examination    of    the    wit- 
nesses   your      committee     proceeded    to 
New  Duluth,  driving   through   the   1,600 
acres  of  land  purchased  by  the  corpora- 
tion   for   this   site,    and   also   examining 
the   line   of   railway   on    the   Minnesota 
side  and  the  location  of  the  new  bridge  I 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD:  TUESDAY,  MARCH 


Don't  wait  until  moving  or  house- 
cleaning  time  to  purchase  your  Spring 
needs.  This  March  Sale  presents 
inany  saving  opportunities  that  you 
cannot  afford  to  overlook.  The  goods 
offered  are  seasonable  and  trust- 
worthy. You  can  make  your  selection 
now,  pay  a  small  deposit,  and  your 
purchases  will  be  stored  free  until 
such  time  as  you  may  want  them.  We 
mention  here  but  a  few  of  the  many 
great  values. 

Your  Credit  Is  Good 


Your  credit  is  good  during  this  sale. 
Come  in,  make  your  selection  and 
we'll  gladly  arrange  terms  to  suit. 
You  will  find  our  Easy  Payment  plan 
liberal  in  every  way.  It  not  only  calls 
for  the  smallest  down  payment,  but  it 
protects  you  in  case  of  sickness  or  ac- 
cident. This,  coupled  with  the  fact 
that  our  prices  are  lower  than  else- 
where, appeals  to  a  discerning  public. 
Come  in  and  let  us  explain  our  plan 
more  fully. 

Your  Credit  Is  Good 


Kitchen  Cabinets 


Take  advantage  of  the  great  March 

sale   of   Kitchen   Cabinets.     They   are 

the    famous    Michigan    Sanitary    line, 

and  you'll  find  they  have  more  special 

labor-saving  features  and  construction 

is  better  than   any   other  make.     We 

want  you  to  see  this   famous  display 

ai»d  you'll  agree  that  a  Michigan 

Sanitary  Cabinet  will  more  than 

pay    for    itself    in    Ijss    than    a 

year's  time.     March  Sale  price — 


$14.75 


Office  Furniture,  Filing  Devices 


Mr.  Business  Man,  if  you  want  office  furniture,  the  practical  kind, 
you'll  do  well  to  see  our  splendid  assortment.  We  are  exclusive  agents 
for  the  famous  Leopold  desks  and  Globe-Wernicke  filing  devices. 

has   one   drawer.      ^O    Ofi 


Typewriter   Stand — Top   of  solid   oak 
Standards  of  iron.     March  Sale  price. 


Solid  Oak  Roll  Top  Desk — Pedestal  of  drawers  on  one  side,  large 
roomy  cupboard  on  the  other.  Easy  rolling  curtain.  ^^  O  fZtk 
March  Sale  price 9  J.^*UV 

Letter  File — The  Kelly  Special,  complete  with  index — made 


March  Sale  price. 


of  heavy  press  board. 

Moon    Typewriter    Desk — 45    inches    long — made    of 
quartered  oak — golden  finished.     March  Sale  price 

Derby  Sanitary  Roll  Top  Desk 
— (A)  inches  long — made  of  quar- 
tered oak.  Regular  value  $70. 
March  Sale  ^tZ^   7^ 

price ^U^«i  U 

Derby  Sanitary  Roll  Top  Desk 
wood,     golden    finish — has     one 
drawer,  size  of  top  28x42  inches, 
regular     value     $5. 
March  Sale  price. . . 

Wire  Waste  Paper  Basket,  large 
size,  regular  value  45c.  9Qo 
March  Sale  price ^  if  V 


15c 
$21.00 


Parlor  Roclcers 


This  massive  Parlor  Rocker,  exactly  like 
illustration,  frame  of  quartered  oak,  fin- 
ished either  golden  or  early  English.     Note 

the   constructicn   of   the    frame-. 

Scat  and  back  jre  upholstered  in 

genuine   leathe  •.     Seat   is    filled 

with  long,  oil  tempered  springs, 

well  tied,  makiig  a  comfortably 

seat.       Regular     value     of     this- 

rocker  $18.     March  sale  price — 


$14.50 


Arts  and  Crafts  Furniture 


$3.85 


j  Carpets  and  Rugs 

Heavy  Axminster  Carpet — Oriental  and 
floral  designs — can  be  made  into  rugs, 
as  we  have  borders  to  match.  Regular 
value  per  yard  $1.75.  March  ^4  OCf 
Sale  price,  per  yard «^JIL*^t) 

Tapestry  Brussels  Carpet — Handsome 
designs  to  select  from.  Regular  value 
per  yard  $1.00.  March  Sale  £{Q/» 
price,  per  yard 0«F ^ 

Good  Velvet  Carpet — Borders  to  match. 
A  number  of  beautiful  patterns  to  select 
from.  Regular  value  $1.50  a  yd.  QQ^ 
March  Sale  price,  per  yard «f  Q^ 

9x12  Velvet  Rugs— Floral  and  Oriental 
designs.  Regular  value  dfi  Qff 
$25.   March  Sale  price 9-l-0*O9 

Misfit  Rugs — several  different  sizes, 
ranging  from  6x9  feet  to  10.6x20  feet. 
The  lot  includes  Tapestry,  Velvet,  Body 
Brussels  and  Axminjter  Rugs.  They  are 
all  on  sale  at  ONE-FOURTH  less  than 
regular  price. 


Here  are  seme  exceptional  values  in  Arts  &  Crafts  furniture.  Come 
in  early  and  m  ike  your  selection. 

Arts   &    Crafts   Davenport — Loose    cushion    seat    of   genuine    Spanish 
leather.     Back  in  two  sections,  also  of  Spanish  leather.     ti^^Q    CA 

Regular  value  ,S72.     March  Sale  price 9^^^* vU 

Desk  Table — ^^ission   design,  weathered  oak,   has   compartments   for 
stationery.     Regular   value  $17.50.     March   Sale  ^Q   »7/" 

price 9  V*  f  O 

Fumed  Oak  Settee — Loose  cushion  seat  of  genuine  Spanish  leather 
Slat  back.     Regular  value  $35.00.     March  Sale  ttOQ    'Tfij 

price 9^«l«f  9 

Library  Table— Of   solid   oak,   weathered  finish,  shelf  under   top   for 
magazines,  etc.  ^Q    7^ 

March  Sale  price ^0»  i  9 

Fumed    Oak     (^hair  —  Spanish 
leather  seat  and  back.     Regjilar 
value  $10.50. 
March  Sale  price. 

Fumed  Oak  Settee — Arts  and 
Crafts  design,  genuine  Spanish 
leather,  loose  cushion  seat, 
back  upholstered  in  Spanish 
leather — regular  value  $42  00. 
March  Sale  CQ-f     fZii 

price 9dX«9U 


IV.  .IVV  f^  tliCll 

$6.85 


Dressiers  at  Reduced  Prices 


Monarcli  Malleable  Ranges 


The    1909   line    of 
ALLWIN    Carts    is 
the     result     of     five 
years  of  hard  work 
and  experience,  and 
for  carts  that  combine  com- 
fort, convenience,  appearance 
and    stability   with    a   reason- 
able prcie,  we  are  firmly  con- 
vinced the  ALLWIN  cannot 
be  beaten.    Prices:     We  have 
a    cart    at    a    price     to    suit 
every   possible    pur- 
chaser.    The    prices 
range      from     $6.50 
up  to  $20.    The  low- 
priced  carts  are 


There  are  more  good 
reasons  why  you  should 
buy  a  Monarch  Malleable 
Range  in  preference  to 
any  other  make,  and  the 
chief  one  is  that  it  will 
outlast  any  other.  You 
can't  afford  to  ex- 
periment with  an 
unknown  range. 
The  Monarch  has  been 
used  here  for  years. 
We'll  take  your  old  stove 
as  part  payment  on  a 
Monarch.  The  terms  are 
as  low  as  $1  PER  WEEK. 


m  ALLWIN 


March  Sale  of 
Brass  Beds 


$6.50 


and  from  their  own  Inspection  state 
they  are  now  working  on  the  new 
bridge;  that  about  160  acres  has  been 
cleared  for  the  buildings;  that  there 
le  a  large  boarding  camp  on  the 
grounds;  that  there  Is  evidence  of  the 
borings  being  made  as  stated  In  the 
testimony  of  Mr.  Hoxle;  that  from  the 
location  of  the  new  railways  and  the 
line  of  the  Northern  Pacific  railway 
now  running  through  the  grounds  to 
the  proposed  site  of  the  buildings  and 
the  extent  of  the  land  acquired  by  the 
corporation,  your  committee  Is  of  the 
opinion  that  the  corporation  Is  In  the 
position  to  carry  out  the  improvements 
as  represented  and  that  It  has  accom- 
plished what  It  claims  to  have  done  up 
to  this  time,  and  considering  the  matter 
of  acquiring  the  title,  getting  acts 
through  congress,  getting  the  approval 
of  the  war  department  to  bridge  plans, 
complying  with  the  various  require- 
ments of  the  state  of  Wisconsin,  that 
the  corporation  has  been  diligent  In  at- 
tempting to  comply  with  Its  agreement, 
and  that  from  all  we  saw  and  heard  li 
Is  the  unanimous  opinion  of  this  com- 
mittee that  the  corporation  Is  acting  In 
good  faith  and  the  plant  that  It  pro- 
poses to  erect  within  the  next  two 
years  will  be  at  least  double  the  size 
of  the  plant  that  It  agreed  to  erect, 
that  the  amount  of  money  it  will  spend 


$:)7.50  Quartered  Oak 
E'resser — Large  size,  bevel 
Trench  plate  mirror. 
^:arch  Sale  <g^O  CA 
price ^TtMm9" 

$'H.75       Quartered       Oak 

Chiffonier  to  match  above 
dresser,  five  large 
roomy  drawers.  French 
plate    mirror.      March 

price $0].*UU 

$i6.50  Quartered  Oak 
Dresser  —  Large  siiic. 
French      plate      mirr^-r 

'pr"e^'.^.'^  $41.00 


Dining  Ctiairs 


Extra  Heavy  Brass  Bed— Polish  finish,  thirteen  fillers  in  head  and 
foot  piece — large  continuous  posts — regular  value  ^^Q  fZ£\ 
$67.50.     March  Sale  price 94«F •  vU 

Continuous  Post  Brass  Bed— Beautiful  design,  hand-  ^^Q  AA 
some  finish,  regular  value  $66.50.  March  Sale  price V»0«UU 

Brass  Bed — Heavy  two-inch  posts,  head  and  foot  pieces  well  filled. 
Regular  $35.00  value.     March  Sale  S9^   00 

Continuous  Post  Brass  Bed — Has  nine  heavy  fillers  in  head  and- 
foot   pieces— Regular   $63.00   value.      March    Sale  ^^'^   O/v 


We  write  all  kinds  of 

AUTOMOBILE  AND 
LAUNCH  INSURANCE 

FIret    Accident    and    Liability    Innur- 
ance  ot  every  kind.  See  u«  for  rates. 


Ej^im 


msss 

^    LOANS 
INSURANCE. 


Main    Floor,    Palladio. 


will  be  about  two  and  one-half  times 
the  amount  It  had  agreed  to  expend, 
and  that,  as  soon  as  the  market  justl- 
mn-  }K  *"^  corporation  Intend*  to  put  a 
120.000,000  plant  Into  operation  ana 
that  such  a  plant  would  employ  at 
A.?-^L^^'^^^  "*€"  and  add  from  30.000  to 
40,000  to  the  population;  that  this 
would  mean  the  building  of  manv 
J^ouses  and  improvements  such  as  store 
buildings  and  all  those  other  things 
that  go  to  accommodate  an  Increase  of 
population  to  that  extent. 
_  Your  sub-committee  ascertained  that 
the  total  expenditure  made  by  the 
Steel  Corporation  pertaining  to  the  pur- 
chase of  a  site,  making  plans,  obtain- 
ing right-of-way.  building  bridge  and 
railroads,  etc.,  is  approximately  11,300,- 
000.  and.  as  shown  by  the  testlmonv, 
the  engineers  have  authority  to  pro- 
ceed with  the  construction  of  the  plans 
as  fast  as  possible. 

L.  H.  JOHNSON,  Chairman, 

HENRY  HINES, 

G.  A.  MacKENZIE. 

CHESTEK  A.   CONGDON, 

J.  F.   SELB. 

C.  M.    BENDIXEN. 

D.  A.   STUART. 

Committee. 

GLASS  FARMING. 

Great  Success  in   Raising  Lettuce 
Gives  Hint  to  Duluth. 

To  the  Editor  of  The  Herald: 

On  Sept.  14  last  you  published  a  short 
letter  from  me  devoted  to  the  consider- 
ation of  glass  farming,  as  exemplified 
In  greenhouse  construction  and  opera- 
tion at  Grand   Rapids,  Mich. 

At  that  time  these  people  were  se- 
curing from  300  to  BOO  dozen  cucum- 
bers per  day,  which  produced  a  very 
handsome  and  satisfactory  return  for 
their  labor  and  Investment.  They  now 
have  under  glass,  nearly  ready  to  cut. 
about  two  acres  of  lettuce,  containing 
In  the  aggregate  many  tons.  The  cur- 
rent price  of  lettuce  is  |280  per  ton.  so 
that  It  would  appear  as  If  there  might 


be  enough  in   this  one  crop  to  cover  a 
large  Investment. 

It  seems  to  me  that  this  success 
ought  to  induce  some  of  our  local  peo- 
ple to  enlarge  their  operations.  Why 
should  Duluth  go  elsewhere  for  her 
lettuce?  She  ought  to  produce  at  great 
profit  to  her  gardeners,  not  only  all 
that  can  be  marketed  here,  but  enough 
to  supply  many  surrounding  towns 
and  cities.  If  the  bill,  now  well  along 
toward  passage  by  the  legislature,  to 
authorize  the  street  railway  companies 
of  cities  to  connect  with,  receive  from 
and  deliver  to  suburban  lines  both 
passengers  and  freight,  becomes  a  law, 
it  seems  likely  that  some  electric  rail- 
way construction  will  be  made  reach- 
ing back  from  the  lake  into  some  por- 
tion of  the  country  around  Duluth.  It 
this  expectation  is  realized,  a  means  of 
transportation  will  be  found  for  coun- 
try produce  of  all  kinds  into  Duluth. 
and  for  the  transformation  of  manures, 
fertilizers  and  other  merchandise  re- 
quired by  the  farmer  and  the  gardener. 


Epileptic  Fits  of 
Cliildren 

Epilpp.«y  or  Fits  in  children  i.^  even 
of  greater  frequence  than  in  older  peo- 
ple. In  their  active  and  restless  life 
an  attack  is  liable  to  come  at  a  fatal 
moment,  and  the  sunshine  of  home 
will  be  crushed  out  of  existence.  At 
the  first  sign  of  nervous  twitching  or 
trembling,  which  is  a  warning  of  the 
disease,    Koslne   should    be   u.sed. 

Deposit  $1.50  with  W.  A.  Abbett  and 
get  a  bottle  of  Koslne.  If  after  using 
same  you  are  not  satisfied  with  the 
result.s,  he  will  return  your  money 
without  question.  Price  $1.50.  Mail 
orders  filled.  The  Kosine  Co.,  Wash- 
ington. D.  C,  or  W.  A.  Abbett,  201 
West  Superior  street.  101  West  Fourth 
street,  and  932  East  Second  street. 


This  ought  to  give  a  great  Impetus  to 
all  kinds  of  producing  activity,  and  not 
only  be  of  great  benefit  to  the  city,  in 
enabling  it  to  procure  its  supplies  in 
a  fresh  and  attractive  condition,  but  It 
ought  to  make  the  growing  of  these 
supplies  a  business  of  great  and  cer- 
tain profit.  One  cause  retarding  mar- 
ket gardening  has  be«  n  the  long  climb 
Inquired  to  reach  the  best  locatlon.s 
for  market  gardens  ar  d  truck  farming. 
When  the  time  arri\es  that  we  can 
avail  ourselves  of  electricity  and  steam 
rails,  instead  of  depending  upon  horses 
and  highway,  the  hill  difficulty  will 
vanish. 

I  cite  the  example  of  lettuce  grow- 
ing above  mentioned  to  show  what 
great  and  sure  rewards  await  tiie  intel- 
ligent prosecution  of  vork  of  this  kind, 
besides  giving  congenial  employment 
to  many  people,  and  stimulating  th? 
gardening    and   agricultural    interest. 

O.  H.  SIMONDS. 

Duluth.  March   15. 


SONS  SENT  TO 
STATE  SCHOOL 

Eveleth  Woman  Loses  in 

Hard  Fight  Against 

Povcriy. 

After  fighting  for  many  weeks 
against  poverty  in  a  vain  attempt  to 
keep  her  children  witi  her,  Mrs.  Bar- 
bara Ripple  of  Evel<  th  has  at  last 
been  compelled  to  call  upon  the  state 
for  aid,  and  today  an  officer  of  the 
Humane  society  took  i.hree  young  boys 


of   the    family   to   the   state   school   at 
Owatonna. 

The  woman  has  had  fifteen  chil- 
dren, but  five  of  them  are  dead,  l»-av- 
ing  her  with  six  sons  and  four  daugh- 
ters. The  father  deserted  the  family 
some  time  ago,  and  Mrs.  Ripple  was 
left  to  get  along  as  best  she  could. 
The  struggle  has  been  a  hard  one,  but 
with  th«  assistance  of  her  oldest  son 
she  was?  able  to  get  along  until  re- 
cently, when  the  boy  lost  his  position, 
and  could  earn  no  more  money. 


At    Temple 
noon. 


Music. 

Rink     Wednesday 


after- 


To   Re«tralu  (ily  of  Ada. 

Ada.  Minn..  March  16. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  suit  was  commenced 
in  the  district  court  here  by  C.  J.  Ska- 
r\id  and  others  to  restrain  the  city  of 
Ada  from  maintaining  the  present  out- 
let for  the  sewer.  The  case  will  be 
tried  at  the  next  terra  of  court  here. 


HOW  A  BUSINESS  MAN 

KEEPS  IN  GOOD  HEALTH. 


A  friend  commenting  on  the  healthy 
looks  of  a  man  who  handles  a  large 
amount  of  business,  a.sked  him  how 
he  .stood  the  strain  ."^o  well.  "It's  a 
simple  matter  with  me,"  he  replied. 
"I  keep  fairly  good  hours,  eat  about 
what  I  like,  and  make  a  practice  of 
taking  one  or  two  Beecham's  Pilla 
generally  before  I  retire.  I  certainly 
owe  my  good  health,  in  a  large  part, 
to  Beecham's  Pills  They  keep  the 
stomach  and  bowels  in  order,  and 
have  a  good  effect  on  the  liver  and 
kidneys.  I  had  been  troubled  a  bit 
with  insomnia,  but  Beecham's  Pills 
make  me  sleep,  and  so  long  as  a  man 
sleeps  and  eats  well  he's  all  right. 

Ask  your  druggists  for  Beecham's 
Pills.        10c  and   25c  a   box. 


r .... 

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8 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,    MARCH 


1909. 


oi™ 


BIG  STRIPPING 
AT  G^D  MINE 

Five  Million  Yards  of 

Over  Burden  to  be 

Removed. 

-(Special    to 


to 


Buhl.    Minn..    March     1«. 
The    Herald.)— The    Grant    mine    Is    go- 
ing   t..    be    stripped,    wt>rk    on    which 
g.»inK  to  commence 
ler    Brother.")   have   the   contract 
calls   for   .-..000.000_yar.ls   of  overburden 
to    he    removed. 


is 

about  April  1.   »ut- 

wlilch 


They    expect 


com- 


neatest    and   most  up 
and    light    pUint    of    any 
Btate   for   its  population 

T     P.    t'arey.    tlie 
tiolpates  a  g 
of    Bull!. 

S%san    !> 


village 


•  v     I..C-    hardware    "^a"- ,i^": 
ood  summer  for  the  village 

hotel 


Olson    has    rented  his 
and    s„h..>n    to_J.d.n^O.>hem-._Who    .111 


.<everal 


his    l>..l<linss    and    "vv  ill    nio\e    lo 
and   enter   husint-ss    liero. 


years     In 
d 
Buhl 


and 


the    week-end 


lIlRIHNGJN^HKiEF. 

National  Hotel  Improvements 
Other  Late  Happening. 

Hibblng.  Minn..  March  16.-( Special 
to  The  Herald.)-E.  B.  Abbott  spent 
Bunday  in  Duluth. 

W.    H     Uoberts     spent 
In    I>uUith.    on    business. 

The  alterations  on  the  National   Ho- 

*"^-|^^lim  ^mi/^fhas  opened  an  elec- 

*'S^'  ^^r^tiT^R^Baily  have  been 
vi^tin«  n  I'u  uth  the  past  few  days^ 
'ah  l!^>..nze  who  has  been  touring 
t.^South    f..r   tW  past    hve  weeK.    ha. 

t^^^ri^?he^^M^.-5i'p?as  ;t  New  Or.^^^^^^^^ 

L   \V.  Browne,    the    broker,    has  taken 

«p  his  suite  of  otnces  In  the  new  bank 

*"Mr' and  Mrs.  J.  W.  Hinckney  have  re- 
tuJnVd  Vrom  a  "visit  with  frie.tds  )n 
Duluth. 


everything  possible  to  make  <Ve  ^^'f^" 
jrratn  to  be  given  under  the  direction 
of  Fatlier  Floyd  of  St.  Patricks  church 
a  success. 

VIRGINIAN  GOES 
TO  FRUIT  FARM 

Aid.  Laviolette  to  Inspect 

Washington  Property; 

Other  Notes. 

Virginia,  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Alderman  James  La- 
violette has  departed  for  North  Yaki- 
ma Wasli..  near  which  place  he  owns  a 
fine  fruit  farm.  He  expects  to  be 
absent  about  a  month,  and  may  pos- 
sihlv  decide  to  remain  there  during 
"tiio  "summer.  He  was  accompanied  1)> 
his  steps"  n^;-  Lionel  Booth,  of  Hibbii.g. 
Mr'5  Laviolette  accompanied  them  as 
far  as  Duluth,  returning  last  evening. 
During  the  amsence  of  Mr.  Lavioletto 
Ijis  laundrv  will  bo  In  charge  of  J.  C. 
Cro/.ier.    the   bookkeeper. 

Rev  William  Greve  came  over  from 
Hibbing  Sunday  and  in  the  afternoon 
held  Oei-man  I.,utheran  services  at  tlio 
Swedish  Lutlieran  church.  Maiiy  peo- 
ple were  present  to  hear  the  able  ad- 
dress   given    by    Rev.    Greve. 

Tlie  ladies  of  the  Norwegian  M.  E. 
church  gave  a  supper  In  the  parlors 
of  the  English  M.  E.  church  Saturday 
evening  whicli  was  largely  attended, 
and  proved  a  decided  success,  flnan- 
tially    and    otiierwise. 

Mr  and  Mrs.  D.  E.  Cuppernull  and 
daughter  .lane,  have  returned  from  a 
two  weeks'  visit  in  Wisconsin,  Illinois 
and    Indiana.  ^       ,_     ,, 

The  Stiidv  club  will  meet  with  Mrs. 
Lafavette  Bliss  next  Friday  afternoon. 
The  roll-call  will  be  current  events. 
Papers  on  Gen.  U  .'^.  Grant  will  be  read 
bv  Mrs  W.  n.  Wasson  and  Mrs.  <).  P. 
.Johnson.  Mrs.  W.  E.  Hannaford  will 
read  a  paper  on  'Voral   Ki>ruiation." 

GILBERT  COUNCIL 
TAKES  NO  ACTION 


.„  The  Herald.) — The  basket  ball  sea- 
son will  end  here  next  Saturday  night 
with  two  games.  The  girls"  team  ol 
tlie  high  scliool  will  take  on  the  Clils- 
liolm  girls"  team,  wliile  the  boys'  team 
will   play  Virginia. 

LONG,  PAINFJ  L  JOIRNEY. 

Sawmill  Man  Injured  at  Bear  River 
Has  \  epy  Tough  Experience. 

Hibbing.  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
lo  The  Herald.)— Biding  forty  miles 
with  one  of  his  arms  so  badly  mangled 
that  amputation  was  necessary,  L.  K. 
Snyder,  who  operates  a  sawmill  at  Bear 
Biver,  was  brought  to  the  Bood  hospital 
last  night  after  the  harrowing  ex- 
perience of  tlie  long  and  painiul  jour- 
nev.  Mr.  Snvders  arm  was  caught 
in 'the  machinery  at  his  mill,  and  as 
soon  as  it  was  bound  up,  he  was  hur- 
ried here,  there  being  no  physician  at 
Bear  River.  The  arm  was  taken  off 
below  the  elbow  last  niglit,  and  it  is 
expected  he  will  survive,  althougli  ho 
was  pretty  weak  from  the  painful  jour- 
ney when  he  arrived  here  and  the  shock 
of   the   operation. 

Miss  Rebecca  Snyder,  who  Is  at- 
tending tlie  Duluth  normal,  was  sum- 
moned here  to  be  witli  tiie  unfortu- 
nate man  during  tlie  first  few  days  in 
the   hospital. 

TWO  HARBORS  RKSULTS 

PROMISES  TO  BE  (XOSE. 

Two  Harbors,  Minn.,  March  16. — 
(Special  to  Tlie  HeraUl.)— This  is  elec- 
tion day  and  the  candidates  and  their 
friends  are  not  overlooking  anything 
tending  to  Induce  the  festive  voter  to 
visit  the  pulls  and  do  the  pnVor  thing. 
With  th>ee  tickets  in  the  Reld  and 
each  iovallv  supported  the  Indications 
for  a  big  vote  either  way  are  not  ap - 
t.arent    at    noun. 

While  the  Socialists  make  great 
claims  for  their  ticket,  tlie  Pul>lic  Own- 
ersliip  there  are  many  wlio  tiiink  dif- 
ferently. A  large  vote  is  being  polled. 
The  weather  Is  clear  and  cold  with  in- 
dications that  the  large  registered  vote 
will   nearly  all   be  cast. 


: 


"'The".sub-postoffice  station,  located  in 
the  Palace  Hotel  drug  store,  commenced 
busini-"  K>day  with  Ephraim  La  VoHe 
In    charge.      The    convenience    was    en- 

I'^ved  /-- .^5^,^|-^„e  Duluth  con- 
tractor: was  in  town  today  on  business. 


HE  SPIRNS  LION  TRAPS 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


Applications  for  Electric 

Lighting  Franchise  Put 

on  Table. 


BIV  HIBBjNi«_THEATER. 

Two  Young  (ipeeks  Aequire  Proper- 
ty Known  as  Orpheum. 

Virginia.  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  lower  floor  of 
the  Whiting  building  on  Central  ave- 
nue, occupied  by  the  Orpheum  theater, 
has   been   leased  to  two   young  Greeks, 


Candy 
ssion 
They 


connected  with  the  Minnesota 
Kitchen  and  they  will  take  possession 
about  ti.e  ir>th  of  next 
will  continue  to  operate  it  as  a  theater 
Ti  d  wi  put  on  moving  pictures  and 
vLudeville^  acts  the  same  as  hereto- 
fure. 

CHISHOLM  PROPERTY 

SELLS  PRETTY  HIiiH. 

Chlsholm.  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
to  "The  Hoiald.*— Mrs.  Mallough  has 
d^.Do^ed  of  her  lot  on  Lake  street  to 
M.  R  PeaVce  of  Nashwauk.  Minn.,  and 
H  P  Heed  of  Hibbing,  Minn.  The 
consideration   was   $3.;)t)0. 

The  Ledoux  building  in  the  rear  ot 
th-  First  National  bank  being  con- 
«trncte.l  tor  the  post  office  Is  getting 
I  ong  rapi.m-:  the'^walls  are  all  up  and 
tbev  are  putting  on  the  roof.  Mr. 
&uf  exKs  to  have  this  building 
ready     for    occupancy        In    about    two 

^T^he'  Methodist  church  congregation 
has  alr.ady  begun  plans  for  .special 
Faster  services.  It  Is  thought  that  the 
choir  will  render  a  cantata  in  the  even- 
ing a-.d  the  Sunday  schoo  will  gUe 
an  Easter  concert  on  Monday  nlglit 
following    Easter    Sunday. 

BREWERY  COMPANY  H.\S 

BOLfiHT  YIROIMA  LOTS. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  March  16.— ("Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  Fitger  Bre^-lng 
company  has  purchased  of  Bred  Engle 
his  lot  and  buiUllng  on  Chestnut  street 
for  a  consideration  of  |o,5»t).  ine  lot 
1«  25  bv  120  and  adjoins  the  tluee 
lots  owned  by  this  company.  The 
companv  has  been  seeking  ihis  prop- 
erty for  some  time  and  the  consumma- 
tion of  tlie  deal  is  taken  as  an  assur- 
ance that  the  brewing  company  wll 
begin  the  erection  of  some  kind 
bu«  noss   block   upon   this  corner. 


Gilbert.  Minn..  Marcli  16. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — At  the  council  moot- 
ing last  night  the  electri^fc.fr&BoJii'?'? 
iiuestlon  was  again  brougl't  up  and 
discussed. 

Harold  Griggs  and  H.  C.  Kennedy, 
of  the  Virginia  l>iglit  and  Water  com- 
panv, were  present  and  argued  their 
side'  of  the  franchise  matter.  After 
considerable  discussion,  the  francliise 
applications  were  tabled  until  the  next 
meeting     two    weeks    hence. 

As  tiiat  meeting  will  be  the  last  for 
the  present  council,  it  appears  that  no 
franchise  will  be  given  by  them,  and 
tliat  they  will  leave  the  matter  in  the 
hands   of   the   next    council. 

TWO  HARBORS  COUNCIL. 

President  Evans  Resigns,WiU  Prob- 
r.bly  Soon  be  Back. 

Two  Harbors,  Minn..  March  16. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — President  F. 
E.  Evans  of  the  city  council  tendered 
his  resignation  last  niglit.  It  was  ac- 
cepted, but  as  he  is  a  candidate  In  to- 
day's election  for  alderman-at-large, 
and  It  s  expected  he  will  be  elected,  he 
will  probably  again  be  chosen  presi- 
dent. John  Dwan  was  given  permis- 
sion to  move  a  building  from  Its  pres- 
ent location  to  Popular  street  and  hec- 
ond  avenue.  G.  W.  White  owns  the 
propertv  to  be  vacated  and  It  is  ex- 
pected he  will  erect  a  two-story  mod- 
ern building  thereon,  with  two  stores 
on    the    first    floor    and    offices    above. 


museum.  In  his  outfit,  which  Is  som 
what  similar  to  Roosevelt's,  are  sever- 
al lion  traps.  Mr.  Roosevelt  is  taking 
none  of  these,  relying  upon  his  rifle 
for  suitable  specimens  ot  these  ani- 
mals. 

Ex- President  Roosevelt  today  re- 
mained at  Sagamore  Hill  preparing  a 
number  of  articles  wliich  will  appear 
under  his  name  after  he  departs  on  the 
hunting  expedition  next  Tuesday.  In 
this  series  of  articles  he  will  treat  of 
a  number  of  iiviesiions  of  national  im- 
portance. Large  (luantitios  of  letters 
continue  to  come  to  the  ex-presldent  to 
whicli  he  is  unable  to  reply  because  of 
tlie  pressure  of  other  matters.  Tomor. 
row  night  Roosevelt  will  attend  the 
regular  meeting  of  the  Matinecock 
lodge   of  Masons. 

In  recognition  of  the  splendid  .show- 
ing made  at  Waslilngton  In  tlie  inau- 
guration by  the  Republican  delegation 
from  Nassau  county,  in  which  Oyster 
Bay  Is  situated.  Roosevelt  has  in- 
vited those  who  went  to  Washington  to 
come  to  .Sagamore  Hill  on  Thursday 
afternoon,  when  he  will  entertain  at 
an  informal  reception.  The  delegation 
which  numbered  2.50.  and  was  desig- 
nated at  tlie  Inauguration  as  -Tlieo- 
-.^.,-  i;.,.,.sevelt's  nelghh.,rs'"  paraded  at 
Wa.-hington,  each  wearing  a  silk  hat 
and  cravenette  rain  coat,  and  carrying 
an  uml)rella.  Tliey  will  come  to  Oys- 
ter Bay  from  tiieir  home  towns  dressed 
as  on  inauguration  day  an<l,  headed  by 
the  band  which  accompanied  them  in 
Washington,  will  parade  up  to  Saga- 
more   Hill. 

TARIFF  BILL  OYER  A  DAY 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


AMERIOVN  PRINONG  Gtt 
WASHFABKIGS 

The  best  material  for  ladies'  dresses  and  waists,  children's  school 
dresses,  negligees,  aprons  and  all  other  uses  where  an  economical,  pretty 
and  reliable  cotton  wash  fabric  is  essential.  Ask  to  see  the  new  Foulard 
Silk  Suiting  Styles,  and  the  new  Pongee  Silk  Suiting  Styles,  also  the  staple 
designs  in  great  variety.  (5) 

"The  Wash  Fabric  that  is  Washable'* 

Continuation  of  the 

Great  Wash  Fabric  Sale ! 

This  is  a  sale  worth  your  time,  your  attention,  consideration 
and  attendance.  The  crowds  tell.  Sales  count.  The  thous- 
ands of  bundles  that  have  passed  through  our  doors  during  tho 
past  two  days  gives  eloquent  evidence  that  this  is  a  sale  worth 
w^hile.  Two  days  are  past,  two  days  of  bustle  and  activity,  of 
steady  shipping— and  only  four  are  left.  Don't  be  a  laggard  and 
wait  until  the  end.  Come  now,  while  the  assortment  is  unbroken 
(l»)   _the  choicest  patterns  always  go  first  you  know  I 


(13) 


THESE  FABRICS 

Will  be  displayed  on  Wash 
Goods  counter,  Dress  Goods 
counter  and  Flannel  counter. 
Price  of  all 

7c  Yard 


Fashion  Sheets  for  1909 

The  new  Fashion  Sheets — 
printed  in  colors,  and  portray- 
ing these  fabrics  made  up  in 
fashionable  dresses  and  suits  of 
tlie  Coining  season,  will  be  given 
free  with  every  purchase. 


Made  Up  Models  on  Display 

Figures,  dressed  in  n- ade  tip 
models  will  be  shown  t)Oth  in 
..ur  windows  and  in  the  depart- 
ment. These  models  will  give 
.T  good  idea  of  the  posjibilities 
')[  make  up. 


THESE  FABRICS 

Will  be  displayed  on  Wash 
Goods  counter,  Dress  Goods 
counter  and  Flannel  counter. 
Price    of   all. 

7c  Yard 


SHIRTING  PRINTS 


8o<>n 
of   a 


SniOOl  DIRECTORS  TO 

OlUiAMZE  ON  SATURDAY. 

Vir£;inia,  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
to  Tlu-  Herald.) — Tlie  board  of  direc- 
tors chosen  la.^t  Saturday  for  the. new- 
Independent  .school  district  will  meet 
next  .Saturday  for  organization,  at 
which  time  a  president,  clerk  ana 
trea.^^uri^r    will    be   elected. 

FIFTEEN  PUPILS  .4TTE\D 

NKiHT  SCHOOL  OPENING. 

Eveleth  Minn.,  March  IS. — (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.)— The  night  school  was 
opened  last  night  at  the  Fayal  school 
building  under  the  direction  of  .lohn 
Shoemaker,  assisted  by  Ml.ss  Esther 
McFadden.  About  fifteen  pupils  pre- 
B^^ntf-d  thf^mselves,  and  classes  were 
Blarto.l  in  reading,  grammar,  history, 
English  and  mathematics. 

The  students  In  the  high  -school  are 
taking  state  examinations  this  week 
In  solid  geometry,  higher  algebra  and 
other   subjects. 

Th.-  t'rescent  Literary  society  enter- 
tainm-nt  will  be  given  next  Friday. 
having  been  postponed  from  last  1'  n- 
day.  ^         

EXPECT  LARGE  AUDIENCE 

's  Celebration  of 


MRS.  BECKEH  AT  REST. 

Many  Pay  Tribute  to  ^^  ell-Known 
Two  Harbors  Resident. 

Two  Harbors,  Minn..  March  16. — • 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  funeral 
of  Mrs.  Kate  Beckett  was  held  yester- 
day afternoon  with  brief  services  at 
her  residence,  and  the  remains  were 
then  taken  to  the  M.  E.  church,  where 
services  were  conducted  by  the  pastor. 
Rev.  W.  Edward  J.  Gratz.  who  took  his 
text    from    Psalm    .'59:4. 

^Several  selections  were  given  by  the 
quartet.  Mrs.  W.  N.  Moulton,  Mrs.  J 
Dorsey  and  Messrs.  J.  E.  Cliandler  and 
Blood  Willi  J.  W.  Woodfield  as  organ- 
ist Mrs.  .T.  Dorsey  rendered  one  of  tlie 
deceased  favorite  solos  "Face  to  Face." 
The  church  was  filled  to  its  capacity 
with  friends.  The  floral  tributes  were 
manv  and  beautiful.  The  pallbearers 
were"  pioneers  of  tliis  city,  namely: 
Messrs.  John  Shea,  S.  A.  Burke,  W .  N. 
Moulton.  H.  K.  Glllen,  E.  H.  Schreiner, 
and  Dr.  J.  .S.  Budd.  The  flower  bearers 
were  Messrs.  1*  W.  Fowler  and  Alex 
Malcolm.  ,      ^,,^ 

.^11  of  the  deceased  children  were 
present  at  the  funeral.  Hugh  M. 
Beckett,  Mrs.  F.  A.  Maxwell  of  Leth- 
brldge,  Alberta.  Can.,  Mrs.  H.  K. 
Brouthers  of  Minneapolis,  Charles  J. 
and  Alex  G.  Beckett  of  Superior  and 
Miss  Catherine  Marie.  At  the  bedside 
at  the  time  of  the  death  was  her  son, 
Hugh   and    daughter,    Catherine. 

Mrs  Beckett  was  born  at  Glasglow, 
Scotland,  June  24,  1858.  came  to  East- 
port  Me..  In  1876  and  to  this  place  in 
1889.  residing  here  until  her  death.  The 
high  esteem  in  which  she  was  held 
was  demonstrated  by  the  Interest  with 
which  her  fatal  Illness  was  followed, 
the  general  expressions  of  regret  over 
ner  death  and  the  attendance  of  her 
many  friends  at   the  last   rites. 

HIBBING  HIBERNIANS  TO 

HONOR  ST.  PATRICK. 


general  good  fellowship  was  apparent. 
The  drawing  of  seats  was  the  first 
business  to  be  transacted  and  this  pro- 
ceeding, although  rather  monotonous  to 
spectators,  commanded  the  intense  in- 
terest  of   the   members. 

Speaker  Cannon  and  Champ  Clark, 
the  minority  leader  of  the  house  swap- 
ped tart  remarks  about  each  other  at 
the  White  House  today.  The  speaker 
culled  upon  President  Taft  early  in  the 
morning  and  when  he  was  leaving  th». 
executive  office  made  this  answer  to 
a  question  as  to  the  flglit  in  the  house 
yesterday: 

"The  amendments  to  the  rules  have 
greatly  improved  them.  All  this  stuff 
about  the  speaker  being  a  czar  is  the 
purest  tommyrol.  There  has  never 
been  a  time  when  the  majority  could 
not  control  the  house.  What  they 
wanted  to  do  was  to  make  the  com- 
mittee of  fifteen  czars,  dominated  oy 
Champ  Clark  and  I.a  Follette.  That  Is 
also  tommvrot.     La  F'ollette   is  a  fake 

When  Representative  Cliamp  Clark 
called  on  President  Taft  later  In  the 
morning  and  was  told  what  the  speak- 
er said  he  answered  briefly: 

"Uncle  Joe   has   paresis." 

Clark  would  not  comment  further 
except  to  sav  that  the  amendments  to 
tiie  rules  adopted  yesterday  amount  to 
very  little. 

STATE  TWINE  IS 
IN  GREAT  DEMAND 


On  the  Bargain  Counters 

Several  thousand  varcJs  of  American  Printing  Co.'s 
choice  Shirting  Prints— white  with  black  and  colored 
figures,  dots,  and  stripes,  suitable  for  home  dress(is,  chil- 
dren's wear,  boys'  waists,  shirts,  etc. 

During  This  Sale  ^^ 

Per  Yard 


_  THERE  ARE 

Mercerized  Dress  Ginghams. 

Indigo   Foulards. 

Calcutta  Fancies. 

Mercerized  Plaids  and  Checks. 

Black  and  White  Plain  Checks. 

Black  and  White  Broken  Check 

Effects. 
Blue    Grounds— Striped,   Dotted 

and  Figured.  ,  ™   ■, 

Light  Fancy  Checks  and  Plaids. 
Foulard  Silk  Fabrics. 
Dress  Gingham  Styles. 
American  Shirting  Styles. 
Cardinal     Reds— with     Pin    and 

Polka  Dots. 
And  Innumerable  Others. 


6c 


6c 


mm 

I  THE   DIG 

■glass  5L0CK 
«5TOKE 


WHERIE.' 

QUALITY  IS' 
.PARAMOUNT 


THERE  ARE 

Reds,      Stripes 

Figured 


and 


and 


Cardinal 
Checks. 

Fancy     Checked 
Grays. 

Oxfords   and   Light   Gray    Fan- 
cies. 

Claret  Reds — Checks,  Plaids  and 
Stripes. 

Claret  Reds — Fancy  Figured  Ef- 
fects. 

Black  and  White  Plaids. 

Black   and   White   Checks  with 
White  Dots. 

White  Grounds,  Black  and  Col- 
ored Figures. 

White  Grounds  with  Checks  and 
Plaids. 

And  Innumerable  Others. 


At  Tuesday 

St.  Patrick's  Day  at  Eveleth. 

Eveleth..  Minn..  March  16. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  St.  Patrick's  en- 
tertainment   to    be    given    at   Vail    hall 


he    .. 
will    anract    many    from    present    indi- 
cation-*    Ti>e  demand  for  seats  ha.s  been 
heavy    and    local    Hibernians    are 


doln: 


Hlbbinx  Minn.,  March  16. — (Special 
to  The  H-rald.) — The  Order  of  Hiberni- 
ans, established  here  only  a  few  months 
apo  Is  constantly  gainlnp  in  member- 
slilp  and  the  first  St.  Patrick's  day 
celebration  held  under  its  au.spices  will 
be  given  at  Close's  hall  tomorrow 
night,  when  the  following  program  will 
l>e    rendered:  ,      „  „  -.. 

"The  Wearing  of  the  Green'  ....Chorus 
Address — "Ireland     and     Her     Patron 

Saint"    E.   J.   Kenny 

Recitation — "Mrs.    O'Toole      and      the 

Constable"   Miss  May  Dwyer 

Duet — "Come  Back  to  Erin"    

Miss   Marcella 

Soijg-^"'rite   Kerry    Dance''    .....  .... 

.  .   Miss  A.  Miller 

Step'  dance " Miss    M.    Lavell 

Recitation — "The    Teacher,    the    Hope 

of   America"    George   Cobb 

Song    J-  P-  Murphy 

"KiUarney"     Chorus 

• 

Two    BaHket    Ball    Cinmcii. 
Eveleth,    Minn.,     March     16.  —  (Special 


Orders  Received  by  Pen- 
itentiary Warden  in  Ex- 
cess of  Supply. 

Stillwater,  Minn.,  March  16.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Notwithstanding  thac 
the  state  prison  output  of  binder  twine 
this  .sea.son  will  be  considerably  larger 
than  ever  before,  the  indications  are 
that  the  supply  will  not  meet  the  de- 
mand  of   the   farmers   of   Minnesota. 

Already  Warden  Wolfor  has  received 
orders  for  12,500,000  pounds.  This  is 
far  in  excess  of  the  amount  of  orders 
for  this  -season  of  tlie  year.  Additional 
orders  from  individuals  and  clubs  of 
farmers  are    being   receive<l   dally. 

Existing  conditions  point  to  the  de- 
mand for  the  entire  output  ot  the  sea- 
^n  before  harvest.  The  amount  thac 
m^v  be  made  this  year  will  be  about 
16  000  000  pounds.  Ot  tills  total  tlie 
new  prlson'^factory  will  turn  out  about 
i:  000,000  pounds.  As  the  t^i^'-^ry  at  the 
new  prison  was  not  started  until  half 
of  the  manufacturing  season  was  over 
onlv  about  half  the  capacity  ot  that 
institution   for  the   year   will   be  avall- 

^*Based  on  the  past  experience  Warden 
Wolfer  believes  that  when  the  two 
factories  are  In  full  operation  for  the 
[uU  period  each  year.  It  will  i^rdly  be 
possfl)le  to  meet  the  demands  of  the 
t-armers  of  Minnesota  now.  and  will 
not  meet  the  requirements  of  a  yearly 
growth   In    demanih 

STRICKEN  WITH  PARALYSIS. 

Mrs.  .lames  Davidson  of  Fort  Ripley 
Brought  to  Brainerd. 


AIRSHIP  MAKES 
EARTtUANDlNG 

Count  Zeppelin  Disproves 

Assertion  Machine  Was 

Handicapped. 

Frled-srlchshafen,  .March  16. — Count 
von  Zf-ppelln'-s  new  model  airship,  with 
the  inventor  and  four  other  men.  made 
a  successful  descent  In  a  field  on  the 
shore  of  Lake  Constance  today.  It  has 
been  assorted  that  the  count  oould  not 
land  on  the  grround  without  an 
especially  built  platform,  but  this  has 
now   been  disproved. 

The  alr.ship  came  easily  to  earth  ana 
after  remaining  for  some  time  re- 
a.scended  and  returned  to  the  balloon 
shed   on    the    lake. 

One    of    the    steering      planes 
slightly    damaged    by    contact 
but  it   was  re  paired 


i»n 


was 

with    a 

tree,   but  it   was  i<-p<iii--»    ■'■■   the  spot 

* 


*  Pl.F.DCiKU   TO  BURX 

*  fi.f.ui      ^.j^jAitKTTE  PAPERS 

*  

*  Montgomery.  Ala..  March 
Menhant.s  of  Tow"   Creek.  Ala.,  * 

small   town  on     Hie     Southern  * 
near       l>eeatur.       have  * 


in  the  emplov  of  the  Thief  River  Falls 
Lumber  company,  became  Insane  while 
on  a  trip  to  Wisconsin  with  his  wife 
on  a  visit  in  1905.  He  was  committed 
to  the  state  asylum  at  Oshkosh.  where 
he  remained  for  two  years.  The  state 
hoard  of  control  of  Wisconsin  ascer- 
tained that  Anderson  was  a  resident 
of  Blackdurk  and  took  up  the  matter 
with  the  state  board  of  control  of  Min- 
nesota, with  the  result  that  Andei  .^on 
was  returned  here  and  Dec.  20,  190^ 
Judge  Clark,  recommitted  him  to  tlie 
asylum    at    Fergus    Falls. 

Anderson  Is  survived  by  his  wife, 
who  has  lived  in  Wisconsin  ever  since 
she  went  on  the  trip  with  Anderson,  in 
1905.  at  which   time     Anderson  lost  hJa 

"■^Anderson  is  well  known  1"  Beltrami 
county  and  especially  at  B  ackduck 
and  also  in  the  vicinity  of  Tliief  KUcr 
Falls  He  worked  many  years  tor  tiie 
Tliief  River  Falls  Lumber  company  ana 
had  many  friends.         ^_^___ 

PERSIA  TO  HAVE 
CONSTITUTION 


Shah,  Urged  by  Russia, 

Consents  to  Call 

Convention. 


that  the  writing  on  the  register  of  the 
rooming  hou.se  where  the  murder  oc- 
curred bore  no  resemblani^e  to  that  ot 
Mann. " 

I'ollce  Inspector  Wheeler,  with  whom 
Mann  alleged  he  shot  craps,  was  the 
state's  first  witness.     Wheeler  declared 


that     he     had     never 
game   In  his  life. 


indulged     in     the 


* 
16. —  # 


^  a 

*  railway       -  --  •  ,,  ,  ^ 

*  sljnied  a  peenliar  pledge.  .Ml  have  * 

*  usrecil   to   burn  all  elKarette   pa-   * 

*  iM^rs  on  hunil  in  their  .stores  and  * 

*  not  to  pureliase  any  more.  Tlicy  * 

*  further  aurt>«  to     pro.«seeute     any  * 

*  one    In    tUe   future    who    handles  • 

*  them.     It   is     unlawful     to     sell  * 

*  cigarettes.  ^ 

WENT  ( RAZY  ON  TRIP. 

Blackdiiek  Man,  Who  Lost  Reason 
in  Wisconsin,  Dead  at  Asylum. 

BemldJI.  Minn..  March  16.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— M.  A.  Clark.  Judge  of 
the  probate  court,  has  received  word 
from  the  state  insane  asylum  at 
Fergus  Falls  that  James  Ander.son,  at 
one  time  a  resident  of  Blackduck,  died 
In    the    institution    last    Friday. 

Anderson,    who   was    for   many   years 


K.   Keluhart.        T.   F.   Kelnhart. 

"Odd    Things    Not    to 
Be    Found    Elsewhere." 


Does  not  Color  the  Mair 

AVER'S    l-IAiR    VIGOR 

stops  Falllns  MaIr  An  Elegant  Dresslns 

Oestroys  Dandruff  Makes    Malr    Grow 

Compos*;dof  Sulphur,  Glycerin,  Qulnin.  Sodium  Chiorid,  Capsicum.  Sage.  Alcohol, 
Water,    Perfume.     Ask  your  doctor  his  opinion  of  such  a  hair   preparation. 


Brainerd.  Minn.,  March  16.--(Special 
to  The  Hemld.  )-Mr8.  James  Davidson 
of  Fort  Itipley  was  stricken  ^.wlth 
paralysis  at%er  home  i"  Fort  R.p^ey 
Sunday  shortly  after  noon.  The  as- 
sistance of  neighbors  was  summoned 
and  she  was  brought  to  Brainerd  that 
ni^tht  by  F.  Lewis  and  Mrs.  Thomas, 
and  Is  now  at  the  home  of  her  brother, 
lacob  Whitney,  South  Tenth  screet. 
She  is  in  a  critical  condition,  and 
there  19  said  to  be  little  hope  for  her 
recovery.  ^ 

M«R. JOHN  FARRELLY  TO 
BE  BISHOP  OF  CLEVELAND. 

Rome.  March  16.— The  pope  today 
ratified  the  appointment  of  Mgr.  John 
Farrelly  at  present  spiritual  director 
of  the  American  college  at  Rome,  to 
be  bishop  of  Cleveland,  in  succession 
to  the  late  Bishop  Horstman. 


flrtistic 
jewelry 

Including  some  of  the  .  most 
beautiful  Breast  Pins,  Scarf 
Pins,  Belt  Pins,  Bracelets,  etc., 
are  to  be  found  at 

Rembarrs, 

129    WEST     SUPERIOR    ST. 


.St.  Petersburg,  March  16. — The 
Xovoe  Vremya  publishes  a  dispatch 
from  Teheran  saying  the  shah  of  Per- 
sia has  assented  to  the  urgent  recom- 
mendations of  his  ministers,  s^PPpyJ- 
od  by  the  representation  of  the  Rus- 
sian legation  to  convoke  a  constitu- 
tional fonvention  March  20  to  grant 
a   constitution   to   Persia. 

O'BRIEN  TO  STAY 
AT  TOKIO  POST 

Taft    Will   Retain    the 

Michigan  Man  as 

Ambassadir. 

Washington,  March  16.— Ambassador 
O'Brien,  at  Tokio.  will  remain  at  that 
post  and  Former  Secretary  of  Com- 
merce and  Labor  Oscar  Straus  will  be 
appointed  to  some  other  embassy.  Sen- 
ators Smith  and  Burrows  of  Michigan 
requested  the  retention  of  Mr.  O'Brien, 
whose  home    is   In   Grand    Rapids,    that 

The  president  sent  to  the  senate  to- 
day   the    following   nominations: 

Consul  general  at  Stockholm.  Sweden. 
Edward  D.  Wlnslow  of  Illinois;  collect- 
ors of  customs.  Edward  W.  Durant,  Jr.. 
for  the  First  district  of  Charleston,  .-5. 
C  Renfro  B.  Creamer,  for  the  District 
of  Brazos  de  Santiago.  Tex.;  United 
States  circuit  Judge  for  Sixth  judicial 
circuit,  John  W.  Warrington  of  Ohio; 
United  States  attorney  for  the  Western 
district  of  Pennsylvania.  John  H.  Jor- 
dan. 


FORMER  MAYOR 
MUSniO  BACK 

GrandJury  at  Los  Angeles 

Wants  A.  C 

Harper. 

Los  Angeles.  Cal.,  Marcli  16.— Former 
Mayor  A.  C.  Harper  will  l)e  brought  to 
this  city  from  Corcoran,  t(  here  he  went 
after  his  resignation  as  mayor  was 
accepted  Friday,  to  testify  before  a 
special  grand  jury  which  will  Investi- 
gate charges  of  graft  In  the  city  gov- 
ernment   during    Harper's     adminlstra- 

It  Is  stated  bv  friends  Df  N.  Oswald, 
the  man  wlio  fiirnislied  lo  E.  T.  Earl, 
the  information  he  holds  against  Harp- 
er and  other.s  that  Oswald  had  lett  tlie 
city.  A  summons  calling  for  his  ap- 
pearance before  the  grand  jury  is  In 
the    hands    of    a    deputy 


A  Glove  Sensation 

Is  tlie  new  $1..")0  Gl<>ve  we  have  Just 
received,  absolutely  the  most  stunning 
and  best  fitting  glove  made.  AH  th« 
very  advance 
shades  for 
spring.  Every 
pair  strictly* 
guaranteed  — 
For     $1.50,     at< 


CLOVF  5HC 


Hlieriff. 


IRON  WORKERS 
NOT  TO  ACCEPT 

Will  Not  Stand  for  Twelve 

Thousand  Salary 

Cuts 

Rading,  Pa..  March  16. — Delegates 
to  the  Eastern  district  of  the  Amal- 
gamated Iron,  Steel  &  Tit;  Workers'  as- 
sociation held  another  meeting  here 
today  and  wound  up  Ihelr  business 
after    deciding    against    accepting    the 


reduction  in  wages  of  12,000  iron 
workers,  recently  announced  by  the 
manufacturers  in  this  district.  Na- 
itonal  President  of  the  Amalgamated 
A.ssociation  C.  J.  McPardle  of  Pitts- 
burg and  National  Secretary-Treasurer 
John  Williams,  also  of  Pittsburg,  at- 
tended. 

James  B.  Mincher,  vice  president  of 
the  Eastern  division  of  tho  Amalga- 
mated association  say.s: 

"From  reports  of  delegates,  we  find 
tliat  the  unorganized,  Sis  well  as  tlie 
organized,  iron  workers  are  clamoring 
against  the   proposed   reduction. 

"Market  conditions  do  not  warrant 
a  cut  in  wages.  The  markets  are  re- 
maining the  .same  as  for  months,  and 
there  is  positively  no  reason  why  there 
should  be  a  cut  in  the  price  now 
being  paid  iron  worktTs." 
* 
sun  -Neck. 
Stiff  neck  Is  caused  by  rheumatism 
of  the  muscles  of  the  neck.  It  la 
usually  confined  to  one  side  or  to  th« 
back  of  the  neck  and  one  side.  Wlill* 
It  is  often  quite  painful,  quick  relief 
may  be  had  by  applying  Chamberlains' 
Liniment.  Not  one  case  o.  rheumatism 
in  ten  requires  internal  treatment. 
When  there  Is  no  fever  and  no  swell- 
ing as  In  muscular  and  chronic  rheu- 
matism. Chamberlain's  Liniment  will 
accomplish  more  than  any  Interr.ai 
treatment.   For  sale  by  all   druggists. 


CHARGED  WITH  ARSON. 

Three  Parties  .\rrested  for  Burning 
of  Ranier  Building. 

Bemidji,  Minn.,  March  16. — r.cjpeclal 
to  The  Herald.) — Joseph  Kenvill,  John 
Woods  and  Ella  Taylor  were  arrested 
here  by  Acting  Sheriff  Mcintosh  of 
Koochiching  county  <harged  with 
arson.  Tnev  are  accused  of  setlln* 
fire  to  a  building  at  Ranier.  alleged 
to   have    been   used   as    a   house    of   111- 

rcDutc 

The  building  was  burned  some  time 
last  November  and  rumors  have  con- 
nected Kenvill,  Woods  and  the  Taylor 
woman  M'ith  the  fire.        ^     _    ^  ,, 

The  three  were  taken  to  Internatlon- 
at  Falls  to  be  given  a  preliminary 
hearing  before  George  H.  Walch,  judg« 
of  the  municipal  court  there. 


EXPERT  SAYS  \YRIT1NG 

IS  NOT  LIMAN  MANN'S. 

Chicago.  March  16.— The  defense  In 
the  trial  of  Luman  C.  Mann,  charged 
with  strangling  Mrs.  Frances  Gilmore 
Thompson  to  death  last  summer,  came 
to  an  end  todav  with  the  testimony  of 
a    hand    writing    exyert,      who    swore 


WHEN  YOU  NEED  A  PILL  TAKE  A 

BRANDRETH'S 

PILL 

The  Great  Laxative  andBloodTonic. 

NONE  BETTER  MADE. 


ALLCDCK'S 


The  DnIyGenuine 
POROUS  PLASTER. 


Mi-tt 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,    MARCH    16.    1909. 


The 

Syrup  of  Purity 

and  Wholesomeness 


K^o 


COUNCIL  DEADLOCK  ON 
QUESTION  OF  PRESIDENT 


City  Fathers  Fall  to  Agree 

After  Casting  Ten 

Ballots. 


The  most  delicious  for  griddle 
cakes   of   all    makes — or  any 
use  where  syrup  takes. 
A  pure,  wholesome   food. 

In  ioc,  2SC.  and  soc  air-tight  tins. 

R  book  of  cooking  and  eandy- 
making    recipes    sent    free 
on  rtqutst. 

CORN  PRODUCTS 
REFINING  COMPANY 
New  York 


'^'fm 


[cORNSYRUPi 


VVITM 

CANE    FLAVOR 


PRODUCTS  RPfl 


NINE  CO 


Election  of  City  Sealer 

Postponed  For  Six 

Months. 


iNii»iiiii(*«!timiiiiii»iiii!<«i*«*«»«*«»i; 


A  Delicious  Lunch 

can  be  quickly  and  easily  preparcci 
ij^  ^cu  nave  on  hand  a  bottle  of^ 


* 

* 
* 

* 


WHAT  THE  COUXCTL  DID. 


Adjourned    without    electing   a  * 
president. 


m% 


m 


I  ^^&j*tC~ 


Aci 


'mm^ 


kr7 


y} 


»"».» 


Better  still— drink  Fitter's  Beer  with  your  regular 
meals.  You  will  find  it  the  greatest  of  appetizers  and  its 
food  and  medicinal  properties  will  restore  youthful  vim. 

Try  a  case  and  you  will  be  convinced.  iNIail  and  tele- 
phone orders  promptly  delivered  to  your  home. 

FITGER  BREWING  CO.,  Duluth,  Minn. 

^^irJTaTauIfof  c'rmSon\*'noi;WK^^^^^  are  relatively  n,o,e 

nerous  ^nd  far  mor^pernicious  in  prohibitioti  districts  than  they  are  m 


numerou 

licensed  districts." 


]NHM  THE  INSURGENT 
REFORM  IN  THE  HOUSE 
MEI\NS,  WHEN  I\N/[LYZED 


WaBhlnston,  March  16.— A.s  analyzed 
bv  parliamentarians,  the  amendment 
to  tlie  house  rules  forced  through  by 
the  insursents  yesterday  makes  three 
Important   changes. 

First.    It   establishes   a  "calendar   for 
unanimous  consents,  the  effect  of  which 
-.cr  tn   have  a  prop 
house  witli 


Is  to  enable  a  member  to   have  a  prop- 


l»o.stpoiiod  ele<'tiou  of  sealer  of  * 
weifthts  and  uieasures  for  six  * 
iiiontlLH.  * 

Postponed  action  on  ordlmmco  * 
proliiI>itii:^  minors  from  buying  * 
intoxicants.  * 

Authorized  purchase  of  lot  for  * 
tire  hail  on  Parli  Point.  * 

Voted  against  transfer  of  3a-  * 
loon  license  froni  John  Jshea  to  ^ 
Charles  Lanuliridgo.  * 

Decidetl  on  repairs     for     Sixth  * 

avenue  viaduct,  but  will  a>k  rail-  * 

^  rmul  to  stand  i>art  of  cost.  * 

*  Granted  us^';  of  the  council  * 
^Jt  chambers  to  the  Political  Kquul-  * 
^  ity  club.  ,^  * 

*  <;avc  first  reading  ot  ordinance  * 

*  making  is  compulsory  for  van  0 
^  companies   to   leave  at     the   city  * 

*  hull   a  recortl   of  all   peopU^  who  * 
I  *  cliange  their  places  of  residence.  * 

*  sho^ving  where  they  moved  from  * 

*  and  to.  ^,         * 

*  Keoelved    Duluth-Edison   Elec-  * 

*  trie  company's  promise  to  lay  its  * 

*  wires  in  jlowntown  street.s  umler-  * 

*  ground  as  soon  as  tlic  frost  leaves  * 

*  the  ground.  * 

The  city  council  failed  to  a«ree  on  a 
president  last  evening,  and  adjourned 
'after  ten  ballots  had  been  taken.  Tlie 
'aldermen  also  failed  to  agree  on  a 
sealer  of  weights  and  measures,  and 
after  four  ballots,  the  motion  of  Alder- 
man Bloedel  that  the  matter  be  post- 
poned  for  six  months  carried. 

Alderman  Shartel  led  in  the  ballot- 
iiie  lor  president.  On  the  fourth,  sixth, 
ei^htli  and  ninth  ballots  he  had  seven 
votes  and  on  tlie  others  had  six  votes 
The  remaining  votes  were  scattered 
about  among  the  other  aldermen,  one 
man  getting  three  votes  on  one  ballot, 
and  none  on  the  next.  Every  man  in 
tlie  council  got  a  few  votes  at  some 
time   during    the    balloting. 

The   balloting  for  president  was   put 
off   until  all   the   other   business   ot    the 
evening    was    over    with.      At    the    con- 
clusion   of    thp    other    business,    the    Ke- 
Dublicans    made    a    motion    to    adjourn. 
Nine    votes    wt-re    necessary    to    carry, 
and  only  eight  were  secured.  A  nv)tion 
that    the    council    proceed    to    ballot    tor 
president    was    lost    by    the    same    vote. 
8  to  7      This  left   the  city  fathers  at  a 
deadlock.      They   could   neither   adjourn 
nor    vote.      Then    a    five-minute    recess 
was   decided   upon,   and  when   tlie  coun- 
cil  was  again   called   to  order   Alderman 
Merritt     of     the     Seventh     ward     swu„g 
over    from    being    opposed    to    balloting 
for  president   and   voted   in    favor   of   It. 
fflving   the  nine  votes  necessary    to  al- 
low  the  aldermen  to  proceed  with  bal- 
loting. ,    -,       ...       „.-_a. 
1       \ldermen    Storey    and    Merritt      were 
appointed    tellers,    and    the    voting    be- 
Iran.      On    the    first    ballot    Sliartel    led 
I  off  with  six  votes,  and  did  not  fall  be- 
llow that  mark  on  any  of  the  ten  votes. 
I  \fter    two    or    three    ballots    had    been 
1  taken  it  Ijecame  evident  that  no  agree- 
ment could  be  reached,  and  a  ballot  on 
I  the    sealer    of    weights    and      mea.sures 
be    placed  ]  ^-as    taken.      There  are   five   candidates 
for  this  place.     Noble  Sampson  got  six 


Moore,  and  finallj^  It  was  decided  to  lay 
the  matter  over  for  one  week. 

Alderman  Moore  said  it  did  not  seem 
to  him  a  proper  ordinance;  that  it  was 
legislating  to  g^t  boys  into  trouble, 
and  discrlminatirter  against  boys  in 
favor  of  grown  nten. 

•We  might  just  as  ♦ell  pass  a  simi- 
lar ordinance  for' halJttual  drunkards, 
said  Mr.  Moore.  "It  i.s  against  the  law 
for  a  bartender  ^  to  aell  liquor  to  a 
drunkard.  Why  not  "Inake  it  against 
the  law  for  a  drunkard  to  buy  a  drink. 
That  would  be  Ju9t  as  wise  as  this 
minor  ordinance,  making  it  a  misde- 
meanor for  a  boy  to  buy  intoxicants. 

"This  would  give  too  much  protec- 
tion to  the  bartender,  and  too  little  to 
the  boy.  The  saloon  men,  under  this 
measure,  would  feel  perfectly  safe  In 
selling  to  minors,  for  they  would  know 
the  minors  could  not  testify  against 
them  for  by  so  d.jing  they  would  be 
convicting  themselves,  and  would  be 
liable  to  a  jail  sentence.  The  boy 
would  be  forced  to  lie  in  favor  of  the 
bartender    in    self-protection."    __ 

Alderman  Shartel  took  a  different 
view  of  the  situation.  He  said  that 
under  existing  conditions  the  saloon- 
keeper had  no  protection  from  minors 
who  looked  and  claimed  to  be  21  years 
of  age  but  who  were  not  more  than 
19  or  20  years  old.  He  believed  the 
saloon  keepers  were  entitled  to  be 
protected  from  this  class  of  young 
men.  for.  he  said,  the  penalty  for  sell- 
ing to  a  man  one  month  under  age  is 
as  great  as  If  the  sale  had  been  to  a 
youth    of     15     years. 

Huntley     &     Bede     were     the     lowest 
bidders     for     printing     the     annual     re- 
ports  of   the    city   officers    and    will    get 
the  contract.     Their  bid  was  $o4o.l4. 
«      *      • 

The  board  of  tire  commissioners  was 
instructed  to  look  up  a  site  for  a  fire 
hall  on  Park  Point,  not  below  Twen- 
tieth street.  A  suitable  lot  will  be 
purchased,  and  a  tire  hall,  to  cost  not 
mora   than    $2,600,   will    be    built    on    it. 

♦  •  • 
An  amendment  to  the  theater  ordi- 
nance was  passed,  making  It  neces- 
sary for  moving  picture  operators  to 
have  an  ooerator  s  license  trom  the 
city  electrician. 

•  •      • 

A  resolution  providing  for  the  trans- 
fer of  a  .saloon  license  in  the  Sellwood 
building  from  JoJin  Shea  to  Charles 
Langbridge   was   voted   down. 

The  mayor's  annyal  message  was  not 
ready    for  reading*. 


I  Cured  My 
Rupture 

I  Will  Show  You  How 
To  Cure  Yours 

FREE! 

I  was  practically  helpless  and  bed- 
ridden for  many  years  from  a  double 
rupture.  I  wore  Innumerable  different 
kinds  of  trusses  and  appliances.  Some 
of  them  were  tortures,  some  positively 
dangerous,  and  none  would  hold  the 
rupture  in  Its  proper  place.  The  doc- 
tors told  me  I  couid  not  expect  to  have 
it  entirely  healed  unless  I  would  con- 
sent to  a  surgical  operation.  I  fooled 
them  all.  however,  and  cured  myself 
completely  and  permanently  by  a  sim- 
ple method  which  I  discovered.  Any- 
one can  use  it.  and  I  will  gladly  send 
the  cure  free  by  mall  to  anyone  who 
writes  for  It.  Fill  out  the  coupon  be- 
low and  mall  It  to  me  today.  I  will 
send  the  cure  by  return  mail,  postpaid. 


Free  Rupture-Cure  Coupon 

CAPT.    W.   A.   COM.I!VGS, 

Box  tt50,  WatertowB,  N.  X. 

Dear  Sir:  I  wish  you  would  send 
me  your  New  Discovery  for  the 
Cure   of   Rupture. 

Name 

Address 


FREE! 


We  are  anxious  to  prove  our  apprpciatiofi 
of  the  patronage  given  our  store,  and  the  very 
many  kind  things  said  of  our  efforts  to  suit 
you. 

In  searching  The  market  for  desirable  novel- 
ties, it  has  been  suggested  to  us  that  few  things 
are  better  appreciated  than  sterling  literature 
and  high  diss  illustrations.  Accordingly  we 
have  subscribed  for  a  limited  number  of 
copies  of 

The  Women's  Record 

We  take  great  pleasure  in  offering  you  a 
year's  subscription  free  upon  receipt  of  the 
coupon,  which  you  will  find  in  the  lower  right- 
hand  corner  of  our  advertisement  elsewhere  in 
today's  paper. 


osltion   brought  before  the   

out  having  to  go  to  the  speaker  for 
recognition.  This  change  they  saj . 
will   be  a  relief  to  the  speaker. 

Second,  when  consideration  of  a  nm 
Is  concluded  and  the  previous  question 
Is  ordered  the  rules  heretotore  ha\e 
provided  for  a  motion  to  commit  ^  it 
ov  without  Instructions.  It  ha.s  been 
'the  practice  to  recognUe  a  member  or 
the  majority  party  to  make  this  motion 
end  thus  prevent  the  minority  from 
offering  such  Instructions  as*  it  may  de- 
sire The  new  rule  gives  the  minoilty 
the  preference  In  making  such  a  mo- 
tion and  thus  enables  them  to  get  a 
record  vote  on  propositions  whicn 
would  otherwise  be  settled  in  commit- 
tee of  the  whole,  where  no  record  vote 
Is   possible,  .  .   _  i„ 

Third  It  protects  the  calenda. 
"Wednesday  by  re(iuiring  a  two-thirds 
Instead    of    a    majority    vote    to    set    it 

^■"'Fourth.    It    Is    also    claimed    that    the 
amendment  will  have  the  effect  of  pre- 
venting favoritism  by  the  action  of  the 
committee  on    rules   in   special  cases. 
Committee    of    Fifteen. 

A  prominent  feature  of  the  Clark  res- 
olution l.s  an  amendment  providing  tor 
a  committee  of  fifteen  members  to  re- 
vise, am^nd  and  codify  the  rules  nno 
much  of  the  opposition  to  it  was  be- 
cause of  this  fact.  As  adopted,  the 
Fitzgerald  amendment  makes  no 
change  in  the  present  method  of  the 
selection  of  the  committee  on  rules, 
which  is  made  by  the  speaker,  nor  is 
th'-re  any  change  in  the  method  of  se- 
lecting .ommittee.s.  The  Fitzgerald 
amendment    is  as  follows.  ,,   ,„ 

1  ^mend  paragraph  «1  of  Rule  11  by 
adding    thereto    the    following: 

••  The  committee  on  rules  shall  not 
reoort  any  rule  or  order  which  shall 
provldf-  that  business  under  paragraph 
four  of  F<ule  26  shall  be  set  aside  by  a 
vote  of  less  than  two-thirds  of  the 
members  present;  nor  shall  it  report 
and  rule  or  order  which  shall  operate 
to  prevent  the  motion  to  recommit  be- 
ing   made     as     provided     in     paragraph 

"^i'2.  Am?nd"  nSle  13.  by  adding  the 
following  paragraph  to  be  numbered  .. 

^*'" 'After  a  bill  which  has  been  fav- 
orably reported  shall  have  been  upon 
either  the  house  or  the  union  calendai 
for  three  days  any  member  may  nie 
with  the  clerk  a  notice  that  he  de- 
sires such  bill  placed  upon  a  special 
calendar  to  be  known  as  the  calendar 
for  unanimous  consent.  On  days  when 
It  shall  be  in  order  to  move  to  sus- 
pend the  rules,  the  speaker  .shall  im- 
mediately after  the  approval  of  the 
journal,    direct    the    clerk    '  -     -- 


bills  upon  the  calendar  for  unanimous 
consents.  Should  objection  be  made  to 
the  consideration  of  any  bill  so  called 
it  shall  immediately  be  stricken  from 
the  calendar,  for  unanimous  consent 
and    it    shall    not    thereafter 

"3.   Amend  Rule  16,   by  adding  at  the  1  vo\es"on''aTr  four   ballots,  with   the  re- 
end   of  paragraph  4,   the   following:  |malnlng   votes    scattered   about    equally 
'•'After    the    previous    question    shall  ]  among    the    other    candidates.      On    one 
have  been  ordered  on   the  passage  of  a  ,  ballot     George     E.     Duren     Jiad     seven 
bill    or   joint    resolution    one   motion    to  |  yot^s.      Alderman    Bloedel    moved    that 
recommit    shall     be     in    order    and     the  '  t^g    election    on    sealer    of    weights    and 
speaker  shall  give  preference   in  recog- 
nition   for    such    purpose    to    a    member 
who    Is    opposed    to    the    bill    or    joint 
resolution."  '                                 .       ..      t.    , 

••4.  Amend      paragraph      4    of      ituie 
26  so   that  It  shall   read  as  follows: 

•  -Wednesdav  of  each  week  no  busi- 
ness shall  be  in  order  except  as  pro- 
viiled  by  paragraph  4  of  rule  24, 
unless  the  house,  by  a  two-thirds  vote 
on  motion  to  dispense  therewith,  shall 
otherwise  determine.  On  such  a  mo- 
tion there  may  be  debate  not  to  exceed 
five  minutes  tor  and  against.'  " 
Clark  >ot  to  Be  Coustulted. 
Only  five  committees  will  be  named 
by  Speaker  Cannon  for  the  present. 
These  will  be  ways  and  means,  rules, 
printing,  mileage  and  accounts?.  The 
other  committees  will  be  announced 
about  the  time  the  special  session  is 
ready   to   adjourn. 

In     making    up    the    committees,    the 
speaker  will   consult  with   every   mem- 
I  ber    of    the    liouse    who    desires    to    dis- 
I  cuss  assignments  with   him. 

This  means  that  Minority  Leader 
Clark  will  not  enjoy  the  privilege  ac- 
corded his  predecessor.  John  Sliarp 
Williams,  of  selecting  the  minority 
member.s.  Cannon,  after  a  trial  of  six 
years,  has  reached  the  conclusion  that 
the  plan  Is  not  the  l>est,  and  hence- 
forth he  will  not  shift  any  of  the  re- 
sponsibility for  committee  assignments 

to   the   minority   leader.  imieieoic^.   ....o--  , —    „  -„«.^  ~^.^t 

The  attitude  taken  by  the  Democrats  i  ^yas  thought  best  to  secure  a  free  meet- 
at  a  caucus  last  night,  after  the  house  j  i,ig    place. 


measures  be  postponed  for  six  months, 
and    the   motion   carried. 

After  disposing  of  this  matter,  the 
aldermen  again  turned  their  attention 
to  the  presidency,  and  continued  voting 
until  ten  ballots  had  been  cast.  Then 
the  aldermen  gave  up  In  discourage- 
ment   and  a  motion  to  adjourn  carried. 

Alderman  Moe.  Republican,  was  not 
present  last  night,  which  left  the  Ke- 
publicans  with  six  votes  and  the  Dem- 
ocrats with  nine.  Evidently  there  are 
three  Democrats  who  have  made  up 
their  minds  that  they  do  not  want  to 
see  Mr  Shartel  in  tlie  president  s  chair. 
The  votes  on  the  presidency  were  taken 
by     secret    ballot 

The  Political  Equality  club  had  in  a 
communication  asking  the  council's 
nermission  to  use  the  council  chambers 
the  second  Wednesday  evening  of  each 
month  for  meeting  purposes.  Dr.  Mary 
McCoy,  presitlent  of  the  club,  was 
nresent  and  put  in  a  few  words  in  sup- 
uort  of  the  petition,  explaining  the  ob- 
jects of  the  club  by  saying  that  it  was 
non-political  and  non-partisan, 
said  distinguished  speakers  would 
brought  here  from  time  to  time 
request  for  the  use  of  the  rooni  was 
Kianted  The  communication  explained 
that  it  was  desired  to  keep  the  club 
,  dues  as  low  as  possible  so  anybody 
1  interested   might  join    and  therefore   it 


Good   Couitii   Medicine  for  Children. 

The  season  for  coughs  and  colds  is 
now  at  hand  and  too  much  care  lannot 
be  used  to  protect  the  children.  A 
child  is  much  more  likely  to  contract 
diphtheria  or  scarlet  fever  when  he 
has  a  cold.  The  q'ulcker  you  cure  his 
cold  the  less  the  risk.  Chamberlain  s 
Cough  Remedy  is  the  sole  reliance  of 
many  mothers,  and  few  of  those  who 
have  tried  It  are  willing  to  use  any 
other  Mrs.  F.  F.  Starcher  of  Ripley. 
W  Va  says:  "I  have  never  used  any- 
thing other  than  Chamberlain's  Cough 
Remedy  for  my  children,  and  it  has 
always  given  good  satisfaction.  This 
remedy  contains  no  opium  or  other 
narcot'ic  and  may  be  given  as  confi- 
dently to  a  child  a."*  to  an  adult,  tor 
sale   by    all    druggists. 

VERDICT  FOR 
THE  COMPANY 

Widow  of  Miner  Burned 

in  Mule  Barn  Gets 

Nothing. 

A  Jury  in  district  court  yesterday 
aftermxMt  returned  a  verdict  for  the 
defendant  in  the  case  of  John  Meslnik, 
administrator  of  the  estate  of  Joseph 
.Mcstttik.  against  the  Malta  Iron  com- 

ID  3.  II V 

Mestnlk  sued  for  $.-.,000  on  behalf 
of  the  widow  and  children  of  Joseph 
Mestnik  who  met  his  death  In  the 
Malat  mine  at  Sparta,  being  suffocated 
when  a  mule  barn  underground 
burned.  His  escape  was  cut  off  by  the 
burning  barn. 

The  contention  of  the  plaintiff  was 
that  the  barn  was  located  so  that  the 
escape  of  the  men  in  the  lower  levels 
was  cut  off  an<l  the  company  was  con- 
sequently negligent.  The  defense 
claimed  that  the  barn  was  located  ni 
the  best  place  that  could  be  found  for 
it  in  the  mine,  and  the  fire  and  the 
death  of  Mestnlk  was  due  solely  to  the 
carelessne-ss  of  a  fellow  workman  of 
the  dead  man.  The  fellow  workman 
fell  asleep  in  the  barn  with  a  lighted 
cigarette,  it  appeared,  and  the  cigarette 
set  tire  to  the  barn. 


ONLY  ONE 
MORE  DAY 

The  Big  "Ben  Hur"  Con- 
test  Closes   at   6 
o'clock  Wednesday. 

The  Educational  Contest 

Has  Proved  to  be  a 

Big  Success. 


BARRELS 

BE  EMPTIED 


BOOZE  WILL 


INTO 


BAY 


ne 

be 

The 


%  FINDS  BODY  OF  * 

«  SUICIDE  AND  THKX 

* 


Tonight    The    Herald    Issues    Its    last 
call   for  "Btn  Hir"  essays.     If  there   Is 
a   boy  or  girl  in  the  seventh  or  eighth 
grade  of  the  public  schools,  or  in  any 
of    the   four    years    of    the    high    school 
who  wants   to  attend   the  big   Klaw    & 
Erlanger    production    at    th«    Lyceum. 
Monday  night,  he  or  she  has  a  chance  to 
do  so.  free  of  charge.     The  Herald  has 
purchased   1.50   seats   in   the  parquet  for 
the   Monday   night   perfoimance.      Thev 
are    the    regular    %z    seats,    as    good    as 
any    in    the    theater,   and    they    will    be 
given    away    to    150    school    c.illdren    of 
the  city    who  will  be  the  guests  of  The 
Herald  at  a  theater  party  next  Monday 
evenirg— the  largest  theater  party  ever 
given    in    the    city.      The    only    require- 
ment is  that  the  boy  or  girl  write  one 
of  the  best   150  essays  on  the  storv  of 
"Hen  Hur,"  submitted  to  the    Ben  Hur 
editor  of  The  Herald.     The  essays  wil 
be    judged    by    a    committee    of    school 
teachers,  whose  names  have  been  pub- 
lished,     and    Uie      winners    annoiinced. 
None    of    the   essays    will    be    published 
so  that  tlie  decision  of  the  teachers  will 

'^It  is  still  too  early  to  tell  how  many 
essays    wlU    be    received,   as    tomorrow 
the   last   day,   will  probab  y  bring   in  a 
very    larJfe   number,    but    It    is    not    be- 
lieved   that   more   than    300   to   400    will 
1-e    sent    In.      This    gives    every    boy    or 
girl    competing    about    an    even    chance 
of   securing  a  ticket.      Any  boy   or   girl 
who   Is   willing  to   spend  some   time  on 
the  essay    and  give   it  some  thoughtful 
study.    Is    practicalUy   assured    of    win- 
ning  a   ticket.      There    are    twenty-five 
tickets  for  each  grade,  and  twenty-five 
for    each    class    in   the    high    scliool.    so 
that  all  win  compete  on  an  equal  basis, 
and    the    high    school    pupils    will   have 
no    advantage.      There    are    no    coupon 
attachments  to  the  offer,  and  no  condi- 
tions   to    It.      Neither    do    the    children 
attend   In   a  body,  each  being  given  his 
own  ticket.     It  is  simply  a  theater  party 
to    Duluth    school    children.     For    obvi- 
ous  reasons   The    Herald  could   not   In- 
clude every  pupil  In  the  city  in  the  In- 
vitation list,   as  the  theater  would   not 
begin   to   accommodate   them.      The   es- 
say contest  was.  therefore,  decided  upon 
as    a    means    of    selecting    those    who 


The    prohibition       forces    will    win    a 
partial    victory    in    St.    Lauis       county 
soon.      In   the    basement   of   the   county 
jail,   many   quarts   of  boer.   whisky    and 
wine  are  reposing,  awaiting  the  action 
of  the   court.     The  court   will   probably 
order  the  destruction   of     he   booze  and 
Sheriff    Bates      will     empty    It 
sewer.       Therefore,     a    pt  rtlon 
available     supply     of    joy     and 
producer  in   St.   Louis   county   will   have 
been    done    away    with    Ai-lthout    being 
consumed  .  ,   ,  , 

The  raid  on  the  Immoral  houses  and 
blind  pigs  at  Hibbing  la.st  week  re- 
sulted In  a  rather  large  haul  of  the 
plunder,   which    always   a:tends   the    in 


Into    a 


va«ion    of   the   law    in    th<!    operation    of 
such  places.     After  the  i.risoners  were 


brought  to  Duluth.  a  couple  of  wagon 
loads  of  stuff  arrived  In  Duluth  and 
were  stowed  away  in  the  basement  of 
the    county    jail. 

There  are   cases   of  beer,   whisky   and 

wine;    cash    registers,    beer    pumps    and 

other    paraphernalia,    which   are    Illegal 

when     kept    In    an        unlicensed    place. 

where   liquor   is   sold.      They   will    prob- 

,    „    ablv   be   used    In    evidence,      when      the 

ot     the  I  prisoners   now   In   the      county   jail    are 

misery    brought    to    trial    and    then     the    court 

will  decree  the  disposition   of  the  Junk 

taken   by   the   officers. 

The  booze  and  beer  have  to  go.  In 
the  basement  of  the  jail.  a])ove  which 
wrecks  of  humanity  brought  there  bv 
booze  are  awaiting  the  expiration  of 
their  terms,  the  stimulants  will  be 
poured  Into  the  sewers,  to  be  carried 
Into    the    bay    and    lost    to    the    traffic. 


PENNSYLVANIA  STEEL 
COMPANY  CUTS  WAGES 


EXDS    OWN    LIFE. 


Harrisburg,  Pa.,  March  16.— The 
Pennsylvania  Steel  compmy.  one  of  the 
largest  Independent  steel  companies  in 
the  country,  has  announ»;ed  a  reduction 
In  wages  approximatlnir  10  per  cent, 
effective  April  1.  The  order  states  that 
the  reduction  would  be  made  pending 
"a  return  of  normal  business  condi- 
tions." The  order  was  somewhat  of  a 
surprise  to  the  6,000  tmployes.  Nine 
thousand  men  are  em  jloyed  at  the 
plant  when  It  Is  running  full  time.  J. 
V.  W.  Reynders,  vice  president  of  the 
company,  says: 

"Wage  reductions  on  •;he  part  of  the 
various  steel  Interests  have  recently 
been  announced  In  the  r  apers  and  oth- 
ers are  in  contemplation  Throughout 
1908  our  wages  and  salaries  were 
maintained  on  a  high  level  although 
the  steel  trade  was  passing  through  a 
depression.  Until  Dece;nber,  the  Indi- 
cations tended  to  the  likelihood  of  an 
early  and  well  rendered   resumption   of 


most  desired  to  see  the  performance. 
Those  who  want  to  attend  enough  to 
spend  an  hour  or  two  I  ours  preparing 
their  essays  will  probajly  win  a  seat. 
The  essays  should  not  b(.  over  150  words 
in  length,  a  simple  sto:-y  of  the  book, 
told  in  the  best  English  that  the  writer 
knows  iiow  to   use. 

At  6  o'clock  tomorrow  night  the  con- 
test will  close,  and  those  who  have 
failed  to  get  their  essays  in  by  that 
time  will  have  lost  their  chance  to  see 


business.  The  prominence  given  to 
the  tariff  discussion  during  the  public 
hearings  of  tlie  ways  and  means  com- 
mittee, however  brought  about  a  wait- 
ing altitude  by  the  buyers.  The  dis- 
appointing reduction  in  the  volume  of 
business  and  a  consequent  straining 
for  orders  forced  the  steel  market  Into 
a    condition    of    demoralization. 

"Normal  conditions  can  only  be  re- 
stored graduallv.  after  a  satisfactory 
conclusion  of  the  extra  session  of  con- 
gress and  the  enactment  of  a  tariff 
bill  drawn  up  witii  the  fixed  purpo.se 
of  conserving  the  American  market  to 
Americans  on  the  basis  of  American 
conditions  and  the  standards  of  living. 

"Pending  the  resumption  of  normal 
conditions  we  must  look  to  the  loyal 
co-operation  of  our  employees  In  our 
Efforts  'to  compete  successfully  tor 
new  business  with  the  certain  expecta- 
tion that  all  such  efforts  will  hasten 
the  time  when  wages  and  salaries  may 
satisfactorily  be  restored  to  the  old 
basis." 


the  greatest  show  that  will  visit  Duluth 
this  season. 

Today  the  final  chapter  of  the  serial 
story  furnished  the  teachers  by  The 
Herald  was  read  and  explained  to  the 
ciiildren,  and  many  of  the  teachers  are 
taking  time  to  allow  the  pupils  to 
write  their  essays  during  school  hour.s. 
All  the  scholars  are  taking  a  deep 
interest  In  the  contest,  and  it  Is  expect- 
ed that  on  the  last  day  a  big  batch  of 
es.says  JvUl  be  rushed  into  the  office. 

B 


to    call    the 


adjourned,  is  in  sharp  conflict  with  the 
new  pollcv  of  Speaker  Cannon.  A  reso. 
lutlon  was  adopted  to  prevent  members 
of  the  minority  accepting  committee 
appointments  without  the  approval  of 
Minority    Leader    Clark. 

— • 

"My  3-vear-old  boy  was  badly  consti- 
pated, had  a  high  fever  and  was  In. an 
awful  condition.  I  gave  him  two  doses 
of  Foley's  Orino  Laxative  and  the  next 
morning  the  fever  was  gone  and  he 
was  entirely  well.  Foley's  Orino  Lax- 
ative saved  his  life."  A.  Wolkush, 
Caslmer,  Wis.  .Sold  bv  all  druggists. 
• 

Funeral    at     St.    Hilalre. 

St.  Hilaire.  Minn..  March  16. — (Special 
to  The  Herald,  t — The  death  of  Olava 
Jorgenson.  aged  25  years,  occurred  in 
this  village  on  Thursday  afternoon  of 
tvphoid  fever,  after  about  a  month's 
illness  The  funeral  took  place  at  the 
Cnited  Lutheran  churcii  this  afternoon. 
Rev  T  A  Hagen  of  Drayton.  N.  D.. 
conducted    the    services. 


Park    Point   residents   offered   a   peti 
tion  objecting  to  the  aerial  bridge  ser 


setting    forth    the    claim 


r- 
that    a 


'  [GHTHARE 


No  woman  can  be  happy 
without  children;  it  is  her 
nature  to  love  them  as  much 
SO  as  it  is  the  beautiful  and 
pure.  The  ordeal  through 
which  the  expectant  mother 

Tinqt  nass  is  so  full  of  dread  that  the  thought  fills  her  with  apprehension. 

rhfrelfno  necessi  y  for  the  reproduction  of  life  to  be  either  very 

Linful  or  dangerous.^  The  use  of'Mother'8  Friend  prepares  the  system 

'or  the  coming  event,  and  iUs  passed  without  any  dangei-.      This 

.-emedy  is  applied  externally, 

and  has  carried  thousands  of 

A'omen  through    the    crisis 

vvith  but  little  suffering. 

Book  containing  Information  of  value 
'M  all  expecmnt  mothers  mailed  free. 

BKAOriELO  REGULATOR  OO. 
JUlmattms  Om. 


The  pe 

to    a    committee. 

»      »      • 

\n  ordinance  was  given  its  first  read- 
me calling  upon  all  people  engaged  In 
hi  moving  business  to  keep  a  record 
of  every  family  moved,  showing  where 
the  family  lived,  and  where  and  when 
a  remo^-al  of  the  household  effects  were 
nide  transferring  this  record  show- 
ing old  and  new  address,  to  books  pro- 
vided for  the  purpose  at  the  city  hall, 
at  the  end  of  every  week.  The  Mer- 
chants' Credit  association  is  Particular- 
ly  anxious  that  such  an  ordinance  be 
passed 


The 


MOTflS^ 
FHIEND 


•    •     • 

Duluth-Edison  lilectrlcal  com- 
pany notified  the  council  that  as  soon 
as  the  frost  leaves  the  ground,  it  ^iU 
place  Its  wires  underground  on>  th^,£.°'; 
lowing  streets  and  avenues:  Michigan 
street  from  Fifth  avenue  west  to  Thud 
avenue  east;  from  Third  avenue  east 
to  Fifth  avenue  west  in  First  alley,  in 
Second  alley  from  Lake  avenue  to 
Fourth  avenue  west. 

•  •  • 
The  Zenith  Telephone  company  noti- 
fied the  council  that  it  would  be  im- 
possible for  it  to  comply  with  the  order 
to  put  wires  underground  because  of  a 
lack  of  necessary  funds,  and  said  that 
if  the  city  Insisted  upon  the  work  be- 
ing done,  it  would  amount  to  a  con- 
fiscation of  the  company's  property. 
This   matter  will  be  Investigated   later. 

♦  ♦      • 
CItv     Engineer     McGllvray     reported 

that  the  Sixth  avenue  viaduct  was  bad- 
iv  in  need  of  repair.  The  council  di- 
rected that  the  repairs  be  made,  the 
railroad  over  which  a  part  ot  the  via- 
duct stands  to  stand  a  part  of  the  ex- 
pense. 

*  •       • 

Alderman  Sliartel's  ordinance  making 
it  a  misdemeanor  for  a  minor  to  get  a 
drink  of  liquor  In  a  saloon  by  misrep- 
resenting his  age  came  up  for  a  second 
reading  Alderman  Shartel  called  for 
a  vote  on  the  measure,  hut  there  were 
strong      objections      from      Alderman 


%       Venire.  III..  Maroh   1«. — Twen 

*  ly.four  hours  alter  he  had  pleked  ^ 

*  lip  the  iKxly  of  a  .siilckle.  C.  B.  * 
4ft  Smith,  a  well-to-do  resident  of  * 
^  this  eity.  endetl  lil.s  life  with  ear-  * 

*  holic  acid,  the  same  poison  that  * 
^  Hohert  Nicli«>ls.  the  man  he  lia«l  * 
^  trietl  to  aid.  diank.  Nichols  kllletl  * 

*  hhiLvelf  alter  liis  brother.  John,  * 
^  and  >li.-*s     IJeryl     Somers     cudetl  * 

*  their  lives  because  of  disastrous  * 
^  romances.  * 

BOSTON  CONSOLIDATED 

COPPER  RAISES  CAPITAL. 

London.  March  16.— .A-t  a  meeting  of 
the  Boston  Consolidated  Copper  coin- 
pany  It  was  agreed  to  Increase  the 
capital  to  $3,875,000  by  the  creation  of 
additional  shares  to  the  value  of  ?230,- 
000  to  rank  equally  with  the  original. 
The  new  shares  will  be  offered  at  for- 
ty-five shillings  each. 

THREE  CENT  FARES  IN 

MISSOURI  ONCE  MORE. 

Chicago*  March  15.— The  resumption 
of  a  3-cent  passenger  rate  in  Missouri 
to  replace  the  present  2-cent  rate  de- 
clared confiscatory  by  Judge  McPher- 
son  was  decided  upon  at  a  meeting  or 
executive  and  traffic  officials  of  the 
ro  ids  held  In  the  office  of  President 
B  M  Wlnchell  of  the  Rock  Island  line. 
No  conclusions  were  reached  regarding 
litigation    In    other    states. 

NlCARACil A  DENIES  SHE 

IS  PLANNING  FOR  WAR. 

Washington.    March    16— Nlcaraugua 
through    her    minister    Senor    Espinoza 
has    protested    to    Secretary    Knox    that 
military  and  naval  activity  in  progl^ess 
that    country  Us   Mestlned    entirely- 
defensive    puvpo.*s:    that    he    does 
contemplate    mating    any    attacks 


Colonist 


'The  Scenic  HionwAY 
Thro' THE  Land  of  Forti/ie." 


CMICACO 


%1   LOUl* 


To  Northern  Pacific  Coast  Points 

VIA  NORTHERN  PACIFIC  RAILWAY 

From  Duluth  or  Su])erior  to  Western 
Montana,  Idaho,  Wast-ington  and  British 
Columbia.  $25  from  St.  Paul-Minne- 
apolis.   Liberal  Stop-overs. 


$ 


25 


In 
for 

on    her"sister "'republics. "and   that    con- 
ditions are  quiet  within  her  borders. 

. •— 

Simple  Uenicdy  lor  La  Orlppe. 
La  grippe  coughs  are  dangerous,  as 
they  frequently  develop  into  pneu- 
monia. Foley's  Honey  and  Tar  not 
only  stops  the  cough  but  heals  and 
strengthens  the  Ifngf  s"^  1^?*  "°  ^^^^' 
ous  results  need  ftie  {eared.  The  gen- 
uine FoleVs  Hon»ey  fend  Tar  contains 
no  harmful  drugs  and  Is  in  a  yellow 
package.  Refuse  substitutes.  Sold  by 
all  drugglsta. 


Tickets  on  Sale 

March  1  to 
April  30.  "09 


Mild,  delightful  climate;  bouatiful  production  in  won- 
drously  fertile  valleys;  irrigation  and  dry-farming 
make  success  SURE  in  this  great  agricultural  empire. 

Through  Pullman  tourist  sleeping  cars  daily  from  St.  Paul- 
Minneapolis,  St.  Louis  and  Missouri  River. 


I 


I 


The  Scenic  Highway 

thro'  the 

Land  of  Fortune 


n 


For  descriptive  literature  write  For  fares,  ex.  call  on 

C  W  MOTT,  G.  E.  A.  T.  E.  BLANCHE,  G.  A.,  J  T.  McKMTWEY,  C.  P.  A., 

St  Paul,  l£nn.  334  W.  Superior  S  t. ,  Duluth,  Minn. 

W.  H.  MITCHELL  A.  G.  A.,  817  Tower  Ave.,  Superior,  Wis. 

„  .       .»     „    -         .X.  Annual  Rose  Fettival,  Portland:    June  7  to  12. 

Alaska-Yukoti-Paciflo  Exposition,  Rainier  Naf  1  Park  and  Paradise  Valley,  by  Auto 

Seattle:    June  1  to  Oct.  16.  or  Bad,  from  Tacoma:     June  1  to  Oct.  1. 

National  Irrigation  Congresa.  Yellowstone  Mat'l  Park:    Season  June  5  to  Sept.  25 

Spokane:    August  9  to  1».  *" 


A.  M.  CLELAND, 

General  Passenger  Agent 

St.  Paul,  Minn. 


C140 


. 

1 

i 

h 

■ 

It 

Ij 

•  t 

•i 

^-rr-r—. . 'd 

.„■              .,       ^ , ■,-■>.■ 

;  1 

— - 


*.r 


> 


10 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      TUESDAY,    MARCH    16,    1909. 


DULUTH  BREWING 
&  MALTING  CO. 


i 


Cor.  29th  Ave.  W.   &.    Melm    St. 
The  Monarch  of  All  Pure 
Malt  Beers. 


OF  TO 


HALL'S  RINK 
WINSTROPHY 

Defeats  Dinham's  Quartet 
in  Final  Game  in  Presi- 
dent's Event 


HAYES  IS 
DEFEATED 

DorandoPietri  Wins  From 

American  in  New  York 

Marathon. 


^v. 


'%N 


The  Next  Tlitie  To« 

Buy    CitturM    Ask  \JJil'ii 

Yoar   Dealer  tMllr. 

For 

LA  VERDAD 

The  J    are    the   flne«t,rlear  UaTans 
CtKitrs    It    Is    poHHfble    to    produce.       A 
Mudf  in  Tampn  by  the  moHt  skilled    M 
C'ub.in     and     .'^ptinlph     workmen         W 
from   becoud   cut    \'uelta   AbaJ«      ^ 
tob.ifco.     Every  clRar  U  per-         ^F 
fe<-t.       L.\     VEUUAD    rifara     ^ 
have   an  aroma   and  fluTor       ^^ 
distinctly      their      otto,  ^^ 

Three  for  25o  and  .^r'^fxHM 

up.      AH   dealer*  ^^   KUn 

LA  j:iRNANDEZ 

VERDAD   ^^^  CIGAR  CO 
DULUTH^   MINN 


Dinham  Also  Loses  to 

Alworth  in  Bagley 

Event. 


After  getting  his  O  cUiss  rink  down 
to  the  finals  in  tiie  president's  event. 
Dinliam  was  last  night  defeated  by 
Walter  Halls  A  class  rink  in  the  final 
contest  for  the  trophy,  and  the  indi- 
vidual  prizes   that   go   with    it. 

The  game  was  a  good  one,  and  at  one 
time  Dinham  was  six  up.  Hall's  men 
played  the  steadier  game,  however,  and 
the    final    score    was    14    to    8. 

Earlier  in  the  evening  Dinham  was 
defeated  by  Alworth  by  a  score  of  6  to 
8  The  game  was  in  the  Bagley  event, 
and  was  one  of  tlie  best  of  the  year. 
.Tlie  result  was  in  doubt  until  the  last 
"stone    was    throwr.. 

Two  games  were  played  in  the  bon- 
sniel  for  O  class  rinks  for  the  po.sses- 
Blou  of  the  board  of  trade  buttons. 
E  K  Jacobi  defeated  Jim  McLennan 
hv  a  score  of  12  to  II  and  E.  W,  Deetz 
had  the  belter  of  John  Oldham  by  a 
score   of    11    to    8. 

The    rinks     follow: 

Pr«»ideut'M   Event. 
John  McGregor,  Gilbert   Magie. 

E.    W.    Deetz,  B.    Schiller. 

C    F    Macdonald.        E.    Chrudinsky, 
W     G.    Hall.  Will   Dinhani 

skip — 14.  skip— 8. 

Bagley    Kvent. 
L.   Macdonald.  Walter  Willcuts. 

O.   L.   Mather,  K.    Schiller. 

Alex  Graham.  Ed  Furnl. 

Will    Dinham,  Royal    Alw.ortn, 

skip— 6.  skip— 8. 

Board     of     Trade     Buttona. 

Waller  Wilcutts,. 


Now  Little  Doubt  As  to 

Who  Is  the  Better 

Man. 


WILL  PLAY 
IN  CHICAGO 

White  Sox  Have  Three 

Contests  Booked  With 

Callahan's  Team. 


:ig>.  v-fisr  — ^«-wj  cff»sr- 


-Jlil"  yj^^^^  ^tlrSC;  vjc^ff-- 


Duluth  Management  Will 

Sell  Admission  TicKets 

in  Advance. 


Beautiful  Oddities  in 

JEWELRY 

to  be  found  at 

Gruesen's. 

•  WATCH     EXPERT." 
125  West   Superior  Street,  I'pstalra. 


Roy    Holmes, 
J.    A.     MoAuley. 
Jay    Finkelson. 
E.    R.    Jacobi. 

skip— 12. 
E.    R.    Ander.^on. 
Clarence     Getty, 
Jack    Plotnlcky. 
E.    W.    Deetz. 

.skip — 11. 


William    White.   Jr.. 
Cliarles    McLennan. 
Jim     McLennan, 

sk  i  p — 1 1 . 
W.   J.   Stevenson 
Morris  Scroggins. 
Clarence    Dunning, 
John     Oldhaiii, 

skip — 8. 


fHE  STEADY  USE  OF 


PREVENTS  as  well  as  RE- 
STORES gray  hairs  to  their  natu- 
ral color  and  bcaafy,  and  keeps 
the  hair  soft,  glossy  and  In  a 
healthy  condition. 
GRAY  HAIRS  mar  every  woman's 
beauty  and  should  be  guarded 
against  In  every  way.  Nothing 
contrlbntes  so  much  to  n  wo- 
man's beauty  as  her  hair,  and  H 
should  be  every  woman's  duty 
to  take  the  best  care  of  It. 

N«    otber    preparation    caa    compare 
wlUk  it  Inlany  way.    IS  NOT  A  DYE. 

ft  and  SOc.  bGttlea.  at  druggists. 
Bend  2c  lor  free  book,  "The  Care  of  the  Hair." 

Ptillo  Bay  Spec  Co.„  Newark.  N.  J. 

W.  A.  ABBETT. 


By  the  Way 

When  buying  a  cigar  call  for 

Elcora  or 
Mataafa 

All  Dealers  Sell  Thetn. 

DULUTH  CIGAR  CO.,  Makers 


25  or  1,000,000 

There  is  no  job  too  large  or  too 
great  in  number  for  us  to  handle; 
none  too  small  to  receivarssur  mo.st 
careful  att«-ntion.     Prompt  and  good. 

Millar  Printing  Company. 

Old    "Phone     KHM. 


GOPHER  SHOE  WORKS 


DILI  TM — *u    l«t     Ave.    W. 

12    4th     Ave.    W. 
Superior — 1418   Tower    Ave. 


SAVE  TIME! 

Telephone  year  want  nda.  to  The 
Herald.  The  rnten  are  the  aaiuei 
aad  we  will  mail  .vou  a  bill  after 
Ita   luxertlou. 

BOTH    'PHONES,    324. 


ENTHUSIASM  AT 
BOWLERS'  MEET 

EIRs  Have  Big  Time  Dur- 
ing Tl^clr  Day  at 
Pittsburg. 

Pittsburg.  Fa.,  March  16.— "Elks- 
Day"  and  "Wheeiing  Night"  injected 
a  great  deal  of  enthusiasm  Into  the 
first  dav"s  ses.«ion  of  the  closing  week 
of  the  ninth  tournament  of  the  Amer- 
ican bov.ling  congress.  The  largest 
crowd  that  has  yet  attended  the  ses- 
sions of  the  tournament  made  Dutiuesne. 
Garden  ring  with  song,  cheer  and  shout 
of  encouragement  for  favorite  teams. 
Ellks  were  out  in  force  with  tlieir 
ladies  to  bring  success  to  their  fellow- 
men  while  the  bowlers  from  Wheeling. 
\V.  Va.,  were  accompanied  by  two 
tiainloaus  of  enthusiasts,  besides  many 
friends  from  tlii.s  city. 

More  than  a  score  of  cities  were  rep- 
resented in  liie  matches  yesterday  and 
last  nlsiit.  ,     ,.    . ,      ,  A 

The  scores  of  the  individual  and 
two-men  team  contests  during  tlie  day 
were  not  up  to  tlie  general  average, 
but  one  change  occurring  in  the  liigh- 
est  ten  scores  In  these  two  events.  H. 
Dean  and  C.  V>\  Turner  of  St.  Loui.>?.  in 
the  second  double  event,  advanced  into 
second  place  in  tl'.e  honor  roll  in  th:s 
event,  making  a  score  of  1.259,  beat- 
ing the  record  made  by  the  Klene- 
Chalm-rs  team  at  Cincinnati  last  year, 
but  tailing  sliort  of  the  mark  set  up 
by  the  rfchwoegler  brothers  of  Madison. 
Wi.s..  last  week.  For  a  time  it  was 
thought  the  new  record  of  1,304  wou'^ 
be  broken,  but  the  men  weakent^ 
somewhat  in  the  last  game.  Turner 
made  a  score  of  267  in  his  first  game. 
this  being  tlie  alley  record. 

Four  five-men  teams  of  Elks  from 
Pittsburg.  Wheeling.  W.  Va.,  and  Ta- 
rentum  Pa.,  rolled  one  game  eacli  last 
night  for  tlie  trophy  offered  by  the 
Klks  of  Cincinnati,  a  score  of  814  made 
bv  the  men  from  Wheeling  being  high 
"Tlie  Elks'  team  from  Milwaukee  last 
Thur.sday  rolled  a  score  of  8S0,  thus 
winning   the   trophy. 

The  highest  ten  scores  in  all  events 
since    the    opening    of    the    tournament 

Individuals — F.  Bruggeman.  Sioux 
City.  691;  Larry  Sutton.  Rochester, 
X  y.  691;  E.  Peterson,  Chicago,  6(2; 
Henrv  Hover,  Sioux  City,  663;  Fred 
Ebert,  Milwaukee,  660;  J.  Blouln,  Chi- 
cago 651 ;  Mai.  Tyser.  Rochester.  N. 
Y  64S:  Gus  Steele  Chicago.  646:  Frank 
Fox,  Indianapolis,  646:  Harry  Steers, 
Chicago    637. 

Two-men — Al  Schwoegler  and  Tony 
Schwoegler.  Madison,  Wis.,  world's 
record  1.304:  Dean-Tucker.  St.  Louis, 
1,239;  Steinmiller-Lippert,  Chicago  1,- 
209-  Fick-Novak.  Toledo.  1.201;  Koehl- 
Meling.  Columbus.  1.198;  Ellis-P.osen- 
l.ach  Grand  liapids,  1.193;  Selbach-Col- 
lins  ■  Columbus  1,192;  Seimer-Garden. 
Cincinnati.  1,190;  King-Murphy.  Akron, 
Ohio  1  1S7;  Green-Moon.  Hamilton.  Ga.. 
1,187;    'Hopkins,Tinney.     Cleveland.     1.- 

183. 

• 

Contracts  and  Releases. 

New  York.  March  16. — Acting 
President  Heydler  of  the  National 
league  announced  the  following  con- 
tracts and  releases: 

Contracts — With  Chicago,  Charles 
C.  Fraser,  Joseph  B.  Stanley.  Fred  R 
Liese;  with  Cincinnati.  Blaine  Dur- 
bin  E.  T.  Oakes.  Martin  J.  O'Toole; 
with  Pittsburg,  Charles  B.  Adams,  W. 
T.  Miller,  Gus  Soffel,  Robert  G.  Vail; 
with  St.  Louis.  Jolin  J.  A.  Bliss,  John 
C.  Lush.  W.   E.   Murdoch. 

Releases — By  Chicago  to  Indianap- 
olis A.  A..  John  F.  Hayden;  by  Pitts- 
burg  to    Louisville    A.    A..    Hugh    Tate. 

Loses  Handicap  )latch. 

Chicago.  March  16. — Frank  Gotch, 
the  champion  wrestler  of  the  world, 
failed  here  last  night  to  throw  Charles 
Cutler  of  Chicago  in  a  handicap 
match.  Gotch  agreed  to  throw  Cutler 
once  in   fifteen    minutes. 

• 

Welsh  vs.  Young  Donohue. 

New  Orleans.  La.,  March  16. — 
Freddie  Welsh,  the  English  light- 
weight champion,  will  meet  Young 
Donohue  of  Boston  In  a  scheduled  10- 
round  bout  before  the  Parkview  Ath- 
letic club  here  tonight. 


Madison  Square  Garden,  New  York. 
March  16.— Befc^re  10,000  spectators,  a 
large  majority  of  whom  were  his  coun- 
tryment,  Dorando  IMetrl  last  night  de- 
feated Johnny  Hayes  in  the  match  for 
Marathon  supremacy.  The  race  was  at 
the  regulation  distance.  26  miles  385 
yards,  and  was  run  over  a  10-lap  track 
in   Madison  Square  Garden. 

Both  men  were  in  excellent  condi- 
tion, and  Dorando  proved  himself  to  be 
the  master  of  Hayes  at  the  game  of 
long-distance    running. 

irom  (he  starter's  gun  to  the  end 
of  the  race  the  Italian  led  the  Ameri- 
can boy.  throughout  being  spurred  on 
by  the  cheers  and  plaudits  of  his  emo- 
tional   countrymen.  .,        ,-v  j 

In  the  stvenleenth  mile  Dorando 
started  a  lieart-breaking  spurt  wltich 
Haves  was  unable  to  follow,  and  belore 
a  half  mile  had  been  run  the  foreigner 
had  gained  a  lap.  Again  In  the  eigh- 
teentli  mile,  after  he  had  taken  a 
breathing  spell,  the  Italian  set  out  at 
a  pace  Haves  was  unable  lO  equal,  anti 
annexed  another  lap.  Thenceforward 
to  the  finish  Dorando  merely  Jogged 
behind  Hayes,  winnhig  the  race  by  two 
laps    In    easy    fashion. 

Hayes  won  the  pole,  but  two  seconds 
after  Sheriff  Tom  Foley  sent  them 
away  at  9:22:30  o'clock  Dorando  went 
to  the  fore  and  was  leading  by  a 
couple  of  feet  at  the  end  of  the  first 
mile.     The  official  time  was  5:06. 

The  runners  passed  the  second  line 
mark  in  10:42,  whicli  is  thirty-six  sec- 
onds better  than  the  time  made  on 
Tl;anksgiving  eve  by  them.  Dorando 
still  was  slightly  In  the  lead  and 
H«y*>s  permitted  him  to  do  the  pace- 
making  throughout  the  third  and 
fourth  miles.  The  time  at  the  end  of 
the  third  mile  was  16:30  and  at  the 
finish  of  the  fourth  mile  22  minutes 
flat. 

Both  Dorando  and  Hayes  were  run- 
ning easy  at  the  fifth  mile,  and  what 
betting  there  was  was  at  even  inoney. 
Haves  trailed  two  yards  behind  the 
Italian  at  this  point  in  the  race.  Time 
for  five  miles.  27:38. 

Dorando  also  led  at  the  end  of  the 
sixth  mile,  but  in  the  first  lap  of  the 
seventh  Haves  sprinted  and  took  the 
lead  Amid"  loud  cheers  the  Amencari 
circled  the  track  at  a  rapid  pace,  but 
then  slowed  down  and  Dorando  again 
went    to    the    front. 

The  enthusiasm  as  the  runners  jog- 
ged around  the  saw  dust  and  clay 
track,  was  intense,  the  Italian  vieing 
with  the  Americans  and  Irish-.\meri- 
cans  In  chetring  on  their  partlclpaiits. 
Two  bands  In  the  arena,  one  Italian 
and  the  other  American,  knew  their 
cues  well,  for  when  there  came  a  lapse 
in  the  applause  for  the  runners  they 
blared  forth  martial  airs  or  rag-time. 
The  best  of  humor  prevailed  every- 
where throughout  the  great  building. 
There  was  a  terrific  burst  of  cheer- 
ing from  the  10,000  spectators  when 
Dorando  led  Hayes  by  a  couple  of 
vards  past  the  ten-mile  mark  In  &6:4b. 
■  In  the  running  of  the  fourteenth, 
Hayes  made  a  sprint  which  to  tlie 
spectators  looked  to  be  a  tryout  to  as- 
certain Just  how  much  the  Italian 
held  in  reserve.  Several  times  the 
runners  changed  positions,  but  the 
Italian  would  not  be  denied  and  led 
Haves  across  the  line  at  the  end  of  the 
fourteenth  mile.  Dorando  also  held 
the  lead  at  the  finish  of  the  fifteenth, 
his    time    being    1:27:05.  ^        .    , 

Dorando  after  finishing  the  sixteenth 
mile  in  1:33:20,  sprinted  away  and 
amid  terrific  cheers  lapped  Hayes  In- 
side of  a   half  mile. 

Dorando's  time  for  seventeen  miles 
was  1:39:22  2-5,  and  was  the  fastest 
for  the  distance  ever  run  in  America. 

During  the  running  of  the  eifeliteenth 
mile  Dorando  gained  another  lap  and 
then  settled  In  behind  the  little  Irish- 
American,  whom  he  followed  step  by 
step   with   dogged   persistence. 

The  nineteenth  mile  was  passed  in 
1:53:07.  The  former  record  for  this 
distance,  made  in  the  Shrubb-Long- 
boat  race,   was   1:54:26. 

From  this  stage  of  the  journey  there 
%vas  little  doubt  as  to  the  result,  as 
Dorando     simply  jogged     in      behind 

Haves  and  In  the  final  miles  rompea 
awav  from  the  London  Marathon  win- 
ner,"  defeating  him  by  half  a  nolle  in 
2:48:08. 


Three  important  games  have  been 
added  to  the  strong  schedule  already 
prepared  for  the  White  Sox  on  their 
spring  training  trip.  They  will  meet 
tlie  fast  Callahan  team  of  Chicago  in 
three  contests  although  the  dates  have 
not  yet  been  decided  upon.  The  games 
will   all   take  place   In   Chicago. 

Mr.  Kuelinow  announced  this  morn- 
ing that  he  has  secured  as  one  of  the 
crack  twirlers  of  the  team,  J.  H. 
Guthrie.  This  young  man  will  work 
out  with  the  Sioux  City  team  and  will 
report  In  Duluth  In  time  to  join  the 
team  In  the  first  game.  Mr.  Kuehnow 
this  morning  received  a  letter  front 
Darby  O'Brien,  playing  manager,  and 
he  Is  very  entliusia.stic  over  the  pros- 
pects   for    a    winning    team. 

In  order  to  raise  the  |3,000  neces- 
sary to  start  the  team  on  its  spring 
trip  and  start  the  season,  the  Dulutli 
management  will  begin  at  once  to  sell 
ticket  books.  These  books  will  sell  at 
|5  and  $10.  The  $5  books  will  contain 
twenty-two  tickets  and  the  $10  books 
will  contain  forty-four.  The  tickets  will 
be  transferable  ajid  can  be  used  at  any 
time  either  in  the  grand  stand  or  any 
other   part    of    the    grounds. 

There  is  quite  a  little  enthusiasm 
over  the  new  league  idea  by  the  fans 
generallv,  and  It  is  expected  that  no 
trouble  "will  be  experienced  In  dispos- 
ing of  the   tickets. 


AWAITS  END 
OFjNQlllRY 

La  Foiiette  Will  Make  No 

Early  Move  Against 

Stephenson. 

Senator  to  be  Guided  by 
the  Results  at  Mad- 
ison. 


Eastern  Team  Wins. 


New  York,  March  16. — The  first 
night's  play  in  the  billiard  match  be- 
tween the  amateurs  of  the  West  and 
the  amateurs  of  the  East,  now  being 
played  at  McGraw's  billiard  academy, 
resulted  in  a  victory  for  the  East,  the 
team  representing  New  York  winning 
out  by  a   score   of  50   to   48. 

James  B.  Lair  started  for  New  York, 
but  gave  way  to  D.  Ballon  after  the 
fifty-seventh  inning.  At  this  point 
Jordan  Lambert  of  St.  Louis,  repre- 
senting the  amateurs  of  the  West,  was 
sixteen  points  in  the  lead,  but  Ballou 
cauglit  up  with  him  and  finally  beat 
him  out  by  two  points. 

Yusiflf  Wins  a  Match. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  March  16. — 
Yusiff  Mahm()ut  struck  the  hardest 
match  of  his  American  tour  last  night 
when  he  ran  against  Henry  Ordeman, 
the  big  Minneapolis  blacksmith.  The 
Turk  won  in  two  straight  falls,  the 
first  after  one  hour's  incessant  wrest- 
ling, and  the  second  in  ten  minutes, 
after  Ordeman  was  exhausted  by  the 
struggle  of  the  first  bout. 

Keyes  Outpointed. 

New  York.  March  16. — In  a  ten- 
round  bout  before  the  Marathon  Ath- 
letic club  in  Brooklyn  last  night, 
Johnny  Frayne.  the  California  light- 
weight, outpointed  Bert  Keyes  of  this 
city  by  a  good  margin.  The  local 
boy  started  the  fight  in  rushing  style, 
but  after  the  first  round  Frayne  man- 
aged to  hold  him  by  clever  work  and 
outpointed  him  except  in  the  sixth  and 
seventh  rounds. 


Washington,  March  16. — The  action 
of  La  Foiiette  yesterday  In  present- 
ing to  the  senate  the  credentials  of  Mr. 
Stephenson  and  in  accompanying  him 
to  the  desk  of  the  vice  president  to 
take  the  oath  of  office  an  senator,  is 
without  significance  as  to  the  course 
that  may  ultimately  be  taken  by  Mr. 
La  Foiiette  concerning  any  contest  that 
may  be  determined  upon  over  the  ques- 
tion of  the  regularity  of  the  action  of 
the    Wisconsin    legislature. 

The  legislature  is  investigating  these 
preceedings  and  should  this  result  in 
the  finding  of  serious  irregularities  In 
the  election  of  Stephenson,  Mr.  La 
Foiiette  may  introduce  a  resolution 
calling  for  an  Investigation  by  the 
comm.ittee  on  privileges  and  election 
as  to  the  right  of  Stephenson  to  retain 
his  seat.  A  senators  credentials  prop- 
erly signed  by  stale  officers  have  al- 
wa'ys  been  accepted  by  the  senate  as 
prima- facie  evidence  of  his  election 
until  a  contest  is  entered. 
> 
Aiuea  Itecelved  fOOO. 
Madison,     Wis.,     March  IC. — A.     E, 

Ames,  who  conducted  the  campaign  in 
Dane  county  for  Isaac  Stephenson, 
testified  before  the  legislative  sena- 
torial primary  Investigation  commit- 
tee that  he  received  $900  from  the 
Stephenson  fund.  Of  this  ainount, 
$500  was  for  salary  for  himself,  the 
balance  going  to  poll  workers  and 
other  small  items  of  expense.  He  said 
he  took  no  active  part  in  the  legisla- 
tive campaign.  He  "devoted  his  whole 
time  to  the  work  and  got  results,"  he 
said.  ,  ^,  , 

C  C.  Wellensgard,  assemblyman  of 
Green  Lake  county  said  he  received 
$250.80  from  the  Stephenson  fund.  He 
arranged  with  Mr.  Sackett  to  do  work 
for  Stephenson  the  same  time  as  he 
was  working  for  himself  and  was  told 
by  Sackett  that  he  (W^ellensgard) 
would  be  reimbursed  for  Stephenson's 
share  of  the  expense.  He  frequently 
hired  the  same  man  to  circulate 
Stephenson's  and  his  own  papers. 


igesfo 

MALT  EXTRACT 


•V 


:i>fe 


CLOTHING 

112  WEST  SU?EiUJi  unit 


mS' 


For  the  Tired  Housewife 

The  dull  monotony  of  the  housewife's  daily 
routine  is  wearing  on  both  body  and  mind.  She 
will  find  in  Digesio  Malt  Extract  a  splendid 
tonic,  whose  mildly  stimulating  effect  drives 
away  that  feeling  of  apathy  and  Ustlcssness  and 
gives  life  renewed  interest. 

Palatable  and  Efficient 

At  all  Drug  Sitra 
THEO.  HAMM  BREWING  CO..  ST.  PAUt 

SREWERS  or  THE  BBER  THAT 

"Lends  Them  All" 


^*  ■ii£»ffa;  D 1..  ST.  P*^ 


AMERICAN  EXCHANGE  BANK 

OF  DULUTH^  MINN. 

CAPITAL  ARDJURPLUS^SI,350,0QI) 

CHECKING  ACCOUNTS  INVITED. 

Savings  and  Time  Deposits  Draw  3%  llntcrcsl. 


CERTIFICATE  OF  INCORPORATION 

— OF— 

GOPHER-EMPIRE  MINING  CO. 

We,  the  jiidei  signed,  hereby  asso- 
ciate ourselves  togetlier,  agree  upon 
arnX  adopt  the  following  certificate  of- 
Incorporation,  under  the  provisions  of 
Chapter  Bs  of  the  Revised  Laws  of  the 
State  of  Minnesota,  for  the  year  1905. 
and  acts  amendatory  thereof  and  sup- 
plemental   thereto. 

ARTICLE  L 
The  name  of  this  corporation  shaT 
be  GOPHER-EMPIRE  MINING  COM- 
PANY. The  principal  place  of  trans- 
acting Its  business  shall  be  Duluth, 
Minnesota.  The  general  nature  of  its 
business  shall  be  the  mining,  smelting, 
reducing,  refining  ana  working  of  lion 
ores  and  other  minerals,  and  the  manu- 
facture of  iron,  steel,  copper  and  otlier 
metals. 

ARTICLE    II. 
The    period    of    its    duration    shall    be 
thirty    (30)    years,   and  the   date   of   the 
comrnencement       of       this       corporation 
shall  be  Marcli  20th,  19ii9. 
ARTICLE   III. 
The    names    and    piaces    of    residence 
of    the    Incorporators    of    this    corpora- 
tion  are  as   follows: 

Wiliiam   Harrison,  Duluth.   Minn. 
S.    T.    Harrison.   Duluth.    Minn. 
E.    H.    Mather,    Duluth.   Minn. 
.1.    .1.   Rol^inson.   Duluth,   Minn. 
Julius   D.    Howard.   Duluth,   Minn. 

ARTICLE  IV. 
The  mnnagement  of  this  corporation 
shall  be  vested  in  a  Board  of  Directors. 
consisting  of  five  »,5  >  members.  The 
names  and  addross'es  of  those  com- 
posing the  Board  of  Directors  until  the 
first    election    are    as    follows: 

William    Harrison,    Dtiluth,    Minn. 
S.   T.    Harrison.    Duluth,   Minn. 
E.   H.   Mather.   Diiluth,  Minn. 
J.   J.    Robinson.   Duluth,   Minn, 
.lulius  D.   Howard,   Duluih,   Minn. 
The    annual     meeiing    of    the    stock- 
holders of  this  corporation  for  the  elec- 
tion   of    Directors    and    the    transaction 
of    other   business   shall    be   held   on   the 
first    Monday    in    March    in    each    year, 
except    wlien    that   day    is   a   legal   holi- 
day,   then     on     the     following    day.     at 
such  placf  as  may  from  time  to  time  be 
determined    bv    bv-lav.-   or  resolution   of 
the  Board  of  liirectors.     The  first  meet- 
ing of  tlie  corporation  shall  be  held  on 
the    20th    dav    f.f    March.    1909,    at    two 
M..     in     Room     609,     Torrey 
Duluth.     Minnesota,     without 


X-ir-    -f-^'-'SV---: 


When  You  Want 
What  You  Want 
When  You  Want 


„  ( Send  Your  Printing  Orders  to 

F.  e.  LOUNSBERRY  &  CO.,  PRINTER!?. 

Bolh  Thoncs.  Providence  BIdg.  4!h  Ave.  W.  &  Superior  SI. 


YOU    WILL    REALIZE    THAT    "THEY    LIVE 
WELL  WHO  LIVE  CLEANLY."  IF  YOU  USE 

SAPOLI 


We    have 
seals  this 

(Rean 
(Sean 
(Peal) 
( Seal ) 
(SeaO 


WHOLESALE 

JOBBERS  AND 
MANUFACTURERS 

or  DULUTH,  MINNESOTA. 
Reliable  and  Up-to-Date  Concerns  Who  Do  a  Strictyl 
Jobbing  and  Manufacturing  Business. 


A3BESTOS. 
/    H.  Krieger  Co. 


Stoddard  Dayton 

$1500  to  S3500 

RAMALEY  GARAGE,  pIIl 

The  Peer  of  All  Electrics 

CATALOGUES   ON  REQUEST 


MARIE  DRESSIER  SELLS  GEMS 
TO  PAY  ACTORS^  SALARIES. 

London,  March  16. — The  liabilities 
of  Marie  Dressier,  the  American  ac- 
tress, who  recently  reopened  the  Ald- 
wych  theater,  but  was  compelled  to 
abandon  the  enterprise  within  a  few 
davs,  amount  to  $10,000.  and  the  as- 
sets to  $3,000,  according  to  estimates 
presented  at  a  meeting  of  the  creditors 
today.  The  liabilities,  however,  do  not 
include  the  unpaid  salaries  of  her 
company.  • 

Miss  Dressler's  solicitors  said  that 
she  had  sold  all  her  jewelry  to  meet 
the  salaries,  which  were  paid  at  the 
end  of  the  first  week,  and  offered  to 
make  over  one-quarter  of  her  future 
earnings  to  the  amount  of  $7,500.  The 
meeting  adjourned  pending  an  at- 
tempt   to    secure    a    better    offer. 

RESISTS  EVKTION.  SAYS 

FARM  BELONGS  TO  LORD. 

Noblesvllle.  Ind..  March  16. — Layton 
Randall,  a  tenant  on  the  farm  of  Scott 
Lester,  has  been  bereft  of  his  goods 
and  his  ten  children,  but  refuses  to  be 
evicted,  because  he  says  the  farm  be- 
longs not  to  Lester  but  to  the  Lord, 
and  he  has  Instructions  to  stay.  Lester 
tried  to  get  rid  of  his  unprofitable 
tenant  for  two  years,  but  was  in- 
variably met  by  Randall's  prayerful 
refusal  to  move.  So  far  as  the  land- 
lord was  concerned,  the  tenant's 
pravers  were  successful  until  now. 
Raiidall  Is  living  -in  the  barn.  Neigh- 
bors are  caring  for  his  children  pend- 
ing further  developments. 

Folev's  Honey  ajid  Tar  cures  coughs 
qulcklv.  strengthens  the  lungs  and  ex- 
pels colds.  Get  tUe  genuine  in  a  yel- 
low  package.   Sold   by  all   druggists. 


BAKERS  AND  ICE  CREAM 
MANUFACTURERS. 

Crescent   Bakery. 


BLAST  FURNACE. 
Zenith  Furnace  Co. 


BREWERS. 

Duluth  Brewing  &  Malting  Co. 
Fitger  Brewing  Co. 

BUTTER     AND     ICE     CREAM 
MANUFACTURERS. 

Bridgeman-Russell  Co. 


GLASS,    PAINTS   AND    BUILD- 
ING   MATERIALS. 

Paine  &  Nixcn  Co. 


o'clock     P 

Pulldlng, 

notice. 

ARTICLE  V. 
The  amount  of  the  capital  stock  of 
ihls  corporation  is  Five  Hundrtd  Thou- 
sand Dollars  (  $50(>.000.00  >.  divided  into 
One  Hundred  Thousand  (lOO.dOO)  shares 
of  the  par  value  of  Five  Dollars  <$5.00» 
each,  to  be  paid  in  as  the  Board  of 
Directors   mav   determine. 

This  corporation  mav  begin  busi- 
ness when  tour  thousand  (4,000)  shares 
of  its  capital  st<'ck  are  subscribed  for. 
ARTICLE  VL 
The  highest  amount  of  indebtedness 
<.r  liabili(v  to  which  this  corporation 
.■-haM  at  anv  time  be  subject  is  Five 
Hundred  Thousand  Dollars  ($oU0.- 
000.00).  _ 

IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF, 
hereunto  set  i  ur  hands  and 
9th   dav   of   March.    1909. 

W1LL1.-\M     HARRISON 
S.    T.     HARRISON. 
E.    H.    MATHER. 
J.    .1.    ROBINSON. 
Jl'l.irS   r>.    HOWARD. 
H.    J.    McCLEARN. 
H.    H.   LONGLEY. 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 

On  this  10th  day  of  March.  1909.  be- 
fore me.  a  Notary  Public  within  and 
lor  said  Countv.  personally  ari'eare<i 
William  Harrison.  S.  T.  Harrison.  K.  H. 
Mather.  J.  .T.  Robinson  and  .Tulius  D. 
Howard,  to  me  well  kn<  \vn  to  lie  the 
persons  described  in  and  who  execute<i 
the  foregoing  Instrument,  and  ac- 
knowledg<'d  tliat  they  exe<'.ited  the 
same  as  their  free  act  and  deed. 
H.  J.  Mo( 'LEARN. 

Notarv  Public. 
St.   Louis  Co..  Minn. 
(Notarial    Seal.    St.    Louis   Co..   Minn.) 

My  commission  expires  Aug.  18.  1910. 

State     of      Minnesota.      Department      of 

State,  ,  ,  ,  .      . 

T  herebv  certifv  that  the  within  in- 
striimcnt  "was  fi<d  for  record  In  this 
((ffice  on  the  12tli  day  of  March.  A.  D. 
1909  at  11  oV'io«k  A.  M..  and  was 
dulv"  recorded  in  Rook  R-3  of  Incor- 
porations, on  page  197.  „^,„,.„_ 
JULIUS   A.   SCHMAHL. 

Secretary    of  State. 


OFFICE   OF   REGISTER    OF   I'EICDS. 
State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Loul; 
— s*^ 

I    herebv   certifv   that    the   within   In- 
strument   was    f^led    in    this    office    for 
record     March     13.    190f)     .-tt   J"     -V    M.   • 
and    was    diilv    recorded    In    Bo.  k    9    ot 

Misc..  page  4?fi.  ^ 

M.  C.  PALMER, 

Register  of   Deeds. 
By  THOS.  CLARK. 

Deputy. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald— March    16-17, 
1909. 


GROCERS. 

Gowan-Peyton-Twohy  Co. 

Stone-Ordean-V^'^ells  Co. 

Wright-Clarkson    M:rcantile   Co. 


HARDWARE. 
Kelley-How-Thoiuson   Co. 
Marshall-Wells    tidw.   Co. 


CEMENT  AND  PLASTER. 
D.  G.  Cutler  Co. 


COMMISSION  AND  PRODUCE. 

Fitzsimmons-Palmer  Co. 

Knudsen  Fruit  Company. 

Thomas  Thompson  Co. 


CONFECTIONERY. 

Duluth  Candy  Co. 

National    Candy    Co. 

(Duluth  Factory.) 


LUMBER.  SASH  &  iDOOR  MAN- 
UFACTURSRS. 

Scott-Graff  Lumber  Co. 


MEN'S     FURNISHINGS     AND 
MAN'F'RS  CLOTHING. 

Christensen-Meadenhall- 
Graham  Co. 


papef:. 

Bemis  Bag  &  Paper  Co. 

Duluth  Paper  &  Stationery  Ca 

McClellan   Paper  Co. 

Peyton  Pap  jr   Co. 


CORNICE    MANUFACTURERS. , 

Duluth  Cormgating  &  Roofing  Co.  I    piCTURE  FRAMES  &  MOULD- 
ING. 


DRUGS. 
L.  W.  Leithhead  Drug  Co. 

DRY  GOODS. 

F.  A.  Patrick  &  Co. 


Decker   Manufacturing  Co. 


PLUMBING  SirPPLIES. 

Crane   &  Qrd  vay    Co. 


NOTICE   OF     MORTGAGE      FORECLO- 
SUKE  SALE—  _ 

Notice  is  liereby  Given.  Tliat  a 
mortgage  made  I  y  .Mary  O'Brien  (for- 
merly Marv  Middleton)  and  James  A. 
O'Brien  (her  husband),  mortgagors,  to 
John  M'-Nauglit.  mortgagee,  which 
mortgage  bears  dale  the  18th  day  of 
September.  19o3.  and  was  filed  for  rec- 
ord in  the  office  of  the  Register  of 
Deeds  in  ajid  for  the  County  of  St. 
Louis  anu  State  of  Minnesota,  on  the 
_'lst  day  of  July,  1904,  at  8  o'clock  A. 
M.,  and  duly  recorded  in  Book  1C4  of 
Mortgages,  "on  page  629,  which  .sale 
mortgage  mortgages  and  conveys  the 
loilowing  described  premises  situated 
in  said  St.  Louis  County  and  State  ot 
Minnesota,   to-wit: 

The  Soutlieast  quarter  of  the  North- 
west quarter  (SE"4  of  the  NW14  »  of  Sec- 
tion ten  (10  1.  In  township  fifty-two 
(!i2;,  North  of  Range  Fifteen  ( R.  15), 
West  of  the  Fourth  Principal  Meridian, 
containing  Forty  (40;  acr;  s.  more  01 
less,  according  to  the  United  States 
Government  Survey,  will  le  forelosed 
bv  a  sale  of  the  above  dest  ribed  prem- 
ises, which  sale  will  be  made  by  the 
Sheriff  of  said  St.  Louis  County,  at  his 
office  ill  tlie  St.  Louis  County  Cour' 
House,  in  the  City  of  Dulutli,  in  said 
St.  Louis  Cunty  and  State  of  Minne- 
sota on  Wednesday,  the  7th  day  of 
Vpril  1909,  at  ten  o'clock  in  the  fore- 
noon. There  is  due  and  claimed  to  be 
due  on  said  mortgage  at  the  date  of 
this  notice  the  sum  of  One  Hundred 
Sixteen  and  49-100  Dollars  ($116.49)  as 
principal  and  interest,  and  tlie  sum  of 
Four  and  4-lOu  Dollars  ($4.04)  as 
taxes  for  ti.e  year  1907.  paid  by  mort- 
gagee, making  a  total  amount  of  One 
Hundred  twenty  and  53-100  Dollars 
(  $120.53)    now  due. 

Dated     at       Minneapolis,     Minnesota  . 
February    lOth,   1909. 

Jt.'HN  McNAUGHT. 

Ml  rtgagee. 
ARTHUR     L.    JONES   and   Gi:ORGE    W. 
STRONG. 

Attorne^  s    for    said    Mortgagee. 
Security   Eaj.k   Bldg.,  Minneapolis.  Min- 
nesota. 
Duluth   Evenii,g   Herald-Feb.  23,   March 
2-9-16-23-30.   April  6,  IS-JP. 


FOUNDERS  and  MACHINISTS.;    SADDLERY,     LEATHER     AND 
.  ...     .  FINDINGS. 


Clyde  Iron  Works 
National  Iron  Co 


FURNITURE. 

DeWitt-Seitz  Company. 


FINDINGS. 
Schulze   Brothers   Co. 


SHOE  MANUF^  CTURERS. 

Noithern  Sl:oe  Co. 


For  space  under  this  heading  apply  to  F.  H.  Green,  Secretary  Jobbers 
and  Manufacturers'  Association.  Duluth,  Miitn. 


1 

1 


to   enioT   life  stioaia 

— Vte  beaitb. 


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toa>u:e  cure  for  Ciirouic  t'lot  rs.  llaiie  I'lcir^ 
BcriTnilo'  ^.I'!cers,^a^  eose  rir«T».5Sprc  in« 
lalUl<prN,Ff^erSori  i»,Gunjfren«-.Hi«>od  lol- 
sontr.K-,  Whitr  ST-.^-lllnK,  l'ol»«iii»'d  Wounds, 

ariSore>of  I'ligrta  Oic^r  PisitUely  n^_vt-rfall.  Cui-«a 
Ei?o  flits,  Barn«,  Boll",  F<  lnn-.»  K'bunrl    s, 

\bBc.e»*«'»  Forfr.!!"  i>y«1rn(:cUt8.  .Mall  25c  aiKlCOo. 
i    »•    Af.LKN  MKDU  lyK  <  o.    9r   Pacl,  Mlity 


^^      g'^^B  Ther  relifvc  iiervcunleclir.e  aad 
&^  J(  ^1  trealLne^^er ;  restore  :'treiit{tb  and 
)  theKTSt«ii. ;  mo,t  wonderful  t!t*;!iii.ii  remedy 
for  young  aJMl  old.  Try  a  boxand  coto  theetleot.   11  »t> 
Boyc*  Dioc  (;o..  88S  Su»«rior  St.  J>ulutL.  liiaa. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,    MARCH    16,    1909. 


11 


Ordinary  and  Industrial 
Life  Insurance  Policies. 
Ages  1  to  70.  Both  Sexes. 
Amounts  &13  to  &  100,000 


1  r    MILLION 
I  J    DOLLARS 


82  SSSs    193  Million  Dollars    363  Million  Dollars 


802  Million  Dollars 


over  1400  Million  Dollars 


INSURANCE    IN    FORCB 


Policyholder 


Prudential  Agents  are  now  can- 
vassing in  this  vicinity.  They 
have  a  very  interesting  story  to 
tell.      Let  thera  tell  it  to  you. 


THE   PRUDENTIAL  INSURANCE  COMPANY  OF   AMERICA 


JOBN  F.  DRYDEN,  President. 

BRANCH  OFFICE  IN  DULUTH: 

N   NISSEN,  Supt..  Rooms  308-9-10  Sellwood  Bldg..  West  Supt  St.  and  2nd  Ave. 

T    SLINEY    Asst.  Supt.       E.  L.  WHITTAKER.  Asst.  Supt. 

J.  bi-iwi^i,  y    ^  ^   PETERS.  Asst.  Supt      A.  J.  GIBSON,  Asst.  Supt. 


INOORPORATED  AS  A  STOCK  SOMPANY  BY  THE  STATE  OF  NEW  JERSEY.  HOME   OFFICE.   NEWARK.  NEW  JERSEY. 


ARTHUR  G.  FITZGERALD,  District  Manager,  Ord.  Dept.,  Sellwood  Bldg. 
B.  H.  TIMBERLAKE,  Mgr.  Ord.  Dept.  for  Minn.,  Andrus  Bldg.,  Minneapolis, 
Minn. 


AGENTS 

;   WANTED. 

GOOD 

1  N  CO  M  E. 

PROM 

O  T  1  O  N  . 

THK 


':::z:r.^ .. .i'jr.z:::.:rr:.:':^^.:..oi  .,.->-»^  >-■»  — "<>-  — °  -"  -  ■^■""-»'"v- 


KEW  TRIAL  IS  DENIED  TO 
SCHKEIBER.  ( ONVRTED  OF 
M I RDER  OF  MASSAPUST 

t.Cantlnued  iJoin  page  1.) 


elf.     He  claimed  that  when 


cale  and  that  if  he  took  a  deed  to  the 
Wisconsin  land  In  the  name  of  FranK 
Massapust  some  time  M'ssap^st  3  peo- 
ple   would    run    across    It    a»d    '■hus    he 


would  save  the  money  to  them  and 
prevent  the  bank  workfnK  the  intended 
wrong,  and  that  tills  was  his  Purpose. 
"Jurors  are  not  reciuired  to  gH  e 
credence  to  such  a  claim  or  to  sucii 
testimony.  Ordinarilv  th«^>/lo  not.  The 
defendant  was  directly  contradicted  b> 
worthy  people  of  hl8  "f  ^hborhood  on 
material  facta  unfavorable  to  him.  lae 
jury  were  not  required  to  credit  his 
••      -        -  -      disposition      to      tell 

They  were  Justified  in 
Is  account  of  how  he 
came  by  the  certificates  was  entirely 
untrue.  If  they  believed  that  he  really 
thought  the  bank  was  defrauding  Mas- 
sapusfs  people  out  of  the  1329.23  cer- 
tificate   they    may   have    concluded,      he 


problematical.  Schrelber  Ig  without 
funds,  the  counsel  having  been  ap- 
pointed by  ti.e  court,  and  unless  tri«"<i^ 
come  to  the  aid  of  the  convicted  man.  it 
Is  not  liLvely  an  appeal  will  be  taken  to 
the   supreme   court. 

The    Conrt's    Memorandum. 

Judge    Dlbell's    memorandum    to    the 
order    denying    the    motion    lor    a    new 

trial   la   as   follows:  ,     »    j--.^      •■ —  -  ,   , 

••It  Is  a  provision  of  the  statute  that    elalmed    pre.sent      disposition 
no  person  sliall  be  convicted  of  murder    nothing  untrue.     '"'         —— — 
or    manslaughter    unless    the    death    of    believing    that   h 
the  person  alleged  to  have   been  killed 
and   the   fact   of  the   killing   by   the   de- 
fendant, as  alleged,  are  each  establlbh- 
ed   as   indei)endent    facto,   the  former   by 
direct    pr.>ur-.    and    the    latter    beyond   a 
reasonable    doubt.  ».,,,„ 

•Frank   Miussapusfs  cabin  was  burn- 
ed  on   the  evening  of  Feb.   9.   1908.      rh& 
trunk   of   a    human    body   was   round   in 
tl;e    ruins.      The   rest    of   the    body    was 
substantially    consumed,    but    the    out- 
lines   of    where    It    lay    were    discernible 
and    a    few    charred    bones      remained. 
There   were   no  mean.s  ot    facial   identi- 
fication.      Near    the     body     were        the 
watch     and     cliain     and     charm     which 
Frank     Massapust     customarily       wore 
Across  it  lay  his  gun.       He  was  in  the 
cabin  alive  a  few  liours  before  the  fire. 
There  were  a  few  other  items  of  direct 
prcof  tending  In  a  minor   way  to  sl-.ow 
Identity:    and   upon   the   whole  evidence 
there      was     no     rea.sonably     debatable 
question    a.s    to    the    fact    of    hi-s    death 
There  is  no  fair  question,  but  that  the 
body   found   in   the   cabin    was    the   body 
taken    to    Xew    I'lm   and   there    Interred, 
and    subsequently   disinterred,   and   that 
It    was    the    body   of    Frank   Massapust. 
"It     appeared     tliat     by     .llrect    pruut^ 

that    a    blood    clot    had    formed    In    tiie 

left    pleural    cavity,    almost    completely 

filling     it;     that     the     lung     tissue     wa.s 

crowded  out  of  place,  and  that  the  heart 

over     tho     displaced.       The     blood     clot 

was    formf u    during    life.      Violence    or 

disease  caused  it.     A  blood  clot  of  less 

extent    was    found    in    the   right   pleural 

cavity      The  lung  tissue  was  apparently 

there  in  place.     Several   of  the   ribs  on 

the    left      side      were      broken      or    cut 

straight    off.    and    one    was    splintered. 

The  ?ibs  on  the  right  sl^*". /^^;\^IJ^  ^'\«- 

were   intact.     The  corpus     delicti     was 

Bufficlentlv  established,  under  the  hold- 
ings  of     substantially   all   the   authorl- 

'^"Th  -  evidence  was  legally  sufficient 
to  Justify  the  jury  in  believing  beyond 
a  reasonable  doubt  that  the  defendant 
killed  Frank  .Masnapust.  The  facts 
about  to  be  recited  were  either  undis- 
puted, or  reasonably  might  have  been 
found'  by  the  jury."' 

Here  ff.llows  a  brief  story  of  the  case 
as  it  came  out  at  the  trial,  and  the 
memorandum  continues;  , 

"On  the  stand  the  defendant  admitted 
being  at  Washburn,  and  admitted  what 
the  state  claimed  occurred  tliere.  Hia 
explanation  was  that  siiortly  after  noon 
of  the  .Saturday  before  the  fire.  Frank 
Mfis8apu.st  came  to  his  place  and  left 
wltli  him.  for  safe  keeping,  the  two 
certificates;  that  on  the  Monday  even- 
ing following  the  fire,  he  hid  them  in 
the  barn;  that  he  took  them  to  W  Iscon- 
Vin  and  u.ed  the  one  for  $329  25;  that 
he  returned  the  $211  certificate  to  Its 
hiding  place,  and  that  when  he^  was 
arrested  in  April  he  instructed  hla 
wife  tn  burn  it.  ,  . 

•He  went  to  Washburn,  he  says,  be- 
cause it  was  a  place  where  likely 
Frank  Ma.«<sapu3t  was  not  known,  lie 
admitted  that  what  he  had  told  so 
many  about  having  seen  Frank  Massa- 
pust last  at  George  Carter's  dance  was 
untrue,  and  tliat  what  he  had  said 
about  never  having  t'een  the  certifi- 
cates and  never  having  been  in  VVasli- 
burn.  and  never  having  seen  Landralnd 
or  Max.-y  was  untrue.  He  .says  tliat 
after  his  confinement  In  Jail  he  ex- 
perienced a  changed  attitude,  and  tliat 
Willie  he  had  told  things  before  about 
tlie  matter  which  were  untrue,  he 
would  not  do  so  now. 

"This  claim  should  have  had,  and 
doubtles.<?  Iiad,  respectful  consideration 
by  the  Jury,  but  they  were  not  required 
it*  believe  his  taatlmony  tending  to  ex- 


thought,   tlie  bank   would  cash  It   when 
sent    on  for   collection   and  keep   still. 

•They  saw  him  and  noted  hi-s  appear- 
ance.    They   may  have  taken  hlni  to   be 
a  rather  aggressive  man.   of  perhap.s  a 
cruel    tvpe    of    countenance,    somewnai 
domineering,  and  one    who  would  carry 
out    resolutely   a   purpose    once   formed. 
He  was  bold  and  shrewd  and  cunning  in 
a    way.      He    was    Ignorant    of    business 
ways    and,    of    course.      he      blundered. 
Tliey   saw    the   attempt    made   to   break 
the    Identification    of    tlie    defendant    as 
the    one     who    assumed    to    be       1*  ranlc 
Massapust  at  Washburn;  and  they  may- 
have  believed  tliat  if  a  fair  question  of 
his   Identity    had    been    left,    3*>.  tliat   he 
iniglit    fairly    hope   or   expect    that   they 
would    credit    his    testimony,    he    would 
have   denied   on   the   stand   having   seen 
Frank  Massapu.'^t  later  than  the  George 
Carter    dance,    denied    liavlng    seen    the 
certificates,      denied     having     been     at 
Washburn,    and    denied      having      seen 
Landraind     or    Maxey,     all     as    he     had 
denied    before.       If    the    evidence    pro- 
duced does   not  justify  a  conviction,  the 
killing  of  another,  unless  there  is  some 
one  who  sees  it.  la  quite  safe. 
Trial    \*'as    Fair. 
"Even    If    the    evidence      Justified      a 
verdict  of  gulliy  the   defendant  should 
have   a   new    trial    if    the   one   had    was 
not  in  every  respect  fair.     Counsel   for 
the    state    prosecuted    vigorously      but 
not    vindictively.      The    defendant    was 
ably      and      vigorou.sly      defended      by 
counsel  appointed  for  him.  All  the  wit- 
nesses he  wanted  were  procured.  There 
was  nothing  In   the  atmosphere  of  the 
trial    prejudicial    to    him.      He    was    not 
restricted   In   the  evidence   lie   chose   to 
offer.      He   was    allowed    to    put    every- 
thing before  the  Jury.     The  state  was 
restricted,    whenever    he      objected,    to 
the    narrowest    limits.      What    Instruc- 
tions  he   asked   were   given.      The  Jury 
were  cautioned  relative  to  circumstan- 
tial   evidence;    the    requisite    degree    of 
proof  was  explained;  the  presumptions 
surrounding  him   were   stated;   and  the 
general    charge    was    altogether    in    his 
favor.     The   trial   was  In   every  respect 
fair  to  tlie   defendant. 

"Notwithstanding  the  sufficiency  of 
the  evidence  and  the  fact  of  a  fair 
trial  the  court  would  now  assume  the 
responsibility  of  granting  a  new  trial 
If  It  were  of  the  opinion  that  likely 
the  Jury  went  astray.  It  would  not 
hide  behind  the  fact  that  tlie  Jury  af- 
ter a  fair  trial  found  him  guilty  upon 
sufficient  evidence  and  refu.se  furtlier 
consideration.  WUth  this  attitude  the 
court  has  gone  over  the  evidence. 

'•Dealing  with  remote  possibilities  It 
might  be  conjectured  that  Frank  Mass- 
apust committed  suicide.  There  is  no 
reason  apparent  why  he  should.  He 
was  prosperous,  friendly  with  his 
brother,  with  whom  in  a  way  he  made 
his    home,    and     was     attached    to     his 


About  Gloves 

Because  we  devote  our  entire  time, 
energj-  and  talent  to  gloves  and  gloves 
only,    we   are   better   qualified   to   give 

you   correct      ^2^  ..»     •/ 

glove  informa- 
tion than  any 
other    store. 


CtOV^rSH 


l>rother's   children.     The   physical    facts 
attending    his    death    negal  ve    suicide. 
He     may     have     been     ftncken         with 
dlseasa   or   have   come   to   his   deatli    bj 
accident.      Tlie    physical    facts    attend- 
ing   his    death    again    negative    such    an 
e.xplanatlon.   The  jury  might  have  con- 
cluded  that   suoli   conjectured    P'^'^^A*''^': 
Ites    were    real       impossibilities.      borne 
mlnd.s    retuse    to    believe   tliat    one    will 
kill    another    for    a    few    hundred    dol- 
lars.     Few    kill    for    money.  _  bome    do. 
even    for    a    few    dollars.      The    book.s 
gives        numerous        authenticated     In- 
stances: and  often  such  killings  are  In 
sparsely    settled    frontier    <;^""";»"'VrJri v 
•The  men  best  qualified  to  find  trul> 
the   fact  of  tho   guilt   or   the   Innocence 
of    the    defendant    were      the      twelve 
jurors     who    were    sworn    to     try    the 
Issue,    who    heard    every    word    of    the 
evidence  as  It   came   to   tliem.  and  wlio 
were    charged    with    the    responsibility 
of  making  a  finding.     The  jurors  weie 
an  intelligent  body  of  men  drawn  from 
different  walks  of  life.     They  were  at- 
tentive    and     circumspect     throug^iout. 
The    defendant's    family    was      present. 
The  Jury   knew  the  meaning  of  a  ver- 
dict   of    guilty.        No      hasty      lnu)ul8e 
prompted   a   verdict   finding   guilt.      The 
deliberate    Judgment    of    a    Jury,    given 
under     such     circumstances,     ought     to 
embody  the  truth.     It  is  far  better  than 
the  Judgment   of   the   trial   court       Us 
better   than   that   of  any  one   who  now 
reads  the  testimony.     The  Jurors  nece^s- 
sarily     concluded     that     the       evidence 
weighed    cautiously    and    gradually    a-s 
they  were  told  to  weigh   it    and  weighed 
it   with    a   due    appreciation    of    all    the 
safeguards    and    presumption."    rnaKlng 
m    favor   of    the    defendant,    proved   his 
guilt    beyond   a   reasonable   doubt,      aiy 
judgment  accords   with   theirs. 

The  motion  for  a  new  trial  for 
Schrleber  was  argued.  Dec.  19.  oy  ^• 
W  C  Ross  of  the  firm  of  Koss  &  :Mc- 
Knlglit.  attorneys  for  the  accused  man, 
Mr.  'Ross  based  his  motion  on  the 
contention  that  the  state  had  failed  to 
establish  a  case  against  Schrelber.  He 
claimed  that  the  corpus  delicti  had  not 
been  established— tiiat  Is.  tlie  state  had 
not  shown  by  direct  evidence,  and  as 
independent  fact.s,  that  Frank  Massa- 
pust was  dead;  that  the  body  found  in 
the  ruins  of  the  cabin  was  Massapust  s. 
and  tliat  tlie  person,  whose  body  was 
found,  had  come  to  his  death  by  violent 
and  criminal  means. 

Mr  Ross  contended  that  the  circum- 
stantial evidence,  on  which  Schrelber 
was  convicted,  was  not  strong  enough. 
He  said  everything  that  seemed  to 
point  to  Schrelber  as  the  guilty  man 
could  be  explained  away  on  some  other 
logical  hypothesis,  and  under  tliose  cir- 
cumstahnces,  the  verdict  was  not  Justl- 

In  "his  argument  on  the  motion. 
County  Attorney  Norton  reviewed  the 
evidence,  and  pointed  out  to  the  court 
wherein  he  believed  the  state  had  estab- 
lished the  guilt  of  Schrelber  beyond  a 
reasonable  doubt.  He  claimed  the  evi- 
dence was  sufficient  to  have  established 
the  corous  delicti,  and  the  case  of  tie 
state  w'as  strong  enough  to  Justify  tne 
Jury  in  returning  tiie  verdict  tliey  dia. 
The   Crime. 

The  murder  of  Frank  Massapust,  as 
the  story  was  told  at  the  trial  of 
Schrelber,  was  an  atrocious  crime,  it 
had  all  the  earmarks  of  a  caretuliy 
planned  and  deliberately  carried  out 
shooting  down  of  a  man  for  his  money 
and  the  burning  of  his  cabin  to  con- 
ceal the  crime.  The  circumstandal 
evidence  brought  out  by  the  state 
tended  to  show  that  while  Massapust 
was  alone  in  his  cabin,  he  was  killed 
by  a  shot  fired  through  a  window, 
and  his  murderer  had  then  set  fire  to 
the  cabin,  that  the  body  and  all  traces 
of  the  crime  might  be  effaced. 

The  scene  of  the  crime  was  a  little 
settlement  about  twelve  miles  from 
\shawa.  now  Cook,  where  eight  or 
ten  families  lived  on  homesteads 
within  a  few  miles  of  each  other.  Mas- 
sapu.st's  cabin  was  about  in  the  center 
of  the  settlement,  and  Schreiber's 
cabin  was  about  a  half  mile  to  the 
cast.  John  and  George  Carter  lived 
some  distance  north  of  Massapuscs 
cabin  and  other  neighbors  were  scat- 
tered at  various  points  around. 

Frank      Massapust      was      last      seen 

alive  on  the  afternoon  of  Sunday,  Nov. 

*i     when    George    Carter    visited    him    at 

his   cabin.      .Ac   the   trial   George  Carter 

1  testified  that  he  left  Massapust  in  good 


spirits.  That  night,  about  9:30  o  clock, 
he  was  awakened  by  his  brother  John 
Carter,  who  said  tlvere  was  a  fire  to 
the  southwest.  They  went  dow-n  and 
found  Massapust's  cabin  alinost  burned 
to  the  ground.  The  interior  was  all 
afiame.  and  through  a  vvindow  on  the 
west  they  could  see  nothing  that  looked 
to  be  a  body,  they  claimed. 

The  testimony  of  the  Carter  brothers 
was  a  strong  factor  in  establishing 
the  case  of  the  state.  They  said  after 
looking  Into  the  burning  cabin  and 
hunting  around  for  Ma.^sapaust,  they 
thought  that  he  had  probably  gone 
over  to  one  of  the  neighbors,  so  they 
started  eastward  to  Investigate.  Ihey 
said  they  called  at  S«h'-en'*^r '^  .h""^^ 
and  George  Carter  knocked  at  the 
door.  Mrs.  Schrelber  answered  and 
Carter  asked  If  Frank  Massapust  was 
there.  She  said  he  was  not  and  they 
went  on  fartlier  down  the  road.  Sclire  - 
ber  did  not  speak  if  he  was  In  his 
house. 

On  their  return  in  fifteen  or  twenty 
minutes,  the  Carters  said  that  the  door 
was  opened  by  Schrelber  almost  as 
soon  as  they  Itnocked.  "He  was,  as 
white  as  any  ghost  I  ever  seen  is 
the  way  George  Carter  described 
Schreiber's  appearance  In 
mony.      Schrelber   joined   th_  . 

they  went  back  to  the  burning  cabin. 
The  Carters  testified  that  as  soon  as 
they     looked       in     the    window 


...     ..... -     his     testi- 
mony.     Schrelber   joined   the   party   and 
tvent   back   to   the   burning    — 

i^^t^-a     f£,<3tlfl.>/1     that     as     Si 

^^^^^^      -     again, 

Schrelb'eTirolnted    tcT  a   spot   and    said 
••What's    that    there?"      They    said    tlie 
charred   trunk  wits   found   in   that  bpot 
the   next   morning.      When    they    passed 
around  to  the  front  of  the  house,  fresh 
tracks   in   the   snow   were   seen    lead  'ig 
across  the  snow  from  the  path  lead  ng 
south    from    the   cabin    to    that    leading 
east.       Both     of     the     Carters     testified 
positively  that  the  tracks  had  not  been 
there  when   they  first  visited  the  scene 
Various  matters  were  brought  out  at 
the  trial,  on  which  the  state  laid  .stress 
and  which   were  contended   to   point  to 
Schreiber's   connection   with    tr\e   crime. 
Statements  made  by  Schrelber.  sucli  as 
he  being  glad   that  he  wasn  t  the  first 
to  discover  the  burning  cabin   'because 
the   law    Is    queer   In    this   country     and 
his   asking   if   one   could   cash    a   certifi- 
cate of  deposit  without  being  Identified, 
were   brouglit  out  In  the' testimony.     It 
was    claimed    by    the    state    that    before 
the      burning      of      Mas.sapust  s      cabin, 
Schrelber  had   been   In  desperate  finan- 
cial  straits  and    testimony   as   to  state- 
ments to   that  effect   by   Schrelber   was 
introduced    to    support    the    contention. 
On  the  other   hand,   it  was  shown   that 
Schrelber   had   paid   $40    for   a    cow   and 
had  expended  other  sums  of  some  mag- 
nitude In  March  of  last  year. 

Schrelber  was  not  directly  connected 
with  the  case,  however,  until  in  April, 
when  he  made  a  trip  to  Wasliburn, 
Wis.  He  negotiated  with  William 
I.andraind,  a  Bayfield  county  man,  for 
the  purchase  of  a  piece  of  land  and  tlie 
.sale  was  arranged.  At  the  Bayfield 
county  bank  of  Washburn,  Schrelber 
represented  himself  as  Frank  Massa- 
T>ust  and  signed  Massapust's  name  to  a 
certificate  of  deposit  on  the  First  Na- 
tional Bank  of  Virginia  made  out  to 
Massapust,  obtaining  $75  on  It.  He 
was  also  seen  In  possession  of  a  certifi- 
cate of  deposit  for  $211.  The  Wash- 
burn bank  refused  to  advance  any 
more  than  $75  on  the  certificate  and  It 
was  dishonored  when  it  was  sent  to  the 
Virginia  bank. 

ArreHted  for  Foricery. 
Schrelber  returned  home.  and  on 
\nril  28  he  was  arrested,  ostensibly 
for  the  forgery.  He  was  held  in  the 
county  jail  and  later  the  murder  charge 
was  placed  against  him.  the  Septem- 
ber grand  Jury  returning  an  Indict- 
ment charging  him  with  murder  in  the 
first    degree  ,    . 

The  trial  of  Schrelber  was  an  inter- 
esting one.  The  stdte'^case  was  sub- 
stantially as  given.  The  settlers  in  the 
district  where  Schrelber' and  Massapust 
both  lived  testified  to  the  evidences  of 
the   crime   and   the   circumstances   sur- 


PIAIWOWOS 

We   have    a    large    stock    of    unre- 
deemed    Diamonds,     which     we     will 
sell  at  greatly  redQced'  prices. 
KBYSTONE  LOAN  CO. 

1«  Went  Superl«»»  Street, 


rounding  the  murdered  man  and  the 
man  accused  of  murder.  Witnesses 
from  New  Ulm  testified  to  an  autopsy 
performed  on  tlie  body,  which  was  ex- 
humed Nov.  12  for  that  purpose.  A 
blood  clot,  which  might  have  been 
caused  by  a  bullet  was  found  in  the 
left  pleural  cavity,  and  several  ribs 
were  broken,  as  though  by  a  l)ullet. 
Mr  L,andralnd  and  officers  of  the  bank 
at  Wasliinun  testified  to  Schreiber;3 
forgery  of  Massapust's  name  and  his 
possession  of  tlie  certificates  of  de- 
posit   of    Mas.sapust. 

Schreiber's  defense  was  based  on  the 
almost  unsupportable  testimony  of  the 
accused  and  ills  wife.     Schrelber  main- 
tanied   a   firm    demeanor   on    the    stand, 
denying    all    knowledge    of    tlie    crime. 
He  "claimed  on   the   night   of  the   burn- 
ing   of    Massapust's    caljin.    he    had    re- 
tired at  6:30  o'clock  and  had  not  heard 
George  Carter  when  he  first  pounded  at 
tlie  door.       The  possession  of  the_ certi- 
ficates of  deposit,  he  explained  by  say- 
ing that  Massapust  had  given  them  to 
him  for  safe  keeping,  as  Massapust  in- 
tended to  go  out  again   to  work  on  Feb. 
10.        He   made   a   full   and    free   confes- 
sion   of   forgery,   saying   that   the   First 
National     Bank    of     Virginia    had    told 
Frank  Massapust's  brotlier  that  Massa- 
pust had  only   taken  out  one  certificate 
of  deposit,  tliat  for  $211.  and  he  wished 
to   put  tUe  other  in  circulation,   so  that 
Massapust's  heirs  would  have  the  bene- 
fit  of    it  ^  ^      « 
Schrelber    claimed    that    on    Feb,    9, 
1908.    he    had    $70    In    the    house,    saved 
from    wages     he    earned    the    previous 
fall,  and  from  the  receipts  of  two  cows 
he  killed,  and  the  butter  and  eggs  sold 
by  Mrs.  Schrelber.    He  said  he  had  bor- 
rowed   $40    from    his    father    in    March 
and  the  expenditures  to  which  the  state 
referred  were  not  unusual.    Schreiber's 
wife    corroborated    his    testimony    and 
his  father  also  told  of  the  loan   of  $40. 
The  case  was  given   to  the  Jury  Dec. 
9.    It  was  afterwards  brought  out  that 
the    first    ballot    stood    8    to    4    for    ac- 
quittal.     After    forty-seven    hours'    de- 
liberation   in  which  every  pliase  of  the 
testimony'    was    discussed     from    every 
viewpoint,  the  twelve  men  decided  that 
Schrelber     was     guilty    of    the    murder 
and    they    returned    a    verdict    to    that 
effect. 

The  verdict  was  something  of  a  sur- 
prise   In    view    of    the    long    session    of 
the  jury,  and  It  caused  something  of  a 
sensation.     Rev.   J.   T.   Moody   came   out 
with  a  statement  In  the  newspapers.  In 
which  he  condemned  the  verdict  on  the 
ground    that    it    was    not    Justified    by 
the  evidence.     Others  upheld  the  Jurors 
action,  contending  that  the  twelve  men 
w^ho  had  listened  to  all  of  the  evidence, 
had    seen    all    the    witnesses,  had    lived 
in   the   case  for  almost  two  weeks   and 
had  spent  nearly  two  days  in  conscien- 
tious consideration  of  it  in  every  phase, 
were   best    qualified   to   Judge. 
Schrelber  an  hZnigswnn. 
An       a       character       study,       William 
Schrelber  is  an  enigma.     Tliere  is  some- 
thing wonderful  In  his  mental  and  con- 
stitutional   make-up.      Be    he    Innocent, 
or   be   he   guilty,  no  normal   man   could 
have     stood     up     under     the     strain     to 
which    Schrelber   has      been      subjected. 
Yet  today,  with  the  exception  of  being 
a  little  paler  and  a  little  stouter,  Will- 
lam    Schrelber   Is    the   same  as   he   was 
the  first  day  he  stepped  into  the  coun- 

^Worry  and  he  are  evidently  entire 
strangers.  During  the  long  months  be- 
fore the  indictment  was  returned,  he 
exhibited  not  the  least  anxiety.  He 
said  he  was  innocent  and  he  depended 
on  the  grand  Jury  to  free  him.  He  got 
religion  and  gave  himself  over  to 
«»tudving  the  Bible.  He  shifted  his  hope 
from"  the  grand  Jury  to  the  prospective 
jury  of  his  peers,  before  whom  he 
would   be  tried,   and  he  never   faltered. 

During  the  trial  he  was  Just  as  calm 
as  he  ever  was  In  his  life.  On  the  wit- 
ness stand  he  told  a  connected  story, 
and  through  a  gruelling  cross  examin- 
ation he  stuck  to  It  In  every  detail. 
He  never  missed  an  opportunity  to 
declare  his  innocence  and  tlie  twists 
and  turns  of  the  county  attorney  In  the 
cross  examination  fahed  to  shake  him 
in    the   slightest. 

Only  once  during  all  this  time  has 
he  lost  his  composure.  During  the  two 
davs  the  Jury  held  his  fate  In  thetr 
hands,  he  was  not  worried  in  the  least 
His  supremo   confidence   held   up   until 


the  clerk  read  out  the  verdict  declar- 
ing him  guilty  of  the  murder  of  Frank 
Massapust.  Then  he  went  into  a 
paroxysm  of  grief  and  disai>pointment. 
weeping  bitter  tears  for  i.bout  two 
hours.  When  tho  sli<9ck  wore  off.  he 
took  another  hitcli  in  hin  courage, 
shifted  iiis  faitli  once  mor<i  from  the 
jury  to  the  Judge,  and  went  on  as 
though  the  noose  were  not  haiiginft 
over  liead  or  the  prison  doors  yawn- 
ing to  take  him  for  the  remainder  of 
his  natural  life.  Tlie  stra  n  of  wait- 
ing for  the  decision  of  the  court  on 
the  motion  for  a  new  trial  has  not 
visibly   affected    him. 


field  &  Co.,  vs.  J.  A.  Clark.  This  is  an 
action  for  $30,000  damages  claimed  for 
alleged  failure  to  convey  perfect  title 
to  real  estate  purchased,  the  lands  be. 
Ing  located  in  Cass  and  Itasca  counties. 
Judge  M.  A.  Spooncr  of  this  city  ap- 
peared as  attorney  for  tlie  defendant 
and  moving  partv  in  tlie  motion  and  C 
L.  Pratt  of  Grand  Rapids  and  T.  J. 
Brennitn  of  Superior  represented  the 
plaintiff.  The  case  has  been  pendinar 
In  Itasca  county  court  for  mi)re  than  a 
jcar. 


If  you  are  a  business  man  I  am 
going  to  tell  you  how  you  can  use 
less  than  one  cent  a  day  and  in- 
crease your  business  on<:  thousand 
times  that  amount  per  jear. 


MCH I 


SEES  WOLVES  EAT 
HIS  BABY  GIRL 

Trapper  Drives  Trained 

Animals  Home;  liunger 

Impels  Them. 

Minneapolis.  Minn.,  Maroh  16. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — A  sijecial  to  the 
Journal  from  Saskatoon,  Sask.,  says: 
A  weird  tale  of  tlie  North  has  been 
brought  to  Sa.skatoon  by  Fred  Alllng- 
ham  and  James  and  Mack  Curtln,  who 
have  been  spending  the  winter  around 
Moose  Lake.  ,  ,  „ 

A  trapper  had  secured  saveral  young 
timber  wolves  which  he  trained  for 
driving.  On  one  occasion  he  had  been 
away  on  a  long  journey  and  wa.s  fin- 
ishing a  hard  day  In  which  the  animals 
had  not  received  any  focd,  as  Is  the 
custom  of  treating  dog  teams  while 
traveling.  When  the  driver  and  the 
team  approaclied  the. shanty  that  vvas 
their  home,  his  3-year  old  daughter 
ran  out  to  meet  them  and  the  farn- 
Ished  animals  jumped  on  he^  and  in 
Hash  she  was  dead,  before  the  father 
could  lift  a  hand.  ^ 

With  an  ax  the  f athe '  went  after 
the  wild  creatures  and  r  ever  stopped 
until    he    had    killed    them    all. 

COURT  AT  BE>lil)JI. 

Nelson  Murder  Trial    Expected  to 
Come  Ip  This  AVeek. 

Bemidji,  Minn..  March  IC— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  trial  of  Barney 
Nelson,  charged  with  killing  Morris 
Fuller  near  Fowlds.  last  January,  may 
be  reached  in  the  distric:  court  today 
or    tomorrow.  .    j..  ^    * 

The  trial  of  the  case  of  the  state 
aealnst  Thomas  Bigster.  charged  with 
Krand  larcenv  In  the  sicond  degree, 
begun   Saturday,   was   on    yesterday. 

In  chambers.  Judge  Stunton  listened 
to  arguments  on  motion  to  vacate^  an 
order  previously  made  for  taking  dep- 
ositions, on  the  ground  tl  at  the  service 
provided  for  in  the  order  was  not 
properly  made,   in   the  «i»e   of   Green- 


Aji  Ideal  C<»utili  Metllclne. 
"An  an  ideal  cougli  medicine  I  re- 
gard Ciiamberlain's  Cough  Remedy  In 
a  class  bv  itself,"  says  Ur.  K.  A.  Wilt- 
.shire  of  Gwynneville,  Ind.  "I  take 
great  pleasure  in  testifying  to  the  re- 
sults of  Chamberlain'.s  Cough  Medi- 
cine. In  fact.  I  know  of  no  other 
preparation  that  m.ets  so  fuly  the  ex- 
pectation.s  of  the  most  exacting  in 
cases  of  croup  and  oughs  of  children. 
As  it  contains  no  opium,  ciiloroform  or 
morphine  it  certainly  makes  a  most 
safe,  plea.sant  and  eilTicacious  remedy 
for  the  Ills  it  is  intended."  For  sale 
by   all    druggists. 

ADD  TO  FREKiliT  ( OST  OF 
AGRICLLTLRAL  IMPLEMENTS. 

Kansas  City,  Mo.,  March  16. — The 
Missouri-Kansas  &  Texas,  Atchison. 
Topeka  &  Santa  Fe,  Chicago,  Rock 
Island  &  Pacific  and  the  St.  Louis  & 
.'^an  Francisco  have  decided  to  discon- 
tinue the  storage-ln-transit  arrange- 
ment on  agricultural  Implements  here. 
The  effect  of  the  cancellation  of  this 
privilege  Is  to  add  4M  cents  to  the 
freight  cost  on  agricultural  Implements 
sold  here  to  Oklahoma  destinations. 
Tlie  decision  came  after  a  protest  by 
Oklahoma  jobbers  alleging  favoritism 
to  local  dealers. 


117-119  Wctl  Snpcrior  2»t..  Dulutb,  aiiaa. 


New  TWngs 

For  the 


We  have  placed  on  sale  a  fine 

collection  of  the  newest  1^09  Drapery 

Nets! 

There     are     many 

distinctively    new  ^-j 

deslKM   ot  ■»  «"*" 

miwal   sort! 

Perhaps  some 

other  store  might 
have  gotten  some 
like  them  if  they 
had  known  how 
these  would  be 
appreciated  —  but 
the  fact  is,  they 
didn't  do  it: 

Do  you  want  something  dif- 
ferent? 

See  our  Filet  Nets  at  39c,  60c, 

»1.00  and  •1.35  the  yard  this     week! 
Tiiey'll   please   particular   folks. 

And  so  will  all  our  Imported 

Scrims  at  45c,  50c  and  95c  yard! 

Visit  the  third  floor  tomor- 
row! 


.^C^^^P  »  ■  H  »   I  «l  M  >- 


• 


I 

I 


I  ^' 


<-  p 


\ 


■■w 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      TUESDAY,    MARCH    16,    1909. 


Began  Like  a  Ringworm  on  Hand 
—Though  Treated,  Washing  Irri- 
tated It  and  It  Spread  Over  Arm 
and  Face— Kept  Growing  Worse. 

• — 

CURED  TWO  YEARS 

AGO  BY  CUTICURA 


CONCERNING 


had 


••A  little  over  six  years  ago  I 

mv  hand.     I  consulted 


Boro  come  on  — .  •      „  ^^ 

doctor.  He  told  me  it  was  a  ringworm. 
It  kept  on  getting  worse  so  I  «eKt  to 
another  doctor,  ile  called  it  salt 
rheum.  I  Ixcpt  on  taking  his  treatment 
for  some  time  but  every  washday  ray 
hand  would  break  out  and  be  worse. 
It  TOntinued  to  spread  till  it  got  over 
my  whole  hand  and  up  my  arm,  also  on 
my  face.  I  suffered  with  the  disease 
about  four  years  when  a  friend  of  mine 
told  me  to  trv  Cuticura.  I  go/  two 
cakes  of  Cuticura  Soap,  one  box  of  t  uU- 
cura  Ointment  and  two  bottles  of  (  uti- 
cura  Resolvent.  When  I  had  used 
them  up,  I  was  cured  and  I  haven  t 
Been  the  least  sign  of  the  humor  sinc-e. 
Mrs.  Linda  Winslow,  WyaluBing,  Penn., 
July   13,  1908." 


FACE  BADLY  BRUISED 

And  Cut  by  Fall.     Now  Healed 

without  a  Scar  by  Use 

of  Cuticura. 

"On  January  31  I  fell  from  a  wagon, 
landing  on  mv  face  and  head  agamst 
the  curb  and  gutter.  I  was  about  the 
worst  looking  person  that  ever  had  a 
face.  After  about  two  hours'  careful 
wai^hing  I  got  the  blood  stopped  and 
the  dirt  off  and  my  face  pretty  well  cov- 
ered with  Cuticura  Ointment.  You 
mav  know  that  I  was  pretty  well  skinned 
up  bv  the  fact  that  both  lips  were  cut 
inside  and  out  and  the  skin  on  my  nose 
and  both  cheek  bones  cut.  Part  of  miv 
face  wa.s  healed  over  in  a  week  and  the 
Bcalps  came  off  and  while  the  cheek  is 
still  sore  there  are  no  marks  to  prove 
that  I  was  ever  scratched.  I  would 
also  say  that  I  u.se  the  Cuticura  Soap 
for  shaving  and  mv  face  is  always  soft. 
W.  H.  Dean,  Newark,  Del.,  February 
24,  190S." 

Complete  ETtem^l  and  Internal  TTeatnient  for 
Evfry  Itumor  of  lufant.«.  Children  and  Adults  con- 
H«ts  of  fu'l'ura  Saip  (25i-  )  to  Cleanse  the  Skin. 
C^tU^Uoinlxent  <5*-.)  10  Itejl  the  Skin  and  rutl- 
cu'ii  R-solvent  (.SOr).  (or  In  the  form  of  (  hoi-olate 
Coittd  I'lUs,  -'5--  Der  vi»l  of  60.  to  Purify  the  BU)od. 
BoM  throuehout  the  world.  Poller  Drug  4  Chem. 
Corn     S'.lc  ProHH  .  Boston.  Mas,<i 

i8*^M.»i.ed  Free,  Cu'.irura  Boot  on  Skin  Dlseaaea. 


As  petticoats  diminish  in  number, 
the  outer  skirt  grows  decorously  long 
In  proportion  and  those  who  dictate? 
fasliions  say  that  by  the  autumn  wom- 
an will  bo  trailing  aicund  in  skirts 
which  lay  upon  tliC  ground  four  inches 
to  a  foot  or  more.  Stenographers  will 
sweep  into  their  employers  office  in  a 
swirl  of  dust  and  grace,  gained  for  the 
time  from  a  skirt  of  long  lines  and 
e.xtra  length,  woman  will  again  ap- 
pear to  the  world  somewhat  lopsided 
from  stooping  to  lift  the  dust  gather- 
ing,   germ    breeding    skirt. 

As  it  i.«,  right  at  tiiis  moment,  the 
person  who  insists  upon  the  short 
skirt  of  the  most  ultra  type,  does  not 
dream  of  having  it  any  shorter  than 
an  incli  and  a  half  from  the  ground. 

The    days    of    woman's    emancipation, 
when   slif   Insisted    upon   her   skirts   be- 
ing   t.etv.  efii   i-iiii-  alia   li\e 
the   iloor,  are  passing  away 
again    entering 
PKirt   that 


to   be   unduly   hurried.     He  Is   45   years 
old,  just  a  nice  age. 

Kverv  one  is  hoping  that  the  matter 
will  end  in  the  mttapiiorieal  marriage 
bells,  and  all  applications  will  be  re- 
garded with  the  most  sacred  conll- 
Uence. 


or   a   cong 
of  bright 
the  home 
ilian  tlie  sordid 


genial  friend; 
,  tnteMige|t  c 
;   folk«   oi*  SOI 


nd;    fifteen    minutes 
conversation  with 
me   Other   subject 
details  of  making  ends 
meet    a  few   minuf^s  in   an   art  gallery, 
just  to  look  at, one- good  picture — these 
thft  mile  every  day  happi- 

be- 
e 
e 
are    too    busy   aiming   at   some   big,    ex- 
pensive pltal^ure  la  the  future. 

We  shall  n«*\er  ienjoy  life  until  we 
learn  to  enjoy  the  31ttle  happinesses  of 
every  commonplace  day  as  we  go 
along. 


Alliance  Meeting. 

Women's    Alliance    of    the    Uni- 
churcii   will  meet  tomorrow  alt- 
at  2:30  o'clock,  at  the  home   of 
Sirs.   Daniels  of  613   East   Tiftli   street. 


The 
tarian 
erncon 


At  the 

eve  ni  Tig 
Century 
eveniiiir 


iCiKS   ironi 

and   she   is 

the     thralidom     of     the 

catches  he  rankles  at  every 


be 
be 


Mop  and  of  ilie  one  wlilcii  must 
lifted  for  every  step  that  is  to 
taken.  ..    ,  . 

The  advance  of  the  evil  has  been 
Insidious.  First,  all  of  the  comfort- 
able width  was  removed  from  skirts 
and  woman  came  fortli  a  slim  thing  of 
no  proportions  at  all  to  speak  of. 
While  she  was  alternately  blushing 
and  admiring,  the  fashion  maker  drop- 
ped the  length  of  tlie  skirt  a  few- 
inches.  The  general  appearance  was 
all  right,  so  woman  said  nothing,  llie 
next  season  roils  around,  and  many  of 
gowns  and  costumes  are  made  en 
train.  To  cut  It  oft  ruins  the  entire 
effect  To  leave  it  on  is  a  menace  to 
health  and  h.ygiene,  but  no  one  doubts 
of   course,   which   will    triumph. 

This  is  a  mere  word  of  warning. 
The  spring  openings  with  their  color 
and  charm  of  novelty  and  advance  sea- 
son beauty,  are  so  apt  to  close  ones 
evee  against  the  dangers  that 
within    them.  . 

But    the    long,    dragging    skirt 
most    her*. 


lurk 
is    al- 


Church  Meetings. 

The    Ladies'    Aid    sucieiy    ui    the    First 
Christian    church    will    meet    tomorrow 
afternoon  witli  Mjs.  George  Jolinson  of 
17  ralmetto  street.  i>uluth  Heights, 
•       «       • 

The   Ladles'   Aid   society   of    the   First 
Baptist    church    will    hold    at    all    day 
sewing  session  tomorrow  at  the 
parlors    in    preparation    for    the 
sale. 


Elect  Officers. 

annual  business  meeting  of  the 
department  of  the  Twentieth 
club,  which  was  held  last 
at  the  clubroom  of  the  library 
L.  A.  LaVoie  was  re-elected  leader  of 
the  Evening  Sliakespeare  cla-ss  for  next 
year;  .Miss  Gerniond  was  elected  as- 
sltant  leader,  and  -Miss  Lena  Fleer  was 
re-elected  secretary  of  the  class.  The 
plajs  that  will  be  studied  next  year 
will  be  "(3thello,  "  "itoineo  and  Juliet, 
••Julius  Caesar"  and  "Macbeth." 

The  class  will  continue  meeting 
weekly  during  the  remainder  of  March 
and   In   April. 

St.  Patrick's  Dinner. 

Mrs.  y.  E.  Catherail  will  entertain 
at  a  St.  Patrick's  day  dinner  tomorrow 
evening  at  her  home  at  Lakeside  in 
honor  of  tlie  seventeenth  birthday  an- 
niversary of  her  daughter,  Ruth. 
■ 

Mission  Meeting. 

"Awakt-ned  Turkey  will  bo  the  sub- 
ject discussed  at  a  missionary  meeting 
to  be  held  Thursday  evening,  at  the 
parlors  of  the  Pilgrim  Congregational 
churcli.  A  picnic  supper  will  be 
served  at  6:15  o'clock,  to  be  followed 
by     the     du^cusslon     of    the     missionary 

with  Mrs.  W.  W.  .McMillan. 
Nelson,  George  Gray,  and  E.  D. 

speakers. 


Long  Umbrellas. 

The  general  adoption  of  Dlrectoire 
modes  ha.s  created  a  demand  for  um- 
brellas that  shall  be  in  keeping  with 
thi.-s  St -k.  of  custom.  And  so  short- 
handed  umbrellas  are  accessories  of 
the  past,  for  in  tlieir  place  v/e  see  the 
nattiest  looking  models,  with  handles 
from   fortv  to   fifty    inches   long. 

The  carvings  and  decorations  on 
many  of  the  handles  are  exceedingly 
eccentric,  and  in  some  cases  grotesque. 
For  example,  a  parrot,  by  no  means 
small,   in  all  Its  natural  brilliant  plum- 


age, hand-painted,  is  seen  tllnging  to 
the  end  of  one,  while  another  is  finished 
with  a  Hat  plate  three  and  sometimes 
four  Inches  in  diameter,  on  wblcli  is 
portrayed  in  enamel  the  face  of  an  ani- 
mal such  as  a  cat.  owl.  dog,  etc.,  with 
most  realistic-looking  eyes  of  mock 
jewels. 

Flowers  on  Hats. 

The  flower-trimmed  hats  are  of  me- 
dium size  In  white  and  delicately 
tinted  llowers,  with  Hat,  regular  brims, 
low  crov»ns,   much    built   up   with    flow- 

lillacs,  v>istarla,  sweet  peas,  hya- 
cinth and  the  finer  flowers  seem  more 
smart  than  roses.  ,     ^    .     ,j      ..„ 

The  Charlotte  Corday  hat  holds  its 
own  wonderfully  for  very  dressy 
wear,  and  is  made  with  a  drapery  of 
net  edged  with  lace,  over  a  brim  that 
looks  for  all  the  world  like  a  lattice 
work  of  wire  covered  with  white  rib- 
bon with  tassel  ends.  .    .,        ^ 

Crinoline  will  be  much  used  for  be- 
tween-season    hats. 

Some  call  it  horsehair,  and  It  ap- 
pears  In   plain  and   lace   weaves. 

---•     •       hats    are    built    of    it.    Includ- 
most     marvelous  rosettes     In 
three   tones   of    one   color. 


Whole 
ing  the 
two 


and 


THE  PARDON 


By  Joe  H.  Ransom. 


subject, 
Andrew 
Field   a.- 


(C<>pTrisht«l.      All   rights   rtstrved.) 
Number    Twenty-seven,    trusty, 
ed    his    head    wearily    upon    his 
About    him    Btretched    the    prison 
bright    in    the    sunlight,    the 


rest- 
hand, 
yard, 
flagstones 
the 


his    head    on 
quivered  with 
still    was    the 
chancing    to 
window,   felt 
flitted    away    to 


Hosts  at  Dinner. 

Mr.  and  .'^Ir.'^.  H.  \V.  Hanson  enter- 
tained at  dinner  and  cards  last  evening 
at  their  home.  211  Twenty-ninth  avenue 
west.  The  card  favors  were  won  by 
Mrs.  G.  Rakowskv  Dr.  Oftcrberg  and 
Andrew  Risen.  Covers  were  laid  for 
eleven. 


church 
Easter 


GELERiED 
WHEAT  FLAKE 

Considered    to   represent 
highest  food  production. 


•  4M 


the 


ATo  matter  what  yon  want 
it  will  save  you  time  and 
money,  if  you  will  use  The 
Herald's  Wants. 


Poverty  Social. 

The    members    oi    the    Baptist 
Peoples  Union 


ertv   social 


will  entertain  at 
this   evening   at   the 


Young 

a  pov- 

cliurch. 


McGregor   wants   you    in 
The    convict 

Sims.' 


rose 


from 


SELECT  PICTURES. 

Committee    Chooses    Those 
For  State  Exhibit. 

The  committee  of  selection  for  the 
annual  e.xhibition  of  the  State  Art  so- 
ciety has  chosen  from  the  pile  of  pic- 
sent  in  by  the  painters  of  the 
state,  those  which  will  be  shown 
the  St.  Paul 
2S. 
atid 


BLACKMAIL 
IS  DEFENSE 

•'God  Help  the  Man  a  Wo- 
man Accuses,"  Says 
Frybergcr. 

"God  Help  the  Woman  a 

Man  Defiles."  Retorts 

Jenswold. 


Dulutli 
the  dis- 


tiires 

in 
Auditorium,  Marcli  20  to 
About  sixty  pictures  will  be  liung 
twentv  were  put  aside  to  be  re- 
turned to  "the  artists  who  sent  them. 
Most  of  those  returned  were  copies. 
The  society  wants  original  woi'k. 
Uihers  were  not  considered  ot  suffici- 
ent   artistic    merit    to    be    exhibited. 

On  the  committee  tor  selectioti  are 
Miss  Grace  McKinstry  of  Faribault, 
n.  D.  Herrick,  Gustaye  Goetsch.  Harry 
Rubens  of  Minneapolis,  and  \\  J.  Con- 
vvav  and  Mrs.  Jessie  Neal  of  St.  Paul,  and 
Mrs.  Robert  Morris  Seymour  of 
Tliere  is  not  so  much  space  at 
Dosal  of  the  committee  this  year  as 
fa<=t  so  that  the  number  of  Pictures 
shown  will  not  be  as  large  as  at  other 

^''^^The^exMbiilon  will  also  be  shown  In 
Faribault,  April  13  to  23,  and  not  un- 
til tlien  will  the  prize  winners  be  an- 
nounced.  The  jury  of  award  .ncludes 
five  members,  three  np"-residenis  of 
the  state  who  will  be  elected  by  ballot 
of  the  exhibitors.  Prizes  of  1100  each 
will  be  made  for  the  best  painting, 
sculpture  and  architectural  design,  and 
thcrVare  .-ix  prizes  of  $20  each  for  art 
handicraft  and  one  for  artistic  photog- 

"^Fn^kdditlon  to  the  work  of  the  state 
artists  and  craftsmen  there  will  be  a 
collection  of  oil  paintings  from  Phila- 
delphia and  one  of  water  colors  trom 
New  York.  One  of  the  strong-est 
in    Philadelphia   will   loan 

^"R(fl£t  Koehler  is  the  President  of 
the  State  Art  society;  Hannibal  Uioate 
vice  president;  R.  D.  Herrick,  secretary 
and   treasurer. 


Personal  Mention. 

Mrs.  R.  A.  Williams  of  Cleveland  Is 
visiting  her  parents,  .Mr.  and  Mrs. 
George  Ross  of  1511  East  Second 
street. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  J.  F.  Denni.v  of  311  Second  ave- 
nue west  has  returned  from  a  five- 
weeks'  visit  at  Minneapolis,  Chicago 
and    Hamilton,    Ont. 

•  •      • 

Mis3     Lillian     Burns,     who     was  the 

guest     of     Miss     Mary     Mcl'adden  of 

Tliirty-second    avenue    east    for    a  few- 
days,  has  returned   to  Zini.   Minn. 

•  •      • 
Miss  Jane  Mack,   who 

of     hfr     brother,     Peter 
Spalding,    has    returned 
at  Chicago. 

«      •      • 

Mrs.    W.    W.    Kleckner    of    Hibbing 
the  guest  of  friends  in  the  city. 

AMERICAN  GIRL' 


was  the  guest 

Mack,     at     the 

to    her    home 


IS 


awak- 
tteld    a 


clubs 
artistic   pho- 


WANTED:     A  WIFE. 

Homesteader       Asks     Mrs. 
Forgy  to  Choose  One. 


Arguments  were  made  in  the  $15,000 
damage  suit  of  Marie  Clausen  against 
Harry  \V.  Johnson  in  district  court 
this  morning,  and  the  case  was  given 
to  the  jury.  The  girl,  who  is  IT  years 
old,  claims  damages  on  account  of  an 
alleged  criminal  assault  she  claims 
Johnson  committed  on  her  when  she 
was  in  his  employ  in  a  restaurant  at 
Twenty-sixth  avenue  west  and  Su- 
perlorstreet  Dec.   9,  last. 

•'God  help  the  man  a  woman  ac- 
cuses," was  H.  B.  Fryberger's  sum- 
ming up  for  Johnson. 

"God  help  the  w  oman  a  man  defiles," 
•was  Attcrnty  John  Jenswold's  reply 
for  his  client.  Roth  appeals  to  the 
jury  were  sen.sational  in  their  way, 
one  pleading  for  a  r.-buke  of  black- 
mail, the  other  appealing  for  damages 
for  a  crime. 

Fryberger  characterized  the  case  as 
one  of  blackmail  pure  and  simple.  He 
pointed  to  the  evidence  to  prove  that 
Johnson  had  gone  home  early  every 
night  during  the  week  of  the  alleged 
assault  and  contended  that  he  could 
not  have  been  at  the  restaurant  at  the 
time  the  assault  was  committed.  He 
said  the  breeding  of  the  girl  hadn't 
been  such  as  to  place  her  above  the 
bringing  of  the  suit,  and  asked  the 
jury  for  a  verdict  for  his  client. 

Jenswold's  plea  was  in  words  of  bit- 
ing .sarcasm  and  invective.  He  vigor- 
ously denounced  the  man  who  would 
Btoop  to  the  assault  of  a  defenseless 
girl  and  attempted  to  riddle  Johnson's 
alibi.  He  asked  the  jury  to  believe 
the  story  of  the  girl  and  to  give  her 
such  damages  as  to  compensate  her 
for  the  injuries  suffered  through  the 
assault. 


the 

first 

A  lonely 

hurly-burly   of 

com- 


II    is   now    Mrs.    Margaret    t  orgy 
children's     best     friend,     and     tiie 
aid  to  men  In  search  of  wives 
man    of    45,    wlio   in    the 
citv   life   never   missed   the   sweet 
panionship    which    might     be     possible 
in    the    married    state     has    discovered 
that     In     the     wilds    of     North     Dakota. 
Willie    one    is    "holding    down      a    claim, 
there  is  nothing  so  desirable  and  seem- 
ingly  so   unattainable,   as  a   wife. 

The  North  Dakota  homesteader  is 
in  town,  and  to  Mrs.  Forgy  he  went 
and  poured  forth  his  innermost  de- 
sires. ,  ,  - 

"I   don't   drink,'    he  said.  ^    ,, 

"No"  she  said;  "I  know  you  don  c. 

•'And   I   work   hard,"    he   said. 

••I'm  sure  vou  do,"  said  Mrs,  Forgy. 

•I'm    shy, '"   he    said. 

'•Oh,'    said      Mrs.    Forgy,      deprecat- 

'""And   I  want   a   wife.      You    get    her." 
he  said  in  an  ingratiating  manner. 

In  talking  the  matter  over  later 
Mr«  Forgv  said,  "I  never  did  such  a 
thing  before  in  my  life,  but  he  is  In 
cuch  earnest  that  1  told  him  I  would 
look  around. "  And  so  applications  are 
being  received  bv  the  assistant  humane 
officer,  Duluth    phone  lOT.v. 

The  man  in  question  is  of  the  gal- 
lant tribe  of  Irishmen,  and  surely  this 
is  tlie  first  ilme  in  history  tliat  an 
Irishman  has  asked  to  have  his  wooing 
done  by  proxy,  but  three  years  of 
lonely  life  on  a  homestead  has  devel- 
oped a  timidity  which  other  men  have 
often  felt  in  asking  wives.  He  would 
nrefer  that  his  prospective  wife  have 
blue  eves  with  long  black  lashes,  blue- 
black  hair  and  a  complexion  similar  to 
Kathleen  Mavourneen,  all  ot  that  com- 
bination, of  course,  going  with  an 
Irish  girl,  but  these  are  not  essen- 
tials, and  any  woman  of  any 
nationality  who  feels  that  life 
homestead  offers  a  very  good 
for  happiness,  may  apply. 

The  homesteader  has  120  acres  of 
land  and  is  thinking  of  buying  more. 
He  will  be  in  Duluth  for  another  month 
or  six  weeks,  so  affairs  would  not  have 


In  Grand  Opera — Now  Re- 
ceives Credit. 

The  ideal  prima  donna  must  com- 
pass three  requisites  to  deserve  her 
name:  head,  heart  and  vocal  cords:  And 
no  two  are  worth  much  without  the 
third!  says  Oscar  Hammerstein  In  tlie 
April    Delineator. 

It  is  strange  that  no  woman  reaches 
her  full  meaning  in  the  world,  espe- 
cially if  slie  expresses  that  meaning 
musically,  without  passing  througli  a 
sorrowing,  struggling  past:  It  is  that 
which  molds  her.  It  is  the  speech  of 
the  soul  in  the  child-song,  the  mother- 
song,  tiie  hero-song,  tliat  shuts  out 
the  world  and  helps  us  to  breast  the 
tides  which  bear  us  to  some  new  and 
truer  sense  of  life's  vast  possibilities. 
This  soul-speech  is  never  learned  save 
tlirough  one  teacher — experience;  and, 
alas,  by  the  time  the  pupil  is  perfect 
in  the  lesson  and  knows  what  it  is  all 
good    for,    she    is    no   longer    young: 

All  the  possibilities  are  embodied  in 
the  American  girl,  never  heard  of  in 
grand  opera  fifty  years  ago,  but  with 
a  record  during  the  latter  half  of  the 
nineteenth  century  whicli  foreslia- 
dows  the  future.  A  few  more  years  will 
see  her  a  radiant  combination  of  char- 
acter, beauty,  dramatic  ability  and 
voice — the    ideal    (lueen    of    song. 

A  generation  ago,  when  an  Impres- 
ario ventured  to  present  an  American 
singer  to  her  countrymen,  he  did  so  on 
the  strength  of  a  European  reputation, 
and  gave  a  foreign  twist  to  lier  name. 
When  Lillian  Norton  made  her  first  ap- 
pearance with  Patti,  in  the  old  Acad- 
emy of  Music,  she  attracted  very  little' 
notice:  but  the  Italianized  Nordica  and 
a  halo  of  European  g'lory  won  long  and 
loud  applause.  Twenty  years  have  rad- 
ically clianged  that  situation,  and  Ger- 
alditie  Farrar's  own  honest  name  does 
not   imperil   her   supremacy. 

When  the  great  people  of  America — 
not  a  few  capitalists  and  devotees  of 
fashion — demand  grand  opera  and 
make  Its  support  the  same  .serious 
business  wliich  continental  Europe  has 
done  for  tliree  centuries,  we  shall 
not  send  abroad  for  our  dramatic 
singers.  It  was  in  A.  D.  1691  that 
Tuscan  Margarita  de  I'Epine  inaugur- 
ated the  fashion  in  England  so  in- 
dustriously copied  by  Patti  in  America 
— an  annual  "positively  last  appear- 
ance." In  A.  D.  1991  Mary  Smith  may 
just  as  reasonably  be  expected  to  lioid 
the  Italian  populace  in  thrall  by  the 
niagic  of  her  American  voice. 

At  the  conclusion  ot  a  busy  life  I 
have  chosen  the  giving  of  opera  as  a 
vocation,  an  aim,  never  a  "business." 
Perhaps  I  am  a  musical  philantluopist. 
for  I  want  to  give  the  great  public  a 
love  for  opera  which  it  does  not  know, 
as  well  as  stimulate  its  affection  for 
that    whicli    it    does    know. 

I  want  music-lovers  to  demand  es- 
tablished opera  In  all  our  cities  of  any 
Importance.  Then  American  voices 
will  be  discovered:  requisite  training 
will  not  be  the  difficult,  costly,  remote 
thing  it  is  today,  and  the  American 
prima  donna  will  be  In  possession  of 
her   kingdom. 


application  for 
voice    was   low 
looked    closely    into 

a    long 

I    was    deail 

I     had  didn't 

said  the  man 


rellecting  in  their     narrow     space 
light    which    flooded   over    the    high   en- 
circling walls  of  the  great  pile  of  gray- 
ish stone.  Suddenly  a  door  opened  and. 
as     it     clanged     to,     broke     the       quiet 

sharply, 

".Moore,    Mr 
the     office." 

"All    right,    sir." 
and  followed  slowly. 

"You  may  go.  —  ,     , 

The   superintendent   looked   up 
his    desk    and    motioned   the   convict    to 
ai^proach.  .     ,       ,      ,  . 

•'I  believe"  he  said  quietly,  looking 
over  his  spectacles  at  Number  Twenty- 
seven,  "that  your  name  is  M^ore — 
James   Moore;    is    that   correct? 

"Yes     sir." 

"And  vou  have  been  here  now — " 
He  hesitated,  turning  to  his  desk. 

".Seventeen   years,   sir." 

"And  your  term?"  He  looked  up  at 
the    convict    again,    questioningly. 

"Life."       The  voice  was  without  emo- 

*^The  man  at  the  desk  turned  his  re- 
volving chair  and  looked  out  of  the 
window.  The  season  was  early  spring 
and  the  freshening  earth  stretched  it  • 
panorama  across  the  view  in 
ening  beauty.  In  a  distant 
man  was  plowing,  and  beyond  him, 
where  a  cluster  of  trees  were  just 
putting  out  their  buds,  stood  a  house 
with  a  cow-lot  behind  and  a  woman 
hai^ging  clothes  in  the  yard 

"Moore;"  the  superintendent  turned 
suddenly  toward  the  convict,  surpris- 
ing the  vearning  in  his  eyes;  he,  too, 
liad  beeii  looking  out  of  the  window. 
"Vlottre  vour  record  has  been  good 
here.  'You've  been  privileged  now  for 
some   time." 

"Five    years,    sir." 
"Have  vou  ever  made 
a   pardon?"      Tlie    man's 
and    clear,    and    he 
the   other's    eyes. 

"At    first     sir;    but    it's    been 
time    now.      It's    no    use. 
poor,  and     what*    friends 
sopiii  to   remember." 

"J    see — I    understand," 
of  authority  gently, 

"Sit  down  here,  Moore."  the  super- 
Intednent  said,  kindly;  "I  want  to 
have  a  talk  with  you.  Would  you 
mind— I  would  like  for  you  to  tell 
me  about  yourself,  how  you  came 
hf-rf.      Your  crime  was.  1  think — " 

".Murder."  finished  the  otlier  quiet- 
Iv.  "1  killed  a  man.  sir.  He  was  a 
big  bug.  I  was  dead  poor.  The  jury 
said  it  was  murder  in  the  first  degree. 
I  couldn't  tell  them  what  was  the 
reason.     So  I'm  here.  sir.  for  life." 

"Is  there  anyone?"  came  the  voice 
of  the  superintendent,  softly,  "out 
there  vou  would  like  to  go  back  to? 
Did  vou  have  a — any  loved  ones, 
Moore?"  .   .    ^.^ 

Across  the  face  of  the  convict  flit- 
ted an  expression  of  such  exquisite 
pain  such  profound  and  tremulous 
sorrow,  that  the  pian  was  almost  sorry 
he  had  spoken.  The  reserved  prac- 
ticed coldness  was  gone,  and  the  face 
was  softer,  and  a  new  light  was  in  the 
eyes. 

"Ye.^,"  he  began,  and  the  superin-. 
tendent  leaned  forward  to  catch  the 
words.  "There  is,  there  was,  sir,  un- 
less— ."      He   faltered. 

"I  understand."  the  man  spoke 
gentlv.  almost  in  a  whisper.  He  no- 
ticed that  the  convict's  face  had  gone 
pale  and   his   lips   quivered   painfully. 

"Id  been  a  tough  sort."  the  man 
began  again,  speaking  very  slowly, 
"mixin"  round  with  the  boys,  workin' 
some,  drinkin'  some.  I  didn't  have 
no  folks,  and  I  didn't  know  what  a 
homp  was.  Then  come  Jinnie,  with 
the  sun  kinder  hidin'  in  her  hair  and 
peepin'  out  in  spots,  and  when  I  saw 
the  llg'.i^  sparklin*  in  her  eye  and  the 
smllin'  face  bendin'  down  over  her 
old  mother,  kinder  tender  and  lovin* 
like,  a  big  knot  seemed  to  come  ris- 
in'  up  in  me  and  chookin'  me.  And  I 
quit  the  gang  and  settled  down,  and 
got    to    be    Jinnie's    steady." 

"I    worked    hard,    sir,    and    the      bos.s 
took  a  kind  of  fancy  to  me  and   things 
begun    to  lookin'   up.      And   then 
a    year    after    our      little 
come,    brinin'    some      of 
her.  I — this    man    came, 
me    in    the    old      days, 
had  me   in   his   power 
did,    but    not    like 
There   wasn't 
do.      I    killed 


it    broke    and    he    leaned 
the  table     as     his     body 
repressed      emotion.      So 
room     that    a     sparrow, 
alight   upon   a   bar   of  the 
the    weight    of    it   and 
the  gladder  world. 

"And  when  they  brought  me  away," 
the  convict  brok*  In  suddenly  upon 
the  quiet.  "I  knowtd  Id  never  see 
Jinnie  and   the   kid   no   more." 

Again  the  man  had  fallen  into  a 
way  of  talking  to  himself,  as  it  "were, 
speaking  aloud  the  things  within 
him,  whispering  a  recital  of  the  soi - 
row  which  before  had  lived  within 
his   heart. 

•'She  was  brave,  was  Jinnie,  brave 
at  the  last,  tryin'  to  smile  at  me  a 
comfort  through  the  tears.  And  she 
held  the  little  one  up  to  kiss  the  dad 
she  wouldn't  see  no  more,  the  dad 
who  was  going  to  be  buried  for  a 
while  before  they  buried  him  for  good. 
And  I  didn't  want  her  to  know  where 
her  dad  was.  her  dad  who  was  a  mur- 
derer and  a  jailbird,  and  1  made  my 
Jinnie  promise  she  would  never  come 
here  to  see  me,  nor  let  the  little  Jinnie 
know — "  ,  .  ,  . 

He'  ceased  abruptly,  brushing  nis 
hand  across  his  face  as  If  to  put  from 
him  the  memory  of  the  shattered, 
liopeless  past.  The  monotone  of  the 
prison  routine  had  worked  In  him  a 
peculiar  patience,  and  the  pictures  his 
own  words  brought  back  stirred  again 
the  depths  wherein  lay  treasured  the 
memory  of  a  three  years'  happiness. 
The  man  who  had  called  forth  this 
narrative  sat  motionless,  his  arms 
resting  listlessly  upon  the  desk,  his 
face  turned  to   the  window. 

A  servant  entering  brought  the  two 
men  back  to  the  present,  and  the 
convict  rose.  As  he  stood  silently  l>y 
while  the  superintendent  dismissed 
the  servant  of  the  force  of  the  seven- 
teen vears  asserted  itself  and  he  came 
to  the  attention  of  the  prisoner  before 
his  jailor.  But  the  other  stepped  for- 
ward and  took  his  liand  and  looked  in- 
to his  eyes.  ,  ,  ,  j 
"I'm  sorry.  Moore.  Its  hard — hard. 
But   tliank  you   for  telling  me." 

When    the    door   had    closed    upon    the 
man    in    stripes,    the   superintendent   re- 
sumed   his    seat    at    the    desk    and    took 
up  his   pen.   as    he   looked   out   upon    the 
gathering   of   night.      He   turned    to 
desk    again    and    pressed    a    button 
the    light.      -And    then    he    wrote,    wrote 
long   and   rapidly,   to   the  man   wlio 
put    him    here,    the    man    who    was 
merely   a   friend   of  politics,    but    of 
vears    gone    by,    the    man    whom    he 
"membered    ever    as    a    boy    of    whom    he 
felt    that    he   could    ask    unhesitatingly. 
He    told    the    storv    of      him    who      was 
known         as      Number      Twenty-seven, 
trustv;    of    James    Moore,     the    convict. 
He    painted    the    picture    of    a    prison  s 
hopelessness,    of    the     outlook     of 
to    whom    It    is    decreed    to    spend 
davs  within   Its   walls.      He   pleaded 
man's    record,      his    patience,      his 


BEN  HUR 

ESSAY 

CONTE 

CLOSES  TOMORROW 
AT  6  O'CLOCK  P.  M. 

Will  yon  be  one  of  the  150  to  make  up  The 
Herald  theater  party? 

The  pupils  sending  in  the  150  best  essays  will 
be  guests  of  The  Herald  at  the  opening  performance 
next  Monday  evening. 

Here  is  the  plan:  Send  in  an  essay  of  about 
150  words  en  "Ben  Hur."'  Who  was  Ben  Hur? 
Tell  something  about  his  life  or  about  some  of  the 
many  things  he  did. 

Write  on  one  side  of  paper  only.  Give  name, 
address  and  school;  also  write  name  of  school  on 
outside  of  envelope. 

Address  essays  to 

BEN  HUR  EDITOR, 

The  Herald  Office,  Dultsth,  Minn. 


the 
for 


had 
not 
the 
re- 


one 
his 
the 
un- 


complaining silence  before  an  agony 
suffered  for  a  crime  whose  enormity 
must  be  extenuated  by  the  very 
silence  whicli  had  brought  its  punish- 
ment. And  in  the  name  of  Him  who 
also  suffered  silently  he  begged  for 
clemency.  ,  ,       ., 

The  months  dragged  through  the 
summer  and  early  fall,  and  now  from 
the  outer  world  came  an  evil  whicli 
brooked     no     imprisonment     and     defied 

maOdme  OJarac 

Ih  no>v  r*«d>-  with  a  eomplcte  utock  of 
Spring  MllUncry.  After  May  lut  we 
will  remove  to  «be  More  room  known 
an  GIddinK'H  Annex,  and  now  occupied 
by    Hint    flrm.  


ing  as  shown  at  this  house.  The  Eng. 
lish  idea  prevails,  that  of  a  severely 
tailored  suit,  cut  on  straight  uncom- 
promising lines  and  depending  entirely 
for  its  style  and  attractiveness  upon 
the  cut  aiid  make.  Serge  is  a  popular 
materia!  to  be  so  made  up,  and  among 
the  suits  shown  are  some  especially 
beautiful  ones  in  the  new  colors,  raw- 
sienna  tints,  browns  of  the  cocoa  and 
vanilla  shades,  dull  c-opper,  etruscaii. 
reddisli  plum,  wild  duck,  canard,  fir 
greens  and  pastel  shades  of  blue. 

The  evening  gowns  and  the  after- 
noon frocks  are  of  the  softest  satins  In 
the  delicate  shades  which  seem  a 
feature  of  the  season.  The  straight 
lines  continue  to  be  the  most  remark- 
able feature  of  these  gowns.  The  bits 
of  net  and  the  trimmings  employed  are 
sucli  as  to  emphasize  in  the  most  deli- 
cate way  the  beauties  of  color  and  de- 
sign, .         ,  .    . 

The  separate  wraps,  in  plan  style 
for  street  wear.  In  the  modified  dlrec- 
toire for  dret^Eier  occasions  and  the 
long  evening  coat  on  military  lines 
!  with  a  large  hood,  are  among  the 
charming  models  phown.  The  new 
waists    are    al.'-o    very    attractive. 

Only  the  tailored  hats  for  early 
•spring  were  shown  in  the  millinery  de- 
partment as  tlie  formal  opening  for 
this  department  will  not  take  place 
until    next    week. 

The  opening  will  continue  tomorrow. 


Kins    Edward    h    Busy    Man 

Even    Theodore    Roo.sevelt,    the 
occupied,    is    a    person    of    leisure 
pared    with    Edward    VII 
correspondent    of    "Town 


about 
Jinnie      had 
heaven    with 
He'd   known 
He   thought    he 
and  I   reckon  he 
he      understood -^  It. 
nothin'      else      for   me    to 
him.       And    he    did — have 
me    in    his    power.      So    I'm     here,    sir, 
and   Jinnie  and  the  little  one—" 

The  man's  voice  was  husky,  and  now 


other 

on    a 

chance 


Comply  with  the   law  and   address  your 
package  with  a  stencil  cut  by  the 

Bradley  Stencil 
Machine 

for  sale  by 

Chamberlain-Taylor  Go. 


'^ 


A  Skin  of  Beauty  U  a  Joy  Forever, 


D 


R.  T.  FELIX  GOURAUO'S 
Oriental  Cream  or 
Magfoal  Beautlfier. 

Removes  Tan,  Pimples,  Freck* 
lea.  Moth  Patches,  Rash  and 
Skin  Di!i«k«et,  aai  artry 
blemish  on  b««ucy,  M>it  de- 
fies drtectton.  It  hu  &tood 
the  tttt  of  te  ^  ein,  ttid  U  to 
humleti  we  taste  It  to  b« 
kur*  It  I*  prop«rly  aids.  Ac- 
cept no  CQUnterfeti  of  &imll«f 
a*me.  t)t  l~  A.  Siyre  uid 
lo  s  Isdy  of  the  lisutloa  (s 
rStieatii  "AsTau'sdlet  will 
UK  th««.  I  rtcoirmena 
•GOURAtTD'S  CREAM'  aS 
it«  least  bsmiwl  el  ell  rti« 
tkiopfKiaratloai."  Pot  salS 
hy  all  ^usglttl  knd  Vvtc4 
GooU  D«  Jeri  In  the  Unilc| 
S<*te>.  Ctnadt  end    Eufope. 

rcrC  T.  HwkJaa.  tn^^  17  Crtat  ioaca  St.  Now  Toit 


ENJOY  LIFE. 

Wealth    of     Enjoyment    in 
Each  Day. 

Half  the  joy  of  life  comes  from  getting 
the  good  out  of  things  as  we  go  along, 
says  the  Philadelphia  Bulletin.  Some 
of  us  are  always  putting  off  our  en- 
joyments. After  a  while  we  expect  to 
take  a  rest,  see  a  friend  or  read  & 
book;  but  after  a  while  never  comes. 
The  good  time  we  are  looking  forward 
to  lies  as  far  ahead  as  ever.  All  life 
is  spent  In  meaning  to  overtake  It  and 
enjoy  it.  Meanwhile  we  trot,  drudge 
and  grow  old,  passing  by  with  unsee- 
ing eye  the  happiness  we  might  get  out 
of  every  day. 

Yes,  every  sordid,  commonplace  day 
has  its  wealth  of  enjoyment  for  us, 
if  we  only  took  the  trouble  to  get  it 
out.  . 

There  are  the  friends  we  love,  and 
who  love  us.  If  we  stopped  to  think 
of  it,  this  consciousness  would  gladden 

life. 

There  is  the  beauty  of  the  earth. 
Did  we  only  open  our  eyes  to  see  it 
we  should  be  made  glad  In  spite  of 
ourselves.  There  are  people  who  have 
lived  on  earth  thirty  or  forty  years, 
who  could  scarcely  tell  you  the  color 
of  the  sky  from  their  own  observation. 
They  take  It  for  granted  It  Is  blue 
because,  they    hear    sol 

There  are  dozens  of  simple  pleasures 
we  might  enjoy.  Ten  minutes  every 
day  with  a  fascinating  book;  an  inex- 
pensive   little    jaunt    with    our    family 


stone  walls,  and  the  prison  hospital 
was  filling  with  men  stricken  with  a 
foul,  infectious  fever,  whose  ravages 
were  working  havoc  in  the  world 
witliout.  The  position  of  the  superin- 
tendent became  a  grave  one.  Daily 
the  men  were  stricken  down.  The 
two  .'surgeons  of  the  institution  main- 
tained manfully  their  position  as  figlit- 
ers  of  this  most  powerful  adversary. 
But  thev  stood  almost  alone,  unaided 
by  the  "necessary  assistants,  fighting 
desperately  their  unequal  fight.  Dls- 
mav  fell  upon  the  man  in  charge. 
Then  came  the  convict  Moore  and 
volunteered  his  services  In  the  pest 
room.  The  act  was  purely  voluntary. 
There  was  no  power  which  stood  be- 
hind him  now.  This  power  had 
striped  him  and  shaven  his  head  and 
marked  him  to  his  fellow  man  "un- 
clean." But  now  it  was  the  will  of 
the  man  —of  the  fearless  man  who 
dared  to  stand  before  the  face  of 
death    and    fight,   and    the      power    was 

forgotten- 
Passed      weeks    of      conflict,      silent, 
methodical,  patience. 

As  the  evening  of  a  December  day 
came  creeping  upon  the  world,  its 
fantastic  shadows  advancing  their 
weird  .shapes  along  the  snow  drifts. 
James  Moore  sat  by  a  window  of  the 
hospital  ward,  looking  out  upon  the 
fading  landscape  which  soon  would  be 
but  a  sheen  of  white.  He  felt  as  one 
upon  whom  an  enemy  creeps  In 
stealth,  as  the  victim  of  some  ven- 
omous reptile,  charmed  by  the  very 
presence  of  the  danger  lurking  near, 
vet  without  power  to  resist.  Closer 
came  the  presence,  stealing  nearer, 
while  he  sat  fascinated  and  defense- 
less, and  even  as  he  lifted  his  head 
and  peered  about  it  was  on  him  from 
the  shadows  and  he  felt  its  clutcli  and 
the  levilish  burning  in  his  brain.  Then 
he   knew   no   more. 

Seven  days  be  fought,  and  the  doc- 
tors watched  and  worked  and  knew 
what  the  end  must  be  On  the  seventn 
day  the  fever  cooled  and  he  lay  weak, 
defeated,  fought  out,  catching  In  his 
breath  at  intervals,  fighting  weakly 
for  the  air.  And  as  the  day  weakened 
and  aged  and  the  light  retreated  from 
the  windows  at  the  warning  of  the 
night,  the  superintendent  sat  by  the 
convict's  side  and  watched  this  last 
fitful   fight   for  life. 

Suddenly  the  eyes  of  the  stricken 
one  opened,  and  between  the  gasps  the 
superintendent  caught  a  question,  the 
question  of  the  day  of  the  year.  And 
when  the  man  of  power  had  answered 
gently  that  the  morrow  would  e 
Christmas,  a  smile  came  quivering  up- 
on the  contorted  face  before  him,  and 
his  straining  ear  caught  sounds  which 
might,    which    must    be    words,   and    the 


MRS.  JOHN  JACOB  ASTOR. 
Who  Has  Taken  s  Deep  Interest  in 
the  Anti- Vivisect  ion  Crusade.  She 
Recently  Appear<:d  Before  the  New 
York  Legislature  as  Champion  of 
the   Anti-Vivisectionist   Measure. 


eyes  looked  far  past  the  prison  wall 
and  the  careworn  nan  by  the  bedside 
•■Jinnie — the  little  one — come — Christ- 
mas— "  faint,  inarticulate  muttermgs, 
as  the  mind  went  groping  back  along 
the  pathAvay   of   the   past.      ,     ,    , 

Tlie  superintendent  reached  to  the 
pocket  of  his  coat  and  took  forth  an 
envelope  of  Imposing  shape  and 
ficial  bearing,  and  as  he  watched 
man  before  him,  lield  it  idly  m 
hand.  Far  into  thi  night  lie  sat. 
tening  to  the  murmuring  of  the 
until  at  last,  upon  the  face  came  peace 
and  the  shadow  of  the  fever  sped  away 
before    a    greater    shadow.  ,,     •    , 

Then     he    rose    aid    put     the    official 
document    back    into    his    pocket. 

"He    didn't    need    it,"     he    whispered, 
gently. 


much 
com- 
The  London 
and  Country" 
repo'ts  the  contents  of  a  note  from 
one  of  the  king's  equerries,  stating  that 
"his  majfstvs  engagements  do  not 
warrimt  him  in  the  disposal  of  a  single 
liour  before  Sepiem'er."  And  the  note 
was  written  early  in  June.  No  matter 
what  vour  station  in  life  Is.  it  is  well 
to  e<iuip  yourself  for  the  trial.s  of 
evervday  life  by  the  daily  use  of  golden 
grain  belt  beer.  This  delicious 
age  rest.s  you  while  you  work, 
good  for  everybody  at  all  times, 
of  your  nearest  dealer,  or 
by  the  Duluth  branch  of 
apt)lis   Brewing  e(nni>any. 

HEAKS  .\i:STRI.\  PLANS 

TO  OCCUPY  BEUiRADE. 


hever- 
and    is 
Order 
he    supplied 
the    Minne- 


Paris. 
today,   it 


of 

the 

liis 

lis- 

man 


March  16. — La  Lib.rte  says 
has  been  learned  from  a  re- 
liable source  that  the  Austrian  gov- 
ernment, for  three  days  past,  has  been 
making  preparations  to  occupy  Bel- 
grade, the  capital  of  Servia,  as  the 
only  way  to  bring  about  a  solution 
of    the    present    .situation. 


r 


SPRING  STYLES 
BEING  SHOWN 

Duluth  Women  Attracted 

By  Silbersti^in  &  Bondy 

Opeiiin]^. 

In  spite  of  the  \.'hirls  of  dust  driven 
by  the  March  winds.  Duluth  women 
stopped  long  before  the  windows  of  the 
Silberstein  &  Boudy  company  today 
for  the  first  glanct  at  the  spring  show- 
ing of  beautiful  garments.  Each  de- 
partment of  the  simply  dressed  win- 
dows was  an  added  delight  to  the 
woman  who  loves  beautiful  clothes.  A 
costume  illustrating  each  of  the  most 
distinctive  and  leading  features  of 
season  of  1009 


MISS  MURIEL  WHITE, 
Who  Is  to  Become  the  Bride  of  Count 
Seth  Josch,  a  Wealthy  Silesian  No- 
bleman. Miss  White  Is  the  Daugh- 
ter of  the  American  Ambassador  at 
Paris. 


The  New  $1.50  Glove 

Is  a  superb  masterpiece  of  the  glove- 
makers'  art.  With  the  stylish  new 
out-seams  in  all  the  advance  spring 
.shades,  with  a  stunning  clasp.  They 
are  in  a  class  ^m^ 
by   themselves,     ^^^r     ^  ..^     ft 

See  them  at 


spring 


the 
is  sliown. 

The  costume  su  t  which  promhses  to 
be  one  of  the  prominent  styles  of  the 
season  is  illustrated  with  a  model  in 
broadcloth  In  one  of  the  beautiful 
tones  of  gray.  The  gown  fasliioned 
after  the  long  and  simple  lines  which 
prevail  ha^.  as  its  only  ornamentation 
effective  trimming  in  a  narrow  braid  of 
the  same  color,  aijplled  in  a  quiet  de- 
sign The  coat  c  mpletes  a  very  mod- 
ish costume  of  quiet  elegance.  These 
costume  suits,  ccnsistlng  of  the  one 
niece  gown  and  t.  coat,  are  a  leading 
feature  of  the  season,  and  many  of 
them  are  sliown  for  the  more  formal 
occasion  for  which  a  plain,  tailored  suit 
is  not  quite  the  thing. 

The  tailored  8u:  ts  are  very   interest- 


THE 

LUDWIG 

PIANO 


Is  now  more  to  be  desired 
than  ever.  If  you  have  not 
seen  our  large  stock  of  these 
wonderful  good  and  suc- 
cessful instruments,  you  can- 
not be  posted  on  pianos. 
Their  splendid  wearing  cpial- 
ities,  superb  tone,  beautiful 
cases,  and  moderate  prices, 
make  them  the  greatest 
standard  piano  for  the  cul- 
tured home. 

We  buy  them  by  the  hun- 
dred, and  save  you  money. 
We  have  a  .Special  Bargain 
for  vou  this  week  :  a  fine  Ma- 
hogany Upright  $:i25  piano, 
used  a  short  time.  $160;  $10 
down,   and   $1.25   per   week. 

Duluth  Music  Co., 

222  \%>i«l  First  Street. 
ED.MIND   G.   CHAPMAN,   M^r. 


-* 


■  .. 

^ 

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^ 

k 

' 

t 

i 

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' 

\ 

;  ' 

' 

t 

1 

1  ■ 

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1 

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0kmtn   I 


i*> 


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■♦■ 


-    -    ■■"■ni 1 


ll 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,    MARCH    16.    1909. 


I 


-»T»T»i  l.=aai 


U 


SOME  BARGAINS 


Four- room 
'oriA  faiences. 

four 

!  >  ll  V  s 
lot. 

liuys 
new  • 


brkk    Hat    to    rent,    all 


a  7-rooin  house  and 

lots. 

a  6-room  house  and 


SiOOO 
11800 
$26Q0 
S500 

INNl  U  AX-;"".   A.\D   LO.\!«S. 

GETTY-SMITH  CO. 

RIllK. 


hnys 


a     7-room     cottage, 
all   conveniences, 
^ood  lot  In  the  Kast 


ADDITIONAL  SPORTS 


BRANCH 


J.  J.   Moran,  405  Central  Ave. 

WASSEEN^IN 
FLOllR  CITY 

Duluth  ^an  Saw  Norman 
Patton  in  Minne- 
apolis. 


OFFK  KSi 
A.    JeuMen, 


330    North    57lh    Ave.    \Ve«t. 


row    evening   promise   to    outdo   any 
tlie   ten    preceding   annual    affairs. 


of 


Curling  Gaines. 


Met  Him 
Week 


in 

Ago 

day. 


Hotel  One 
Sun- 


The  gunies  are  beihs  played  off  in 
all  i)os3ible  haste  at  the  Western  Cur- 
ling: rink,  .so  the  Bagley  event  will  bo 
finished  before  warm  weather.  i..ast 
evening  there  were  four  games  In  this 
event.  Play  bttfan  at  8  o'clock,  and 
two  ga^ues  were  played  before  10 
o'clock,  and  two  after.  Tlie  last  game 
was  not  flnisiied  until  after  midnight. 

The  following  games  were  played: 
Wad  defeated  Donald.  19  to  8;  Hewitt 
won  from  Scott.  13  to  9;  Meldahl  won 
from  Wade,  11  to  7;  and  Filliatrault 
was  defeated  by   Mickisli.   IC   to   7. 


"KID"  SKIP. 
A  WONDER 

Will  DInham's  Two  Rinlis 

Have  Made  Great 

Records. 


close,  and  by  the  time  Uie  sun  l>egins 
to  shine  too  brightly  for  the  good  na- 
ture of  the  admirers  of  the  bcottish 
game,   tlie   events   will   be  finished. 

There  is  a  great  deal  of  interest  in 
the  bonspiel  being  played  off  between 
tlie  C  class  rinks  for  the  final  owner- 
ship of  the  board  of  trade  buttons,  and 
tonight  begins  the  second  night  of  play. 

CLOSE  iTBiT 
FOUR  DAYS  OFF 


EVERYTHING  HERE  JUST  AS  ADVERTISED. 

-^ — mmm 


Houses  and  Lots. 


We  have  modern  homes  for  sale 
in  all  parts  of  the  city.  Let  us 
find  yiu  a  lot  that  will  double  in 
valu"  in  a  few    years. 

H  jmes  on  ea^y  payments;  also 
building  lots.  Fire  Insurance  In 
str<»nK  companies.  It  will  pay  you 
to   see    U.S. 

L.  A.  Larsen  Co., 

•il4-2l5    rrovideiico    HUlS 


but 


of 

Mr.    Fen 

since    he 


SAVE  TIME! 

■  da. 


Tel<>pbon(>  your  \%»at  ««••  to  Th« 
Beralcl.  The  rat*,  are  the  •am*, 
and  «e  TTin  mall  you  a  bill  after 
It*    laacrtlou.  _„^ 

BOTH     PHONES,    SM. 


AUTIILES  OF  IMOHrORATION 


Its 

Duluth. 


blanks 
To    sell, 
products 
hold    and 


Know  all  men  by  these  presents 
that  we,  the  undersigne..!.  do  liereb> 
as.-ociate  ourselves  together  tor  the 
puryode  of  forming  a  corporation  under 
the  laws  of  the  Stale  ot  Minnesota. 
AKT.   1. 

This    corporation    shall    be    known    as 
the      I>uluili      Handle      (Jompan^^ 
principal     piace     of      business 
Slinncsoia.  ^^^    ^^ 

Th-    general    nature    of    the    business 
of  this  corporation  shall   be   the  manu- 
facturing    of     handles,     handle 
Uiiiib^r.     lath    and     shingles, 
handle    and     dispose     of     said 
so     manufactured.       To     buy, 
«o-is.^^s     such     land,     timber     and     law 
material  as   may   be   necessary   to  carry 
on  such  manufacturing  business. 
•V I^  T    1 1 1 

This  corporation  'shall  endure  for  a 
period  of  thirty  years  from  January 
first,    A.    D.    1909.^^    ^^. 

The    names    of    the    persons    forming 
this  corporation  are:     ^   ,^    ,      ,      ,,. 
L)eU.»Ml   -V.  Crosby   of   Duluth.   Minne- 

"^^Tliomas     C.     Himebaugh     of     Duluth, 
Minnesota.  ,      ,    ,,, 

Lilliai-  M.  Himebaugh  of  Duluth  Mln- 

"^""'*-  ART.  V. 

Th«^  management  of  this  corporation 
shall  l»e  vested  in  a  board  of  three 
«Urect.»rs.  who  shall  be  elected  on  the 
first  Tuesdav  of  .January  of  each  year. 
The  names  of  the  first  board  ot  direc- 
tors are: 

Crosby, 

Himebaugh, 

Himebaugh,     residing    as 


The  first  news  concerning  Norman 
Patton,  the  I'anton  &  While  buyer, 
who  so  mysteriously  disappeared  near- 
ly two  weeks  ago,  was  learned  today 
from  Ray  W.  Fenton.  assistant  secre- 
tary of  the  Trade  News  Publishing 
company,  who  returned  yesterday  from 
Minneapolis,  where  he  claims  to  have 
seen  Patton.  a  week  ago  Sunday,  Just 
four  days  after  he  was  last  seen  In 
I'ittsburg. 

The  first  Mr.  Fenton  knew  that  a 
search  was  being  made  for  Patton. 
was  last  evening,  when  he  read  The 
Herald.  The  newspaper  account  im- 
mediately recalled  to  his  mind  that  he 
1  ad  seen  the  missing  young  man,  with 
whom  ne  is  acciualnted  in  the  lobby 
of    the    KicoUet    Hotel      in    .M'""'^^!*^,  'f^ 

He  was  walking  through  the  lobby 
on  Sunday,  March  7,  P''^*''*^;:^ .  ^,^"''": 
who  appeared  to  be  in  a  f » «l^,^  '^,^"1^ 
and  very  much  preoccupied  tor  he  did 
not  respond  to  Fentons  nod  of  gr_eet- 
ing.  This  did  not  impress 
ton 

has    learned 
which   the 

he 
un- 

natural 
not  see 
about    him. 

Mr.  Fenton  last 
Mrs.  Pation  and 
seen  her  husband, 
bv  Mr.  Fenton  is 
and  her  husband 
miles    away    by 

The  storv  told  by  Mr. 
the  fact  that  Mr.  Patton 
be  greatly  worried,  leads 
licve  that  the  young  man 
right  mind. 

Two  Buildings  Burn. 

Rv  the  bright  red  reilection  In  the 
sk?  at  a  out  1  o-clock  this  morning 
?bJ  West  Duluth  firemen  were  made 
aware  ?hat  there  was  a  fire  somewhere 
fn  wist  Duluth.  several  miimte_s  »)efoie 
hev  were  called  to  .l-'4  North  bixt>- 
first  avenue  west,  wnere  two  s.naii 
SuHdlngs^were  destroyed  by  flames^ 

Tlie  reflection  of  a  fire  on  tne  s^y  '» 
so  decept?ve  that  the  firemen  dared 
not  leave  the  -station  '".  search  of  it, 
but   were    forced   to  remain   at    the 

until    a    call    ^^^    ^^'^'"^'^  J"nnish 
The    fire    started    in    a    F'^n/f" 
and  spread  to  an  adjoining 

were  burned  to  tne 
eround  There  was  no  one  living  n 
fhe  ba  h  house,  and  the  two  cows  quar- 
tered in  the  barn  were  saved  without 
any   difficulty 


That  Rastal  Pat. 

"Thai  Rascal  Pat."  a  one-act  comedy, 
will  be  given  tomorrow  evening  at  the 
<;real  Eftstern  hall  at  S  o'clock,  under 
the  auplces  of  the  St.  James'  Catholic 
Uiurch.  The  following  is  tlie  pro- 
gram: 

Overture    . 

Prof.  F.  \V.  Riele. 

"Tipperary"     

Mis.s    Kmeline   Brett. 

"Erin's  Flag"    

Miss  ElTie  Brotherton. 

Address      

James    P.    Boyle. 
Comedy.    "That    Ptascal    Pat." 

"Katlileen    Mavourneen"    

Mls.s    Clara    Kenny. 

Recitation     

Miss   Mary   Shessgreen. 
"Good-bye.    Sweet    Heart.    Good-bye" 
Neil    l.auermann. 

"The  Ould  Land'   

Ollie    Digmus. 
"Top  o'  the  Mornln',  Bridget   .McCue" 
Miss   Kditii   Cashin. 

"Far  Away" 

Messrs.    Doyle,    Carey    ami    I^auennann 


WillTam 
cuiier.s  as 
est   skips 
and   Ills  record 
of   phenomenal. 

He  has  succeeded 


Dinliam.    known    to    all    the 

"Bill."   Is  one  of   the  young- 

in    the    Dift«th    Curling   club, 

thi.<?   year  is   little   short 

ii*-getting  his  rinks 


but 
meet- 
crowds 
at 


much    at    the    time. 

of  the  strange  manner  in 
missing  man  has  neglected 
writing  to  his  young  bride,  and  the 
company  by  which  he  is  employed, 
remembers     that     Patton.     had    an 

look    in    his    eyes,    as   if   he   did 
anvthtng    that    was    going    on 


evening    telephoned 
told      that    he    had  1  hearsing 
Tlia  clue   furnished 
now    ten    days    old, 
is     probably     many 

this    time.  , 

Fenton,  and 
appeared  to 
many  to  be- 


ts not  In  his 


house 

both    buildings 


hall 

bath 
barn. 


Will  Meet. 

the 


Dyna- 


Dynaiiiiters 

The   annual    gathering    of  . 

mlTe  club  will   be  held  tomorrow  nignt 
with    its    usual    burst    of    fireworks,    at 

Wade's    hall.  ►      ^<'     n,ia     well 

The  annual  banquet  of  this  well 
known  and  historic  ^^sanl/.ation  s  the 
hie  event  of  the  year  m  \\  est  Dulutij. 
nol  even  excepting  the  West  Duluth 
Commercial   club   and    Republican 

banquets,  so  the  members  of  the 

mite    club    assert. 

The    members   arrange    for 

and  few  know  that  trouble  Is 

until,  on  the  night  of  St 

they      are     brought    to 

that     the     dynamiters 

force,  and   It  is  no  time  tor 

dren    to    wander    out 


club 
Dyna- 

it    quietly 

brewlng 

Patrick's  day. 

the    realization 

are     abroad     In 

small  clill- 

of    door.- 


The  dinner  an  1  celebration  of  tomor- 


C. 
M. 


i.»elbert 

Thomas 

Lillian 
above.  ,,, 

ART.  VI. 

The  capital  stock  of  this  corporation 
is  twenlv  thou-sand  dollars,  divided  Into 
two  thousand  shares  of  the  par  value 
of  ten  dollars  each,  which  shall  be 
paid   in  as  the   business  demands,  at  its 

i>ar    value. 

^  ART.  VII. 

The  highest  amount  of  indebtedness 
or  li.ibilitv  to  which  this  corporation 
shall  at  .i"ny  time  be  subject  shall  be 
live  thousand  dollars. 

ART.    VIII, 

The   first   officers  of   this  corporation 

'"^Delhert    A.    Crosby.    President. 

Th.>mas      C.      Himebaugli,      Secretary 

'"^JbrBKKT    A.    CROSBY.  (Seal) 

THOMAS  C.  HIMKBACGH.        (Seal) 
I>ILL1.\N   M.    HIMKBAL'GH.      (Seal) 
Slgneil.  Sealed  and  delivered  In 
presence  of:      Witness — 
JOHN   H.   BRIGHAM. 
D.    X.    WHEELER. 


-IT  PAYS  TO  PAY  CASH" 

THOMASSON 

•THE  FURNITURE  man" 

ODD  mXOWS  HAIX  BUaDlMfi, 
U  AIU)  20  LAKE  AVENUE  NttBTH. 

SPECIAL  SALE  OF 

FINE  ROCKERS 


West  Duluth  Briefs. 

Rev.  Dr.  Samuel  <1.  Briggs,  former 
pastor  of  the  Merritt  Memorial  M.  F^ 
church,  now  of  Grand  Rapids,  Minn., 
was  In   West   Duluth    this   morning. 

A.  Freimuth  has  recovered  after  a 
brief  Illness. 

The  Phllathea  society  of  the  West 
Duluth  Maptlst  church  was  entertained 
last  evening  at  the  home  of  Miss  Eliza- 
betli   Soddall. 

Rev.  J.  W.  BJerke,  pastor  of  Our  Sav- 
ior's Lutheran  church,  returned  home 
yesteiday  from  Scanlon,  where  he 
preaclied    Sunday. 

The  Ladles'  Aid  society  of  the  West- 
minster Presbyterian  church  will  meet 
Wednesday  afternoon  at  :,':30  o'clock, 
at  the  home  of  Mrs.  Becks  of  Sixtieth 
avenue  west  and  fody  street. 

"That  Rascal  Pat."  a  play,  will  be 
given  at  the  Great  Eastern  hall  to- 
morrow evening  at  8  o'clock.  James  P. 
Bovle.  attorney,   will  speak. 

The  choir  of  the  Asbury  M.  E.  church 
win  hold  an  extra  practice  tonight  at 
the  home  of  Ben  Smith.  7  North  Fifty- 
third  avenue  west.  Tho  choir  is  re- 
for  the  .special  musical  pro- 
gram for  Easter  Sunday. 

Mrs.  Summerville  and  her  daughter, 
Kate,  of  Coleraine.  are  visiting  at  the 
home  of  Mrs.  Peter  Gilley,  322  Central 
avenue.  They  will  be  here  for  the 
week. 

Herbert  Brown  will  leave  tomorrow 
f.>r  Toronto,  Canada,  where  he  will  visit 
his  mother. 

Russell  Houston  has  returned  from  a 
trip  on  the  range. 

Louis  Andei-son  of  Lakeside  under- 
went a  successful  operation  at  the  Du- 
luth hospital  Sunday,  and  Is  reported 
to  be  improving. 

The  I.,adles'  -A.id  society  of  the  As- 
bury M.  E.  church  will  hold  an  all  day 
sewing  session  tomorrow  at  the  j)ar- 
soiiage  with  Mrs.  Thomas  Grice.  The 
ladies  will  meet  at  10  o'clock  in  the 
morning  and  make  sheets  and  pillow 
slips  for  the  new  V.  W.  C.  A.  building. 
A  conference  of  the  Sunday  school 
teachers  of  all  the  Norwegian  Lutheran 
churches  In  Duluth  and  Superior  will 
be  held  tomoirow  evening  in  Our 
Savior's  Norwegian  Lutheran  church  of 
West  Duluth.  I»lans  for  the  Lake  Su- 
perior district  for  the  year  will  be  dis- 
lussed. 

The  ladles  of  the  West  Duluth  Bap- 
tist church  will  have  an  opportunity  to 
display  their  wit  tomorrow  evening  at 
the  cliurch's  St.  Patrick  day  social  and 
entertainment,  which  will  be  held  at 
the  home  of  Mrs.  George  Little,  624 
North  Fifty-sixth  avenue  west.  For  the 
past  month  the  feminine  portion  of  the 
congregation  has  been  earning  money 
to  go  toward.*  buying  a  furnace  for  the 
new  church.  At  the  socl.il  tomorrow 
evening  each  woman  will  be  expected 
to  describe  in  Irish  rhyme  Just  how- 
she  earned  her  monc.v. 

Harry  Peterson  was  the  guest  of 
honor  at  a  pleasant  surprise  party  Sat- 
uiday  evening  at  his  home.  313  Sixty- 
third  avenue  west.  A  pleasant  evening 
was  enjoved  by  the  following  guests: 
Misses  Caroline  Soderland,  Jennie  Han- 
sen, Marie  Hansen,  Ethel  Brasgala. 
Barv  Berran.  Maud  Manscrgher,  Ida 
Olson.  Relma  Johnson.  Louise  Sands, 
Ida  Johnson.  Alta  Thyre.  Clara  Peter- 
son. Rena  Christerenson.  Tlllle  Peter- 
son: Messrs.  Arthur  Oettle,  John  Cey- 
borskl.  Matt  Sloidal.  Albert  Sloldal,  Jes- 
sie Sand.  Albert  Stahl,  A! ford  Stahl,  Al- 
ford  Green,  Perly  Green,  Oscar  John- 
son, Arthur  Doroy.  Frank  Ludwick.  A. 
Johnson.  Charles  Christensen.  Melvin 
Walstad.  Justin  Walstad,  Ole  Balgaard. 
Matt  Vandal,  Sandy  McCIewin,  Emll 
Huber,  Harrv  Collins;  Mr.  and  Mrs.  C. 
Gell  and  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  Peterson. 
Watch    repairing.     Hurst.    W.    Duluth 


Pittsburg.  Pa.,  March  16.— W  ith  the 
clo«e  of  the  ninth  annual  tournament 
of  tho  American  Bowling  congress, 
four  days  off.  interest  in  the 
ing  continued  unabated.  Large 
surrounded  the  different  alleys 
every  session  and  scores  threatening 
the  records  are  greeted  enthusiasti- 
cally. Eastern  men  and  teams  P/e-, 
dominated  in  today's  events,  New' 
Vork,  Philadelphia.  Buffalo       and 

Wlieeling  figuring  prominently  in  the 
games.  Tonight  Jefferson  and  baund- 
ers  of  St.  Louis  wilil  roll  three  games 
to  decide  who  is  entitled  to  the  gold 
and  silver  medals  given  by  the  con- 
gress for  the  highest  scores  of  the 
year.  Each  of  them  has  rolled  300 
scores  in  matches  at  St.  Louis. 

High  scores  in  the  first  double  event 

Sciiwebke-Shiman.  New  York,  l-l^Tj 
Serrell-Cook,  Philadelphia,     ,^l.i^'- 

Jones-Gehman,     Philadelphia.     1,137. 

High    second    double    event:  . 

Cochran-Smith.  Martins  Ferry,  Ohio. 
1,152  J.  Nolte-A.  Nolte.  Wheeling.  1,- 
139.. 

Third   double  event:  ,  o,q. 

Jarretl-Pump,  Jr..  New  ,^ork.  1.-49, 
Helltes-Haller.   New    York.    l.lo2. 


3:10 


West  Superior  Street, 
Duluth,  Minn. 


Q 


(BOTY  miEF. 


>luaut}pe 

Quick   work    by 


Ctrwipu.titlUU. 

'ihwing-Slewart 


OvILl/TH.  MiNH.  

Tomorrow,  Mother  Surprise  Day 

And  they  have  been  comir  g  pretty  regularly  this  month.  This  sale  is 
going  to  cost  us  a  lot  of  money,  as  we  are  -taking  a  good  big  loss  on 
everything  we  sell,  but  w<;  determined  early  last  month  to  reduce  oiir 
stock  and  ko  cut  prices  no  deep  that  people  would  anticipate  their 
jewelry  wants.  Our  daily  ads  have  shown  you  our  determination  to 
sell,  and  your  responses  lave  been  beyond  our  expectations.  Come 
again  tomorrow.  .     . 

When  you  buy  a  watch  or  a  piece  of  jewelry,  it  is  important  that 
you  select  a  store,  not  oily  of  unquestioned  integrity  and  strength, 
but  of  progressive  ideas  and  such  methods  as  will  insure  you  satis- 
factory service. 

Tomorrow,  W  cdncsday,  March  17,  1900. 

THIS  DAY  ONLY,  we  offer  you  any  article  in  our  store  marked 
in  plain  figures  $16.00,  for  the  small  sum  of  $8.85.    This  will  give  you— 


I       iijrin^c 


i.   |3= 


Any 
Any 
Any 
Any 
Anv 


$16 
$16 
$16 
$16 
$16 


12  size  Gent's  thin  Walthum,  O.  F.,  Watch  for. 

Ladies'  or  Gent's  Ring  for 

Sterling  S  her  Manicure  Set  for 

piece  or  s<  t  of  Cut  Glass  for 

Sheffield  I'ruit  Bowl  for. 


1^8.83 
.$8.85 
.!!;S.8.> 
.JJ58.85 


Central   lee   Hluk, 

Tenth    avenue    west    and    Third    sireet. 
Masquerade    and    barrel    lan.i   Thursday 
evening.    Match    lltth.      tlood   ice. 
■ 
For    Kfiii    -Muy    i»t. 
Twelve-room      residence,      -01       « esx 
;  Third    street.      Plenty    of    room    tor    ot- 
!  flees    and    residence    for    a    professional 
business.       H.     H.     Han  lord.       bellwood 
building. 


WILLIAM  DINHAM. 


— for  he  skips  both  B  aind  C  class  rinks 
— down  to  the  finals  In  three  events, 
and  has  held  the  Board  of  Trade  but- 
tons for  some  time  past.  He  is  an  en- 
thusiast in  every  sense  of  the  word, 
and  tliis  year  attended  both  the  St.  Paul 
and  Winnipeg  bonspiels. 

Both  his  B  and  C  class  rinks  got 
down  to  the  finals  In  the  Presidents 
event  being  defeated  by  Hall's  rink, 
and  both  his  rinks  got  down  to  the 
same  point  In  the  Bagley.  Both  rinks 
are  also  squad  winners  in  the  Manley, 
and  In  at  the  finisli. 


WantN    OulutU'H    Help. 

Mayor  Haven  has  received  a  tele- 
gram from  the  mayor  of  Brlnkley,  ArK., 
asking  Duluth  to  aid  the  people  ot 
Brinklev  who  lost  their  homes  through 
a  cycloiie.  Many  people  are  destitute 
a   result   of   the   cyclone. 


as 


CainpalgD    S«<>lal. 

A  membership  campaign  anniversary 
social  will  be  held  this  evening  at  the 
Y  M  C.  A,  Just  a  year  ago  the  big 
campaign  for  members  of  the  associa- 
tion was  on,  and  it  will  be  recalled 
this  evening.  Those  who  attend  will 
shown  how  the  organization  has 
during   the    last    twelve    months. 


be 
grown 


RECORD  BROKEN. 


St. 


Advertlne    raving   Job. 

The  board  ot  public  works  will  tnis 
week  advertise  for  bids  for  the  paving 
of  Twentieth  avenue  east.  Bids  will 
be  received  on  cedar  blocks,  tar  mac- 
adam',  sandstone    and    creosote    blocks. 


Any  $16 
Any  $16 
Any 
Any 


Gold  Cros  5  for    $8.85 

Solid  Gold   Fob  for $8.83 

Diamond  Set  Beauty  Pins  for $8.85 

Ladies'  W  itch.  20-year  case,  for $8.85 

set  of  Gent's  Military  Brushes  for $8.85 


■^n- 


tor 


Umbrella 

Cane   for    

Baking  Dish  for    

Diamond   Cuff   Links   for 

Diamond    Scarf    Pin    for 

Solid  Gohl  Comb  for 

Pearl  Mounted  Opera  Glasses  for. 
of  Sterling  Silver  articles  for... 
of  Silvei-  Depositware  for 
of  Silvei   Plated  Flat  ware 


.$8.85 
.$8.85 
.$8.85 
.$8.85 
.$8.85 
.$8.85 
.$8.85 
.$8.85 

$8.85 

for $8.85 


30  to  33  1-3  per  cent  discount  on  everything  above  and  below 
$16.  Hundreds  of  things  you  need,  all  at  sale  prices,  but  not 
mentioned  in  this  «d. 

^-  CAUTION 1 


Ask  for  discount  ti<:kets  when  you  enter  the  store.  We've  been 
compelled  to  use  this  precaution  to  prevent  other  dealers  here  buy- 
ing up  our  specials  to  sell  again.    t*v  K.;r,or  *.;*h  •^•r^  Hat, 


It's  being  tried  every  day. 


I 


Louis    Women    Break    Bowling 
Record  Made  at  Cincinnati. 

Pittsburg,  Pa..  March  16. — The 
world's  record  in  the  double  event  for 
women  bowlers  was  broken  In  the 
ninth  annual  tournament  of  the  Amer. 
lean  Bowling  congress  in  session  here 
todav,  when  Mrs.  M.  Kern  and  Miss 
Berdle  Kern,  both  of  »T.  Louis,  rolled 
1.024.  ^. 

The  previous  record  made  at  Cin- 
cinnati by  Mrs.  Hull  and  Mrs.  Ross 
Kotf>f    of    Chicago,    was    964. 

CLOSE  OFSEASON 
IS  NEAR  AT  HAND 


Tonight  at  the  curling  rink.  Hall 
meets  Dunlop  In  the  Bagley  event,  and 
the  winner  of  the  game  meets  Alwortli 
In  the  semi-finals. 

For  the  board  of  trade  buttons.  R.  D. 
Bradley  meets  Fcetham,  and  Hall  meets 
Dlnham    In   the    same   event. 

All   the  events   are   rapidly    nearlng  a 


the 

the 

sca- 


re- 
after 


«■■«■ 


T 


TO  tlk 


Sprlnkliuis    DUtrlctH. 

The  board  ot  puglic  works,  at 
meeting  Friday,  will  arrange 
sprinkling  districts  for  the  coming 
son.  The  board  desires  that  people  who 
want  streets  in  front  of  iheir  property 
sprinkled,  or  who  do  not  want  such 
streets  sprinkled,  make  their  w^ants 
known  this  week,  because  delayed 
Quests  along  this  line,  coming  In 
Che  districts  are  arranged,  cause  a  good 
deal  of  trouble,  and  it  is  hard  to  satisiy 
them. 

• 

A  Small  Fire. 
The  fire  department  liad  a  run  at  .an 
early  hour  this  morning  to  the  Bethel 
bakery.  GOG  liast  Fifth  street.  The 
fire  started  in  the  basement,  but  was 
extinguished  before  more  than  5100 
damage   was  done. 

■ 
SayN  Son  In  luNanc. 
Information  of  insanity  was  filed  in 
probate  court  this  morning  against 
Charles  Oja  and  he  will  be  Klven  an 
examination  this  afternoon.  Ihe  in- 
formation was  filed  by  his  father,  who 
savs  his  son's  actions  have  been  queer 
of"  late  and  he  believes  he  is  Insane. 
Charles  Oja  is  26  years  old  and  a  sin- 
gle man. 

■ 
Want    Storage    For    I.ork. 
The   Duluth    Log  company    has 
car    of    poles    In    storage 
years.      The    company 
age  is  worth  $4 no 
for   that    amount 
morning  against 
PMaanerv  as   sole 
the    firm    of    B, 
Kllen   M.   Carney  as   executrix. 


DIRECTORS 
RE-ELECTED 

Congdon,    d'Autrjmont, 

Hoatson,  Still  on  Greene- 

Cananea  Board. 

About  the  only  business  transacted 
this  noon  at  the  annual  meeting  of 
tiie  stockholders  of  the  Greene-Cananea 
Copper  company,  held  at  th  ?  concerns 
general  offices  in  the  Lyce  im  theater 
building,  was  the  re-election  ot  three 
of       the       directors,    whose    terms    ex- 

^^^The     three     dlreccors     re-elected     are 
Cliester  A.  Congdon  and  Chirles   d  Au- 


cured  a  verdict  for  $3,000  for  injuries 
to  his  foot.  The  evidence  showed  he 
had  been  working  thirty-four  hours 
without  a  rest,  and  he  fell  asleep,  some 
cars    passing   over   his    foot. 


and     Capt.    James 


SAYS  ANTE 
WAS  RAISED 


One  Cent  a  Wor«l  lilacb  laaertlon— N« 
AdvertUcmeut   L<ea«  Than  15  Cents. 

A''pKRFECTPsVvTTCHnFoR  $5,  MADE 
of  finest  select  human  hair;  extra 
long  and  heavy  and  In  every  shade 
to  match  any  liair.  Hand  made,  In 
sanitary  workrooms.  The  best  switch 
value  ever  offered  In  Duluth.  Miss 
Horrlgan,    Christie    building. 


OR  SALE — THE  TROTTING  BEACTV. 
"Lucy  Wilkes;"  can  sJiow  a  40  gait, 
and  as  handsome  as  you  can  find; 
.safe  for  any  lady  or  children;  stand- 
ard and  registered.  'Phone,  Zenith, 
1887. 


FOR  FINE  PERFrMP^  AND  SACHET 
powders,  go  to  Miss  llorrigan,  Chris- 
tie   building. 


State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis 

Orfthis  27th  day  of  Feby.,  A.  D.  1909. 
before  me  personallv  av»peared  Delbert 
A  Crosbv.  Tliomas  C.  Himebaugh. 
LlMlam  M.  Himebaugh.  to  me  known  to 
lie  the  persons  descrllied  in  and  who 
ectH'-d  tlie  foregoing  instrument, 
acknowledged  that  ihey  executed 
same  as  their  free  act  and  deed. 
JOHN  H.  BKIGHAM. 

Notary  Public. 
St.   Louis  Co.,  Minn 
rial   Seal.   St.    Louis  Co.,   Minn.) 
commission    e.vpires    on    Nov. 


(Not  a  I 

Mv 
1911. 


ex- 

and 
the 


16. 


of 


State     of     Minnesota      Department 

1  he|■'eb^-  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument Was  filed  for  record  in  this 
f.fllcf  on  the  6th  day  of  March.  A.  p. 
1»«>;»  at  11  o'clock  A.  M..  and  was  duly 
re<orded  in  Book  R-3  of  Incorporations, 
on    page    ISl.^,^^^,^   ^    SCHMAHL, 

Secretary  of  State. 


A  sale  like  this  gives  you  a  fine 
opportunity  to  -save  money.  If  you 
are  In  need  of  an  odd  Rocker  about 
the  house,  buy  now  for  you  can  act- 
ually buy  at  less  tlian  the 


OFFICE    OF    REGISTER    OF   DEEDS. 
Stai-  of  .Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis 

—  ss. 

1  herebv  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument "  was  filed  In  this  office  for 
ree,..d  Muich  9.  1909,  at  12:30  p.  m.,  and 
was   tlulv    recorded    in    Book   9    of   Misc., 

page  4:;i.  _ 

M.  C.  PALMER, 

Register    of  Deeds. 
By  THOS.  CLARK, 

Deputy. 
I>u;uth     Evening    Herald — March   16-17, 
11»0». 


WHOLESALE  PRICES ! 

4n-»  AA  I^rge  Arm  Rockers,  made 
\ -4  1 11 1  of  solid  hardwood— Impe- 
%p^,\J\f  rial  !«»  oak  finish  rf»  |  A  a 
— turned  spindles — special  3  1,4-0 
in  this  sale ^ 

d*^  rf\  Extra  fllne  large  -Vrm 
\S  Sll  Rockers — extra  heavy  and 
*p>J»>J\f     strong— V4       oak    ^4    Q  (- 

finish  —  solid  hardwood—  >1,7  J 
E-ood  value  at  $3.50;  special  ^ 


Madison.  Wis.,  March  16. — Assembly- 
man C.  Wellensgard.  who  took  the 
stand  In  the  senatorial  primary  investi- 
gation late  yesterday,  resumed  his  tes- 
timony today.  Witness  received  $250.80 
from  the  Stephenson  fund  and  spent 
about  the  same  amount  for  his  own 
rampaign.  He  said  he  kept  his  ac- 
counts In  two  small  books,  but  not 
separate  them,  because  he  did  not  re- 
ceive any  Stephenson  money  until  after 
the  primaries.  His  bill  against  Stephen- 
son was  estimated.  lie  promised  to 
send  for  his  memoranda. 

In  the  senate  today  the  joint  resolu- 
tion extending  the  time  for  Investigat- 
ing the  senatorial  primary  was  con- 
curred  In. 

A  hot  debate  ensued  at  the  primary 
hearing  over  a  motion  that  the  ser- 
geant-at-arms  of  the  committee  be  sent 
after  W  H.  Hatton.  It  was  said  Hat- 
ton  told  the  sheriff  of  Waupaca  county 
he  expected  to  be  subpoenaed,  and  was 
willing  to  appear  at  any  time.  When 
the  sheriff  sought  to  serve  Hatton  to- 
dav at  New  London  he  was  not  In  his 
office,  and  it  was  believed  he  had  left 
the  city.  The  motion  to  have  the 
sergoant-at-arms  go  after  him  was 
lost. 

C  H.  Russell,  defeated  candidate  for 
congress  in  the  Second  district,  testi- 
fied to  having  received  $450  of  the 
Stephenson  fund  to  be  used  in  Stephen- 
son's and  his  own  interests.  Most  of 
the  Items  of  expense  were  small.  One 
of  those  to  wiiom  he  paid  money 
turned  against  him  because  his  oppon- 
ent "raised   the   ante." 


FOR  SAI>E— COMPLRTELY  FURNISH- 
ed  five-room  cottage;  cheerful,  com- 
fortable and  convenient,  on  leased 
lot.    Park    Point.      B    49,    Herald. 

we'  CURE'sCALP  TROUBLES.  OUR 
methods  are  scientific  and  never  fail 
to  give  fullest  satisfaction.  No 
charge  for  consultation.  Miss  Horri- 
gans  Hair  Shop,  new  Christie  build- 
ing.  


liad  a 
for  over  two 
thinks  the  slor- 
and  suit  was  brouglit 
in  district  court  this 
E.  B.  Brand  and  .M.  P. 
surviving  members  of 
J.  Carney  &  Co..  and 
and  \N . 
J  Carnev  as  executor  of  the  estate  of 
b'  J  Carney.  The  poles  were  stored 
with'  the  Dulutli  Log  company  Nov.  1. 
1906,    and    they    have    been    there    since. 

• 

SettleH    111m    Suit. 

By    the    payment    of    $121.72.    the    suit 

brought     bv     Uno    Lake     against        the 

Great   Northern    Railway    comi)any    has 

been    settled    and    a   dismissal    was    liled 

in    district    court    this    morning.      Lake 

sued    for    $220.22,    whlcli    he    claimed    to 

be     the    value    of    a    quantity    of    ties, 

whicli    were    destroyed    by    fire    from    a 

spark    of   a    locomotive    passing   on    the 

Great   Northern    tracks    nearby. 

■ 

Delegaten    Kleoted. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  musicians    union 

held  this  morning.  L.  F.  Berger  and  ^^ . 

J     Dutcher    were    elected    delegates    to 

represent    the     Duluth       union       at    the 

national    convention     of    the    Ainerican 

Federation    of    Musicians   to    be    held    in 

Minneapolis.   May   10. 


tremont    of    Duluth 
Hoatson  of  Calumet. 

The  annual  reports  of 
are  in  the  hands  of  the 
will  be  distril)uted  lo  the 
In   a   few  days. 

♦       •       ♦ 

The    copper    stocks    advanced 
and       closed        higher.  North 

opened    at     $67.50.    advancec.     to 
and     clo-sed     at     $68.25     bid    and 
asked.     Amalgamated  opened  at 
advanced   to   $68   and   closed   at   $b 
bid    and    $68.1 2 Vi    asked. 

Greene-Cananea     opened 
and    closed    at    i'J.^lVz     bid 
asked.      Butte   Coalition    opened 
declined   to   $22.50   and 
bid    and   $22.75    asked 


the  officers 
pilnlers  and 
stockholders 


today, 
Butte 

$6S.5<> 
$68.50 
$6fi.Tr), 


I  «  V2 


at 
and 


bid 


BIRTHS. 


PIEIRSOi^L 


Mr. 

4124 


and 
Six- 
Mr. 
:;431 


ANDERSON — A    son    was    born    to 
and    Mrs.    Axel       Anderson    of 
Puesta   street,    March    10. 

WOOD — A  son  was  born  to  Mr. 
Mrs.  James  Wood  of  320  South 
teenth  avenue  east,  March   15. 

ST.    GEORGE — A   son    was   born    to 
and    Mrs.    George    St.    George    of 
West    Seventh    street,    March    1. 

CLOUTIER — A  son  was  born  to  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  A.  Cloutier  of  3931  West 
Fourth   street.   Marcli    13. 

BOUFFORD — 'A  son  ^tr&n  born  to  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  J.  D.  Bouffoi  d  of  322  Ver- 
non  street,   March   11. 

LUND — A  son  was  liorn  lo  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Emil  Lund  of  Ziiz9  West  Supe- 
rior street,    March    27. 


STORM — A  daughter 
and  Mrs.  S.  Storm 
sixth   avenue  west 


Was  born  to  Mr. 
of  111%  Twenty- 
March    14. 


$4, 4.50  and  $5 


Rockers  at 
«::.10.  Here 
i.'^  a  small 
lot  of  fine  Parlor  Rockers  for  you  to 
.select  from — assorted  designs  for 
vou  to  select  from.  Don't 
fail  to  see  these  fine  Rock- 
ers ;  special 


$2.19 


WILL  REfOMMEND  JLD6E. 

The  members  of  the  Duluth  Bar  as- 
sociation .will  nieet  at  the  rooms  of  the 
Commercial  club  next  Tuesday  even- 
ing for  the  purpose  of  agreeing  upon 
some  candidate  for  the  fourth  judge, 
tor  the  eleventh   judicial  district. 

There  are  several  attorneys,  who  are 
mentioned  as  possible  candidates. 
Among  those  considered  most  likely  to 
receive  the  recommendation  of  the  bar 
as.sociatlon,  are  Martin  Hughes  of 
Hibbin^.  Frank  Crassweller,  C.  O. 
Baldwin  and  L.  C.  Harris  of  Dulutli. 


BUILDING  PERMITS. 

To  Joseph  Becks,  frame  dwelling 
on  Grand  avenue,  between  Six- 
tieth and  SixCy-flrst  avenue 
^ast * 

To  Kate  Budnick,  frame  addition 
to  dwelling  on  East  Tenth 
street,  between  Sixth  and  Sev- 
enth   avenues    

To  E.  R.  Lode,  frame  <K)ttage  on 
Regent  .street,  between  Forty- 
first  and  Forty-seootiJ  avenue 
east    fr-  •%■ 

To  J  A.  Johnson,  frame'Bwelllng 
on  West  Second jr  street,  be- 
tween Twenty- fourth  and 
Twentv-flfth    avenlSeS:  west    .. 

To  D.  Honoltz.  bake  ^ven  on 
Fifty-seventh  aveftiieji'est,  be- 
tween Raleigh  _avi^  Polk 
streets W^'-'f 


2.000 


500 


D.  E.  Helps  of  Eveleth  is  at  the  St. 
'*A."j.  Sullivan  of  Ribbing  Is  at  the  St. 

'  Thomas   Nugent  of  Hibbing  Is  at  the 

McKay.  ,  „       . 

C  W.  Kleswater,  general  agent  of 
the  Duluth.  Mlssabe  &  Northern  is  con- 
fined to  his  home  with   the   snp. 

A  M  Fenton,  Northwestern  district 
freight'  and  passenger  agent  for  the 
Omaha,  who  has  been  seriously  ill,  is 
reported   greatly  improved   today. 

Harry  W.  Browne.  Northwestern  pas- 
senger agent  for  the  Lake  Shore  & 
Michigan    Southern    railroad    Is    In    the 

'  Mr  "and  Mrs.  Thomas  F.  Cole  returned 
this  morning  from  the  East.  Mr,  Cole 
represented  Minnesota  at  the  lait  in- 
auguration. 

VACATION  BEGINS 
NEXT  SATURDAY 


Spring  vacation  for  Duluth  school 
children  and  teachers  will  begin  this 
coming  Saturday  and  continue  until 
Monday.  Marcli  29,  nine  whole  days  of 
freedom   from   books  and 

Tho    spring    vacation 
earlier     this     year 
week   has   been 


$9.37 '/a 
$9.50 
at  $2,.. 
clo"s<d  at  $22.50 
Givoux  opened 
at  $8  25.  advanced  to  $8.37%  and  closed 
at  88  37%  bid.  Calumet  .fe  Ari/.ona 
onened  at  $99,  advanced  to  $100  and 
closed  at  $99  bid  and  $100  asked.  Ana- 
conda opened  at  $39-7  5  advanced  to 
$41.50  and  closed  at  $41. ..0  bid. 

Superior  &  Pittsburg  sold  at  $13.o0 
and  $13.62%  and  closed  at  ^3-62%  bid 
and  $13.75  asked.  Calume.  &  Sonora 
sold  at  $14.25  and  closed  at  $14 
$14.50  asked:  Butte-BallS-klava 
$16  37V.  and  closed  at  $16  2j 
$16.37%  asked;  Copper  Qufsn 
at  $1.50  and  closed  at  $1.^  % 
$1  50  asked:  Cactus  at  $1 
at  $1.62%  bid  and  $1.7;> 
C-hlef  Consolidated  at  98 
and  closed  at 
Globe     was 

V^  bld'and'$i.62-%  asked  Red  War 
*ior  at  $2.37%  bid  and  r2;;>0  asked. 
<'arman  at  $1.37%  hid  end  $l-6-i% 
asked  Savanna  at  $2  hid  and  $2.23 
asked.  Cliff  at  $1.62%  bid  and  $1.8.»/2 
asked,  and  Butte-Montana  at  40  cents 
bid  and    42   cents   asked. 

Black  Mountain  ^oUi  ,^^.  *}V,a 
$1.50.  and  closed  at  $1.3.%  bid 
$1.50    asked.         ^      ^      , 

A  wire  to  Paine.  Webber  &  Co  from 
Chicago,  said:  "We  are  '.old  that  at 
a    meeting   today,   an    Issue    of    $2o0,000 


and 
at 
bid    and 
of   Idaho 
bid   and 
.Co  and  closed 
asked      and 
and   99    cents 
98  cents  bid  aid  $1  asked, 
inactive     anc      closed     at 
bid    and    $5    asked.    Denn-Arizona 
at     $4  12%,    Mowit/.a       closed       at 


House  Cleaning 
Hardware 

For  the  regular  once-a-w»'ek  aa 
well  as  the  general  .spring  tear-up. 
t:)ur  line  interests  the  house- 
keeper— also  the  man  who  pays 
the  bills.  We  supply  thing.s  that 
clean  and  keep  clean  the  h'>use  at 
a  non-cleaning  out  of  the  pocket 
book  price.  We  make  a  specialty 
of  Janitor  Supplies  and  you  will 
find  all  of  the  latest  articles  in 
stock  at  all  times.  Come  In  and 
see. 


:KELLEV  HARDWARE  CO; 

pUUJTH,  MINN.      ; 

'  'your    MONtY    BACK   IF    NOT    SATISFIEIQ 


and 
and 


debenture  7  per  cent  bon<is  were  au- 
thorized by  the  Black  Mountain  Mining 
■ompanv.  and  a  holder  of  100  ^l^ares  of 
Ltock  W'ill  be  entitled  to  subscribe  toi 
$50    in    bonds   at    par." 

POSTAL  REPORT 
SHOWS  INCREASE 


The  total  receipts  at  the  Duluth  post- 
office  for  the  month  of  February  were, 

$22,881.28.  . 

This    is    an    increase    of 
the   corresponding  month 
The    receipts    for    this 
1908    were.    $22,632.97.  ,^  ,^      f 

These    receipts   are   from    the   sale    oi 
stamped    paper    and    other    in- 
furnlshed      by    the    govern- 


of  the  hour  is 
manifest  in 
the  Newest 
Styles  of 
Woolen  Nov- 
elties, which 
we  now  pre- 
sent for  your 
early  consid- 
eration. 


$249.31    over 

of   last   year. 

same    month    in 


500 


500 


200 


The  native  purity  and  ilelicions  flavor 
of  "Salada"  is  preferv'e'd  by  the  use 
of  sealed  lead  packWs.o  Never  sold  in 
bulk.  It  Is  richer.  Woijp  fragrant  and 
stronger  than  otherjX^a^. 


lessons 

is  somewhat 
than  usual.  Next 
selected  as  the  holiday 
week  regardless  of  Easter.  This  is 
done  so  as  to  make  the  second  and 
third  school  terms  as  nearly  the  same 
length  aa  possible.  The  second  term 
as  it  is  now  arranged  ends  next  Satur- 
day and  i«  eleven  weeks  long,  and  the 
third  term,  starting  March  29.  will  be 
one  week  shorter  than  the  second,  or 
ten  weeks.  If  the  vacation  was  put 
off  until  Easter  time,  the  last  term 
would  be  too  short  for  effective  work. 
. •  — 

Verdict  Too  Large. 

Unless  Walter  Blakney  consents  to  a 
reduction  of  his  verdict  against  the 
Red  Cliff  Lumber  company  from  $1,000 
to  $650,  the  company  may  have  a  new- 
trial  under  a  decision  filed  iu  the  dis- 
1  trict'  court    this   afternoon. 


^I^^SpI^* 


404  West  Superior  St. 


stamps, 
cidentals 

"^Considering  the  fact  tliat  February 
is  the  shortest  month  in  the  year,  and 
that  bu.^iness  is  not  in  any  way  rush- 
ing, the  postoffice  officif  Is  think  the 
report   a    very    fair   «>ne. 

WOUND  COSTS  FOOT. 

Ashland  Whs.,  March  1(.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  bullet  hcle  in  his  heel, 
accidentally  received,  near  the  ore 
docks  last  September,  cost  Stanley  .*?hefl 
one  of  his  feet,  yesterday  the  surgeons 
declaring  the   operation    'vas   necessary 

to  save  his  life. 

, • 

New  Trial  Denied. 

\  motion  for  a  new  trial  or  a  judg- 
ment notwitlTstanding  the  verdict  in 
the  case  of  Peter  Desi  man  against 
Butler  Brothers,  was  dci  led  in  district 
court     this     afternoon.       Desaman     se- 


MOVED 

TO  20  EAST  SUPERIOR  ST., 
UPSTAIRS. 


F.  W.  EDWARDS 

CREDIT  CLOTHING. 


m 


1 

i 


> 


14 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      TUESDAY,     MARCH    16.    1909. 


WHEAT  HAS 
A  DECLINE 

Market  Is  Heavily  Sold 

on  This  Side  of  the 

Atlantic. 


THE  MARKETS  AT  A  GLANCE. 


Flax  Is  Dull 
May  Option 


and   the 
Closes 


Unchanged. 


Duliith  Bcar.l  of  Trade.  March  16.— 
The  tiaJt;  was  siliing  wheat  ayain  to- 
day, and  prices  declined  in  a  very  ac- 
Uve  maiktt.  Closing  cables  were  up. 
but  the  domtslic  situation  was  regard- 
ed as  bearish 

Recjlpts 
large 


in  the  Northwest  were  very 
most  vt  it  being  No.  1  and  No.  : 
norlhorii.  „- 

Brailstrects    rti'orted    an    Increase    or 
S.0S8  »•'»•>  bu   in   the   worhis   visible  sup 
ply  of  wlieat.     In  the  L'nited  Stales 
Canada  ihert   wa.s  an  increase  of 
bu.    a:.d    atioai    and    in    Euri-pe    an    m 
crease  of  2.1"'U.('(k>  bu. 

IJverpool  t. 
Un   -isC  lower 


and 


iosed    h'o  ■'•»<^  higher. 


and  Hudapest  -'sc 


Ber- 

higher. 

The  :dav  option  t  losoit  °*c  lower  in 
Duluth  anu  AlinneapoMs,  ^  li  •»€  lower 
In  Chicago,  ^sc  l-'Wer  in  New  i  ork.  'hc 
lower  in  St.  l.ouis.  "i,  f(i  T c  lower  in  Kan- 
sas C'if..  and  '^c  iilgher  in  Winnipeg. 
The  Julv  option  cloned  \c  lower  in  l»u- 
luth  and  New  York,  ^^c  lower  in  C  hl- 
C««o  \<li  ^«c  lower  in  Minneapolis,  'iz 'a 
%C  lower  in  St.  I-ont.s  and  Kansas  City, 
and    'i,c   higher   in    VVinniptg. 

Mav     corn     closed      •■»  "i'  '•ic 


Duluth  May  wheat  closed  %c  lower. 
Chicago  May  wheat  closed  %c  to  ^/gC  lov/er. 
Minneapolis  May  wheat  closed  %c  lower. 
Liverpool  wheat  cables,  y^d  to  %d  higher. 
Duluth  May  flax  closed  unchanged. 
New  York  stocks,  strong. 
Boston  copper  stocks  closed  higher. 
Duluth  curb  coppers  firm. 
Cotton  is  steady. 


210    cars. 
Chicago 
day    were 
cars    last 


lower    in 


1.1  ver 
higher 


Chicago    and    Uli'ad    higher    In 

f>ooh      May    oats    closed    *=i  <ij '4c 
n  Chicago. 
AD   mah!<i:t 

Broomhaii  cabled  from  Liverpool. 
"Wlieat — The  disappointing  American 
cables  yesterday,  together  vsMtli  the  un- 
expected increas.-  in  tiie  American  visi- 
ble supplv  stiniulatKl  some  dlspositinn 
to  realize  at  the  opening  and  values 
were  "sd  lower,  aliiiougn  the  un.ier- 
tone  was  steady.  Following  the  open 
Ing,  tlie  market  developed  .lecided 
ness  and  value.*  gained  ■''(.  Ii 
Ings  at  this  time  wt  re  ligiu 
nervous,  due  to  tlie  p<'l 
between  Servia  and  Hungary,  private 
reports  slating  that  a  I  reak  is  immin- 
ent London  was  reported  a  heavy 
buyer.  aggrf-t;ainig  nearly  i.uoo.ooi.  bus. 
IJellcrs  in  this  market  were  few,  and  al- 
la    I'lata    l.ou.-^»s    were   repi.ried 


hrn;- 
•>hd.     Offer- 
and  sliorts 
political     trouble 


b-;:d 

mg 

fU 

lis 

sup- 

ih.- 

111 

irket 

was 

higl 

ler 

Ih 

an 

tlie 

though 

to   be  offering   I  reel  y 

ported.       At     midday 

strong     and     -S'y    t>d 

opening. 

■•Corn  was  steady 
about  unchanged. 
March  covered  in  sy.  ..  . 
flrnnuss  in  wheal  and  the  strength  in 
J..a  IMaia  offerings.  Lsi  I'iata  spot  be- 
ing ""d  iiigher.  At  mid-day.  thf  mar- 
ket   was   linn   and    '.j'(;\,<l   Ingher. 

Car  receipts  of  wheal  at  Duluth  were 
271'  against  Jl   last  year,  and  at   Minne 
apolis    14!>   against    35:5    last    year, 
Ing    a    u.tal    for    the    Northwest 
BgHin!=t   -HM   last   year.  Chicago 
73   against    i.j   ia.-l   year. 

prtmarx    leceinis  of  wlieat  were 
000     bu.,    last    year    6(5'.. 000    bu.      bhip 
ments   j.'S.oom   bu..   last   year 
Clearances    of     wheal    and 
930,0i'0   bu. 

Primary    receipts    of    corn 
000     bu..  "last     year    r>7lM»00 


at  the  start  and 
Later  siiorts  in 
inpathy    with    the 


mak- 
of    420 
received 


-ir.o. 


S 3 1.000   bu. 
Hour     were 


were 
bu. 


Cleaianccs    of 


;.04.- 
■hip- 
Lorn 


nsenis    i.j;;,<">o    bu. 
were    7t;.('<>0    bii. 

add    market  .^^    ,    .,         ■»!„,. 

Wheat  was  active  in  Duluth.  May 
whci't  opened  ^t,c  higher  at  »l.lo^*  and 
gradualiv  eased  off  to  $1.14 'i.  closing 
It  $1.14^'«.  a  loss  of  ^*c  trom  yes  er- 
day.  Julv  wheat  ii>ened  uiuhangocl  al 
-  -        advanced     to     $1.16>.i.     declined 


Total    receipts    of    wheal    at 

Minneapolis    and    Duluth     to- 

493    cars,    compared   with    462 

week    and    469    cars    the    cor- 

lesponding  day  a  year  ego. 

Close:  Wheal — May,  ?l.lo%  ©  llo'-i  . 
July,  $1.04;  September.  tt7>»c:  Decem- 
ber 98 ^c.  Corn — March,  64a4c;  May, 
67>^(^b7'4c:  July,  67Sj  67  i^c;  Septeni- 
ber  66  5s<{t  66»4C;  December.  59»8C.  Oats 
— Mav,  54%c:  July.  48-hc;  Septeniber, 
48»^.c.  Pork — May.  $1  <,SoCs  1  »>'  ;2  • 

Juiv.  $17.90.  Lard — May,  $10.ld,  July. 
$10  37>>;  September,  $10.30.  Ribs — 
Mav.  $9.40119.421,2;  July.  $i'.55;  Seplem- 
ber".  $9.7W.  Rye— Cash.  Sic;  May  i»Oc. 
Barley— Cash,  651(69c.  Timothy— March 
$3.85.  Clover — March,  $8.75.  i-^^'] 
wheat— No.  2  red.  $1.22 -&  1.24  •»  :  No.  3 
red,  $1.16'(«  1.23:  No  2  hard.  $l.loM!.«-? 
1177»:  No7  3  hard.  $1.10(tt  l.lo-'s 
1  northern,  $1.18  6,1.191.4;  No.  2  north; 
ern.  $1155<1.17;  No.  3  spring.  $1.13(& 
1.16.  Corn— No.  3.  eoVsc;  No.  3  white. 
67(?i67i2c;  No.  :<  vellow.  66(ft66i/ac:  No. 
4.  63^  64c.  Oats — No.  3  white. 
54»ic;  No.  4  white,  511t5oc;  si 
55c. 

THE  MI\NKAP(JLl;!l  M.\RKKT. 

XervoiiMiess  Displayed  in  Wheat — 
Strength  Lost  IMiiinji:  the  Day. 

Minneapolis.  Minn.,  Maicli  16. — Local 
elevator  slocks  of  wheat  decreased  70.- 
00(1  Ills  for  three  days.  Today  s  wheat 
market  was  rather  nervous.  Minneapo- 
lis  again  followed  the  Chicago  quota- 
tions As  the  session  progressed  the 
market  lost  strength  and  May  gradually 
declined  to  $1.14  and  closed  at  $1.14 '.4. 
II4C  below  the  opening.  Minneapolis 
today  rtielved  148  cars  against  353;  Du- 
lutli"272  against  51;  Winnipeg  255 
against  3'J.  Mav  opened  $1.]5'.*>-  high 
$1.15»2.  low  $1.14.  clo.se  $1.14 'i.  July 
opened  $1.16's.  ^iiKll  $116's.  low  $1.14«h 
tr^*.  close  $1.14'«.  Cash  wheat  was  in 
fair  to  good  <lemand  today.  Millers 
were  the  only  buyers  and  were  not 
quite  as  eager  buyers  today  as  yester- 
dav.  No  1  northern  si>ld  for  1  «-<  li  2e 
over  Mav  and  No.  2  for  'iC  under  to 
the  full  Mav  price.  Close;  No.  1  norlii- 
ern.  $1.16;  to  arrive.  $1.1C;  No.  2  north- 
ern. $1.14'!»  14''4  ;  to  arrive,  $1.14.  No. 
3  wheal.  $1.1  (-4/  1.1 2  I4  :  Nt>-  3  yellow 
corn,  62»,2l{62^c;  No.  3  white  oats,  jO'-i 
({loliac;   No.   2  rye.   7 4  =*4  f-'  7 1;  %  c. 

Flax  — Heceipis.  14  cars  today  against 
46;  shipments.  1.  Lack  of  offerings 
made  tlie  market  <iuiel.  Demand  was 
strong  and  jii  lees  w^l^■  liic  same  as 
Oululh    May.      Close,    $1,041^. 

Karlev — Keceipts.  29  cars  loaay 
.•it;ainsl'    18;     shipments.     39.  Todays 

market  was  about  steady  with  yesier- 
dav.  Prices  were  the  same.  lni;uiry 
was  trood  for  boih  feeding  and  malting 
grades.  lieceipts  were  the  same  as 
yesterday.      Close.    62ii;faG4c. 

Miiisluffs  —  Sliipments.  1.321  tons. 
Shipmtnts  sliowed  a  decrease  Irom 
Yesterday.  Demand  exceeded  the  s.ip- 
ply.  Business  was  v»  ry  satisfaelory 
to"  the  millers.  Prices  held  firm.  Bran 
in   bulk.   $2;:<)  2:?. 50. 

Flour — Shipments  again  showed  a 
decrease  from  yesterday  and  a  week 
{•go.  Demand  was  onlv  fair  among 
the  local  mills,  but  outside  millers  re- 
portetl  betttr  conditions.  Prices  raised 
the  same.  Shlpnienls.  38.729  Viarrels. 
First  patents.  $5.65fft  .".75;  second  pat- 
ents. ?.'.55(fi  5.65;  first  clears.  $4.4(i'54  4.50; 
second  clears,  $:15'</ :h25. 


$4.50@5  4P:  w«tem  stecre.  $4.15^r..6C;  ttockprs  and 
feeders.  $:i.4:p('j5.40;  «>«»  ami  lielfci^.  $1  UO^S.TO 
fjUves.  S»;.iKii!<8  25.  Hogs— Keotlpts  mainutid  at  jT 
000;  ia<iiket  strum  to  oc  hlgliir;  ll«ht.  tG.2j(a^f"^  ' 
mlxeJ,  $6.:!r>("e.8o;  heavy.  $6.4;(«C.8.' ;  niugli.  i<-*' 
^6.13;  rcod  til  choice,  heavy,  J6.."..'.(n6.85;  pl«» 
$5.10616.(10;  bulk  ft  taJes.  le.SSCsC.rs.  Slieep— Ue- 
celpts  e»lim.-aea  at  la.OnO;  market  steady;  i.aU\t. 
»;<.13(a5.«0;  wtstem.  »:<.2,n<t".8li;  yearUugs.  $r'.J5w 
T.UO;   Uiubs.    riatSve.    l.'>.T5('i7.70;  wesUni.   $3.J0<a.7 


STRENGTH 
IN  STOCKS 

Market  Opened  Higher 

and  Close  Was  Strong 

and  Active. 


Atchison  Was  Heavy,  Fol- 
lowing Reports  of  New 
Bond  Issue. 


0. 


THE  COPPER  STOCKS. 


The  following  are  the  closing  quota- 
tions of  copper  Slocks  at  Boston  today, 
reported  by  Paine.  Webber  &  Co..  lioom 
A,   Torrey 'building; 


STOCKS — 


Bid     I  .^sked 


|jy  I  .Vmalgamaled 
-  ■  '  Anaconda    . . . 
Adventure   .  .  . 
Ahrneek    .... 
Allouez    . 
..    i^®  j  American 
nda'ra.  '  American 


67% 


Anierlonu   \\  hrat 

liiil.illi.  Miut.iapi  li> 


Market, 


New  Yc  rk. 


11.15  \.. 


51  1 


, >s    and    closed 


1       .May— 
I  Hl'fll  ••  .  . 


there,    at 


to    ,-  -     _ 

of    ^4C    Irom    yesterday 

Duium    wiieal    closed 
cash    spring    wluat    was 
basis   of   Ic   over   May 
ern.  ,    ,        , 

.Mav    nax   opened    'gc   h 
declined    to    $1.64=*     and 
changed    from    yesterday      at 
Flax    was  very  dull.     The  other 
wef    not    iradtd    in    at    all 


a 


loss  1 1!;t!l 


ower    and 

selling    on    a 

for   No.    1    nortli- 

gher   at    $1.65. 

closed       un- 

$1.64'*. 

options. 


■fitse 
!<!(5e  !.'>. 
I      .Tilly - 

<Hhii 

tilSli    .  . 

I...W      . 

rinse 


>4c    lower    and    barley 


Oats     closed 

%c  lower. 

Following     were     the     closing 
Wheat — -N'o.    1    hard   on   track. 

To  arrivt  ;   No.   1    northern.   $1.1: 

2    rortheni,    $1.13^h.      On    track 

northern.      $1.15**;      No. 

IliaiJi;     -May      $1 

SeptemVer.   $ 

1.   $1.03;   No. 


prices; 
S;  No. 

No.     1 

norlhern. 

14^,:     July.     $1.15S; 

01;.      l>urum   on  track.  No. 

$L('4;  -May  durum,  $1.02; 


15 


.$1. 
.  1. 
.  1 
1 
.  1. 

.   1 

1 

.   1 

.   1. 

1 


t"l{>»e 

St.      lA'UiS 

.May     

July    .... 

May    

J.ily    

Wii.nii'eg — 

May    

July   


15I1.B 

l'\ 
14  H 
14*kB 

K-H 

16B 

u;% 
i.'.H 
l.-»*B 

15T4 


Jliiii 

1.14 

l.UVi 

1.15 


»L16',- 
l.)H"» 

1.1.-. '4 

i.i:.^- 

l.lti>4 


M6'«  1.04Ti,-.'. 

l.Hi'i,  1.0.'.H-\ 

i.!4%-=4    i.o:<'* 

1.14',»,-l.Ml  1   04 

l.l&H-^      If'JH 

fliw    1«IU. 

11.12% 

1.01- '* 


Jl 

£(.1, 

20^ 

i!'»i 

IV\ 

■m'lk 

M\ 

r.'% 

115, 

ll'iB 

12s 

!(> 

e    ir.lli 

11 

l.-^s 

oiH 

nty- 


1 


.(i«'4 

14 


■Si 


OTU 
00  \ 

.  la'. 


Chicnso    C'«»ru, 


$1.63 
1 


{1.64 's;        .luly 
1.1214  ;  October.  $1.3 
51c;    oats    on    iraik 
barley,    tl  »2  ^i  63c. 

«'ars  inspected;  Wheat,  2' 
61:  corn.  1;  oats.  li>;  barley 
last    vear   16. 

Receipts:   Wheat.   119.231: 

oats,    12.920:    bailey.    16  13S; 

Shipments:     Barley,    2.594. 


51  c 


g ,  .'September, 
Oats  to  arrive. 
;    rye,    72ti75c; 


tir.en 
High 
hew    . 
<.'lt>se 


(latM 

iiay 

...54''i-5 

...s.-.->* 

...r.4S 


And    Pork. 

<  on. 
M..y. 

t'8-'* 


M..y. 
llT.'.i-- 
17  !!' 
17.8.'. 
17.8:. 


last  year 
46;   tlax   7, 


corn 
Max. 


175. 
235. 


CttMh    *ialra    Mouday. 

No.   1   lif  nturii.  1  .-..r   

No    1   niMlurii.  i  4i>0   Ini   Ic  arrive 

No!   1   ii<rti;<m.  440   bu   lo  arrive 

No.   U  1.1  iili»rn.  1  far 

No.   3  spri'.g.    1  'Hr 
t 


1  norihem. 


B<>iul«(l  wi.eiit.    1.000  bu  No, 

Velxtl  I  lialT.    1  >  .nr  .No.   2 

T>uriini.   SOO  l;i.    N<  .    1  Iti  arrive 

iMiniin.   l.<0(    t:u  Nu.    I   To  arrive... 
Uuruiii.  2.000  f.i  No.   1  lo  arrive... 

rnjruiii     1    car   .No.    1 

Ituniiii     1    '-ar    .No.   3 

OuU.    1   lar   .No.    4   wtilte 

<)at!<.  800  bu  Nl.  3  Khlte  to  arrive. 

Barley.   1  ••ar   

Klax.   1  car 

VlhX.  'M\>    bu 


!.1B»4 

I.IG 

l.lS'a 

J.14'»» 

1.13 

1.10'i, 

l.llH 

1.03'-, 

1.03 

1.03"» 

1.03»4 

1.01»i 

.  .".0 

.JlVi 

.t:3 
i.ne 
i.ee 


L>lver|i<-<il     (.rain. 

Liverpool,     Maroii     Ifc. — Close:     Wheat 

Spot,   strong     No.  2   red  wesU  rn   win 

ter     is    6*2d.    I'm 

2-'4d; 

11  •■■sd 

mixed 


■ures    steady;    .Ma: 


lures 
10-'4d. 


Julv,  fs  4'^d:  Septeniber  7s 
Corn — Spot  firm;  new  American 
(via     Calveslon  1.     5s     Hd.       I'u- 

firm;     March,     5s     l»=*4d;     .May.     5s 


Duluth    Car    luKpeetion. 

Wh«it— .N(.    1    h.-.nl     1.    .Nc.    1    iiinlitrii.    i.M 
iK.rilurn.   44:  No.   3  »rr'.i'l'    -•':   N''-   *  spring.   ."i 
1    liuniDi..    tit;    No.    2    diinim.    Si;    No.    3    (iuruni 
lelvet   rl.aff.   6.     T<  t.il   I'f   wlieat.    272;   Ia«t   .vear. 

Flax— No.    1.    7.      Tft.-.i    ■!    ria.x.    7;    last    ytar. 

Tutal  of  all  tar*     :'■•■•      <  ■''-   •■'  "■"ik  Hilay, 


No.    ; 

i ;    No, 
,    46 

ri. 

16. 


Telephone   .. 

Zinc    

j  Atlantic     

I  Arcadian     

1  .Vri^ona    Commercial 

I  Hegole    

j  Boston   Cons 

I  Boston    Coi  bin 

I^iat  k     Mciintain     .... 

Butte    Coalition     

Butte  &  London  .... 
Calumet  &  Arizona.. 
Calumet   *i   Hecla    .... 

Centennial     

C(  ns.   Mercur    

C<ppt  r   IJange    

Cumberland   Ely    

Daly    West    

Davis  Daly    

litmiinion   Copper    .... 

Kast    Butte    

F'l  ankiin    

First    National    

(jiroux    

(rranby    

CJreenc  Cananea    

Hancock    Cons 

Hflvi'tia    

Isle    Royale    

Keweenaw    

Lake   Copper    

la    Salle    

Mass.     Cons 

Mass    Gas    

M<-xico    Milling    

Miami    Copper    

Mi(  higan    

Midiawk     

Nevada    Consolidated 

Nevada     Utah     

Newhouse    

NijM'ii-ing     

North    Butte     

Ojibw:'.y     

Old    Dominion    

Osceola     

Parrolt     

Pneu.     Ser 

(y  ulnc^ 

Raven     

Santa    I'e    

Shannon     

Slioe    Michigan     

Superior  Copper    

Superior  i»i   Pittsburg 

Tamarack    

Trinity    

Pnited  Copper 

l'nited    Kruit    

V.  S.  Mining 

do    pfd     

r.    S.    Oil    

Utah    Apex    

I' tall  Cttns 

I' tall    Copper    

Victoria    

Winona    

Wolverine    

Wyandot    

Yukon    Gold    

Arizona-Michigan  .  . 
American    .Saginaw    .  . 

Boston    Ely    

Bulte-Ballaklava  .... 
Butte  &  Sui»erior  .... 
Chief  Consolidated    .. 

Cactus    

Calumet  &  Corbln  .  . 
Calumet  &  Sonora  .  . 
Calumet    &    Montana 

Carman    

Chemung 

Cliff    

Copper     Queen     

Cordova     

l)enn-.\rizona     

Duluth  &  Mocteguma 

Elv    Cons 

Globe   Cons 

Goidfi'^ld     Cons 

Lion   Gulch    

Live   Oak    

Lake  Superior  &  Sonora) 

M.  M.   &  M 

Mowllza    

National    Exploration....] 

Ohio  Copper    • 

Rawhide    Royal     i 

Rav   v'ons    

R*d    Warrior    

Rawhide  Coalition    . 

San    Antonio     

I  Savanna     

I  Shatluck    

I  Superior  &  Boston., 
i  Superior  &  Globe.... 

Torre  Roca    

Tcnopali    Nevada    .  .  . 

Warren     

Wolverine  ^-   Arizona 
Zenith    Lead    


7% 
145 

38  H 
129  »t 


14  »A 

34^4 
131,4 

IIM: 
1>> 

1% 
22».S8 
25c 
99 
615 
29 
30c 
75*4 

"ioc" ' 

14  >^ 
14 

(■\ 

92 

IIV4 

3»4 

26 '^ 

17  " 
147ij 

63  It 

10 1/^ 
60  'A 
17 '4 

i'i 

10  34 
6S'4 
13 
4S 
127 
31  V4 

85 
38c 

2'ti 
14 

561/i 
4114 
136* 
78 
13 

11 '4 
132  V4 
39  ■•■4 
44% 
31 

5>,^ 
39'/*. 
40% 

4 '-4 

6 
139 

2'/i 

4V4 

l'-4 

3  Mi 

1    5-16 

16  >4 

1 
98c 

1% 

1 
13^ 
18c 

1^ 
191/i 

l4. 

1?4 
3V4 


4S4 


681yi 

41»4 
8 
155 

39  M: 
129^ 

24*i 

14  1/2 

35 

"12    " 

18  14 
IVi 
22  %, 
30c 
100 

"2914 
40c 
76 


4   9-16 
12c 
14  »4 
1414 


95 

9»'i 

11>,S 

31/^ 

4 


'PHONES— 

ZENTI'H,    1464.         DULUTH,    18T1. 


REFERENCES: 

City  National  Bank, 

First  National 


Bank. 


ID 

0 

64 

4H 

13% 

10% 

"i7% 

3% 

11 

68  14 

loi^ 

48I4 

128 

31  li 

914 

86 

40c 

2% 

14 '4 

a  i 

42 

1334 

80 

131/4 

1214 

133 

4014 

4  5 

3114 

6 

39 -s 

41 

434 

61/4 

142 

New  York,  March  16. — Reading  and 
Chesapeake  &  Ohio  started  %  higher 
today  than  last  night.  Changes  of  the 
other  principal  trading  stocks  were 
limited  to  eighths  and  Muarters  and 
the  volume  of  the  business  was  in- 
significant. American  Ice  rose  a  point 
and  Consolidated  Gas    ^4. 

Standard  railroau  stocks  were 
bought  more  freely,  especially  the  Har- 
riman  group  St.  Paul  and  Reading. 
Most  of  the  well  known  specialties  also 
were  taken  on  a  rising  scale.  After  a 
number  of  stocks  had  scored  good 
gains  the  demand  abated,  but  prices 
held  well.  American  Sugar  moved  up 
li/i.  Peoples  Gas  I'i,  and  Reading. 
Union  Pacific  and  American  Beet  Sugar 
1.  Pittsburg.  C.  C.  *c  SI.  Louis.  Chi- 
cago Great  Western  preferred  "A." 
Tennessee  Copper.  American  Malting 
preferred  and  Pullman  declined  a 
point. 

Buying  was  renewed  on  intimations 
that  tiie  president's  special  message 
was  expected  j»roniptly.  United  Stales 
Steel  and  Amalgamated  Copper  were 
features,  with  an  adva:".ce  of  II4.  Tle 
movement  died  out  towards  noon. 
Bonds    were    steady. 

Baying  of  the  general  list  was  re- 
vived to  some  extent  by  the  bidding 
up  of  the  Harriman  Pacifies.  Southern 
got  up  1  and  Union  Pacific  1%.  Very 
little  interest  was  manifested  In  the 
industrials.  Wabash  preferred,  Kansas 
City  Southern  and  Minneapolis  &  St. 
Louis   pref«:-rre<l   gained   a  point   each. 

The  market  closed  strong  and  active. 
Atchinstm  was  heavy,  following  reports 
of  a  new  bond  issue.  Later  prices 
hardened  again.  I'nion  Pacific  gained 
2it,.  Reading  2.  Peoples  Gas  1%.  Amal- 
gamated Copper  1%.  St.  Paul  aad  the 
United  States  .Steel  1 14 .  and  Louisville 
&  Nashville.  New  York  Central,  Kansas 

Texas.  Chf^sepeake  &  Ohio  Wisconsin 
Central  preferred.  Soulliern  Pacific  pre- 
ferred. Colorado  Fuel.  Allis-Chalniers 
preferred  and  Granby  Mining  1  or 
more. 


Martin 
Rosendahl 

&Co., 

locorporated. 

CAPITAL,  $50,000.00. 


Copper  Stock 
Brokers 


414    WEST    SUPERIOR 
lOa-lOS   MANHATTAN 


STREET. 
BLiDQ. 


Duluth  Copper  Curb  Market. 

N.  S.  MITCHELL  & 


CO., 


Private   Wire*. 
City   'Phoncat,    180;i. 


202-2O4    MANHATTAN     BLILDINO 
References  I 
CITY    NATIONAL   BANK, 
Dulutb.  Mlun. 

»L\RCH   16,   1909. 


Private  L«nv  Distance. 
'Phoaes,  1«57.1!»0S. 


i     Bid.l    Ask. 


I     Bid.l    Ask. 


My  own  wires  to  the 
Copper  country.  Also  con- 
nections to  Eastern  mar- 
kets. 


American  Saginaw  . 
Arl/,.->li<liigan  .  .  . . 
Black  Mountain  . . . 
Butte  Montana  .  .  . . 
Butte  &  Supericr.. 
Butte  Ballaklava  .  . 
Calimict  &  .\rl2oria. 
Cal.  &  Montana  .  .  • 
Caluntct    &    Sonera. 

Carman   Cons 

Cliff 

Copper    Queen    . . . . 

Cordova    

Cactus     

Dcna-Arizona    

East    Butte     

Globe    Cons 

Grt>ene    Cananea    . . 


3.50 

1.37 

1.50 

.41 

1.00 

10.37: 

99.(101 

.181 

14.00! 

1.371 

1.621 

2.OOI 

1.371 

1.621 

3.«7! 

13.87 

4.75 

9.25 


3.75 
1.50 
1.62 
.43 
1.06 

16.62 

99.. jO 
.20 

14..->0 
l.."iO 
1.87 
2.12 
7i62 
1.75 
4.12 

14.12 
5.00 
9.50 


Keweenaw •■ 

IJve   Oak    

Lake  Sup.  it  Sonora. 

Movvit/a    

Xlpissinjs    

National    

Xortli    Butte    

Rod  Warrior    

Rawhide  Royal   .... 

San    -Xnionio    

Savanna    

Sup.  &  Pittsburg.  . . 

Sup.   &    Boston 

Shattuek-Arizona    .. 
Superior  &  Globe .  . . 

Tuolumne     

Warren    

Zenitli  Lead  &  ZliiC. 


4.00 

4.50 

5.87 

6.12 

3.50 

3.75 

1.37 

1.50 

10.25 

10.50 

.50 

.55 

68.00 

68.25 

2.37 

2.50 

.13 

.15 

14.25 

14.75 

2.00 

2.25 

13.37 

13.62 

14.25 

14.. 50 

15.50 

16.00 

1.00 

1.06 

1.75 

1.87 

3.50 

3.75 

2.00 

2.12 

Ulbbiuc 


Private   Wires    to 
Itoth   *p bones,   IIOI^S. 


— BRANCH   OFFICKS — 

PAID  UP  CAPITAL  $50,000.00 

LEE  &  GO.^ 

BANKERS  AND  BROKERS. 

Copper  Country,   KaiiKe  nuU 


Superior. 


Inc. 


nil   FJnixtern  Mnrketii. 
410  West   Superior  Street. 

mil  Til  nun  stocks. 


New    V(  rh    f  tcxk 
hy    P;p<r    .((■Imsdi 


ic    las;. 


furnislit'd    The    Herald 


FRED  H.  MERRITT 

BROKER. 

Stocks,  Bonds,  Grain. 

328     WEST    SUPERIOR    STREET. 
Teiepbouei*:  Uiilutb   I4UN;  Zenith  V7I. 

5L\RCH    16.    1909. 


Op*n.j  Higli-l  low.  !  Close. 


Car    Foundry 
Kf'Ci  nii''.Jve    .  . 
ii.uon    Oil     . 
Smelt*  lb     ... 


1 


THE  (HirAiid  MARKET. 

Renened   War   Has   Strengtheuin^ 
Effect  on  Wheat. 

Clilcago.  March  16. — Renewed 
possible     war 
etrt-ngtiiening 
market    ttday 


Of 


talk 
had     a 
wlieat 

r  up 


Net%    )  ork   (.rain. 

New  York.  .Maith  IC  — Clo.oe:  Whtat. 
.Mav,  $1.1J«3^4,  .Inly.  $1.11  Ti.  Corn.  May. 
74'i»c-;  July.   T4i*i.. 


5% 
3 'A 
3V4 
1\ 

r.F.c 

15-16 

13c 

12 

2% 
64c .  . 
13 

2 
15M! 
1414 
9>«c 

3 

fl^ 

3M! 

■  ■  i  % ' 


4% 

1»2 

3% 
1>4 

i-ie 

1*4 
l'/4 

14  1^ 
20c 

1% 
21 

1'4 

2V4 
4»^ 

IS 
F. 
7 '4 

n 

3»4 
3»2 

60c 

16c 
i:;Mr 

2»4 
65c 
14 

2 '4 
16 

1434 
1-16 

S% 
2'* 


AlUs    Chalniir- 
do     pfd      .    . 
.\malFa  muted 
Americi  II    Sug 
AmerJi  iiii 
Ani»-rl -..ii 
Atiurli  .III 
.\ineriiiiii 

.^t(•lli^oll 

do    pfd     

Hidtlim  re    &    Ohln    

Rn:kl.vii      Kapld     Tr.tlisit.. 

<\i;tr.il    Ui.tlsir     

•  lieMijiWike     &     Ohio 

('1iIp:i6o-*;i.  Wfftrru  com 
(■id<aito<ir(;;t  Wwlern  A 
Chltago-Citi.t     Wiftc-m     B 

C.    M.    &    St.    Piiul 

Coll  rati  •   Frel   Ac   Iron   . . . 

Colt  r.ido    s<  iitixni     

(■(  ii'oUdate    <'.ii*     

Cnnadiiiii  I.i<ifir   

I>c!a>vi.rfr    A:    Hudson    .... 

I'eii>fr  Ac    ISlf    flmiide    ... 

I'i'-tllhr* 

!>..    S.    8.    &    .* 

Fr!e    

do    l>t    pfd 

<to    l!nd    itW. 

(;rent     Norllierii     

tinat    Northern   Ore 

Illihoio    Cenrral    

Iiittr-.M<t      

I(«a    Ctiitral    

Ki.i,f!is    City    Soufhim 

LouisTlUe   k    X:ishvUle 

Mexh-wi    Ceiitnil     

Mlfs<iiirl.   Kaii«aii  A  Tesas 

Mlfouri    Pacific    

Nailiiial    l.wid     

New    Yi  rk   I  eiitial    

.Norlilk   A;    Western 

.\(r(h    Anuricaii    

.\<rthtri.    I'atlflc    

Ontario   At    We»t«m    .... 

IViiiiSAlvai.la     

I'KiIile's   lia"*    

f'r>»sHl    Ste<l    <ar    .... 

ltepul>Ui'  Sttcl  &  Iron., 
do     J  fd     

hock    Island    

do       pUl        

IU'iulli;g     

Slos9-.»<tiefTleld     

Son    Unc     

Soulhiiii     H»il>iay     

do  pfd    

Suiithcni   rmillc    

Tf iiuesste  Copper   ' 

Texas     I.-.iillc     

lliild     ,\TCIUK     

Twin    City    

liih  n    Pnt-Ulc     

rtjih    Copptl     

r.    S.    Suel    

di,   pfd    -  •  •  ■ 

Wul.n«li      

do    pill    

Wc.>Uiigh<i»ift      

Webttr.i    I'lilt-n    

Wl«roi;>-iii   (  cntral    

&■  Ifd    


I     ViW\     13'4i     13>;4I 


HEARD  ON  THE  FLCKlR. 

(Jossip  of  the  Trading  Room  and  the 
Pit. 


M 

fl.l 


ir.neapolis    puis    were 
■     call^^    fl.Mi* 


IIA2\^     and 
and     $i.l5lJ 


in  the  Balkans 
effect  on  tlie 
at  Ihe  start  belna  up  -4 
to  ^c  compared  with  the  previous 
close.  I)emand.  however,  was  noi 
urgent  and  iradins  was  rather  quiet 
early  in  the  .■-•cssir.n.  A  feature  of 
trade  was  buylnK  of  the  July  delivery 
by  some  of  vostei  days  siiort  sellers. 
Mav  openftl  at  $l.lf.-'„  10  $1.16'i,  and 
for"  a  tim»^.  held  within  that  ra,nKe. 
Julv.  which  oi.entd  al  $1.04  "^  to 
ll.ori'g.    advanced     to    JI.Oj  >i,  (h  1.05 '4. 

A  iieavv  tune  developed  in  the  rhial 
hour  owii'ig  to  sellinK-  ^lav  declined 
to  Jl.l.'>'4  and  July  lo  11.03's.  The 
close  was  weak,  with  .May  oft  %<ii 'ic 
at  $l.ir.">.'&  1.15Vi-  July  closed  "^c  low- 
er  al    $1.04. 

I »t spite  liberal  receipts  and  weather 
favorable  for  the  movement  the  corn 
market  was  firm  al  llio  start.  The 
etrenKtli  of  wheat  was  the  chief 
bullish  influence.  Prices  at  the  open- 
ing were  a  shade  lower  to  i^c  lii;;her. 
Initial  ■jUdialions  on  May  being  at 
67^c  to  C7a4c,  Early  in  the  day  May 
bold    up    lo    68c. 

Th»  niaik't  sltanped  with  v.heat.  May 
declining:  to  (!7'ic.  The  close  was 
weak.  Willi  May  \4^*8C  lower  at 
67  '(*  dt  t>7  '.4C 

Oats  wore  tiuiet  and  steady,  offer- 
ings and  demand  l>eins<  limited.  The 
firmness  of  wlieat  and  corn  was  tlie 
chief  factor.  May  opened  i^  to 
higher  at  ."4"v'i'^"'C  and  ht  Id 
that   range  earlv  in  the  session. 

I'rovisit^ns  weic  firm  on  a  decrease  In 
receipts  of  live  hogs  here  anil  at  other 
Westtrn  packing  centers.  The  v<d«me 
of  trad«.  liowfver.  was 
al  tlie  opening  were  a 
higher. 

Articles — 

Flour,     bbls     

Wheat,    bu 

Corn,     bu      

Oats,    bu 

Rye.     bu     

Barley,    bu    

Car     lot     receipts: 
with    I'l     of    contract 


and 

1.151.4     hid. 

I'liicago  Mav  ups  were  $1.16(f»l.l.  ano 
$1.17  and  down.s  $1.14'.,.  .!uly  ui-s  were 
$1.04-4     and    downs     $1.03-\  (&  LOo^.i. 

•      «       • 

A  wire   from   Cliicago   said: 

"Nebraska  Is  selling  some  more  hard 
winter  wheat  here  this  morning.  There 
was  a  sale  late  yesterday  here  al  a 
iow  figure  in  acceptance  of  a  bi<l  from 
a  dealer  who  bid  low  and  did  not  want 
the  property  very  bad.  This  sale  was 
J.1.000    bushels.' 

«      *      * 

The  world's  visible  supply  of  corn  in- 
creas«d  .'iSO.OCO  bushels,  and  the  visible 
suppiv  of  oats  decreased  76:i.O('0  bush- 
els. 


66^1 
128*» 

48 

MiVi 
.'•IHl 

82»4l 

io:<»4! 
Hi:i>.a 

'«0\ 

)41^ 

•M% 

ltj<i>« 

1:3*4 
4Vi 
34*4 
17 

2:<14 

37% 

30^4 

130  "s 
66  H 

14UH 
14-i 
2!i', 

44  ^» 
129 

'  ioH 

C8'H 

75 ',4 

123 '4 

86-V«' 

78'^; 

135% 

45  I 

iii'u: 

'"20^4! 
•  I 

22'^«l 

Cl's 
12.1 
73 

'•i3i»i 

61^1 

11«\1 

41»4 

3'-Sl 
37"i»| 

175-    1 

43'*! 
110»» 

IT'/ii 

4:s'ii 

66 
48% 

86H 


6«'4 
13JU 
4S>i 
.'il 

r,i^ 

83  H 

41'4 

103% 

102>2 

167% 

71'i 

67% 
6'4j 

■■8»4 

I43>4 

32'* 

i;:t4i 

166% 
173\ 

44H 

.34*4 

17 

24% 

;:y 

3>'!4 

HO'4 

66% 

.110% 

2y>4 

44% 

13V 

61' 4 

75\i 
125 

66^^ 

78 '-i 
1.37  !\« 

4.-.% 
130 
113% 

"26% 


,1. 

22  >4 
62 

73 

'2.3% 
61% 

118 
41% 

:^2% 

37'% 

176% 

41 

4.-.% 
lUt"?» 

17% 

44% 

"6B 
4!l% 
86%  I 


66% 

128  "i  I 
48     I 

.V"4| 
.M'il 
82%; 

:«i'4l 

102%; 

102 =i; 

106 ',4: 

70% 

'66H 
6%} 

■■8%1 

141% 

31%  I 

63%  I 

ll;9%| 

166% 

173% 

43% 

34% 

"  I 
23% 

37% 

30% 
13<J% 

66% 
140% 

U%| 

44%| 

,"•..! 

40%  I 
69% 
75% 
123% 
86% 
78% 

i:i5% 
43 

121'% 
112% 

■'26' 

22% 
61% 
124% 
73 

23% 
61% 

116%, 
40%! 
32% 
37% 


170 
40% 

43% 

110%; 

17% 
43 ',4! 

"«6" 
4»%\ 
86%! 


13% 
43%  b 

68 
120% 

48% 

r.i 

51  % 
83 'i 
41% 

lo:^% 
102% 
107% 

71 
20%!. 

67 

6% 

28%L 

8% 

143% 

32% 

63% 
K>0% 
166% 
173% 

44 

:<4% 
17 

•J4% 
38 '.1 
30% 

140% 
66% 

140% 
14% 
20% 
44% 

130 

20  %h 
40% 

6;<% 

75% 
12.'-. 

86% 

78% 
137% 

45% 

i:<o 

113% 

35 

2J% 
71%! 

22% 

62 
l'ie% 

73 
142%!, 

23% 

61% 
lib 

41 

32% 

37% 
104  li 
176% 

41 

45-* 
110% 

17% 

44% 
77  %h 

66 

4!)  % 

86% 


B.-.%Iex  Sootl  full  p<l 
IJuttc-A.  Scott  $2  pd 
Hiittc-Hallaklnvn  ... 
Huttc  &  Superior.  .  . 

t'actus    

<'aluinct  &   Soiioi-a.. 

Carman 

('Iii«'f  Cons 

Copper  Queen    

Cor(l<»va  .$2  |m1 

l>enn-.\rizona 

Oirou.x    

Cilobc    Con« 

tilobc  S»2  pd 

<;reene  Cananea    .  . 
Lake  S.  &  S.  $2.50  pd 

Lion  Ciiih'h .. 

Live  Ooak  $2  ikI 

Mowitza 

•Rawhide   Hoyai    

R«'d  Warrior    

San  Antonio  $1  pd.. 

Savanna   $2    pd 

Shaltuck-Ari/.fma  .  .. 
Sup.  &  Pittsburg.  .  . 
Xenlth    


Bid.   1 

.\sk. 

SS.25' 

4.00 

$1.25 

16.00 

16.12 

1.06 

1.12 

1.1s 

1.50 

13.75 

14.00 

1.25 

1.37 

.98 

.99 

i.:57 

1.50 

2.00 

3.8" 

4.00 

8.25 

5.00 

2.00 

9.25 

S-.'iO 

10.50 

11.00 

6.00 

1.37 

1.56 

.13 

.14 

2.37 

2..50 

13.25 

2.00 

15.50 

13.50 

i 

2.00 

1 

THE  GREATEST   EXCITEMENT 


Prevails    no  v    In    rxjiigl.a?.    Arlwna,    o^cr   the 

only   100  feet  oil  the   (irand   Arizona  Copper 

alion    and    ueiUar   ort    thlpuui.ts    to    the    n« 

te    no    possible    doubt 

50    cents    per    sh:tre.       Tills 

price.      Uo   iiol 


dIs-coTcrs-    .'f    a   body    of    rich    .-opper    ( re   at    a    depth   of 

Company's    pn^trty       With    u    Mtaiii    hoist    in    full    opcr- 

rijv  Miiiltirs    t(    conimeiK-e   in    the   near   future,    there   ear. 

ns    lo    the    future    if    tills-     ion.p.tiiv.       Treasury    stock    Is    now    telUng    at    only 

is    p<9ltlvely    the    Bi;sT    tria»-un'    Moik    on    the    market.     te«an;l««8    of 


nii>.s    this   opr<ort.unJty,    but   Invest     .NOW.      Apply    to 


0.  E.Pcttcrsoii  &  CO..  Fiscal  Agts.  t^iut^h'".- 


FirHt    \atiounI  nnnk   nids., 
nu.      Old     I>hoiie   0S5-K. 


Both   'PI  ones.    14S5. 
ROOM  "B,"  PHOENIX  BLOCK. 

J.  H.  ROBBERS, 

Copper  stocks  and  Bonds 

Curb    St€»ckii    n    Specialty. 
LiMted     :»feurltle«. 


N.  E.  LUGOFF 

STOCKS  Am  BONDS. 


All    Orders    Promptly    and    Conflden- 
tially    I'lxeculed. 

Boo-r,oi-502    ^o^!>D.4LE  eriiDixG. 

Old  phone  1«25;    Zenith  pboue  977. 


BILL  FOUGHT 
BY  JOBBERS 

Duluth  Men  Opposed  to 

Rate  Measure  Now 

Before  Senate. 


with  our  o\m  private  wire 
connections  vith  New  York. 
Boston  and  th<'  copper  countries 
of  Michigan,  Montana,  Nevada, 
Utah,  Arizona  and  Mexico,  we 
are  the  betst  equipped  to  give 
you  quick  exe(!Utlons  on  all  the 
leading  local  slocks  of  any  brok- 
erage house  in  the  city. 

PAINE,  WIBBER  &  CO., 

315  WEST  {5T'PERlOR  ST. 
Torrey  touilding. 


will 
the 


store  occupied  by  the  R.  R.  Forwarn 
Kurnlture  compary.  has  given  up  her 
lea.-e  and  will  ojen  quarters  upstairs 
in  the  same  buililing,  where  she  will 
continue    her    business. 

Tlie  Forward  Furniture  company 
soon  move  to  its  new  location  in 
Folz  building  on  Second  avenue  east 
and  Superior  street.  This  will  Uave 
a  50-foot  store  t)UJlding  on  the  mam 
street  of  the  city,  in  the  center  of  the 
very    busiest    portion,    unoccupied. 

So  far  as  can  h'^  learned,  tlie  owners 
have  not  as  vet  rented  the  building  to 
other    parties    fcr    l.us!i:ess    purposes. 


PIPER, 
JOHNSON 
(Si  CASE 

BROKERS 

MEMBERS: 

Be  si  911  Stock  Exchange 
Kew  York  Stock  Exchange 
Kew  York  Produce  Exchange 
Chicago  Slock  Exchange 
Chicago  Board  of  Trade 
Mpls.  Chamber  of  Commerce 
Duluth  Board  of  Trade 
Winnipeg  Grain  Exchange 

406-411  Chamber  ol  Commerce  and 

New  York  Life  Arcade, 

Minneapolis 

102  Pioneer  Press  BIdg.,  St.  Panl 
Grain  Exchange  Winnipeg 

DULUTH: 

1cinpDr«r)  OlUc*  - 

18  3rd  Avenue  Wesl» 

R.  G.  Hubbell,  Manager. 

BEU  PMONL  739.  lENlTB  PHONE  7>J. 


Totjil  >ii»u¥.  :■ 
M<'ii*y.    2   pti 


7!'  THi. 
cent 


small, 
shade 


Rcpts 

.  3.1. JOO 
.  4.=i.600 
.257.300 
.23S.:iOO 
.  8.000 
.166.500 
Wheat,     7 


gradi: 


>t,  'it  14  <■ 
within 


Price.- 
to    10c 

.  .<^hpts. 

18.600 

27.700 

3  SI. 200 

o32.000 

6.000 

45.600 

3     cars. 


corn. 


M5 


cars.    With    3    of    contract    grade;    oata. 


MldTrn."!     Ilorxf    Market. 

Mliint-'j'i;i  'Iri.iii-ltr.  si.  r..iil  .\l;i:ii  .M;;rih  16.— 
Itiiiritl  &  Zliiiiui  mum  i*|inrt:  Hor»f  iiirirkct  nd  ii? 
ii.liie  us  Si.tiirdiiy.  ^'111  a  fair  amount  <.f  bll?!ne^^" 
wms  trniifartid.  IHg  m-msi  iinl  ilrall.,i»  \ur«-  In  nt- 
iiiujiil.  I'.it  the  imiin  •.ill  «as  U.i  fi.rm  marts  and 
^'t  inTul  i'.;Tii(i-e  hi  r-es.  Hi'niefs  das  e»  tm\t  ili.u. 
W.  H.  Wccii?.,  Hen  VetU  i.inl  I.  II.  ItJf-Sf  arc  mi  U\t 
ii::irk»t  with  !i  rn',*  <f  niixttl  stntT  I'lT  Ihe  Weihusday 
:i'.<tlon.  tSurtte  W.  Eastnarn.  Stephen.  Minn.,  and  .A. 
M  lUn^im.  Turtle  Lake.  N.  IK.  lillUd  mil  lo.i.ls  Ir- 
day.  <<1.  John  J-  tVrkln«  if  Hiiffah..  N.  Y..  will  l«- 
111  hand  li'  ciniluit  the  hits  W«l!n<-day  auction  sale 
.ind    a    Ills   Ktteiidam-t'   Is   esperteU. 

nrafur.-     estrn    $16:.«i24.'. 

Prafter*.    eh.io*    12(iMl6ij 

l>rafttr>-.    cr-ramun    Ui    Bi'od 6."(«ll" 

K:.r.ii  nuire*   and   hf'rs«-s,    «\lrj HOCi  hil' 

[•'arm    nuires    and    hnrses,    choice llOcalX" 

Kami   mr.r*'!!.   cin;ni<^M  te>  gix-U 60(<illii 

Delivery      12.1v<  I.<>ii 

.\Iults.    according   lo   size   HU(p  2;>j 


St.  Paul    i.i%FHtook. 

St.  Paul.  .Minn..  .\San.li  16. — Cattle: 
Ui-teipts.  2,00ti:  stee-rs.  15c  to  lOc 
lower.  $-1.00 ^<  4.00;  cowstuff  steady  and 
unclianged;  ralves.  strong.  $2.2."  ©  C.50. 
."tockeis  and  feeders,  steady  lo  l.'.c 
lower.  52.."ti»  <;«:.. 00.  Hogs:  Receipt.-. 
.'i.soO:  generally  oc  higher,  range  je.SO^j, 
fi.r.o;  bulk.  ft'. 35ft/ 0.40.  .Sheep:  Recelpt-s, 
l.'.Ou:  strong,  unchanged;  lambs,  un- 
Lliangi  il. 


I'liienso   Live  $>(oek. 

Chir.-icn.     .Mur.h    16  — •.'atile — ReteUits    eftlmaled    at 
3.5CC  reurku  tteadj ;  bet\ts.  $4.6t'6*.-5;  TeJtan  steers. 


NEW  WAYS-MEANS 
COMMITTEEMEN 

Speaker  Cannon  Names 

Cushman  Harris  and 

Broussard. 

Washington,  March  16. — .Speaker 
<'ann<.n  announced  the  ways  and 
means  committee  and  rules  commit- 
tee. The  new  members  are:  Cush- 
man of  AVashington.  Republican: 
Harris  of  New  York,  Democrat,  and 
Brousard  of  Louisiana.   P»  mocrat. 

Many  of  the  members  who  attended 
the  caucus  of  Democrats  <  f  the  house 
last  night  do  not  interpret  the  reso- 
lution adopted  there  as  a  "boycott" 
of  all  of  Speaker  Cannon's  passible 
committee  assignments  of  minority 
members.  It  was  explain^^d  today 
that  the  resolution  was  adopted  to 
censure  the  Democrats  who  bolted  the 
minority  leadership  yest<  rday  in  the 
hou.se  and  to  provide  a  punishment  for 
their  act. 

The  intention  of  the  caucus,  it  is 
explained,  was  to  prevent  the  "bolt- 
ers" from  obtaining  any  reward  for 
their  course.  It  is  believed  there- 
fore that  Minorltv  Leader  Clark  will 
object  to  the  assignment  of  no  mem- 
bers to  committees  except  the  twenty- 
four  Democrats  who  deserted  his  lead- 
ership. In  the  event  that  a.ssign- 
ments  are  refused  and  the  house  ex- 
cuses a  member  from  serving  «in  a 
committee,  the  speaker  may  decide  to 
leave  the  position  vacant,  thus  giving 
power  to  the  Republican  numbers  of 
the  committees.  In  the  speakers 
room,  it  is  not  believed  that  any 
serious  embarrassment  will  arise  over 
the  action  of  the  Democratic  caucus. 
• 

George  Washington  was  a  real  estate 
orator — and  advertiser.  Newspaper  ad- 
vertising was  one  of  tlie  things  in 
which  m  was  "first — in  peace!" 


TroPNury   Balnneew. 

Washington,  March  16. — Today's 
•Jtalement  of  the  treasury  balances: 
gold  coin  and  l.ullion.  $41,499,260;  gold 
certificates,  $4.^^., 635. 080:  available  casli 
balance.  $l35.3!i2.160. 
» 
IS>w    York    Mtiney. 

New  York.  March  16.— Close:  Prime 
mercantile  i>apc  r.  S'sSi  5  per  cent.  .Ster- 
ling excha'igt  steady,  witli  actual  busi- 
ness in  banktrs"  bills  at  $4.86.25(y 
4.8fi.35  for  sixty  day  bills,  and  at 
$4  SS.i;0  for  dtmainl.  Commercial  bills. 
|4.><6r«  4.86.'*..  Bar  silver.  .%0^c.  Mexi- 
can dollars  44c.  tJovernment  bonds 
steadv;  raili^oad  bonds  Irregular.  Money 
on  call  easy.  1  %  <&  2  per  cent:  ruling 
lates  \'u:  closing  bid.  \\*i:  offereu 
at    1=^1.      Time      loans.      very    dull      and 


softer:      sixty-days. 


'  \^  ((I  2 : 


ninety- 


days.  2Vj   to 
3   per  ctnt. 


.'^i.  and  six  months.  2'>4^ 


to  8 
ses- 
dur- 
tone 
was 


Thr  (otlMU    Murket. 

New     York,     March     16. — The     cotton 
market    opened    barely  steady,   at  a  de- 
cline   of    4  ft*  ti    points,    and    sold    7 
jioints   net   lower   during  tiie   early 
sic  n.        It   steadied   a  point    or   two 
ing     the     morning,     a'.tiiough     the 
continued    r.ervcus    and    sentiment 
verv    unsettled. 

Cotton  ftitures  closed  steady:  closina 
bids:  March  9.32:  April,  9.26:  May, 
?  •>7:  .Tune,  9.20:  July.  9.20;  August.  9.17: 
September.  9.13:  October.  9.13;  Novem- 
ber. 9.08;  December.  9.08;  January. 
9.06.  Cotton  spot  closed  quiet.  15  points 
lower;  middling  uplands,  9.65;  middling 
gulf.  9.?0;   no  sales. 

GIRfGIVEN 
A  VERDICT 


The  jury  in  the.  case  of  Marie  Clausen 
against  Harry  W.  Johnson,  in  district 
court,  returned  a  verdict  for  $3,000  for 
the  girl,  shortiy  after  3  o'clock  this 
afifrn'.on.        The  "girl    sued   for    $15,000 

for    an    alleged    assault. 

• 

"Things  without  r»  nudy  should  be 
without  regard;'*  so  if  you  have  lost 
your  job,  stop  "fretting"  about  it  and 
look  over  the  ads. 


H.  A.  Earnshaw.  traffic  manager  for 
Stone-Ordean-Wells  company,  and  Carl 
Rowe.  traffic  manager  for  the  Mar- 
shall-Wells Hardware  company,  re- 
turned tills  morning  from  St.  Paul, 
where  both  men  went  to  appear  before 
the  state  legislature  in  the  interest  of 
the  Duluth  Jobbers. 

According  to  Mr.  Earnshaw.  the  job- 
bing interests  of  the  Head  of  the  Lakes 
are  threatened  by  tlie  provisions  of  the 
bill  introduced  by  Senator  Casliman  of 
Owatonna. 

At  tbe  present  time,  for  Instance,  two 
railroads  may  reach  tlie  same  point  by 
very  different  routes.  The  case  of  the 
Omaha  and  the  Northern  I'aciflc.  from 
this  citv  to  Ashland  is  an  e.vample. 
The  Northern  I'acllic  has  the  shorter 
route  but  as  tlie  competition  is  strong, 
botli  roads  make  the  same  rate.  In 
otlier  words,  the  Omaha  makes  as  good 
a  rate  to  Ashland  s  does  the  Nortliern 
Pacific. 

There  are  other  examples  through- 
out the  state.  In  many  cases  tlie  North- 
ern Pacific  reach  the  same  destinations 
bv  routes  that  vary  greatly  in  tlie 
number  of  miles.  Vet  in  competitive 
territory,  these  roads  invariably  make 
the  sanie  rates.  The  result  of  this,  is 
that  the  jobbers  from  Duluth,  or  from 
St.  Paul  and  Minneapolis,  for  that  mat- 
ter,   have    the    use    of    more    than    one 

By  the  provisions  of  the  Cashman 
bill"  as  explained  by  Mr.  Earnshaw, 
who  with  Mr.  Rowe,  appeared  before 
the  senate  committee  in  the  interests 
of  the  Duluth  Jobbers,  the  railroads 
win  be  compelled  to  base  their  rates 
to  all  points  upon  tlie  mileage  basis 
they  establish  to  a  competitive  point. 

This  would  result  in  one  road  be- 
ing shut  out  of  the  competition,  where 
its  mileage  was  greater  to  the  same 
destination  than  that  of  its  competitor. 
The  lUiluth  men  who  were  before 
the  senate  committee  are  of  the  opln- 
l<Mi  that  the  bill  is  nothing  less  than 
a  blow  at  the  Jobbing  interests  of  the 
large   cities. 

Minneapolis  and  St.  Paul  jobbers,  as 
well  as  the  Duluth  jobbers,  doclare  It 
Is  an  attempt  to  make  evfry  little 
country  center  a  small  jobbing  center 
of    it.s   own. 

For  instance.  If  the  bill  went  into 
effect,  it  would  not  result  in  the 
Northern  Pacific,  as  the  short  haul  to 
Ashland,  reducing  its  rate,  it  is  alleged, 
but  would  compel  the  Omaha  to  In- 
crease its  rate  to  a  proportionate  mile- 
age basis  with  the  Northern  Pacific, 
and  would  shut  the  Duluth  Jobbing 
trade,  more  or  less,  off  from  the  Omaha 
as  a  route  betv.een  here  and  Ash- 
land. 

It  is  probable  that  Duluth  jobbing 
interests  will  be  further  represented 
before  the  legislature  before  the  meas- 
ure   is    disposed    of. 


COLLEGIANS 
AT  BANQUET 


The  second  annual  banquet  of  the 
Duluth  Alumni  club  of  the  Phi  Delta 
Theta  fraternity.  was  held  at  the 
Spalding  hotel  last  evening.  The  Du- 
luth club  is  composed  of  college  men 
from  many  colleges  of  many  sections 
of  the  country,  and  around  the  banquet 
board  last  evening,  were  gathered 
alumni  from  many  of  the  famous  old 
seats    of    learninf;    of    the    country 

The    club    was    formed    in    Duluth 
the    purpose    of    bringing    together 
different    alumni 
ternity.      As    one 
lege  Greek  letter 


6 

5'/2 

6 


%  MONEY 


Money  to  loan  on 

Real  Estate  Security. 

Building  Loans. 

W.  M.  Prindle  &  Go. 

LONSDALE   Bl  ILDING. 


are  su«  cessful  in  obtaining  through  the 
courts  for  her.  ,    .     ,     ^ 

The  motion  is  being  argued  before 
Judge  Morris  of  the  federal  court  antJ 
has   been  in  progress  since  yesterday. 

The  case  has  dragged  through  the 
lourts  tor  several  years,  and  is  the  out- 
come of  alleged  misrepresentations  of 
facts  concerning  iron  properly  made  by- 
Mr.  McClinto.k  and  Mr.  Crosby  \vhen 
the  land  was  purchased  from  Mrs*. 
Rodgeis  several    years  ago. 

J  •  L.  WashViurn.  who  is  an  attorney 
for  the  Clark  Mining  company,  is  here 
from  his  winter  home  in  North  Caro- 
lina to  argue   the   motion. 


BUILDING  INOrClPlED. 

Choice  Site  for  Retail  Store  Is  Va- 
cant on  Superior  Street. 

Mrs.  Webster,  who  for  a  number  of 
years  past  has  conducted  a  restaurant 
In  the  east  half  of  the  feupcrior  street 


for 
the 
members    of    the    fra- 
of    tlie    strongest    col-  j 
•  societies  in   the  coun-  i 
trv    a  long  list  <>i   members  were   found  | 
residing    in    Dulutli.      This    list    is    con- 
stantiv    being  added    to.    by    the   coming 
to  Duluth  of  menbers  of  tl.e  fraternity, 
and    since    the    Initial     banquet    a    year 
ago.    the   growth   of    the   club    has   been 
steady. 

The  banquet  last  evening  was  a  most 
successful  one.  There  were  college 
.«ongs.  as  only  loUege  men  can  smg 
them,  speeches,  ind  toasts,  with  jolly 
good    fellowship    reigning    supreme. 

The  following  members  of  the  club 
were   present   last    evening: 

Joseph  Rell  Co;ton.  Mich.  A.  '86:  Bert 
Fesler,  Ind.  A.  hi  :  Benjamin  F.  Wright. 
Me.  A.  '83:  Hartley  V.  Burioughs.  Ont. 
A.  -10;  Leslie  T.  Hubbell.  Wis.  A,  -96: 
Ernest  L.  Helmbaugh.  Wis.  A.  94:  John 
I'  Keyes,  Mich  A,  "90:  Francis  J. 
Webb  111.  A,  00;  William  N.  Merriam. 
Wis  A,  '81:  01l\er  S.  Andresen.  Minn. 
A,  '04;  C.  L.  Hornaday.  Ind.  A.  ('6; 
Marc  W.  Lewis.  Ohio  A,  >«.<>'' V  ^ 
Poirier.  Minn.  A.  02:  Mark  II.  New- 
man. Wis.  A.  01:  Ezra  R.  Stevenson. 
Pa.  Ep..  '00;  Charles  E.  Adams.  Minn. 
A.  96;  Charles  O.  Teare.  111.  Ep^  83: 
Chauneev  C.  Colton.  N.  H.  A  03:  David 
L.     Fairchild.    W  s.    A       90;     Howard    J. 

Irwin,  Mass.  B,  "*>-;  J"";*-!.  "'  ^'ViL}- 
Iowa  B.  -82:  Hi.  hard  M.  Sellw-ood  N. 
Y  A  ■<t4-  Warren  E.  Gieene.  R.  1.  A. 
■98;   Elmer  F.   BU:.   111.   A.    (»5. 

ARGUMENT  IN 
f  EDERAL  COURT 


The  attorneys  In  the  case  of  May  T. 
Rodgers  vs.  J.  N  McClintock  and  W.  G. 
Crosby,  the  famous  Clark  mine  suit. 
are  today  arguing  a  motion  made  by 
the  defense  to  have  J.  B.  Ri(hards  and 
D.  G.  Cash,  attorneys  for  the  plaintiff 
included  as  plaintiffs  in  the  case  hy 
virtue  of  a  contract,  which.  It  is  al- 
leged, was  draw  1  up  between  them  and 
Mrs  Rodgers.  whereby  they  are  to  re- 
ceive   one-half    of    all    the    money    they 


RAIL  FELL 
ON  HIS  ARM 

AndZutkl  Bjelos  Wants 

$41,500  From  Mining 

Company. 


The  personal  Injury  damage  suit  of 
Zutko  Bjelos.  by  Lui  Macbak  bis  guar- 
dian ad  litem,  against  tlie  fleveiand- 
«'liffs  Iron  company  and  John  liaggait, 
has  been  remanded  to  the  disti  ict 
court  bv  the  United  States  court.  The 
transcript  of  t!u  flies  of  the  case 
filed  witi)  the  c ierk  of  the  district 
this    morning.  ,        . 

Bjehis  sues  for  $41,500  for  inpurles  ne 
alleges  he  received  at  the  Crosby  min« 
at  Nashwauk.  N.v.  8.  190..  He  was 
emploved  on  a  surface  gang  and  was 
carrying  rails  fr(  tn  one  point  t«^'  an- 
other, ile  claim-  th.  place  over  which 
Ihe  had  to  carry  the 
land  uneven  and  tht 
ligent  in  failing  to 
number  of  men    to 

With    two    ether 
wa^    cat  tying 
500 
had 


were 

court 


rails  was  lough 
ttimpany  was  neg- 
provide  a  sufficient 
carry  each  rail, 
men,  he  a: leges,  he 
I  ail  weighing  between 
and  900  pounds,  and  when  they 
proceeded  about  100  feet  he  slipi.ed 
and  fell.  His  right  arm  was  Iroken 
aiid  he  claims  his  right  side  v.as  badly 
lacerated  bv  the  rail,  which  he  bad 
been  tarrying  on  his  bhuulder.  He 
claims  lie  was  in  a  hospital  four  and 
ene-lialf  months  on  account  ol  the  m- 
jurv  that  his  arm  was  useless  alter 
he  "came  out  of  the  hospital,  and  that 
he  has  r.ot  been  able  to  use  i;  since 
and  will  be  crippled  for  the  remainder 
of    his    life. 


-   jl 

» 

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4 

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— -H 


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^MBfc-»^Mfai«*  '  H  t-X"  S*^'' 


;-g.<fci;^,  ■4.»'^T-..*»' 


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-r 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      TUESDAY,    MARCH    16,    1909. 


15 


Dulutti  Real  Estate 


I«  known  aa  the  best  tareatment.  The 
city  l«  groTflnm,  «nd  Investom  will  And 
It  to  their  advantaK*  to  patronUe  the 
followinK  fonoern«,  who  ailvertlse  the 
year  aruiind   In  The    Herald. 


The  ~ 

11   llnd  1 1 

le   the  II 

le    the  !| 


OCEAN    STK.\MSHIPS 


II  GOING  11 
ABROAD? 


The 

MagniP.- 

cenf 

Sfeamem 

of  rhe 


American 

AfUntir  Transport 

Red  Star 
White  Star 


■Linrs 


Sail  frnm  N««  York,  Bnaion,  PblUdelphia, 
Montreal  aod  Oue*»««  '»''  Grf'al  Britain,  France. 
Krlglom.     Atorea.     Madeira.     Glhralrar.     Italy. 


121  So.  Third  St..  Minne- 
Minn..  or  l.oc.tl  Agents. 


J 


IforthQermanAioyd. 

FAST    EXPRESS  SERVICE. 

PLYMOUTH-CHERBOURG— BREMEN— 10    A.     M. 

(.>.illp  Mar.h  i3      Kal»«    «'m.    II    ...Alirlia 

K     Will     !•     ';:    M;itoii   M      Knuyrluz    Uni  .\prll   IS 

TWIN-SCREW  PA8»4ENGER  SERVICE 

BREMEN     DIRECT— 10    A.     M. 

R.>.„         M.ir.li   IS     ■!■     Kr«Wru-h   Wm...\prlH 

fkh>in.h..r:.!  .M-<ri.li  2S       •  Y.rck  April  » 

•Calls     It    Pljni.vit'i    .\'.\    CluriH'iirK 

MEDITERRANEAN  f  ERVICE. 

OIBRALTAI^ALGIERS-NAPLES-GENOA 

S.iJUiiS    .11    Hum  .    ^,    ,n 

•N«kjr       March  21      tl<       »■"'"• i^ttlx- 

tBArtMP"«*       M^r^h  r   ,  tp.   Irme  .....    -April  l. 

•t»i»-t;    \lg'tT»    iitul   (Viu.a.      Titralt*    Alglors. 

North     German     Lloyd     Traveller*      CheeM 

Oelricn.  &   Co..   A«ent».   5   Broadway.   N^Y      ,„ 

H     ClauMsniu*  A  Co..  95   Dearborn   St..  Chlc»«o.   III.. 

or   the    local   a««nt   In   your  city. 


SECOND  STREET  GORNEIfi 

100x150  feet  on  the  Southeast  corner  of  Second  street  and  Eighth 
avenue  west.  Sewer,  gas  and  water.  Two  blocks  and  a  half  from 
new  Court  House.  Easy  of  improvement  and  no  ^^Cflfl 
better  site  in  Duluth  for  immediate  improvement--^"twllU 

R.  P.  DOWSE  Wl  CO., 

GENERAL  INSURANCE. 
106     Providence     Building. 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

FROM  PAGE  16. 

-  _  -    .   -I  -.    I    II   -III   I   ■    -*     -----».  .  ..   ■  1  »  i«  «  »«■ ».  ^  ^i—i  iii«  ^  ■         ■«^^»i.^ii' 


FARM  LANDS 


* 
a- 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

DUllTB.  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY, 


^^:^ 
^W.^ 


D-RM»ieNNAN.  PfWSiOINT 
JAMtS  A- W  LtNNAN.V-PlKS 


ED«t-  F- SPINK.  StCRtTA«r 
L-BMANLtY.  Troisu«« 


Central  Dock  Property:, 

Half  a  block  of  dock  property, 
with  llallroad  str«>Pt  frontagre  and 
an  area  pqual  to  seventeen  dOx 
140  feet  ordinary  bay  front  lots — 


CV    rV  REAL  ESTATE.  LOANS  &  RENTALS 


N^ 


$35,000 

Terms  t  an   Be   ArranKed. 


TORREY    BLOC.  FIRST   rLOOR.  DULUTH.  MINN 


IIKRE  AHJ^SO.Mt:  SNAP.S.  * 

300  acres  at  %'M.     320  acres  at  |40.  ^ 

160  acres  at  135.       80  acres  at  $40.  * 

All    these    f armji  ^are    in    Dodge  * 

county    MlnnegrtU    well   located.  ■^ 

and    there    is    no  "better    land    in  *■ 

the  United   States.  * 

120    acres    at    WllOO,    In    Mower  *• 

county,   Minn.  * 

160  acres  at  $55.00.  Mower  coun-  *• 

ty     Minn.  # 

180  "acres    at    -JSo.OO.   This    farm  * 

has    a.s   fine    sfctVof    buildings    as  •^- 

any   in  Southern   Minnesota,   one  ^ 

half    mile    from    good    town     in  * 

.Mower  county,, Southern   Minne-  H- 

sota.  * 

320  acres  of  the  finest  land  in  * 

the      Red      River      valley,      good-  # 

buildings,   two  miles   from   town.  # 

This    farm   will    be    sold      on   the  # 

crop  pavment  plan  if  desired.  # 

C."  E.     GI.AS-SPOOLE,  * 

322  Endlcott   Bldg.    St.  Paul.  Minn.  ^ 


>i^;?^V<^5^^k^*^;e****^^^f**^^f'^?^^ 


l-'OR  SALE— 640  ACRES  BEST  SEC- 
tlon  of  farm  land  in  Douglas 
county,  Wiscon.sin,  three-quarters  of 
a  mile  east  of  Poplar,  on  Northern 
Pacific  railway;  no  improvement;  nice 
rreek.  plenty  of  timber;  a  fine  stock 
and  liairv  and  truck  farm.  Price, 
$12.50  per  acre;  half  cash,  balance 
in  five  equal  annual  payments,  6  per 
cent.  This  will  be  on  the  market 
for  a  few  days  only  at  this  price. 
Call  or  write  for  information.  Isaiah 
Henry  Bradford.  213-214  Torrey 
building. 


FOR  SALE— HORSES. 

FOR    SALE — 

HORSES  HORSES  HORSES  HORSES. 
We  ait  leaders  in  our  line  and  can- 
not be  undersold.  Our  motto,  "quick 
sales  and  suiall  profit."  We  have  from 
400  to  600  head  of  horses  on  hand, 
consisting  of  draft  horses,  farm 
mares,  delivery  horses  and  mules. 
Wo  can  sell  you  one  horse  or  a  car- 
load Auction  every  Wednesday  at 
1:30  p  m  Private  sales  daily.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Take  interur- 
ban  oars  from  either  city.  Barrett  & 
Zimmerman,  Midway  Horse  Market. 
St.   Paul. 


^  ^  Uf  Uf  j 


i*fi.^)i*rn*Min**************^*********-***** 


a 
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it 

it 

it 

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it 
it 
it 


DULUTH'S 

PROQRESSIVE 


i 


FIRMS! 


For  Sale — Draft,  delivery,  farm  mares 
and  drivers  always  on  hand  at  our 
new  stables.  308  East  First  St.  Also 
wagons   of   all    kinds.   L.   Ha  in  me  I 


Co. 


FOR  SALE— SNAP.  $75  BUYS  SOUND, 
1,050  pound  delivery  horse,  left  by 
boarder.  Kendall's  Livery,  20  Second 
avenue  west. 


BARGAINS 


Oirice: 


42e  Went  Superior  St. 
'Phune.    9tiU. 


For  nibbing.  Virginia.  Eveleth, 
Coleraine.  ••M.«)untaln  Iron, 
••Sparta,    ••Biwabik 

For      Hibl.lng.       Virginia. 

•"Eveleth,    Coleraine 

For  Virginia.  Cook.  Ranler. 
Fort  Fiances,  Port  Arthur, 
Beaii-lette.       Warroad      and 


Winnipeg 
•Daily.     ••Except 
Cafe.  Observation 


•7i40   AM 


•3:50   I* 


•TjIO 


Sunday. 

Car.  Mesaba  Range 
Points.  Solid  Vestll-uled  Train,  Mod- 
ern   Sleeper   through   to   Winnipeg. 


RAIL- 


THE  DULUTH  &  IRON  RAN6E 
ROAD  COMPANY. 

"THE  VKKMIMON   KOUIE.'^^ 

Dll.ltll.  1     Arrtf* 


Learr. 

•7  30  am 
*3. 13  pm 
f7.4j  am 


•  l»aily   i-»fipt 


Kiilfa   Kher,    Two   Hor- 

Nifs.     Ttjvrer.     Kly.     -Aurora. 

Blwsblk.    MtKliiley.    Sparta. 

Kvileth   lUiU 

\  Iricinla. 

SuiiJay 


J  I 


«I2.00  m 
«7.4S  pm 
f6.45  pm 


^:Suiiday   only. 


on   West  First  street,  .six  rooms,  bath,  hard- 
and  electric  lights,  ga-s  range.      Month- 


gaa 


$3.001) — Buys    house    and    lot 

wood    floors,    city   water, 

ly  payments. 

$100 ^Buys  two  lots  50.xl50  each.     Central,  and  tv\o  blocks  from  car  line. 

S6.->0— Buys  two  lots   50x150  each.      Eighth  street  and  Third  avenue  east. 


MONEY  TO  LOAX. 


Il4'al  Estate — Loans — In.suruuce. 


Julius 


216   WEST  .SUPERIOR  STREET. 


Co. 


FOR  SALE— THE  LAND  DEPART- 
ment  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
Railroad  company  is  preparing  to 
put  on  the  market  a  number  of  ten 
and  twenty-acre  tracts  for  poultry 
farming  and  truck  gardening  at 
Moadowlands.  These  lands  will  be 
well  ditched  and  drained  and  sold 
on  easy  terms  and  long  tnme.  For 
further  information,  address  Land 
CommiBsioner,  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
Railroad  company.  512  Wolvln  build- 
ing.   Duluth.    Minn. 


For  Sale- 
removed. 


-Horses,  mill  wood.  Also  aahea 
2119  w.  1st.  Old  'phone  1931 -M. 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES. 

FOR  SALE— 8- ROOM  MODERN  HOUSE 
e.xcept  heat;  lot  50x140;  easy  terms. 
626   East    Sseventh   street.         ^ 


Something  is  Always  Wanted.  Just 
what  it  is,  v^rho  makes  it,  sells  it,  or 
does  it,  and  where  it  may  be  obtained 


it 
it 

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» iicyiicy  )i(»»y)i(»»itc»»»*»ii»»»»»»»»»»»»*»»»*»»»y  »»y  »»»*«»»  y»« 


AUTOMOBILES. 

Thomas  Fivers.  40-hp.  6-cylinder.$3.000 
Thomas  Fivers,  60-hp.  6-cylinder.  4.500 
Thomas  Flyers.  70-hp.  6-cy  Inder.    6.000 

Chalmers  Detroit,  30-hp.  6-(  yl 1,500 

Most  perfect  cars  In  Amer'ca.  Mutual 
Auto  Co.  Garage   rear  B.  ol    T.,  Duluth. 


ATTORNEY. 


HARDWARE  AND  TOOLS. 


FOR 

SALE- 

-MINUTES 

Ol' 

HOM?:- 

.«tead   of      1 

20 

acres,   small 

louse  and 

cle.nring;   one 

and     one 

-fourth      mile 

from 

town 

an 

d   station; 

a 

bargain. 

Add! 

ess   I.. 

45. 

Herald. 

Corner  100  Feet  on  Superior  St. 

IN  HARRISON  DIVISION. 

E.  W.  MARKELL,  aoe  Lonsdaie  eidg. 


This  is  a  bargain. 

Exclusive  Sale  by 


SALE 


Duiuih  &f^orlhern  Minnesota  Railway 

Office**,  510  boiwdale  Uldg.,  Duluth. 

T-alns  leave  Knife  River.  20  miles  out  ! 
on  the  D.  &  I.  R.  R-  every  day  except  i 
Sundays,  on  arrival  of  the  train  leaving, 
Union  station.  Duluth.  at  7:30  a.  m  Re- , 
turning  connections  are  made  at  jy^iito 
River   with   trains  due   In   Duluth   Union  I 

«'dth»n  iX  r:l'  !'.  in.  »'.iiiu»TU'>ns  .ire  ma.iw  tlaily. 
crpi  srm.lay  it  Baptism  Klver  wUh  »la«e  line 
r.rin.l    Miir.iU   sii.l   M   n'.'rth   Shi'te   vminta. 


ex- 
fur 


NORTHERN  PACIFIC  RAILROAD 

I     Arrive. 

(•II. 13  am 
•  6.40  pm 
•8- 13  am 
•6.23  pm 


Lnuve       ; 
•  4.00  PB-. 
•8  00  am 
•7.30  pm 
•8   15  am, 

t9  00  am; 

♦1.55  frm 

•II    10  pm 

~»n.iii>.^ 

IXl>p'     II. 'I 


A«hlaiid   i«nd  Baat 

.    .  .Asiilnti'i    au'l    Ka»t. 
Mliui.   aii'l   Daknla   teprew 
Nrtrtli  Coast  Limited.  .  . 


•■Duluth   Short    Line." 

ST.     PAUL 
MINNEAPOLIS.    _ 

tiMlly  t-xcept  Sun(l.ty.     'Pl»on«, 
;j|   'Vest  Superior  street. 


RorTh^esiirhIine 


HOUSES  AND  LOTS  FOR 

^Cfinn  for  a  beautiful  ii-room 
wDOUU  house  on  East  Third  St., 
near  Portland  Square,  all  modern: 
nearly  new:  $1.5oO  cash,  balance  as 
VMii    pav    rent. 

ikQAAA  f'lr  corner  9-room  house 
vOUUII  Kast  Sl.vth  street.  very 
i-eritral:  lot  50.\140;  for  two  families, 
casli     $1.0tiO. 

Af  aA  for  lot  50x140  feet,  on  Ea.it 
«IUU  Seventh  St..  near  Twelfth 
avenue;  water  and  gas.  Thi.'J  Is  uf- 
f.'red  $20(»  under  price  for  <iulck  sale. 
f  Al"f|  for  lot  40x100  on  Park 
VVwll  Point:  very  central.  .Short 
time  offer. 

THE  HARRIS  REALTY  CO., 

K-.iS   Mnnhattnn   Building- 


Let  Us  Show  You  ! 

$3000 

Seven  room  house  ai  Lakeside — 
modern  plumbing,  electric  ligiit;  lot 
50x140.      Rents   $30  per  month. 

$5500 

.six  room  lionse  in  East  end,  strict- 
ly modern,  splendid  locution. 

We   also    have    a   huge    number    of 
houses   up   to   $10,000. 

C.  H.  Graves  &  Go. 

Suite  200,  1st  National  Bank  Bldg. 


FOR  b'ALE— WE  HAVE  FOR  SALE 
Indian  scrip  of  the  Canadian  gov- 
ernment covering  10. 000  acres  of  land, 
which  can  be  lorated  in  sunny 
Southern  Alberta;  price.  $T.-jO  per 
acre;  an  exceptional  opportunity. 
Call  on  or  write  us  for  particulars. 
The  O.  W.  Kerr  company.  Minneapo- 
lis.   Minn. 

FOR  SALE— 40  ACRES  IN  TIMB  E  R. 
also  40  acres  cultivated;  railroad  and 
depot  In  center  of  same;  two  wells; 
furnished  house,  cost  $2,500:  good 
stable,  three  milch  cows,  granary  and 
complete  farm  machinery;  twenty-six 
miles  from  Duluth.  Part  cash,  bal- 
ance easy  terms.  Inquire  J  79,  Her- 
ald office. 


FOR  SALE— 6- ROOM  HOUSE  IN  WEST 
Duluth.  Water  and  gas.  Parties  leav- 
ing the  city.  Snap  if  taken  at  once. 
Call    2821    West   Third   street. 

FOR  SALE— ELEVEN-ROOM  HOUSE. 
oO-foot  lot,  in  Minneapolis;  easy 
terms,  or  will  exchange  for  prop- 
erty in  Duluth.  A  bargain 
one.  R.  C.  Black, 
street. 


314 


for 
West 


some 
First 


FOR  SALE— EIGHT- ROOM  HOUSE. 
Willi  all  modern  conveniences.  To 
deal  with  owner.  Zenith  phone 
2 0 0 5 - X .      1016   East  Sixth   stree t^ 

FOR~SALE— 7  -  ROOM  HOUSE.  ^VITH 
water,  gas  and  sewer.  Bargain  If 
taken  at  once.  H.  S.  Merry  .29  East 
bixth    street. ^ 

FOR       sTvLE— SEVEN-ROOM       HOUSE, 
water,    electric       liglit,     sewer,    bath; 
double    lot.    concrete    foundation 
walks;    reasonable.      Reason    for 
lug.   owner   leaving  city.     Ha 
street  


William    Marx, 
Burrows    bldg. 


Attorney    it    Law.    510 
Zenith   "ihone    384-A. 


BLACKSMITHS    AND   WAGON 
MAKERS. 

Horseshoeing    and    repairing — Devaney 
&    Jordan.    20-22    First    avenue    west. 


BOATS  AND  LAUNCHES. 

All  kinds  built  to  order  and  for  sale; 
also  ga.s  engines.  H.  !:..  Patterson, 
Railroad  street  and  Slxt.i   Ave.   west. 


O.    A.    Geise.    10 
class  tin  shop 


W.    1st    St.    with    flrst 
in  connection.  'Phones. 


IMPROVED    SHOE    REPAIRING. 


GOPHER   SHOE   WORKS- 
avenue  west  and   12  4th 


-Shops   10   1st 
avenue  west. 


KODAKS  AND  CAMERAS. 


Eclipse   VI. 
Develops 


w   <^o..    Inc., 
and     flnislies 


30   4th    Ave.    W. 

for    amateurs. 


LAND  FOR  SALE. 

We  always  have  bargains  In  wild  and 
Improved  land.  List  with  us.  E.  H. 
Hobe  Land  &   Lber  Co.   10   5lh  a  v.    W. 


LOAN  OFFICE. 


and 
.sell- 
Vernoii 


WANTED    TO    BUY. 

We  buv  furniture  and  stoves.   Joe   Pop- 
2    W.    1st    St.    Zenith    l>>5i-X. 


kin. 


Highe.st  prices  paid  for  2d-hand   furni- 
•    clothes.      619-D,    Zenith.      1 
street. 


ture    and 
West    .Superior 


COAL  AND  WOOD. 

City    Wood     Yard.       Prompt    deliveries. 
J.   D.   O'Connell.   Prop.      Both    phones. 


CIVIL   ENGINEERING. 

Duluth  Engineering  Co.,  V'.  B.  Patton. 
Mgr.,  013  Palladlo  Bldg.  Speclflcatlons 
prepared  and  construction  superin- 
tended  for  waterworks,  sewerage,  etc. 


Money 
City 


loaned   on   all   articles  of   value. 
Loan  Office,  524   W.  Superior  St. 


LYCEUM  SCENIC  STUDIO. 

Photographic     background     painted     to 
order,  decorating  all   kinds.     Lyceum. 


LAUNDRY. 

Model   Laundry.   126   E.   1st 
the   work."      Old.    2749-L. 


St.     "We  do 
New.    1302. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— IF  YOU  WANT 
to  sell  or  buv  property,  any  kind, 
anvwhere  write  the  Northwestern 
Business   Agency.    Minneapolis 


Minn. 


WANTED 
trunk.    L 


TO 

59. 


BUY  —  A 

Herald. 


DRESSEli 


OF 


FARM  LANDS— 128  ACRES.  HUBBARD 
county;  iron  lands;  on  lake  shore; 
$1,200.  A  snap.  Isiali  Henry  Brad- 
ford.  213-214   Torrey  building.      

FOR  S  A  LE— T  W  ENT V  -AC  R  E  FARM, 
two  milGs  from  car  line;  splendid 
fcix-room  cottage;  large  l)arn^and  hen 
house:  win  sell  in  tive-acre  lots 
if  so  desired.      .Address   H  55.   Herald. 


1  \  HuliitSi       a  ;  S'l"™ 
I  .r  Superiwir       3  JSplB 

Ai  Miai-.'n        i  15"" 

Ar  .Vil>  i-.ikrf    

Ai  'io:'-5><ll^'     J  35an> 
ArC'!.'  ai{J         7  ajam 


•  I  •>;>       Lhxcept  aunday. 


bt  i5i'rolLv  Uuluth  18  35am  04  151™ 
J  ,5pra  Lv  Superior  f  c-jam  4  551"" 
10  iol>in  .\r  St.  I'iul  430pm  9  551^'" 
341  am  .*r  M "polls  S-'Spm  10  251  ni 
-  4«iiiil  Pul.nwn  s'.eefxti  anil  ciiair 
isoaui  -.ir^  to  Chicigo.  Parlor  and 
7  3L.ani Lat;  .^ars  to  Twin  Cities.  Otficr 


-yaw  W    buperiol  St..  Duluth- 


DULUTH.  SOUTH  SHORE &ATi.ANTlO 


A.M.] 

P..M.  1 

1 

No.  7 
A.M. 

No.  i 
P.M. 

7  7  45,    ♦j.OO  1.1. 

Duluth    

.Ar  *I0.30I    t7.55 

+8.03;    'SIS 
P.M.      A.M. 

•    • 

. . .   Superior   

•  10. 15 
P  M. 

te.4u 

t7.45     '5.40 
Is. 35     '6.30 

tS.55     -3  50 

Ar. 

. . .    Houghton    . . . 

.Lv 

•10.30 

. . .    Calumtft    

•9  40 

P .  .\1. 

A.M. 

. . .    khprmlng    . . . 

•12.25 

t7-55 
16.44 

47.45     •4.301... 

. .      M:irquftie    .. 

•  1 1 . 30 

•10.15 

.Sault   .-5te.    .Marie 

•5.30 

•8.00 

Montreal   .  . . 

•9.30 

•8.13 

Boston   

•  10.00 

A  .M    i  P.M.  I 

A.M. 

P.M. 

ts.jai  •7.iO|Lt. 

P  M.  [  A.M.  1 

. . .     Montreal     . . . 

.Ar 

•7.30 

tlO.13 

P.M. 

A.M. 

ts.oo 

•7.l8'.\r. 

....New    York 

.Lt 

•7.00 

I   t*-45 

CHEAP  ACRES 


80  acres  on   Swan  Lake  road;  a  er^id 

supplv   of   timber   left,   only   91.0OU. 

Ref.    -i. 
40    acres    three-quarters    of    a 

from  Pike  I.^ke.  part  cleared. 

road,  only  ^00.     Ref.  3. 
26    acres    in    section    26-50-15, 

cleared;     some    timber,     only 

Ref.     . 
1%'E:  Write  luKiiranoe  on  Farm 
I'ropert.r. 

Harrison  &  Jamar 

310  Providence  Bldg. 


mile 
near 

half 
9400. 


t  Few  Snaps  in  Lands 

.^20  acres  of  niixcd  tlnilior  lun'U  almut  3 
mll^  simtlnvest  nf  Pliip  Station,  ami  about  It 
mllt-s  frnm  Duluth.  ii:irtlally  Improved  by  house 
and  b.ini  and  about  l^  acres  '•hnirtMl.  Tlmlifr 
en.ugli  on  land  to  pay  for  It.  Price.  flu.OU  per 
acrf.     ca»y    terms. 

.Vll  of  .Sec.  7.  Tp.  50,  R.  IP.  almut  3  nilles 
goiith  of  Pcuix^ri"  on  O.  N.  Uy. .  an  excellent 
.opportunity  for  a  dairy  farm,  small  lake  on  sec- 
tion, bright  i>r.>-ipei-ts  for  Iron  ore.  Price.  $7.60 
per    a  re.    ..sasy    lernu. 

ill  iirres.  one  mile  from  KIce  I.ake:  brat  forty 
In  wluile  iown»lilp.  oidy  $11). ')0  per  acre.  Timber 
eni'Ogh  on  lanil  Vi  pay  for  It.  No  in.uble  to 
aliou     lands. 


Torr«y 


W  VNTED   TO    BUY— DOUBLE    SET 
work   harness;   must   be   in   good   con 
dltion   and   cheap.   Call    evenings 
•phone    87-M.  


Old 


Higlust  price  paid 
M.   Stone,    213    W 


for  cast 
.    1st   St. 


-off  clothing. 
Bell    1834-L. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— A  LARGE  OR 
small  tract  of  land  for  investment. 
1     6i»,    Herald. . ______^»_ 


DENTIST. 

Dr.   W.   H.  Olson.  222  New  Jersey  Bldg. 
All   work   guaranteed.      Both    phones. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICE. 

N^rr^mpT^^F'srTtirAr.  w.  esimj. 

1882.   "We   get   the   men.'     Phones   376. 


MATTRESS  MANUFACTURER. 

mmitlTlieddTng   Co..    308    Lake    Ave.    S. 
Mail    orders    a    specialty.      Zen.    1732. 


MUSICAL  MERCHANDISE. 


Boston  Music  Co.  Mall  orders 
ty.    121   W.    1st.     Old   2787-M 


a  special - 
New  673. 


MASQUERADE  COSTUMES. 

Complete    line    for   all    occasions.      F'an- 
ny    Roswold,    113    First    avenue    east. 


PROFESSIONAL. 


ENGRAVING. 


Jewelry   and 
Dul.    Eiig. 


Silverware, 
Co..    4th    av. 


lowest 
W.    & 


prices. 
1st    St. 


FINANCIAL. 


•Dally. 
Trains    N-.>». 


t  Dilly 

7    and 


except 

a. 


Hunday.       Oluhig 


ON  DULUTH  ReAl  CSTATt  1 
CORPORATION  t  PRIVATE  fUNDS^ 


THE  GREAT  NORTHERN 


I.eav". 


ST.VTIO.NS. 


Arrive. 


t6  UO  am 
•  3  25  pm. 
•  II  10  pm; 
•8  45  am. 
•8.55  pm 
.20  pm 
l-a.aOaiii; 


15: 


ST.    PAUL 
aad 
MINNEAPOLIS. 

!     I'rook'iton,     Grand     Forks 

M'.iitana  and  (.'oast.  J 

Swan    Klver.    Ilibbing.    Virginia. 
.St.   t'loud.   WUmar.   Sioux  City. 


tlO.  15  pm 
•1.55  pm 
•6.30  am 
•8.35  pm 
•7.15  am 
tl2.30  pm 
tlO.I5  pro 


'   •imiy.     tUally  except  Sunday.     Twin  City  sleepers 
rsaclj    at   0  P    m.     0«nt».   Spalding  hotel. 


HOTBI^ 

^ust    thorougliiy    equipped    in    the 
North  w*>st.      Sanitation    perfect. 
EL'ROPB.\l«,   »1.00  AXD   UP. 

a.mb:kic-an,  «2.oe  and  up. 


ORMONDE  HOTEL 


•2'2i-ti-S  I..ake  Avenne   .Soath 
Firat-Claan    ft.OO   Per 


In   the 

heated 


City. 

and 


The   «>uly 

Hotel 

Every      room 
througliout. 

AmerlcHn  and  Kiiropean  Plan. 

MIKK    GL,EESO\',   Prop. 


The  MUler 

2r.{-U24  W.  Superior  St. 

AmerScan  and  European  Plan 

^lfl>    Homr-IIke    Rooms. 

JOHN  W.  .MILLER,  Prop. 


K*»» 


BnlMlBK. 
R.%TIi:S, 


•2.00 


New   BqulpmeMt 
AXD  fa.60. 


FOR  SALE-FORTY  ACRES-FINE, 
beautiful  home  on  lake  stocked  with 
HhIi:  log  house,  one  story,  four  rooms; 
log  barn  and  chicken  house;  five 
acres  under  cultivation,  about  ten 
acres  into  clover  and  timothy;  one 
mile  from  schoolhouse;  one  and  a 
half  miles  from  tJrand  Lake  railway 
station  and  two  miles  from  Burnett 
station,  on  the  D..  M.  &  N.  railway. 
I'rice  $1,000,  Including  buildings  and 
farm  tools  and  machinery.  Including 
$200  wortli  of  pine  timber.  Terms,  half 
cash  balance  out  year  at  6  per  cent. 
640  acres,  bi-.st  section  of  farm  land 
In  Douglas  county.  Wis.,  one  mile 
east  of  Poplar  on  N.  P.  railway;  no 
improvement;  nice  creek,  plenty  of 
timber;  a  tine  stock  and  dairy  and 
truck  farm.  Price  $12.50  per  acre;  half 
cash  balance  live  equal  annual  pay- 
ments;, C  per  cent.  This  will  be  on  the 
market  loV  a  few  days  only  at  this 
pric<-  Call  or  write  for  Information, 
fvaiah  Henry  Bradlord.  213-214  Torrey 
building. 

FOR  SALE— 40  ACRES  IN  TIMBER; 
also  40  acres  cultivated:  railroad  and 
depot  In  center  of  same;  two  vvellsj 
furnished  house,  cost  $2,600;  gtiod 
stable:  three  milch  cows;  granary 
and  complete  farm  machinery;  twen- 
t\ -six  miles  from  Dulutii.  Part  cash, 
balance  easy  terms.  Inquire  J  79. 
Herald  office. 
"NriTlTK  T^ARTH  RESERVATION 
lamls  In  Minnesota;  good  lands  at 
low  prhus;  the  lands  are  very  fertile, 
heavv  black  loam  over  clay  sub-soil; 
we  have  large  or  small  prairie  or 
timber  tracts,  from  $8  to  $15.  accord 
ins  to  location  and  cultivation. 
Beaulleu  &  Dahl,  317-319  Palace 
buUiling,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 


MEDICAL. 

L\DIES— $1,"»00  reward:  I  positively 
"guarantee  my  great  successful 
"Monilily"  remedy.  Safely  relieves 
some  of  the  longest,  most  ob.stinate, 
abnormal  cases  in  three  to  hve  daNs 
No  harm,  pain  or  interference  with 
work.  Mail.  $1..>0.  Double  strength. 
$2.  Dr.  L.  M.  Southlngton  P.  Co.. 
Kansas   City.    Mo. 

L\  DIES— DR.       LA       FRANCO'S    COM- 
"pound:  safe    speedy  regulator:       2oc 
Druggist    or    mail.    Booklet    free.      Di . 
I. a    l-'raiico.    Philadelpiiia.    Pa. , 


Buv   Gerrnanla-Tungsten    jtock, 
share.   Hoffman.  605  Man.  Zen. 


$100.00 
1731-D. 


FLORIST. 

W.    W.    Seekins,    302    E.    Sup, 
Ilowers  and  Horal  emblems. 


St.      Cut 
all  kinds. 


DR.  MITCHELL,  electro-magnetic  spe- 
cialist, has  positive  cure  for  kidney, 
stomach,  liver,  heart,  di-afness,  blind- 
ness, piles,  sexual  weakness,  all  fe- 
male troubles.     325  West  First  street. 


PHOTOGRAPHER. 


Snap 
zle' 


shots.     25c    a    dozen     at     McKen- 
I.    30    East    Superior    St..    upstairs. 


PLUMBING  AND  HEATING. 


Geo.    McGurrln 
Old.   815. 


Co.,    329    E. 
JOBBING. 


Superior  St. 
New.  983. 


FURS  STORED  AND  REPAIRED. 


Fur 
ty 


garments 
.      Duluth 


made  to 

Fur   Co. 


orler  a  special- 
32'    W.   First  St. 


CLAIRVOYANTS. 

MADAM    RIX'^WELL  EGYPTIAN  PALM- 
ist    lis  Tliird  avenue  west,  tells  past 
p'resent    and    future    on    all    affairs    ot 
life;    satisfaction    guaranteed. 


MADAM    STERLING. 
25c.    Card    reading 
lerior    street 


PALiI    READING 

■,0c.      114   East   Su- 


WHOLESALE  BARGAINS  —   12.800 

acres  in  Montana  at  $5.75  per  acre; 
40.000  acres  in  Te.vas.  at  $1.75  per 
acre.  Jay  P.  .Morrill.  Palace  building, 
Minneapolis.  „..,,. 

FOR  SALE— EIGHT  Y--\C  RE  FARM 
twelve  miles  from  town,  on  Rice 
Lake  road.  Will  sell  cheap  for  cash. 
J  tn.   Herald.  


BUSINESS  CHANCES. 


SINESS  CHANCE-^DOCTOR:  I  HAVE 
a  bargain  for  you;  a  strictly  office 
practice  In  a  cily  of  40,000  inhabit- 
ants; business  averages  $700  per 
month  cash;  If  you  mean  business 
write  me;  If  not.  tjon't  waste  your 
time  or  take  mine;  price  $3,000; 
$2,000  cash,  $1.0110  on  time.  Address 
P    O.  Box  603,  Kalamozoo,  Mich. 


STOVE  REPAIRS. 

WE  CARRY  IN  STOCK  'rEPAIRS 
for  lO.ooO  different  stoves  and  ranges. 
(.'  F  Wiiigerts  <&  Son.  410  Kusl  S^u- 
, ;. r i ^r   street.        Both    telephones. 


Jl 


FAMILY   THE/.TER. 


PAINTS.  OILS  AND  GLASS. 


k 


The   Little    Paint    Man    says: 

Sherwin-Williams    Is    the    best. 

NORTHWESTERN  PAINT  CO. 

323    West    First    StreeU 


.SAVOV- 
t  tires. 


-Vaudeville     and     feature 
afternoon     and     in-ening. 


plc- 

10  c, 


FURNACE  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work    done    on    short   notice.    Burrell   & 
Harmon.  308    E.  Superior  St.     •Phones. 


FURNITURE  RECOVERED. 


Let    Forsell    do 
334   E.  .-Superior 


vour    UPHOL.STERING. 
St.  (ir    rlione  Zen.  949. 


FURNITURE  AND  PIANOS. 


Polished     and     repaired. 
Hill,  336   E.  Sup.  St.  Old 


Thompson    & 
•phone  1202-L. 


DYE  WORKS. 


y.FXITH  CITY  DYE  WORKS— LARG- 
est  and  most  reliable.  All  work  done 
In  Duluth.  Work  called  for  and  de- 
livered -Phones:  Old.  115 1-R:  new. 
1888.     232  East  Superior  street^ 

Uulut'h    Dve   Works— French 
lug;        fancy     dyeing. 


1202-R;   new.    1191-A. 


oldest 
cleaners   In 
north.    "Phones: 


BUSINE.SS  CHANCIKS  —  FOR  SALE 
rooming  hoii.se.  15  rooms,  well  fur- 
nished, best  locatioti  in  city;  reason 
for  selling,  leaving  the  city.  Ad- 
dress   L   55.   Herald. ^^^__ 

BUSINESS  CHANCE — B'OR  SALE— 
Two  lunch  cars.  Twenty-sixth  ave- 
nue west  and  Michigan  street. 


bUSLNE.^S  CHANCE— FOR  SALE — 
Delicaiesstn  and  restaurant,  well  es- 
tablished business;  good  location, 
owner  intends  to  leave  Duluth  antl 
win  sell  cheap.  Address  L  52. 
Herald. 


dry  clean- 
Old     'i)lione 
330   E.  Sup.   St. 

Northwestern    Dyeing    &    Cleaning    Co^ 

reliable  dvers  and   French   dry 

Northwest.    15    Lake   Ave. 

New.    1516;    old.    i3^'. 

BURKE  BRO.=i. — Most  up-to-date  dry 
cbaning  establishment  in  the  cUy. 
22    East    Suo.    St.      ",.th    -phones      23.. 

SWEDISH  MASSAGE. ^ 

XT^'ErHANSENrTLXSSEyR^^ 

Jersey    building.    Old    •phone_182^^ 

Mrs.  H.  wTking.  Swedish  ma.ssage  Flat 
2.    20 IS    W.    Sup.    St.       Zeni_th^J89jt-2>. 

masseuse. 


FURNITURE  AND  STOVES. 


All  kinds  at  lowest  prices. 
First   avenue  west.     Ze  i. 


Shapiro.  E 
■phone   103: 


PAINTERS    AND    DECORATORS. 


John 
us 


Hogan    &   Co.,    22    E.    Ist    St.      Let 
figure   on   your   work.      Zenith   741. 


PRINTERS  AND  BOOKBINDERS. 

MeriTtt  ft  Hector.  Railway  and  commer- 
cial printing.  30-32  W.  1st  St.  Phones. 


PLASTERING  AND  BRICKWORK. 


lOstlmates 
'phone. 


furnished.   W 
1224-.A;     old 


J.   Darby.  New 

"phone,      42-1-M. 


RELIABLE  SHOE  STORE. 

Shoes  that  wear  and  fit  for  all.     Lowest 
prici's.  Joe   Williams.   123    1st  .Vve.   W. 


ROOFING  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work    executed    promptly.       Burrell    & 
Harmon.   308   E.  Superior  St.   'Piiones. 


FRENCH  CLEANER  AND  DYER. 


Zenith   Valet.  213 
pairing     and     t 


W 


Isl 
ring 


St.    Expert   re- 
Old      1S34-L. 


HOME  BAKERY. 


The  Zenith  will  furnish 
pastry.       Zen.    187  9 -P. 


\'ou   bread  and 
4  27     E.    4th    St. 


Maria  Grindereng.  graduated 

Averilson's  Inst.  Sweden.  Zen.  844. 


Dr 


FOR  SALE— COWS. 


FOR  S\LE— I.  L.  LEVINE  WILL  .\R- 
rve  w  th  a  carload  of  fre.sh  milcn 
cows.  Sunday.  March  14.  821  Fourth 
east.      Zenith    'phone 


avenue 


1708-D. 


COW       6 

not  fresh. 
evenings. 


Ton'  .SALE— FINE  IRRSKY 
vears  old;  giving  milk,  but 
Old  'phone  5031 -L.  Call 
after    7. , 

FOR  SALE— S.  M.  K.VNER  WILL  AR- 
rlve  with  a  carload  of  fresli  milch 
cows.  Sunday.  March  14.  '  1219  East 
Seventh    street.      Both     phones. 


HAT  MFR.  AND  CLEANER^^^ 

tJ^X'-oT'Moosbrugger,    »  J»c^«»oV,,^o  j^' 
Volland.  24   First  avenue  E.     'Phones. 


HAY.  SEED  AND   ^^'^^Jf^^^^ 

T     T^Scar^tT^l^T^wTTst  St.     'Phones. 
Make  Lakeside  Tuesdars  and  Friday.s. 


SHIRTS  AND  UNDERWEAR. 


Made 
teed. 


strictly 
C.    C. 


to     order, 

Smith.    409 


fit     guaran- 
Torrey    Bldg. 


TYPEWRITING. 

Public  stenographer  and  notary   public. 
Miss  Orton.   433   Man.   Bldg.  Zen.   L)98. 


TURKISH  BATH  PARLORS. 


Guaranteed     cure, 
meiits.    S.  Kasmlr 


all     rheumatic     ail- 
under  Hotel  McKay. 


Ka 


UMBRELLAS  RECOVERED 

And  repaired.     II  pays  to  do  them  now. 
Gingold.   Mfr..    12.'.    E.    Superior  St. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE  -FOR  SALE — UP- 
to-date  restaurant  in  the  West  end. 
Complete  outfit.  Doing  good  business. 
Other  business  to  attend  to.  In- 
quire  614   West   First  street. 

BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  VALUABLE 
timber  land,  improved  and  unimproved 
farms  in  the  Cow  Creek  Valley,  ad- 
dress the  Glendale  Real  Estate 
Agency,   Glendale.   Or. 


FOR  SALE! 

Xevv    three-room    house;    lot   25x 
100;  Sixth  avenue  east  near  Eighth 
street;  $800.    $100  cash  and  balance 
payments   to  suit  purchaser. 


PVLFORD,  HOW  &  CO. 

309  Exchange  Bldg. 


Hotel  McKay 


Cor.    First 


Street 
West, 


and    Fifth 
Duluth. 


Avsnue 


SAVE  TIME! 


Telephone  your  fvant  ada.  to  The 
Herald.  The  rates  are  the  aame, 
and  wc  will  mall  you  a  bill  after 
Ita   Insertion. 

ROTH    'PHONUS,    3M. 


BISINE^S  CHANCE — FOR  SALE,  14- 
room  boarding  house,  very  central. 
J    73,    Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES  —  FOR  S.ALE, 
largo  twenty-room  modern,  steam- 
h*>ated  hotel,  including  large  sample 
room,  parlor,  etc.:  fine  lawn,  good 
town,  big  business:  will  sell  on  easy 
terms.  George  McDonald.  Sr..  City 
Hotel.  Hawley,  Mlnn^ 

-Will   trade   piano 
123    W.    First    St. 


FRESH 


FOR    SALE— FOUR 

cows,    at     1516    West    Superior 
.S.    Widdis. ^ 


MILCH 

street. 


FOR  RENT— HOUSES. 

FO^^  ^^KNT^^^^^uTTE^^Om^^ 
with  conveniences,  rear  2009  \\  e.st 
Third  street,  $15;  7-room  i>"i»«",; 
Fourth  avenue  west,  near  Fiftb 
street  $13;  three  and  four-room  flats, 
water"  and  toilet.  Fifteenth  avenue 
west,  near  Superior  street.  $9  and 
$10.  Harris  Realty  company.  uo.i 
Manhattan   hldg^ 

i^TTii       RENT  —  MODERN      7-ROOM 

631   East   Fifth    street.   $35    per 
Inquire    629     East     Fifth    St. 


DO  YOU  UV  E  IN  A 
RENTED  HOUSE? 

,.ZeT;i:ir'o;:^,^wui;\ru.^!::y^n,ai- 

to    your    laiidloril  y 
WOULDN'T     YOU     LIKE        0     LIVE     IN 

LAKESllDE 


pay 


MOVING 

gfl  a   home 
1)6   pleased 


DAY    will    soon    b«     here, 
and   Iw  your  own   ImdlorU? 
to  show  you  how. 


Lakeside  Land  Co., 

503    SELLWOOD    ELOQ. 


house, 
month. 


S^HiT      RENT— MODERN       FURNISHED 
FOR     RL^i^^^^j^    located.     Call  Get  y- 
201  Manhattan   bulld- 


BUSINESS  CH.\NCE- 
for   driving   horse. 


B I -SI  NESS  CHANCES- 
wlll  trade  for  good 
grocery  store;  good 
good  business;  have 
on  hand  and  cannot 
58.    Herald. 


-FOR    SALE    OR 

real      estate,      a 

location,  doing 

other      business 

attend  to  it.     L 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— A 
restaurant  and  coMfectlonery  outfit, 
including  dishes,  lunch  counter, 
stools,  showcases,  shelving  and  re- 
frigerator. Will  s611  separate.  231 
Central    avenue    we>it.    upstairs. 


house; 

Smith  company, 

Ing. 


,,-nR  Ri.'VT NEW  6 -ROOM  HOUSE  TO 

lOR  Rl-^:^^,,^^f^  children:  rent.  $2^5.  80i* 
street.  'Phone  1388-K.  old. 


couple 
East  Third 


-fTprs  TTeNT- EIGHT-ROOM  DWELL- 
Ing-  water,  etc.;  Forty-fifth  avenue 
west    one  block  from  street 


rent 
ment 


FOR 
Park 
3-room 


car  line; 
reasonable.  Dlckerman  Invest- 
company.    Lon.sdale    building. 

y.  ENT— 12 -ROOM      HOUSE      ON 
Point.     Zenith  'phone.  1063.  Also. 


SNAPS  I 

SienA    Buys    lot    50x140    feet.    In 
I5UU    East   end.    v.ater  and   gas 
Inti.    the    building    line,   arid    good   ce- 
nent    sidewalk:    $500    tash    and    ea.sy 
ierms    on    balance    wi!l    handle    this 

S'lnnn    B^Vs    lot    5)xl40    feet    on 
I OUU    Kast    First    street:    deslr 
able    lesidence   property, 
exceptional  opportunity. 


This  Is  an 


J.  Abrahamson 

17    :«ieNabn    Ulook. 
WK   WRITK  FlllK   INSIRANC  K 


Are  You  Looking  for  a 
Vacation  Spot? 

We  reoeiitly  opened  a  tract  of  land  at  Solon 
Springs  and  are  selling  lou  with  loO  feet  laka 
frontage  and  from  .llo  to  8.10  feet  deep:  finely 
wooded,  good  short-s.  and  an  Ideal  lo«-atlon  for  a 
summer  bungalow.  Tlie  only  i<M«\  lake  frontage 
lota  left  and  worth  twice  what  we  ask  for  them, 
■riiov  arc  on  bettutlful  l..ake  .St.  CroU.  near  Uie 
Ilnila  and  Ox  Creek.  *l;:j  and  H.W  buy*  tlieoi 
and  only   '   left. 

Also  lots  In  Holun  .Springs  Proper,  heavily  tlm 
beretl  with  pine  and  har»Jwi>od  and  In  the  l)e»t 
of    locations— $450    and    J.">0  (    lor    tracts    10Uxl4.^. 

See  us  alioiit  summer  cottage  funilabed  i-om- 
plete.     for    sale. 

Hanford  Investment  Co., 

413  Sellwood   UiilldluK. 


house. 


PATENT   ATTORNEYS. 

I^ATENTs"'T>r"A0r'c01?NTnF^ 

talned,  sold,  manufactured;  estab- 
lished 25  years;  uriexcelled  reputa- 
tions; Investors'  book.  free.  .American 
PaUnt  Market,  3W  i*aul.  Mino, 


FOR     RENT— 407      TWENTY-FOURTH 
avenue   west.    $20;    water,   sewer,   por- 
celain   bath;      five     rooms;    hardwood 
floors  on  first   floor;   first-class 
tion     Little  &  Nolte.  agents. 


DANCING  ACADEMY. 

rOFFINS       IS   I.ake  nv^ioi"  north.      Ntw   'ph  )ne   l'i4:! 


/ 


/ 


^^ 


»-.  I— 


J 


DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD,      ^uespav  »«i,ch  »  im 


1. 
I 


One  <Vnt  a  Word  Kacli  Insertion. 
No  Advert iseinent  l^esti  Tlian  15  tVntw. 

'  SHOPPINii 

BY  TELEPHONE. 


I      One  Cent  a  Word  Each  In 
Xo  Advert Iseiiient  l.etss  'limn 


Old 

New 

"Phone. 

•phone. 

MEAT   .MAIIKTS — 

B.   J.   Tobf n    22 

22 

Mork    Brue IBito 

169 

l.Al'XnRIK!S — 

Yale   Laundry 479 

479 

Lute.o  La,«n«lry    441 

447 

Trov    Launilry    257 

25i 

DRl  «<ilSTS— 

KiU1i«?   .Ttronlmus    1243 

1027 

Buvie    H3 

163 

BAKKRJE$)— 

•me    Bon   Ton    1720-L 

1128 

hf:atixg  A>'n  plimbixg— 

Arci.ie    McDougal    ...1723 

916 

WOOD — 

"W.   ."^.  EllinK!=en    

17r.0-A 

REAL  ESTATE,  FIRE 

INSURAXCE  AND 
RENTAL  AGENCIES. 

John  A.  Stephenson.  W.lvin  bu!l(]ing. 
E  I>  Fleid  Co..  203  Kxohange  bi)i!dtn?. 
L  A  Lar'-en  Co.  I'rovitlonoe  buiUhnir. 
Pulford,  How  &  Co..  309  Exchange  Biag. 


MUSIC. 

PHOXOGRABHr?  AND  MUSICAlT"  IX- 
etruments.  Send  your  orders  for 
popular  sor.gs  and  records  to  Zenith 
Music  comrany.  No.  6  East  Superior 
street.    Duluth^    Minn. 

Iil~HlX     VNl)   NU^Slc'TL'lNSfirr'MK.NTO   or   KVTCHY 

-  -  *  (l.i.Tiptioi:.     Edison  piioi.w- 

trraplu.      band      and        vt- 
h  e  »  t  r  B  Instniraenls. 

licmis  ii;id  crgans.  lug- 
ttiild  UTSTG.\.\Rr»  T 
and   &   First   .Wrnuc   West. 


FOR   RENT— FLATS. 


rOR       RENT— FOL'R- ROOM  FL-VT — 

mcdtrn    except    heat.      1324  .Jefferson 

street.     Inyuire  J.  V.  Wilde,  basement 
flat. 


FOR  RENT— MODERN  5-ROOM  BRICK 
fiat;  heat,  hardwood  finish.  6(t7  East 
Sixth  street.     Zenith    phone  1T05-Y. 


FOR    RENT— FIVE- ROOM      FLAT 
123'^     East    Fourth    street 


AT 


FOR  RENT— -STEAM  HEATED  FLATS. 
With  all  modern  conveniences;  gas 
range,  steam  laundry;  first  flat.  M. 
W  Allen,  We.st  end.  Zenith  phone 
1048. 


sertlon. 
15  Cents. 


FOR     SALE  — MISCELLANEOUS. 

FOR  SALE— SAFES.  OFFICE  FIRNI- 
ture.  architects"  and  engineers"  sup- 
plies, typewriters  and  supplies.  J.  S. 
Rav  Co.,  406  \V.  Sup.  St.  Both  phones. 


FOR 

SALE— 

SEND 

rs 

YOUR    NAME. 

We 

will  ma 

il 

vou 

the 

new  Vlctoi 

•  and 

Ed 

son  reeord 

lists  each  month. 

Free 

of 

charge. 

F 

renc 

h  & 

Bassett. 

FOR    SALE— NEW    VICTOR    AND    EDI- 

son  records,  direct  from  the  factory. 
P\jll-toned.  perfect  records.  They 
last  longer  and  sound  better.  Buy 
tiiem   of   French  &   Bassett. 


FOR  SALE— THE  NEW  STYLE  VI.C- 
tor  •  i>."  A  genuine  brand  new  Victor 
machine  with  horn,  needles  and  len 
10-inch  new.  perfect  records.  Direct 
from  the  Victor  factory.  All  com- 
plete for  523.50.  Easy  terms.  French 
&  Bassett. 


FOR  SALE— ONE  24-FT  MOTOR  BOAT. 
lO-h.-p. :  i>onian  engine;  190Jj  model. 
K    iO,  Herald. 


FOR  SALE— BABY  GO-CARTS — THE 
new  I'rlnccss  one-motion  collapsible 
folding  go-carl  in  ihe 
$0.50  up;  call  and  look 
sen<l  for  free  booklet. 
Liuiuth. 


Is  the  fltiest 
world;  pricee 
em  over,  or 
Bay  ha  &  Co., 


One  Cent  a  Word  Kach  Insertion. 
\o  AdAerti.«*eniem  I.«'S.s  'llutn  15  Cents. 

^     HEl^?vl^iNTS^^^5EMixE. 

WANTED  —   EXPERIENCED      OVER- 

all    makers.      Christianson,      Menden- 
hall-Grahani   company. 

WANTED — A^bMPICTENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  Must  be  good 
cook;  good  wages.  24  Butte  avenue, 
Hunter's   Park.      Old   "phone    1011. 

WANTED — GlliL  ABOUT  18  YEARS 
old  for  light  housework,  at  922  East 
Fifth    street. 


WANTED — LADIES  TO  CALL  AT  THE 
daylight  trunk  store.  Our  goods 
sta;ui  the  sunshine.  A  square  deal. 
Try  us.  Repairing  reasonable.  North- 
ern Trunk  company,  :;2&  W.  First 
street,  opposite   Wolvin   building. 

AT 

in 


WANTED— FIRST-CLASS      GIRL, 
1510     East     Second     street,     three 
family.  

WANTED— A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
geneial  housework;  good  wages. 
4  232  London  road. 

WANTED— A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  51b  North  Fifty- 
eighth  avenue  west. 


FOR  SALE— ONE  .MAHOGANY  PIANO, 
nearly  new  and  in  good  condition;  a 
splendid  bargain;  $10  cash  and  $3  a 
moiuh.     French  &  Bassett. 


FOR  SALE  —  PHONOGRAPHS  AND 
records;  don't  buy  till  yon  get  our 
prices.  We  carry  by  far  the  largest 
lines  of  Victor  and  Edison  machines 
and  records  in  Duluth;  only  new  and 
perfect  goods.  Outfits  $10  up;  cash 
or  easy  payments;  catalogues  and 
record  "lists   on    request.   Bayha  &   Co. 

FOR  SALE— 25- FOOT  LAUNCH,  FULL 
cabin,  drop  windows,  leather  cush- 
ions, full  iirass  fittings,  ele. ;  6-li.-p. 
engine,  used  but  few  weeks.  Zenith 
■phone,    6040. 


FOR  SALE  —  36-FOOT  CP.UISING 
launch;  good  reliable  engine;  toilet, 
cooking  galley,  ice  bu.xes.  sleeping 
capacity  for  six  persons;  storage  de- 
partment on  top;  electric  lights, 
nic  kei  plated  tri^mmings  and  complete 
in  every  respect.  Inquire  2S  East 
First   street. 


FOR      SALE— $75 
upright  piano. 
I'hoenix   block. 


TAKES      ELEGANT 
Can   be  seen  room  15, 


FOR     SALE— THREE     RAT     TERRIER 

pupiiies     26    East    Second    street. 


FOR  RENT — FIVE  ROOM  FLAT.  UN- 
(urnlslied,  steam  heat,  electric  light 
and  gas.   316   West   Fourth  street. 

FOR   RENT— FIVE  ROOM  NEW  FLAT; 

hot   water  heat;    hot   and   cold  water; 

Janitor   service.        2308      West  Third 
street.       Zenitli     "i>hone.     752. 

FOR  RENT— NICE  FLAT.sT^Ol'R  AND 
five  rc>oms.  opposiie  new  courthouse. 
Call   608    West    Third   street. 

FbUR-ROO>I 
without    chil- 
street. 


FOR  RENT— MODERN 
heated  rlat  to  couple 
dren.      419    East   Fifth 


FOR  RENT— SIX-ROOM  FLAT.  DOWN- 
Ftairs.  624  Garfield  avenue.  $16 
a   month.      Water   paid. 


FOR  RENT  —  SIX-ROOM  FLAT  — 
heat  and  hot  and  cold  water  fur- 
nished: hardwood  floors  and  finish. 
Apply  Corporate  Investment  company, 
Torrey    building^ 

FOR  RENT  —  TWO.  THREE  AND 
four-room  flats  $6  to  $12  per  month. 
632  Easi  Koui'th' street.    "Phone  1751-X. 

WITH 

street. 


FOR  S--\LE  CHEAP — NEW  EDISON 
graphophone  with  twenty-seven  late 
records.     Address  K  90,  Herald. 


WANTED — A  MILLINERY  APPREN- 
tice.  Brandt's  Millinery,  114  West 
Fourth    street^ 

WANTED— A  THOROUGHLY  COMPE- 
tent  working  housekeeper,  three  in 
family;  small  modern  home;  wages 
$20.  Sail  after  6:30  p.  m.  Old  'phone 
1689-L. 


WANTED— GIRL      FOR    HOUSEWORK. 
1119    East   Fourth   street. 


WANTED — A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  Mrs.  F.  H.  De 
Groat,    1619    East    First    street. 

WAXTP^rTI-DINTNGTiobM  GIRL.  5310 
Roosevelt    street. 


One  Cent  a  AVonl  Facli  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  Li*!*  'limn  15  Cents. 

liiifiioilL 


SITUATIONS  WANTED— 
FEMALE. 

SITUATION  WANTED—BY  A  YOUNG 
lady  as  bookkeeper  or  assistant 
bookkeeper.     Address  K  91,  Herald. 

SITUATIO.\  WANTED  —  PLACE  AS 
housekeeper;  small  family,  by  middle 
aged    woman.      K    SO,    Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED^ YOU.NC.  LADY 
desires  position  in  doctors  office.  Ad- 
dress  K  99.  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —  WORK  BY 
the  day.  Anna  Wesley,  116  West 
Second   street. 

SITUATION  WANTED— EXPERIENC- 
ed  lady  desires  laundry  woik  by  the 
day.  Zenith  "phone  1140-Y'.,  after  6 
p.   m. 

SITUATION  WANTED- YOUNG  LADY' 
desires  office  position,  doctor's  office 
preferred.     Address  H.    87,   Herald, 


One  Cent  a  AVord  Eaoli  In.sertlon. 
So  Adveinisrnient  l>e)ss  ITmn  15  Cent*. 

*~^  hIeLP  wanted— MALE.  ' 

WANTEL> — TWO  FIR.ST  CLASS  PIANO 
salesmen.  Howard.  Farwell  &  Co., 
i;iO    East    .'Superior   St.,    Duluth,    Minn. 


WANTED— 100 
at     Esterly's 


MEN  TO  BUY  Watches 
.Spalding  Hotel  Jeweler. 


WANTED— THE  LADIES  TO  KNOW 
that  Mrs.  C.  F.  Morgan  has  removed 
her  dressmaking  parlor  from  23 
Columbus  block  to  214-216  West 
First  street. 

WANTED    —    AN       APPRE.XTICE       TO 

learn  dressmaking;  can  work  If  you 
like  for  room  and  board.  24  West 
First    street. 


WA.XTED— A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework,  two  in  family. 
1817  »/3    East   Second   street. 


WANTED— GIRL  FOR 
housework,  Mrs.  A. 
East    Fourth    street. 


GEN  ER AL 

L.    .Miles,    1520 


FOR  SALE— SOME  VERY  CHOICE 
barred  Plymouth  Rocks  and  While 
Wvandottes,  cockerels  and  pullets, 
all"  laying.  H.  Gould,  Eighth  avenue 
west  and  Tenth  street. 

F0R~S  aITe^N  ICE  F.AMILY  HORSE, 
two  carriages,  outter_  wagon;  an 
opportunity  to  get  a  g"ood  outfit  at 
a  low  cost.  Call  9  East  Superior 
street,     between  12  and  1  o'clock. 


FOR  SALE— TWO  INCUBATOR.S,  O.NE 
brooder,  and  bone  cutter.  E.  Hill. 
2215    West    Second    street. 


FOR     RENT  —  4-ROOM      FLAT 
city       water.      No.    2    Vernon 
Zenith    "phone,    :;228-A. 


FOR  RE.XT— 6-ROOM  LOWER  FL.A.T, 
bath,  electric  light.  1325  London 
road.  Inquire  1913  London  road. 
Ztnith     "phone,     1535. 

FOR  RENT— 6-ROOM  BRI<'K  FLAT: 
all  convenienct.«.  Corner  of  Twentieth 
avenue  west  and  Second  street  $20 
per  month.  Inquire  127  East  First 
Btreet. 


FOR  RENT— FIVE-ROOM  FLAT,  312i-i 
West  Fifth  street,  hardwood  floors. 
electric  light,  gas.  Inquire  Bridge- 
man  &  Plussell,  or  call  old  'phone, 
906. 


FOF:  sale— SEND  YOUR  SUBSCRIP- 
tlons  and  renewals  for  the  Ladies' 
Home  Journal  and  Saturday  Evening 
I'ost  to  Miss  .L  Kluge,  agent,  care  of 
Herald. 


FOR  .SALE— ICE  BOX,  KITCHEN  CAB- 
Ir.et  and  few  odd  pieces  of  furniture. 
115   Tenth   avenue  east. 


FOR  .S.A.LE— RIGNE  PIANO,  USED  FOR 
two  months;  very  cheap  for  quick 
sale.     Call   I20i>   West  First  street. 


FOR  SALE— $375  UPRIGHT  GRA-ND 
piano,  good  as  new,  ;jl5i».  319  West 
Fifth    street. 


FOR  SALE — STEEL  RANGE,  WARM- 
in  clo.«-et,  six  holes  and  hot  water 
back;  used  since  last  November  for 
light  housekeeping,  $15;  fine  oak 
dresser  and  commode,  very  fine  suite, 
large    size.      26    Fourth    avenue    wes^ 

FOR  SALE  CHEAP^^'EW  P^OLL  TOi' 
desk.  A.  Berglln,  116  West  Superior 
street,    uiistairs. 

FOR  Sa^..— OFFICE  FUItNlTlllE. 
desk,  typewriter,  letter  press.  Atlas' 
of  Lnilutii  and  Superior.  Old  phone 
1366-M. 


WANTED  —  EXPERIENCED  SHIRT 
makers.  Api-lv  Dakotah  Garment 
Mfg.  Co.,  225  South  Fifth  avenue 
west. 

WANTED  —  GIRL       FOR       GENERAL 

hou.'^ework;  must  be  good  cook;  fam- 
ily of  three.  Apply  1026  East  Su- 
perior street. 


BINDERY 

department. 


WANTED — GIRLS     FOR 
work.       -Xpply     printing 
Marshall-Wells    Co^ 

WA.XTED  —  LADY  FOR  PRESSING 
and  repairing  clothes  at  10  Fourth 
avenue   west. 


SITUATIO.X 
Ing  by  day 


WANTED- 
,  at  once. 


-PLAIN     SEW- 
J   75,  Herald. 


SITUATION  W.ANTED  —  CITY  Posi- 
tion by  first-class  accountant  and  ex- 
pert stenographer:  best  of  references. 
Now  employed.  Address  K  100,  care 
of  Herald. 


SITUATIO.X  WA.XTED— YOUNG  LADY 
desires  a  position  at  office  work.  Ad- 
dress   H    \>i.    Herald. 


SITUATIONS   WANTED  — MALE. 

conversant  in  German,  trench  and 
English  would  like  any  position  sev- 
eral hours  daily.     J   92.   HeraKL 


SITUATION  WANTED— POSITION  AS 
window  trimmer  or  would  go  as  as- 
sistant; can  give  good  references. 
Address  Martin  Hoilister,  311  South 
L>.  street,  Marlon,  Ind. 


W-AlNTED — BY 
work   at    once; 
83,  Herald. 


GOOD       CARPENTER, 
stranger.      Address    H 


WANTED — MEN  TO  HAN  B  THEIR 
trunks  repaired;  best  brass  locks  50c 
and  $1;  no  more.  Try  us.  Northern 
Trunk  Co.,  228  West  First  street, 
opposite  Wolvin  building. 

WAN  TED- LEARN  BARBER  TRADE, 
big  ci<ii)c.'.d  for  barbers;  big  wages; 
easx'^work  short  time  to  learn:  tools 
given;  cafalogue  free.  Moler  Barber 
College,  27  E.  Nicollet  avenue,  Min- 
neapolis^  

WANTED— 10    BOYS.  16    TO    18    YEARS 

old,    steady    insldt  work;    wages.    $1 

to    $1.25    per    day.  W.    H.    Reickhoff 

Co..    New    Duluth.  


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

forIrent^^eSoms^ 

'»  FOR  RE.Xr, 

FOR       RENT — BOARD 
front  room   with  alco 
pie.  private  family  in 
old  'phone.  2S06-R. 


A     Carpenter     Shop; 
building,    rear    of    27 
rior    street.      Call    Vi 
207   West  Superior  st 


good     stone 
East    Supe- 

Mina    bakery, 

eet. 


AND  LARGE 
••e  for  two  peo- 
East  end.     Call 


WANTED  —  STENOGRAPHERS  AND 
bookkeepers  wanting  positions  should 
register  at  the  National  Accountants 
and  Stenograph.ers'  Bureau.  Minne- 
sota office  at  the  Duluth  Business 
University,  600  Christie  Building^ 


WANTED— YOUNG  MEN  TO  SEND 
their  subscriptions  and  renewals  for 
the  Saturday  P:ven:ng  Post  to  Miss 
L.    Kluge,   agent     care   of   Herald. 


WANTED— RAILWAY  MAIL  CLERKS. 
Salary  $800  to  $1,400.  Examinations 
in  Duluth  Mav  15.  Common  educa- 
tion sufficient.  Candidates  prepared 
free.  Write  Immediately,  Franklin 
Institute,    Rochester,    N.    Y.  


WANTED— ENGINEER  FOR  McGIF- 
fert  log-loading  machine.  Peter  E. 
Meagher,   409    West   Michigan  street. 

WANTED  —  POSITIOJ^  OPEN  FOR 
two  good  salesmen  accustomed  to 
meeting  business  men  and  talking 
business.  Ten  dollars  a  day  or  more 
guaranteed,  to  right  parties.  Ad- 
dress  Watcli.   B  47,   Herald. 


FOR  RENT  —  MODERN  FURNISHED 
room  in  private  family;  reasonable. 
Zenith  213S-D. 

FOR  RENT  —  FURNl  SHED  ROOM  ; 
electric  light;  cooliing  allowed.  lll>/i 
East   Fifth   street. 

FOR  RENT  —  FURNI  SHED  FRONT 
room  with  alcove:  modern  conven- 
iences.     Zenitii   2067->;.   315  West   Srd. 


FOR  RENT — THREE  ROOMS  FOR 
light  housekeeping,  or  two  rooms 
furnished  for  gentlemen,  1718  West 
Second   street. 

FOR  RENT— THREE  I'XFUIiNlSHED 
rooms,     714    West  Second. 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  ROOMS,  229 
East   Superior   street, 

FOR  RENT  —  NEATLY--  FURNISHED 
front  room,  flr.-^i  floor:  gas  liglit  and 
use  of  phone;  $2  j>er  week.  440 
Mesaba   avenue. 


FOR  RENT — ROOM  A>D  BOARD  FOR 
two  in  private  familj  ;  u.-^e  of  ph..ne. 
Call   No.    5    West    Fou;th   street. 


SECRET  SOCIETIES. 


MASONIC. 
I  ALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79, 
A.  F.  &  A.  M. — Regular  meet- 
ings first  and  third  Monday 
evenings  ot  eaeh  month,  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting 
March  29,  1909,  Work— Sec. 
end  degree.  Andrew  C. 
M. ,   H.  Neifbitt,  secretary. 


IONIC  LODGE.  NO.  186.  A.  F. 
&  A.  M. — Regular  meeting 
second  and  fourth  Monday 
evenings  of  ea<  h  month  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting, 
special.  Wednesday,  March 
17.  1909.  Work— First  deKree.  Clar- 
ence B,  Miller,  W.  M.;  Hugo  Burgo, 
secretary. 

KEY.-^TO.XE  CHAPTER,      NO. 

20.  j\.  A.  M. — Stated  coTivoca- 
tlons  second  and  fourth 
Wednesday  e\en;ngs  of  each 
month  at  7::<0  o  clock.  X<-xt 
meeting,  March  24th.  1?09. 
Work— P.  M.  and  M  E.  M.  degrees.  Will- 
iam D.  Underbill,  H.  P.;  Alfred  Le 
Richeux,    secretary. 


Master 
T.    I.    M 


DULUTH  COUNCIL,  NO  ?  R. 
S.  T. — Regular  meetings  fir^t 
a!id  third  Friday  evenings  <..t 
tad;  month  at  7  30  o'clock. 
Next  meeting.  Mar.  J;  19.  Iit09. 
Work  —  Royal       and       Select 

degree      Andalla     W.    Torrance. 

;    Alfred    Le    Richeux,    recorder. 


FOR      RENT  - 

quire  at   628 


-  THP.E 
West   Fii 


St 


ROOMS 
Btreet. 


IN- 


WANTED 

team    to 
Herald. 


-PARTNER 

go    In    junk 


WITH   . 

busines^ 


GOOD 
J.    74, 


WANTED— MEN  TO  INSPECT  OUR 
$4.25  cowhide  suit  cases.  Don't  get 
fooled  on  sheepskin  cases.  We  man- 
ufacture. Trunk  and  case  repairing 
very  reasonable.  Northern  Trunk  Co,, 
228" West  First  street,  opposite  Wol- 
vin building. 


WANTED  —  EXPERIENCED  WAIT- 
ress.  207  West  Superior  street, 
Vienna   bakery. 


WANTED— A  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework,  family  of  three.  Incjuire 
at   No.   6  Adams   fiats. 

WAN'TED— We'cAN  GIVE  VERY'   RE- 

munerative  emplo>ment  to  four 
voung  ladies  of  neat  appearance  and 
engaging  manners.  Address,  wit'n 
references — Watch;   J    76,    Herald. 


AVANTED — NORAVEGIA.X  GIRL  FOR 
kitchen  work  in  boarding  house.  Ad- 
dress   M.     Edwardson,    Two    Harbors, 

Minn. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  PRUDENCE 
Robert,  public  Janitor  and  porter, 
window.s  washed,  tloors  mopped,  etc. 
Branch   Bethel,   508   W.  Sup.   Zen.   391. 

SITUATIO.X  WANTEIJ— GENTLEMAN 
of  25  years,  with  commercial  edu- 
cation, desires  a  pcjsiticjn  as  assistant 
bookkeeper  fc>r  a  wholesale  hcpuse.  or 
a  position  as  inside  wlreman  for  an 
electrical  company.  Address  12  Carl- 
tc>n  avenue   west,   Clocniet.   Minn. 


WA.XTED— A 
housework. 


GIRL     FOR     GENERAL 
1210    East   Second   street. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN. 

IK)   YOU  NEED   MONEY'.' 
Money  loaned   in  r>uluth  or  Superior  to 
salaried  people  wltliout   security:   also 
on    pianos,   furniture,   horses,   ^agons, 
etc.     Business   absolutely   confidential. 
Call    and    get    our      rates     and    terms. 
Monthly   or   weekly     payments  as   de- 
sireti.     No    good    applicajit    refused. 
WESTERN    LOAN   CO., 
521    Manhattan   Building. 
New    phone.  930.  Old  "phone,  1036, 


FOR  RENT— VERY  DESIRABLE  7- 
room  flat,  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; steam  heat,  and  janitor  service: 
good  lake  view:  moderate  rent.  C. 
P.   Craig  &   Co..   503   Sellwood   bldg. 

FOR  R EN T— N E W  SIX- R OOM  FL.YT, 
St  Regis  apartments;  conveniently 
arranged;  heat,  water  and  janitor 
service.  M.  H.  .\lworth.  100  Alworth 
b  u  i  Id  i  n  g. ^^^ 


PERSONAL. 

PERSf»NAL— LADIES,       "aSK         YOUR 

druggi.'-t  for  Chlchesters  Pills,  the 
Dlamorid  Brand.  For  2o  years  known 
as  best,  safest,  always  reliable.  Buy 
of  your  druggist:  take  no  other. 
Chiehesters  Diamond  Brand  Pills 
are     sold     bv    druggists     everywhere. 


THE  ARNOLD  MAS.SAGE 
VIBRATOR  makes  you 
LOOK  YOUNGER  and  FEEL. 
YOUNGER.  The  exhibit  and 
demonstration  by  a  profes- 
sional. Miss  McGuire.  at  your 
home  or  at  Abbott's  drug 
8t"re.      201      West      Superior 

Btreet.      (Call   or  telephone).     Northern 

Minnesota  agents. 

FffRSONAI.  —  .MANICURLXG,  SHAM- 
pooing  and  massage,  done  at  your 
home.  Address  Xellie  Maize,  123 
West  .'Jeeoiid  street.     Old    phone. 


FOR   S.\LE— 

C.\.'-H    REGISTERS. 
We   manufacture   a   ca.sh    register 
every  two  minutes.     Liberal  allow- 
ance' for  exchange  of  registers. 
Call  and  see  our  1909  models. 


MS. 


PERSONAL— WHY  DON'T  YOU  FIND 
out  iiow  to  take  care  of  your  hard- 
wood floors?  It  costs  nothing  to 
have  the  floor  expert  call  on  you.  M. 
J.   Rss.  313  West  Third  street. 

PERJ^<'X.\L — Foot  specialist;  corns  ex- 
tracted. 25e;  inverted  nails  and  bun- 
ions  cured.      Scott.    17    E.   Sup.   street. 


PERSONAL— LADl  ES  ONLY— I'SEFUL 
secret,  worth  $5  to  any  married  lady, 
for  25c.  J  win  help  any  sister  in 
trouble.  Stella  J.  Sargent,  Winner 
station.  St.  Louis,  Mo. 


PERSONAL — Elect rii-  cabinet 
baths.     Knauf  Sisters.   24   W 


Turkish 
Sup.   St. 


Personal — Manicuring,    massage, 
treatment.    813    Tor  rev;     phone 


scalp 
946-X. 


THE  NATIONAL  CASH  REGISTER 

CO.MPANY. 

E.   W.   Russell,   Sales  Agent, 

425  West  Superior  Street. 

Zenith,  817^ Bell,  2585. 

FOR  SAl-E— CHICKERING  &  SONS' 
upright  piano,  cheap  for  cash,  or  will 
take  bankable  note  for  $165,  but 
must  have  the  money.     J  100,  Herald, 

FOR  SALE— BIG  BUNCH  OF~>2^obO, 
also  sample  to  make  one  quart  of  rye 
whisky  by  mail  for  50  cents,  Ernest 
G.  Carlson,  Mandan,  N,   D. 

FOR  S.4LE  —  FURNITURE,  STOVES, 
carpets,  draperies  and  house  furnish- 
ings of  every  description  at  money- 
saving  prices;  cash  or  easy  payments. 
Bayha  &  Co..  Duluth's  largest  house- 
furnishing  concern. 

FOR  SALE— KIM  BALL  PIANOS  NOW 
sc-:d  direct  from  factory  to  your 
home.  No  canvassers",  no  agents',  no 
dealers'  profits  for  you  to  pay.  Come 
in  on  \our  own  accortl  and  buy. 
Korby  Piano  Co.,  the  Kimball  factory 
store,  201   East  Superior  street. 


WANTED— LADIES  TO  SE.XD  THEIR 
subscriptions  and  renewals  for  the 
Ladies  Home  Journal  to  Miss  L. 
Kluge,    agent,    care    of    Herald. 

W7\NTED  —  DISHWASHER,  SECOND 
cook  and  dining  room  girl.  Central 
hotel.    Proctor.      Old     phone    54. 


EMPLOYMENT   OFFICES, 

i^TRS^^'sOMERS^^^EMPLOYMK.XT      OF- 
fice,    17    2nd    Av.     E.       Botth     phones. 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE. 

FOR  SALE— NEW  9-ROOM  HOUSE  IN 
perfect  condition.  East  end;  50-foot 
lot,  most  desirable  location.  B.  48, 
Herald. 


FOR      SALE— EIGHT      ROOM      HOUSE 
and    lot.    2918    West    Third    street. 


DO.X  T  BORROW  MONEY 
at  exoibitant  rates.  Give  us  a  trial. 
Thousands  of  satisfied  customers  our 
best  references.  We  are  an  old  and 
established  firm,  with  unlimited 
capital.  Therefore  we  can  loan  at  the 
LOWEST    RATES. 


W,ANTED  —  INSURANCE  MEN  TO 
handle  best  line  of  health  and  acci- 
dent policies,  costing  $1  per  month 
and  up.  Include  latest  and  most  at- 
tractive features.  Big  money  to  be 
made  under  good  contracts.  Call  or 
write  National  Casualty  company,  506 
Palladlo     building     Duluth. 


FOR  RENT— STORES  &  OFFICES. 

FXm^UKST^^^^^lS^'v^  OX 

Central  avenue,  fine  corner  store, 
with  basement,  and  warehouse  in 
rear:  steel  ceiling:  hardwood  floors 
in  both  store  and  warehouse;  one 
of  the  best  corners  on  Central  ave- 
nue. For  rent  from  May  1.  W.  C. 
Sherwood  &  Co..  118  Manhattan  block. 


FOR  REXT— NO.  114  WEST  MICHIGAN 
street:  four-story;  25x90-  railroad 
track  at  the  rear:  elevator,  refrig- 
erators and  office  all  In.  P.  Beneteau. 
St.    Patil.    Minn.  


I'OR  RE.XT— DESK  ROOM:  t>E  OF 
both  'phones:  $7  per  month.  A  snap. 
Inquire    1010    Torrey    building 


FOR    RENT— 3-ROOM    ]3.\SEMENT.    AT 

720   East   Third   street. 


FOR    RENT— 2    LARtiP:      ROOMS      FOR 

light    housekeeping,    jras    and    electric 
light  and  heat.     16  \\  est  Fifth  street. 


FOR   RENT— FURNISHED   ROOMS,   331 
West    Third    street. 


FOR   RENT— VERY  PL  -::ASANT  FRONT 

room,     private     familv.       Old     'phone, 
1111-M.      313    Third    avenue    west. 


FOR       RENT     —     TWO 
rooms.     East     Super!  ar 
Fourteenth  avenue.     Old 


DESIRABLE 

street,     near 
phone  252-L. 


FOR  RENT  —  TWO  HEATED  Fl'R- 
nlshed  rooms  for  lightliousekeeping 
2609  Huron  street. 


FOR  RENT— FURNISI 
West  Fourth  street, 
entrance. 


ED    ROOM, 
first    floor, 


DULUTH  C<»MMANL>ERy  NO 

15.  K.  T— Stated  conclave 
fiist  Tuesday  of  esch  month 
at  7:30  o'clock.  No.t  conclave 
will    be   held    Tuesday.    March 

16.  Work — Driii.  C.  E.  Peas- 
lee,  acting  E.  C. ;  Alfred  Le  Richeux, 
recorder. 


SCOTTISH  RITE—REGULAR 
meetings  every  Thursday 
eve.. ing  at  7:30.  Next  meet- 
in  cr.  .March  18,  19<'9.  Work — 
Twenty-seventh  degree.  J.  E. 
secretary. 


Cooley, 


ZENITH  CHAPTER.  NO.  25, 
Order  of  Eastern  Star.  Reg- 
ular meetings  second  and 
fourth  Friday  evenings  of 
each  moT.th.  Next  meeting, 
Frlda> .  .March  26.  19e9.  Work, 
regular  business  and  iniation.  Gertrude 
Bates,  W.  M.;  Ella  F.  Gearhart,  secre- 
tary. 


^f- 


FOR    RENT — TWO    LARGE    FURNISH- 

ed  rooms  compute  lor  liousekeeping; 
water  i>aicl;  se\\  er,  oilet;  rent  rea- 
sonable.      722    East     Fifth    street. 

FURNISH- 

telephone. 


FOR 
ed 


RENT- 
rooms. 


-TWO   NICELY' 

witli    usp?      of 


EUCLID  LODGE.  NO.  198.  A. 
F.  &  A.  M,  —  Re.eular  meetings 
stcc^nd  and  fourtii  Wednes- 
day evenings  of  each  month 
at"  7:30  o'clock.  Next  meet- 
ing,  special,    March    10.    Work 

Second  degree.   Martin   J.   Murray,    W. 

M.;    A.    L>unleavy,    secretary. 


Call 
310 


evenings: 
East    First 


refe  ;-ences 
street. 


retiuired. 


FOR  REXr  —  FURN'ISHED  ROO.M. 
heat  and  bath:  eleciric  light.  $6.50 
per   month.      456    Me.saba   avenue. 

FOR     RENT^ —   NICEL  i 
five-room    Hat;    water 
month.      Apply    Mis. 
avenue   east. 


DULl^TH  CHAPTER.  NO  59. 
H  A.  M. — Meets  at  West  Du- 
luth first  and  third  Wednes- 
day.'- of  each  n.onth  at  7:30 
P    "m.    Next  meeting  March    17, 


FUIiNISHED 
paid;    $25    per 
Mair,    519    First 


PICTURE  FRAMING. 

GUSTAV    HENNECKETinTEr^SUP.   ST. 


— S.^LARY     AND     ("HATTEL    LOANS- 


301 


DT'LUTH    FINANCE    CO, 
J'alladio    Bldg.  Both   "phones. 


BOARD  OFFERED. 

Two  desirable  rooms  with  board  at  the 
Colonial.    16   W^est   Second   street. 

BOARD  OFFERED  —  FURNISHED 
rooms,  steam  heated,  with  or  with- 
out   board.    122    East    First   street. 


FOR  SALE  —  ADDRESSOGRAPHING 
machine,  cheap.  It  can  be  seen  at 
Bayha  &   Co."s. 


FOR  SALE— SAFES  AND  VAULTS 
opened,  combinations  changed;  fire 
and  burglar-proof  safes,  vault  doors, 
safety  deposit  boxes  and  bank  vaults. 
Christie  Lithograph  &  Printing  Co., 
Northwestern  agents.  Herring.  Hall, 
Marvin  Safe  company,  manufacturers 
of  the  original   Hall  safes. 


BOARD  OFFERED— A  CHANCE  FOR 
two  gentlemen  to  secure  board  and 
room  In  private  family:  East  end; 
walking  distance.  Zenith  'phone 
2138-D. 


BOARD     AND      NICKLY 
room   in    private   family 
Address   B.    53,    Herald. 


FURNISHED 
in    East   end. 


Room    and    board — 301    East    Third    St. 


Room    and    Board — 318    W.    Second    St. 


BOARD     AND     ROOM 
East   Third    street^ 


OFFERED — 426 


MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  PIANOS.  FUR- 
niture,  horses,  wagons  and  fixtures 
at  low  rates  and  on  small  payments. 
A  liberal  discount  if  paid  before  due; 
business   confidential. 

Y'OU    CAN    GET    IT    TOD.\Y. 

Security   Mortgage    Loan    Company, 

401     FIRST    NATIONAL     BANK     BLDG. 

Zenith  "phone,  612, 

MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  DIAMONDS^ 
watches,  furs  rifles,  etc..  and  all 
goods  of  value',  $1  to  $1,500.  Keystone 
Loan  &  Mercantile  Co..  16  W.  Sup.  St, 


PIANO  TUNING. 

C.   A.   (;REG0RY'.  ZENITH   "PHONE   606. 


CLOTHES  CLEANED  &  PRESSED 

Suits  pressed.  5oc:  pant=.  15c.  Ladles" 
skirts  cleaned  and  pressed,  50c.  Zen, 
1852-X.  .1.   Ortc-kovsky,   10   4th  Av.   W. 

Fine  ladies'  tailoring  a  specialty.  Bring 
your  alterations  and  re  lining  coats 
before  the  rush.  Mueller.  208  West 
First   street. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITAL^ 

PRIVATE  HOSPITAL— PROSPECTIVE 
mothers  will  find  a  pleasant  home 
during    confinement    at     the    Ashland 

best    of    doc- 
board    or 
Hess.     923 
Ashland,   Wis. 


FOR  RENT— NICELY 
comfortable  room  ii" 
lady,   all   conveniences. 


FURNISHED 

East       eiid     to 
K    87.    Heiald. 


W.    B 

secretary 


\Vork- 
(^etchell, 


Ro.v 
H.    P. 


Ai«l»     degree. 
A.    Dunleavey. 


UVLVTH 


UHKIK.     .N"0. 
•■\tr>      Krlda> 


28.     I      O.     O      r— MKKTM 

evMitng    nt     «>.Kl     KilKvis 
:i»«iiiii'  iicrtli     Nut   ii.«<tliig 
Wirk-Kir><    rt«git«.      W.   H 


reccinlli.g 


Mcntiifv ; 


l:cUf 

A.  n. 


pnii.d 


r..i«vin    n<r„~1r»in, 
CnaiK't&l    »nreur>. 


FOR    RENT— IN   BOARD      OF      TRADE 

building,  large  room  on  Third  ave- 
nue west:  also,  several  offices.  .Apply 
Secretary,    Room    209 


FOR  RE.XT— THoROlLHiLY  MODERN 
furnished  room.  Ref<*rences  required. 
116 i/s    West   Fourth   street.  

FOR  REXT  —  THREE  ROOMS  FOR 
housekeeping;     modern.  626    West 

Third    street. 


FOR  RENT  —  FIVE  AND  SEVEN 
rooms;  all  modern  ccnveiiience.«.  Ap- 
ply A.  H.  W.  Eckstuin,  301  Burrows 
building. 

FOR      RENT  —  NICELY     FURNISHED  I 
room.     224     West     Third     street,     St. 
Marco  fiats,  flat   F. 


K.    O.    T.    M 

pn.t'TH  TKNT  NC  1  MKKTS  KVFJIT 
Wttiiiiniin  unilne  .-n  Mic'a'xt  I.;ill,  2S4 
W«-l  Fin.t  hUn^t.  VlslMuK  ra*-iiit«rb  w»i- 
ifUK  A.  J.  .A:»<UT?on  c«.mm.iiul«-r.  6ul 
F;,«l  Four;li  urect;  J  B.  Ocliiieau.  r« - 
irtl  U<-Htr.  Oni't  111  Imll.  ni.iir«  10  a. 
Ui    u.    1   I',   m.     Zenith    jIk  iif   Ut'l-X. 


Materiiity    Home,    with 


tors:      confidential: 
adopt     Infants.       Mr.s 
Second    avenue   east. 


may 
K. 


Money  supplied  to  salaried  people  and 
others,  upon  their  own  names,  with- 
out security.  Easy  payments.  Offices 
In    66   cities.     Tolinans.    509    Palladlo. 


Furniture  and   salaried  loans  by  Union 
Loan  company.  303  Palladlo  building. 


MONEY      TO       LOAN— ANY     AMOUNT 

from  $500  to  $5,000,  on  improved  real 
estate.  No  delay.  J.  B.  Greenfield, 
306    Burrows    building. 


MONEY  LOANED  ON  PERSONAL 
PROPERTY.  Minnesota  Loan  com- 
pany.  205   Palladlo  building. 


M0NF:Y  to  LOAN— LOANS  MADE  ON 
farms  and  timber  claims.  Guaranty 
Farm  Land   Co.     416  Lyceum, 


MRS. 

HANSON 

GRADUATE 

MID- 

wife 

:   female   < 

■"omplaints. 

413   Se 

venth 

avenue    east. 

Oid     phone 

1594; 

Zen- 

ith   1 

225. 

Private  home  for  ladies  before  and 
during  confinement:  expert  care: 
everything  confidential:  infants  cared 
for.  "  Ida  Pearson.  M.  D..  284  Harrison 
avenue,  St.  Paul. 


Mrs.    H.    Olson,    graduate   midw 
hospital,  329  N.  58th  Av. 


vate 
3173. 


ife: 
W. 


prl- 
Zen, 


HOSPITAL  FOR  LADIES  DURING 
confinement.  Mrs.  W.  K.  Cody,  u08 
East  Lake    street.   Minneapolis. 


MRS.    ANNA    RONGE— Graduated    mid- 
wife, 2018  W.  .Sup.   St.    Phone  1894-D, 


FOR   RENT  —  LAR(;E,        DESIRABLE 

furnished  room;  all  conveniences.  316 
East    Second    street. 

FOR    RENT— A    BEAI'TIFUL,    LARGE 

furnished  room,  all  mo<lern  conven- 
iences, private  fanill>  ;  reasonable, 
320   East  Second  street. 


ili-iit 


MOl>I.I«N    S.-V  MAUI  TANS. 

A^i-'iA  (■of.\<n.  NO.   j-mi;ets   at 

Kl*."  I  »li  «\tr:.  ■riiuiv<l.i>  fvuiiiig  »t  8 
Cilodi  M«^iif!ici':it  lUgrif.  fir-t  jiiui  Ourd 
Tliursdio:  S.juiirli.ii.  ihaw.  se'^jnU  «nd 
t(.,.i:h  'jinirsJays.  A.  N«J»Mi.  C  ^  :  bu«7 

M.  fur.iy  L.  G.  1^;  '^  .."^  .*'"!'  ,/'": 
i.nili.1    K-nlo.     •it'l    KirA    Natloi-kl    lUuh 

ne     WallHit   r.    WellLKi.!.!..    fiil*.      AU    Sioujl- 

inutMl. 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  FRONT 
room  and  alcove,  heat,  light  and 
bath.      608*^5    West   Second   street. 


A      O.     V.    W.  ..„.,„ 

Fll'EUTT  t.o!»GE.  NO.  tOR-MmTS 
fil  M:.rc.iUt  twll.  2:24  W«~.t  FIret  street. 
o-..rv  "riu.i-s.lE.v  .It  8  J).  .11.  VIsSUiiS 
meiiit^rs  w.l.ci.if.  (Jut«  I»»lilin.  M. 
W. :  A.  I..  I'i  ring.  ncc.rd«T:  O.  J.  Mur- 
voKl.    fli.«iii»tr      '.li:    K»i»l    Fifth 


•tret 


FOR     RENT  —  A 
pleasant  furnished 
able    for     two   or 
singly;    modern, 
street. 


SL'ITE  OF  TWO 
front  rooms,  suit- 
lour,  or  rented 
£23     West    Second 


l>H.t"TH  borK;E.  NO,  K.,  A.  o  V.  w. 
— .Mett-  at  «Md  Fti'owy'  h.Hll,  l*  l.aW 
avcnvi*  IK  nil  .v.r>  Tii.'"'..iy  tvcijj.g  al 
S  (  fl:<k.  Vlsnine  l>:iiik--rs  wc.it.nie. 
N(r.i..-iii  J«.liu<iuii.  iiiiisur  wirkiiiui;.  H  Ci. 
Focit.  rc'<irdt-r:  T.  .1.  St.  Cit-nuaii..  fliiU-'J- 
citr    121   Kli*t  a^j-i.ue  wtsU  


FOR  RE.XT  —  L.^RGE  FURNISHED 
front  room,  first  f  1  Dor,  with  use  of 
telephone  and  bath;  suitable  for  man 
and  wife  or  two  gentlemen,  with  or 
without  board.  32!»  Fourth  avenue 
west.     Zenith    phone  778. 


I.     O.     K. 

roirtT  «-ommi:kce.  no    3283.  inde- 

im>iUi,t  O^K^  «if  Foi«-»t<rni.  lut'ctg  first 
ai:d  third  Friday  c\ei.iiigs  .-.t  S  ci"cl<xh 
i.t  Hiwley't,  hall.  Nu.  112  Wc*t  lltiX 
nr«<t.  Nfxt  K'giihir  mwlli.g,  FllOaj, 
Mi-Kii  iCth.  r.  A.  CariMiJ.  C. 
Hdios     It.    S. 


K.   W.,  W. 


LOST   AND   FOUND. 


DRESSMAKING. 


ARCHITECTS. 

Olsen   &  Magney,  513-14   Sellwood  Bldg. 
FRANK  L.  Y'OUN^&  CO..  201  Pal.  Bldg 


TENTS  AND  AWNINGS. 
PPIRIER    &    CO..    108    E.    Superior    St. 


FOR       S.ALE    —    ONE       OAK       PIANO, 

splendid  tone,  fine  action.  This  In- 
strument is  a  big  snap  for  the  lucky 
buv»-r.  Price  only  $175:  $10  cash  and 
$5  "a   month.     French  &   Bassett. 

For  .«a!e — Typewriters,  safes,  cash  reg- 
isters,  cabinets.    Edmont,   116   W,  Sup. 


FOR  SALE — 20-ft.  launch.  5-h.p.  Doman 
engine.   1908  model.     A  44,  Herald. 


PERSONAL  —  LE.\R.X  HYPNOTISM. 
Free  lessons  and  particulars.  Box 
152    Eatherville,   Iowa. 

Wanted  old  clothes,  furniture,  etc.  Sal- 
vation Army.  Old  1003-K;  new  2134-X. 


PERSO-X.VL-— PA  INTING 

hanging.     Zenith.   1518 


AJSJD   PAPER- 
-X.      C.   Gill. 


PERSONAL — OLD     .MIRRORS     RESIL- 

yeied.      St,   Germain   Bros..    121      First 
avenue    "fst. 


LIQUOR    HABIT   CURED, 

Prof.  J.  B.  Flssette,  Anti-Liquor  Cure; 
guarantees*  to  cure  the  worst  habit- 
ual drunkard  In  two  weeks,  or  mon- 
ey refunded.  No  danger  to  health. 
Investigate.  Testimonials,  advice  free. 
Gall    or    write    815    West    Superior    St. 


STENOGRAPHERS. 

TYPE^VRITLNG,  ^STENOGRAPHY    AND 
copying.      Lenox   hotel   notary. 

GRACE  BARNETT    FIRST  NAT.  BLI>G. 
E.  J.   FARRELL,  yccum  Bldg.  Old  2380. 


FOR  SALE  —  WOOD  AND  IRON- 
working  machinery:  sawmills,  edgers, 
lathmills,  saw  tables.  surfacers, 
sharpers.  Northern  Machinery  com- 
pany,    Minneapolis. 


PATENTS. 

PATENTS — ALL       ABOUT 
See  Stevens,  610  Sellwood 


PATENT.S. 
building'. 


BOARD  WANTED. 

BOARD   AND    ROOM    WANTED— LADY' 

desires  furnished  or  unfurnished 
room,  with  hoard.  Address  B  300, 
Herald. 


DRESSMAKING— RP:LIABLE  DRESS- 
maker  and  ladies'  tailor.  with  ten 
years'  experience  in  Twin  Cities,  will 
make  suits,  skirts  and  waists  at  rea- 
sonable prices.  All  work  guaran- 
teed. 331  West  Third  street.  Zenith, 
1602-A. 


MISS    VICTORIA    GAJEWSKI.    DRESS- 
making,  817  First  avenue  east. 


Mrs.      J, 
street. 


R.   SLOAN, 
Old  'phone 


119    WEST 
2137-L;  Zen 


FIRST 
2083-D 


FANCY"^   DRESSMAKING      AND      TAIL- 
oring.     515  East  Fourth   street. 


DRESSMAKING- 
can  be  secured 


-GOOD  DRESSMAKER 
by    1717-1... 


MILLINERY. 

A.    COX,    330    E.A.ST  ^m'RTH 


ST. 


M. 

MIJS.     BRANDT,  114  WEST  FOURTH  ST. 


Mrs.     J.     C.     Haglund. 
wife.  634   N.    o6th  Av 


graduated     mid- 
W.  Zen.   3174-D. 


WATCHES  REPAIRED, 

Guaranteed    -Main    Spring.    $1.00;    watch 
cleaned,  $1.     Garon  Bros..  213  W.   1st. 


UPHOLSTERING  &   REPAIRING. 

ED  OTT.   112  1st   Ave.  W.   Both  'phones. 


CUTTING    &    SEWING 


Pupils 
Third 


enter 

Poor. 


any     time— 
Grav-Tallant 


SCHOOL. 

Gray, 


-Miss 
Co. 


ASHES  AND  GARBAGE. 

ashes!  GAltiiAGE  ANlP'ma  N  U  R  E 
hauled.  Dick  Barrett,  Zenith  'phone. 
1274-Y, 


REMOVED — GUST    HOLMGREN, 

London  road.  Old  'phone.  331 -M. 


1906 


SHEET   METAL   WORKS. 

Roofing,  guttering,  eave  troughs,  con- 
ductor pipes  a  specialty.  H.  Popkin, 
29   Fifth   avenue  west.   Zenith   2062-D. 


CARPET  CLEANING. 

INTERSTATE  CARPET  CLEANING 
Co..  Slnotte  &  Van  Norman,  com- 
pressed air  cleaners  and  rug  weavers. 
Both   'phones.      1701-03    W.   Mich.   St. 


TIMBER   LANDS, 

SIIELD<JN->IATrHKR'¥lMBER  CO.  309 
Fist  .\ational  Bank  bldg.     'Phones. 

TIMBER  AND  CUT-OVER  LANDS 
bought:  mortgage  loans  made.  John 
y.  A.  Crosby.  209  Palladlo  building. 


buy    standing    timber:    also    cut-over 
lands.    Geo.  Rupley,  322  Lyceum  bldg. 


The  Duluth  Herald  is  a 
Woman's  Newspaper 


It  publishes  more  news  and  features  of  interest  to  women  than  any  other  news- 
paper in  Northern  Minnesota.  It  is  first  in  society  news,  first  in  dub  news,  first 
in  book  news,  first  in  many  other  special  departments,  which  particularly  appeal  to 
women  who  manage  the  home.  The  Herald  has  been  a  woman's  newspaper  for  a 
great  many  years  and  it  has  been  the  main  reliance  of  the  dry  goods  and  depart- 
ment stores.  During  that  time  it  has  built  up  a  subscription  list  in  the  homes  of 
Duluth  women,  that  no  other  newspaper  can  interfere  with.  Any  advertiser  who 
wishes  to  increase  his  sales  to  women,  can  do  so  by  increasing  his  advertising  in 
The  Herald. 


IF    YOU     LOSE    ANYT4ING— Advertise    It 

riere.  It  wll!  K-  rctun.eii  to  ycu  If  an  hnnMt 
H-tson  fliils  It.  Iteiuarlalile  rciinerles  ais 
Lrcugbt  about  every  <lay  t  iruugh  lids  column. 

IF   YOU    FIND   ANYTHING   Irlng  U  to  the 

HERALD   CiFFICE. 

Get  t  claim  check.  Have  It  advertiaed. 
Krclalm  It  If  the  owner  d.'<%  not. 

THE  LAW— '"Every  ptiscn  who  shall  find 
lost  picptrty  under  clriuiifliincfs  which  gave 
him  kncwhdgc  cr  menub  t  inquiry  us  to  th* 
true  owner,  who  shuU  ap:  )r  frtale  'i^'''  prop- 
erly to  his  own  use.  'ir  U  llic  utc  of  another 
person  not  entitled  there  lo,  without  having 
first  made  reasonable  cffo -t  to  flud  the  owner 
and  restore  the  prcptrty  to  hlra.  »L9ll  b« 
guilty  ot  larceny"— Seci  Ion  iol>6,  licrUed 
Laws,    Minutsota,    !9U5. 


\Vt*;    'li^ru 


TNITF.P  OKriKIl  OF  FORKSTKllS— 
Ni  Ith  Star  No.  4P.  mett*  trverj  second 
ind  fourth'  Mondays  at  f.  O.  F.  hall. 
orncr  Fourth  .iTtiiuc  wo«t  and  First 
.met  M.  E.  J<.'ln.  <•.  It  .  2  t>»bornc 
Mock  K.  M.  Stewart.  «e<nijiry.  2i2  Thirl 
nvenu't  vc.-t;  H.  Jl  Youi:a.  treasurer,  63i 
nr»et;   17:<:i-K,   oid   'phone. 


I'NITKIi  OliDKll  OF  KOKKSTKItS- 
Cxu:n  K.istcrn  Stiir.  No.  8b.  n.eetM 
eicrv  first  and  tlilid  Tuesdays  at  U.  0_ 
r  h.iU  corner  Fourih  a\er.ue  w« -t  ai.d 
First  tlr^el.  A.  1..  Foottr.  V.  It,  IC'7 
liist  Ninth  street;  »'.  K.  r»>il.  McrcLiry, 
?  West  Suiicrlor  strot:  Harry  .Mllues. 
Hooiu    r.i,    Wlnlhrop    block:    Zenllu     phon* 


M. 

IMrKKlAL 

!it  Stein" av 
Fir«t    stnet 
cf   eaci; 
F.    E 


W      A. 
(AMP   NO. 

h«ll.   Foiiith 

scec'Ud   and 

uicni;i. 

I»i  r«niu8. 


2206  —  MEETS 
atenue  ncft  and 
touith    TutM'taj't 


consul. 


c'.    P.    K;irl.    cUt'k.    Box    411. 


LOST— FRIDAY  MORNLVG,  A  LARGE 
black  and  white  d>g.  i'inder  plea.^e 
return  to  2801  Wellington  street,  or 
call    old     phone    17i9-L. 

LOST— MARCH  15,  ON  SUPERIOR 
street,  small  purst  containing  sum 
of  money.  Einder  receive  reward  at 
1209   London    Road 


FOUND  —  LADIES'  GOLD  WATCH. 
Owner  can  have  sane  by  identifying 
and  paying  charges  1018  East  Si.xth 
street. 

AF- 

Re- 

New 


LOST— DOWN     TOWi;     MONDAY 

ternoon,  siring  of  small  coral, 
turn  for  reward  tc  Dr.  Parks, 
Jersey    building,  


KOl'ND— FUR  NECK  PIECE.  CALL 
130"  East  Fourth  K:rfcfct,  prove  prop- 
erty  and   pay   for  a  1. 


LOST    —    BETWEEN       EIGHTH       AND 

Eighteenth  avenues  east  on  London 
road,  satciiel  enginrtr's  tools.  Finder 
please  return  for  reward  to  A.  Carl- 
son. 191.5  West  F  rst  street.  New 
■phone   1677- Y. 


FOUND— A  DIAMO>D  BROOCH.  I.N 
cathedral.  Finder  prove  property. 
Call   Matt  Hackatt,  at  Cathedral. 


Sparkf. 


NOliTH    STAU   LOlHiK   NO.    5 
— MciPlf     «v«r>     Tuewlay     night 
hall.     Ub     W"«5«     Sur«rlor 
n!<-<ll!ie        Ti.esila.^ 
Wrrk-Har.k    "f 
wclcoinc.      Ix/ids 
«f    It.    and    S. 


K.    of   P. 

at    Elka' 

stret-t.       Next 

e«<ning.      MmTcIi      IH- 

Page,     visiting     Knlghta 

Ltworshak,    C.    C. ;   L    L. 


mteUnt 


ri,AN  STi;WAKT.  NO.  RO.  O.  8.  C. - 
Mwts  first  and  third  Wednesdays  each 
im.Tilh.  h  p.  m..  Folz  hall.  116  We<<t  Su- 
perior street.  .Mexaniler  «i.  .Mclxnignt. 
ildef;  iK.n  M.  Lcnnan.  'eintar.v:  Joiin 
Huinett.  flnamial  »ecrit;.rj,  412  Finit 
Naiunid  B.»iik  buiUUng.  Next  regular 
.March  17.    l*M'-<-     Ihiuciug  from  1'  to  i::  p.   m. 


miYAL  LKACifE. 
ZlMTll  CtilNriL.  NO.  161.  ItOY.M. 
I.«i:».-iM— Meets  In  Klk«'  haU  first  ai«l 
third  Mondaj  cvenli  gs  fit  8  o'clock  CJ. 
L  Hiircraves.  «rile.  care  of  Nmiheni 
si,<.e  coinpan.N;  W.  W  Booth,  archon. 
care   <f   .Marshail-Weils.         


WOOI'MEN    OF    Till.    WOltI.l». 
Z::.MTH    CITT    <  AMP     NO.    5.— MEETS 

e^fn  secfnd  i.nd  fiurth  We<lne*day»  at 
the  old  Masoiil.-  temple,  lllth  floor  John 
Hangcn  C  C  :  A  M  Holmes  totiker. 
T20  We't  Fifth  sii*»-t.  "at  K;  KoKrt 
Forsyth,     clerk.     817     ICast    .<eccnd    Etrt^t. 


LOST— A  POCKETB4JOK  ON  EAST 
Third  street  and  Fifty-seventh  ave- 
nue west  car.  about  li;:30  p.  m.  Sun- 
d.iv.  Finder  is  kn:>wn.  Save  further 
trouble  by  leaving  siime  at  2007  Pied- 
mont avenue  for   reward 


ZF.NITH  CITY  TENT.  NO.  1044. 
Knights  of  the  Mo<ler.  Maccabee..  m«eU 
e»er>  swnd  and  f<  urth  Friday  erenlrun 
of  each  mi  nlh  in  Ma<-<al«e  hall.  224 
We-t  First  s:r«t.  It.  M  Hlkir 
mander:  f  H.  UKnds.  H.  K..  Io30 
Z.nlth     phone   2243-T. 


cf.m- 
Weal 


hOYAL  .'^UrANt'M,  DuhUh  Council.  No. 
HSS.  rnetls  first  and  third  Ktlday  cren- 
Ing?,  Elks'  haU.  ('Union  Urcuks.  »oc- 
rclary.    il'l    Burrows    huildlng. 

Me«al«    Council.    No.     il»43.    meets    first 
anil    tljrd   Wedjiesday    ettnlngs.    t'olumhl* 
hill.    Wett   end.      A.    M.    Jchnscii,    »«cr«- 
Norih   Tweutieth   afe&ue   west. 


wm 


■ii-s-ti  p. 


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t ' 


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r  r 


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w»>  1    ■ 


ate. 


irihMk 


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rr 


,1, 

1  HISTORICAL 


nil  too  in 


heSDULUTH  T^.VTi^NTNa  HERALD.  n« 


TWENTY-SIXTH  YEAR. 


LAST    EDITION. 


WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  17, 1909. 


TWO  CENTS. 


"m 


V 


AJUki  Ji.-ij  A%. 


OF  ST.  PATRICK  WILL  ALWAYS  BE  K 


JL^JLJ 


t^ 


LJii 


IRON  ORE  TONNAGE  TAX 


BILL  APPROACHES  VOTE 
IN  STATE  LEGISUTIRE 


Expected    That    House 
Kill  Give  Good  Major- 
ity Against  Bill 

House  Passes  Bill  Allow- 
ing Boxing  Matches 
in  Larger  Cities. 

Also  Adopts  Measure  Per- 
mitting Clubs  to  Dis- 
pense Liquors. 


FRANK  SHERWIN,  MISSING 


CASHIER,  IS  HEARD  FROM; 
IN  DENVER  AND  IS  WELL 


He  Has  Been  Living  In 

Denver  Since  Leaving 

Duluth. 


(Krom    A    Staff    Correspondent.) 

St.  Paul,  Minn..  March  17.— iSpecial 
to  The  Herald.)— The  tonnage  tax  bill 
was  a  special  order  In  the  house  for 
this  afternoon,  and  debate  upon  it 
began  shortly  after  1:30.  the  hour  set 
for  the  consideration  of  the  Bjorge 
meapure.  The  prospects  were  that  the 
arguments  would  continue  until  late 
in  the  afternoon,  but  that  a  votff  would 
be  taken  today  by  which  the  bill 
would  be  defeated.  The  outlook  this 
morning  was  that  it  would  be  beaten 
at  least  a  little  worse  than  it  was  two 
years  ago.  when  there  were  51  for  and 

58  against  it. 

•  •      • 

The  house  this  morning  passed  the 
Greene  bill  allowing  city  councils  in 
Duluth,  Sit."  Paul  and  Minneapolis  to 
permit  regulated  boxing  matches,  ine 
vote   was   61   to  49. 

•  •      • 

There  was  a  hot  debate  over  the  bill 
allowing  clubs  to  dispense  liqtiors  to 
their  members  without  paying  the  sa- 
loon license  fee.  and  the  measure  was 
adopted.  6o  for  and  56  against.  This 
(Continued    on    pageTl.   sixth   column.) 

FRIENDLY  TO 
NEW  REGIME 

Germany's  Attitude  To- 
ward Venezuelans  Is 
Made  Clear. 

Berlin.  March  17.— Foreign  Minister 
von  Schoen  received  Jose  de  J.  Paul  to- 
day and  assured  the  Venezuelan  com- 
missioner of  Germany's  good  will  to- 
ward   the    government      of      President 

Gomez. 

Senor  Paul  thanked  the  foreign  min- 
ister for  Germany's  good  offices  In 
the  dispute  between  Venezuela  and 
Holland  Senor  Paul  probably  will  be 
received  in  audience  by  Emperor  Wn- 
[fam  later  in  the  week.  Paul  does  not 
belR've  Ciprlano  Castro,  former  presi- 
dent of  Venezuela,  who  is  now  at  Dres- 
den, will  return  to  Venezuelan  soil.  If 
he  seeks  to  land  in  Venezuela  he  will 
be  arrested;  so  he  probably  will  land 
at    Trinidad.  ^     .„      ,    „„i,i 

The  French  government,  Paul  said 
today,  will  pay  no  attention  to  Senor 
^astro  on  his  way  through  France  to 
take  the  steamer  Guadeloupe  at  13oi- 
deaux,  March   L*6. 

CHARGE  TO 


H.    O.    BJORGE 

Of  Lake  Park,  Minn.,  Author  of  the 

Iron  Ore  Tonnage  Tax  Bill. 

BLUNDERED^ 
INTO^HOLE 

House  WorRed  All  After- 
noon on  Tax  Bill 
Without  Result. 

Many  Measures  Affecting 

Railroads  Favored  by 

House  Committee. 


(From    a    Staff    CorreNpondcnt.) 

St.  Paul.  Minn.,  March  17.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  house  yesterday 
afternoon  bravely  marclied  up  the  hill, 
and  tl'.en  precipitately  retreated  down 
the  hill,  arriving  at  the  bottom  a  little 
further  behind  than  It  was  at  the  be- 
ginning of  an  afternoon's  hard   work. 

Three  tax  bills,  recommended  by  the 
tax  commission,  were  a  special  order, 
and  all  the  house  did  was  to  consider 
one  of  them,  to  reject  a  number  of 
amendments  to  it,  to  heat  the  bill  by 
an  overwhelming  vote,  and  then  to  re- 
consider its  action  unanimou.sly  and 
put  off  consideration  of  tlie  special  or- 
der  for   more   than   a    week. 

The  bill  considered  was  that  provid- 
ing for  the  valuation  of  all  property 
at  its  actual  worth,  and  assessments 
at  40  per  cent  of  that  basis,  in  order  to 
provide  uniformity  in  assessments  all 
over  the  state. 

The  law  now  states  that  all  property 
shall   be    assessed    at    its    full    value    in 

(Continued   on   page   4.   first   column.) 

"STRAY  BULLET." 
YOUTH  EXPLAINS 


Mystery   of  Disappear- 
ance Solved  by  Letter 
to  Employer. 

Offers  No  Lucid  Explan- 
ation of  Departure 
From  Duluth. 

Frank  T.  Sherwln,  the  missing  cash- 
ier of  the  American  Express  company, 
whose  strange  disappearance  Jan.  30 
attracted  the  attention  of  the  entire 
Northwest  and  threatened  to  remain 
always  unsolved.  Is  alive  and  well  in 
Denver,   Colo. 

George  F.  Kennedy,  local  manager 
for  the  American  Express  company, 
received  a  letter  from  Sherwin  this 
morning,  stating  that  he  was  out  of 
his  head  when  he  left  Duluth  and  could 
only  account  for  Ills'  presence  In  Den- 
ver by  the  fact  that  he  had  regained 
Ids  senses  in  a  measure,  and  was  tired 
of  riding. 

Sherwin'a  letter  to  Mr.  Kennedy  doet) 

(Continued   on  page  4,   fifth   column.) 

TWO  WYCLIFFES 
ARE  ACQUITTED 

State    Fails   to   Prove 

That  They  Killed 

Marshal 

Tahequah,  Okla.,  March  17. — Thomas 
and  John  NN'ycliffe,  on  trial  for  the 
killing  tf  Isaac  Gilstrap,  a  deputy 
United  States  marshal,  were  acquitted. 
Gilstrap  was  killed  In  1906,  In  a  sensa. 
tional  fight  with  a  band  of  men  sup- 
posed to  liave  been  the  Wycllffes  ,in 
Spavlnaw  Hills. 

The  state  failed  to  establish  clearly 
the    identity    of    the    marshal's    slayers. 

The  Wycllffes,  accused  of  numerous 
crimes,  had  been  hunted  by  officers  for 
half  a  dozen  years. 


IRON  ORE  IS  ON  FREE  LIST, 
STEEL  DUTY  CUT  ONE-HALF 
IN  PROPOSED  TARIFFLAW 

No  Duty  on  Coffee,  But 

Eight  to  Nine  Cents 

on  Tea. 


FRANK  T.  SHERWIN 


WILL  TRY  LONG 
JOURNEY  IN  AIR 


Indianapolis.  Ind.,  March  17.— The 
Aero  club  of  Indiana  has  received 
word  from  its  engineer,  G.  U  Bum- 
baugh  in  Los  Angeles,  tliat  he  will  at- 
tempt a  trip  by  balloon  from  that  city 
to  Indianapolis  and  will  be  accompan- 
ied   by   C.    A.    Coey    of   Chicago. 

Bumbaugh,  qualifying  as  an  aero 
pilot,  increases  the  number  of  pilots 
in  the  United  States  to  twenty-one.  He 
is  to  be  in  Indianapolis,  April  1  to  in- 
struct members  of  the  Aero  club  In 
ballooning  In  preparation  for  the  Inter- 
national   contest    June    B. 


ttli***rMti^t******t***t******'*'^********'****^ 


SALIENT  FEATURES  OF 

THE  PAYNE  TARIFF  BILL 

Steel  and  lumber  duties  reduced  50  per  cent. 

Iron  ore  and  hides  put  on  free  list. 

Big  reduction  in  tariff  on  boots  and  shoos. 

Wood  pulp  free  and  print  paper  duties  reduced. 

Lower  duties  cn  sugar  and  starch. 

Coffee  free,  but  tea  taxed  8  to  9  cents. 

Beer  and  whisky  unchanged.  Cigarette  ta>:  raised. 

Inheritance  tax  provision  similar  to  New  York 

law.  ,     .   .  I      • 

Tariff  made  on  maximum  and  minimum  l)asis. 
New  tariff  expected  to  add  $40,000,000  to  $50,- 

000,000  to  government's  revenue. 


i^,iHMHtHMH|HMHl^i|HMHfc-^^*»»» 


ij(-i)(  )i(y}Hit>yyyy***  *'^  y  y  ^ 


I 


*  GOOD    OVLl)    <;0  tT 
^  FRO.M  I»KL\M>  (ilVKX  • 
^                       TO  WARSHIP,  B'GOBI   * 

•)|j  M^ 

^  Boj^lon,  Mass.,  3Iarch  17. —  * 
^  Skeliig  Molir,  a  K"»t  from  the  * 
^it  Kerry  mountnins  of  Ireland  and  ^ 

*  renownetl  for  the  litigation  he  * 
^  ha.H  eaiiso«l  In  the  lower  and  * 
^  higher  eourt.s  of  3fassaehusetts,  * 
^  was   yesterday    presente<l    to    the  * 

*  battleship  \  erniont  as  that  ves-  ^^ 
^  set's  niastH)t,  an<l  thus  ended   by  * 

*  eonipronilse  the  eontest  in  the  * 
^  courts  over  his  ownership.  ¥^ 


CUBAN  OUTBREAK 
CAUSES^  DEATH 

Former  Captain  of  Rural 

Guard  Shot  to 

Death. 

Havana.  March  17.— The  outbreak  in 
Vueltas,  Santa  Clara  province,  ha.^i 
scored  Its  first  fatality.  Lavastlda,  a 
former  captain  of  the  rural  guard,  was 
shot  and  killed  by  the  detachment  of 
the  guard  sent  out  to  arrest  him. 

Lavastlda  was  reported  last  night 
officially  as  having  been  arrested  at 
Placetas  on  the  charge  of  complicity 
in   the   Insurrectionary   movement. 

It  is  rumored  the  uprising  Is  more 
serious  than  the  authorilles  are  will- 
Tng  to  admit.  President  Gomez  is  in 
receipt  of  many  telegrams  from  off  - 
cials  veteran  organizations  and  pri- 
vate culzlns  pledging  loyalty  and 
active  support  In  the  maintenance  of 
the   republic^ 

SHOE  FACTORIES  WILL 

RUN  AS  OPEN  SHOPS. 

Portsmouth,  Ohio,  March  17.— Ports- 
mouth shoe  manufacturers  have  with- 
drawn their  final  proposition  of  com- 
promise to  the  striking  shoe  lafters 
and  announced  that  factories  will  be 
opened  and  operated  as  open  shops 
after  March  22. 


DEMOCmS 
WILL  BIND 

House  Mcmbcrj;  Arc  To 

Have  Stringent  Caucus 

Rules. 


Approval  of  Committee 

Assignments  Is  Left 

to  ClarK. 


^  w  ^  ^  w 


()H»»»»»»*)K*****.K»*»**^^>H»*^' *»*»»*»*****: 


y  y  y  yjm  y  y  y  ^  y  .y  ^ 

ryy  ^k  )ti  jf .  ^^  jy.  >n  Jt>  .^.^^  jt>  os  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^ -f -^ -.t- -,^  t- -r- -,  -.■ -, ^ 

WHEN  THE  AMERICAN  ST.  PATRICK  SPENDS  THE  DAY  IN  AFRICA. 


|<,-«.i>  11.111  >(«■>»«»«»»»*»»««*»*»»»»»*»***»*»***»»««************************* 


Tuc    II  \nv  Staggers  Into  Drug  Store 
I  nil  JUK  I      With  Wound  In  the 

BacK. 


Address  of  Judge  Hart 
TaKes  Thirty  Thou- 
sand Words. 


V. 


"Innocent   Till    Proved 

Guilty,"  the  Jurist 

Reminds. 


Nashville,  Tenn..  March  17.— Judge 
Hart  took  30,000  words  to  charge  the 
jury  today  in  the  case  of  tlie  Coopers 
ami  John  Sharp,  charged  with  the  kill- 
ing of  ex-Senator  Carmack.     The  judge 

said: 

•'While  the  indictment  contains  but 
one  charge  upon  Its  face  in  contempla- 
tion  of   law,    it   embraces   four   distinct 

felonies: 

'■3Iurder  in  the  flr.'^t  degree;  murder 
In  the  second  degree;  manslaughter, 
and    involuntary    manslaughter. 

J-jdse  Hart  outlinid  the  legal  defini- 
tions of  the  various  crimes  reading 
copiously  from  penal  statutes.  .tie 
eo.nluded    by    saying: 

•l-ievious  threats  by  the  deceased 
against  the  defendant,  or  acts  of  hos- 
lilitv  towards  him.  or  previous  abuse 
of  bim.  how  violent  soever  it  may  liaye 
have  been  or  trespasses  upon  liis 
pioperty,  is  not  such  provocation  as 
the  law  recogni7.es  as  sufficient  to  re- 
duce an  unlawful  killing  to  manslaugh- 
ter, if  the  killing  was  done  at  such 
time  as   had   passed   after  these   things 


(Continued  on  page  11,  second  column) 


Chicago,  March  17. —  Robert  Schultz, 
17  years  old,  who  says  he  came  to 
Chicago  from  Milwaukee  last  Monday 
In  search  of  work,  staggered  into  a 
West  side  drug  stor^  mis  morning 
with  a  bullet  wound  in  his  back.  "I've 
been  shot  by  a  stray  bullet,"  the  youth 
gasped   as   he  sank   to   the   floor. 

The  police  were  summoned  and  re- 
moved tiie  wounded  man  to  the  hospi- 
tal, where  he  is  in  a  serious  condition. 
He  says  that  lie  was  walking  on  Mon- 
roe street  near  Clark  at  3:30  a.  m. 
when  he  heard  a  shot  and  fell  a  sting- 
ing in  his  back.  He  saw  no  one  fire 
the  shot. 

BROWN  ELECTED 
AS  POSTMASTER 

Little  Falls   Contest  Is 

Settled  by  Popular 

Vote. 

Little  Falls,  Minn..  March  17— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — In  the  postmaster 
contest  yesterday.  Kthan  Brown,  for 
the  past  eiglit  years  assistant  post- 
master, won  by  a  vote  of  224  to  90  for 
the  next  highest  candidate.  There 
were  fifteen  candidates  in  the  field, 
thirteen  Republicans  and  two  Demo- 
crats. The  latter  received  a  total  of 
flftv-tliree  votes.  Business  men  fav- 
ored Brown,  and  the  choice  Is  satis- 
factory to  all.  The  total  vote  cast  was 
896    of  which  fifteen  were  tlirown  out. 

.Mrs.  Clara  E.  Fuller  is  tiie  present 
postmistress,  and  will  hold  office  until 
February.  1910. 


Washington,  March  17. — After  a 
stormy  debate  over  the  failure  of 
twenty-two  Democrats  of  the  house  to 
abide  by  the  party  cauc as  on  the  rules 
fight,  the  nouse  Democratic  caucus  de- 
cided to  liave  a  select  committee  draft 
more  stringent  rules  to  govern  future 
caucuser. 

The  adoption  of  the  resolution  was 
preceded  by  one  of  the  most  bitter  de- 
bates heard  In  a  Democratic  caucus  for 
several  seasons,  over  a  resolution 
directing  Minority  Lead?r  Clark  to  ap- 
prove Speaker  Cannon'n  appointments 
of  Representative  Francis  Burton  Har- 
rison of  New  York  and  Representative 
Broussard  of  Louisiana,  as  Democratic 
members  of  the  committee  on  ways 
and  msans.  Both  men  voted  for  the 
Fitzgerald  amendments  to  the  house 
rules,  but  Broussard  vo  ed  witli  the  Re- 
publicans on  other  qutstlons  during 
the  rules  fight.  ,    , 

The  resolution  was  presented  by 
Representative  Pujo  of  Louisiana.  Aft. 
er  an  hour's  debate.  Chairman  Clayton 
ruled  that  the  resolutioi  proposed  was 
covered  by  the  resolut  on  adopted  by 
the   caucus    Monday   night,    leaving   the 


Provision  Made  for  the 

Free  Admission  of 

Wood  Pulp. 

Inheritance  Tax  Proposed 

Similar  to  the  New 

York  Law. 

]|[  ■  11* 

^  WaMhlnjcton,  March  17. — Down-  ^ 
ijf  ward  rfvislon,  maximum  and  * 
^  mlniniuiii  provlnlouH,  which  Im-  • 
^  puHc  an  avcruKc  maximum  duty  of  * 
■#•  UO  per  cent  In  excess  of  the  pre«-  •fj 
*  ent  tariff,  and  numerous  pro-  * 
^  vImIoum  by  which  It  In  CKtimated  » 
^  that  the  revenue  to  the  Kovrnment  ^ 
I  will  be  lucr.a«ed  from  »40.<M»0,««0  4t 
^  to  l(!,'M),0m»,(M(0.  are  the  Nalient  fea-  4> 
Jlf  tnrea  of  the  new  tariff  bill,  which  4jl 
«  was  introduced  In  the  house  to-  • 
$  day  by  IleprcNcntatlve  Sereno  K.  * 
^  Payne,  chairman  of  the  ways  and  <|» 
^  means    committee.  ♦ 

The  recommendations  made  by  Presi- 
dent Taft  that  an  Inheritance  tax  b« 
provided  and  that  a  limited  amount 
of  tobacco  and  sugar  be  admitted  free 
from  the  Philippines,  are  included  In 
the  bill.  The  measure  also  provides 
for  the  Issuance  of  Panama  canal 
bonds  to  the  amount  of  $40  000,000  to 
reimburse  the  treasury  for  the  original 
purchase  of  tlie  canal,  and  re-enact« 
the  provision  for  the  issue  of  treasury 
certificates,  the  amount  being  Increased 
from    $100,000,000    to    |250.000.000. 

While  there  is  no  duty  imposed 
upon  coffee,  tea  is  taxed  8  cents  when 
Imported  from  the  country  where  it  is 
produced  and  9  cents  from  other  than 
the    producing    country. 


(Continued  on  page   11,   second  column) 

EIGHT  mm 

SIAIN  IN  FIGHT 

Constabulary  lias  Brisk 

Brush  With  Hostile 

Filipinos. 

Manila,  March  17. — A  belated  dispatch 
from  Lake  Lanao  repo  ts  that  a  band 
of  hostile  Moros  attaclted  Lieut.  Fur- 
long's detachment  of  :onstabulary  at 
Bordong  March  8,  and  after  a  sharp 
fight  Moros  and  two  members  of  the 
constabularv  were  left  dead  on  the 
field,  while  two  soldiers  and  one 
civilian    were   wounded. 

A  company  of  the  Twenty-fifth  In- 
fantry rnd  a  detachment  of  scouts 
have  gone  to  the  aiJ  of  Furlongs 
forces.  ^    . 

The  dav  af*er  the  f  i  ?ht  a  constabu- 
lary soldier  deserted,  after  stealing 
five  rifles  belonging  to  members  of 
the  detachment 

TAFT  TO  BiriN 
THE  WRIGHT  FETE 

President  Will  Assist  in 

Honoring  the  Aer«- 

planists. 

Dayton,  Ohio,  March  17. — The  pro- 
posed reception  to  the  Wright  broth- 
ers on  their  return  to  their  native  city 
will  be  possessed  of  national  interest. 
President  Taft,  the  secretaries  of  war 
and  navy  and  Goverr  or  Harmon  will 
be    present. 

A  committee  has  b.;en  appointed  to 
wait  on  the  president,  who  has  already 
signified  his  desire  to  take  part  in  the 
ceremonies  the  date  for  which  will 
irobably  be  the  latter  part  of  June. 

The  celebrated  aviators  have  prom- 
ised to  give  an  exhibition  flight.  The 
festivities  will  be  continued  over  tw.- 
days  and  the  plans  embrace  an  elab- 
'  urate   banquet. 


»*      '    I 


'■■■■■-< 


9k.  The  Intcrual  revenue  tax  on  ^ 
^  clKarettes  In  materially  Increased,  « 
£  while  the  tax  on  beer  and  whlNkj  1^ 
±  Is  undlHturbed.  A  cut  €»f  50  per  ^ 
A  cent  Is  made  in  the  steel  and  lum-  ^ 
her  scheduler.  Iron  ore,  hides,  W 
tallow,  cottonseed  oil,  and  works  • 
of  art  more  than  twenty  years  » 
old,  are  placed   on   the    free   list.        J 

The  tariff  on  boots  and  shoes  Is  re- 
duced 4't  per  cent  and  on  other  leather 
manufactures  in  proportion.  The  pot- 
tery schedule  remains  about  the  same, 
but  the  dutlef.  on  window  and  plate 
elass  of  the  smaller  sizes,  are  in- 
creased, while  the  duties  on  the  larger 
sizes  afe  reduced.  The  tariff  on  wool 
of  the  lirst  and  second  class  used 
principally  In  clothing,  is  not  dis- 
turbed, but  on  wool  of  the  third  class, 
known  as  carpet  wool,  it  is  reduced 
on  the  cheaper  grades.  A  o-cent  re- 
duction is  made  on  the  duties  in  shod- 
dy and  waste,  while  wool  tops  are  as- 
sessed 6  cents  a  pound  more  than  Iho 
duty    on    scoured    wool,    which    Is    un- 

'^'^Thf'^^'recommendatlons  for  placlnff 
wood  pulp  on  the  free  list  »"<!  re- 
ducing the  duties  on  print  paper,  with 
certain   restrictions,  made  by  the  Mann 

(Continued    on   page_  3,  second  column.) 

SIX  KILLED 
ir^DEPOT 

Boston  &  Maine  Engine 
Crashes  Imo  the  Wind- 
sor Station. 

Plunges  Through  Brick 

Wall    Into  Ladies' 

Waiting  Room. 


Montreal,  March  17.— Six  persons 
were  killed  and  several  seriously  In- 
jured when  a  locomotive  attached  to 
a  Boston  &  Maine  train,  early  today, 
crashed  through  the  walls  of  the  la- 
dies' waiting  room  at  ilie  W  indsor  sta- 
tion, here.  ,  „#   « 

The  train,  which  was  made  up  of  a 
locomotive,  baggage  car,  and  three  pas- 
senger coaches,  had  but  few  passen- 
gers or  the  accident  might  have  been 
much    more    serious. 

When  passing  Highland  station,  a 
few  miles  from  Montreal,  a  plug  blew 
out  of  the  engine  and  the  engineer 
was  thrown  from  his  cab.  The  fire- 
man tried  to  stop  the  train  but  found 
the    brakes    would    not    work. 

Arriving  at  the  Windsor  station,  the 
train  plunged  through  several  barriers 
and  a  brick  wall,  fetching  up  »n  the 
ladies'  waiting  room  and  crashing 
tlirough     the    floor. 

The  fireman  wajr  pinned  beneath  tne 
wreck  and  Instantly  killed.  A  nian 
at  work  In  the  room  below  the  waiting 
room,  was  also  killed.  Another  vic- 
tim was  a  little  girl  who  was  sitting 
in    the    station    walling    for    a    train.. 


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THE    DXJI-UTH    EVENING    HERALD:      WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909. 


■PP 


*«s-i 


r \ 

\\i: ATMKR  —   Iprrcnslng     rloudlnww     with     sn'<w  ■ 
r!  iMps    UI«    toiilght    or    TUiusUay;    lialng    tern-   • 

I'l  rii'jrrt. 

KNOX 


yjrw  Yojuc. 
World*R.eno^«med 

HATS 

Spring  Styles  Ready 


V. 


Superior  St.  at  4th  Ave.  W. 


GUILTY,  SAYS 
LAllRIN  JURY 

Young  Man  Convicted  of 

Assault  In  District 

Court. 


Jurors  TooK  But  Twenty 

Minutes  to  Reach 

Verdict 


Did  You  Hear 
Qal  Stewart  ? 


You  can  hear  his  quaint  hu- 
mor right  in  your  own  home  if 
you  want  to.  You  never  could 
tell  the  difference,  'either — as 
lifelike,  as  perfect  and  clear  as 
though  "Cal"  were  talking  to 
you  himself. 

French  &  Bassett  have  all  of 
Cal  Stewart's  famous  records — 
its  the  place  to  get  thetn.  If 
you  don't  own  a  Victor  Machine 
you  ought  to  have  one.  A  Vic- 
tor is  the  greatest  entertainer  in 
the  world.  French  &  tiassett 
have  a  plan  that  gives  you  one, 
and  on  easy  payment.*. 


It  took  a  Jury  but  twenty  minutes 
this  mornlnK  to  find  Alplionse  Laurin 
guilty  of  the  crime  of  criminally  as- 
saulting Edna  Stahbrodt  on  the  Her- 
mantown  load  Feb.  19.  After  brief  ar- 
j,'uments  by  the  atorneys  for  the  state 
and  the  defense,  the  case  was  given 
to  the  Jury  at  11:10  and  the  verdict 
was   returned  twenty  minutes  later. 

Laurin  went  on  the  stand  in  his  own 
behalf,  but  his  story  wasn't  exactly 
favorable  to  him.  He  said  he  didn  t 
remember  anytliing  that  transpired  on 
the  evening  he  is  alleged  to  have  com- 
mitted the  crime.  He  said  he  had  been 
drinking  In  the  afternoon,  and  had 
."Started  for  home  about  6  o'clock.  He 
said  he  didn't  remember  anything  after 
that.  He  .said  If  he  committed  the 
irimo.  he  did  it  while  he  was  out  of  his 
liead  on  account  of  the  liquor. 

County       Attorney       Norton  asked 

Laurin  If  he  had  told  somebody  at  the 
tall  that  he  would  "fix"  Miss  Stahbrodt 
if  he  got  out.  He  said  he  had  stated 
he  would  "fix"  Mr.  Stahbrodt.  When 
asked  if  he  was  of  the  same  mind  yet, 
he  said  that  he  was.  "I  don't  know 
how  I'll  get  my  revenge,  but  I'll  get 
it,"    he    said.      "I'll    Hck    him    anyway. 

While  walking  home  on  the  Herman- 
town  road  on  the  evening  of  Feb.  19, 
Laurin  met  the  girl  and  walked  with 
her  for  some  distance.  In  a  little  hol- 
low In  the  road,  he  knocked  her  down 
and  assaulted  her.  He  compelled  her 
to  walk  back  toward  the  city  with 
liim  and  a  liundred  feet  back  he  as- 
saulted her  again,  she  said.  Two  girls, 
who  came  up  in  a  sleigh,  took  her 
home  and  Laurin  was  arrested  that 
nlglit  at  his  home. 

Tlie  curiosity  squad  was  out  In  full 
force  during  tlie  trial.  The  big  court 
room  was  packed  every  day,  scores 
standing  In  the  open  spaces,  taking  in 
every  word  of  the  rather  sensational 
testimony. 


Many  a  Self-made  Man 
Should  be  Suffering 
from  Remorse 


JMMi^ot^ 


BRANCH    OFFICES: 
J.  J.  Mornn,  405, Central   Ave.  A.    Jentten,    SSO    Xorth    STth    Ave.    W  e«t. 


JAIL  CELLS 
FOROWNERS 

Trouble  Ahead  for  Per- 
sons Allowing  Cattle 
to  Roam  Wild. 


SHAKE  JAIL  DDST 
FROM  THEIR  FEET 


CHATTELS  AND  SALARY 

LOANS 

MONEY  TO   LOAN  In  aiiy  nmoiint  on  houeshold 

fiinttare.  -  pl*r."^.  lories,  wagoiui  an.l  personal 
l.r'i...rty  uf  aU  klnO*  at  the  Lovxeit  Rate*  In  thi 
City. 

I>-.r.'t  forest  to  rail  at  430  MANHATTAN 
BLOQ..  hef'.n'  you  make  a  loan  eUe'.viiere  and  gtt 
iur  i  i'<?^  .11.1  Iwcouio  tonvinoevl  that  we  will  iave 
yuu    mone;. 

Diiluth  Mortgage  Loan  Oo., 

430    MANHATTAN    BLOG. 


Z-^nlth   'phone   1')',».>»-D. 


Wm.    Uorkaii.    Mgr. 


A  Profitable  Exchange. 

Mr.  Wai\l  Orovr.  owner  of  a  Mg  orange  ranch 
tn  San  femar^Uno.  California,  has  retently  sold 
U  ami  peni'>ve.l  lo  tlie  Isle  of  Pines.  He  says 
thit  the  a<hantagct  of  the  Island  over  Callfornln 
lire  very  mark.-.l  In  the  fruit  bualness.  The 
Uianil  hM  no  ixciX.  and  no  need  for  irrjgatlon. 
It  U  ol'ne  to  nurkct.  and  ha3  water  tran.sporta- 
Um.  Tlie  climate  and  soil  are  Ideal.  Yet  land 
L-au  >K  had  on  tlve  Uland  for  aliout  one-twentieth 
of  OaUfjnila  prices.  We  are  still  selUng  pcr- 
iooaUj-    selected   lauds    for    $1U    an    aero. 


Buying  Now  for  Spring 

I.s  not  a  bad  idea.  Especial  Ly.  wlien 
vou  can  get  pieces  you  really  need  for 
iialf  price.  Frencli  &  Bassett's  sale  of 
dining  room  furniture  offers  grand  op- 
|)ortunlties.  Don't  you  need  a  buffet, 
.fet  of  chairs,  china  closet  or  dining 
table?  If  you  do.  Its  the  time  to  buy, 
now. 


MAY  REOPEN 
ARMY  OFFICE 


Robert  lialre  and  Fred 

Amo  Serve  Their 

Terms. 

Robert  H.  Haire  and  Fred  P.  Amo, 
who  were  sentenced  to  the  county 
jail  for  ten  days  by  Judge  Ensign  in 
district  court  Monday  of  last  week, 
were  released  from  the  jail  this  morn- 
ing. They  pleaded  guilty  to  con- 
ducting a  gambling  house,  and  in  ad- 
dition to  fining  them  each  $2<»0,  Judge 
Ensign  gave  thorn  each  tin  days. 
• 

Snappy  Spring  Suits 

Just  received  at  $15.  US  and  |20.     C. 
W.    Ericson,    llie   clothier. 


They  Will   Be  Arrested 

and  Fined  in  Police 

Court. 


WAS  FRIEND 
OF  SHERWIN 

Norman  Patton  Intimate 

With  American  Express 

Company  Cashier. 


Mm\ 


If  you  are  a  business  man  I  am 
going  to  tell  you  how  you  can  use 
less  than  one  cent  a  day  and  in- 
crease your  business  one  thousand 
times  that  amount  per  year. 


Strange  Coincidence 
Disappearance  of 
Two  Men. 


In 


mm\ 


Uncle 
be 


Sam  Will 

Looking 

Recruits. 


Again 
for 


SHEPHERD  &  CHANDLER 

UOO  >Itiiihnttan  IlldK. 


Arrival  of 

SKIRTS 


Black  and  navy  Panama  Skirts, 
perfect  goods,  at  the  tf^  QO 
low  price  of ^^m^\3 

Black  Voile  Skirts,  satin  or  tatfeta 
trimmed,  very  hand-  d!A  Q*V 
some;  price   only %pT»  ^-^ 

Satin  trimmed  Panama  Skirts  in 
black,   navy  and  tt'X    QQ 

brown  at ^>3*^\3 

Very  fine  quality  wiry  Voile  Skirts, 
beautifully   made,   ex-   tf  £L   rtCl 

tra  wide;  price  only .  .  4>Vf  .\/\/ 


It  Is  believed  that  the  Duluth  army 
recruiting  office,  which  has  been  closed 
lor  over  a  month,  will  be  reopened 
within  a  short  time.  All  the  recruiting 
offices  in  the  country  were  closed,  for 
the  reason  that  the  army  had  its  full 
complement.  Many  men  will  be  dis- 
charged from  the  service  within  a 
j-hort  time,  and  tlien  It  is  believed  that 
the  various  recruiting  offices  will  be 
reopened. 

If  the  Duluth  office  is  not  opened 
within  a  very  short  time,  this  year's 
record  of  recruits  will  fall  behind  that 
of  last  vear  liy  a  considerable  figure. 
When  the  men  come  in  from  the  woods 
in  the  spring  time  is  when  the  greatest 
number  of  recruits  are  secured.  If  the 
office  is  not  optned  until  after  these 
JTien  leave  town,  the  records  of  the  Du- 
luth office  will  show  a  decided  shrink- 
age.  

$18  Blatk  or  Bine  Suits  at  $9.00. 

The  sooner  you  come  and  make  your 
.selection  the  better.  C.  W.  Erickson, 
the  clothier. 


MURDERS  HIS  BROTHER, 

THEN  SHOOTS  HIMSELF. 


INJURED  BY 

THE  "JUICE" 


Eau  Claire.  Wis.,  March  l". — Henry 
Foss,  aged  35,  married,  who  was  dis- 
missed from  the  oolice  force  a  few 
days  ago  for  sleeping  on  his  boat,  and 
has  since  been  acting  queerly.  last 
nierht  visited  the  family  home  and 
shot  and  killed  hi.s  brother,  Joseph 
Foss,  aged  34,  single,  as  the  latt«r 
was  eating  his  evening  meal.  The 
murderer  then  turned  the  weapon 
upon  himself,  inflicting  a  serious  but 
not  necessarily  fatal  wound.  Eva 
Foss.  aged  16.  a  sister  of  the  two, 
was  in  an  adjoining  room  when  the 
tragedy  was  enacted,  and  ran  scream- 
ing from  the  house  to  give  the  alarm. 
Henry  Foss  was  hurried  to  a  hospital. 
• 

The  Latest  in  Spring  Overcoats. 

Perfect    fitters    at    $15,    $18    and    $20. 
C.   W.   Ericson,  the  clothier. 


ANNUAL  SENIOR  PLAY 

The  ."Senior  C'lajtn  I'renents 

"DIAMONDS  AND  HEARTS" 

Under  Direction  of  Mr.  A.  K.  M.  Custance 
AS.SKMHLV  HAM.,  HIGH  SCHOOI., 
FIIIDVV,   MAIK  H   10,   1»0»,  N  I*.  M. 

Reserved  seats.  50  cents,  General  Ad- 
mission. 25  cents.  Tickets  on  sale  at  the 
High  School  and  at  Stone's  Book  .Store. 


From  now  on  any  persons  allowing 
their  cattle  to  roam  the  streets  of 
West  Duluth,  will  be  arrested  and 
prosecuted  to  the  full  extent  of  the 
law. 

This  was  announced  this  morning  by 
Lieut.  Wilcox  of  the  West  Duluth  po- 
lice force.  The  stray  cows  will  not  be 
placed  in  the  pound  until  bailed  out  by 
their  owners,  as  formerly,  but  the 
owner  will  be  located  and  a  warrant 
sworn    out    for    hts   arrest. 

So    many    complalnLs    concerning    the 

careless  manner  in  which  gome  cattle 
owners  allow  their  stock  to  wander 
the  streets  have  come  to  the  police 
recently,  that  tliey  have  decided  it  L-j 
time  that  a  stop  Is  put  to  the  prac- 
tice. 

It  seems  to  be  the  belief  of  many 
people  that  during  the  winter,  when 
the  poundmaster  is  not  on  duty,  they 
have  a  perfect  right  to  let  their  cows 
run  where  they  please  marring  lawns 
and     destroying     trees  Besides     this 

the  animals  get  on  the  sidewalks  and 
obstruct  the  way  of  pedestrians. 

The  city  ordinance,  which  forbid.^ 
owners  to  let  their  cattle  have  the  tree 
run  of  streets  arfd  vacant  lots  about 
the  city.  Is  in  effect  summer  and 
winter,  even  though  there  is  no  pound- 
master  at  tills  season  to  enforce  it. 
There  is  trovible  ahead  for  those  who 
neglect   this  ordinance. 

THE  LETTER  THAT 
NEVER  WENT 

Missive.  Yellow  With  Age. 
Found  in  Did  Post- 
office. 

Some  person'  Ifi"  |he  old  country  has 
waited  in  vain  f»«r,»,  letter  from  a  loved 
one   iu  America. 

H.  C.  Brown,  contractor,  who  Is  re- 
modelling the  old  West  Duluth  post- 
office,  so  as  to  enlarge  tiie  i>resent 
(juarters  of  the  Spem^er  pharmacy,  in 
tiie  Silvoy  block,  in  tearing  out  an  old 
mail  box  in  the  pffice.  came  upon  a 
letter,  yellow  with  age,  and  bearing 
an  uncancelled  postage  stamp.  It  was 
addressed  to  some  town  in  Finland, 
and  judging  from  its  appearance,  was 
written    many    years   ago. 

The  mail  box.  which  was  torn  out. 
was  only  used  when  the  postofflce  was 
closed,  and  the  mail  was  dropped  from 
outside  through  a  slot  into  the  box  on 
the  inside.  In  some  way,  in  slipping 
the  letter  through  the  slot,  it  feil  be- 
tween the  box  and  the  partition,  and 
lay  there  unnoticed,  for  nobody  knows 
how  long.  Judging  from  the  letter'* 
appearance,  it  must  have  been  for 
years. 

Even  after  being  rescued  from  its 
hiding  place,  the  letter  was  doomed 
to  further  misfortune.  Mr.  Brown 
placed  it  in  his  pocket,  with  the  inten- 
tion of  carrying  it  over  to  the  new 
postofflce,  and  -giving  it  a  fresh  start 
on  its  long  delayed  Journey.  But  Mr. 
Brown's  pocket  had  a  hole  in  it.  and  the 
letter  dropped  oui  somewhere  on  tiie 
roaci  between  the  old  and  the  new 
offices,  and  has  not  been  again  found. 
It  would  appear  that  the  unfortunate 
letter  Is  destined  to  never  reach  its 
destination. 


Norman  Patton.  the  Panton  &  White 
buyer,  who  mysteriously  ..disappeared 
in  Pittsburg  nearly  two  weeks  ago, 
was  a  particular  friend  of  Frank  T. 
Sherwin,  the  missing  cashier  of  the 
American  Express  company,  who  has 
written  George  F.  Kennedy,  local 
manager  for  the  exi)ress  company  from 
Denver,  explaining  his  strange  disap- 
pearance  from   Duluth    Jan.   30. 

The  local  police  are  wondering  if 
there  was  any  connection  between  the 
actions  of  the  two  men.  It  is  under- 
stood that  they  were  boon  companions 
while  working  here,  and  that  Sherwin 
was  the  best  friend  Patton  had.  It 
seems  rather  queer  to  the  police  that 
both  men  sliould  disappear  in  precisely 
the  same  manner,  suddenly  dropping 
completely  out  of  sight,  and  leaving  no 
word    behind. 

Kay  W.  Fenton,  assistant  secretary 
of  the  Trade  News  I'ubiishlng  com- 
pany, is  positive  that  he  saw  Patton 
in  Minneapolis  a  week  ago  last  Sun- 
day, just  four  days  after  he  was  last 
seen  in  Pittsburg,  and  il  la  thought  pos- 
sible that  he  was  on  his  way  West  to 
join  Sherwin  in  Denver.  It  is  assumed 
by  some  that  botli  Sherwin  and  Pat- 
ton were  not  In  their  right  minds 
when  thev  decided  to  forsake  iiome  and 
friends  in  Duluth,  but  others,  who  take 
a  somewhat  more  harsh  view  of  the 
situation,  venture  the  assertion  that  the 
two  disappearances  were  the  result  of 
a  plot  hatched  before  Patton  left  Du- 
luth. There  is  no  proof  to  sustain  this 
suspicion,  however. 

If  til©  men  did  meet  by  appointment 
in  Denver,  It  would  be  interesting  to 
know  how  Sherwin  happened  to  write  a 
letter  back  to  Duluth,  telling  of 
whereabouts. 


hi. 


BRASS  STOLEN. 


Sidney  Weber,  Chaiged  With  Theft 
From  Box  Factory,  Arrested. 

Sidney  Weber  of  West  Duluth,  19 
years  of  age.  was  arrested  this  morn- 
ing for  the  theft  of  $25  worth  of  brass 
and  tools  from  Petruschke's  New  Du- 
luth box  factory.  He  will  be  arraigned 
in    municipal    court    tomorrow. 

Mr.  Pet.ruschke  has  been  missing 
material  from  his  factory  for  the  last 
two  or  three  weeks,  and,  by  keeping  a 
close  watch,  tinally  tlxed  the  blame 
upon  young  Weber,  who  is  employed  in 
the    factory. 


Sunday  School  Conference. 

The  Sunday  school  teachers  of  tiie 
Norwegian  Lutheran  churches  of  Du- 
luth and  Superior  will  meet  In  confer- 
ence this  evening  at  Our  Savior's  Luth- 
eran  church    at    West    Duluth. 


MALPRACTICE  SUIT. 


aurgrsrMtriMsn^scmfiafsntffr 


Hotel   Superior 


SVPBRIOR.    >iVIS. 

LracUng   Hotel   of   the   city.        Fine   Cafe   Serr- 
Ice    at    popular    prices. 
Bi.i    nieeU    all    tra.lu3. 


Large    Sample    Boonu. 


European   Plan.  75e  to  S2.50  per  day. 
Special   Weekly   Rates. 


Pleased  to  Announce  the 

$|}ji©wiiiii|  ©H 
ii  STYLI 


(ireatent    Wiriety  and    Quulitij  of  Fine 

Woolens /or  Men's  Wear  Ever  Displayed 

Muy  We  Have  the  Pleasure  of  Serving  Youf 


W'^f.vUt 
Bull'/ in  J 


W.  F.  Mte\ 


110-112- 
[  114  3rd 
'9  Ave.   W. 


Workman  Is  Suing  the 

Duluth  Street  Railway 

Company. 

Claiming  that  he  was  severely  In- 
jured by  a  shock  received  while  paint- 
ing a  pole  at  the  intersection  of  Gar- 
field avenue  and  Superior  street,  Sept. 
21,  1907,  Stephen  Foster  Is  suing  the 
Duluth  Street  Railway  company  in 
district  court,  for  $20,000  damages. 

Foster  was  in  the  employ  of  the 
company,  painting  the  poles,  which 
hold  the  cross  wires,  on  which  the 
trolley  is  hung.  He  claims  that  the 
trolley  slipped  from  the  wire,  struck 
a  cross  wire  and  a  severe  electric 
.shock  was  communicated  to  him.  His 
general  physical  condition  was  im- 
paired bj'  the  shock,  he  says. 

CURLERS  HAVE 
THREE  DRAWS 

interesting  Contests  to 

be  Played  Off  at 

Duluth  Club. 

Feetham  and  Deetz  are  curling  this 
afternoon  in  the  C  class  bonspiel  for 
the  possession  of  the   Board  of  Trade 

buttons. 

At  6  o'clock.  Hall  will  meet  Ron 
Smith  in  the  semi-finals,  in  one  of  the 
A  cla.ss  squads.  At  8  o'clock,  Dun- 
lup  and  Dinham  play  the  finals  in 
the  Bagley  event;  Hall's  C  class  rink 
plays  Jacobl  in  the  button  contest; 
and  Trosise  will  meet  the  winner  of 
the   Smith-Hall    game. 

The  games  are  being  rushed  these 
days  and  the  events  are  getting  well 
down  toward  the  close.  The  weather 
has  been  favoring  the  Scots,  and  they 
are  taking  advantage  of  every  oppor- 
tunity to  get  the  events  finished  before 
they  are  interrupted  by  warm  weather. 


Dr.  .Tern  Sued  for  $25,000   for  Not 
Performing  Operation. 

The  .suit  of  Hilding  Gradlnt*  against 
Dr.  J.  H.  Jern  went  on  trial  this  af- 
ternoon, before  Judge  Dibell. 

The  plaintiff  claims  malpractice  on 
the  part  of  Dr.  Jern,  and  states  that 
when  he  was  suffering  from  appen- 
dicitis, he  went  to  the  defendant,  who 
diagnosed  his  case  as  some  other  ail- 
ment, and  failed  to  operate,  or  treat 
him   for  appendicitis. 


SpHmig,  1^ 

Stetson,  $3.50 
Gordon,  $3.00 
Waite,   $3.00 

DERBY  and  SOFT  HATS 
ALL  COLORS. 


DYNAMITE  CLUB. ' 

Reported  That  Anarchist  From  Rus- 
sia ^^  ill  Address  Organization. 

Tonight's  the  night.  In  other  words, 
the  Dynamite  club  will  hold  Its  tenth 
annual  reunion  this  evening  in  Wade's 
hall.  It  win  be  a  gathering  of  the 
same  old  crowd,  with  but  a  few  ex- 
ceptions, and  the  same  old  round  of 
horse  play  and  jokes  will  be  Indulged 
in. 

A  strange  ambassador  from  Russia, 
It  Is  whispered,  will  be  the  guest  of 
honor  tonight.  This  man,  'tis  said, 
comes  bearing  credentials  proclaiming 
him  to  be  the  most  artful  of  artful 
bomb  throwers  In  the  old  country.  It 
will  be  a  rare  treat  for  the  West  Du- 
luth members  to  hear  from  their 
branch  organization  in  the  laud  of  an- 
archists. 


MISS  BORGSTROM  DIES. 


IL 


FLOAN, 

LEVEROOS 

&C0. 


End  Comes  at  Parent's  Home  After 
a  Long  Illness. 

Pearl  Lillian  Borgstrom.  the  13-year- 
old  daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  P.  J. 
Borgstrom  of  204  North  Sixty-first 
avenue  west,  died  last  evening  at  6:30 
o'clock  after  a  long   illness. 

Miss  Borgstrom  was  born  in  West 
Duluth,  and  was  a  student  in  this 
year's  graduating  class  at  the  Long- 
fellow school  when  she  was  taken 
from  the  school  on  account  of  Illness. 
She  was  also  a  member  of  the  Sunday 
school  of  the  Third  Swedish  church. 
Her  death  Is  greatly  mouined  by  her 
schoolmates. 

The  funeral  will  take  place  Saturday 
afternoon  at  3  o'clock  from  the  Third 
Swedish  Baptist  church.  Fifty-ninth 
avenue  west  and  Ramsey  street. 


Today  Concludes  the 

Formal  Display  Days — But 
We  Have  Just  Begun  Our 
Garment  Showing. 

We  wish  it  clearly  understood 
that  the  invitation  to  visit  this  store 
is  Broad,  Earnest  and  Permanent. 
Furthermore,  your  visits  here  Imply 
no  obligation  to  buy.  All  we  ask  is 
your  /air  compaiason  of  qualities 
and  values,  and  there  is  no  question 
as  to  where  you  will  ultimately  buy. 

During  the  last  few  days 
we  have  pictured  and  told 
a  great  deal  about  the 
higher-priced  garments. 

Today,  we  turn  to  the 
plainer  and  more  practical 
garments  that  form  the 
basis  of  every  well-planned  wardrobe. 

TAILORED  STREET  SUITS  at  $25.00,  $29.50, 
$35.00,   $39.50    $45.00  and  $50.00. 

SMART  COATS  at  $13.50,  $19.50,  $25.00,  $29.50 
and  35.00. 

TROTTEUR  DRESSES  at  from  $15.00  to  $35,00. 

DRESS  SKIRTS  from  $6.75  to  $25.00. 

.TAILORED     LINEN    WAISTS    from  $2.50  to 
$12.00. 

LINGERIE  WAISTS  from  $2.75  up. 

PRETT'V  SILK  and  NET  WAISTS  at  $4.00  or 
$5.00  and  up. 

Garments  of  this  Staple,  Stylish,  Medium  Priced 
Character,  from  the  gfreat  bulk  and  body  of  our  Gar- 
ment ShovvinJ,^  They  come  in  the  most  fashionable 
colors,  materiils  and  styles  of  the  season,  and  Perfect 
taste  is  displsyed  in  every  inch  of  their  make-up. 
Some  are  stri:tly  plain,  and  some  slightly  fancy — but 
in  all,  Desirability  is  the  chief  charm,  and  Sterling 
Quality  in  evident  in  every  detail. 

J.  iH.  d^Uihtns  tc  CUfl. 

'^Correct  Dress  for  Wonien.^^ 


m 


** 


P 


r 


And 

we 

are 

ready 

now. 

to 

settle 

down  i 

to  the  greatest 

bust-  \ 

nes.s 

we 

liavo 

ever  ' 

had. 

•  1 

1 

ji 

if 

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1 

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'' 

1 

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' 

.ttMBtuU 


Y.  M.  C.  A.  ACTIVITIES 


West  Duluth  Briefs. 

Three  more  games  were  curled  last 
evening  at  the  Western  Curling  rink 
in  the  Bagley  trophy  event.  Wade  de- 
feated Evered,  15  to  8;  Zauft  won  from 
Donald  by  a  score  of  13  to  9  and  Scott 
made    1.3   scores   to   Filitraulfs    11. 

The  ladies  of  the  West  Duluih  Bap- 
tist church  will  meet  this  evening  ai 
the  home  of  Mrs.  George  Dittle.  624 
North  Fifty-sixth  avenue  west.  The  la- 
dles have  each  been  earning  $1 
(luring  the  past  month  for  the  church 
turnace  fund,  and  this  evening  they 
will  tell  how  they  earned  the  money. 
Tickets  to  or  from  Europe  for  sale 
by  A.  .1.   Llndgren.     Lowest   prices. 

Masquerade  ball  given  by  the.  Tem- 
perance society  at  Great  Eastern  hall, 
West  DuUith,  Saturday  evening.  March 
20.  Tickets.  50  cent.s;  ladies,  25  cents. 
Olander  can  fill  any  prescription. 
Fifty-seventh  and  Grand  avenue. 

Mrs.  Hanna  Thorpe  and  her  three 
children.  .Si;?ne.  Knut  and  Ruth,  who 
have  been  visiting  friends  and  relatives 
in  Christlania.  Norway,  for  the  past 
three  months.  are  expected  home 
shortly. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Carl  Herman  and  three 
children,  who  arrived  recently  from 
Copenhagen.  Denmark,  are  the  guests 
of  S.  Christensen  of  319  North  Fifty- 
ninth  avenue  west  for  the  present. 
They  expect  to  make  their  home  In 
West  Duluth. 

Sam  Yax  of  631  South  Sixtieth  ave- 
nue west  is  seriously  ill  at   his   home. 

Duluth  Chapter  No.  59,  R.  A.  M..  will 
work  the  royal  arch  degree  tonight  at 
the   West   Duluth   Masonic  temple. 

Mr  and  Mrs.  Walter  M.  Evered  of 
Nortii  Fifty-sixth  avenue  west  will 
entertain  a  number  of  their  friends  at 
a  card  party  this  evening  at  then- 
home. 

The  Literary  Club  of  the  Westmin- 
ster Presbyterian  Christian  Endeavor 
socletv  will  meet  tomorrow  evening  at 
the  home  of  Mrs.  Elvina  McCleland, 
615  North  Fifty-ninth  avenue  west. 

The  Oak  Hall  baseball  team  will 
celebrate  St.  Patrick's  day  with  an  en- 
tertainment at  the  Great  Eastern  haii. 

Edward  Done,  who  has  lived  in  Vir- 
ginia for  the  past  year,  has  returned 
to  West  Duluth.  where  he  expects  to 
make  his  home. 

Rev.  S.  A.  Jamieson  will  pronounce 
the  Invocation  at  the  annual  banquet 
of  the  West  Duluth  Commercial  club, 
and  Mayor  R.  I).  Haven  will  speak  on 
•'The  C^ity  of  Duluth."  The  committee 
on  speakers  for  the  bankuet  has  Invited 
a  number  of  prominent  men  to  respond 
to  toasts  at  the  dinner,  and  expects 
daily  to  hear  from  them. 

Watch    repairing.    Hurst.    W.    Duluth 

Would  Vou  Take  a  Dollar  for 
Fifty  Cents? 

If  so,  you  have  the  opportunity  offered 
you  now.  Your  dollar  will  do  the  work 
of  two  at  French  &  Bassett's  sale.  A 
splendid  lot  of  dining  room  furniture 
now    on    sale     prices    about    half. 


Rev.  Paul  Doltz  of  Washington.  D.  C, 
lecturer,  traveler  and  missionary  will 
be  the  principal  .speaker  at  the  weekly 
nien'.3  mass  meeting  to  l:e  held  in  the 
gymnasium  of  the  Central  building 
building  Sunday  afterrfoon  at  the  usual 
time. 

Mr.  Doltz  has  spent  1  he  last  seven 
years  In  foreign  countries  doing  mis- 
sionary work,  and  has  hi.d  some  thrill- 
ing experiences  of  which  he  will  speak 
in    his    lecture    Sunday. 

He  is  said  to  be  a  very  entertaining 
talker  and  will  address  the  young  men 
of  the  city  on  "The  Philippines."  It 
was  in  these  islands  flat  he  spent 
inanv  years  and  as  he  has  been  close 
to  the  natives  of  the  islands  all  that 
time  ho  will  endeavor  to  tell  his  audi- 
ence'facts  concerning  the  natives  that 
have    heretofore   been    overlooked. 

There  will  be  special  musical  num- 
bers and  •  Charles  Applehagen  will 
sing.  ^       ^      ^ 

The  Bible  study  depa-tment  is  ac- 
tive. The  students  are  getting  ready 
for  their  final  examlnutions.  which 
come  the  first  part  of  iipril.  and  for 
v/hich  thev  will  receive  diplomas  from 
tlie  national  association.  The  questions 
are  sent  here  from  the  national  head- 
quarters. 

♦  •      • 

Rev.  J  A.  McGaughey,  who  is  at  the 
head  of  the  religious  department  of  the 
association,  will  organize  a  noon  Bible 
class  from  among  the  ore  dock  work- 
met     as   soon   as    the    navigation   season 

op^na. 

•  •       * 

The  big  wrestling  tournament  comes 
on   March   30.        There   Is    much    interest 


being  displayed  and  the  event  will  un^ 
doubtedly  prove  a  big  success.  Tlie 
entry  list  has  not  as  yet  been  coai> 
pleted. 

CHANGE  IN  THE 
SUNDAY  TIME 

Mall  to  Be  Distributed 

Hereafter  Between  10 

and  Ii  o'clock. 

A  change  in  the  Sunday  postoffica 
hours  that  will  be  welcomed  by  many 
people,  will  be  Inaugurated  next  Sun- 
day, when  the  general  delivery  and 
carriers'  window  will  be  open  from  10 
to  11  Instead  of  from  9  to  10  as  has  been 
tile  custom  for  a  number  of  years. 

The  change  is  purely  a  local  one. 
Postmaster  Guy  A.  Eaton  ha.s  found 
tiiat  the  hours  were  very  unsatisfactory 
to  a  large  number  of  people.  Not  only 
were  the  former  hours  a  little  early 
for  Sunday  morning,  but  under  the  old 
rules  It  was  Impossible  to  give  out  tn« 
Chicago  mall  This  disappointed  many 
and  under  the  new  hours  the  Chicago 
mall   will   be  distrii.uted. 

The  new  rule  will  concern  the  mam 
office  and  all  sub-stations,  and  is  ex- 
pected   to    meet    with    general    approval. 


I 
■■II      ■    - 

t 

I 

i 


y 


MMHHMMMMMMMMMMMHMMMMHHH 


B.AI«i.\lNS. 

81300 — Buys  •  sli-fiom  c-otUg««  tn  Slxty-thiril 
a\<!uue.  with  water,  gewer.  bath,    hardwood   floors. 

S900 — Buys  a  five-room  house  on  Wonleu  street ; 
rlty  water:  lot.   23x100. 

SI 500 — Buys  i^"  el(t)t-room  bousa  on  Plfty- 
llilrrl  avenua;  rwits  for  $13.00  a  month. 

$1650 — Buys  a  four-family  flat:  rents  for  $30 
a    month. 

S12i>0 — Buys  a  ili-r>om  house  on  Fifty-eighth 
avenue,    with  dty   water   and   electric   light*. 

161200 — Buys  a  7-room  house  on  CDmar  of  ."*lx- 
ly'elght   .\Te.   and   Fremont   St..    very  easy  terms. 

S1850~~Buy9  a  new  six-nom  house  on  Sixty- 
third  avenue.,  with,  dty  water,  gas.  electric 
light*:  lot.  2^x123;  one-third  to  one- half  cash 
will  handle. 

tt.><>00 — Buy*  a  ftte-room  cottage  on  North 
Tttty-eiglith  avenue,  with  city  water,  gas.  bath, 
full    Ijesenient;    inillt    leas    than    a    year    ago. 

Some  of  these  can  t)e  had  on  very  eaay  terms.  See 

I..  A.  BARKKS,  West  Diilutii.  Minn. 

Real     Estate — Loans — Fire     Insuranee. 


AND  STILL  NO  ( HOICE 

FOR  ILLINOIS  SENATOR. 


Springfield.  III..  March  17. — On  tha 
forty-ftfth  ballot  In  the  Illinois  legis- 
lature today,  the  total  vote  of  the 
joint  session  was:  Hopkins,  77;  Foss. 
18;  Shurtleff,  18:  Stringer.  42;  Mason, 
4;  Lowden.  2;  McKinley.  2;  Sherman 
Calhoun.  1;  F.  P.  Morris,  24:  J.  J. 
Callahan.  3.  No  choice.  The  as- 
sembly then  rose  until  tomorrow. 
» 

Judge  Wlio  Re.slgnotl.  Dies. 

Trenton.  N.  J..  March  17. — Elmer 
Ewing  Green,  who  recently  resigned 
a.s  a  Judge  of  the  court  of  errors  and 
appeals  on  account  of  illness,  died  at 
his  home  in  this  city  early  today.  He 
was  59  years  old. 


m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 

M 

m 
m 

M 

m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 


iL  W.  &  L. 


THURSDAY,  v.-e  will  place  on  sale  500  pairs 
of  Ladies'  Sample  Shoes,  made  by  the  fol- 
lowing firms:  .Selby  Shoe  Co..  J.  J.  Latle- 
man  and  Sitz  ife  Dunn.  This  includes  high 
and  low  shoes  and  all  leathers.  The  sizes 
range  from  2  ^*!  to  5,  and  A  B  and  C  widths. 
The  values  range  from  $4.00  to  15.00. 
Sample  sale  price 


S2Ji 


218  West  Superior  Street. 


— ^ 


^m 


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^ 


■MMMMHMMH 


wmm 


! 


f» 


»  »i' 


■t 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909 


3 


-«  r*- 


Come  in  and  See  Our 

Bostonian 
Shoes 


(Union 


$3.50  and  $4.00 

For  all  the  New  Shapes. 


Si  Louis  Cafe 

A  Special   Program  of 

Music 

Rendered  by  ihe  LaBrosse  Or- 
chestra Every  Evening  From 
6  to  8  and  From  lo  to  IX 

Table  D'Hote  Dinner,   Includ- 
ing Wine,  75c- 

AHf  r  ThMler  Sap!>cr  Parties  a  Specially. 


CONTEST 

A  TOESS 

"Ben  Hur"  Essays  Come 

With  a  Rush  During 

the  Last  Day. 

Winners   Will    be   An- 
nounced in  The  Herald 
Saturday. 


The  "'Ben  llur"  contest  has  been  a 
big  success. 

School  children  generally  all  over 
the  city  took  advantage  of  the  oppor- 
tunity given  them  by  The  Herald  to 
see  the  big  production  free  of  charge, 
and  several  hundred  essays  have  been 
recchod. 

The  contest  will  close  at  6  o'clock 
tonight  and  as  soon  as  it  is  possible 
to  get  the  judges  together  so  as  to 
mark  the  papers,  the  winners  will  be 
announced.  There  will  probably  bt; 
500  essays  to  go  through  but  not  later 
than  Saturday  night  a  lisi  of  the  win- 
ners will  be  published. 

Today  being  the  last  of  the  con- 
test, the  essays  came  in  with  a  rush, 
several  of  the  schools  sending  in  pack- 
ages of  twenty-five  or  fifty. 

Thi  Herald  is  pleased  with  the  suc- 
cess of  the  contest  and  its  only  re- 
gret is  that  all  those  who  sent  in  es- 
savs  cannot  be  given  an  opportunity 
to"  see  the  show.  The  papers  will  be 
judged  impartially  by  the  eighteen 
teachers,  whose  names  appeared  in  the 
paper  some  days  ago,  and  every  child 
who  has  submitted  an  essay  stands 
a   fair  chance   of  landing  a   ticket. 

The  big  theater  party  comes  Mon- 
day night.  The  tickets  will  be  dis- 
tributed Monday. 

.    "Moth  and  Bumble  Bee." 

Zenith    Music   I'ompany. 


Dr.  Lyon's 

PERFECT 

Tooth  Powder 

Cleanses,  beautifies  and 
preserves  the  teeth  and 

purifies  the  breath 
Used    by    people    of 
refinement     for    almost 

Half   a   Century 


rrdfei   e 

idloarc 
pBtind 


c^nts 
,    from 

otlier 
pound 


MODEL  CLOTHING  CO.. 

17  West  Superior  St. 

SELLNIG  OUT 

Big   Raduclions  in    Everything    Men 
and  Soys    Wear. 


IRON  ORE  IS  ON  FREE  LIST 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


DULUTH  THONE  1604 

Printing  Hea<Uiiiariers.  where 
work  l.s  done  prompt  and  good. 
Onlv  to  ring  and  some  one  comes. 

MILIAR  PRINTING  CO. 


$25.00 


For  a 


SUIT  OR  GVEREOAT 

Made  here  In  Du'.uth  of  good 
honest,  all-wool  material; 
newest    cut. 

MORRISON, 


I 


S   Lnlte   Avenue   Soatb 


\^-^m^ 


Builders'  Hardware,  Mer- 
chants' Tools.  Fine  Cnllcry 

QUAYLE-LARSON  CO. 

2!Secon'l  Avenue  West. 


I 


C  D.  TROTT, 

has  removed  to 


20  East  Superior  Street. 


PROPOSALS 

For  Grading   and  Im 
proving  Grounds. 


Bealed   proposals,   addressed     to     the 
Court   House   Commission,    will   be      re- 
ceived at  tlie  office  of  said  Commission, 
321    Providence    Building.    Dulutli,   Min- 
nesota   until   10  o'clock  a.   m.,  April   15. 
1909.    for    excavating,    fillinpr,    grading, 
paving  and  concrete  work  for  tlie  site, 
approaclies,   terraces,    etc.,   for  the   new 
St.   Louis  County  Court     House.        Said 
work  to  conform  to  tlie  plan.s  and  spe- 
cifications  tlierefor,    now   on  file  in  tlie 
office   of   said  Commission.       Copies   of 
said    plans    and    specifications    may      be 
obtained    by   prospective   bidders   at   the 
above  named  office.       Said  bids  will  be 
opened    publicly    at    the    office    of    .said 
Commission  at  12  o'clock  noon,  April  5. 
1909.       Kach   bid   must   be   accompanied 
by    a    deposit    equal    to    five    per    cent 
(5    per   cent)    of   the   total   of   the      bid. 
which    deposit    must   be   in    the   form   of 
a  certified  check,  payable  to  the  County 
of  St    Louis.       This  deposit  will  be  re- 
turned to  the  unsuccessful  bidders,  and 
to   the   successful   bidder,    upon    his   en- 
tering  into  a  contract   with   said   Com- 
mission,  and    the   giving   of  a   satisfac- 
tory surety  company's   bond   to  said  St. 
Louis    Countv     tlie    amount    of      which 
Bhall   be  the  contract  price,  within   ten 
(10)    davs    after    the    date    of    notifica- 
tion that  his  proposal  has  been  accept- 
ed        Should    the    bidder    fall    to    enter 
Into  said  contract  and  bond  within  ten 
(10)   davs,   said   deposit   shall     be     for- 
feited  to   said  County.        Said   Commis- 
sion   reserves    the    right    to    reject    any 
or  all   proposals. 

Dated    at    Duluth.    Minnesota,    March 

BT  YoUlS  COUNTY  COURT   HOUSE 
COMMl.^SIOX. 

Per   GEO.   H.   CLAYPOOL, 
^  Secretary. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  13.  13, 
17.  1909. 


committee   of   the    house,   are   Incorpor- 
ated  In   the   bill. 

The    duty    on      refined    sugai    is      re- 
duced  5.100   of  a   cent  a   pound   and   on 
dextrin    half    a    cent    a    pound.       A    re-  i 
duction   of  half  a  cent  a   pound   is  also 
made   in   the   duly   on    starch,    with    the 
exception  of  potato  starch.     Zinc  in  ore  | 
is    assessed    1    cent    per    pound    for    the  , 
z'inc  contained.     The   tariff  on   pig  iron  | 
is  reduced  irom  $4  to  %-l.:>0  per  tons. 
Lemon    Duty    Rained. 
The   principal    increases   are   made   in 
the    duties    on    lemons,    cocoa    and    sub- 
■fcitutes      for    coffee,       coal-tar,      dyes, 
gloves    and    coated    papers    and    litho- 
graphic  prints. 

As  was  expected,  the  new  tariff  bill 
is  made  on  a  nia.\imum  and  minimum 
basis  witli  the  provision  that  the  inax- 
i  inuim  rates  are  not  to  go  into  effect 
until  si.xty  days  after  the  passage  of 
the  bill.  Reciprocity  provisions  are 
contained  in  the  paragraphs  assessing 
on  bituminous  coal  and  coke  and  ag- 
ricultural Implements  by  which  these 
articles  are  given  entry  free  of  duty 
wlien  imported  from  countries  which 
permit  the  free  importation  of  these 
articles    from    America. 

The  inheritance  tax  provision  of  the 
bill  is  similar  to  the  New  York  state 
law.  It  provides  a  tax  of  o  per  cent 
on  all  inheritances  over  |500.  that  are 
collateral  inheritances  or  in  which 
strangers  are  the  legatees.  In  cases  of 
direct  inheritance  the  taxes  prescribeU 
are:  On  $10,000  lo  $100,000,  1  per  cent: 
on  1100.000  lo  $500,000.  2  per  cent,  and 
on  those  over  $500,000,  3  per  cent.  It 
Is  estimated  that  $20,000,000  annually 
will   be  derived   from   this   tax. 

The  maximum  and  minimum  provi- 
sion of  the  bill  dots  away  with  neces- 
sity of  continuing  tlie  foreign  trade 
agreements.  The  abrogation  of  thc.-e 
is  provided  for  in  a  section  which 
authoriy-es  the  president  to  issue  not- 
ices of  the  termination  of  these  agree- 
ments within  ten  days  after  the  bill 
goes  into  effect.  The  French  agree- 
ment would  therefore  terminate  im- 
mediately while  tiie  German  agreement 
would  remain  in  force  for  six  months. 
The  time  that  must  Intervene  before 
the  ino'jeralion  of  the  other  reciprocity 
would  become  effective  range  from 
three   months   to   one   year. 

A  provision  in  the  bill  is  designed 
to  meet  the  conditions  resulting  trom 
the  patent  laws  of  Great  Britain, 
which  requires  that  patentees  must 
manufacture  their  articles  within 
Great  Britain.  This  provision  applies 
the  same  rules  to  patents  taken  out 
in  this  country  by  aliens  as  applies 
to  Am?ricans  in  the  country  of  the 
aliens.  ^       ,    .  . 

Drawback  privileges  are  extended  by 
the  bill  and  the  method  of  valuation 
on  articles  upon  which  the  tariff  im- 
poses an  ad  valorem  duty  is  broadened 
for  the  purpose  of  preventing  the  prac- 
tice  of   under   valuation. 

Explanation    By    Payne. 
The     following     explanation     of     the 
form     of     the     bill     is     made     by     M.r. 
Payne:       "The  new  tariff  bill  is  a  mini- 
mum   and    maximum    tariff    bill.        The 
minimum   rates    of   duty   are   contained 
in    the    first    section,    and    the    free    list 
for   the   minimum   rates    is    in    tlie    sec- 
ond section   of  the  bill.     The  third  sec- 
lion    contains      the      maximum      rates, 
which  are  generally  equal   to  the  mini- 
mum rates  and  20  per  cent.       In  addi- 
tion   thereto    and    the    articles    on    the 
free    list     is    the    transfer    to    the    third 
section,   bear  a  duty   of  20   per  centum 
ad  valorem  as  a  maximum  rate.        The 
maximum   rate  does   not   go   into  effect 
in   anv   event    until   six    days   after   the 
passage  of  the  act.     By  the  fourth  sec- 
tion the  minimum  rates  are  applied  to 
all    goods    Imported    from    any    country 
which      gives      the     United     States    as 
good    terms    by    way    of    tariff   as   that 
given    to    any     other    nation,    and    the 
maximum    rates    are    applied    to    those 
countries     which     discriminate     against 
the     trade     of     the     United     States,     or 
fall    to    give    the    United    States    tariff 
rj-tes  as   favorable  as  those   given   any 
o'her    nation.        This    section    is    self- 
acting,  making  it  the  duty  of  an  execu- 
tive to  collect  the  duties  whether  max- 
imum,   in    accordance    with    the    terms 
of  the  bill,  leaving  It  open  to  the  courts 
to  decide  upon  the   legality  of  the  ac- 

Regarding  (he  miscellaneous  provi- 
sions of  the  bill.  Mr.  Payne  states: 
•The  bill  provides  for  reciprocal  free 
trade  with  the  Philippines  on  all  ar- 
ticles but  limiting  the  sugar  to  be 
imported  free  of  duty  to  300.000  ions, 
wraooer  tobacco  to  300,000  pounds,  and  ! 
3  000  000  pounds  of  filler  tobacco  and 
150,000,000  cigars  in  any  one  fiscal 
vear  The  excess  of  sugar,  tobacco 
knd  "cigars  to  pay  full  tariff  rates.  This 
exception  from  duty  Is  confined  to  the 
growth  of  products  of  the  islands, 
however,  and  does  not  admit  articles 
Imported  into  the  Philippines  trom  a 
foreign  countrv  without  payment  of 
full  rates  of  duty  on  such  imports. 
As    to    Patentii. 

"A  section  is  added  applying  the 
same  rules  to  patents  obtained  4n  the 
United  States  by  aliens  that  are 
pdopted  bv  the  country  of  which  these 
aliens  are  citizens  in  respect  to  patents 
issued  there  to  citizens  of  tlie  United 
States.  Tills  will  either  compel  for- 
eigners obtaining  patents  in  the  United 
States  to  build  factories  and  manufac- 
ture here  for  our  trade,  or  eventually 
forfeit   t!ie   right   to   their  patents. 

"A  section   is   inserted  preserving 
Cuban    reciprocity    provisions    of 
present  law. 

•'Provision  is  made  to  terminate 
various  commercial  agreements  with 
foreign  countries,  according  to  the 
terms    of    said    agreements,    by    notice. 


and  in  the  meantime  keeping  faith  in 
those  agreements.  The  provision  of 
section  4.  applying  the  minimum  anu 
maximum  rates,  will  take  the  place 
of  these  sections. 

"The  estimated  revenue  under  the 
tariff  duties  prescribed  in  the  bill 
amount    to    about    $300,000,000. 

•The  bill  provides  for  a  tax  on  trans- 
fers of  property,  both  real  estate  and 
personal,  by  inheritance  or  succession, 
and  by  will. 

"It  is  believed  that  this  provision, 
when  in  full  operation,  will  bring  in 
a  revenue  of  $20.0ii0.000,  alUiough  no 
accurate  estimates  can  be  made. 

"The  tax  on  cigarettes  is  increased, 
those  weighing  over  three  pounds  ijer 
thousand,  from  $3  to  $3.60.  and  those 
weighing  less  from   $1   to   $1.50. 

"The  committee  has  examined  thor- 
oughly all  the  decisions  of  the  courts 
and  of  the  general  appraisers  for  the 
last  fifteen  years,  interr-reting  the 
meaning  of  the  language  of  the  laritl 
laws,  and  has  framed  the  language  ot 
the  various  paragraplis  to  meet  these 
decisions.  It  is  hoped  that  it  will 
prevent  much  litigation  and  will  in 
the  future  give  the  courts  a  clear  un- 
derstanding of  the  intention  of  con- 
gress 

"The  bill  contains  a  carefully  pre- 
pared section  extending  the  privileges 
of  drawback  on  material  imported  on 
which  the  tariff  has  been  paid  and  the 
products  of  which  are  manufactured  In 
this  country  when  exported.  It  is  be- 
lieved that  this  section  carefully 
guards  the  revenue  and  at  the  same 
time  liberalizes  the  provision  and  will 
stimulate    our    export    trade. 

"It  is  provided  that  the  bill  shall  go 
Into  effect  the  day  following  its  enact- 
ment '' 

Representative  Payne,  in  introducing 
the  tariff  bill,  gave  out  the  following 
statement:  .  .  ^,     .. 

•Section  A — One  problem  that  con- 
fronted the  committee  was  Hie  question 
of  revenue.  The  business  of  all  com- 
mercial nations  has  been  depressed 
for  nearly  two  years,  and  thus  has 
affected  our  commerce  and  greatly  re- 
duced our  revenues,  so  that  we  have  a 
large  deficit,  but  the  revenues  under 
tlie  present  law  are  improving  from 
month  to  month  as  business  conditions 
are   becoming  better. 

"The  last  normal  year  of  Imports  was 
the    fiscal    vear    ending    June    30,    1900; 
lliOi   was  an  unusually  prosperous  year, 
and     the    revenues    from    customs    ex- 
i  ceeded  those  of  1906  by  $32,000,000.  The 
committee    has    tlierefore      taken      the 
I  year  1906  as  the  basis  to  form  its  esti- 
Imate    of    the    revenue-producing    quall- 
I  ties   of   the  Jiew   bill.     Should   the   next 
fiscal    year    prove    prosperous    and    the 
normal    conditions    of    1906    return,    on 
account  of  the  large  increase  in  popula- 
tion,  the  revenues  for  1910  would  show 
a    considerable    increase   over   the   esti- 
mates of  the  committee. 

Fore»»ee»    Kud    of   Deficit. 
••With  a  return  to  anything  like  nor- 
mal   conditions    during    the    next    .iscal 
vear,  it  is  safe  to  predict   that  the  de- 
ficit  will   be   entirely   wiped   out.    but   in 
case  it  is  not,  the  bill   pnAidi'-^  for  the 
Issue    jf  Panama  canal   boiid.-^    ti>  reim- 
burse   the    treasury    fctv    the    $4". 000. 000 
paid    out    in    the    original    i>jrchase    of 
the   canal.      Tliis    nvue    thai:    mikes    up 
anv  deficiency.     There  i.i  .-ilso  re-enact- 
ed" the   provision    for   the   issue   of  cer- 
tificates   to    run    one    ye-tr    to    replenish 
the    trea.surv,   raising?   the  amount    from 
$100,000,000    to    $250,000,000,    an    amount 
i  sufficient      to      i)rovide      at      anv      time 
against  two  or  three  years  of  depressed 
business  ccmditions." 
I      The  statement  gives  the  rates  in  the 
i  present   law,    the     Dingley      tariff,    and 
I  shows    the   charges   that   the  Payne    Wll 
proposes.     The  abstract  of  the  bill  con- 
tinues: 

"The  committee  has  transferred  some 
articles  from  the  free  li.«t  to  the  duti- 
able, and  have  increased  duties  on  oth- 
ers for  the  sole  purpose  of  Increasing 
the  revenue.  Most  of  these  articles  on 
which  duties  have  been  Increased  are 
luxuries,  which  have  been  Increased  as 
follows: 

••I'erfumerles  and  toilet  articles, 
from  50  to  60  per  centum  ad  valorem. 
Fancy  soap  from  15  to  20  cents  per 
pound.  Chicory  root,  raw  not  dried, 
from  1  cent  to  2^  cents  per  pound; 
roasted  from  2*^  cents  to  5  cents  per 
pound. 

"Cocoa,    crude,    transferred    from 
free  list  to  the  dutiable,  at  4  cents 
pound;    prepared   or   manufactured, 
creased    2    cents   on    each   classification, 
exscept  that  valued  above  35  cents  per 
pound,   which   remains   the  same.       Ten 
perceiitum  ad  valorem  is  also  added  to 
the  duties  assessed  on  tliat  valued  be- 
tween   15    and     35    cents    pere    pound. 
Powdered  cocoa  from  5  cents  to  9  cents 
per  pound. 

"t:ocoa  butter,  from  3%  cents  to  5 
and  5\4  cents  per  pound.  Dandelion 
root  and  articles  used  as  a  substitute 
for  coffee.  2i^  to  4  cents  per  pound. 
"Spices,  which  are  now  largely  on  the 
free  list,  are  assessed  an  average  duty 
of  30  per  centum  ad  valorem.  Feath- 
ers are  increased  from  15  per  centum 
to  20  per  centum  ad  valorem.  and 
dressed  or  colored  feathers  received 
an  increase  of  10  percentum.  Furs, 
dressed  on  the  skin,  are  assessed  27 Vi 
per    centum    ad    valorem. 

DutleM  Increased. 
"Duties  on  the  following  articles 
have  been  Increased  because  the  com- 
mittee found  that  tliere  was  not  suffi- 
cient protection  under  the  present  law. 
Coal  tar  dyes  or  colors,  now  bearing 
a  dutv  of  30  per  centum  to  35  per 
centuiii  ad  valorem.  Zinc  in  ore.  now 
brought  in  at  20  per  centum  ad 
valorem,  to  1  cent  per  pound  for  the 
zinc   contests    contained    therein. 

"Peas,  split  peas,  from  40  cent  to 
45  cents  per  bushel.  Figs,  from  2  to 
2>^  cents  per  pound,  l^emons.  from  1 
cent  io  Wa  per  cent  per  found.  Pine- 
apples, from  $7  per  thousand  to  $S  per 
thousand.  ,     ,    , 

"Increases  in  the  cotton  schedule  are: 

"An    additional    duty    of    1    cent    per 

vard    on    mercerized    fabrics.      (A    new 

process   of   manufacture    invented    since 

the  present  law  was  enacted.) 

"Also  a  small  additional  duty  on 
lappets.  There  is  also  an  increased 
duty  on  stockings  fashioned  and 
shaped  wholly  or  in  part  on  knitting 
machines. 

"Changes      in      the 
which    include    those 


the    special    commltree"  on  "wood    pulp 
and  print  paper  invest*gatlf»p,  are: 

"Surfaced  papers,  covered  with  metal, 
from  3  oents  and  20  percentum  to  5  cents 
and  20  percentum  ad  valorem;  other 
surface-coated  paper  frum  2>4  cents  per 
pound  and  15  per  cent  *d  valorem  to  5 
cents  per  pound. 

"Lithographic    print.4    fr 
per   pound   to   8    cents;    rtii 
20   cents    to    25    cents    p*r 

paper,   20   cents   to   25   cents   per   .. 

with  small  increases  on  various  sizes 
of  other  papers.  Lithographic  cigar 
labels,  from  20  cents  per  pound  to  30 
cents  per  pound;  printed  in  colors  less 
than  eight,  from  20  U>  30  cents  per 
pound;  more  than  elghtj  from  30  to  ."TiA 
cents  per  pound;  printed  in  metal  leaf, 
from  50  cents  a  pound  to  52 '/^  cents  per 
pound;  paper  hanging*,  from  2  5  per- 
centum to  30  percentum  ad  valorem; 
paper  not  specially  provided  for.  from 
25  percentum  to  35  percenttim  ad  va- 
lorem. 

'Plain    'paper   envelopes    from    20    per 
centum   to  30  percentum  ad  Aiplorem. 

••The  recomi.iendations  of  the  select 
committee  were  to  permit  the  free  en- 
I  trv  of  mechanically  ground  wood  pulp 
I  from  anv  country  not  imposing  export 
duty  and  to  reduce  printing  paper  val- 
ued at  not  above  2  Vi  cents  per  pound, 
from  three-tenths  to  one-tenth  ol  1 
cent  per  pound;  valued  not  above  2'^k 
cents  a  pound  from  four-tenths  to  two- 
tentl'.s  of  1   cent  per  pound." 

Redtictiunx    .More    X  iimeroiifi. 
Section    B — The      reductions    in      duty 
are   much  more  numerous   than   the  in- 
creases.    In  the  schedule  on  chemicals, 
oils  and  paints,  they  are: 

••Boracic  acid,  borax  from  5  cents  to 
2  cents  per  pound;  reductions  of  2 
cents  per  pound  are  made  on  gallic 
and  tartaric  acids,  borate  of  lime.  Ke- 
ductions  of  50  per  cent  are  made  In 
the  duty  on  salicylic  acid,  chloroform, 
fruii  ethers,  oils  or  essences,  pepper- 
mint oil,  whiting  and  paris  white,  dry; 
bichromate  and  chromate  of  potash 
and    santonin." 

Other    material    reductions 
the  chemical   schedules  are: 

'Borate    of    lime   and    other 
are   reduced    from    4    cents    to 
per   pound  and   from   3   cents 
per  pound,  according  to  the  percentage 
of  anhydrous   boracic  acid  contained. 

"Suphuric  ethers  are  reduced  to  8 
cents  per  pound;  spirits  of  ether  to  20 
cents    per    pound. 

"Chloroform  from  $1  to  75  cents  per 
pound.  Flax-seed,  linseed  and  poppy- 
seed  oil  reduced  to  15  cents  per  gallon. 
"Varnishes  reduced  from  35  to  2o 
percentum  ad  valorem,  and  spirit  var- 
nishes from  $1.32  per  gallon  and  3tv 
percentum   ad   valorem. 

"Lead,    acetate    of,    white,    from    3>i 

cents    to    2%    cents    per    pound;    brown, 

or    yellow    from    2  Vi    cents    to    1 '» 


TAILORED  SUITS  ^°oVn 
DISTINCTIVE  AND  DIFFERENT 

$16.50,  $25.00,  $29,50,  $32.50. 

Our  Spring  Opening  Days  were  ftill  of  enthusiastic  comment  on  ^l^e  magnificent  show- 
ings of  true  Fashion.  From  now  until  Easter  (scarcely  a  month  away),  our  second  floor 
will  be  a  scene  of  continuous  activity.  Easter  styles  should  be  selected  now,  thus  avoiding  the 
hasty  choosing  during  the  Easter  rush. 


made    in 

borates 
1  »4  cents 
to    1    cent 


^X^otnen's  Suits  at  $16.50 

Tomorrow  we  specialize  in  an  important  showing  of 
popular  price  suits.  A  shipment  of  smartly  Tailored  Suits 
will  be  offered  at  this  most  attractive  figure.  New  and  at- 
tractive models  in  tailor  worsteds  in  the  prevailing  ones 
for  the  new  season— choose  from  this  special  showing 
at  $16.50. 

Panama  and  Serge  Skirts  at  $6.00. 

New    gored    models   have   just   arrived   and  ' 
will  be  ready  to  select  from  tomorrow — colors, 
blue,  brown  and  black.     Price  $6.00. 


UE-ORGAMZATIOX     OF     OUR 
ALTERATION    SERVICE. 

Our  svstem  for  fittings  and  alter- 
ations is  now  on  a  basis  of  perfec- 
tion that  absolutely  does  away  with 
all  delays  in  fitting  and  finishing  of 
garments.  ,       ,    . 

The  problem  has  been  solved  by 
the  Installation  of  a  system  aug- 
mented bv  the  addition  of  an  ex- 
pert forewoman,  v.-ith  metropolitan 
experience,  who  will  assist  our  ef- 
ficient corps  of  fitters  in  securing 
punctual    service    for   our  patrons. 

A    most    capable    and    satisfactory 
organization    v.hich    Insures    against 
all   future   disappointing   delays. 
Test  this  assertion  for  yourself. 


WKite  Serge  Skirts  $9.50 

A  new  assortment  of  pretty  styles  in  fine 
White  French  Serge,  new  gored  models  for 
dressy  wear,  $9.50. 

Silk  Dresses  at  $19.50 

Charming  new  onc-picce  models,  in  the  de- 
sirable shades,  yoke  and  collar  of  all-over  lace 
— tomorrow,  $19.50. 


New  Silk  Petticoats  $5.00 

Made  of  fine  quality  Taffeta  Silk,  in  a  full  as- 
sortment of  colors,  $5.00. 

Messaline  Skirts  $6.00 

New    Underskirts  in  fine  quality  Messaline, 
full  line  of  shades,  $6.00. 

Princesse  Dresses  $14.50 

One-p.ece  styles,  in  plain  and  fancy  wool  ma- 
terials; correct  st3'lcs  for  spring  wear,  $14.50. 


gray 
cents 
cents 
from 


per    pound;    nitrate    of,    from    2Vj 

to   2'^    cents  per  pound;   litliarge 

'»4    cents  to   2'm    cents  per   poun»l. 

Potash,   chlorate    of,   from   2Vi    cents 

to  2   cents   per  pound. 

"I'lasters,  healing,  etc..  from  3»  per- 
centum to  25  percentum  ad  valorem. 

"Hydrate  of,  or  caustic  soda,  from 
three-fourths  cent  to  one-half  cent  per 
pound;  nitrate  of  soda,  from  2V.s  .cents 
to  2  cents  per  pound;  liyposulphite  of 
soda,  from  one-half  of  1  cent  per 
pound    to   30    percentum   ad    valorem. 

"Sulphate  of  soda,  or  salt  cake,  or 
niter  cake,   from   $1.25  per   ton   to   $1. 

•'Sponges   and    manufactures   ot,    from 
40    percentum   to    30   percentum   ad    va- 
lorem. ,     .  -  „,, 
•'Stryclinia,     or    strychnme,    from    30 
cents   to   15   cents   per  ounce. 

refined      or      sublimed,    or 
from   $8  per   ton   to   $6   per 


the 
per 
In- 


paper      schedule, 
recommended    by 


Check  Yonr  Fat 


the 
the 

the 


Hold  it  where  it  is,  or  take  off  some. 
You   can   do    either    without    disturbing 
your  meals  or  your  ease  or  your  diges- 
tive   organs.      You    can    do    it    without 
physical   risk,  mental    effort   or   danger 
of  a  wrinkle.     "Sounds   well,    but   these 
are  words   only,"    you    say.     True,    but 
these    words,    so    your    protest,    while 
natural,  Is  feeble.     Prove  it.     Write  to 
the    Marmola    company,   Detroit,    Mich., 
inclosing  75  ceuits,  or,  better  still,   take 
that  amount  over  to  your  druggist  and 
get    one    of    the    extra    large    cases    of 
Marmola      Prescription      Tablets.      You 
v.'lll  find  it  generously  filled.     Take  ono 
after  meals  and  at   bedtime,  and  with- 
in  thirty   davs   you    should   be    losing  a 
pound    of    fat    a    day,    without    disturb- 
ance, as  we  said,  of  either  your  meals, 
habits  or  organs.     Fact  is,  these  state- 
ments are  not  to  be  denied,  for  the  tab- 
lets are  an  exact  duplicate  of  the  fam- 
ous fat-reducing  Marmola  Prescription; 
One-half      ounce       Marmola,     %     ounce 
Fluid    Extract    Cascara    Aromatic    and 
'  3>^     ounces    Peppermint    Water,    which 
any    druggist      will    tell      you    Is      the 
Worlds  Fair  medal  winner  in  its  class. 


"Sulphur 
flowers   of, 

"Vanillin  from  80  cents  per  ounce  to 
ID   cents  per   ounce. 

Ou    the    Free   List. 

Section  C — Articles  in  this  schedule 
that  are  placed  on    the  free  list   are: 

"Sulphate  of  ammonia,  copperas,  li- 
corice,   and    cottonseed    oil    and    croton 

Continuing,  the  statement  gives  the 
following  important  reductions  in  the 
other   schedules: 

".Ticliedules  on  earths  and  earthen- 
ware: .    ,  ,         •* 

"Fire  brick  and  other  brick,  ir 
glazed  and  enameled,  from  4  5  per 
centuniv    to   35  per  centum  ad  valorem. 

"Plaster  rock  or  gypsum  crude,  from 
50  cents  to  40  cents  per  ton;  if  ground 
or  calcined,  from   $2.25   to  1.70  per   ton. 

"Unpolished,  cylinder,  crown  and 
common  window  glass  above  2o  and  36 
Inches  square,  reduced  from  15  cents  to 
12  cents  per  square  foot;  sizes  above 
that,    from    20    cents    to  .15    cents      per 

square    foot.  .,  .„  •  • 

"Onvx  in  blocks  from  $l.o0  per  cubic 
foot  to   $1   per  cubic  fot. 

•Cast  polished  plate  glass,  silvered, 
exceeding  24  by  30  Inches.  25  cents  per 
square  foot  which  is  a  reduction  on 
most  sizes  from  38  to  25  cents  per 
square   foot. 

"Mosaic  cubes  of  marble,  onyx  oi 
stone  not  exceeding  two  cubic  feet 
in  size,  if  loose,  from  1  cent  per  pound 
to  1  V>  cents,  and  same  ad  valorem;  if 
attached  to  paper  or  other  material, 
from  20  cents  to  10  cents,  and  same 
ad  valorem.  . 

Free  stone  and  other  building  or 
monumental  stone,  except  marble  and 
onyx,  unmanufactured,  from  12  cents 
to  \>  cents  per  cubic  foot. 

"Mica  cut  or  trimmed,  from  12  cents 
rer  pound  and  20  percentum  ad 
valorem;  unmanufactured,  from  6  cents 
per  pound,  and  20  percentum  ad  val- 
orem; all  to  30  percentum  ad  valorem, 
mica  plates  or  built-up  mica,  35  percen- 
tum ad  valorem." 

On  marble,  sawed  or  dressed,  the 
reduction  is  about  one-sixth,  and  tlie 
additional  duty,  "if  rubbed  in  whole  or 
In  part,"  is  reduced  from  3  cents  to  2 
cents  per  superficial  foot. 
Metal  Jiieheilule. 
Section  D.  Metal  schedule — Iron  ore 
and  basic  slag,  from  40  cents  per  ton 
to   the    free   list. 

"Pig  iron,  Iron  kentledge  and  sple- 
glelsen.  from   $4   per  ton   to   $2.50. 

•'Scrap  iron  and  steel,  from  $4  per 
ton    to   .oO   cents   per    ton. 

"Bar  iron,  from  six-tenths  of  1  cent 
to    four-tenths    of   1    cent    per    pound. 

"liound  iron,  less  than  seven-six- 
teenths of  one  inch  in  diameter,  from 
1  cent  to  six-tenths  of  1  cent  per 
pound.  ,         „ 

"Slabs,  loops,  or  other  forms  less  nn- 

ished   than    bars,   from   five-tenths   of   1 

cent  to  four-tenths  of  1  cent  per  pound. 

"Charcoal    iron,    from    $12    to    $6    per 

ton. 

"Beams,  girders,  points,  angles,  etc.. 
from  five-tenths  of  1  cent  to  three- 
tenths    of   1    cent   per    pound. 

"Anchors,  from  1%  cents  per  pound 
to  1   cent. 

"Iron  and  steel  forglngs.  from  3o 
percentum  to  30  percentum  al  valorem. 
"Hoop,  band  or  scroll  iron  or  steel, 
not  thinner  than  No.  10  wire  gauge, 
from  five-tenths  of  1  per  cent  to  three- 
tenths  of  1  cent  per  pound;  thinner 
than  No.  10  and  not  thinner  than  No. 
20  from  six-tenths  of  1  cent  to  four- 
tenths  of  a  cent  per  pound:  thinner 
than  No.  20,  from  eight-enths  of  six- 
tenths  of  1  cent  per  pound.  Steel  bands 
or  strips,  untempered,  suitable  for 
making  bands  saws,  from  3  cents  per 
pound  to  W^t  cents;  If  tempered,  from  6 
cents  per  pound  and  20  percentum  ad 
valorem  to  3  cents  per  pound  and  20 
percentum   ad   valorem   . 

"Cotton  ties  from  five-tenths  of  1 
cent  per  pound  to  three-tenths. 

Railroad  bars  and  steel  rails  frorn 
seven-twentieths  of  1  cent  per  pound 
to  seven-fortieths;  railway  fish  plates, 
from  four-tenths  of  1  cent  per  pound  to 
two-tenths.  .      ^      ^   - 

"Iron   steel   sheets,  valued   at  3  cents 

per  pound  or  less,  thinner  than  No.  10 

and  no  thinner  than  No.  20  wire  gauge. 

from    seven-teftths    to    five-tenths    of    1 

per    pound;    not    thinner    than    2o. 

eight-tenths    to    six-tenths    of    1 

not    thinner    than    32,    from    one 

one-tenth     cent     to     eight-tenths 

thinner    than    32,    from    one    and 

two-tenths    to    nine-tenths    of    a    cent; 

corrugated    or    crimped,    from    one    and 

one  tenth  to  eight-tenths  of  1  cent  per 

pound.  .  ,      ,  .     , 

"Sheets,  polished.  planished,  or 
glanced,  from  2  cents  to  one  and  three- 
fourths  cents  per  pound;  If  pickled  or 
cleaned,  two-tenths  of  1  cent  per  pound 
in  addition. 

"Tin  plates,  from  1  »i  cents  to  one 
and  two-tent b-  ■  <^"t-  nor  pound. 
Steel  Wire. 
"Section  10 — i..  uii.l  ..r  steel  wire, 
not  smaller  than  No.  13  wire  gauge, 
from  l»/4  cents  per  pound  to  1  cent; 
not  smaller  than  No.  16.  from  IVfe  cents 
to  IH  cents  per  pound;  smaller  than 
No.   16,   from   2   cents  to   l>/i    cents   per 

pound.  ,  ,  ,       1       * 

"That  all  the  foregoing  valued  at 
more  than  4  cencs  per  pound  shall  pay 
not  less  than  40  percentum  ad  va- 
lorem. ,  ,  ,,  ,  , , 
"Steel  bars  or  rods,  cold  rolled,  cold 
drawn  or  cold  hammered,  ,or  polished, 
from  one-fourth  of  1  yent  per  pound  in 
addition    to    the    above    rates,    to    one- 


eacli  to 
of  hard 
from    5 


cent 

from 

cent; 

and 

cent; 


eighth  of  1  cent  per  pound;  on  strips, 
plates,  or  sheets  of  Iron  or  steel  other 
•  ban  polished,  where  cold  rolled,  etc., 
from  1  cent  per  pound  in  addition  to 
the  rates  on  plates  to  five-tenths  of  1 
cent   per   pound. 

"Bolts,  with  or  without  threads  or 
nuts,  from  IVi  cents  to  l^^  cents  per 
pound.  ,  .,         * 

"Cast-iron  pipe,  -from  four- tenths  of 
1  cent  to  one-fourth  of  1  cent  per 
pound.  .    ,         ,        J 

"Cast  hollow  ware,  coated,  glazed 
or  tinned,  from  2  cents  to  IVi  cents  per 
pound.  ,  ,         . 

"Chains  not  less  than  three-fourths 
of  an  inch  in  diameter,  from  1%  cents 
to  seven-eighths  of  1  cent  per  pound; 
not  less  than  three-eights  of  an  in<:h 
in  diameter,  from  1%  cents  to  1 »« 
cents;  not  less  than  five-sixteenths, 
from  one  and  seven-eighths  to  one  and 
six-eighths    of    1    cent. 

"But  no  chain  will  pay  less  than  45 
percentum  ad  valorem. 

"Lap- welded,  butt-welded,  seam-td  or 
Jointed  iron  or  steel  boiler  tubes,  if 
not  less  than  three-eighths  of  an  inch 
in  diameter,  from  2  cents  to  1  cent  per 
pound;  not  less  than  one-fourth,  from 
•>  cents  to  1^8  cents  per  pound;  If  less 
than  one-fourth,  2  cents  per  pound; 
welded  cvlindrical  furnaces,  from  2V2 
cents  per"  pound  to  2  cents  per  pound: 
all  other  iron  or  steel  tubes,  from  35 
percentum  to  30  percentum  ad  va- 
lorem. 

KnlveH   and    Files. 

"Table  butchering,  carving  knives, 
etc  with  pearl  shell  or  ivory  handles, 
from  16  cents  each  to  4  cents  each; 
handles  of  deer  horn,  from  12  cents 
10  cents  each;  with  handles 
rubber,  bone,  celluloid,  etc.. 
X.V....  .,  cents  each  to  4  cents  each; 
with  other  handles  from  1  Vfe  cents  each 
to  1  cent  each;  with  the  same.  ad 
valorem  addition  of  15  percentum; 
provided  that  none  of  the  above  sliall 
pay  at  a  less  rate  than  40  per  centum 
advalorem,  Instead  of  45  in  the  present 
law.  ,      ,  ._ 

"Files  were  reduced  from  specific 
rates,  the  equivalent  of  80  percentum 
ad  valorem  to  40  percentum  ad  va- 
lorem. ,  X  ii.  t 
"Cut  nails,  spikes,  from  six-tenths  of 
1  cent  to  five-tenths  of  1  cent  per 
pound.  ,,       . 

•Horseshoe  nails  and  hob  nails,  from 
2'i   cents  to  1»^  cents  per  pound 

"Wire  nails,  not  lighter  than  No.  16 
wire  gauge  from  one-half  of  1  cent 
to  one-fourth  of  1  cent  per  pound; 
lighter  than  No.  16.  from  1  cent  to  one- 
half    of    1    cent    per    pound. 

"Spikes  nuts,  washer  and  horse,  mule 
ox-shoes.' from  1  cent  to  one-lialf  of  1 
cent    per    i)Ound. 

"Cut  tacks  not  exceeding  sixteen 
ounces  to  the  thousand,  from  1»4 
cents  to  five-eighths  of  1  cent  per 
thousand;  exceeding  sixteen  ounces, 
from  IVa  cents  to  three-fourths  of  1 
cent   per  pound.  ^     „   o- 

"Steel  plates,  engraved,  etc..  from   2a 
nercentum  to  20  percentum  ad  valorem. 
"Rivets,    from    2    cents    to    IVi    cents 
per  pound.  .      »      - 

"Cross-cut  saws,  from  6  cents  to  a 
cents  per  foot;  mill  saws,  from  10  cents 
per  linear  foot  to  8  cents  per  linear 
foot,  pit  and  drag  saws  from  8  cents 
per  linear  foot  to  6  cents  per  linear 
foot-  circular  saws,  from  25  percentum 
ad  valorem  to  20  percentum  ad  valor- 
em- steel  band-saws,  from  10  cents  per 
pound  to  5  cents  per  pound,  and  20  per- 
centum ad  valorem  remaining;  all 
ohter  saws  reduced  from  30  percentum 
to   25  percentum  ad  valorem. 

"Screws  more  than  two  inches  in 
length,  from  4  cents  to  2\<2  cents  per 
pound;  over  one  Inch  and  not  more 
than  two  Inches,  from  6  cents  to  4 
cents  per  pound;  over  one-half  Incn 
and  not  over  one  inch,  from  S'^  cents 
to  6  cents  per  pound;  one-half  inch 
and   less,  from   12   cents  to  6  cents  per 

pound. 

RniUvay    Wheels. 

"Wheels  for  railway  purposes,  or 
parts  thereof,  from  1*^  cents  to  I'A 
cents  per  pound;  ingots,  blooms,  or 
blanks  for  the  same,  from  Wi  cents 
to    1    cent    per    pound.  ,     ^    c 

"Aluminum,  in  crude  form,  froni  b 
cents  to  7  cents  per  pound:  in  plates, 
from  13  cents  to  11  cents  per  pound. 
"Hooks  and  eyes,  from  5%  cents  to 
4  cents  per  pound,  retaining  the  addi- 
tional   15   percentum   ad   valorem. 

"Lead-bearing  ore.  on  the  lead  con- 
tents therein  from  l»/a  cents  to  1  cent 
nef  pound.  .     ,,, 

"Lead  dross  bullion,  gross  bullion 
and  lead  in  pigs,  from  2%  cents  to  1% 
cents  per  pound;  In  sheets,  pipes,  shot, 
from  21^  cents  to  1  Ti  cents  per  pound 
"Zinc  in  blocks  or  pigs,  f rom  1 V2 
cents  to  1  cent  per  pound;  sheets,  from 
"  cents  to  \\i  cents  per  pound. 

"Cash  registers,  electrical  apparatus 
and  machinery.  .lute  manufacturing 
machinery  linotype,  and  all  typesetting 
machines,  '  tools.  printing  presses 
sewing  machines,  typewriters,  and 
all  steam  engines,  from  4o 
percentum  to  30  percentum  ad  valorem. 
Embroidery  machines  and  lace-making 


I 


They  Give  the  Effect 

BlaoKl3ttrrr« 

l^ascaRiyal  PiKi 

\HmetmmnxX3XsmammmJL 

Without  the  Taste. 
15  doses  10c. ,  45  dcses  25c. 


machines,  the  same  rate,  with  a  proviso 
that  they  may  be  imported  free  until 
.July   1,   1911. 

"Steel  ingots,  cogged  ingots,  blooms 
and  slabs,  valued  at  1  cent  per  pound 
or  less,  from  three-tenths  o'  1  cent  per 
pound  to  seven-fortieths,  and  on  the 
other  valuations  the  reductions  are  one- 
tenil:  of  a  cent  per  pound,  li.ith  the  ex- 
ception of  those  valued  above  7  cents, 
and  not  above  10  cents,  upo  i  which  ti'.e 
duty  remains  the  same;  and  upon  those 
valued  above  30  cents  per  jiound,  upon 
which  the  duty  is  made  15  percentum 
ad  valorem, 

"Lumber    schedule: 

"Timber,  from  1  cent  per  cubic  foot 
to  one-half  cent  per  cubic  foot. 

"Sawed  boards,  planks  of  whitewood. 
sycamore  and  basswood,  from  $1  per 
thousand    to    60    cents    per    thousand. 

"All  other  sawed  lumber  from  $2  to 
$1  dollar. 

"If  further  advanced  and  manufac- 
tured, the  same  reductioa  from  ttie 
present    law. 

"Paving  posts,  railroad  ties,  tele- 
phone poles  etc,  from  20  percentum  to 
10    percentum    ad    valorem. 

"Clapboards  from  $1.50  ler  thousand 
to  $1  per  ihousand. 

"Kindling  wood  transferred  to  the 
free   list 

Laths  from  25  cents  pei  one  thous- 
and pieces  to  20  cents  one  ihousand 
pieces. 

"Fence  posts  from  10  percentum  to 
the  free  list. 

"Agricultural    products: 
"Barley,   from   30  cents  per  bushel   to 
15   cents 

"Barley  malt  from  4a  cents  lo  25 
cents. 

"Cabbages  from   3   to  2   tents   each. 
"Bacon   and    hams,    from    5    cents    per 
pound    to    4    cents. 

"Fresh  meats,  from  2  cents  to  l^/i 
cents  per  pound. 

"Lard   from    2   cents   to   1  »^    cent.e. 
"Tallow    from    %    cents  I'cr   pound   to 
free   list- 

"Wool  grease,  from  one  half  of  1 
cent  to   one-fourth    of   1   cent. 

"Dextrin,  burnt  starch  etc,  from  2 
cents  to   1»^    cents   per  poind. 

•Peas,  green,  from  40  cents  per 
bushel  to  30  cents  per  bushel. 

"All  starch,  except  poiato  starch, 
from   1  \<ii   cents   to   1    cent   per  pound. 

"Sugar     refined,    is    reduced    from       1 
cent    anti    95-100    of    1    cent    to    1    cent 
and  90-100  of  1  cent  per  p  lund.' 
Flax,     hemp     and     jute: 
"Flax   straw,    not   hackled   or   dressed 
to  tlie  free  list. 

•Cordage,  reduced  from  1  cent  to 
three-fourth    of    1   cent   pei    pound. 

"Threads,  not  finer  than  five  lea  or 
number,  reduced  from  13  cents  to  10 
cents  per  pond,  with  five-eighths  In- 
stead of  three-fourths  of  1  cent  per 
pound  advance,  witli  each  lea  in  num- 
ber   in    excess    of   five. 

"Single  yarns,  not  finer  than  eight 
lea,  reduced  from  7  cents 'to  6  cents 
per  pound. 

"Flax  gill  nettings,  f re  m  25  to  20 
percentum. 

"Carpets,  mats.  etc..  from  5  cents  per 
square  yard  and  35  percentum  ad  va- 
lorem to  4  cents  per  stjuara  yard  and  30 
percentum  ad  valorem.  vhen  valued 
not  above  15  cents  per  square  yard;  if 
valued  above  15  cents,  f  om  10  cents 
per  square  yard  and  35  jercentunj  ad 
valorem  to  8  cents  per  square  yard  and 
30    percentum    »d    valorem. 

"Hydraulic  hose,  from  20  cents  per 
pound  to  15  cents  per  pound. 

"Oil  cloth,  Including  linoleum  above 
nine  feet  in  width,  from  20  cents  per 
square  yard  and  20  percentum  ad  va- 
lorem to   12  cents  per  sqi.are  yard  and 

15  nercentum  ad  valorem 
Collars    and   CiiITn. 

"Shirts,  collar.'^  and  cuffs  of  cotton, 
from  45  cents  per  dozen  and  15  per 
centum  ad  valorem  to  35  cents  per 
dozen   and  10   per  centum  ad  valorem." 

Wool  schedule: 

"Wool  of  the  third  class,  known  as 
carpet  wool,  from  a  duty  of  4  cents  per 
pound  on  such  wool  worth  12  cents  or 
less,  and  a  duty  of  7  cents  per  pound 
upon  such  wool  exceeding  12  cents  in 
value  to  a  duty  of  3  cents  per  pound 
on  such  wool  valued  at  i  ot  more  than 
10  cents  per  pound;  and  if  valued  at 
more  than  10  cents  per  pound,  and  not 
more  than  16  cents  per  i>ound,  3  cents 
per  pound  and  in  addition  thereto  one- 
half  of  1  cent  per  pound  for  each  cent 
per  pound  of  additional  value  exceed- 
ing   10    cents;     if   valued   at   more   than 

16  cents,  7  cents  per  pound. 
"Top   waste   and    rovlnir   waste,   from 

30  cents  to  26  cents  per  pound;  slub- 
bing  waste,  ring  waste  and  garnetted 
waste,  from  30  cents  :)er  pound  to 
20    cents    per    pound. 

"Shoddy,  from  25  to  20  cents  per 
pound;  noils  and  all  ather  wastes 
from    20    to    18    cents    per    pound. 

"Woolen  rags,  murgo  and  fiocks, 
from  10  cents  per  pound  to  6  cents 
per    pound. 

"Tops,  from  33  cents  per  pound  and 
50  percentum  ad  valorem  when  valued 
at  not  more  than  40  cents  per  pound 
and  44  cents  per  pound  und  60  percen- 
tum ad  valorem,  when  valued  above 
40  cents  and  not  abov?  70  cents  to 
the  duty  imposed  on  scoured  wool  and 
6    cents    in    addition." 

"Sundries: 

"Bituminous  coal  and  coke,  from 
any  countrv  admitting  American  coal, 
from  67  cents  per  ton  f  jr  coal  and  20 
percentum  ad  valorem  fer  coke,  to  free 

list 

"Gunpowder,  valued  at  20  cents  and 
less  per  pound,  from  4  cents  per  pound 
to  2  cents;  valued  over  20  cents  per 
pound,    from    6    cents    per    found    to    4 

*^*^"Cartridges  from  35  t3  30  percentum 
ad  valorem;  '  blasting  caps,  from  an 
equivalent  to  80  percentum  ad  valoreni 
to  30  percentum  ad  valcrem;  mine  and 


I 


blasting  fuse,  from  35  percentum  to  25 
percentum    ad    valorem. 

Hides    to    Free    \A%t, 
"Hides   of   cattle,   from    15   percentum 
ad    valorem,    to    free    list.         Band    and 
sole     leather,     from     20    percentum    ad 
valorem    to    5    percentum    ad    valorem. 
Upper  leather,  calf  skins,  choice  skins 
kangaroo,    sheen    and    goatskins      and 
other  leather  not  provided  for.  from  20 
percentum  to  15  percentum  ad  valorem. 
Patent   leather,    weighing   not   over   ten 
pounds  per  dozen  skins,  from   30   cents 
per  pound  and  20  percentum  ad  valor- 
em,  weighing  over  ten  pounds  and  not 
over  twentyrfi\e  pounds,  from  ;;o  ce 
per  pound  and   10  percentum  ad  vaior- 
tm;  weigliiiig  over  twenty-five  pound."! 
from    20   cents  per  dozen   and   20   cents 
per  pound  and  10  per  cent  ad  valorerr 
all    to   20   percentum   ad  valorem.    Piano 
forte    leather,    from    35    percentum    ad 
valorem    to    20    percentum    ad    valorem, 
boots    and    shoes,    from    25    percentum 
ael  valorem   to   15    percentum   ad   valor- 
em; shoe  laces,  from  50  cents  per  gro-i^a 
and    20    i>ercenlum    ad    valorem      to    15 
nercentum  ad  valorem;  leather  cut  into 
shoe    uppers,    etc.,    from    35    to    30    per- 
centum   ad    valorem;    all    other    manu- 
factures of  leather  from  35   percentum 
ad  valorem  to  30  percentum  ad  valorem. 
"Agricultural    Implements: 
"Plows,  15  percentum  ad  valorem  and 
further  provision   to  free  list   from   any 
country    admitting    American    agricul- 
tural  maciiinery  tree. 

•Works  of  art.  including  paintings 
and  statuar.v.  more  than  twenty  years 
old,   from    20   percentum   to   free   list. 

"The  articles  mentioned  In  the  re- 
maining paragraphs  are  rated,  sub- 
stantially, at  tl'.e  same  duty  as  under 
the   present    law: 

"Tlie  duties  on  women's  anel  chil- 
dren's gloves,  not  over  fourteen  inches 
in  lengtl'i,  are  considerably  Increased 
on  'Schmaschen,'  'Glace'  of  sheep  origin, 
Giace'  other  than  of  sheep  origin, 
'with  exterior  grain  surface  removed,' 
and  "kiel  of  other  leather  than  of  sheep- 
skin.' The  rate  applied  to  these  gloves 
i.s  $•!  per  dozen  pairs,  and  3a  cents  in 
addition  per  dozen  pairs  for  each  Inch 
over    fourteen. 

".Some  further  increases  under  var- 
ious schedules  are: 

"Cast  polislied  plate  glass  increased 
from  8  lo  10  cents  per  square  foot  on 
sizes  net  exceeding  16  by  24  Inches, 
and  on  tliose  above  tliat  and  not  ex- 
ceeding 24  by  30  Inches,  from  10  cents 
to  121-4  cents  per  sejuare  foot;  all 
above  that  22  Vi  cents  per  square  foot.  ^ 
whicii  Is  a  reduction  of  nearly  all  of 
these   larger   size!?, 

"Keene  s  cement  or  other  cement  in 
which  gypsum  is  the  component  ma- 
terial or  chief  vaiue,  from  30  to  35  per- 
centum ad  valorem. 

"Asphaltum  and  bitumen,  not  refined 
or  otherwise  atlvanced  In  condition 
from  its  natural  state,  to  fifteen-one- 
hundredths  of  1  cent  per  pound  on  tlie 
bitumen    contained    therein. 

"Fluorshor,  rude,  from  10  percentum 
ad  valorem  to  15  cents  per  ton;  crushed 
or  otherwise  manufactured  from  20 
percentum  ad  valorem  to  $1.75  per  ton. 
"Pins  with  ornamental  heads,  with 
a  new  classification,  including  those 
set  with  precious  stones,  pearls,  or  cor- 
als, from  40  lo  50  percentum  ad  va- 
lorem. 

^'atcb  Movements. 

"Watch  movements  with  more  than 
seven  jewels,  from  35  cents  each  and 
25  percentum  ad  valorem  to  75  cents 
each  if  more  than  seven  Jewels  and 
not  more  than  eleven,  from  50  cents 
each  and  25  percentum  ad  valorem  to 
$1.35  each;  more  than  eleven  Jewels 
and  not  more  than  fifteen,  from  75 
cents  each  and  25  percentum  ad  va- 
lorem to  $1  05  each;  having  more  than 
seventeen  jewels,  the  rates  of  duty  re- 
main   the    same. 

"Watch  cases  and  parts  of  watches 
and  clocks,  the  duty  remains  the  same. 

"Ciiromic  acid  and  lactic  acid,  from 
3    cents    lo    2    cents    per    pound. 

"Tannic  acid  or  tannin,  from  50 
cents  to  35  oents  per  pound." 

One  of  the  most  important  of  the 
miscellaneous  provisions  of  the  bill  is 
tlat  providing  for  the  method  of  val- 
uation, which  Mr.  Payne  explains  as 
follows: 

"Tlie  bills  adds  a  new  paragraph  to 
section  11  of  the  customs  administra- 
tive act;  which  provides  for  the  ap- 
praisement of  goods  Imported  by  con- 
signment and  not  by  sale  where  there 
is  no  market  price  at  the  place  of  the 
origin  of  the  goods.  After  re-enacting 
the  present  provisions  to  ascertain  llie 
value  the   bill   adds   this   paragraph. 

"'The  actual  market  value  or  whole- 
sale prices,  as  defined  by  the  law,  of 
any  imported  merchandise  which  is 
consigned  for  sale  in  the  United  States 
or  wliich  is  not  actually  sold  and 
freely  offered  for  sale,  in  usual  whole- 
sale quantities  in  the  open  market  of 
the  countrv  of  exportation  to  all  pur- 
chascre,  shall  not  in  any  case  be  ap- 
praised pX  less  than  the  wholesale  price 
at  which  such  or  similar  imported  mer- 
chandise is  actually  sold  and  freely  of- 
fered for  sale  in  usual  wholesale  quan. 
titles  in  the  United  States  in  the  open 
market  to  all  purchasers,  due  allow- 
ance bv  deduction  being  made  for  es- 
timated duties  ihereon,  cost  of  trans- 
portation, insurance  and  other  neces- 
sarv  expenses  from  the  place  of  ship- 
ment to  the  place  of  delivery  and  a 
reasonable  commission,  not  exceeding 
10  percentum,  if  any  of  the  same  has 
been  paid.'  ,   ,        , 

"It  will  be  seen  that  this  provision  is 
only  applied  to  consigned  goods  and 
not  to  those  actually  sold  for  importa- 
tion." 


I 


"Mv  child  was  burned  terribly  about 
ihe  face,  neck  and  chest.  I  applied  Pr^ 
Thomas's  Eclectric  Oil.  The  pain  ceased 
and  the  child  sank  into  a  restful  sleep. 

Mrs     Nancy    M.    Hanson,    HambuiKt 

N.  Y.  ■ 


/' 

f 

' 

j 

1 

1 

\               f 

HI 


I  J*     ■   ' a= 


■  ' 


1 


^ 


^       ■     i 


3^C%g|^e.aJfcg'^.«^ 


ST.  PATRICK 


Irish  of  Duluth  Are  Gen- 
erally Observing 
the  Day. 

Weather  Man  Smiles  on 

Sons  of  the  Emerald 

Isle. 


This  is  St  Patrick's  day.  and  every- 
where the  green  of  the  shamrock  is  in 
evidence.  March  17  is  looked  for- 
ward to  by  newsboys  as  a  time  when 
they  can  swell  their  earnines  by  a 
sale  of  the  imitation  shamrocks,  and 
ever>-  youth  in  town  who  felt  that  he 
had  any  capacity  ft)r  selling,  and  who 
wanted  a  little  spiudinff  money,  pro- 
cured a  box  of  the  attractive  little 
pins  last  evening-,  and  started  out  to 
Bell  them.  The  little  merchants  are 
aifaln  at  work  today,  and  their  sales, 
together  with  those  of  the  stores, 
amount   into  the   hundreds. 

The  weather  man  handed  out  a  day 
worthy  of  the  occasion. 

The  Irish  geneially  are  observing 
the  day  in  some  way  out  of  the  or- 
dinary Many  from  Duluth  will  this 
evening  attend  a  St.  Patrick's  day 
banquet  to  be  given  in  Superior.  There 
is  a  St.  Patrick's  day  entertainment 
at  Cathedral  auditorium  this  evening, 
which,  it  is  expected,  will  be  very 
largely  attended,  and  another  enter- 
tainment will  be  given  in  West  Du- 
luth under  the  auspices  of  the  Irish 
re.siding  In  that   portion  of  the  city 

While  there  Is  really  nothing  in  the 
church  rules  saying  so,  it  seems  to  be 
a  tacit  understanding  among  Irish- 
Catholics  generally  that  they  shall,  on 
St  Patrick's  day.  be  permitted  to 
largely  relax  their  observance'of  Lent,  , 
and  act  ju-st  about  as  they  would  if 
It    were   not    Lent. 


BLUNDKREn  INTO  HOLE 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


casii.  Local  assessors,  county  boards 
of  equalization  and  state  boards  of 
e<^tUaIization  have  for  generations  been 
blinking  at  this  law.  assessing  property 
at  100  per  cent  here.  50  per  cent  there. 
JJ'i  per  cent  elsewhere,  and  even  15  per 
cent. 

Now  the  state  has  a  lax  commission, 
and  that  body  declares  that  it  cannot 
afford  to  participate  In  a  direct  ylola- 
tlon  of  a  law  It  is  sworn  to  enforce. 
Unless  the  legislature  provides  some 
other  law.  it  is  going  to  assess  all 
property  at  Its  full  value,  as  the  pres- 
ent law  require*.  This  would  have 
the  effect  of  increasing  salaries  that 
are  based  on  assessed  valuation,  and  of 
largely  increasing  bond  Issue  possi- 
bilities in  many  communities.  This 
seeming  too  great  a  disturbance,  the 
ta.v  commission  suggested  to  the  legis- 
lature tliat  it  fix  a  ratio  on  which  the 
commission  could  lawfully  act  without 
revolutionizing  local  conditions.  So 
far  as  taxes  are  concerned,  the  result 
of  uniformity  Is  the  same,  no  matter 
what  the  ratio.  At  100  per  cent  of  ac- 
tual value  or  at  10  per  cent,  taxes 
would  be  equal,  and  there  would  be  a 
difference  only  In  tax  rates,  not  In  ac- 
tual taxes  paid.  Hence  the  bill  whicli 
the  house  had  up  for  consideration 
yf  si.erday. 

The  commission  had  suggested  50  per 
cent  valuations,  but  for  feai-  that  would 
it.i-re?se  county  salaries  In  some  cases, 
the  i;ouse.tax  committee  made  this  40 
per   ttnt. 

The'i.  realizing  that  this  would  re- 
cl'.ici-  the  assessments  of  banks,  which 
are  now  fixed  by  law  at  5'>  per  cent  and 
of  cit.v  property  which  averages  over 
5'»  pt  i  cent  at  present,  several  mem- 
1>ers  of  the  tax  committee  got  to- 
i;etl'er  with  the  tax  commission  and 
fievised  a  graduated  scale,  which  P.ep- 
r.=  !i--niative  Stuart  of  Wlndom  offer-^d 
5-c?terdav  afternoon  as  an  amendment 
to   the   bill. 

Tin.-,  iicposed  an  assessment  of  city 
prfqxrtv  and  personal  properly  at  50 
per  cer.t  of  actual  value;  of  property 
oi'lsidc  cities  and  villages  at  40  pe- 
cent,  oi.d  of  Iron  lands  at  60  per  cent. 
Keprcsentatlve  *Bob"  Wells  of 
Br .»ck--r ridge  wa.s  responsible  for  in- 
trodui  ng  the  tonnage  tax  fight  Into 
this  contest.  He  said  that  If  the  valu- 
ation cf  the  iron  mines  were  lncreasc>l 
in  tl-js  manner.  It  would  be  used 
against  the  tonnage  tax  when  It  came 
v.p    t>"lay 

Rei»ie.'.entative  Washburn  of  M'nne- 
at.oiis  (.pposed  the  amendment  be.^ais  • 
it  Mou'dn't  be  fair  or  legal  to  divide 
real  ewiate  Into  different  classes  In 
t^"s     manner. 

Representative  Thayer  of  Fillmore 
county,  wanted  to  give  farming  prop- 
erty a  still  greater  advantage,  and 
he  proposed  an  amendment  to  the 
Stuart  amendment,  making  the  assess- 
ment of  farm  lands  3;!  per  cent.  Instead 
of  40  per  cent.  That  amendment  was 
defeated   by  a   very  decisive  vote. 

Representative  Wallace  of  Minne- 
apolis, said  that  Northeastern  Minne- 
sota had  often  accused  the  southern 
part  of  the  state  of  using  Its  power  to 
discriminate  against  that  section,  and 
if  iron  property  were  to  be  assessed 
upon  a  different  basis  than  other  prop- 
erty, that  action  would  prove  the 
charge. 

Representative  Stuart  said  that  his 
amendment  would  Increase  the  Iron 
valuations  to  nearly  |300.000.000, 
•which  would  produce  more  revenue 
than  any  tonnage  tax  bill  that  could 
be    proposed. 

The  amendment  was  voted  down, 
however,  16  for  and  94  against,  the 
St.  Louis   county  delegation   dividing. 

Representative  Ware  then  offered  an 
amendment  making  the  ratio  of  as- 
sessment 50  per  cent  instead  of  40  per 
cent,  and   that.  too.  was  lost. 

Representative  Bendixen  wanted  to 
continue  tlie  special  order  for  a  week, 
but  the  house  rejected  that  proposal. 
The  roll  call  was  then  taken  on  the 
bill,  and  It  was  defeated,  40  for  and 
67    against. 

J.  N.  Johnson  then  moved  that  tlte 
vote  whereby  the  bill  was  lost  be  re- 
considered, and  asked  that  his  motion 
be  voted  down.  This  Is  the  usual  way 
of  cinching  action  on  a  bill,  but  it 
did  not  work  out  this  time.  If  the 
motion  had  been  rejected,  the  bill 
would  have  been  dead,  as  the  motion 
to   reconsider  cannot   be   made  twice. 

However,  Representative  Spooner  and 
otliers  called  attention  to  the  fact  that 
the  house  had  blundered  Into  a  bad 
hole,  and  asked  that  the  motion  to  re- 
consider be  adopted.  This  was  done, 
without  a  dissenting  vote,  and  the  bill 
■was  made  a  special  order  for  next 
"VN'ednesday    afternoon. 

"The  other  two  bills,  that  providing 
for  a  county  assessor  system  of  val- 
uation Instead  of  the  present  system 
of  valuation  by  local  assessors,  and 
that  increasing  the  exemption  of 
household  goods  from  $100  to  $200  for 
each  iiead  of  a  family,  were  continued 
until    the   same   time. 

•      «      « 
If         the       railroads       thought       their 
trouldes    were    ended    two    years    ago. 


Dyspeplets 


Sugar  coated   Tab- 
lets, Quickly  relieve 
_         _  _  Soar. Stomach, 

Iii»\tV.v,ir .  Nausea.  Wind  In  tlie  Stomach,  S«»- 
lickue.ss,  Sloeple.-^sne.ss  .irising  from  Indigeation, 
tkll  liiacomtorts  of  Dyspepsia.  They  are  composed 
of  the  liest  diuestives,  carminatives  and  correct- 
ives, aud  are  at:reeable  and  e<-onomtcal  Pat  np  in 
three  sizes.  I0<-.,  'Sic.  and  |1.  Sold  by  all  druggists, 
imd  sent  promptly  by  mail  on  receipt  of  price  by 
0.  1.  HOOD  CO  .  Mfg.  Chemists,  Lowell.  Mass. 
It  Made  br  lluoU  XtS  Good. 


^^(^^^  News  for  TftmoiT ow^s  SHoppef s  ^ 


^ 


f 


Smart  Tailored  Suits 


Worth 

$25  at 


ns 


.95 


The  woman  looking  for  a  plain,  smart  suit  for  practical  wear  should  see  these.       The  first  glance 
will  delight  her.      The  material  is  a  fine  all-wcTol  serge,  in  black,  blue,  rose,  tan,  grey,  green,  etc. 

The  coat  is  a  severe  tailored  model,  long  graceful  lines,  showing  new  hipless 
effect,  becoming  to  most  any  figure,  plain  gored  skirt,  simple,  smart  and 
(T  j  o  Q/r  fullof    good  service.      Regular    $25.00    value—  C  1  O  QC 

Women's  Suits  at  $29-50 

The  New  Hipless  Model 


special  at 

Women's  Suits  at  $24.95 

Beautiful  Styles 

We  certainly  are  proud  of  the  grade  of 
workmanship  shown  at  this  price.  The  mate- 
rials are  tine  serges,  satin  striped  prunellas, 
satin  soUel,  Imported  worsteds  and  French 
serges.  In  all  the  correct  colors  such  as  faded 
rose,  gosllii  green,  stone  green,  turquoise,  wild 
duck,  bisquet  shade,  smoke,  taupe,  navy  and 
black. 

Jaunty  length  coats  with  slight  curve, 
giving  just  tlic  right  lines  to  the  figure. 
New  gored  .skirts,  strictly  tailored — 
s«>nie  irlnmu'd  with  jet  buttons — .suits 
worth  $35.00 — sfXHiul  at $21.95 


At  this  price  we  feature  an  exceptionally 
stylish  tailored  model.  Made  of  fine  satin  fin- 
ished French  serge.  In  plain  and  shadow  striped 
— in  black  and  all  the  new  colors  as  well  aa 
the  staple  blues  and  blacks — strictly  tailored — 
save  the  Uttle  touch  of  braid  and  buttons. 

Tito  coat  is  a  Uiplcss  model  witli  long 
graceful  lines,  lined  witli  satin  duches.s. 
Skirt  new  gored  style,  beautifully  man- 
tailored — equal  to  any  $35.00  er^r- 
ment.s — special  at    $29.50 


Smart  Attractive  Tailored  Suits  at  $14.95 

Made  of  fine  All-wool  Serge,  in  black  and  colons.  Th^  coat  is  a  jaunty  length,  hip- 
less models,  silk  lined,  gored  skirt.  A  suit  of  distinction,  because  of  the  good  ma- 
terial and  good  tailoring. 

A   Suit  that   cannot   be   duplicated  for  less  than  $20  anywhere — very 
special   at •  • $14.95. 


Sale  of  Tailored  and  Lingerie 
Waists  at  $  1 .98 

Tomorrow  in  thi  Waist  Section  we  feature 
a  special  lot  of  Lingerie  and  Tailored  Waists. 
The  Lingerie  Waists  are  made  of  fine  sheer 
lawn,  very  tastily  trimmed  with  lace  or  em- 
broidery— the  practical  tailored  styles  of 
Madras,  batiste,  lineen  and  lawns,  pleated 
fronts,  stiff  collar  i.nd  cuffs;  all  very  attractive 
styles.  Waists  thit  are  worth  every  cent  of 
$2.50 — special  Thursday — at 

$1.98 

Worth  "While  to  Buy  Handkerchiefs 


Prices  that  say:  "Buy  Now."  Prices  that  say:  "Hurry." 
variety  of  kinds  and  prices.  You  can  buy  for  every  day, 
for  gifts,  and  save. 

Women  s  20c  Linen  Handkerchiefs  at  lOc 


Such  a 
for    best. 


Fine  sheer  linen,  plain  or  cross   barred- 
dered   borders   in  bes  utiful   designs. 


-hemstitched      hem — embroi- 


>c  Linen    t  ^7 
,  Special  at  i"  /  C- 


Women's  35c  Linen 
Handkerchiefs 

Fine  sheer  linen,  cither  plain  or 
cross  barred,  hemstitched  hem  — 
embroidered  borders — .some  lace 
edged.  Regular  35c  value — special 
at  17c — or 

3  for  50c 


Women's  35c  Linen   j  'J 

Initial  Handkerchiefs  at  ^   /  v^ 

Fine  sheer  linen  with  hem- 
stitched hem,  hand-embroidered 
initials  encircled  with  embroidered 
designs.  Regular  35c  values — spe- 
cial 17c — or 

3  for  50c 


32-in.  Madras  Shirt- 
ings  Regular   25c 
Value^  Special  at 


.15c 


White  p^roitnds,  with  black  and  col- 
ored figured  designs,  excellciit  for 
men's    shirts    and    tailored    waists. 
Regular   2Sc    a    yard    kind;      \  Ci 
special  at r^  ^C 


Egg  Shell  Poplin^ 

20c  a  yard  Kind^ 

Special  at 

15c 

New  Eggshell  Poplin  in  two-toned 
striped  effect,  the  correct  fabric  for 
coat  suits;  comes  in  all  the  new 
wanted  colors.  32  inches  wide.  Reg- 
ular 20c  value,  special  at  -f  /T 
per  yard ^  *^t 


I 


AnpSierLotof  I2^cayd.  QI^ 
Drgs$  Ginghams  at ^  2^ 

Abetn   2,000  yards   all   told,     in     all  the   wanted 
checks,  §?ripes  and  plain  colors,  in  pretty  pink  and  blues. 

•  We  had  a  preceding  lot  last  week,  but  they 
fairly  melted  away.  If  you  would  share  in 
this  bargain,  be  here  early.  Choicest  patterns 
go  first — 9V2C  the  yard  instead  of  12i/4c. 


1  New  Dress  Goods 
Worth  up  to  65cs 
Special  at 


39c 


Shadow  striped  Serges  and 
Panamas  in  brown,  blue  and 
black;  also  mixed  suitings,  38 
and  42  inches  wide  worth  regu- 
larly up  to  65c,  special  C50/» 
tomorrow  at O  z' C 


40-in.  White  Lawn, 
Worth  I2V2C,  at 


lOc 


One  case  of  40-inch  white  Lawn, 
fine  sheer  quality,  suitable  for 
aprons,  waists,  dresses,  drop  skirts; 
considered  excellent  value  at  12.'4c 
a  yard,  special  tomorrow 
at 


lOc 


Choose  Your  New  Rug  Now 

While  Stock  is 
Complete 

The  new  Rugs  are  all  here,  in  both 
Oriental  .ind  d^omestic.  Never  before 
have  we  shown  sucii  an  extensive  asst>rt- 
ment,  all  the  newest  designs  and  rich 
colorings  of  the  best  makers  are  shown. 
Many  of  the  new  designs  are  exclusive 
with  us  for  this  city.  Yon  can  chot)se 
here  from  an  endless  variety  and  special 
low  prices. 

Oriental  Rugs 

Unquestionably  the  largest  assortment 
ever  shown  in  the  city.  Many  beautiful 
pieces  have  been  added  recently,  secured 
by  our  buyer  while  East.  All  sizes  are 
here,  from  small  mats  to  room  sizes,  all 
in  rich,  soft  tone.  Our  prices  are  the 
lowest  possible. 

9x12  Tapestry  Brussels  Rugs  $14*50 

Tapestry  Brussels  Rugs,  room  size,  9x12  feet.  Ik-autiful  new  de- 
signs and  prettv  colorings.  Our  regular  $17.50  leader.  <t  "f /I  CJ[\ 
Special  at '. "^  > ^*^^ 

Same  quality.  8.3x10.6  feet  at $12.50 

Same  quality,  6x9  feet  at $6.75 


5c 

For  JOc  Brass 

Extenison 
Rods 

;  J -inch      Rods, 

extending 

from 

30  to  54  inches. 


40-Inch  Scrim,  the  Yard,  25c 

White  and  ecru  grounds,  with  col- 
ored figures. 

I2V2C  Dotted  Swiss  at  9c 

36  inches  wide,   in   various  size   dots, 
for  sash  curtains,  regular  VlYiZ     Q 
quality,  special,  the  yard '^ 


Rexdorfer 
Linoleum 

In  Parquette 

floor  effects. 

We  are  sole 

agents  for 

Duluth. 


Matchless  Styles  in  Millinery  at 

$5.G0,  $10.00,  $15.00 

Not  only,  mdt^lcss  styles,  but  unequalled  values.  Our  Hats  at  $5.00 
to  $15.00  are  made  hy  the  same  staff  that  makes  all  our  hats— the 
artist  toudi  asid  carefulness  mark  all  our  work.       Women  know 

that  no  other  hats  at  these 
prices  equal  ours  in  qual- 
ity of  material^and  work, 
and  that  no  others  so 
truly  reflect  the  latest 
fashion  thought  of  Paris.. 

Our  $5.00  to  $15.00  Hats 

will  again  be  the  talk  of 
the  town  this  season,  for 
tomorrow  hundreds  of 
new  styles  will  be  shown 
— a  millinery  beauty  gar- 
den. Don't  thi.ik  of  buy- 
ing   without    seeing    this 

splendid' collation  of  $5.00,  $10.00  and  $15.00  Hats. 

A  Hat  fqr  eVfery  face ;  a  Hat  to  match  any  gown. 


Children's  35c  Cashmere  Stockings 


Special  To-  <  Q 
morrow  for  \/Z> 


GET  A  BILLY  POSSUM — The  new  toy,  on  sale  tomorrow      CS\f* 
at,  from  $1.25  down  to «^UC 

NEW  TEDDY  DOLLS — With  celluloid  faces;  on  special  sale      O/I- 


tomorrow 


Children's  fine  ribbed  black  Cashmere  Stockings,  natural  gray   merino 
heels  and.toes,.*ibsolutely  fast  black. 

Manufacturer's  imperfections,  "first  class  seconds."  consisting 
of  droppiSd  stitches,  but  all  have  been  darned;  otherwise  they 
are   perfect;    all    sizes   from    5    to    9J/^;    special,    per    pair    19c. 

Women's  J  9c  Cotton  Hose 
— 2  Pairs  for  25c 

Women's  fine  seamless  Cotton 
Hose,  double  soles,  medium  weight, 
fast  black.  Regular  19c  kind;    ^Ci^ 


Boys'  25c  Hose  at  19c 


Boys'    hea'^^  ""'Cotton    Stockings,    fine 
ribbed,  very  elastic,  good,  heavy,  dur- 
able kind,  with  double  heels;  tans,  fast 
black,  all  sizes  6  to  10;  special 
tomorrow,  per  pair 


J  9c 


tomorrow,  2  pairs   for 


Sale  of  $2*00  Suit  Cases  at  $K25 

Imitation  Alligator  Suit  Cases,  well  made  and  well  riveted,  corners  bound, 
brass  catches,  brass  lock.  24-inch  size;  only  50  to  sell.  Rcgu-  <1* -f  ^r 
lar  $2.00  value,  special  at ; ^^  *■  *^^ 


A  Word  About  Our  New  Shoes 

The  new  shoea  for  Spring  and  Summer  are 
all  here.  The  products  of  all  the  best  makers 
arc  represented.  A  fascinating  array  of  footwear 
style,  smart  new  oxfords,  ribbon  ties.  Colonials  in 
tie  or  buckle,  in  black,  tan  and  the  new  wines.  If 
yt-)U  want  to  see  thi'  new  styles  in  footwear  come. 
Between  $5.00  and  $1.50  you  can  buy  one  kind  or 
another  of  these  charming  shoes. 

^?7omen's  $3.50  Shoes  for  $L48 

Odds  and  ends  of  many  styles,  one  of  those  times 
when  it  pays  to  take  time  and  see  if  you  can  find  your 
style  and  size  and  save  so  much  by  doing  so. 

Patent  colt,  patent  kid.  vici  kid,  mostly  all  black, 
although  some  tans,  worth  up  to  $3.50,  at  $1.48. 

Women's  $3.50  and  $4.00 
Slippers  for  $L95 

Women's   House  and   tlvening  Slippers  in  two 

and  three-strap  .styles.  French  vici  kid  leather. 

Hand  turned   soles;   also   included   in   this   lot 

are  patent  colt  and  patent  kid  leathers; 

worth    up    to    $4.(.X),    special      d* -f    Q^ 

at,  per  pair ^P  '  ♦^^ 


Children's   Vici   Kid    Shoes— Hand 


turned    soles;    also    patent      QQ« 


colt,  all  sizes,  special,  pair. 

Women's  Rubbers — Storm  and  low 
cut.    in    low    and    medium 
heels,  special,  per  pair.... 


49c 


Misses'  and  Children's  Shoes — 
Odds     and     ends;     regular      AQ.f» 

$2.50  values,  choose  at T-QC 

Children's  Shoes — Patent  tip,  kid 
and  patent  colt,  in  all  sizes,  worth 
up  to  $1.00,  special  at,  /IQ-, 
per  pair 3xC 


Women's  $  X  Union  Suits  for  75c 

Medium  weight   cotton.   Harvard    Mills  brand — just  the  kind  you 
want  for  early  Spiing  wear.     Comes  in  the  following  styles: 

High  neck,  long  or  short  sleeves,  ankle  length;  low  neck, 
short  or  no  sleeves,  knee  length;  high  neck,  short  sleeves 
and  knee  length;  sizes  4,  5,  and  6.  Special  at,  each  75c. 

Extra  sizes,  7,  8,  9,  at  $1.00. 


There  are  nearly 

before   the 

and    what    is 

the    railroad 

easier       now 


has    put     be- 
all  the  anti- 
it,    and    the 
house   com- 

elther    body 

the   Spooner 

gross  earn- 

whicli  is 


they  were  mistaken 
as   many   railroad   measures 
legislature    now    as    then, 
more,    thev    come    out    or 
committees    a    good    deal 
than  they  din  then. 

The    senate    committee 
fore  the  senate  practically 
railroad    measures    before 
.same   thing  is   true   of    the 
mlttee. 

The    only    exception    in 
that   is   worthy   of   note   is 
bill  increasing  the  railroad 
Ings  tax   from  4  to  6  per  cent, 
still    lagging    in    committee. 

Yesterday  afternoon  the  house  rail- 
road committee  turned  out  a  number  of 
important  measures,  chief  among 
which  was  the  J.  N.  Johnson  bill  put- 
ting the  Issuance  of  stocks  and  bonds 
under  the  regulation  of  the  state  rail- 
road and  warehouse  commission,  which 
the  committee  recommended  to  pass. 

Two  years  ago  this  measure  was  In- 
troduced by  J.  A.  Rockne  of  Zumbrota, 
now  the  speaker  of  the  house,  and  over 
it  was  waged  one  of  the  hottest  fights 
of  the  session.  The  Great  Northern 
railroad,  which  is  a  Minnesota  cor- 
poration, was  particularly  active 
agaln.'^t  it.  and  every  lever  in  its 
reach  was  pulled  In  the  attempt  to  de- 
feat it,  which  was  successful  In  the 
end. 

Clarence  B.  Miller  of  Duluth,  who 
^vTls  then  In  the  house,  but  Is  now  a 
member  of  congress  from  the  Eighth 
district,  took  a  conspicuous  part  witlt 
Mr.    Rockne    in    pushing    this    measure. 

Other  railroad  bills  put  out  by  the 
house  committee  yesterday  afternoon 
were   as    follows: 

By  Senator  Thorpe — Requiring  rail- 
roads to  have  stjitable  cabooses  on 
freight  trains,  recommended  to  pass. 

By  Senator  Sundberg — Requiring 
railroads     to     keep     clean     the     ditches 


along  their  rights  of  way,  recommend- 
ed  to   pass. 

By  Senator  Hill — Requiring  rail- 
roads to  give  stockshippers  transpor- 
tation for  caretakers  going  and  re- 
turning,   recommended    to    pass. 

By  Representative  McGarry — Provid- 
ing for  additional  right  of  way  over 
states  lands,  recommended  to  pass  as 
amended. 

*  *      * 

A  bill  bv  Representative  John  Mc- 
Grath  of  i3arnesville,  which  was  put 
out  of  the  house  railroad  committee 
without  recommendation  yesterday 
afternoon,  proposes  a  novel  plan. 
Where  railroads  abandon  lines  because 
of  which  towns  have  been  built  up 
and  property  given  value,  the  measure 
requires  that  the  railroads  shall  pay 
suitable  damages  to  the  owners  of 
property  whose  value  is  affected  by 
the   abandonment. 

*  •      • 

The  senate  yesterday  afternoon 
passed  the  bill  by  Senator  T.  M.  Pugh 
ot  Duluth.  reorganizing  the  naval  mil- 
itia of  Minnesota  to  correspond  with 
the  organization  of  the  United  States 
navy.  The  bill  advances  the  chief  of- 
ficers of  the  Duluth  naval  militia  a 
grade  or  so  all  around. 

*  •      • 

Other  bills  passed  by  the  senate  yes- 
terday  afternoon   were   as   follows: 

Bv  Representative  Pfaender — Em- 
powering cities  to  regulate  control  and 
license    transient    merchants. 

By  Senator  Pauly — To  prevent  the 
fiilching  or  killing  of  hares  or  rabbits 
with  the  assistance   of  ferrets;   passed. 

3J    to   le. 

«      *      « 

T.  J.  Mlchaud  of  the  St.  Louis  hotel 
and  E.  C.  Ribenack  of  the  Lenox 
liotcl  of  Duluth,  were  here  yesterday 
aftt^rnoon  to  appear  before  the  house 
committee  on  public  health  and  pure 
food   In   opposition   to   the  L.    H.   John- 


son bill  regulating  the  safety  and  sani- 
tation of  liotels.  Along  with  them 
were  about  tifty  other  hotel  men,  who 
are  up  in  arms  agaiiist  the  bill,  but 
the  hearing  had  to  be  postponed  until 
today,  because  just  as  the  committee 
was  getting  together  the  members  had 
to  obev  a  call  of  the  house  which  kept 
them  the  rest  of  the  afternoon,  pre- 
venting   a    committee    meeting. 

*  *      • 

The  house  committee  on  taxes  and  tax 
laws  has  recommended  for  passage 
the  Stuart-Kneeland  bill,  providing  a 
graduated    inheritance    tax. 

•  **      •  . 

The  Swendsen  bill,  repealing  the 
mortgage  registry  tax  law,  is  before 
the  house,  having  been  sent  out  by 
the  house  tax  committee  with  a  recom- 
mendation  that   it  pass. 

*  *      * 

The  Wallace  bill,  exempting  munic- 
ipal bonds  from  taxation,  has  been  rec- 
ommended tov  liassage  by  the  house 
committee  on  taxes  and  tax  laws.  This 
bill  can  be  used,', it  is  said,  to  test  the 
proposition  :put  rbefore  the  house  by 
itepresentat4ve  Stuart  of  Wlndom,  to 
exempt  credits  from  taxation.  His 
plan  was  reject&d  by  the  house  judi- 
ciary committee,  because  of  a  doubt  as 
to  its  constitutianallty,  and  because 
the  committee  did  not  deem  it  advisa- 
ble to  risk'  «o  important  a  matter  as 
the  entire  tax  oncredits  upon  a  doubt- 
ful proposition.'  However,  the  Wal- 
lace bill.  If  it  Is  passed,  will  afford  a 
chance  to  test  In  the  courts  the  plan 
of  exemptinfj  crt'dits  without  jeopard- 
izing revenues  to  any  great  extent. 

•  ;     •      • 

Representative  Thayer's  bill  to  re- 
store the  state  board  of  equalization, 
which  was  t^limin&ted  by  the  tax  com- 
mission law,  wfU  heve  a  chance  for 
consideratiop  before  the  house,  the  tax 
committee   having   put    It   out    without 


recommendation,  at  the  request  of  its 
author.  The  plan  is  to  have  the  board 
of  equalization  continue  as  a  sort  of 
safety  valve  upon  the  tax  commission. 
The  powers  of  the  two  bodies  would  be 
practically  equal,  and  there  could 
hardly  fail  to  arise  some  friction  and 
disturbance  if  both  bodies  were  allowed 
to   continue. 

As  a  matter  of  fact,  those  who  favor 
this  p'au  are  really  in  favor  of  the 
abolition  of  the  tax  commission,  and  it 
is  not  believed  that  they  are  numer- 
ous. 

*  •      * 

The  bill  Introduced  In  the  senate 
yesterday  by  Senator  Fosseeen  of  Min- 
neapolis, prohibiting  the  purchase  of 
stolen  grain  from  boys,  is  aimed  to 
reduce  tlie  number  of  thefts  of  grain 
from  cars  in  railroad  yards,  particu- 
larly in  Minneapolis,  from  whence  the 
bill  comes.  It  is  introduced  at  the  re- 
fjuest  of  the  juvenile  court  and  others 
interesctd  in  the  welfare  of  children, 
and  it  is  based  on  a  showing  from  the 
records  that  more  than  25  per  cent  of 
juvenile  court  arraignments  are  of 
children  charged  with  stealing  wheat 
from  railroad  yards. 

•  «      * 

The  senate  yesterday  passed  the  bill 
by  Senator  Sageng,  increasing  the 
terms  of  office  of  members  of  boards 
of  grain  appeals  from  two  to  three 
years. 

STILLMAN    H.    BINGHAM. 


FRANK  SHERWIN.  MISSING 
CASHIER,  IS  HEARD  FROM 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


not  furnish  a  very  lucid  explanation 
for  the  former  cashier's  movements 
since  that  Saturday  evening  when,  aft- 
er   balancing    his    books    and    drawing 


his  salarj".  he  dropp< 
completely  as  if  he 
lowed   by  the  lake. 

Sherwin's    letter    d 
time    which    elapsed 
appearance  in  Dulutl 
ing  in  Denver,  but  it 
he  has  been  himself 
"I    could    net    havt 
when    I    left    Duluth, 
in   one  of   the   few   pa 
ter   to  Mr.   Kennedy   1 
to    the    particulars 
ture. 

"Whh  Tired 
"That  I  stopped  in 
In  another  place,  "w 
as  I  had  somewhat  ( 
and  was  tired  of  rid 
Evidently  the  anx 
others  lias  been  pre 
for  at  the  conclusio 
writes:  "Why  this 
that  Innocent  peopl 
the  mistakes  of  otl 
I  cannot  figure  out. 
figuring  on  it  a  wli< 
last    month." 

Sherwin  says  he 
view  with  an  express 
out  of  Denver,  and  « 
that  he  will  secure 
has  not  worked  sim 
He  asked  Mr.  Kenr 
mendation  to  help  hit 
in  the  West,  and  Mr. 
"Frank  made  gooc 
have  no  doubt  but 
good  in  Denver,"  sai 
day.  "When  here  h' 
and  there  never  wa: 
lar  about  his  books 
any  entanglements 
which  might  have  le 
as  some  people  pers 
Sherwin  says  that 
come  back  to  Dulutl 
for  a  visit,  as  he  cc 
his  home.     He  asked 


d  out  of  sight  as 
luid,^    been    swal- 

oes    not    give    the 

between    his    dis- 

and  his  awaken- 

is  presumed  that 

for  some  weeks. 

been  just  right 
'  writes  Sherwin, 
ssages  of  the  let- 
n  which  he  refers 
jf    his    weird    ad- 

RldinK." 

Denver."  he  says, 
as  mere  accident, 
ome  to  my  senses 
ing." 

lety  he  has  given 
ying  on  his  mind, 
1  of  the  letter  he 
world  is  made  so 
;  must  suffer  for 
ers,    is    sometliing 

and  I  have  been 
)le   lot   during   the 

has  a  position  in 
;  company  running 
'Xpresses  the  hope 

it.  Evidently  he 
;e  he  left  Duluth. 
edy  for  a  recom- 
n  in  securing  work 
Kennedy  gave  it. 
I  in  Dululli  and  I 
hat  he  will  make 
d  Mr.  Kennedy  to- 
>  was  a  good  man 
;  anything  Irregu- 
Neither  had  he 
nere  with  women, 
d  him  to  go  away, 
isted   in  saying." 

it    is    his    hope    to 

.some  day.  If  only 
insiders     this     city 

to  be  remembered 


to  all  "the  boj-s"  at  the  express  office. 

The  side-Iiglils  on  general  conditions 
in  Denver  show  a  hopeful  vein  and 
throughout  the  epistle  seems  '  quit^ 
rational.  It  Is  a  good  letter,  well  writ- 
ten and  evidently  by  a  sane,  reliable 
man.  who  made  a  mistake  when  some- 
thing clogged  his  mental  machinery  for 
a  short  period,  but  who  Is  now  hard  at 
work,  being  reliable  again  and  getting 
a  new  start. 

'•Denver  Is  a  nice  place  to  live,"  he 
writes,  "and  I  guess  I  will  liko  it  all 
right.  Everybody  is  suspicious  about 
peoples'  health,  though.  The  natives 
fear  the  inroads  of  "lungers'  and  al- 
ways ask   you   If  you  are   healthy." 

Sherwln's  disappearance  created  a 
lot  of  talk  in  Duluth.  There  was  such 
a  lack  of  clues  as  to  the  cashiers 
whereabouts  that  it  afforded  amp;e 
room    for  wild  speculation. 

In  Duluth.  SherwJH  was  always  a 
reserved  young  man  of  modest  ways. 
never  addicted  to  liquor  and  when  he 
failed  to  show  up  at  the  express  office 
on  West  First  street  Monday  morning, 
Feb.  1.  his  fellow  workers  were  unable 
to   account    for    his-   whereabouts. 

He  slept  in  the  rear  of  the  office  and 
his  personal  belongings  as  well  as  his 
books  in  the  office,  were  perfect  and  in 
good  order.  He  took  nothing  with 
him  but  the  clothes  he  had  on  and  tlie 
money   he    had   drawn   as   salary. 

The  police  searched  everywhere  In 
the  city  and  Superior  was  ransacked, 
but  no  trace  of  the  missing  cashier 
was  revealed.  Descriptions  of  him 
were  sent  broadcast  but  he  could  not 
be  located.  His  aged  father  came  from 
Knox.  N.  D.,  to  see  if  he  could  locate 
the  young  man.  but  he  was  hidden 
from  the  view  of  all  his  friends  ur.tll 
his  letter  to  his  former  employer  threw 
light   on    the   case. 


*.»*<  r 


\ 


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blackhead:>  and  pimples.  24  W.  Sup.  St. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     WEDNESDAY.    MARCH    17.    1900. 


ONE  HUNDRED  AlND  FIFTY  SCHOOL 

PUPILS  TO  BE  THE  HERALD  S  GUESTS 


SHIEK  ILDERIM,  IRAS  AND  BALTHASAR.  THREE    OF    THE    PRINCIPAL    CHARACTERS    IN    GEN. 
■*  WALLACE'S  POWERFUL  DRAMA,  "BEN  HUR. 


Hundreds  of  essay?  have  been  re- 
ceived by  The  Herald  In  the  "Ben  Hur" 
eontest  for  students,  and  every  mail 
briners  In  nnore.  Some  of  the  essays 
have  been  filed  with  the  teachers  in  the 


various  cltv  schools  and  an  will  be 
given  consideration  In  making  the 
awards  bv  the  committee.  The  con- 
test closes  at  6  o'clock  tonight,  and 
a  list  of  the  winners  will  be  published 
in  the  Saturday  Herald.  March  20.  The 
tickets   will    be   distributed   on   the   fol- 


AUTOS  AS  AID 
IN  WAR  SHOWN 

British    Military  Office 

Uses  Five  Hundred 

Motor  Carriages. 

London.  March  17. — An  Interesting 
experiment  was  made  by  the  war  office 
today  to  demonstrate  the  utility  of  the 
automobile  as  a  means  of  rapid  mill- 
tarv  transporation  to  supplement  the 
resources  of  the  railroads.  Acting  on 
the  assumption  that  a  hostile  army  had 
landed  at  Hastings  nd  the  railroad  was 
blockaded  with  troop  trains,  a  relieving 
force  of  1.000  men,  with  full  war  kit 
and  guns,  was  moved  to  the  scene  by 
automobiles. 

Some  500  machines  loaded  by  mem- 
bers of  the  Automobile  club  picked  up 
the  men  and  their  accoutrements  at 
the  various  barracks  and  conveyed 
them  to  Crystal  palace,  whence  the 
■tart  was  made.  The  machines  trav- 
eled twenty  miles  an  hour  over  the 
hard,  frozen  roads  to  Hastings.  The 
lighter  cars  with  the  men  took  the  lead, 
leaving  the  heavier  vehicles  with  the 
Buns  and  stores  to  bring  up  the  rear. 
Great  crowds  gathered  along  the 
route  to  watch  the  column,  which  was 
over  a  mile  long.  Arriving  at  Hast- 
ings the  cars  were  drawn  up  on  the 
sea-front.  The  relieving  "army  w.U 
return   home  this  evening. 

STILL  THINK  HE 
IS  DEMENTED 

Peterson's  Relatives  File 

Information    of 

Insanity. 

Though  physicians  declared  that 
booze  and  not  insanity  was  responsi- 
ble for  Andrew  Peterson's  queer  ac- 
tions, his  family  still  believes  there  is 
Bomethlng  wrong  with  his  mind.  In- 
formation of  Insanity  was  again  filed 
yesterday  afternoon  In  probate  court 
and  Peterson  will  be  given  another  ex- 
amination. ,     .  ,     . 

Peterson  was  examined  In  probate 
court  last  week  and  was  declared  sane, 
though  addicted  to  booze.  He  returned 
to  his  home  at  Wlnton  and  Immediate- 
ly began  smashing  up  the  furniture 
again.  His  wife  and  children  are  afraid 
of  him,  but  he  beats  them  every  time 
he  gets  a  few  drinks.  They  think  he  is 
demented  and  the  physicians,  who  ex- 
amined him  before  will  be  asked  to 
reconsider    their    decision. 

FREKiHT  BOAT  LINE; 

ST.  LOUIS-KANSAS  CITY. 

Kansas  City,  Mo.,  March  17.— The 
Commercial  club,  the  leading  business 
organization  of  Kansas  City,  at  a 
meeting  last  night,  decided  to  raise 
$500,000  to  re-establish  a  freight  boat 
line  between  Kansas  City  and  ht.  Louis. 
The  action  follows  the  alleged  dis- 
crimination   by   railroads   against    Kan- 


I  sas  City  shippers  In  favor  of  Oklahoma 
merchants. 
I  • 

Notice  to  the  Public 

We  wish  to  announce  to  the  public 
that  we  have  bought  out  all  the  in- 
terest of  Mr.  John  P.  Brander.  who  has 
handled  our  family  trade  business  for 
tlie  last  six  vears.  From  now  on  we 
will  handle  this  business  ourselves. 
We  have  secured  the  services  of  Mr. 
Harrv  P.  Hall,  who  will  be  pleased  to 
see  all  of  the  old  friends  and  custom- 
ers of  Mr.  Brander.  The  office  ana 
warehouse  still  remain  at  the  same 
place,  117  West  First  street.  We  will 
endeavor  to  give  the  pviblic  and  cus- 
tomers t  he   best   possible   service. 

The  telephone  numbers  are  the 
same,    484    new    and    1430-K    old    'phone. 

We  shall  be  pleased  to  receive  or- 
ders for  family  trade,  either  by  'phone 
or  personal  call  at  117  West  First 
street,  and  such  orders  will  be  given 
the  very  best  attention. 

We  invite  all  customers  and  friends 
to  call  at  our  brewery.  Twenty-ninth 
avenue  west  and  Helm  »iid  inspect  our 
splendid  new  bottle  riouse,  and  see 
with  what  care  and  cleanliness  we 
prepare  our  famous  brands,  the  Ilex 
and  Moose. 

"Thanking     all  friends     for     past 


.  pa- 

tronage, and  soliciting  your  future 
business  and  orders,  we  remain. 
DLLLTH  BREWING  &  MALTING  CQ 
Brewery.  Twenty-ninth  avenue  west. 
Family  trade  office  and  warehouse, 
117    West    First    street. 

HARRY   P.   HALL.   City   Agent. 

STEEL  TRUST'S 
RECEIPTS  LESS 

Corporation  Makes  Public 
Annual  Report  Show- 
ing Decrease. 


How  She  Got 
Rid  of  Her  Fat 


Il«BKU   Did   It.      No   Starvation    Diet,   or 

TireMome      ExercUes      \evrntmrj. 

A       Free        Trial       Paekase 

Will  Convince  You. 


A  woman's  form  Is  essentially  one  of 
grace  the  lines  of  beauty  vani.sh  as  fat 
accumulates  and  Instead  of  beauty  we 
Bee  bulk,  and  what  was  once  fair  be- 
comes   a    fright. 

Revgo  will  reduce  you.  It  Is  per- 
fectly safe.  You  eat  it  like  fruit  or 
candy  and  easily  an*  safely  reduce 
your"  fat  a  pound  a  day. 

For  sale  by  all  druggists  at  |1.00  per 
full  sized  box,  or  by  mail  prepaid  by 
The  U*-ngo  Co.,  3325  Rengo  Bldg..  De- 
troit, Mich.  The  company  will  gladly 
■end  vou  a  trial  package  free  by  mall. 
If  vou  will  write  them  direct  to  De- 
troit, no  free  packages  at  drug  stores. 

Rengo  Is  for  sale  and  recommended 
In  Duluth  by  all  druggists.  L.  "W. 
Lelthhead  Drug  Co.,  wholesale  distribu- 
tors. 


New  York.  March  17. — The  annual 
report  of  the  United  States  Steel  cor- 
poration was  made  public  today,  and 
showed  that  for  tlie  year  ended  Dec. 
31,  1908,  gross  receipts  of  5482,307.840 
were  earned,  a  decrease  of  J274,706,927 
from  the  preceding  year.  The  net 
earnings  of  the  corporation  were  $91,- 
847,711,  a  decrease  of  $69,116,963  from 
1907. 

The  report  further  shows  that  $16- 
965,181  was  appropriated  for  deprecia- 
tion, replacement  and  extinguishment 
funds,  together  with  sinking  funds  on 
bonds  of  subsidiary  companies,  which 
is  a  decrease  of  $10,754,563,  from  1907. 
The  interest  on  bonds  outstanding  and 
sinking  funds  of  the  corporation  was 
$29,487,851,  an  increase  of  $1,250,001 
over  the  previous  year. 

The  report  shows  that  no  sums  were 
set  aside  during  the  year  for  addi- 
tional construction,  against  $54,000,000 
in  190".  The  surplus  for  the  year  after 
the  payment  of  interest  charges,  divi- 
dends, appropriations  and  all  other 
charges,  was  $10  342,986,  a  decrease  of 
$4,836.&.".l    from    1^07. 

P.  R.  M'DONNELL 
GETS  CONTRACT 

Duluth  Contractor  Cap- 
tures Big  Sewer  Job 
at  Grand  Forks. 

Grand  Forks.  N.  D..  March  17. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  city  council 
last  night  let  the  contract  for  the  con- 
struction of  the  sewer  on  Demers  ave- 
nue to  P.  R.  McDonnell  of  Duluth.  Mc- 
Donnells  bid  on  the  work  was  $68.- 
881.05. 

His  nearest  competitor  was  the 
Northern  Construction  company  of 
Grand  Forks,  whose  bid  was  only  $o97 
higher.  The  sewer  Is  to  be  of  brick 
construction.  On  concrete  construction 
the  No.nhern  Construction  company 
had   the   lowest  bid. 

Mr.  McDonnell  last  year  got  away 
with  a  large  paving  contract  here 
which    he    has    nearly    completed. 

DITCHES  WILL  BENEFIT. 

Drainage    Schemes     in     Marshall 
County  Bound  to  Help. 

Middle  River.  Minn.,  March  17. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — An  era  of 
development  is  dawning  for  this  vil- 
lage   and    surrounding    country.      The 


lowing  Monday,  and  that  evening  The 
Herald  theater  party  of  150  will  wit- 
ness the  first  performance  of  ■Ren 
Hur  "  The  best  seats  In  the  Lyceum  have 
been  reserved  for  The  Herald's  guests, 
and  this  will  be  one  of  the  larKe.st 
theater    parties    ever    given    In    Duluth. 


big  state  drainage  proposition  now  un- 
der way  Is  already  waking  people  up 
as  to  land  values  and  a  couple  of  new 
residences  are  under  way  In  the  vil- 
lage, with  prospects  of  several  more 
being  commenced   In  the  near  future. 

Albert  Dalqulst  and  wife  of  this 
village  went  to  Roseau  yesterday  to 
attend  the  funeral  of  Mrs.  Judge  Holm 
of  that  villag'e.  Mrs.  Holm  having  been 
a    sister    of    Mrs.    Dalqulst. 

. • — 

Can't  look  well,  eat  well  or  feel  well 
with  Impure  blood  feeding  your  body. 
Keep  the  blood  pure  with  Burdock 
Blood  Bitters.  Kat  simply,  take  exer- 
cise, keep  clean  and  you  will  have  long 
life. 

%  CALLING   MAN    LIAR  * 

^  IS  BKEACH  OF  PE.^CE  * 

^  DOWN  GEORGIA  WAY.  * 

*  Atlanta.     Ga.,     Martli     17. — To  * 
^|f  call  a  nmn  a  liar  in  the  state  ol   ^(t 

*  (itHirjila  1.x  a  breath  of  the  peace  ^K 
¥tc  and    nieaius  a    nght.   <leclares   the  * 

*  state   <'<iiirt    of   appeal.*!   in    a   tie-  * 

*  ei.>«ion  liantietl   down   to<lay.     The  * 

*  lower  t-ourt,  which  refusetl  dan»-  * 

*  ages   to   William      Runsey,      who  * 

*  sue<l  W.  A,  Bullard  l'<»r  $100  dam-  * 

*  atses  for  breach  of  the  peace  for  * 

*  calling    him    a    liar,    is    reversed,  * 

*  the  opinion  by  Judge  Powell  con-   * 

S  eluding; :  * 

"Beinia:  to  the     nianner     bom.  * 

*  the  judges  of  this  court  take  ^ 
"k  Judicial  «ognlzance  of     the     fact  * 

*  that   in  (;corgia   to  call  a  man  a  * 

*  liar,   even      williont      threatening  * 

*  him    witli    a    weaiM)n,    most    gen-  * 

*  erally  means  a  fij!;ht.  There  may  * 
^  be  exceptions  to  this  rule,  but  ^ 
^  they  ai-e  exotics  and  lind  little  * 
^  nourishment  on  (Jeorgian  soil  and  ¥ 
^  under  Southern  skies."  ^ 
^  ^ 

• 

It    Saved    HIh    lieg. 

"All  thought  I'd  lose  my  leg,"  writes 
J.  .A.  Swenson,  Watertown.  Wis.  "Ten 
years  of  ezcema,  that  fifteen  doctors 
could  not  cure,  had  at  last  laid  me  up. 
Then  Bucklen's  Arnica  :5alve  cured  it 
sound  and  well."  Infallible  for  Skin 
Eruptions,  Plzcema,  Salt  Rheum.  Bolls, 
Fever  Sores,  Burns,  Scalds,  Cuts  and 
Piles.      :;5c    at    all    druggists. 


SELLS  MANY  Tl  BERS. 

Rural  Mail  Carrier  Making  Money 
Raising  Potatoes. 

Crookston,  Minn.,  March  17. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — J.  W.  Lee,  one 
of  the  progressive  farmers  residing  on 
Rural  Route  No.  1.  southwest  of  the 
city,  has  lust  finished  loading  8,0Q0 
bushels  of  Early  Ohio  potatoes,  most 
of  which  will  be  shipped  to  Kansas 
City. 

He  received  90  cents  per  bushel  for 
them,  as  they  are  In  fine  shape.  The 
prlee  makes  the  crop  a  very  profitable 
one,  even  though  last  season  was  not 
an  ideal  one  for  potatoes,  lack  of 
moisture  early  in  the  season  keeping 
them    back. 

In  addition  to  the  sale,  Mr.  Lee  last 
fall  sold  2.000  bushels,  and  still  has 
2,000  bushels  for  seed. 

RECOUNT  COMMITTEE  IS 

AGAINST  A.  E.  STEVENSON. 

.Springfield,  111.,  March  17. — After  a 
stormy  session,  in  which  there  were 
frequent  tilts  between  the  members, 
the  recount  committee  today,  before 
the    convening    of    the    house    session, 


SUPERFLUOUS 
HAIR 


NEWEST 
WOMEN 


'  Don't  plan  your  Spring  Wardrobe  or  make  one  purchase  until  you  view  our  new 
merchandise.  In  this  store  you  will  find  style  ami  economy,  hand  in  hand.  In  our 
women's  section,  spring  business  has  already  started  with  a  rush  We  never  began 
a  season  with  so  spirited  a  selling,  and  you  can  justly  take  the  fact  as  an  indication 
that  our  selection  and  prices  have  met  with  an  unprecedented  public  approval.      . 


Ladies'  Tailored  Suits 

For  Thurs(Jay  we  specialize  two  specials 
in  Tailored  Suits.  AT  $27.50  we  sub- 
mit the  best  value  that  it  has  ever  been 
possible,  even  for  this  big  value-giving  store  to 
offer — strictly  man-tailored  suits,  made  up  in  the 
very  latest  approved  styles — coats  are  of  the  long 
hipless  variety,  silk  lined ;  skirts  are  of  the^  new 
gored  models,  trimmed  with  buttons,  etc.  (.Some, 
however  are  plain  tailored).  Materials  are  all- 
wool  worsteds,  serges,  prunellas  and  fancy  satin 
finished  cloths,  in  materials  and  jvorkmansh^ 
they  are  unexcelled — in  value,  ^  ~ 
unapproachable 

AT  $20.00— We  offer  a  number  of  very  attrac- 
tive models,  all  of  the  approved  styles  of  this  sea- 
son;  exceptionally  well  tailored,  and  of  good  ma- 
terials, in  either  plain  colors,  two-toned  effects 
or  fancy  stripes ;  such  garments,  indeed^  as  ycxi 
will  be  unable  to  find  elsewhere 
in  Duluth  at  this  price 


The  New  Coats 


wurR-iiiauMiiiJ 

$27.50 


$20.00 


A  lar^e  and  varied  assortment,  in  style,  mate- 
rial and^fabric,  awaits  you  here.  Coats  bearing 
the  stamp  of  Dame  Fashion's  approval— the  best 
of  this  iseason's  models,  finely  fashioned  and  rea- 
onably  priced. 

In  materials  there  are  serges  and  fancy  weaves, 
in  styhs  there  are  the  new  hipless  and  semi- 
fitted,  slso  a  number  of  smart  models,  buttoning 
straight  up  to  the  chic  military  collars;  trim- 
mings are  tailored  strappings,  buttons,  large 
patch  pockets,  etc.,  and  prices  range  from  $10tO  $30. 

Heatherbloom  Petticoats 

On  Thursdav  we  will  offer  on  special  sale  25  dozen  of 
the  popular  Heatherbloom  I'ettlcoats;  almost  every 
woman  is  acquainted  with  their  good  merits,  lasting 
qualitief ,  the  sheen  and  rustle  of  silk  at  a  fraction  of  its 
cost.  The  t.kirts  are  In  several  styles,  eome  with  deep 
tailored  flounce.  oUier  with  deep  embroidered  flounce; 
In  color  of  brown,  navy,  tan.  light  blue,  pink  and  black; 
some  in  fancy  stripes  and  plaids;  all 
are  $3.  )0  values;  on  Thursday  at, 
each 


inK  ana   uiucn, 

$2.49 


Silk  Dept.  Specials 

The  popular  P'oulard  Silks — We  carry  a 
complete  line  of  the  Cheney  Bros.'  spot  proot 
Silks  In  all  the  new  styles  and  colors.  Prices, 
$1.00  and  75c. 

Spedal  for  Thursday  and  Friday 

23-^n.  all  Silk  Foulard  In  black  and  blue 
grounds,   with   dots  and   rings;    price  48c  yard. 

AU  the  new  weaves  In  Silks  for  Waist.s, 
Dre&.«»es,  Suit.s  and  Gowns  are  now  ready  for 
your   Inspection. 


Dress  Goods  Specials 

Wliat  you  can  buy  for  $1.00  of  New  Dress 
Fabrics. 

New   Satin  Surface  Cloths. 

New  popular  Taffetas. 

New  Satin  Cloth  In  Shadow  Designs. 

New  jyide  Wale  Serges,  specially  adapted  for 

suits. 

New  Panamas  and    Wool  Taffetas. 

A  complete  assortment  of  the  Newest  Dress 
Fabrics  now  on  display. 


White  Goods  Dept. 

The  "Flaxon,"  the  most  popular  material  for 
waists  and  dresses,  it  imitates  sheer  linen, 
corr.es  in  plain,  checks  and  stripes;  prices  16c, 
19c,  25c  and  35c  yard. 


■     ■       ■    >~ 


At  Bargain  Counter  No.  2 

>le   i 

5c 


500    yards   white    Shrunk    Cotton,    suitable    for 
Waists  and  Dresses  and  children  wear; 
slightly   soiled   from    handling;    36    In. 
wide,  to  close,  per  yd 


7c 


per  yard  for  your 
choice  of  any  of 
these  fabrics. 


'*The  Wash  Fabric  that  b  Washgible'* 


Your    choice   *>f  ^^ 
any  of  these  fab-  1 1 
rics  for,  per  yard 


AMERIG\N  PRINHNG  CQ 
WSH  FABRICS 

Buy  Now  for  Future  Needs 

Once  a  Year  Only  Are  Such  Values  Offered— and 
then  only  at  THE  GLASS  BLOCK. 

We  anticipated  an  Immense  increase  in  dema'nd  for  this  i;eason's  sale— - 
and  bought  accordingly— against  our  60,000  yards  of  last  year  s  sale  ^e  boiight 
120.000  yards  this  year— and  If  the  sale  contmues  until  th^.j'^.'LwSlmaled' 
at  the  .same  pace  as  that  of  the  past  two  days,  we  will  have  tnderestimatert, 
ln.stead   of  overestimated,   the   probable  increase.  ^pnnnmlral 

These   materials   make   the   prettiest,   most  serviceable.      mo,t     economical 

HERE'S  A  FEW  OF  THEM: 


Fashion  Sheet*  for 
1909 

The  New  Fashion  Sheets — 
printed  In  colors  and  por- 
traying these  fabrics  made  up 
In  fashionable  dresses  and 
suits  of  the  coming  season, 
win  be  given  free  with  every 
purchase. 

Made  Up  Models 
on  Display 

Figures,  dressed  in  made- 
up  models  will  be  shown  both 
in  our  windows  and  In  the  de- 
partment. These  models  will 
give  a  good  idea  of  the  pos- 
sibilities of  make  up.  . 


Cardinal   Reds,  Stripes  and  Cliecks. 
Fancy  Checked  and  Flffurcd  Grays. 
Oxfords   and   Ivlght   Gray   J^ncies. 
Claret      Reds— Checks,      Plaids      and 

Stripes.  ,,_     ^ 

Claret  Reds — Fancy  Figured  lancets. 
Black   and   White   Plaids. 
Black  and  White  Checks  with  Wliito 

Dots. 
Wlilte    Grounds,    Black   and      Colored 

Figures. 
llTilte    Grounds      with      Checks      and 

Plaids. 
And  Innumerable  Others.  


Mercerized   Dress   Ginghams. 

Indi^  Foulards. 

Calcutta  l-'^ncies. 

Mcrcx'rtwHl  IMalds  and  Checks.        ^ 

Black  and   White  Plain   C  hecks. 

Black   and   \^liite   Brolien    Clieck   Kf- 

fe<'ta- 
Bluo  Grounds — Striped,     Dotted     and 

J^gured. 
Light  Fancy  Cliecks  ard  Plaids. 
Foulard  Silk  Fabrics. 
Dress   Gingham   Styles. 
American   Slilrting  Styles. 
Cardinal  lU'ds — with  I'hik  and   Polka 

Dots. 
And    Innumerable   Oth  ^r??. 


THE  DIG 

^GLASS  BLOCK 


QUAUTYIS' 

PARAMOUNT 


ON  THE  BARGAIN 
COUNTERS. 

Shirting  Prints 

Several  thousand  yards  of 
American  Printing  Co.'s 
choice  Shirting  Prints — white 
with  black  and  colored  tig- 
ureK,  dots,  and  stripes,  suit- 
able for  home  dres.«es.  chil- 
dren's wear,  boys'  waists, 
shirts,   etc.. 

During  This  Sale, 
per  Yard 


6c 


DootorN  .Say  There  l«  •  Hariiile«»i.  Safe 
and  Sure  Way  to  Remove  Superfluous 
Hair. 

Dr.  Fowler,  wlio  has  made  a  thorough 
studv  of  superfluous  hair  growths, 
speaking  of  a  case  in  which  he  used 
DeMlracle.  says:  "I  applied  DeMlracle, 
and  In  a  few  minutes  I  had  her  lip  de- 
void of  hair  without  any  pain  whatever. 
I  instructed  her  to  call  again  in  two 
weeks,  which  she  did.  1  found  about 
one-fourth  of  the  hair  roots  were  not 
killed  hy  the  first  application,  so  I  made 
a  second  application.  I  saw  her  again 
in  about  a  month.  an<l  found  her  Up 
as  clear  of  any  hair  as  an  infant's.  I 
can  heartily  recommend  DeMlracle  for 
all  the  uses  for  which  the  manufactu- 
rers  recommend  it." 

It  is  well  to  rememtier  that  DeMJrade  Is  abeoliit«ly 
iion-iKjUoncus.  aiiUstpUo  and  germicidal,  therefore  It 
will  not  prwliioe  blond  polsoidng  or  irzema  which  is 
«o  i-onunon  "l;h  liiilr  removers.  DeMlracle  is  the  only 
method  in  the  world  which  Is  endorsed  by  physicians, 
surgeons,  detmatologlsu.  medical  Journals  and  prom- 
inent magazines. 

DeMlracle  mailed.  se.iled  in  plain  wrapper,  for 
$1  00  .  Your  ircncj  back  without  QUesUon  (no  r«1 
tape)'  if  it  faft*  to  do  aU  tliat  la  cUlm«l  for  it. 
Booklet  free  In  plain  scaled  envelope  by  the  De- 
Mlracle Chemical  <o..  Desk  2.  ItnO  Park  Ave..  New 
York.  K.T  sale  by  I.  Fnlmiilli.  corner  Lake  a\euue 
I  and   Supertox   St.,    and   all   go«>d   iturei. 


adopted  a  report  holding  that  the 
petition  of  Adlal  E.  Stevenson  for  a 
?lcount  of  the  votes  cast  for  governor 
last  fall  in  Illinois  did  not  Present  a 
prima  facie  case.  The  report  was 
drafted  by  Former  Senator  Berrv  who 
represented  Governor  Deneen  >"  the 
contest.  Counsel  for  the  contestant 
and  the  contestee  were  Permitted  to 
file  their  briefs  covering  the  legal 
Joints  to  be  submitted  with  the  re- 
port of  the  committee. 

CHEAPER  DYNAMITE. 

Farmers  of  Beltrami  and  Adjoining 
Counties  to  be  Benefitted. 

Bcmldjl,  Minn.,  March  17.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— W.  R.  Mackenzie,  vice 
president  of  the  Northern  Minnesota 
Dairy  Farm  &  l>and  company,  states 
he  has  Investigated  the  mat^ter  of  fur- 
nishing dynamite  to  the  farmers  ot 
Beltrami  and  adjoining  counties,  and 
he  believes  that  he  can  fecure  the 
stump-removing  explosive  at  one-third 
or  even  one-half  the  prices  being  paid 
by  the  farmers  at  the  present  time. 

Mr.  Mackenzie  says  that  he  has 
taken  up  the  matter  with  several  big 
powder  companies,  and  that  he  has  re- 
ceived assurances  from  each  of  the 
companies  that  they  will  gladly  send 
demonstrators  to  this  county  who  vvill 
show  what  can  be  done  with  dynamite, 
the  proper  way  to  destroy  stumps,  and 
the  most  economical  method  of  using 
the  explosive. 

—  • ■ — ■ 

BemldJI    Home    Uurnn. 
Bemidji.     Mii»n..     Mjircli     17. — (.Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Fire  Tuesday  almost  I 


totally  destroyed  the  honie  of  James 
Price,  causing  a  loss  of  about  f2.800, 
nartlally  covered  by  Insurance. 

An  overheated  cook  stove  started 
the  flames.  which  spread  almost 
straight  upward  and  destroyed  all  of 
the  roof  and  the  second  door  The 
fire  department,  which  quickly  re- 
sponded to  the  call,  did  excellent  work 
and  saved  practically  all  of  the  furni- 
ture on  the  ground  floor. 
■ 
BemldJi    Art    Kxhiblt. 

BemidJl,  Minn.,  Marcl.  i?.- (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  Horace  K.  Tur- 
ner Art  Company  of  Boston.  Mass..  will 


SoreThroat 
ColdinCliest 


OUSE 
mi 


meea 


0 


Rub  the  throat  and  chest  with 
Omega  Oil;  then  bind  around  the 
vliroat  and  lay  on  the  chest  pieces  of 
flannel  soaked  in  the  Oil.  The  Oil 
poes  in  through  the  pores  and  reduces 
the  inflammation  that  causes  the 
trouble.    Three  sizes ;  10c. ,  25c. ,  50c. 


hold  one  of  their  lar^e  exhibits  of 
copies  of  the  worlds  famous  works  of 
art  in  the  BemidJl  high  school  on  Fri- 
day and  Saturday,  Apri:    2  and  3. 

The  proceeds  of  the  exhibition  are 
to  be  donated  to  the  school  for  the 
purpose  of  buying  pictures  for  the 
new  136.000  school  building  which  is  to 
be  constructed  in  Benddji  this  sum- 
mer. 

AN  EXPENSIVEfFsH. 

Ten  Dollars  and  Cost?  for  Illegally 
Spearing  Big  White  Fish. 

Bemidji,  Minn.,  Mar  :h  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Alfred  Erlckson  of 
Nymore  was  fined  flO  ind  costs  In  the 
municipal  court  for  viclating  the  state 
fish  laws. 

Erlckson  had  speared  a  big  white 
fish  and  was  feeling  quite  elated  over 
his  success  when  Gam<!  Warden  Bailey 
came  around  the  corner  of  his  nsh 
shack  and  succeeded  In  purchasing  the 
fish  before  Erlckson  knew  to  whom  he 
was    making   the   sale.      ^  ,   ,  . 

The  warden  arreste<l  Erlckson,  who. 
pleaded  guilty  before  :  udge  Bailey  and 
paid  his  fine  and  costs 

JOHN  AKMSTRONCi  (1IANLER 
EXONERATED  FOR  KILLING. 

Charlottesville,  Va.,  March  17. — 
John  Armstrong  Charier,  former  hus- 
band of  Amelia  Riven,  the  authoress, 
engaged  in  a  scuffle  tit  the  possession 


of  a  revolver  la.st  night  with  John 
Gillard.  an  Englishman,  at  his  country 
home,  "Merry  Mill.-,"  at  Cobham.  Va., 
during  which  the  revolver  was  dis- 
charged and  Gillard  was  killed.  Chan- 
ler  was  exonerated  of  all  blame  by  a 
coroner's  Jury. 

• 

Allreed  Fault}  Prnperm. 
Stillwater.  Minn..  March  17. — A  writ 
of  habeas  corpus  has  been  Pued  out  In 
behalf  of  Jolm  Hlman.  who  Is  a  pine 
county  prisoner  In  the  Washington 
county  jail,  having  b'^en  arrested  for 
alleged  assault.  It  is  contended  that 
the  papers  are  faulty  and  that  Hlman 
Is  wrongfully  detained.  The  matter 
will    be  heard   on   Thursday. 


><«^*8t^  J  ■*■■"■'■ 


Stearns'  Electric 
Rat  and  Roach  Paste 

rids  the  house  of  all  vermin  in 
a  night.  Drives  rats  and  mice 
out  of  the  house  to  die. 

t  or.  box  X5C. ;  18  oz.  box  $1.00.    Sold  everywhere 
or  seat  express  prepaid  OD  receipt  of  price. 

STEARNS'  ELECTRIC  PASTE  CO.,  CklcagoJN. 


"  V 


-r. 


(B^ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       WEDNESDAY,     MAKCH    17,    1909. 


Hale  and  Hearty 

at  the  age  of  75 

rirs.  Joanna  F.  Leek  of 
Dixon,  Mo.,  says  that 
she  owes  her  vigor, 
health  and  strength  to 
the  use  of  Duffy's  Pure 
Halt  Whiskey,  when  all 
other  remedies  she  tried 
failed. 

In  a  recent  letter  Mrs.  Leek- 
writes:  "I  take  pleasure  in  rec 
ommcnding:  Duffy's  Pure  Malt 
Whiskey  as  a  builder  of  body, 
brain  and  nerve  in  the  old.  It  has 
helped  me  more  than  anything 
else  I  ever  took.  I  am  now  seven- 
tv-five  (T.'j)  years  of  aj^e  and  walk 
and  go  anvwhere  I  wisli.  Duffy's  Pure 
Malt  Wliiikey  is  the  very  thing  men  and 
women  in  iheir  rechning  years  need." 

Every  testimonial  i>  guaranteed 
genuine  and  is  published  in  good  faith 
with  full  consent. 

Duffy's  Pure  Malt  Whiskey 

Manv  men  and  women,  who  have  almost  reached  the  four-score  tnark   tell 
the  same  story  as  Mrs.  Joanna  V.  Leek  about  what  Duffy  s  Pure  Malt  W  h:s 
kcv  has  done  toward  renewing  their  youth  and  keeping  them  vigorous,  hale 


.MR:>.    lO.'VNNA   F.    i-EKK. 


an<i  liearty  and  in  possession  of  all 
tiieir  faculties.  As  a  leadnig  doctor 
savs.  the  secret  of  the  whole  thing  is 
that  Duffy's  Pure  Malt  Whiskey,  if 
taken  as  prescribed,  drives  out  ..ill  dis- 
ease germs,  invigorates  the  brain,  en- 
riches the  blood,  quickens  the  circula- 
tion and  prevent>  decay  and  old  age. 

4A1  TIO\. — When  >oii  ask  >€»ur  driiK- 
KiMti  Krt»»"«T  or  flen'tT  f«>r  l>iifl'>'«  I'lir*- 
.Malt  \\  hinkej-  be  hutt  you  jtet  the  ko"- 
iiiiie.  Il'.H  nil  iih.>«t>liitfl>  {iiire  niedielnni 
niHit  ^^hiMLe>  and  1m  komI  iu  Menleti  li«>t- 
tle»  oiil.'i  :  uever  in  bulk.  Look  for  the 
trntlt>-uiurk,  the  "Old  CheinlKt,"  on  the 
lai'ri.  Olid  make  Hure  the  .seal  over  the 
cork  1.H  unbroken.  I'rlre  $1.(H>.  >Vritc 
t'oiiMiiltiiiK  IMi>  .<<ieiaii,  DiitTy  Malt  \\  bis- 
key  to.,  ll<»ehe!»ter,  >.  1.,  for  a  free  II- 
lUMlrated  iiiedloal  booklet  and  free  ad- 
^  Ice. 


TREASURY  OUTLOOK 
IS  BETTER  THAN  IN 
MONTHS,  ISjREPORT 


\<'aslilngton,  March  17. — Declaring 
the  treasury  outlook  today  is  better 
tlia!i  it  has  been  before  In  months. 
Assistant  Secretary  of  the  Treasury 
Coolidge  has  authorized  a  statement 
eiving  figures  to  show  a  marked  Im- 
provement so  far  as  government  re- 
ceipts are  concerned.  The  statement 
follows: 

"There  is  no  foundation  for  the  wide- 
ly ciieiilated  report  that  the  payment 
of  over  150,000.000  of  claim.<i  agaln.st 
the    government,     now    due,    has     been 

postponed    by    the    treasury    for    want 
of    ready    cash. 

"On  the  contrary,  the  department  Is 
abreast  of  demands  upon  it,  honoring 
requisitions,  and  no  necessary  pay- 
ments arc  postponed   for  future  action. 

■"All  claims  are  met  as  fast  as  ap- 
piopriatoxis  therefor  are  made  by  con- 
gress. While  the  appropriations  an 
e.xpenditures  of  the  government  are  In- 
citsslng  annually  and  the  expenditures 
f*-r  the  current  fiscal  year  are  largely 
ab(n'e  the  revenues  for  the  year,  the 
avjiilable  cash  in  the  treasury  is  e<iual 
to  all  demands  that  may  be  made  upon 
it   for   some    time. 

"The  revenues  from  Imports  have  re- 
cently sliown  substantial  gains  and, 
should  these  continue,  the  treasury  i.s 
in  j4ood  condition  to  await  the  ap- 
proaching readjustment  of  the  tariff. 
BIk    Iiiiproveiuent. 

"So  far  from  the  treasury  being  in 
a  desperate  way.  tlie  outlook  is  better 
todaj"  than  It  has  been  before  In  months. 
The  revenues  for  the  first  fifteen  days 
of  Marcli  have  been  |2G,430.7.tG.  as 
against  920,785,250  for  the  correspond- 
ing peiiod  a  year  ago,  an  improvement 
of  over  27  pt'r  cent,  wlille  the  excess 
of  expenditures  over  receipts  for  the 
same  period  has  been  $1,509,243.  as 
againsi  $4,374,7  13,  an  improvement  of 
over  G'l  per  cent.  Tlie  revenues  foi-  the 
first  fiteen  dajs  of  March^were  greater 
than  for  any  corresponding  period  in 
the  past  five  yt-ars. 

"The  e.xcess  of  expenditures  over  re- 
leipts    for    the    fiscal    year    to    date    is 


i 


$87,871.223..  tKhii&li  is  sllglitly  in  excess 
of  the  estimate  of  Sec-retary  Cortelyou 
at  the  beginning  of  the  last  session  of 
congress.  The  average  daily  excess 
of  expenditures  over  receipts  for  the 
entire  fiscal  year  to  date  has  been 
$340.5S6.  In  .January  the  average  daily 
e.\cess  was  $501,4 1 4.  Had  this  con- 
tinued, as  seemed  possible  for  a  time, 
the  outlook  might  nave  been  less  fav- 
orable, but  since  the  first  week  in 
February,  there  has  been  a  marked 
improvement.  Tlie  average  excess  of 
expenditures  over  receipts  during  Feb- 
ruary was  $233,841.  For  the  first  fif- 
teen days  of  .Marcli  it  was  only  $100.- 
616.  An  average  daily  deficit  of  $245.- 
000  for  the  remainder  of  the  fiscal  year 
will  siili  leave  the  year's  deficiency 
within  Secretary  Cortelyou's  estimate 
of   $114,000,000. 

"The  new  administration  comes  into 
office  witli  the  general  fund  of  the 
treasury  in  as  good  a  condition  as  It 
was  at  the  beginning  of  the  adminis- 
tration which  .iias  just  come  to  an  end. 
The  available  cash  balance  on  March  15 
was  $i:^'). 087, 993.  On  March  15,  1905, 
at  tl;e  beginning  of  tlie  last  aiiminis- 
trati<m,  the  available  cash  balance  was 
$141,498,436,  and  bv  .\ug.  23,  1905,  It 
had  fallen  to  $123,t94,710.  Tlie  work- 
ing balance  on  March  15.  1909,  was 
160,561,544.  On  March  15,  1905.  It  was 
$36,870,764.  The  free  gold  in  the  treas- 
ury general  fund  on  March  15,  1909. 
was  $87,581,825.  On  March  15,  1905,  It 
was  only  $57,588,250.  The  gold  coin 
represented  by  gold  certificates  out- 
standing on  March  15,  1905,  was  $519.- 
619.969.  Yesterday  it  wa.s  $S52.878.869, 
The  receipts  from  custom.*?  during  tlie 
first  fifteen  #ays  of  March,  1905,  were 
$12.1S6,953. 

Keport%  Not   Jniitlfled. 

During  tfijp  filteen  days  of  March. 
1909.  they  were  $14,378,743.  From  in- 
ternal revenue  the  receipts  were  $9,- 
776.113,  as  against  $10,511,954.  The  ex- 
cess of  receipts  over  expenditures  on 
March  15,  1905.  was  $189,754.  March 
15.    1909.   It   was   $534,959. 

Thus  It  will  be  seen  thai  the  con- 
dition of  the  treasury  does  not  Justify 
ihe  disturbjjig  reports  which  have 
gained  currency. 


REALLY  PROPER  THING  IS 
WAIST  LINE  SIX  INCHES  ABOVE 
KNEE,  CORSETS  MUCH  LONGER 


WE 


MOVE 

PACK 

STORE 


EVERYTHING 


FSRE  PROOF  WAREHOUSE. 


Office  210  West  Superior  St. 


Both  'Phones  492. 


New  York,  March  17. — There  were 
only  two  really  new  things  shown  at 
the  first  session  of  the  Dressmaker.s' 
Protective  association.  One  is  the 
"stjie  clerical,"  a  summer  costume, 
made  to  look  as  much  the  French 
priest's  robe  as  possible,  witli  500  but- 
tons on  It. 

The  other  novelty  Is  the  "moyan 
age"  gown,  which  was  first  heard  from 
at  a  Western  dressmaker's  convention 
a  short  time  ago.  Several  specimens 
of  this,  whlcii  is  to  be  the  "really 
proper  thing  this  summer,"  are  shown 
today.  The  exhibitors  explained  that 
the  waistline  In  this  model  Is  "six 
inches  above   the  knee,   requiring  cor- 


sets five  Inches  longer  than  la.st  year." 
Features  of  the  "moyan  age,"  which 
is  said  to  follow  the  costume  lines 
worn  by  fashionable  wom<  n  of  the 
tenth,  eleventh  and  twelfth  "French 
centuries,"  are  a  separate  hanging 
"pocket  for  pennies,"  suspended  at  one 
side,  and  a  gigantic  buckle  of  red  and 
gold  worn  at  the  breast. 

The  associations'  president  told  her 
auditors  that  the  favorite  color  for 
street  wear  next  season  is  called  "tea 
green."  Then  there  Is  a  new  mustard 
shade  known  as  "khakhi  d'or.'  In 
the  pastel  shades,  the  favorites  will  be 
■peach  blo.ssom,"  "cloud  blue"  and 
"cloud  gray."  Raw  silks  and  a  new 
diagonal  silk  crepe  are  to  be  the  pre- 
ferred   materials. 


STEEL  WAGE  CUT 
RUMORED  AGAIN 

Gary  Reiterates  No  Re- 
duction Has  Been  De- 
cided Upon. 

New  York.  March  17. — Reports  are 
again  current  in  Quarters  said  to  be 
usually  well  Informed  on  such  mat- 
ters, that  the  United  States  Steel  cor- 
poration is  contemplating  a  cut  of 
from  15  to  20  per  cent  In  the  wages 
of    Its    240,000    employes    to    lake    effect 


April  15.  The  decision  to  reduce  wages, 
it  was  stated,  was  reached  at  a  con- 
ference   held    last    Saturday. 

E.  H.  Gary,  chairman  of  the  United 
States  Steel  corporation,  when  asked 
regarding  the  truth  of  the  report,  said 
the  question  of  wage  reduction  has  not 
been  discussed  yet,  by  the  board  of 
directors,  and  that  no  cut  In  wages  has 
been  decided  on  by  the  management. 
He  added,  however,  that  he  did  not 
mean  to  say  that  a  reduction  would 
not  be  decided  on  ultimately. 
■ 
Cat    AffeetH   Six    Hunilred. 

Lebanon,  Pa.,  March  17. — -V  general 
cut  of  10  per  cent  in  the  wages  In  all 
departments  of  the  Pennsylvania  Steel 
company's  plant  at  North  Lebanon  la 
announced  for  April  1.  It  affects  all 
local  employes,  numbering  about  600. 
No  notices  of  a  reduction  have  been 
posted  at  the  Lackawanna  Iron  &  Steel 
plant   here. 

Read  the  want  ads  tonight.  Your 
neighbor  does.     It  pays  too. 


TO   MOiUTAViA 
IDAHO 

WA8Hli«GT0N 
OREGON 
BRITISH  COLUMBIA 

From  Duluth  and  Superior  Daily  during  March 
and  ApriL  Tickets  are  good  in  Tourist  Sleep- 
ing Cars  on  payment  of  Berth  Fare,  Good  via 
Direct  Line  or  via  St.  Paul  and  Minneapolis. 

Tourist  Sleeping  Cars 

on  the  Oriental  Limited  and  Fast  Mail.  For 
full  information  and  illustrated  literature, 
address 


FRED  A.  KILLS, 

Northern 
Passenger     Agent, 

432    W.    Superior 
Street, 

1)1  i.i'TH.  »nxx. 


FRED  HALL, 

City    Pa.ssenger 
and  Ticket  Agent. 

Cor  Broadway 
and    Tower    Ave., 

sn»ERIOR,  WIS. 


A1.-\SK.\-YUKON-PACIFIO    EXPOSITION,    SEATTI.E,       JUNE    1- 

OCT.    le,   1909. 
RO.SE     1  ESTI\  Al..     POKTI..\N'D.  ORE..  JUNE  7-12,   1909. 
N.VTIONAL   IRRI«ATiOX   CONGRESS,   SPOKANE.    WASH.,   AUG. 

9-14,   1909. 


GOETHALS  DECLARES 
CANAL  ZONE  ONE  OF 
MOSTHEALTHYPLACES 


Chief  Engineer  of  Com- 
mission Makes  Another 
Report. 

Strong  Defense  Is  Given 

of   the    Lock 

Type. 


Washington,  March  17. — A  strong  de- 
fense of  the  present  plan  of  building  a 
lock  canal  at  Panama,  not  only  be- 
cause it  is  deemed  more  desirable  than 
a  canal  built  on  sea  level,  but  because 
of  the  saving  in  time  and  money,  is 
contained  in  a  special  report  of  Lieut. 
Col.  George  W.  Goethals,  chairman  and 
chief  engineer  of  the  Isthmian  Canal 
commission,  made  public  today.  The 
report    deals    with    every    phase    of    the 

canal's  construction,  and  in  It  Col. 
Goethals  handles  witliout  gloves  those 
critics  who,  he  says,  are  predicting 
nothing  but  disaster  and  failure  to  the 
enterprise. 

Goetlials  reviews  the  whole  history 
of  proposed  canal  construction  on  the 
Isthmus  and  calls  attention  to  the  fact 
tliat  after  tlie  subject  had  occupied 
public  attention  for  upward  of  four 
centuries,  it  was  not  until  the  nine- 
teenth century  that  any  definite  action 
was  taken  looking  toward  Its  accom- 
plishment. "The  United  States,"  he 
says  "not  unmindful  of  the  advantages 
of  an  Isthmian  canal,  had  from  time 
to  time  made  Investigations  and  sur- 
veys of  the  various  routes."  He  adds 
that  with  the  view  to  governmenc 
ownership  and  control,  congress  di- 
rected an  investigation  of  the  Nlcar- 
aguan  canal  for  which  a  concession 
had  been  granted  to  a  private  com- 
pany. The  report  of  the  commission 
to  look  Into  the  subject  was  adverse 
to  the  Nicaraguan  route,  he  says,  and 
favorable  to  the  Panama  route  and 
the  lock  type  of  canal. 

Mucii  attention  is  given  to  the  sub- 
ject of  the  Gatun  dam.  This.  Goethals 
savs,  is  to  consist  of  two  oHes  of  rock 
1.200  feet  apart  and  carried  up  to  sixty 
feet  above  mean  tide.  The  space  be- 
tween them  and  up  to  the  required 
height  Is  to  be  filled  by  selected  ma- 
terial deposited  In  place  by  hydraulic 
piocess.  He  speaks  of  the  slip  which 
occurred  last  November.  which,  he 
savs,  amounted  to  practically  nothing. 
"This  slip,"  says  he,  "probably  would 
have  passed  unnoticed,  as  did  the  for- 
mer ones,  but  for  the  fact  that  at  the 
time  a  flood  In  the  Chagres  river  had 
attained  such  proportions  as  to  cover  a 
portion  of  the  Panama  railroad  tracks 
just  south  of  Gatun.  A  newspaper  cor- 
respondent, going  from  Colon  to  Pan- 
ama, saw  his  opportunity  for  a  sensa- 
tional story  and  attributed  the  flood 
to   the  droppln-^  of  the  Gatun  dam  In- 


LIEUT.  COL.  GOETHALS. 


to  the  subterranean  lake  under  the 
dam  and  locks,  which  another  faker 
had  previously  discovered.  and  the 
news  of  the  destruction  of  the  dam 
was  cabled  to  the  states."  The  slip,  he 
declares,   did   not  affect   the  south  slope 


Baby  Laugh 

It  belongs  to  health  for  a  baby  to 
eat  and  sleep,  to  laugh  and 
grow  fat. 

But  fat  comes  first;  don't  ask 
a  scrawny  baby  to  laugh; 
why,  even  his  smile  is  pituul! 
Fat  comes  first. 

The  way  to  be  fat  is  the  way  to 
be  healthy. 

Scott's  Emulsion 

is  the  proper  food,  but  only  a 
little  at  first. 


Send  this  adverttaement.  together  wHh  name  of 
paper  in  which  it  appears,  your  address  and  foor 
cents  to  cover  postage,  and  we  v;ll!  send  you  a 
'"Complete  Handy  Atlas  of  the  World"        ;:       :: 

SCOTT  &.  BOWNE.  409  Purl  Street.  New  Ygtk 


'!»».--f  -•?.--:■ 


akihg^ 


mt-:^' 


v^.-^:'-.*- 


?»>1-:^-    ;■= 


The  others  Use- 

Washburn- Crosby's 


Mr 

||TjJ^ 

lah 

uwTf 

i  i  • 

.^"J^qBffflMgSM^^^ 

^E  ViiRY»IiGiiEST  QUALITY 


■'■'  jv^:^-,' 


or  side  of  the  rock  pile.  '*It  was  en- 
flrely  local,"  he  says,  "and  did  not  In 
any  "way  interfere  with  the  work.  As 
a  result,  however,  the  public  le  told 
that  dire  disaster  will  follow  the  un- 
dertaking unless  the  present  plans  are 
abandoned  and  the  Straits  of  Panama 
constructed;  that  Is,  a  sea  level  canal 
:icross  the  Isthmus  500  to  600  feet 
wide.  To  accomplish  this,  however,  a 
lock  canal  must  be  built  first,  and  sub- 
.sequently  widened  and  deepened  until 
the  tidal  is  reached.  There  is  no  data 
vallable  for  such  a  canal.  With  moun- 
tains instead  of  hills  to  be  removed 
estimates  are,  of  course,  impossible;  so 
the  most  optimistic  figures,  suitable 
alone  to  the  ideal,  are  offered  as  a 
bait.  In  any  event,  it  Is  claimed  also 
that  Bohlo  should  have  been  selected 
for  the  site  of  the  dam  in  lieu  of 
Gatun."  Col.  Goethals  points  out  that 
at  Bohio  the  gorge  In  its  lower  strata 
is  lUled  with  water-bearing  gravel,  and 
that  fact  alone,  he  says,  removes  it 
from  consideration.  "I  venture  the 
statement,  without  fear  of  contrac- 
tion," he  says,  "tliat  the  site  of  no 
public  or  private  work  of  any  kind 
ha 3  rtceiced  such  a  thorough  and  ex- 
haustive examination  and  investigation 
as  the  foundation  of  the  dam  and  locks 
at  Gatun.  There  is  no  longer  a  doubt 
concerning  any  of  the  underlymg 
.«'ryta;  neither  the  Impermeability  nor 
the  ability  of  the  foundations  to  bear 
the  loads  that  will  be  brought  upon 
them,  can  be  questioned  if  the  data  bo 
carefully  and  impartially  examined. 
Tl;e  investigations  fail  to  disclose  any 
water-bearing  strata  or  the  existence 
of  that  underground  stream  with  a 
discharge  equal  to  the  Chagres  river 
itself,  which  was  recently  asserted  as 
a  fact   on    the   floor  of  the   senate. 

According  to  the  report,  tlie  Gatun 
dam  satisfactorily  solves  the  problem 
ot  the  control  of  the  Chagres.  and  there 
should  be  no  doubt  in  the  mind  of 
anyone,  who  impartially  examines  the 
data  It  savs.  that  the  solution  is  not 
(  niy    feasible,    but    absolutely    safe. 

Reverting  to  the  subject  of  a  sea 
level  canal,  Gol.  Goethals  says:  "To  be 
sure  the  partisans  of  the  sea  level  type 
are  "now  proposing  to  eliminate  both 
the  Gamba  dam  and  the  tidal  lock  by 
niaklng  the  channel  so  wide  as  to  re- 
duce the  currents  that  result  from  the 
discharge  of  the  Chagres  and  the  dif 
ferent  tides,  but  fail  to  explain  how 
they  propose  to  control  or  divert  the 
Chagres,  the  bed  of  which  v^iill  be  fifty 
feet  above  the  water  surface  of  the 
canal  at  the  juncture.  As  data  is  not 
available  for  preparing  accurate  esti- 
mates for  oven  such  a  sea  level  type 
as  was  originally  offered,  neither  they 
nor  anyone  else  can  offer  any  figure.'* 
as  to  time  and  cost  for  the  construction 
of  such  a  canal  as  they  now  advocate." 
In  any  comparison.  Col.  Goethals  adds, 
"we  must  confine  our  attention  to  the 
lock  type  as  now  building,  and  a  sea 
level  canal  as  offered  by  the  board  of 
engineers,  and  not  by  the  idealist." 
After  declaring  the  canal  zone  to  bi 
one  of  the  healthiest  communities  in 
the  world.  Col.  Goetlials  concludes:  "I 
assure  you  that  several  years  hence,  no 
later  than  Jan.  1.  1915,  even  the  mo.'^t 
ardent  sea  level  advocate  will,  in  mak- 
ing tlie  vovage  through  the  canal,  ad- 
mit that  the  ability  to  navigate  a  bat- 
tles!'. Ip  at  a  high  rate  of  speed  through 
the  lake  and  wide  channel  from  Gatun 
to  Pedro  Miguel,  far  outweighs  the 
small  inconveniences  of  the  safe  lock- 
ages up  to  and  down  from  the  sunnnlt 
level." 


cents    in    payment,    anc 
liable  to  a  fine  for   bn 

"Here      is     another 
particularly    thirsty      I 
miglit    enter    a    saloon 
their    thirst    would    ext 
o'clock,  a  part  of  then 
the    bartender's    attent 
others    set     the    clock 
hour.         He    would    se 
ables  until   his  clock  s 
the    closing    hour,    anc 
fore  be  breaking  the  1 
ly.    but    would    be    liab 
imprisonment,  or  both 
The    cu.stomers    with 
however,     who     would 
guilty  ones,   would   get 
the  present  ordinance, 
saloonmen    ar.»    in    nee 
protection    as    this      or 
offer. 

"When    you    come    t< 
this  light,  it  seems  rea 
sary    for    such    an    ort 
to    pass  than    fop  the 
ordinance   to  be  adoptc 


I  he  would  be 
taking  the  law. 
possibility.  A 
■  unch  of  men 
and.  thinking 
end    beyond    11 

I  might  engage 
on,       while    the 

back    half    an 

II  them  drink- 
hovved  it  to  be 
1  would  there- 
aw  unknowing- 
le    to   a    tine    or 

just  the  same. 

the    big    thirst, 

really     be     the 

off   free   under 

so  you  see   the 

d    of    just    .such 

iinance      would 

>  look  at  it  in 
lly  more  neces- 
linance  as  this 
proposed  minor 
d." 


NO  SHAKE-OIT  ATTFMFT 
IN  STEEL  ('0RP()R.\T10N'S 
ACT  OF  ABSORPTION, 


New  York,  March 
Thorne.  president  of  tin 
of  America,  api)eared  I 
mittee  appointed  by  G 
to  investigate  the  New 
and  told  It  about  the  a 
Tennessee  C<nvl  &  Iron 
Steel  corporation  in  1 
mony  was  along  the  ! 
gave  before  the  senal 
Washington  a  short   tli 

When     questioned     as 
for  calling  Thorne.   Mr 


17.— Oaklelgh 
Trust  Company 
lefore  the  com- 
overnor  Hughey 
i'ork  exchanges, 
bsorption  of  the 
coini)ajiy  bv  the 
30  7.  His  testi- 
ines  of  that  he 
e  committee  In 
ne  ago. 

to     the    reason 
White  said  the 


committee  desired  to  secure  information 
as  .to  whether  any  attempt  h.ad  ber^ii 
made  to  "shake  out"  the  firm  of  Mnore 
&  Schley,  brokers,  and  to  force  tliem 
to  sell  their  holdings  of  Tennessee  Coal 
&    Iron    stock. 

According  to  White,  the  testimony 
of  Thorne  was  to  the  effect  that  no 
such  attempt  was  made  at  the  time  the 
merger  was  put  through. 

"The  banks  wanted  money  at  that 
time,"  said  White,  "and  in  order  to  get 
it,  they  proceeded  to  liquidate  their 
loans  on  mactive  stocks.  The  stocks 
of  the  Tennessee  Coal  &  Iron  company 
ueie  Inactlye." 


Near   Death  iu   Big  Pond. 

It  was  a  thrilling  experience  to  Mrs. 
Ida  Soper  to  face  death.  "For  years 
a  severe  lung  trouble  gave  mo  Intenso 
suffering,"  she  writes,  "and  several 
times  nearly  caused  my  death.  All 
remedies  failed  and  doctors  said  I  was 
incurable.  Then  Dr  Kings  New  Dis- 
co\  ery  brought  quick  relief  and  a  cure 
so  permanent  that  I  have  not  been 
troubled  In  twelve  years."  Mrs.  Soper 
lives  in  Big  Pond,  Pa.  It  works  won- 
ders In  Ctiughs  and  Colds,  Sore  Lungs, 
Hemorrhages,  LaGrlppe,  Asthma. 

Croup,    Whooping  Cough   and   all    bron- 
chial   affections.      50c    and    Jl.OO.      Trial 
bottle    tree.      Guaranteed    by    all    drug-- 
gists. 


I'M 


"TA  HA  RA  BOOM  DE  AV 

AUTHOR  IS  NO  MORE. 


Denver,  March  17. — Paul  Stanley, 
comedian  and  compo.ser  of  the  son-.? 
"To  Ka  Ra  Boom  De  Ay."  is  dead  After 
a  lingering  illness.  Stanley,  whose 
real  name  Is  Sonnenberg,  had  Uveci 
here  with  his  wife  since  the  San  Fran- 
cisco earthquake.  He  was  reduced  to 
straitened  circuinstances  and  his 
health  was  much  impaired  by  tho 
shock.        He  was  61  years  old. 


AN  AWFUL 
POSSIBILITY 

Thirsty  Customers  Might 

Force  Bartender  to 

BreaK  the  Law. 


"Lid"    Aldermen    Have 
"Come  Back"  on  the 
"Minor"  Ordinance. 


An  ordinance,  making  it  a  misde- 
meanor, punishable  by  fine  and  im- 
prisonment, for  a  man  to  drink  in- 
toxicants in  a  saloon  or  other  place 
where  liquor  is  .sold,  after  11  o'clock 
in  the  evening  or  on  Sunday,  is  now 
among   the    possibilities   for   Duluth. 

Such  an  ordinance  will  be  intro- 
duced, it  is  claimed.  If  the  proposed 
ordinance,  making  it  a  misdemeanor 
for  a  minor  to  purchase  intoxicants, 
goes  through  the  council.  The  lat- 
ter measure  met  with  strong  oppo- 
sition when  it  came  up  for  passage 
at  the  council  meeting  Monday  even- 
ing, and  action  in  regard  to  it  was 
deferred  for  one  week. 

"If  the  'liberals'  insist  upon  passing 
an  ordinance  prohibiting  minors  from 
buying  drinks  in  a  saloon,  and  pro- 
viding a  fine  or  imprisonment  as 
punishment  if  they  violate  this  law, 
we  shall  insist  on  getting  a  vote  on 
an  ordinance  making  it  unlawful  for 
a  man  to  buy  a  drink  after  the  regu- 
lar clo.sing  hours,  or  on  Sunday,"  said 
a    "conservative"    alderman    yesterday. 

"One  measure  is  just  as  fair  and 
reasonable  as  the  other.  If  the  bar- 
tenders need  protection  from  boys, 
they  must  be  equally  in  need  of  pro- 
tection from  men.  Why,  the  waj- 
things  are  now.  two  men  might  seize 
a  bartender  after  the  clock  strikes 
11  and  force  him  to  draw  them  a 
couple  of  beers,  and  then  allow  the 
terror-stricken  man  to  stand  by  and 
watch  them  drink  it.  That  would  be 
awful.         They    could    throw    him    10 


u 


WHIERE  VALUES  REIQN  SUPREME. 


f* 


ikm 


00 


21-23  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


Off  With  Old  Season  ! 
On  With  the  New  I 

Inventory  is  Taken -Stocks  Are  Clean. 

The  New — Only  the  New 

Is  the  Storv  Now, 


Men's  Furnishings 

THE  SHIRT  SNAPS  OF  THE  SEASON. 

Men's  $1.00  Model  Shirts,  uinon  made,  soft  bosom,  in  pretty 
stripes,  checks  and  figures,  made  extra  full — all 
sizes  from  14  to  17*/.> — choice,  each 


59c 


stu 


■■■'■■'J--- 


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M 


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■4 

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■  <t    '    • 

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m  '::J^ 

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iMEN^'- 


Men's  50c  Silk  Four-in-Hand  Ties  in  this  season's  best  shades 
— a  grand  assortment  from  which  to  make  your 
selection — choic<',  each 

Extra  Special  Skirt  Values 

Walking  Skirts,  made  up  in  fine  all-wool  Panama,  neatly  trim- 
med with  self  tailored  bands  and  buttons,  al.so  satin  and  button 
trimming — four  distinct  styles — -not  one  worth  ^  ^  ^^  gm 
less  than  $5.50 — extra  special %f^  \3«  J^ ^^ 

New   Tailored  Spring  Suits 

Two  exceptiona!  values  for  tomorrow  in  fine  all-wool  Serges, 
Panamas.  Prunellas  and  Novelty  Worsteds,  in  the  new  spring 
tones.  These  Tc.ilored  Suits  are  certainly  0*  "^  O  /S  fi* 
wonderful  values  for  the  prices — $17.50  and  ^  jf  %^^  >/0 

12  Dozen  New  Lawn  Dressing  Sacques 

In  dark  and  light  grounds,  Persian  patterns  and  large  and 
small  figures,  perfectly  fast  colors — all  sizes —  ^  0>^ 

in  two  lots — priced  for  25c  and J_   >r  C/ 

10  Dozen  New  Lawn  Waists 

Eml)roidered  ard   lace  trimmed,  long  sleeves,  open  back  or 

front — all  sizes — regular  $1.25"  waists — 

on  special  sale  for f. . . 

Mvslin  Underwear  Specials 

Night  Gowns  and  Sli|)  Overs  in  very  fine  quality  nainsook, 
cambric  and  Harrock's  long  cloth,  handsomely  trimmed  with 
lace  and  embroi<lery,  six  styles  in  each — the  ^  ^  /^/^ 
best  $1.50^ garments  ever  shown — special  for.  . .  \Jp  X  •  V-/L/ 


89c 


P  «  »  Til  ,T~4l 


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■♦■ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909. 


MEET  WITH 
TEACHERS 

r^rents  Ml  Have  Chance 

to  iiijcuss  Children's 

School  Affairs. 

Meeting     at     Franklin 
School  Will  be  Fol- 
lowed by  Others. 


Parents  who  want  to  know  why 
Johnny  doesn't  gel  a  b,  tttr  mark  in 
mathematics,  or  woniUr  why  Sarah 
doesn't  leain  how  to  spell,  or  think  j 
that  Mary  isn't  making  the  progress 
In  her  school  work  that  ^;he  ought  to. 
will  have  a  chance  to  talk  matters 
over  quietly  with  the  teachers,  if  the 
plan  being  tried  at  the  Franklin 
school  is  carried  out  in  the  other 
schools,  according  to  the  wishes  of 
Supt.   Denftld. 

Tomorrow    night,    the      parents      of 
children  in  the  fifth,  sixth,  seventh  and 
eighth    grades   of   the    Franklin    school 
are  Invited  to  come  to  the  school  and 
inspect   the   work   done   by   the   pupils. 
There     will     be    a     short     program    of 
music    bv    the    school    orchestra,    and 
readings  by   Ixliss   Agn».s   May  Johnson 
and    Ruth    Bjorse.        This   will    be   fol-  | 
lowed    by    a    talk    from    Health    Com- 
missioner      Fatton      on      tlie      proper 
methods    of    safeguarding    the     health 
of   the   children,    and    a    talk    on    "Co- 
operation'   by   Principal    Burrell      The 
girls    of    the    eighth    grade    will    then 
serve     refieshm*  nts.     and     tht-     guests 
will  bt'  shown  ab«iut  the  building,  and 
given    an    oj'poriunity    to    inspect    the 
work    done    in    all    the     departments. 
The  ttachers  will  bt-  present,   ready  to 
meet    the    parents,    and    talk    over    the 
Individual    problems    of    the    students. 
Later   in   the   year   another   meeting 
•will   be   held    for   the   parents   of  chil- 
dren  in   the   four   lower  grades.     Ow- 
ing   to    ihf    fact    that    the    school    has 
no  large  assembly  hall,  all  the  parents 
could     not     be    invited    on    the    same 
night. 

The  meetings  are  htld  in  the  even- 
ing in  order  that  the  fathers  may  at- 
tend. The  principal  and  the  ttach- 
ers are  anxious  to  get  in  touch  with 
the  fathers  of  the  children,  and  talk 
over  the  school  affairs  of  the  pupils 
with  them  as  well  as  with  the 
mothers. 

The  Franklin  school  is  located  at 
Fifth  avenue  east  and  Seventh  street. 
The  plan  of  holding  such  meetings 
has  the  indorsement  of  .Supt.  Denfeld, 
who  has  been  urging  the  principals 
In  all  the  schools  to  follow  it  out.  and 
other  meetings  will  be  held  before 
the    close    of    the    school    year. 

Many  a  child  has  difUculties  which 
he  is  either  ashamed  or  afraid  to  t<ll 
the  teacher  of,  and  many  a  teacher 
has  wished  for  an  opportunity  to  talk 
with  the  parents  of  certain  of  her 
scholars.  These  meetings  will  solve 
this   problem. 

• 

Antiiiuiiy  of  I>«^iitiHtr}'. 
Manv  persons  will  bt  surprised  to 
learn  that  false  tefth,  gold  raps  ar.d 
fillings  and  >>ridg;es  are  by  t^o  means 
modern  creations.  Six  hundred  years 
ago  and  probably  long  before  tlie  dawn 
of  Greek  civilization,  the  skill  of  the 
dentist  had  reached  a  high  dtgrce  of 
perfection.  Many  people  will  also  te 
surprised  to  learn  that  goldt-n  grain 
belt  beer  is  considered  the  ideal  table 
beverage.  It  is  the  one  beverag  which 
is  as  good  for  the  health  as  it  is  to 
the  taste.  Have  it  on  your  home  table 
at  all  times.  Order  of  your  nearest 
dealer,  or  be  supplied  by  Duluth  branc-h 
Minneapolis   Brewing  comi-any. 


'Moth 


and 

Zciiit  I 


Bniiible 

Mu.-ic 


Bee.'' 

Ccmpar! 


IS  ALMOST  TOO 
STEEP  FOR  ROAD 

Stairway  May  be  Built 

on  Sixth  Avenue 

East. 

It  Is  up  to  the  property  owners  along 
Sixth  avenue  east  to  decide  whether 
they  want  a  paved  winding  roadway 
on  the  avenue  between  First  and  Sec- 
ond streets,  or  a  concrete  walk  and 
concrete   stairway. 

City  Engineer  McGilvray  says  the 
grade  of  ilie  block  in  que.stion  is  about 
18  per  cent,  v.hieh  is  prohibitive  for 
teams.  If  the  ;>roperty  owners  want  a 
roadwav.  the  only  solution  is  to  make 
It  a  winding  one.  whicli  would  reduce 
the  grade  to  11  i/j  per  cent.  This  would 
still   be  i^retty  steep  for   teanis. 

On  the  otlier  hand,  if  tl.ey  decide 
that  a  roadway  is  unnecessary,  the 
concrete  walk  and  steps  for  pedestrians 
can  be  constructed  at  <»;.<  00  less  cost 
than  the  roadway.  The  latter  would 
cost,  it  is  estimated.  ?l»;.o(io,  while  tlie 
former  could   be   put    in   for  $10,000. 


Hives,  eczema,  itch,  or  salt  rhetim 
eet*  vou  crazv.  Can't  bear  the  touch 
of  vour  clothing.  Doan's  Ointment 
cure«  the  most  obstinate  cases.  Why 
suffer.      An    druggists    sell    it. 


You  Know  I 


better  than  wc  the  trouble?  you 
have  experienced  In  electrical  work 
done  for  vou — slipshod  workman- 
siiin  inferior  materials  and  all  the 
rest.  Profit  by  your  past  experi- 
ence and  let  us  show  you  what  can 
be  done  in  ilie  electrical  Ime.  Our 
work  and  appliances  are  guaran- 
teed, and  our  charges  are  extreme- 
ly modest,  Ciuality  considered. 


Duluth  Electrical  Co., 


fTTirNDREDS  of  people  were  more  than  de- 
I  ITj  li^rhtcd  at  the  big  bargains  they  got  h<;re 
H^^^  in  dining  room  furniture.  Today  we 
have  added  many  new  pieces — Tables, 
Buffets,  Chairs,  etc.,  so  that  the  list  of  bargains 
is  as  large  as  ever.  You  will  not  be  disappointed. 
Prices  on  a  great  number  of  pieces  cut  right  in 

two. 

We  are  glad  to  grant  you  easy  terms  of  pay- 
ment on  any  purchases  you  make  at  this  sale. 
Saturday  is  the  last  day.  Don't  put  off  com- 
ing until  then — your  dollars  will  do  double  dut> 
now. 


Handiiome  Arts  and  Grafts 
Dining  Set— Half  Price. 

This  set  is  solid  quartered  oak — the  popular 
fumed  color — and  includes  a  Sideboard.  China 
Closet,  Dining  Table  and  Chairs.  The  best  values 
you  ever  saw.    Note  the  big  cut  in  i)rice : 

$90.00  SIDEBOARD  for $45.00 

$48.00  E>:TENSI0N  table  for  $24.00 

$66.00  CHINA  CLOSET  for $27.50 

$14.50  ARM   CHAIR  for $9.75 

$9.60  D:;NERS  for $6.50 

( :;   Dinera   and    1    Arm   Chair.) 

GENUINE  CRAFTSMAN  BUFFET 
was    $50.60— NOW $25.00 

6-FOOT  PEDESTAL  TABLE— 

fumed  oak,  was  $27— NOW.  .  .  $18.00 


I 


uy  Y 


Room  Furinitur 


vca 


$108  EARLY  ENGLISH  DIMXG  SVITE  —  Solid 
quartered  oak,  hand  carved,  very  massive  and  beau- 
tiful in  design:  buffet,  china  closet,  pedestal  table, 
five  side  chairs  and  one  arm  chair.  Spo-i 
cial  Sale  Price,  coniplete 

$308  M.'\llO<J.\NY  DLNIXt;  SET— A  beautifully  de- 
signed. hand-l;ni«hed  set;  all  work  first-class;  pieces 
made  of  finely  selected  wood;  buffet,  china  closet, 
pedestal  claw-foot  table,  box  seat  dining  chairs;  five 
side    chairs    and    one    arm    chair.      S|MH-iaI 

Sale  Price,  complete   

of 


$260 


$211 


five 
one 
leg 


$109.75 


ClllVi  ''11-  <(i>a.» 

$175.75 


a      good-sized 


This    set    will 
dining       room. 

$101.25 


$161    10-PlECE   MAHOGANY   SET  —  <  onsislmg 

leather  seat  diners,  one  arm  leather  seat  diner, 
china  closet,   one  serving  table,  one  carved-foot 
table,    one   carved-foot   buffet;      an      exceedingly 
handsome  set  in  fine-grained  mahogany:   a  splendid 
value    at    $161.      Special    Sale 

Price,  <'oniplet<' 

$312.75  S-PIECE  MAHOGANY  SET— Consisting  of 
beautiful  Colonial  sideboard  of  solid  mahogany;  a 
large  claw-foot  solid  mahogany  pedestal  table,  8-foot 
extension,  54-inch  top;  live  carved  claw  feet,  solid 
mahogany,  leather  box  seat  diners  and  one  arm 
chair  to  match.  Special  Price, 
complete 

$173  MAHOGANY  DINING  SET  —  This  set  has  a 
hand.somt  swt-U  front  buffet  with  Colonial  brass 
bandies:  a  live-leg  mahogany  table,  6-foot  extension; 
five  leather  seat  diners  of  latest  design  and  a  hand- 
some leather  seat  arm  diner;  best  leather  only;  a 
plain  Colonial  design  china  closet 
completely  furnish 
SSpeclal  Sale  iuice, 
foinpletc 

A  $210  9-PIECF.  EAHLY  ENGLISH  DINLXG  llOOM 

SET — Complete  for  only  $117.50.  This  set  consists  of 
a  hand:^ome  duartered  oak  carved  foot  table;  a  very 
beautiful  quarl^-red  oak  buffet,  period  style,  with 
carved  top  and  m.irror  back;  live  leather,  upholstered 
diners  and  cue  arm  diner  to 
match.  Special  Sale,  eoinplete 

$139  EARLY  ENGLISH  DINING  SET  for  $96,  com- 
j.lete. — This  set  has  a  large,  finely  figured,  quartered 
oak  pedestal  table,  solid  base,  does  not  divide;  carved 
foot:  table  has  .".2 -inch  top  and  extends  to  6  feet; 
the  chairs  are  upholstered  in  finest  roan  skin.  In  an 
attractive  bronze  color,  making  a  very  handsome  sel 
of  diners;  the  buffet  is  of  genuine  quartered  oak, 
French  shaped  l<gs.  mirror  top,  with  shelf  and  china 
closet:  a  quaintly  designed  piece  with  leaded  glass 
doors.  Special  Sale  ITice.  com- 
plete .  .    

S,13.1.2.-.   EARLY   ENGLISH      DINING      SET,      NOW 

5^^7.75. — This  set  consists  of  nine  pieces;  five  leather 
seat  diners,  worth  each  $7.50;  upholstered  leather 
backs,  with  arm  diner  to  match,  regularly  selling  for 
$10.75;  a  six-foot  heavily-carved  claw-foot  dining 
table:  a  handsome  carved  front  Early  English  buffet 
with  shaped  Trenoh  plate  mirror;  French  legs;  linen 
drawer  and  dish  cupboards  on  the  side  and  a  leaded 
glass  door  china  cabinet.  Sale 
I*rice,  complete    

A  VERY  HANDSOMELY  HAND-CARVED  BUFFET. 

— Of  finest  selected  quarter-.sawed  oak — with  extra 
heavy  French  plate  mirror — beautifully  designed, 
with  trays  in  front  for  linen,  large  silver  drawers, 
large  roomy  cupboards  for  dishes  or  cut  g^a.ss. 
regularly  sold  for  $lCo.OO 
Special  at    


selling 


$98.00 


was 


ex- 

$.-)r).00 — and 

$38.00 


$52.00 


$117.50 


HAND-CARVED  SOLID  MAHOGANY  SIDEBOARD 

— With   Griflln   ornarnent.s,   carved  door   panels,   can- 
opy top,  handsome  French  plate  mirror — every  piece 
of   solid    fine      grained      mahogany — regular 
price   was   $98.00  .Sptvial  Salt 

I»rlce 

BE.WTIFVLLY       DESIGNED.      CARVED      CLAW- 
FOOT  DINING  TABLE— Moulded, -rim,   heavy  claw- 
feet — heavy    round    pede.stal    base-|-5 2-inch    lop 
tends   to   eight    foot —regular   price 
a  big  value.  Siwclul  Sale 

Price 

$78  SI'TT  OF  DINERS — Now  $.-)2.00— These  diners  are 
very  massive  In  design,  with  haml-carved  backs, 
leather  uphohstered  seats  trimmed  with  brass  tacks, 
turned  legs — made  of  finest  selected  quartered  oak — 
five  side  chairs  and  one  arm  diner. 

Special  Sale  I'rice.  set 

SOLID  MAHOGANY  CHINA  CLOSET— Regular  $75 

value — now  $•!.'>. 
SOLID  MAHOGANY  BUFFET— Regular  $98  value — 

now  $68, 
MAHOGANY    CLAW-FOOT    PEDESTAL    TABLE— 

Was  $55 — now — $38.00. 
SOLID      MAHOGANY.      LEATHER      SEAT,      ARM 

DINER — Was  $17.75 — now  $12.00. 
SOLID    MAHOGANY.    LEATHER    SEAT,    DINER- 

Was   $12.50 — now    $9.50. 

SOLID   QUARTERED  OAK 

now   $t'5.00. 

SOLID    QUARTERi:i>   OAR 

$100 — now   $6.">.00. 

SOLID   QUARTERED   OAK 

now — $8.00. 

SOLID   QUARTFIHM)      OAK 

$18.00 — MOW  $12.00. 

EARLY   ENGLISH   QUARTERED  OAK 

-—     -  •        *'^5 

AK 


B  U  FEET — Was    $  1 6  5  - 


ClliN.\    CLOSET — Was 


DINER— Was    $12.00— 


A 1131      DINini — Was 


CHINA 


CHINA 


$96.00 


$87.75 


This 


$95.00 


CLOSET — Was   $25.00— now     $12..>0. 

EARLY   ENtJLISH   QUARTERED       O 
CLOSET— Was   $20.00— now   $10.00. 

MAHOG.'VNY    BUFl-^T —   Claw    foot— was    $38.00— 
now   $22.00. 

MAHOGANY      CHINA      CLOSET— Claw      foot— was 
$38.00 — now  »27.00. 

MAHOGANY   SERVING   TABLE— Was   $23.50- now 
$18.00. 

M\HO<i.*NY      FINISHED      LE.ATHER        UPHOLS- 
TERED ARM   DIN1:R — Was   $9 — now  $6.00. 

MAHOGANY      llNlSHED      LEATHF:R        UPHOLS- 
TERED  DINER — Was   $5.50 — now  $3.75. 

SOLID    3IAHOGANY    BOX    SE.\T    LEATHER    UP- 
IIOLSlERED-yWas  $13.75 — now  $6.75. 

SOLID    MAIKKiANY    BOX    SEAT    LEATHER    UP- 
HOLSTERED ARM  CHAIR— Was  $19 — now  $9.50 

SOLID     MAIKMiANY     COLONIAL     BUFFET— Was 
$150 — i-ow    $75.00. 

MAHOGANY    CLAW    FOOT    1»EDEST.AL    TABLE — 
Was  $7." — now  $37.,>0. 

MAHOGANY  BUFITTT,  FULL    SWELL    FRONT  — 
Was  $85 — now  $12.50. 

MAHOGANY  D1.MX<.  T  \BLE,  COLONLVL  DESIGN 

— Was  $2  4.00 — now   $19.00. 

Six-foot  extension  with  4 5 -inch  top. 

M.AHOGANY     CHINA     CLOSET — Colonial  design — 
Was   $28.00 — now    $18.00. 


EARLY  ENGLISH   BUFFET— very  €LAA    HCl 

handsome— was    $68— now    ^P^t'fBWV 

EARLY  ENCiLISH  QUARTERED  OAK  PEDESTAL 
TABLE— was  $35.00—  $19    50 

now    ^  I ViiWW 

Extends   to  eight  feet,   with    4  5-inch   top. 

EARLY  ENGLISH  CHINA  CLOSET  C1C    €\f\ 

— was  $32.00— now    ^  iWaUW 

1  .Set  MAHOGANY  I<TNISHP:D  DINING  <  HAIRS  — 

--;::.""':- $21.75 . 

These    chairs    have    mahogany    veneered    backs    and 
genuine  leather  seats. 

1  Set  E.\RLY  ENGLISH  DINERS — was  $7  5.00 — 
now  $38.00 — Full  box  seat  diners,  leather  covered, 
upholstered  with  hair  and  have  leather  backs — a  very 
handsome  set — five  side  chairs  and  ^Ofi    Hfl 

one  arm  chair — the  six  now ^PWW«WW 

1  E.\RLY  ENGLISH  BUFFET — mirror  with  canopy 
top — was   $25.00 — now    $17.00 

1  EARIiY  ENGLISH  C1I1N.\  CLO.SET— leaded  glass 
door— was    $24.00— now    $16..->0 

1  E.VRLY  ENGLISH  BUFF'tTT— carved  front,  mirror 
top — was     $29.00— now     $21.50 

1  S<«t  EARLY  ENGLISH  DINERS — leather  seat  anA 
back — was  $48.25 — now    $33.75 

1  EARLY  ENGLISH  6-I<X>OT  I'EDESTAIi  TABLE— 
52-inch    top— was    $33.50— now    $18.00 

1  EARLY  EN^JLISH  BUFFET  —  was  $28.00— 
now   $*».ou 

French   plate   mirror   with    canopy   top,    full    swell 
top  drawers,  carved  claw  feet  and  latticed  doors. 

1  ^L\RLY  ENGLISH  CHINA  CLOSET— was  $26.00 
— now    $13.00 

Handsomely   de.signed   latticed   floor,   correct   mis- 
sion .style  of  selected  quartered  oak,  well  finished. 

1  EARLY  ENGIilSH  BUIT-'ET — mission  style — mir- 
ror top — was  $24.00 — now $18.00 

1    G0LDI:N    QUARTERED    OAK    BUFFET   —    was 

{2.5.00 — now  $19.00 — Handsome  Freneh  plate,  mir- 
ror top,  rubbed  and  polished  base,  carved  scrollwork 
on  front  doors,  French  shaped  legs.  , 

1    GOLDEN  QUARTERED   OAK  COH    Mi 

BUFFET— was     $27.00— now      ^IbWa  W 

1  GOLDEN  QUARTERED  OAK  CO^    HH 

BUFFET— was   $29.00— now    ^PfaWaVW 

Both   of  above   pieces  have   mirror  tops;   one  has 
leaded  glass  door  in  base,  the  other  wood  panel  door 

lined    drawers   for  silver — French   shaped   legs,   all 

hand  rubbed  and  polished  pieces. 

1  QUARTERED  OAK  GOLDEN  CHINA  CIX)SET— 
was  $32.00— now  $21.00 — A  very  large,  beautifully 
finished  piece  with  canopy  top,  French  plate  mirror, 
four  deep  shelves..       A  big  $P^    QQ 

snap   at    «4Pfc"¥» W 

LARGE  QUARTERED  OAK  BUFFET— was  $38  00 
—  now  $29.50 — A  strikingly  handsome  piece  with 
massive  carved  top  and  very  large,  clear  French  plate 
mirror  19x37  inches;  full  swell  top  drawers,  carved 
feet,  and  made  of  finely  figured  genuine  quartered 
oak,  rubbed  and  polished. 

1  QUARTERI^D  OAK  BUFF^TT-  CI  ft    1111 

mirror   top;    was   $24— now    ^IWbWW 


1  Kl  HLV  ENGLISH  BUFFET— 

was    $23.00 — now     


$16.00 


S|MH'lal  VahK's  in  Hi«h  (irade  Dining  Chairs.  En- 
tire -sets  of  chairs  to  be  closed  iiul  at  a  l>ig  disioiint 
from  rcRular  prices.  Big  bargains  for  Hie  lucky 
buyer  of  these  <'halrs. 

1  Stt  (iOLDEN  WAX  DINERS— was  $42.50— now 
$29.;i0 — Five  side  chairs  and  die  arm  diner,  full  gen- 
uine leather  .seat  diners,  carved  claw  foot,  French 
shaped  leg — a  big  bargain. 

1    Set    <;OIiDr<:N   0.\K      diners — was      $47  00— now 

$33.75 — These  are  beauties,    full   leather  backs     and 

leather  seats,   rounded   and    finished    in   be.«t   possible 

manner,  made  of  solid  selected  quartered  oak.       For 

the  jntlre  set — 

only    


$33.75 


1  Spt  GOLDEN  0.\K  DINF^R.S— was  $26  50 — now 
$17. iO — Quartered  oak,  rubbed  and  polished;  shaped 
wooil  seats — .set  consists  of  six  side  ihairs  and  "ue 
arm  chair — the  entire  set  of  seven 
for    


$17.50 


1  Set  M\RLY  ENGLISH  DINERS — was  $32  00 

$22.00 — Genuine   bather  .seat   diners,    pan.  l!«-d 
— six  side  chairs  and  one  arm  chair 
— tlie  entire  set  for  only    


— now 

ba.ks 


$22.00 


1  S«'t  EARLY  ENGLISH  DINER.S — was  $22.50 — now 
$15  00 — Leather  seats,  panelled  backs,  quartered  oak, 
four  straight  chairs  and  one  arm  chair. 

1  Sot  E^\RIA'  ENGLISH  DINERS— was  $59  50— now 

$38  00 — Finely  mad<'  box  seat  diners,  hair  filled,  up- 
holiitered  with  very  best  A  No.  1  leather:  a  very  fine 
set  of  diners:  six  straight  chairs  and  ont  arm  chair 
— ail  complete,  for 
only    


$38.00 


1  St  EARLY  ENGLISH  DINERS— was  $39  00— "Ow 
$2100 — Has   a    handsome   elaw    fool,    French    shaped 
legs;,  genuine  leather  seat — set 
of  six  chairs — for   


$24.00 


2  S«  (s  of  GOLDEN  OAK  DINERS — were  $28  50— now 
$15.00 — Carved  claw  foot,  gtnuine  leather  seats  and 
leather  backs;  handsomely  figured  golden  quartered 
oap  ;  a  big  snap.  These  go  on  sale  at  Itss  than 
actjal  factory  cost. 

1  Set  EARI>Y  ENGLISH  DINER.S—was  $52  00— now 
$37.50 — Full  box  seat.s,  hair  upholstered,  covered 
with  finest  of  genuine  leather,  swell  shape  front, 
handsomely  shaped  backs,  carved  arm  diner;  set 
corsists  of  five  and  one. 

1  Set  EARLY  ENGLISH  DINERS — was  $74  50 — now 
$5-1.50 — French  shaped  legs,  carvod  claw  foot,  Span- 
ish leather  seats  in  bronze  leather,  shaped  backs; 
full  box  seat  diners  and  the  very  best  that  can  be 
had;  six  straight  chairs  and  one  arm  chair. 
1  Set  GOLDEN  OAK  DINERS— was  $60  00— now 
$11.00 — Handsomely  polished,  full  genuine  leather 
bo:t  seats  with  heavy  French  shaped  legs  and  carved 
claw  foot".  A  big  bargain  in  high  grade,  hand- 
somely finished  diners. 
The    set    for 


$41.00 


"ALL  A  BIG  MISTAKE," 
SAYS  WILLIAM  SCHREIBER 


"It's 

of  the 
got  In 
ber  in 
morning. 


all  a  big  mistake;  I  got  one 
most  unjust  deals  a  man  ever 
that  court,"  said  "Bill"  Schrei- 
his  cell  in  the  county  jail  this 
He  was  in  just  as  good 
spirits  today  as  he  has  been  any  day 
since  he  was  arrested,  despite  the 
fact  that  a  new  trial  has  been  denied 
him  and  he  hasn't  the  means  to  carry 
the   case   to    the  supreme  court. 

■•The  truth  will  come  out  some  day 
and  when  it  does,  people  will  know 
that  I  am  innocent,"  he  said.  "xNow 
everybody  seems  to  think  I  am  guilty, 
but   my   wife   and    I   know   that  I   am 

not. 

-I'm  not  worrying  about  what  they 
do    with    me.        They    may    hang 
If  they  want,  or 
tentiary  for 
the  other. 

deep 

v,^     /i.-,<.Bn"«-    worrv       uuouv     "«•■ 

If 


20  Third  Ave.  W.  Bo«h  'phonen  18.S0, 


'J 


me 
send  me  to  the  peni- 
life.  One  is  as  bad  as 
When  a  man  knows  down 
in  his  heart  that  he  is  inno- 
cent, he  doesn't  worry  about  what 
thev're  going  to  do  with  him 
they  send  me  to  the  gallows,  I  will 
shout  my  innocence  just  the  same  as 
I  a.ssert  it  no\\'." 

Though  .S'chreiber  '  doesn  t  worry 
much  over  his  own  predicament, 
keenly  feels  the  plight  of  his 
and  children.  He  says  they  are  alone 
the  world  and  when  the  law  dis- 
of  him  they  will  continue  to  be 


he 
wife 


alone  and  dependent  upon  the  public 
for  support. 

Schreiber  isn't  changed  much  after 
nearly  a  year  in  jail.  He  is  a  little 
stouter  and  a  little  red  mustache, 
raised  since  the  trial,  gives  him  an 
older  a^nearance.  He  will  be  26 
years  old  April   26. 

• ■ 

MlnucMota    Patents. 

Washington,  March  17. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Patents  have  been  issued 
to  J.  Day  of  Duluth  for  a  spirit  level; 
to  C.  A.  Duncan  of  Duluth  for  a  water 
electro  carbon  connection  for  electric 
furnaces:  to  R.  A.  Lowe  of  Duluth  for 
a  dredger,  and  to  P.  E.  Sundhuist  of 
Albany   for  a  cutier  bar. 

• 

Menoiulnee    neNidence    Biirelary. 

Menominee.  Mich..  March  17. — The 
residence  of  R.  H.  Church  was  entered 
early  Tuesday  morning  by  unknown 
parties,  presumably  tramps,  and  $200 
In  cash  and  jewelry  was  taken.  Sev- 
eral arrests  have  been  made,  but  the 
suspects   were  quickly   released. 


in 
poi 


es 


SoinetKiii({  New   in 

LIFE  INSURANCE 

ASK 

THE  Prudential 

IMSDRANCE  COMPANY  OF  AMERICA 


CALLOWAY  WILL 
LAND  THE  JOB 

Will  be  Made   General 

Passenger  Agent  of 

Combined  Roads. 

It  Is  reported  here  today  that  W.  C. 
Calloway  will  be  made  general  pas- 
senger agent  of  the  Soo  and  Wisconsin 
Central  lines,  the  order  transferring 
J.  C.  Pond,  formerly  general  passenger 
agent  of  the  Wisconsin  Central,  with 
headquarters  at  Chicago,  to  Minneapo- 
lis,   having   been   made   yesterday. 

It  was  staled  In  The  Herald  some 
time  ago  that  the  most  likely  arrange- 
ment of  the  passenger  department  of 
the  consolidated  railroads,  would  be 
that  Mr.  Calloway  would  be  placed  in 
charge  of  the  passenger  department  of 
the  two  roads  and  that  Mr.  Pond  would 
be   made   his  assistant. 

Such  is  the  case.  It  was  thought 
thAt  Mr.  Pond  might  remain  in  Chicago 
as  assistant  general  passenger^  ^^f!^* 
of  the  road  at  that  poiOt. 
Soo  officials  are  making  the 
polls  office  the  main  office  of 
roads,  and  for  that 
will   be  stationed   at 


since  which   time  he  has  been   actively 
engaged     in     the     newspaper     business, 
having      piloted    the      Uepublican 
Argus    and    finally    the    Call,    whicli 
established    in    1889. 


the 
he 


But  the 
Minnea- 
the  two 

reason    Mr.    Pond 

Minneapolis. 


WILL  PUT  WIRES 
UNDER  GROUND 

Duluth  Telephone  Com- 
pany Planning  on  Big 
Improvements. 

The  Duluth  Telephone  company  this 
morning  submitted  a  map  to  the  board 
of  public  works,  showing  the  streets 
and  avenues  upon  which  It  proposes  to 
place  its  wires -under  ground.  In  ac- 
cordance with  a  resolution  passed  by 
the  council  a  few  weeks  ago. 

The  map  covers  the  district  lying  be- 
tween Eighth  avenue  west  and  Twen- 
ty-fourth avenue  east.  It  Is-  proposed 
to  remove  practically  all  the  Duluth 
Telephone  company  poles  In  this  terri- 
tory This  Includes  Ea.st  Superior 
street.  East  First  street.  Second  street 
from  Eighth  avenue  west  to  Twenty 
fourth  avenue  east, 


Sixth  avenue  west  to  Twenty-foiirth 
avenue  east.  Fifth  st -eel  from  F.fth 
avenue  east  to  Twelfth  avenue  east, 
and  several  of  the  avenues  in  tlie  same 
district. 

• ■ 

Don't  use  harsn  pnysics.  The  reac- 
tion weakcnH  the  1  owles.  leads  to 
chronic  constipation,  'jet  Doan  s  Reg- 
ulets.  They  operate  -asily,  tone  tlie 
stomach,    cur.     cfiistipa  lion. 


FarKO   Papers   Consolidate. 

Fargo  N.  D.,  March  f1. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald  ) — The  consolidation  of  the 
Fargo  Morning  Call  and  the  Fargo 
Daily  News,  which  has  been  rumored 
for  some  time  past,  is  announced  by 
those  two  papers.  The  News  takes 
over  the  Call  and  Editor  J.  J.  Jordan 
retires  from  active  newspaper  work. 

J.  J.   Jordan  came  to  Fargo   In   1884, 


Fourth  street  from 


^^StVOfiS  Dellclou. 

are  the  most  natural  flavors  made. 


Jadpitional  sports 

MORNING  SCORES 
BY  BOWLERS 

Feature  Is  Innernational 

Match  for  World's 

Championship. 

Pittsburg,  Pa.,  Mai  cli  17.— Bowling 
at  Duquesne  Garden,  where  the  ninth 
annual  tournament  cf  the  American 
Bowling  association  is  in  progress,  be- 
gan at  8  o'clock  this  morning  and 
will  continue  uninterruptedly  until 
midnight    or    later. 

The  morning  doubles  Included  teams 
from  St.  Paul,  Louisville,  New  York. 
Newark  N.  J.;  Meadvllle,  Pa.;  Brad, 
ford.  Pa.;  Fort  Wayne.  Sebring,  Ohio, 
and'Barberton.   Ohio.  .    ^,        ,      .=, 

In   the   individuals   several   Cleveland 

I  men    were    contestants    in    addition    to 

members    of    the    teanis    carded    in    the 

The   feature    of   the    rolling    late    to- 


day and  tonight  will  be  the  interna- 
tional matches,  to  decide  the  cham- 
pionship of  the  world,  between  the 
champions  of  the  American  Bowling 
congress,  the  National  Bowling  asso- 
ciation, the  Western  Bowling  associa- 
tion, and  the  Canadian  Bowlers'  asso- 
ciation. 

High  scores  in  first  double  event  to- 
day: Martin-Vanttrtunk,  St.  1  aul, 
1,174;  Votel-Olendenning.  Pittsburg, 
1,154;  Sandblom-Schnielzer,  St.  Paul, 
1.112:  Hell'.ake-  Springenburg,  St.  Paul, 
1,107:   Cli'.ik-Phelps,    Pittsburg,    1.104. 

Second  double  event:  Mushofsky- 
Hinderer.  St.  Paul.  1.167.  Paulus-Stock, 
Pittsburg,  1,107;  Guild-Oliver.  Cleve- 
land 1,076:  Stone-Sliarpe,  Cleveland, 
l.tiCD":  Purmah-Huldsenieier,  Cleveland, 
1,069:  Spurher-Kline.  Pittsburg,  1,067. 

Tlilrd  double  event:  Owen-Hilde- 
hrand,  Louisville.  1,165;  Hetsel-Noack, 
Newark  N.  J.,  1,151';  Doehmann-Kelly, 
Fort  Wavne,  1,136,  Kracke-llandall, 
York  1,082:  Coffin- Wick,  Brad- 
Pa.,  '  1,080:  Doerlimann-Kelly, 
Wayne.  1.136  Kracke-Handall, 
York,  1.092;  Coffin- Wick,  Brad- 
1.080. 


New 

ford. 
Fort 
New 
fold 


Baseball  Captain  Dead, 

Washington,  March  17. — Joseph  v^urt- 
ney,  of  Worcester,  Mass..  captain  of 
the  Georgetown  University  baseball 
team,  died  of  pleuro-pneumonla  today 
at  the  university  hospital,  after  an  ill- 
ness of  about  one  week.  The  body  will 
he  taken  to  his  home.  The  funeral 
will    probbaiy    be    held    tomorrow. 


Whiskey  for  Rheumatism 

To  one-half  pint  good  whiskey,  add 
one  ounce  syrup  sarsaparllla,  and  one 
ounce  Toris  compound,  which  can  be 
procured  of  any  druggist.  Take  in 
teaspof>nful  doses  before  each  meal 
and  before  retiring.  Followed  up, 
this    is  a   sure   remedy. 


.  ■         ■  "  ■  ■■  ■ 

.1  I     ■  ■  ■»      -    r  i    i 

■     IMJi        1'   I  .-„  .'V      ■ 


■      ■      *J 


1 


I 


F 

« 

I 

1 

» 

1 

4 

i**IIML 


>  -  r 


8 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17.    1909. 


THE  EVENING  HERALD 

Publisliod  ta  Herald  BUlg:..  First  St..  Opposite  P.  O.  Square. 

THE  HERALD  COMPANY. 
Telephones:     Counting   lioom,   324;    Editorial   Rooms,   1126. 

SUBSCRIPTIONnRATES^AYABLE  IN  ADVANCE. 

I  nilcd   Stalen  nud  (  unada,  Vontago  Prepaid. 

Dally,   per  year.   In  advance '^oo 

Daily,  .six  months.  In  advance *" 

Daily,    lliri^e  months.   In   advance •*'"^ 

Daily,    ont-   month,    in    advance *^ 

t:nfert  d  at  Duluth  ]\>.<5tofflce  as  Second -Cla.HS  Matter. 

DULUTH  WEEKLY  HERALD 

Per   vear.    in    advance *    _!! 

Six    month.*,    in    advance "^ 

Tltree   months,   in  advance ',' "  1 ' 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postofttce  as  Second-Class  Matter,  

BY  CARRIER,  IN  THE  CITY,  TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

K\  KRV    KV1:M.\G — DIOI.IVERKD. 

SInsle    copy,   dally •  "^^ 

One    month t\n 

Three    months *' ftn 

Sis    mon t hs. t'^,^ 

One   year _ 

~  TO  SUBSCRIBERS: 

It  Is*  Important  when  desiring  the  address  of  y<''iJr  paper 
ch.ingfd.   to  give  both   the  old  and  new  addresses. 


progress,  against  every  step  of  which  progress  intrenched 
private  privilege  in  business  has  made  the  most  vigorous 
opposition  tli.Tt  it  could.  With  the  pas>inpr  of  Roosevelt, 
special  privilege  In  business  ^ees  its  opportunity  to  halt 
and  in  turn  back  the  march  of  progress  from  the  goal 
of  the  general  interest  of  all  in  the  control  of  business 
enterprises. 

F^encc  the  conspiracy  of  1909,  the 
every  special  interest  in  the  country 
velt,   to   cast    su^picion    upon    the 
bring  about  a  reaction  from  these 


)Iowing  together  of 
to  discredit   Roose- 
Roose^elt   policies,   to 
policies.     This  is  the 


{ I 


WHY  IT  CANT  BE  DONE. 

The  proposition  to  change  the  inauguration  day  from 
March  4  to  some  day  in  April,  say  the  fourth  Thursday, 
i^  one  that  seems  just  as  likely  to  fail  in  1909  as  it  has 
failed  every  four  years  for  the  past  century. 

There  are  probably  few  people  in  the  whole  country 
who  have  any  real  objection  to  making  the  change. 
That  a  day  in  April,  with  greatly  increased  chances  for 
fair  weather,  is  more  desirable  than  a  day  in  early 
ftfarch,  cannot  be  dericd  except  by  those  who  feel  that 
the  day  is  not  an  occasion  for  pomp  of  any  kind,  if 
indeed,  we  are  to  adopt  the  policy  of  simply  swearing 
into  oftice  the  new  incumbent  of  the  presidency  and 
letting  it  go  at  that.  March  4  is  as  good  a  day  as  any 
other  Mut  despite  the  love  of  democratic  simplicity, 
which  genuinely  prevails,  there  is  a  deep  desire 
important  an  event  as  the  inauguration  of  a  new  presi- 
dent shall  be  marked  by  solemnities  befitting  so  great 
an  occasion,  and  that  such  solemnities  shall  be  those 
which  may  be  observed  and  participated  in,  ti>  the  fullest 
extent  that  it  is  physically  possible,  by  the  whole  people. 
For  these  reasons  it  seems  fairly  certain  tliat  inaugura- 
tion day  will  always  be  a  day  when  the  people  of  the 
United  States  will  tlock  to  Washington  and  demand 
to  see  the  new  president  take  his  oath  of  oftice  and 
hear  him  state  his  views  upon  public  questions,  there 
to  cheer  him  and  dance  in  his  honor,  making  the  occasion 
one  of  democratic  simplicity,  but  one  of  solemnity  and 
national  rejoicing.  Such  being  the  case,  it  is  very  desir- 
able indeed  that  a  day  be  chosen  for  the  inauguration 
when  there  shall  be  the  best  chance  of  fair  weather. 
Such  a  day  we  do  not  now  have;    how  shall  we  get  it? 

The  fear  of  disaster  that  may  come  from  revolu- 
tionary changes  in  the  Constitution  operates  to  make 
any  formal  amendment  of  it  almost  impossible.  The 
Herald  doubts  very  much  whether  the  people  will  give 
their  as>ent  to  the  calling  of  a  congress  to  propose 
an  amendment  to  the  Constitution  to  change  the  day 
of  inauguration,  even  could  the  business  of  such  a  con- 
gress be  con t'lned— which  it  can  not— to  that  one  subject. 
St  deep  is  the  distrust  of  amendments  to  the  Constitu- 


explanation  of  the  clamor  in  congress  during  the  past 
few  months,  of  all  the  widely  published  reports  of 
estrangement  between  Roosevelt  and  Taft.  of  the  fanati- 
cal bitterness  toward  Roosevelt  on  the  part  of  certain 
great  newspapers  which  have  always  supported  the  sel- 
fish interests  of  predatory  wealth.  In  furtherance  of 
the  purposes  of  this  conspiracy  President  Taft  is  now 
the  object  of  the  cunning  craftiness  of  the  conspirators. 
Every  possible  attempt  is  being  made  to  misrepresent 
him  in  the  eyes  of  the  country.  The  ablest  writers  are 
being  employed  to  adroitly  suggest  to  the  country  a 
thousand  misconceptions  of  the  character  of  the  new 
occupant  of  the  While  House.  The  harp  of  harmony 
has  been  brought  forth  and  the  string  of  tact  is  being 
iounded  mightily.  If  flattery,  cajolery  and  subtle  sug- 
gestion can  lull  Mr.  Taft  into  complaisance  and  keep  his 
lingers  from  off  the  big  stick,  what  a  triumph  that  would 
be  for  the  conspirators? 

Mr.  Taft,  and  the  people,  too,  have  need  to  rub  their 
eyes  and  keep  their  vision  clear.  There  arc  those  who 
do  blow  together  to  raise  a  dreadful  dust  about  nothing 
under  which  things  of  real  moment  may  escape  notice. 


HOTEL  GOSSIP. 

'•  -3 — 

F.  R.  MyerS"  oC^Biwabik,  who  was 
nt  tl.o  ."^t.  Louis  yesterday,  is  one  of 
the  range  barfkerlf  who  believes  that 
the  business  ^ndQ|ions  In  this  part  of 
the   state   are^^joinK   to    Improve 


Charles  Johnson.  Two  Harbors;  L.  C. 
Newland,  Chicago:  L.  J.  Mayfleld. 
Lawrence,   Neb. 


for 


virile 
world 


Ireland. 

or   not. 

he  was 

Escap- 
few  brief  years,  while 
only  to  return  to  his 
life  of  devotion   to  its 


tion    that    it  has   never   yet  been   amended  e.Kcept   under  j 
practical  compulsion.     Such  were  the  tirst  eleven  amend-  j  memory 
ments    made    immediately   after    its    adoption    and    such  j  as 

fifteenth  amendments'  St.  Patrick  and  nis  Irish,  so  long  shall 


were  the  thirteenth 
made 

never 
simply 


after    its 
fourteenth  and 


ERIN  GO  BRAGH. 

If  you  have  a  strain  of  Irish  in  you.  you  are  fortunate 
you  then  have  something  of  loyalty,  wit   and 
vitality,  qualities  which  make  the  Irish  famous  the 
over  and  which   stand  any  man  in  good  stead. 

With    all    these    qualities    was    St.    Patrick    endowed, 
even    though    he    may    not    have    been    born    in 
at   all   at   all.      P>ut   whether   be   was  born    Irish 
so !  he   became   an    Irishman   at   an    early  age   when 
caught  and  carried  captive  to  Ireland  by  pirates, 
ing.  in  time  he  left   Ireland  for  a 
he    studied   and    became   a   priest, 
beloved  isle,  there  to  give  a  long 
people. 

For  every  blade  of  green  grass  in  Ireland  there  is 
a  pleasant  legend  about  St.  Patrick.  .Ml  the  world  knows 
how  he  drove  the  snakes.out  of  Ireland,  and  in  fact,  there 
was  never  in  all  the  world,  more  resolute  and  persistent 
enemy  of  the  serpent  that  tempted  Eve  than  St.  Patrick. 
Such  were  his  labors  that  they  are  still  bruising  the  head 
of  the  serpent  to  this  day.  St.  Patrick  was  a  grand 
missionary.  To  the  redemption  of  Ireland  he  devoted 
his  life,  and  at  it  he  labored  with  a  wisdom  that  must 
have  been  from  above.  So  unusual  was  his  success  that 
he  made  Ireland,  from  a  land  swarming  with  petty  chiefs, 
constantly  warring  with  each  other,  into  a  place  that 
in  later  years  became  known  as  "the  island  of  saints 
and  scholars."  Possibly  this  was  putting  the  case  too 
strong;  the  Irish  people  are  not  yet  saints,  even  with 
St.  Patrick,  for  they  are  too  human,  but  that  St.  Patrick 
has  brought  something  saintly  to  the  life  of  every  Irish- 
man cannot  be  doubted.  To  have  done  that  is  to  have 
done  a  great  work,  a  work  worthy  of  the  canonization 
it   received. 

,        The  grass  is  not  greener  in  Ireland  today  than  is  the 
of  St.  Patrick  in  every  Irish  breast,  and 
uch'as  the  world  .shall  stand  so  long  shall 


so 


long 

we  have  need  of 

we  say  with  them, 


foil. 

yet 

de> 


•wing    the    Civil    war.      The    Constitution    has 
been  amended  to  secure  something  that  was 
irable.  and  we  doubt  if  it  ever  will  be;     it  has 
only  been  amended  to  secure  something  that  had  to  be. 

The  Constitution  is  a  wonderful  document;  it  has 
met  every  necessity  that  has  arisen  in  more  than  a 
century  and  a  quarter,  adjusting  itself  with  the -most 
marvelous  facility  to  the  most  radical  changes  in  society 
that  have  ever  taken  place  in  any  period  of  equal  length 
in  the  world's  history.  The  .\merican  people  are  con- 
vinced that  their  Constitution  insures  them  "lite,  liberty 
and  the  pursuit  of  happiness,"  and  that  it  has  a  compre- 
hensiveness and  an  elasticity  that  will  enable  it  to  pro 
tect  and  perpetuate  this  government  of  the  pe 
the  people  and  for  the  people  in  any  exigency  which 
may  arise. 

Because  of  their  belief  in  its  inherent  sufficiency, 
the  people  have  ever  been  opposed  to  changes  of  any 
kind  in  the  Constitution,  preferring  to  bear  the 
ill.-,  they  have  to  taking  the  risk  of  weakening 
wark  of  their  liberties  in  even  the  slightest  degree  by 
amendment.  For  this  reason  the  change  of  the  day 
of  inauguration,  desirable  as  it  may  be,  appears  to 
practically  impossible. 


"Erin   go  bragh! 


ordinance 
be    com- 


SHALL  ABUSES  CONTINUE? 

Some    quite    unnecessary    protests    have    been    made 
within  the  past  few  days  to  the  passage  of  an 
fixing   the    maximum    load    which    lu)rses   may 
pelled  to  haul  up  Duluth's  hills. 

This  is  not  a  matter  which  Duluth  can  longer  neglect 
to  consider.  .That  every  sense  of  humanity  shall  con- 
tinue to  be  outraged  daily  and  hourly  in  this  matter  is 
not  to  be  tolerated. 

The   question    is   not.   shall   something  be   done. 
That  abuses  now  exist,  every 


^"J  **'■/''    what  shall  be  done? 
ople,  by 


trifling 
the  bul- 


be 


IS 

stance, 
nance. 


THE 

To    conspire 
that    is   exactly 


CONSPIRACY  OF  1909. 

means    literally    to    blow    together,    and 
what   the  enemies   of   good  government  |  been 


but 
hour 
of  the  day  bears  public  witness.  The  alarm  expressed 
by  some,  who  have  never  been  guilty  of 
that  the  proposed  ordinance  is  simply  an  academic  crea- 
tion certain  to  be  impractical  and  hurtful  to  business 
entirely  unfounded.  The  jobbers  of  Duluth,  for  in- 
have  nothing  whatever  to  fear  from  the  ordi- 
They  employ  the  finest  horses  to  be  had,  keep 
them  in  the  best  condition,  and  use  enough  of  them 
on  every  load.  Diligent  inquiry  for  a  month  past  reveals 
but  one  instance  in  the  past  six  months  in  which  a 
team  from  a  jobbing  house  was  overloaded.  Neither 
has  any  complaint  been  heard  against  the  overloading 
of  vans  which  arc  frequently  loaded  heavily,  but  to  the 
moving  of  which  sufficient  horse  power  has  always 
applied.  Anyone  who  stands  upon  Fifth  avenue 
Superior  street  for  five  minutes  at  any  hour  of  the 
business  day,  however,  can  see  teams  that  are  not  strong 
enough  for  the  loads  they  are  compelled  to  haul.  That 
there   are   grave   abuses  of  overloading  by   certain   con- 


at 


are    doing    this    very    minute    with    all    the    energy    that 

they  have  and  with  every  art  of  which  they  are  capable. 

The    problems    of    government    today    are    economic 

problems.     The   relation   of  business   enterprises   to   the 

nment  is  the  foremost  thought  in  the  mind  of  every   tractors  and  others,  cannot  be  disputed. 

either    politics  '        It  certainly  ought  to  be  possible  to  draft  an  ordinance 

f  business!  which    will    correct    these    abuses    without    in    any    way 

local  but  gen- 1  hampering  those  who  are   showing   every  consideration 

the  dumb  brutes  they  employ.     If  it  is 


of   these   times   touching  [  of  humanity  to 


gover 

citizen    who    has    any    active    interest    in 
or  bu>iness.     The  phenomenal  development 
whereby  business  has  become  no  longer 
eral,   each    business    institution 

not  simply  the  interests  of  a  few  but  affecting  the  wel- 
fare of  all,  is  a  development  which  has  changed  business 
in  large  measure  from  a  private  concern  to  a  public 
matter.  Great  business  enterprises  are  no  longer  private 
ventures  solely,  but  semi-public  undertakings,  and  as 
such  they  are  no  longer  matters  for  the  rules  of  private 
control,  but  have  become  subject  to  the  necessity  of 
public  regulation.  Business  has  become  the  chief  con- 
cern of  government. 

First  we  attempted  to  apply  the  rules  of  private 
ownership  to  our  new  industrial  conditions  and  we  failed. 
Then  we  began  to  seek  out  stronger  methods  but  our 
great  business  enterprises  had  grown  so  powerful  that 
they  were  easily  able  to  resist  our  feeble  and  inex- 
perienced efforts  to  control  them.  The  manifestations 
of  this  wonderfully  exuberant  industrial  and  commer- 
cial life  have  been  so  marvelously  swift  and  so  riotously 
strong  that  business  for  the  time  crowded  everything 
else  to  one  side.  Slowly  the  other  interests  of  life  have 
begun  to  assert  themselves  and  during  the  past  decade 
considerable   progress   has   been   made. 

Whatever  we  may  think  may  have  been  the  mis- 
takes of  Theodore  Roosevelt,  the  people  of  this  country  | 
are  thr. roughly  convinced  that  he  has  honestly  given' 
his  best  and  most  vigorous  effort  to  the  solution  of  the 
intricate  problem  of  the  adjustment  of  government  to 
the  economic  needs  of  the  whole  people.  Backed  by 
the   approval   of   the   people    he    has   made    considerable 


not,  we  must  be  a  pretty  poor  sort  of  men  here  in  Duluth. 

The  "recall"  is  coming  in  fashion.    That  is  something 
for  Roosevelt's  enemies  to  think  about. 


This  is   Ireland's  day.  and 
hoot,  mon.  either,  if  he  knows 


The  Associated  Press  announces  that  Joseph  B. 
Foraker  is  out  of  politics  but  it  probably  does  not  con- 
sider the  item  a  scoop. 


-  Mr.  Rockefeller  does  not  need  to  piU  up  the  price 
of  oil  to  recoup  that  $29,4(X).(3(X).  Possibly  he  can  find 
other  reasons,  however. 


Nobody  knows  just  what  the  administration  is  doingj 
and  the  interests  hope  it  isn't  doing  anything.  They 
have  been  done  enough  for  a  while. 


If  President  Taft  should  try  to  do  things  as  fast  as 
Alfred  Henry  Lewis  predicts  them  for  him  it  would  be 
more  effective  than  taking  any  other  kind  of  anti-fat. 


There  is  only  one  subject  in  the  world  upon  which 
Mr.  Bryan  has  no  opinion.  He  doesn't  care  whether 
the  people  fix  March  or  April  for  his  inauguration. 
Either  will  suit  perfectly. 


within 
a  very  short  'lime.  Mr.  Myers  stated 
yesterday  that''  business  conditions  on 
the  range  were  linprovlng.  and  that 
the  indication^'  pointed  to  a  further 
iniprovemenl    a.s    tWe    spring    advanced. 

•Things  are  very- quiet  on  the  ranges 
at  the  present  time,  as  they  are  every- 
where else."  said  Tdr.  Myers,  "but  there 
is  every  iiidleatiou  thai  there  will  be 
an  impi-ovement  in  business  conditions. 
Ip  at  Liwabik,  w.-  have  notliid  some 
improvement  already.  Things  ln_  gen- 
eral are  picking  up  and  business  is  be- 
coming more  Active.  I  look  for  a  good 
spring.  There  Is  notlilng  fundamental- 
Iv  wrong  with  the  buslne.'^s  situation; 
it  is  simply  that  business  is  backward 
and  we  are  .slow  in  recovering  from  the 
i-ever.sc  of  a  year  ago." 
•       •       • 

S.  .1.  Levers  from  Grand  Marais,  was 
at  the  Lenox  ye.sterduy.  Mr.  Levers 
savs  iliere  lias  i>een  considerable  ciear- 
ing  done  this  winter  upon  many  of  the 
homesteads  around  Grand  Marais,  and 
that  many  of  tl»e  settlers  have  im- 
proved their  homes.  beatdes  clearing 
lonsidorable   land, 

Mr.  Levers  says  what  damage  was 
accomplished  by  the  fire,  has  been  al- 
most entirely  repaired,  aside  from  the 
trees  that  were  destroyed.  Practically 
alt  of  the  bonus  have  been  rebuilt, 
and  a  great  part  of  the  burned  district 
has    been   partlaUj    cleared. 

«  •  • 
•.\rtie"  O'Dea  of  UeA.er  Bay  was  at 
the  Lenox  liotel  last  evening.  "Artie 
has.  been  on  his  claim  all  ot  the  year, 
lie  is  going  to  sav  nay  to  the  allurmg 
call  of  the  diamond  this  year,  and  stick 
right    close    to    mother    nature. 

ODci  has  made  up  iiis  mind  that  he 
will  spend  the  pre.sent  summer  upon 
his  claim.  He  stated  that  he  was 
thii-king  somewhil  of  organizing  a 
league  among  the  settlers  u  plhat  way, 
so  that  ill  years  LJ  come  lie  could  have 
the  honor  of  Having  been  the  first 
man  who  introduced  baseball  in  that 
I-art  of  the  country.  His  name  would 
Ko  down  in  historv,  linked  close  with 
I  hat  of  Father  La  Salle,  and  other  in- 
trepid explorer.s  and  blazers  of  the 
path    of    progress. 

•Artie"  says  the  settlers  up  his  wav 
are  in  the  need  of  some  harmless  and 
healthv  diversion.  If  he  can  secure  a 
diamond  in  the  timber  and  stone  belt 
s.>mewhere,  he  will  proceed  t»  organize 
the  North  Shore  league.  It  Is  probable 
that  the  Beaver  Bay  league.  which 
would  be  a  more  fitting  name  for  the 
organizai  ion.  by  the  way,  will  not 
start  out  with  a  very  large  schedule  of 
games.  Vrt  those  who  are  acquainted 
with  the  methods  of  Mr,  O'Dea  can 
voucii  for  the  fact  that  lie  is  an  ener- 
getic organizer.  The  very  fact  that 
he  believes  there  is  s^-""-  timlier  up  in 
the  Beaver  Bay  district  (thai  is  base- 
ball timber,  of  course,)  is  a  partial 
guarantee  that  -Artie"  will  have  his 
league   in   working  order. 

It  Is  not  probaUJe  that  games  will 
be  sought  wilirtlie  range  lowns  betore 
fall,  as  some  of  the  original  settlers 
are  a  littie  rusty  on  liaseball,  not 
haying  played  since  days  when  the 
.\nso!is.  .\drian  and  liis  pap.  played  on 
the  lots  of  Iowa, 

However,  the  air  up  ihere  in  the 
15eav<'r  Bav  district  is  fine  for  the 
lampo  and  "lends  strength  and  vigor  to 
the  arm.  If  the  batters  in  the  Beaver 
Bay  league  ever  get  a  batting  streak, 
it  "will  be  good  night  to  any  of  the 
opposing  pitchers.  Some  of  tho.se  boys 
who  have  been  chopping  the  rough  stult 
all  winter  should  be  able  to  ciout  the 
ball    to    the    forest. 

•The  father  of  Beaver  Bar  base- 
ball." What  a  proud  and  imposing  litle 
that  would  be.  and  It  would  lend  gracs 
and  dignitv  to  the  name  of  O'Dea, 
when  that  individual  gets  so  he  can  not 
clout  the  ball  and  pick  the  low  ones 
out  of  the  sand. 

*      •      • 

Harry  Lyons,  wlio  gets  to  Duluth 
about  every  month,  was  at  the  St, 
Louis  yesterduv.  Mr.  Lyons  was  at 
the  union  depot  in  St.  Paul  when  the 
worlds  heavvwelglit  «-hainpion.  Jack 
Johnson,  hove  in  .<*lght,  and  a  cheer 
went  up  from  a  leg,iou  of  black  ihroats 
that  would  have  majjeia  welcome  to  a 
presiilent  seem  as  fktnc  and  as  quiet 
as  the  announcement  of  the  weekly 
meeting    of    the    ladles'    auxiliary. 

Mr.  Lvons  says  there  were  more 
colored  men  on  hand  than  he  knew  ex- 
isted in  any  one  country.  They  were 
there  from  the  Hondo  street  district, 
according  to  Mr.  Lyons,  and  from  the 
more  exclusive  circles  of  colored  so- 
ciety. 

The  Rondo  street  society  is  pretty 
well  up.  according  to  Mr.  Lyons,  but 
.<t  Paul  has  more  exclusive  circles 
where  the  colored  brother  hangs  forth, 
and  from  these  the  swells  of  black 
society  sallied  forth  to  greet  the  cham- 
pion, not  onlv  of  the  colored  race,  but 
of     the     lighter     skinned     battlers       as 

well.  .    ,  ,      . 

Mr.  Lvons  says  he  saw  plaids,  tweeds, 
checks. "  stripes,  cross  bars,  dots  and 
colors  of  ever.v  conceivable  mixture 
and  every  conceivable  shade,  in  the 
clothes  of  the  asaemblage  that  gath- 
ered at  the  station  to  meet  the  big 
pugilist. 

It  was  a  sight  that  made  Mr,  Lyons 
ponder  upon  the  glory  that  comes  to 
the  brawnv-flsted  *on  of  the  padded 
c'rcle.  Those  looking  for  tumultuous 
glorv.  and  not  the  quieter  fame  that 
th^co  ahinp.;  comes  to  those  who  burn  the  midnight 
these    aOUses,    ^^^^    ^^    ^j^^    elurtdation    of    some    knotty 

problem,  should  enter  the  fight  game, 
for  glorv  of  a  noisy  nature  lurketli 
there  for  the  champion,  says  Mr.  Lyons, 

*  *      • 

At  the  Lenox:  Patrick  Murphy. 
Sparta;  G,  W.  Curtias.  St.  Paul;  John 
Kotold,  Virginia:  S,  R.  Davis,  Eau 
Claire;  George  W.  Buckingham.  Min- 
neapolis; William  Robinson,  Minneapo- 
lis; Carl  Erickson,  Aurora;  B.  E.  Craw- 
ford. Chicago;  J.  B.  Patterson.  Minne- 
apolis; B.  E.  Munson.  Tower;  \V.  K. 
Chamberlln.  .Minneapolis;  Robert  Wol- 
strom.  Minneapolis;  D.  Fowle,  New 
York:  A.  H.  Heckendorf,  Milwaukee; 
W.  11.  Daw,  Moorhead;  Edward  M. 
Larson  Eaii  Claire;  W.  J.  Allen,  Min- 
neapolis; T.  M.  Smith,  AVausau;  Gordon 
Long,  Chicago;  B.  H.  Burelson.  St. 
Paul;  John  I...  Prelsman.  Minneapolis; 
J.  \V.  Harrison^  St.  Paul:  J.  Criswell. 
Grand  Rapids.  ^lich.;  M.  D.  Kelly.  St. 
Paul;  Peter  Englund.  Minneapolis:  G. 
P.  Power.  St.  Paul;  E.  R.  Miller.  Grand 
Forks;  William  Werden,  Ashland;  H. 
W.   West.   Minneapolis;    Edward   Luger. 

Chicago. 

*  •      • 

At  the  St.  Louis:  F,  Reed.  Philadel- 
phia- Q.  W.  Boardman.  Milwaukee;  C 
M.  Sharp.  St.  Paul;  O.  G.  Gilberton.  St. 
Paul;  R.  J.  Hiderman.  Minneapolis;  C. 
M.  Ingram.  New  York;  John  A.  De- 
war  Drummond;  J.  A.  Solmes.  St.  Paul; 
B  H  Hubbard,  Chicago;  F',  H.  Carson. 
Detroit;  R.  H.  Williams.  New  Rich- 
mond; A.  D.  Harding,  Minneapolis; 
I'-red  Johnson,  Biwabik;  O.  T.  Thorson. 
Washburn;  P.  L.  Kennedy,  St.  Paul* 
Robert  Godfrey.  Hibblng;  J.  C.  Mc- 
Beth,  Eveleth;  O.  F.  Martin.  Minneap- 
olis; Thomas  Sullivan.  St.  Paul;  C.  E. 
Morse,  Detroit:  J.  A.  Kennedy,  New 
Y^ork;  Emil  Nelson.  Two  Harbors;  Miss 
Dewey  Grand  Rapids;  John  A.  Jacobs. 
Minneapolis:.  M.  L.  Griffith.  St.  Paul; 
John  Shea.  Two  Harbors:  C.  G.  Brush, 
St.    Paul:    A.    S.    Harris.   Minneapolis;    F. 

B.  Myers,  Biwabik;  James  Boyle,  St. 
Paul, 

*  •      • 
At    the    Spalding:  William    Smith, 

Anoka:  F.  W.  Boardman.  Milwaukee;  J. 
E.  Lobdell,  St.  Paul;  J.  A.  Gary.  De- 
troit; J.  L.  Emmerson.  Port  Arthur;  W, 
G  Downey,  New  York;  R.  R.  Bradley, 
Minneapolis;  George  Lee  Brown.  St. 
Paul;    Harold    Vorce,       Minneapolis;    A. 

C.  Thomas,  Chicago;  James  Sprung, 
Chicago;  R.  L.  Daniel,  Milwaukee;  A. 
J  Larsen,  Minneapolis;  C.  W.  Scott, 
Philadelphia:  L.  P.  Davis,  St.  Paul; 
Julius  Braun.  Columbus;  J.  F.  Orde- 
mann,  Minneapolis;  J.  F.  Kelly.  Minne- 
apolis:     W.    G.    Shajibaugh,    Chicago:    C. 

D.  Wang.  St.  Paul:  Edward  Freldman, 
Milwaukee;  G.  A,  Mowry,  MinneapolU; 
W.   W.   Millar,  Minneapolis. 

*  «      * 
At     the       McKay,       J.    C,    Lewis.     St. 

Paul:  G.  E.  Spafford,  Long  Prairie; 
Mrs  John  McCormlck  and  son.  Grand 
Rapids;  G.  A.  Kohrt,  Ely:  S.  B.  Humph- 
ries, Truman:  Charles  Burpee.  Sklbo; 
G  \  Calberg.  Tower;  W.  E.  Edward- 
son,  Two  Harbors:  J.  P.  Carder,  Wil- 
ton Iowa:  J.  Crossin  and  wife.  Grand 
Forks:  A.  F.  McDermott.  Minneapolis; 
Hattie  D.  Jones.  Llvermore;  George 
W  Smith,  St.  Paul:  D.  C.  Jeffery.  Min- 
neapolis:   D.    T.    Waldron.    Chicago;    R, 

E.  Olson,  Two  Harbors;  John  H.  Olson, 
Two  Harbors;  James  Shea.  Two  Har- 
bors;     J.      J.      Deckls,      Grand     Foiksi 


THE  WEATHER. 


Winter's  return 
visit  is  not  likely 
to  be  of  long  dura- 
tion. There  was  a 
«U  elded  snap  to  tlio 
air  yisterday  and 
thin  inornlng,  but 
m  1  1  d  ti  r  weatluM-, 
V  itli  snow  Ilurrie.x, 
Is  looked  for  to- 
night and  tomor- 
row. 

A  year  ago  to- 
day   it      was      cicar 


and  cold. 

The    sun    rose 
o'clock,   and    will 


this  morning  at  6:17 
set  this  afternoon  at 
C:1G.  making  eleven  hours  and  fifty- 
nine  minutes  of  sunlight. 

R.  E.  Clark,  acting  forecaster,  makes 
the  following  comment  on  weather 
conditii'us: 

"During  the  past  twenty-four  hours 
light  rain  or  snow  fell  over  Oregon. 
Liiiish  Columbia,  the  lake  region,  the 
Ohio  valley  and  North  Atlantic  coast 
f tales,  due  to  t!ie  movement  of  baro- 
metric depressions  central  over  Al- 
berta and  the  Ipper  St.  Lawrence  val- 
ley. Those  disturbances  have  caused 
warmer  weather  In  Canada,  over  the 
Eastern  Rocky  Mountain  slope.  tiiC 
Atlantic  coast  and  Southern  states.  The 
Middle  Western  high  pressure  area  ha.« 
inov;?d  eastward,  being  central  this 
morning  over  Iowa  and  overspreading 
the  entire  Mississippi  valley.  Another 
area  of  liigii  pre.ssure  Is  approaching 
over  tl:e  Pacific  coast.  The  movement 
of  these  high  pressure  areas  lias  been 
attended  by  falling  temperatures  in 
the  Oliio.  Missouri  and  Upper  Missis- 
sippi valleys,  the  lake  region  and  the 
e.xtrenie  Northwest." 


Makes  delicious  hot  biscuit, 
griddle  caikes,  rolls  and  muffins. 

The  only  Baking  Powder 
Made  from  Royal  Grape  Cream  of  Tartar 


r 


TWENTY  YEARS  AGO 

Taken  From  the  Columns  of  The  Herald  of  Thb  Date,  1889. 


Following 

were 

last    night's 

lowest 

temperatures 

.\l)ill'IIC     

42  ' 

Marquette    

12 

AhlieTllle     

3i  ■ 

MlWs    City     

2« 

.Mlitlitt     

41 

Moiiiplils      

42 

Kiittlefnm     

1) 

Milwaukee      

8 

HlsmaiTk     

10 

.Mliinedoaa    

— 2«i 

Itostnii      

3» 

.MiHleiia     

24 

HulTalo     

20 

Moiiigoinery    

4B 

Cairo     

;<2 

.Moorli'.vl      

("Klgiiry      

3.> 

New  Orleans    

J2 

riijrip5ton    

or 

Xcw    York    

34 

Clilcaeo    

14 

.N.irfolk    

4(1 

fluHiiiiatl    

18 

Ni>rtliflel(l    

2e 

*'onc;rdIa    

26 

.North     Platte     ... 

21 

I»avcnpnrt      

10 

Oklahoma     

38 

Itfiivcr   

34 

Omalia     

10 

Uelrtih    

IC 

PhoeiUz      

52 

IHnil.4     Lake     

...— lU 

Items     

20 

I».Ml«e     

.^0 

PilMburt     

20 

Oululli     

....—4 

Port    Arthur    . . . 

2 

l^nioiiton    

20 

Portland.      Or.  .  . 

42 

El   Paso    

«6 

Prince   All)ert    . . 

Kscaiiulja     

10 

tiu-.Xppflle      .... 

—14 

(lalvrslon    

%2 

Kapi.l    Ctly    

2J 

<ir«nd    Haven    ... 

IS 

St.    Loula    

18 

i;ref n   Bay   

4 

St.    Paul    

2 

Havre    

84 

.•>aii    Aiitoido    . . . 

38 

llrUiin     

32 

.■<a  11    Kraiiclsoo 

48 

llDUglitun    

11) 

.Santa    Ke 

30 

Huron     

8 

Sault  Sie.    Marie 

4 

Jucksonrllle    

4(« 

Shrcvcport     

4« 

KamlooiM     

34 

Spokane     

38 

Kansas    City    . . . 

22 

Swift   Cuirtnt    . . 

18 

UiioxvUle     

3r, 

Wasldngton    

:!2 

Iji   Criisse 

i) 

WIrhlta    

32 

I.smlrr   

22 

WlllUton     

hi 

l-lttlc-    Hock    

41 

WInnemucra     . .  - 

:<u 

l.i>3    Antfeltn    . . . 

41! 

\\'tnnli)eg    

—18 

♦••Neil  Miliini.-;  has  foimed  a  part- 
nership with  Albert  Klllo  and  they 
will  open  a  laige  store  at  Tower  in 
April. 


••♦Col. 
living  at 
old   home 


Huntington, 
Tower,  has 
in    Illinois. 


M'ho     lias     been 
rei  loved    to    his 


•♦♦In  spite  of  th.e  bad  ^veather  there 
was  a  good-sized  gathering  last  night 
to  hear  the  musical  program  given  at 
the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  L.evl  Barkey 
at  New  London. 


Department  of  Agriculture,  Weather 
Rurcau,  Dulutii,  .March  17. — Forecast 
for  twenly-foul-  hours  ending  at  •  p. 
m.  Thursday:  l>uluth.  Superior  and  vi- 
cinity, including  the  Mesaba  and  Ver- 
milion iron  ranges — Increasing  cloudi- 
ness with  snow  Hurries  late  tonight  or 
Thursday.  Rising  temperature.  Mod- 
erate  to   brisk    easterly   winds. 

11.    E.    CLARK, 
Acting    Forecaster. 


•♦♦Oscar  Nolander.  a  well-known 
Duluth  ik  Iron  Range  ena:ineer.  living 
at  Two  Harbors,  has  left  on  a  visit  to 
F^scanaba. 

•♦•Col.  F.  L.  Ripley  left  last  night 
for    a    short    visit    In    Chi>?ago. 

♦♦♦H.  O.  Plnther.  formerly  in  the 
book  business  in  Duluth.  is  in  the  cily 
today    from    Chicago. 

•♦♦Cnlted  .stales  Senator  Jonathan 
Chase   of   Rhode   Island    has    resigned. 


lire.  Hi-  and  his  little  children  barely 
escaped  with  their  lives,  saving  noth- 
ing   but    the    clothes    they    had    on. 

••♦The  National  Bank  of  Commerce 
of  Duluth  will  start  business  next 
week  with  a  paid  up  capital  of  $100,000. 

♦♦•E.  E.  Burley  fjom  Taylor's  Falla 
lias  opened  a  barber  shop  In  Campbell 
K-  MiKavs  building  on  Central  avenue. 
West   Diiluth. 


♦♦♦E.  E.  Kelson  has  sold 
Ionian    stallion,    wliich    he 


ported    from 
of   Duluth. 


Missouri,    to 


his  Hamble- 

re«-ently    im- 

Mr.    Calkins 


♦•♦.Albert  E.  Quinn. 
editor  of  the  Cloquet 
some    time,    has    bought 


who 

Pine 

the 


has    been 
Knot     for 
paper. 


17. — Forecast 
ending    at    7    p. 


for 
in. 


♦♦•Pat  Sullivan  will  open  a  barber 
shop  over  the  Red  Star  .-estaurant  on 
Weft    Superior    street. 

♦♦»The  bill  for  the  Duluth  park  bo.ard 
passed  the  state  senate  yesterday  with 
an  amendment  offered  by  Senator 
Whiteman,  substituting  ,lohn  Flynii  in 
place  of  D.  G.  Cash  as  one  of  the  com- 
missioners. 

♦♦♦A  benefit  concert  is  being  arrang- 
ed for  Prof.  Mountz.  wh  >  lost  all  his 
household    goods     in     the    opera     house 


MINNESOTA  OPIMOXS. 


♦•♦G.  G.  Hartley  has  sold  to  ,Iohn  J. 
Murphy  twenty-five  feet  of  lot  93. 
block  IS,  Third  division,  which  is  on 
tie  upper  side  of  Superior  street,  near 
.^ixtli  avenue  west,  for  $17, .'.00,  or  %709 
a    foot. 


the 

the 

of 

de- 


•♦♦A   surprise    parly    was   held   at 
residence     of    T.     W.     l.emieux     at 
West     end     last     evening,     in     honor 
Miss  Obenhoflf.   who  soon  takes   her 
parture    for    Houghton,    Mich. 

•••Robert     Clark,     superintendent     at 
Capt.     McDougall's    shipyard.    Is    build- 
ing   a    fine    residence    on    the    corner 
Garfield    avenue    and    Fourth    street. 


of 


Chicago.     March 
twenty-four  -hours 
Thursday: 

I'pper         Michigan — Fair  tonight: 

Thursday    Increasing      cloudiness      and 
warmer   with    snow    in   west    portion. 

Minnesota  —  Increasing  cloudiness 
with  snow  flurries  late  tonight  or 
Thursday;     rising     temperature. 

Wisconsin — Fair  and  wanner  tonight: 
Thursday  Increasing  cloudiness  and 
warmer. 

North  Dakota — Partly  cloudy  tonight 
and  Thursday:  v/armer  In  east  portion 
tonight. 

«H>e«ii»o«t-   111    SoIiooIm. 

The  following  item  published  in  I..es- 
lie's  Weekly  by  Dr.  Colin  A.  Scott,  pro- 
fessor of  the  Boston  normal  school,  on 
"Teach  Real  Obedience  in  tlie  Schools," 
deserves  not  only  t'.ie  consideration  of 
our  Western  teachers,  but  is  worthy 
the  consideration  and  practice  of  our 
church  leaders.  The  day  has  gone  by 
wh*i  a  human  being  was  regarded  as 
a  mere  machine  to  do  another's  bid- 
ding. True  it  is.  faith  in  another's 
teaching  is  essential  everywhere,  bui 
faith  Is  nothing  more  than  believing 
what  we  see  to  be  true  without  the 
process  of  a  demonstration.  Reason 
may  be  said  to  be  a  way  by  which  we 
see  the  truth  by  means  of  a  demonstra- 
tion Hence,  whether  witli  or  without 
a  demonstration,  It  Is  of  the  greatest 
Importance  that  the  truth,  the  right, 
yea  all  the  prin<iples  of  moral  recti- 
tude, should  be  taught  in  a  way  that 
each  individuals  Lord-given  conscience 
will  dominate  his  life  under  all  circum- 
stances and  conditions.  As  a  result  of 
such  teaching,  each  citizen  will  become 
a  factor  In  upholding  the  laws  rules 
and  regulations  that  are  devised  for  the 
government  of  well  organized  society. 
The  laws  of  our  land  would  eventually 
be  voluntarily  obeyed  without  the  em- 
ployment of  coercive  means,    .p    ..    _, 

If  the  problem  of  the  schools  is  to 
take  the  lead  In  training  up  a  new 
generation  of  citizens,  we  must  have 
the  spirit  of  citizensliip  In  the  school.*.. 
This  is  more  important  than  whctlier 
we  have  prohibition  or  any  other  par- 
ticular measure  or  not.  Nor  do  I  mean 
bv  citizenship  simply  what  is  known  as 
self-government  in  the  schools;  as  far 
as  the  employment  of  force  or  legal 
procedure  Is  concerned,  this  would  seem 
unnecessary  and  inappropriate  to  the 
schools.  I  certainly  include  loyalty  and 
obedien<e  as  a  characteristic  of  citi- 
zenship, but  if  we  have  only  a  one- 
sided obedience  we  do  not  have  that 
What  is  obedience  in  its  truest  sense. 
Is  It  issuing  commands  to  be  compelled 
by  force?  Is  it  not  doing  willingly 
what 
other    ijei.i^i^   ""   ••",:, r'W  z.', «!.,,..»    (he 


Badger  Herald-Rusder :  It  should 
help  us  to  bear  palientl;  adverse  cir- 
cumstances in  life  to  know  l-.ow  fre- 
<iuenlly  they  prove  to  bo  blessings  in 
disguise.  St.  Patrick  must  have  found 
his  six  years  ot  slavery  in  Ireland 
when  a  vouth  anything  but  pleasant, 
and  probably  he  never  once  thought 
during  those  vears  what  a  good  train- 
ing they  were  for  his  a  ter  iile.  But 
when  he  became  the  great  apostle  of 
Ireland,  one  great  reason  lor  his  suc- 
cess was  his  familiarity  with  Irish 
manners  aiul  customs  and  his  intimate 
knowledge  of  the  Irish  language 
gained    during    liis    servitude. 

Floodwood        Broadax:  Uncle       Ike 

Stephenson  has  been  sent  ba<k  to 
the  I'nited  States  senaie  again  Irom 
Wisconsin.  Well,  our  uncle  paid  the 
price,  and  that  seems  to  be  about 
there  is  to  the  senatorial  game. 


♦♦♦If  the  present  weather  continueB, 
an  attempt  will  be  made  to  resume 
communication  by  ferry  between  Du- 
luth and   Superior  on   April  1. 


MEANT  TO  BE  FINNY. 


Detroit 
dignantly ) 
kiss  me! 

He— But 
pleasure. 


News 
— You 


Tribune: 
had    no 


She       (In- 
buslness    to 


it    wasn't    business:    It    waa 


Chicago  Tribune:  "There  goes  the 
most  talked  about  man  in  this  com- 
munity." 

"You  surprise  me.  Who  talks  about 
him?" 

Milwaukee  New.-^;  Maisie — I'll  only 
marry  a  man  whose  fortune  has  at 
least    si.\    ciphers    in    it. 

Morton — Tl-.on  I've  got  a  cinch.  Mine 
is  all   ciphers. 


doea 


all 


St.  Hilaire  Spectator:  Chances  seem 
to  be  against  the  passage  of  a  reap- 
portionment bill  by  the  legislature. 
Ni.rthern  Minnesota  seens  to  have  no 
rights  that  the  south  part  will  re- 
spect, 

Martin    County    Sentinel:      The    legis- 
lators   who    attempted    to    play    peanut 
politics    at    the    expense    of    the    gover 
nor    have    landed    where 
in   the  30-cent  class. 


Cleveland     Leader:       Him — How 
she    manage    to    keep    her    looks? 

Her — Keep  her  looks?  Why.  she 
cant  gel  rid  of  'em,  or  she  would.  I 
.siippose. 


th 
they 


belong — 


not  one  Scot   had  better 
when  he's  well  off. 


its 
on 


own 
their 


other  people  really  want?  But  if 
people  do  not  also  do  what  you 
want  It  is  Impossible  to  continue 
at^Uude  and  have  it  real  ^^>^'Si^noe  . 
voluntary  is  never  one-sided.  To  limit 
the  .school  to  a  one-sided  obedience  on 
the  part  of  children  defeats 
ends.      It   kills   real    obedience 

part.  ^ 

>ew   TopyrlKht    Law. 
Knoxvllle   Sentinel:     One   of   the   last 
acts  of  congress  was  the  passage  of  a 
new    copyright    law.    which    seems      to 
satisfy    the   demands    of    authors,    pub- 
lishers,    musicians       and 
period     of     copyright     is 
eight 


Hutchinson  Leader:  Senator  La 
Follette  makes  the  star- ling  assertion 
that  70  per  cent  of  the  r avenues  of  the 
rnited  States  are  spent  on  the  army 
and  navy.  We  haven't  much  of  an 
armv,  and  the  greatest  warships  we 
build  are  out  of  date  ar  d  nothing  but 
scrap  iron  ten  years  after  they  are 
launched.  How  long.  O  Lord,  how  long 
must  Christian  nations  iax  themselves 
to  death  to  keep  themse  ves  in  trim  to 
lick  some  other  nation? 


Philadelphia  Record : 
wad   claims   that    v>hen 
ed    he    is    always    th.e 
hand      in   ills    pocket. 

yiobbs — Yes,  and  he  keeps  It  there. 


Blobbs— Tight- 
charity  is  need- 
first    to    put    his 


"I       sometimes 
regular    patron. 


Chicago        Tribune: 
think."     remarked    the 

"Ihat  the  snare  drummer  should  be  the 
best  musician  in  the  theater  orchestra." 

"He    usually    is,"    said    the    drummer. 

Life:  Weary  (lying  under  the  apple 
tree* — Say,  mister,  kin  1  have  one  of 
dem   apples? 

Farmer — Wliy,  them  apples  won  t  be 
rip;^   for   four   months   yit. 

Weary— Oh.  dat's  all  right,  I  ain't 
in    no    hurry.      I'll    wait  I 


Red  Wing  Republican:  The  gover- 
nor of  Indiana  wisely  discouraged  tne 
erection  of  a  mansion  or  the  use  of 
the  chief  executive  which  would  cost 
$150  000.  He  gave  as  his  opinion  that 
$15,000  or  $20,000  would  build  as  good 
a  liouse  as  a  governor  whose  salary 
was  onlv  $S.OO0  a  year  could  maintain, 
and  In  his  opinion  the  state  ought  not 
to    be   asked    to   maintain    it. 


"I    suppose,"  said   the 
■-that    you    never    had 


which 

as  much 

"ons 

0 

necessary 


artists.  The 
left  twenty- 
years  as  before,  but  the  re- 
newal period'  Is  lengthened  rrom  four- 
teen to  twenty-eight  years.  This  is  not 
the  perpetual  copvright  for 
.Mark  Twain  pleaded,  but  it  is 
as  anybody  hoped  for.  The  provis 
about  the  reproduction  of  works  of  a 
and  music  are  drawn  with  ""■^"'"'"• 
technical  knowledge.  English  eopy- 
richt  books  must  be  printed  and  bound 
in  the  I'nited  States  as  hitherto,  but 
protection  may  be  secured  for  thirty 
davs  before  a  copy  of  the  American 
edition  must  be  deposited.  Photographs 
are  no  longer  required  to  be  printed 
from  negatives  made  in  the  I'nited 
States.  The  Importation  of  pirated 
edition.-?  of  copyright  works  Is  forbid- 
den. In  case  of  an  unauthorized  repro- 
duction bv  a  newspaper  of  a  copyright- 
fd  photograph.  It  is  provided  that  the 
damages  shall  not  exceed  $200,  and 
shall  not  be  less  than  $50,  This  award 
of  damages  is  not  to  be  regarded  as 
a  penalty. 

■•-. 

M'hni    Th*y    Will    «lve   I'p. 

Life:  Mr.  Roosevelt  will  not  call  any 
one  a  liar  for  the  entire  forty  days — 
except  on  Sunday.  That  neing  a  feast 
day,  and  not  a  regular  part  of  Lent,  he 
will    indulge    himself    as    usual. 

Mr.  Rockefeller  will  abstain  from 
thinking   about    liis   good    points. 

Horace    Fletcher   will    chew    gum. 

Prof.  William  .lames  of  Harvard  will 
stop  talking  philosophy,  and  try  to  be 
serious. 

-• 

A  Sizable   Packaiiro, 

St,  Louis  Times:  Under  the  nine-foot 
law  the  Missourian  who  gets  "three 
sheets  in  the  wind"  will  carry  quite  a 
sizable    package. 


Princeton  Union:  In  -esponse  to  an 
invitation  from  the  state  legislature, 
.lames  .1.  Hill  on  Thursday  addressed 
the  members  of  that  holy  in  joint  as- 
.semblv.  He  chose  for  his  subject  the 
nreservatlon  of  our  agricultural  re- 
sources and  proposed  to  the  legislature 
a  plan  which  he  helie'-ed  would  ac- 
complish great  results  in  the  vi;ay  of 
realizing  the  utmost  possibilities  of 
the  soil  and  at  the  sam«  time  preserve 
its  fertllitv.  His  sugge-stion  was  timt 
this  legislature  appropr  ate  $50,000,  to 
be  expended  under  the  direction  of  the 
agricultural  college,  and  that  200 
graduates  of  the  agricultural  school 
be  scattered  over  the  state  to  give 
practical  demonstrations  to  farmers 
of  what  can  be  accomnl  shed  by  scien- 
tific methods.  Mr.  Hi  1  has  studlod 
this  question  of  the  j  r«?SPrvatlon  of 
agricultural  resources  lor  twenty-five 
vears  and  Is  one  of  the  best  authori- 
ties on  the  subject  In  the  country.  In 
consequence,  his  advi.-e  is  eagerly 
souglit  on  such  matters  and  whereso- 
ever followed,  has  invariably  proved 
valua1>le. 


Chicago  News: 
angular  spinster, 
a   romance?" 

"Dat's  where  youse  is  wrong.  re- 
plied the  unlaundered  hobo.  "I  wunst 
had  a  sweetheart  wot  wuz  a  dead 
ringer   fer   vouse." 

"And  did  she  die?"  asked  the  angu- 
lar spinster  as  she  helped  him  to 
another    hunk    of    pie. 

"No,  ma'.im,"  answered  the  hobo. 
"When  leap  year  come  'round  she 
asked  me  t'  marry  her — an"  I  run  away 
from    home." 


DuIuthiiiH  JolHoM    iluuMton. 

Houston  Post:  "Talk  ibout  extremes 
in  weather,"  said  M.  S.  Burrows  of  Du- 
luth. Minn.,  who  Is  a  gu?st  at  the  Rice, 
"the  weather  in  Housttn  and  where  T 
lecentlv  came  from  ar?  in  wide  vari- 
ation, and  the  variation  is  decidedly  in 
favor  of  Houston.  Tlie  climate  here  is 
immense.  It  must  be  a  i)leasure  to  live 
in  a  section  of  the  United  States  where 
vou  can  feel  assured  the  thermometer 
will  never  touch  the  5ero  mark.  As 
for  Houston  herself,  theie  seems  enough 
push  and  enterprise  h^re  to  stock  a 
couple  of  cities.  The  evidence  of  build- 
ing to  be  seen  on  e  .ery  hand  are 
enough  to  enable  a  stranger  to  size  up 
your   city." 

——• 

Laughter. 
Worrv    stalked    along    tlie    road. 

Trouble   sneaking   after. 
Then  Black  Care,  and  Grief  and  Goad — 

Enemies  to  Laughter. 

But     old     Laughter     wllh     a     sliout 

Ros?  up  and  attacked  'em, 
Put  the  sorry  pack  to  rout. 

Walloped  'em,   and   w  Hacked   'em. 

Laughter   frivols    day   and    night. 

Sometimes   he's   a   bubble. 
But   he  hath  a  deal   of    night 

In   a    bout    with    Trouale. 
.lOHN      KENDRICK      BANGS,    in   Alns- 

lee's. 


Wnti  ThlM   C.   H.   Mllierf 

Brookivn  Eagle:  The  Roosevelt 
i!ielho<l  is  not  always  the  Taft  method. 
"The  new  i.re.sident  believes  In  the 
pov.-er  of  a  soft  word  and  the  influence 
of  calm  arsrument.  All  the  week  a 
scramble  has  ensued  for  the  president's 
support  in  the  fight  on  the  house  rules. 
A  rebel  Republican — a  newcomer  yet 
to  be  sworn  in — called  at  the  White 
House,  accompanied  by  one  of  Can- 
non's supporters.  The  president  knew 
all  about  the  new  man.  Mr.  Taft  be- 
lieves tiiat  the  prompt  revlsii>n  of  the 
tariff  will  be  endangered  by  a  fight  on 
the  house  rules,  f.nd  naturally  is  anxi- 
ous to  avoid  any  row  wliich  will  delay 
revision  and  continue  uncertainty  In 
the  business  world. 

A  plump  arm  was  passed  through 
that   '>f   the   fledgeling  representative. 

"Now.  I  am  sure,"  said  a  persuasive 
voice,  "that  you  don't  want  to  start 
your  "career  in  the  house  by  getting  on 
the  wrong  track.  It  would  be  a  mis- 
take to  fall  out  with  your  own  party. 
I  trust  Ih.at  vou  will  do  nothing  rash 
at  the  outset  which  you  may  regret 
later  on." 

Whe.i      the      representative-elect   left 
the    White    House    the    insurgents 
lost  an  all.v. 


had 


AMUSEMENTS. 


A  Tbons-iit  for  Today. 

The    vulgar    estimate    themselves 
what  they  do:  the  noble  by  what 
are. — Schiller    . 


by 

they 


LYCEUM 


L..VST  TIME 
TOMGHT. 


With 


The    Great    Oramalic   Sensation, 

THE  THIEF 

Chas.    Oaltoa    and    Margaret    Wyelierly. 
Thursday    Eveninj    at   8:15, 

EMMA  EAMES 

Prima    Donna,    and    Einilio    do  Oo»om*,    Bant»a» 
The    Stelnway    Piano    U»e*.   


Friday    and    Saturday. 

Th»    Singini     Comi-dicnn. . 

GIRLS  FROM 


March 


Matinoe    Saturday. 
CORINNE.    in      'THE 
BERLIN." 


—SEAT  SALE  THURSDAY— 
22      23     24— Three    Ni«hU    at    8    O'clMk. 
Matinee  Weda«»day  at  2. 

— Ki  \\v  k  i.i:i..\Nt;Ki'.-s  sTi  PKNr>or.s— 

BEN-HUR 


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Price*  Me.  %t.  $1.^0  and  $2.0«. 


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«       -■ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909 


To  Clean  Straw  Matting. 

Before  applying  water  to  straw 
matting,  it  should  be  thoroughly  swept 
and  then  gone  over  with  a  dry  cloth 
to  rem<ne  as  much  dust  as  possible. 
Kemove  grease  spots  by  applying  Ful- 
ler's earth  made  into  a  thin  paste 
\iltii  cold  water.  Spread  the  paste 
over  the  spot,  let  It  remain  two  or 
three  days;  then  brush  it  off  care- 
fully. To  freshen  and  clean  mat- 
ting, wipe  it  off  in  lukewarm  water 
to  which  has  been  added  a  teaspoon- 
ful  of  (;old  Dust  washing  powder  to 
a  basin  of  water.  The  matting  should 
never  be  made  thoroughly  wet  but 
■wiped  a  little  at  a  time  with  a  damp 
cloth  and  the  water  should  be  changed 
freMU'*ntly. 


CONCERNING 


Kimbdli  Pianos 

Speak  for  ZUm- 

selves 

perhaps  not  in  trumpet  tones, 
hut  loud  enough,  yet  sweet 
enouifh.  to  declare  their  value 
to  those  who  have  ears  to  hear, 
the  'nuisical  understanding  to 
appreciate  their  g^enuine  value. 
\Ve  are  more  than  pleased  to 
show  visitors  to  our  salesroom, 
free  to  see  and  to  listen. 


Korby  Piano  €o» 

201  East  Superior  St. 

THE  KIMBALL  FACTORY 

STORE. 


The  department  of  home  and  nlisca- 
cation  of  tlie  Twentieth  Century  ilub 
will  again  secure  tliis  jear  young  apple 
trees  for  distribution  among  the  sthool 
children  of  the  city,  at  the  smallest 
possible  cost.  Last  year  the  committee 
of  education  of  the  .Minnesota  Federa- 
tion of  Women'.s  Cliil».s  secured  ."seveial 
thousand  i  pple  trees  to  be  distributed 
for  planting  to  the  school  children  of 
ilie  tslate  and  Duluiii  ciiiidren  were 
grtativ  interested  in  tlie  work,  an  or- 
der for  1.100  trees  heing  sent  in  from 
this  fity.  The  work  of  interesting  the 
ihildreii,  receiving  liie  orders  and  dis- 
tributing llie  trees,  was  supervised  by 
Airs.  J.  H.  Crowley,  chairman  of  llie 
department  of  home  and  education  of 
the  club.  The  federation  is  not  under- 
taking ti.e  work  this  year,  ami  so  this 
department  of  the  club  is  making  ar- 
rangements lor  tiie  Ouluth  cliildren  to 
Older  the  trees,  if  they  so  desire.  Cor- 
respondence is  now  going  on  with  the 
nurseries,  and  llie  orders  will  prohably 
lie  taken  ne.xt  week  and  tiie  trees  be 
liere   ready   for  planting  in  April. 

At  tlie  business  meeting  of  tlie  travel 
class  of  this  department  of  the  club, 
wiiicli  was  held  yesterday  afternoon, 
.Mrs.  J.  II.  Ciowle>  was  re-elected  chair- 
man of  the  department,  and  leader  of 
tiie  cla.-is.  Mrs.  L.  A.  I^arson  was  elect- 
ed secretary  of  the  department.  The 
study  for  next  year  was  informally 
discuss  mI.  and  a  committee  of  ttv^^  will 
be  appointed  b>  the  cliairman  to  de- 
cid;^  upon  tlie  outline  t>f  work  for  next 
.\  ear. 


were  with  her  when  death  came.  Tlie 
laws  there  demanded  that  after  a  hur- 
ried funeral  tne  body  should  be  buried 
in  an  isolated  cemetery,  there  to  re- 
main not  less  than  five  years.  If  her 
friends  desire  to  bring  lier  body  to 
America,  it  cannoi  be  done  until  l'J14. 
Mr.  .lames  formerly  lived  in  this  city 
iind  he  and  his  wife  are  well  known  to 
many   Oulutliians. 


St.  Patrick's  Party. 

Mrs.  William  1/.-:.^  I  range  entertained 
at  a  St.  Patricks  day  party  this  ailer- 
i:oon  at  her  home,  r.^ll  Minnesota  ave- 
nue. 


W.  C.  T.  U.  Meeting. 

The  regular  meeting  of  the  \\  omen  s 
Christian  Temperance  union  will  be 
held  tomorrow  afternoon  at  2:30  ocbick 
at  the  home  of  Mrs.  (Jetchell  of  oti-- 
West  Klgiith  street.  -American  Au- 
thor.s"  will  be  the  subject  of  the  after- 
noons  study,  wltli  Mrs.  S.  G.  Stevens 
as    leader. 


CONCERT  IS 
CALLED  OFF 

Mme.  Eames  and  Go- 

gorza  Will  Not  Visit 

Duluth. 


Home  Wedding. 

Tlie  wedding  of  .Miss  Hose  Witz, 
daughter  of  Mr.  and  .Mrs.  Witz  of  423 
Kast  I'^irst  street,  and  Samuel  Allman 
of  Chisholm,  took  place  last  evening  at 
the  home  of  the  bride's  uncle,  at  4-1 
First  avenue  east.  The  wedding  ser- 
vice was  read  at  C  o'clock  by  llabl  . 
Klssam.  The  bride  had  as  her  ai- 
tendant.  her  sister.  -Miss  Dora  \^  It/.,  anu 
the   groomsman   was    Harry    Lipman. 

The  bride  wore  a  gown  of  white 
messaline  satin  with  a  long  tulle  veil 
and  carried  bride's  roses.  The  brides- 
maid was  gowned  in  pink  and  carried 
pink  roses.  .Mr.  and  Mrs.  .Mtman  will 
go  later  to  Chisholm.  where  they  will 
be  at  home. 


HONOR  DULUTH  GIRL. 


Helen    Congdon    to    Carry 
Vassar  Daisy  Chain. 

Miss  Helen  Clarn  (nngdon.  a  daugh- 
ter of  Mr.  and  Mrs;  C.  A.  Congdon  of 
this  city,  who  is  a- sophomore  at  Vas- 
sar. lias  been  chosen  as  one  of  the 
seven  members  of  her  class  who  will 
carrv  the  daisy  ehain  on  class  day  in 
.June.  It  is  a  tradition  in  the  college 
that  the  prettiest  girls  are  chosen  for 
this  honor.  Beside  Miss  Congdon,  the 
list  includes  Sarah  Caroline  McDavltl, 
St.  F'aul:  Mary  Grace  Johnson,  South 
Hend,  Ind.:  Helen  Keniington  Noyes 
and  Margaret  Stanton  Noyes.  Milwau- 
kee; Klizabeth  Wilkins  Ogden,  Pitts- 
burg, and  Kffie  Blanche  Smith,  Buffalo. 
N.    Y. 


Birthday  Party. 

.Mr.  and  Mrs.  August  Width  last  even- 
entertained  in  honor  of  the  twenty- 
second  birthday  anniversary  of  Albin 
Xordstrom.  An  Informal  evening  of 
music  and  games  was  enjoyed  by  the 
following  guests: 
.\Usses — 

Esther  Nordstrom 

Alma    Forsell. 


Diama, 

Nan     Nordstrom. 
Louise  Burthwick 
Messrs. — 

Uoy  Bridgeman. 
Julius    Baldwin. 
William     Ander- 
son. 
Gilbert    Wester. 


Alice    Forsell, 
Swanson, 
Edith     Miller, 
Alice    Anderson, 
Edith    Nordstrom. 


George   Haakens. 
tlusi   Pearson. 
David    Olson. 
William     Weston. 


Baritone's  Illness  in  Min- 
neapolis Prevents  His 
Appearance. 


Mme.     Kmma     Eames    and     Emllio    de 
Gogor;:a    will    not    appear      in      Duluth. 
AI.   Gogorza    is    suffering    from   a   severe 
c-old.  and   Mme.   Eames   feels   unequiil   tc« 
giving  the  concert  program  alone. 

The  noted  soprano  and  M.  Gogor/.a 
sang  a  concert  engagement  at  Minne- 
apolis last  evening,  although  the  bari- 
tone was  then  suffering  from  a  severe 
cold.  He  showed  a  great  willingness 
to  t.>me  on  to  Duluth  and  trust  to 
providence  and  such  remedies  as  the 
doctors  could  give,  that  he  might  be 
able  to  sing,  but  Ids  physicians  de 
creed  that  even  if  the  attempt  were 
made,  it  would  certainly  prove  a  last- 
ing Injury 
ment 
but 


Charity  Club. 

Miss  Marjorie  McMillan  will  enter- 
tain the  Charity  club,  of  which  she  is 
a  member,  this  evening  at  her  home, 
li:^  East  Fifth  street.  The  affair  is 
also  in  lionor  of  the  seventeenth  birth- 
day   anniversary    of    the    hostess. 

AT  CITY   HALL. 

Political    Equality    Club    to 
Meet  Next  Week. 

The  ne.\t  regular  meeting  of  the 
Political  Equality  club  will  be  held 
Wednesday  evening  of  next  week  tn 
the  city  council  chambers.  A  large 
attendance  is  desired,  as  the  principal 
business  of  the  meeting  will  be  the 
framing  of  a  constitution  by  the  so- 
ciety. 


Will  Wed  in  Germany. 

Artliur  H.  Krieger  left  yesterday  for 
New  York,  and  he  will  sail  from  tliat 
port  Tuesday  of  ne.xt  week  for  Ger- 
manv.  where  his  wedding  will  take 
place  .Vprll  1.1  to  Miss  Clarchen  Dony- 
Fitger.  the  adopted  daughter  of  Arthur 
FitJ?er.  the  artist.  Mr.  FItger  is  a 
brother  of  August  Fitger  of  this  city, 
and  is  known  here  through  his  work. 
One  of  his  large  canva.ses  is  now  hung 
in  the  lobbv  of  the  Spaiuing.  Miss 
Wilhelmina  Fitger  of  Duluth  will  be  a 
guest  at   the  wedding. 

Mr.  Krieger  ami  his  bride  will  go 
for  a  few  weeks'  wedding  trip  to  the 
Black  Forest  In  CJermany.  and  will  re- 
turn to  America  to  be  at  home  in  this 
citv.  Thev     will     occupy     the     .\.     II. 

Viele  home  at  815  East  First  street 
for  a  year,  while  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Vlele 
are  traveling  abroad.  Mr.  Krieger  and 
his   britle   will   return   about    May    1:">. 


Women's  Meeting. 


the 

to- 

A 


The  regular  women's  meeting  at 
Lake  avenue  Bethel  will  be  held 
morr«<w  afternoon  at  2:;'.0  o'clock, 
blackboard  lesson  on  Bible  reading 
will  be  given,  and  there  will  be  some 
musical  numbers.  The  women  of  the 
neighborhood  are  invited  to  be  pres- 
ent. 


Birthday  Party. 

Miss  Dorothy  Lyons  was  the  gue.st 
of  honor  at  a  birthday  party  yesterday 
afternoon  ac  her  home.  .S16  East 
Seventh    street.       The    decorations    and 


to  his  voice.  The  manage- 
felt  that  there  was  nothing  to  do 
call  off  the  Duluth  concert. 

It  is  a  matter  of  great  regret  to  the 
Duluth  public  and  to  Manager  Marshall 
of  tlie  Lyceum,  for  this  was  one  of  tlie 
few  nuisieai  events  that  was  assured 
of  a  packed  house.  Tl.e  Lyceum  was 
almost  sold  out  for  tlie  concert,  and  of 
course  the  money  will  be  refunded 
ticket   purehasers  at   the   box  office. 

Tie  present  tour  of  Mme.  Eames  and 
M.  Gogorza  has  been  enlivened  by  the 
New  York  activities  of  the  letters  wife, 
■who  within  the  week  has  filed  suit  foi 
divorce  naming  Mme.  Eames  in  the 
suit.  The  resulting  notoriety  has  at- 
tra<-ted  much  attention  to  the  Western 
concert    tour. 


Personal  Mention. 

Miss  Kifie  Minile  will  leave  Satur- 
day to  spend  the  spring  vacation  with 
her    parents    at    Minneapolis. 

•  *       * 

Miss  Laura  Hamblin  of  1'219  East 
Fourth  street,  and  Miss  Fanny  Luiin 
of  East  First  street,  will  leave  Fri- 
day for  the  Twin  Cities,  the  former  to 
visit  with  her  brother,  Willis  Hamblin. 
at  Macalester  college.  St.  Paul,  and 
Miss  Lum  to  visit  frieiuls  at  the  state 
university.  They  will  lie  the  guests 
of  honor  at  a  box  party  to  see  'Ben 
Hur"  during  the  week. 
«       •       * 

Mrs.  A.  M.  Hunter  left  yesterday  for 
a  month's  visit  with  h.er  son.  Thomas 
E.    Hunter,    ol    Birmingham,    Ala. 

•  *      * 

Mrs.  \V.  L.  Whipple  of  1710  East 
Third  street  is  visiting  relatives  in 
Illinois. 

•  *      * 

Rev.  and  Mrs.  J.  G.  Faries  of  Hun- 
ter's J  ark  have  as  their  guest  Mrs. 
Faries"  sister,  Mrs.  Best,  of  Minnea- 
polis. 

•  «      * 

Miss  Millie  Conley  of  -Z  West  Sec- 
ond street  left  yesterday  for  Chicago. 


favors  were  in   green, 
ternoon   was   enjoyed 
guests: 
Misses — 

Evelyn  Erickson. 

Elizabeth  Hanson, 

Agnes  Manthy. 

Bonnie  Lyons, 

Marie  Lyons. 
Masters  — 

Bertine  Nesgoth. 

Edward  Erickson. 

Asa  Lyons.  .1  r.. 


by 


delightful  af- 
the    following 


Gean  McFad<len. 
Helen  Walker. 
Alice  Walker. 
Genevieve  Ehlen- 
bach. 

Bobby  Lyons, 
Walter  Ooodson. 
Tvonald  Hanson. 


Bundle  Shower. 

Mrs.  Minnie  Cml<l\  of  19  East  Su- 
I>erior  street  entertained  at  a  bundle 
shower  last  evening  in  honor  of  Miss 
Adalia  Oppel.  The  rooms  were  prettily 
decorated  in  hearts,  and  twenty-rtve 
guests  were  entprt.iined. 


KillM     Wuuld-Be     Slayer. 

A  merciless  murderer  is  Appendicitis 
with  many  victims.  But  Dr.  King's 
New  Life  Pills  kill  it  by  prevention. 
Ti'ev  gtntly  stimulate  stomach,  liver 
and  b'lwt's".  preventing  that  clogging 
tha'  invites  appendicitis,  curing  Con- 
stipation, Lilocsuess,  Chills.  Malaria 
Headiiclo'  and  Indigestion.  25c  at 
druggis  ^. 


Miss 
friends 


Ellen 
in    St. 


Douglas 
Paul. 


Is       visiting 


all 


DUE  TO  SMALLPOX 

Was  Mrs.  H.  James'  Death 
in  Athens. 

Word  has  just  been  received  in  St. 
Paul  of  the  details  of  the  death  of 
Mrs.  Howard  James  of  that  city,  whose 
sudden  death  was  such  a  shock  to  her 
maiiv  friends  in  America.  Mrs.  .lames 
died'at  Athens.  Greece,  and  the  details 
which  have  just  been  received  relate 
that  her  death  was  due  to  malignant 
smallpox  and  was  most  tragic.  She 
was  seized  with  the  disease  suddenly 
upon  her  arrival  in  Greece,  and  in  ac- 
cordance with  the  health  laws  of  the 
community  was  held  in  a  detention 
hospital  away  from  her  friends,  and 
neither  her  husband  nor  little  daughter 


WKat    Retail   Markets    Offer. 


Old   ealibage,    5   cents   a   lb. 

New   cabbage.  6  cents  a  lb. 

White    turnips.   40   cents  a   peck. 

Rutabagas.  25  cents  a  peck. 

Sweet  potatoes,  3  lbs  for  -'5  cents. 

White  lish,    12 ^^  cents  a  lb. 

I>ake    trout,    12 ',2    cents   a    lb. 

Pike,    12'/4    cents  a   lb. 

Shad.    $l._'5    each. 

Mince  meat,  18  cents  a  lb. 

Cottage  cheese.   12%   cents  a  lb. 

\\'ith  the  return  of  winter,  bright  and 
snapp.s'  th<mKh  it  be,  interest  is  re- 
vived   in    mince    pies    and    pork    roasts. 


The  eold  comfort  offered  by  fish,  fine 
brain  food  though  it  be.  is  even  less 
desiral)le  than  usual  when  the  mercury 
unexpectedly    goes    down    to    zero. 

Even  the  commonest  vegetables  are 
rather  expensive,  and  s(iuash,  which 
is  sold  by  the  pound,  is  cut  up  into 
three  or  four  or  five-pound  pieces  for 
the  accommodation  of  small  house- 
holds. Cabbage,  either  old  or  new,  Is 
not  csheap,  but  home  grown  lettuce  is 
a  cent   less  expensive  than   it   was. 

Oranges  and  grape  fnit  are  very 
plentiful. 


SLOW    IMPROVEMENT. 

House  Decoration  Becoming 
More  Simple. 

"We  have  lived  through  the  hand- 
painted  craze,  when  ntJthing  was  safe 
from  the  would-be  artist,  whether  in 
the  form  of  a  rolling-pin  or  a  coal 
scuttle,"  says  Dorothv  Take  Priestman 
In  her  recent  book.  "Art  and  Economy 
in    Home    Decoration." 

"Having  survived  this  stage,  the 
drapery  epidemic  overtook  us;  'tidie.V 
tn  the  chairs,  draperies'  on  the  man- 
tel and  'throws"  on  the  furniture. 
Curtains  of  lieavy  texture.  trimmed 
and  looped,  drained  the  pocketbook 
and  vrcvi^  the  terror  of  discriminating 
minds. 

"Ne-\t  the  bric-a-brac  habit  overcame 
us.  Dreadful  overmantles  with  cubby- 
holes were  put  on  the  market.  They 
were  naturall.v  overladen  with  useless 
\ases  anu  imitation   Dresden  figures.  " 

To  be  sure,  as  the  author  points  out. 
the  pillow  evddemic  is  still  in  full  sway, 
yet   there  are  beautiful  pillow  covers  to 
select   from.     Well-designed      furnituie. 
appropriate  to  the  room  where  it   is  in- 
tended to  be  placed,  may  be  had  for  the 
seeking,  and   this  point   is   well   empha- 
sized.    It  is  not  difficult,  nor  need  It  be 
expensive,  to    carry  out     a     good   color 
scheme  bychoosing  a   suitable  rug.  and 
artistic  draperies.     More  and  more  there 
is  recognition  of  the  fact  that  harmony 
is  essentia'..     But,   with     harmon\-.      the 
idea  of  simplicil>-  must  be  kept  in  mind. 
"Homes  are  apt  to  lack  simplicity  be- 
cause the  furnishings  have  been  chosen 
without   regard      for   one  another.      The 
pli-tures  on  the  walls,  the  ornaments  on 
shelves  and  tables,  the  carpets  and  rugs 
upon    the    Iloors.   the   draperies   at    win- 
dows and  doors,  contend,  as  it  were,  for 
pre-eminence,    and    defeat    the    effect    of 
harmony,      •     •      •     The    first    step    to- 
ward   improving    the    home    is,    then,    to 
do    away    with    what    Is    bad.      There    is 
more  danger  of  destro.ving  the  appear- 
ance  of  a   room    by   overcrowding   than 
b>*    bareness.      We    have    all    felt      the 
futility     of     adding     in     order     to     im- 
prove. 

"A  few  principles,  the  importance  of 
which  Is  clearly  understood,  and  which 
are  acted  upon  as  occasion  offers,  will, 
ere  lon.a;.  work  a  happ.v  revolution  in 
surroundings.  True  home  missionaries 
are  tiiose  wlio.  in  their  own  houses, 
stud.v  to  make  the  furnishings  serve 
useful  purposes,  and.  at  the  same  time, 
educate  the  taste.  Not  onl.v  are  such 
environments  satisfying  in  themselves, 
but  they  are  examples,  whose  influence 
ma.v  be   far-reac-hing." 


3. 

Your  baking  is  not  an  experiment 
when  you  use 
HUNT'S  PERFECT 
Baking  Powder  and  Extracts. 
They  never  disappoint. 

^//  Grocers 

CKT   A   CAN  AND  A  BOTTLK  TODAY. 


BORDERED 
To  Be 


DRESSES 


Fashionable   During 
Summer. 

The  reappearance  of  borders  in  all 
the  best  shops  and  among  the  finer 
giades  of  imported  and  domestic  ma- 
terials shows  very  clearl.v  that  the 
straight  plaited  skirts  will  be  much  in 
evidence  this  spring  and  summer,  say.s 
Helen  Berkeley-Lloyd  in  the  April 
Delineator.  The  borders  are  so  per- 
fectly bewitching  that  no  woman  can 
resist  them,  and  it  Is  really  not  nec- 
essar.v  that  she  should,  for  they  come 
in  all  prices  to  suit  all  purses.  Among 
the  more  expensive  materials  there  are 
the  lovelist  things  In  the  world  fcjr 
bridesmaids'  dresses  and  garden  party 
frocks;  for  the  girl  who  Is  to  gradu- 
ate, are  the  now  embroidered  fiounc- 
Ings,  In  white  and  pale  colors,  that 
run  from  forty  to  sixty  inches  wide 
and  are  deep  enough  to  be  utilized  in 
a     dozen     different     ways.  The     new 

ginghams    are    really    beautiful,    espe- 


BELMAR  SHOES 

$3.00  the  Pair 

The  wiell  known  make  for  st.vle 
and  wear — a  large  assortment 
of  new  spring  styles — Blucher. 
lace  and  button — better  than 
most  $3.50  shoes  for  women 
our  price,  the 
pair 


$3.00 


AliWAYS  8EM)  YOUR  MAIL  ORI>KRS  TO 


117-119  WEST  RUPEKIOR  STREET,  DULUTH.  M3NN., 
FOR  QUICK.  SATISFAC1X)RY  HERViCE. 


WOMEN'S  KID  SHOES 

$1.48  the  Pair 

Two  lines  of  women's  Dongola 
Kid  Shoes — both  light  and  heavy 
.^oles — in  well-made  shoe.- — a 
full  line  of  sizes  to  open  the  sale 
— don't  wait  too  lorig.  Come 
early  for  your 
size    at    


L7  1|J^.  V-"|I1TL- 

$  1 .48 


Several 


MORE 
BIG  - 


Shipments  of  New  Styles 


Have  First  Showing  Tomorrow! 

HE   Easter  selling  is  on — and  we  never  found  it  so 

easv  to  sell  Liuods!  Women  who  come  only  to  look,  seem  to  have 
that  way.  for  you  know  we  never  try  to  urge  a  cuiitomer  to  buy — 
found  it  impossible  to  resist  the  temptation  to  buy — at  least,  it  seems 

so.  we  always  want  you  to  feel  free  to  look  as  much  as  you  please  and  not 

feel  under  the  .slightest  obligation  to  buy! 

You  May  Choose  From  120  Suits  at  $25  to 
$35  and  90  Smart  Coats  at  SI  5 Jo  S25, 

The  garments  represents  the  very  latest    and   best   ideas  in    fashions 

spring the  styles  are  metropolitan— the  .same  that  are  just  bcgiuning  to  make 

well  dressed  circles  in  New  York  city! 


for 
their 


fir.st  appearance  ui 

They  are  distinctly  different  from  the  ordinary  ready-to-  vear  gar- 
ments with  their  monotonous  similarity  of  design  and   :rimming. 


We  Bought  Late  Else  We'd  Have  the  Same 
Things  You  May  See  at  Other  Stores  Now 


Every  new  season  an  immense 
ntmiber  of  new  ideas  are  brought  out — 
they  are  largely  e.xperimental— styles 
later  crystalize  and  are  "fixed"'  for  the 
se.'ison! 

We  waited  late  this  Spring.  Our 
buyers  were  long  in  market,  study- 
ing styles.  Most  stores  had  com- 
pleted their  purchases  when  we  be- 
gan to  buy,  so  we  have  later  styles. 


It  is  immensely  pleasing  to  par- 
ticular folk.s  to  find  .stch  entirely  "differ- 
ent" styles  here!  Goo.l  taste  in  dress  ap- 
preciates coats  and  suits  like  ours. 

We  offer  you  dozens  of  styles 
of  refinement  aid  distinction 
— garments  that  are  charming 
examples  of  high  class  tailor- 
ing at  the  prices  named  above! 
Also  others  for  more  and  less. 


THE  HATS  OF  SPRING  ARE  HERE, 
READY  FOR  YOUR  ADMIRATION 
AND    APPROVAL!      WELCOME! 

We  can't  wait  until  ilie  Formal  Opening — we  .sim- 
ply niu.st  .show  some  of  the.se  Ijewitching  Hats  at 
once:  And  tlio.<ie  of  you  who  come  tomorrow  may 
well  feel   privileged  by  what  you  will  see! 

Style  and  Beauty 
Are  Hand  in  Clove 
This  Season. 

We  do  not  .re- 
call any  .season 
where  the  hats 
were  all  .so  pretty! 
Our  .selections 
are  such  that 
we  can  truthfully 
.say — "here  are  the 
finest  styles  of  the 
season — see  them 
and  j-ou'll  know 
the  truth  about 
the  fa.shlons  In 
millinery." 

Alreaiiy  wroiueii  ar«» 
bu.viuK'  titeiu  —  itH 
tinir!  RnHtfr  In  but 
Ittle  ii'ore  thnn 
throe  weeks  awa.v! 
Iliit  whether  rentl.v 
to  buy  or  not,  come 
In  nnil  nee  the  nioMt 
churiiilui;  hnt<«  of 
NpriuKS 

And  note,  that  our  prices  are  so  reasonable,  that 
discrlmlnatinK  people  cannot  escape  noticing  that  it 
pay.s  to  buy  hat.s  at  (iray-Tallanfs  If  one  appreciates 
stvle  without  paying:  fancy  prices: 


48- [n.  French  Linen  Finish 
Suitings  39c  Yd. 

Tb«  Width  Makes  tlte  Sldrt  Length. 


Thest  Bordered  Suitings  nuike  the 
smartest  kind  of  skirt  suits — nothing 
else  so  fashionable  this  season — vari- 
ous stripes  in  plain  and  dotted  effects — 
bands  and  clusters — light  dark  blues  — 
tans  and  white  grounds  with  striking 
stripe.s — six  to  seven  yards  makes  a 
suit. 


Th'>y  look  exacMy 
Miich  HN  would  Nell 
titc  yard — we  are 
lot  at    


like    liiieuN, 

n(    7r»e  to  91 

nelllnK     tUlH 

SJ»o  yard. 


THE    NEW 

Sheath  Bockers 

ARE    HEHE. 

Rather  close  form-fitting 
Drawers  of  finest  cottons — 
with  draw  strings  at  knee.s 
— similar    to    cut. 

^\■e   ulwM.VN    have    the 
New       ThIiiKH       l<MrN(. 
^heath-Uo<ker3     on     sale 
at   Undermuslin  department 
—prices  fl.S,.  aud  $I.1T». 


1909  **Kekko- 

Silk*'  Waistings 

5()c  a  Yd. 

All    tlu       new      shades 

for      spring    —    plain 

and     fs.ncy     weaves — 

they  Icok  like  a  pure 

silk        )f       very       fine 

Qualitj — they    can    be 

laundered  easily     and 

are   snips   .-it    50c    yd! 

The      value      In 

there!        .\ud     the 

M  t  y  I  e      denkHiidM 

fabrlcM    of      their 

Nort!       See    them! 


48c 

The  yard  for 
36-inch  Nat- 
ural Linen 
Waistings — 
some     are 

plain  — 

others     have 

herringbone 

weaves: 

They    are 

worth  rsth- 

yard  auy- 

where! 


New  and 

Dainty 

Neckwear 

Two  shipments  last  week 
and  yet  w©  had  to  wire  to 
New  York  for  more  Satur- 
day: The  new  lot  came  in 
a  hurry  by  express:  Real 
smart   tatl- 


Baby  Irish   and 

ored    effects; 
Prieen   on      the 
■tyl«M     •A'Sc      — 
at 5»r,  6Se 


niniple 

others 

and   up. 


69c  glove;  sale 

TOMORROW 


A    special    line    of      Women's      Short       Kid 
Gloves — the     well    known    "Diana"    Gloves 
so    much    worr    by 
knowing  w  omen 
everywhere:     .  To- 
morrow,   only 


69c 


69c 


in 


tJraym,    tann,    navy,    anil    brown, 

ttlM'H  n,  eVi,  «V2.  «%.  7,  7»/i  and  T'/z 
— JuHt  o  few  of  the  Nniall  MixeN! 
Choice «»<•    i»alr. 

Come  early  while  we  ha "e  your  size:  In 
selling  them  at  this  price,  we  will  not  take 
time  to  fit  them:  The  rash  will  be  too 
great  for  that,  so  please  do  not  ask  to 
be    fitted    at    the    sale    price    of    «»c    pair. 


We  Do 
Stamping 
To  Order 

An  entirely  new  outfit — 
we  do  the  best  possible 
work — do  it  promptly  and 
well — and  we  give  you 
choice  of  all  the  newest 
190S)    designs. 


See 
for 


our 
the 


Dentgu 


Hook 
ideUM! 


-  a= 


■W^  m 


^ 

1 


with 


ciallv  the  plain  blues  and  pinks 
wide  band  borders  of  deeper  blue  or 
crimson  at  the  bottor."..  And  among 
the  less  expensive  materials  that  can 
found  at  absurdlv  low  prices  are  all 


be 


batistes    and 
little   dresses 


sorts  ot  pretty  dimities, 
muslins  that  make  dear 
for   small   girls. 

But  for  most  of  us  workaday  mor- 
tals "sufficient  unto  the  day"  is  the 
law  that  regulates  our  wardrobes,  and 
summer  dresses  are  something  of  a 
dav-dream  at  present.  The  needs  of 
tb-^  moment  He  decidedly  along  the 
lines  of  spring  suits  rather  than  cotton 
dresses.  The  new  woolen  materials 
have  only  been  In  the  shops  about  a 
month,  but  already  it  is  easy  to  see 
the  general  trend  of  popular  fancy. 
Setting  aside  serges,  cheviots  and 
Panamas,  whose  social  position  never 
varies  from  year  to  year,  there  are 
manv  new  and  attractive  tweeds,  hop- 
sackings  and  wool  crashes.  These  lat- 
ter are  of  British  extraction  and  have 
always  been  the  Knglishwomans  first 
choice  for  trotteur  suits.  They  come 
In    subdued    grays,    greens    and    tans. 


This  Is  a  Big  Sale— Genuine,  Too. 

F^very  price  tag  shows  the  original 
price — blue  tags  show  the  discounts, 
and  thev  are  big  discounts,  too.  You 
know  what  a  French  &  Bassett  sale 
means — you  always  get  a  square  deal 
and  great   big   values. 


no    little    comment    among    Duluth    the- 
atergoers. 

•  •  • 
Charles  Towle,  advance  manager  for 
the  big  "Ben  Hur"  company,  arrived  in 
the  city  this  morning  from  Winnipeg 
with  ten  stage  carpenters,  and  at- 
tacked the  Lyceum  stage.  The  stage 
will  liave  to  be  strengthened  and  over- 
hauled for  the  big  production.  The 
company  consists  of  105  people,  several 
race  horses  and  several  carloads  of 
scenery.  The  company  will  arrive  on 
a  special  train  Monday  morning.  Klaw 
&  Erlanger,  who  own  the  production, 
refuse  to  allow  it  to  appear  in  any  city 
until  the  stage  has  been  tested  and 
strengthened,  if  neces.'^ary.  in  order  to 
avoid  all   possibilities   of  an  accident. 

•  •      • 

"The  Girls  From  Berlin,'  with  Cor- 
inne  featured  in  the  cast,  will  be  the 
attraction  at  the  I.,vceum  Friday  and 
Saturday  with  a  Saturday  matinee. 
Corlnne  is  one  of  the  most  popular 
comediennes  in  musical  comedy  She 
made  a  big  hit  in  George  M.  Cohan's 
"Forty-five  Minutes  From  Broadway." 
when    it   was   first    produced. 

*  •       • 

Carl  Herman.  "The  Electric  King"  is 
creating  a  lot  of  amusement  and  mys- 
tifying many  at  the  Bijou  this  week, 
with  his  demonstrations  of  the  possi- 
bilities  of   the   electric   current. 


Ik 


EOTOIHY  iF 
ySEiilEliTS 


where   most   of   the   boathouses   are   lo- 
cated. 

At  present,  there  i.-i  nothing  in  most 
of  the  houses  but  tie  actual  hulls  of 
the  boats,  which  are  a  bit  cumber.some 
for  thieves  to  take  au'ay,  l)ut  when  the 
biass  fittings  and  ex])ensive  machiner.v 
purls  are  put  in  for  the  summer,  the 
boatsheds  will  ofTer  is  great  fields  for 
the  enterprising  burglars  as  they  have 
in    the   past. 

Time  and  again,  the  West  end  boat 
houses  have  been  brc  ken  Into  and  val- 
uable parts  of  the  bo  it  eyuipment  stol- 
en. In  few  cases  have  the  offenders 
been  apprehended  or  the  stolen  prop- 
erty  restored   to   the  owners. 

The  launch  enthusiasts  have  figured 
it  out  that  they  will  be  money  ahead 
if  they  stop  the  depredations  of  the 
thieves  by  employing  a  night  wa  ch- 
man   as  soon   as   the    season   opens. 

The  West  enders  will  organize  a 
launch  owners'  protective  association 
or  something  simikr  and  will  each 
bear  a  share  of  the  cost  of  hiring  the 
guard. 


avenue    west    and    Fourth    street. 

The  regular  meeting  of  the  Bem.a 
club  was  held  last  evening  in  Dr. 
Oredson's  office  Preparations  are  be- 
ing made  by  the  Bemaites  for  their 
debate  with  the  members  of  the  Men's 
Literary  society  of  the  First  Nor- 
wegian-Danish M.  K.  ciiurch.  wlilch 
will   be  held  soon. 

The  ladies  of  the  TwentiethCentury 
club  are  elated  over  the  success  with 
which  their  sewing  school,  conducted 
in  the  vestry  room  of  St.  'Luke'rf 
Episcopa'  church,  is  meeting  this  set- 
son.  Last  Saturday,  there  were  157 
little  girls  in  the  class,  by  actual 
count. 


CoIUn    I'uiiNv    Headache. 

L.XX.ATIVIi  BKO.MO  (Juinine.  the  world  wiJa 
Cold  and  Grip  remedy  removes  cause.  Call  for 
lull  name.   Look  !or  j-ifiiature  F..W.  GROVE.  250 


WHERE  TO  GO  TOMGHT 


LYt^EUM— "The  Thief." 


Green  Room  Notes. 

The  last  performance  of  "The  Thief" 
will  be  given  at  the  Lyceum  tills  even- 
ing. The  engagement  has  been  a 
successful  one.  and  the  play  lias  caused 


WILL  EMPLOY 
NIGHT  WATCHMAN 


As  soon  as  the  West  end  launch 
owners  replace  the  brass  fittings  and 
machinery  in  their  b(*its  for  the  com- 
ing season,  they  will  employ  a  night 
watchman  to  look  after  the  boathouses 
at    the    foot    of    Twenty-first      avenue, 


West  End  Stioi'trails. 

The    Young    Mens      Sodality    of      St. 

Clement's  Catholic  church  will  give  an 
entertainment  this  evening  in  the 
parish  hall.  "The  <;;aptaln's  Idea"  is 
the  name  of  a  playlet  that  the  drama- 
tically   inclined    members    will    present. 

Rev.  Carl  G  Olsor .  pastor  og  Beth- 
any Swedish  Lutherin  church  will  be 
one  of  the  speakers  at  the  Lutheran 
conference,  to  be  I  eld  tomorrow  at 
Arnold. 

W.  S.  Harlow  of  Ia  Crosse  is  regis- 
tered  at   the   Esmonc . 

Rev.  G.  H.  Young,  pastor  of  the  Bap- 
tist church  in  Supe  -lor,  spoke  at  the 
church    last    evening. 

Lenten  services  will  be  held  this 
evening  in  St.  Luke's  Episcopal  church. 
"The  rector.  Rev.  Rt  derick  J.  Mooney, 
will   preach  a  short    i^ermon. 

The  cadet  corps  of  St.  Luke's  Episco- 
pal church  will  meet  in  the  vestry 
rooms  this  evening.  Capt.  Glover  will 
bring  up  some  important  business  at 
thl.s^   meeting 

Miss  Anna  Bjorklolm  of  119  Twen- 
ty-first avenue  wesl  will  leave  Friday 
for  Des  Moines.  lova,  where  she  will 
make   her  home. 

The  Ladies'  Guild  of  St.  Luke's 
Episcopal  church  will  meet  Friday  aft- 
ernoon with  Mrs.  L>.  R.  Uibbs  of  Ei^lith 


CHASED  CHILD 
WITH  A  KNIFE 


Information  of  Insanity  was  filed  in 
probate  court  this  morning  again.st 
Mrs.  Marie  Manual  of  Virginia.  Her 
husband  filed  the  information  in  whicit 
it  is  said  that  she  has  fits  of  temper 
and  hallucinations.  She  threatens  to 
kill  her  husband  and  child,  and  la.><t 
evening  she  cliased  the  child  out  «>f 
the  house  with  a  knife 
years  old  and  has  seven 
health  Is  believed  to  be 
the  woman's  deranged 
dition. 


She  is  4« 
children.  Ill 
the  cause  of 
mental     con- 


• 

'"' 

v~ 

*" 

HP^(pa 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909. 


pmim 


OF  TIHIE  iM 


EASY  FOR  THE 
HERALD  TEAM 

The  Tribune  Bowlers  Fall 

Down  In  Three  Straight 

Bowling  Games. 

The  IleiHld  bowlers  last  niglit  took 
the  News  Tribune  team  into  camp  on 
the  Central  nllevs.  .Ui>atinp  tliem  by 
235   pfn's. 

The  men  from  tl>e  evening  paper 
took  the  three  struiglit  games  and 
didn't    lialf  ti'y   at    that. 

Since  Tiie  Herald  team  has  roorpfan- 
Ized  ana  speiii  a  few  evenings  at 
practice,  tliey  now  feel  confident  of  de- 
feating the  Tribune  bunch  at  any  time. 
That  the  games  might  be  made  Inter- 
esting .=1-  that  tlie  men  would  all  show 
up  at  the  alleys  on  the  occasion  of  the 
contests,  they  suggest  that  the  series 
of  thre<  which  is  to  be  rolled  next 
week  be  for  a  purse  of  from  $10  to  $-'.">. 

The   scores    made   last    night    follow: 
Herald. 
B.    Bennett    .     .l.TS  169 

I..   Bennett   i:?9  l  H 

Ol.son     161  lis 

Summers      17!*  179 

Anderson     192  176 


^  ^i^  u>  u*  a*  ^ 


4^  ^  A  Tif  W  ^ 


f^AW^iicWA^^ 


FEETHAM'S  "MOLLYCODDLES"  AS 
SEEN  BY  THE  HERALD  CARTOONIST 


168— 
155— 
143 — 
159— 
162— 


475 

4:?  5 

517 
530 


Total    s"'.t  7s:? 

Tribune. 

Farmer     110  lOS 

Brown      177  199 

Porter    172  151 

Wilson      172  149 

Lindstrom     ....135  117 


787—2 

.379 

114— 

332 

132— 

508 

140  — 

463 

ilC— 

441 

152— 

400 

Total      766 


724 


654—2,144 


TICKET  BOOKS 
ARE  POPULAR 


DuluthiVSanagcmentFlnds 
No  Dul^iculty  in  Dis- 
posing of  Them. 

The  ticket  books  being  issued  by 
the  Dtihah  baseball  club  are  going  like 
hot  cakes.  Al  Kuehnow  said  thi.s 
morning  that  if  they  continue  to  go  as 
they  have  up  to  this  time,  there  will 
be  no  ditTiculty  in  disposing  of  all  that 
have  been  Issued  and  the  neeessarj- 
$3,000    rail^ed. 

The  tickets- are  transferable,  can  be 
used  at  any  time,  and  are  good  for 
any  position  inside  the  grounds.  There 
1.S  quite  a  saving  in  buying  them  in 
book  form,  and  this  is  probably  the 
reason    they    are    already    so    popular. 

The  Duluth  management,  in  addition 

to   the    many   other   changes   made   in 

the  policy  of  the  club  this  year,  is 
considering  the  advisability  of  in- 
auguraitng  the  rain  check  system  in 
this  city.  In  all  the  big  baseball  towns 
of  the  country,  checks  are  given  at 
each  game.  If  rain  or  bad  weather 
interferes  with  the  game  the  holder 
of  the  ticket  is  entitled  to  see  the  next 
game  played  on  the  home  grounds 
free  of  charge.  It  is  thought  that  this 
would  please  the  fans  greatly,  and  it 
is  probable  that  the  matter  will  be 
taken  up  at  the  next  meeting  of  the 
league  to  be  held  in  St.  Paul  Sunday. 

It  is  said  that  Baker,  Koepping  and 
Ness  may  play  ball  with  the  Duluth 
team  this  year.  The  arrangements 
are  incomplete  wtih  these  players  as 
yet  and  nothing  will  be  delinitely 
known  until  some  time  later  in  the 
spring. 


COLORED  CHAMP 
CHANGES  PLANS 

Johnson  to  Appear  for 

a  Week  at  Chicago 

Theater. 

Chicago,  March  17. — Champion  Jack 
Johnson  changed  his  mind  again  late 
last  night  on  the  subject  of  his  plans 
for  the  immediate  future.  He  will  re- 
main in  Chicago  for  a  week,  having 
signed  a  contract  witli  a  local  theater. 
ThI.s  di.spose.s  of  his  New  York  and 
Galveston    trips   for    the   present. 

Johnson  last  night  acted  as  referee 
In  a  match  in  which  Frank  Gotch,  the 
champion  wrestler  of  the  world,  threw 
both  Jack  l.eon   ;ind    Paul   Martinson. 


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SHOE  POINTS! 


■'•Y;^--^' 


/,,.j,\iXf<Ai>.5fi:'* '':••, r'^f^fl^'**  ~^'  ''"■*^''  -'^l -/VJ^-:'-'  -*3- 


^'GITCHE  eAMEE''  8H0E8  have 
tion  POINTS  that  are  su- 
perior to  the  average  shoe. 
Its  a   fact   that  $5  and  $6 
shoes  do  not  excel  "Gitchc 
Gamce"  in  these  very 
essential  shoe 
POINTS. 

The  Toe 


construc- 


of    fine  gram   sole 
leather,  insuring  a 
toe  shape  that  will 
wear  the  life  of  the 
shoe.     NO  soft- 
ening  from 
the    heat    of 
the  foot.    No 
canvas,past6 
or    gum    to 
soften  and 
fall  down. 


V 


IN 
DULUTH 

Sold  and 
Recommended  By 


H  ieland  Shoe  Co. 
K  istriner  &  Neuman 
Rockwell  Shoe  Co. 
J.  J.  Moe  &  Sons 
S.  W.  Hill 
F.  E.  Blodgett  &  Co. 


Jnteo  Shoe  Co. 
Fedfe  Cloth'g  Co. 
W.  &  L.  Shoe  Co. 
S.  Van  Wagner  « 
Big  Duluth 
Alfred  Johnson 


And  Best  Merchants  throughout  the  Norlbwesl. 

riORTHEBN  SHOE  GO. 

IHANUFACTURERS 


$3.50— $4.00 


Mine  HOST 'TO*^^i^y  MiCH^uD  OF  THE 
SJ.LOKflS  HOTEL  PReSfNTfMQ  WWNC/?S 
OF  ST.LOLfiS   eVEN^T 


^^^^■^  -T'  ^^  ^  "T^  "T*  -T^  ^  ^^^. 


^'^^■^ih'^W^^^^^'^  ^^W  W  W  Tic  Wiini^ 

rJ|*  Jft^^  ^  3H  3f^  5|?v^  ^  ^  ^  ^  *p*^  -^  ^  T*  ^  ^  ^ 


MOTOR  RACES 
ON  LAKE  WORTH 


The  Buffalo  Courier  Wins 

Mile  Event  by  Eleven 

Seconds. 

Palm  Beach,  FJa.,  March  17. — The 
fifth  annual  motor  boat  carnival  and 
races  on  Lake  Worth,  under  the  aus- 
pices of  the  Palm  Beach  Power  Boat 
association,  opened  yesterday  under 
favorable  condi lions.  The  only  event 
In  the  morning  was  the  speed  trials 
for  the  Palm  Beach  Challenge  cup.  The 
cup,  however,  has  to  be  won  twice  by 
the  same  owner  before  becoming  his 
bona  tide  property. 

Six  trials  were  given  over  the  mile 
course.  Only  three  boats  entered,  the 
Buffalo  Courier,  owned  by  W.  J,  Con- 
nors of  the  Buffalo  Yacht  club;  the 
Trente-Sept  and  Bruiser,  owned  by 
George  Gingra.s  of  the  Euclid  Yacht 
club.  The  race  between  the  Courier 
and  the  Trente-iiepi  was  close,  the 
Courier  winning  the  event  by  eleven 
aeconds. 

The  first  event  of  the  afternoon  was 
a  speed  contt-at  for  Florida  designed 
and  con.structed  boats  only,  nine  miles, 
no  time  allowance,  for  the  Pabst  Blue 
Ribbon  challenge  cup  to  the  winner, 
and  the  Kuinart  cup  to  the  second. 

The  Trente-Sept,  Dennison  Third, 
owned  by  Christopher  Gallagher  of 
tlie  Cape  May  Yacht  club,  and  the 
Fo.>i.sum,  owned  by  Lieut.  H.  L.  W'il- 
loughhy  of  the  New  York  Yacht  club, 
competed. 

The  Tronte-Sept  won  an  easy  victory, 
running  away  from  her  competitors 
from  the  scart.  Dennison  Third  finished 
second. 

The^ast  event  of  the  day  was  the 
Class  A  open-to-all  boats,  nine-mile 
handicap,  for  the  Benjamin  Douglas 
cup.  Kitty  Sparks  won,  Trente-Sept 
•econd,  and  Buffalo  Courier  tliird. 


COLUMBIAS  DROP 
TWO  OUT  OF  THREE 


McLaughlin  Gets   High 

Average  and  Kreittcr 

Rolls  High  Score. 

The  First  National  Bank  bowling 
team  won  two  out  of  tRree  from  the 
Columbias  on  the  Central  alleys  last 
night. 

McLaughlin  of  the  Columbias  got  the 
high  average,  186.  and  Kreitter  of  the 
Nationals   rolled    the   high    score,   237. 

The  detailed  scores  follow: 

First    .\atlonal    Bankii. 

Verket    (13)    lv\  165  136 

Schuld    (22)    159  168  101 

Kreitter    (US)     157  115  2V1 

Letteau    (::4)    156  149  136 

Pettlt     (17)     131  ISO  183 

Handicap     101  101  101 

Totals     S98  878  919 

ColumbinM. 

Otterson     199  167  1S7 

Miller     162  \^\  171 

McLaughlin    (3)    181  196  173 

LIsty     193  152  182 

Massey     169  Ibl 

Staudt    (2)     134 

Handicap     3  3  3 

Totals     907  S63  857 

DOWN  TO  FINALS 
IN  BAGLEY  EVENT 


BEGIN  WORK  ON 

NEW  cnuRcn 


Dunlop  and  Dlnham  Will 

Piay  the  Deciding 

Contest 

Royal  Alworth  was  defeated  at  the 
curling  club  last  niglit  in  tlie  senii- 
tinals  in  tlie  Bagley  event  by  Bert 
Dunlop.  Dunlop  will  tonight  meet 
Dlnham  in  the  finals  for  the  Bagley 
trophy,  and  as  both  rinks  are  strong 
ones,  the  contest  will  be  watched  witli 
interest. 

In   the   6   o'clock  draw   played   earlier 

in  the  evening,  Dunlop  defeated  Hall  in 

the   Class   A   finals.      This   gave    Dunlop 

the  right  to  meet  Alworth  in  the  semi- 
tina'.s. 

In  the  bonsplel  being  played  between 
tlie  Class  C  rinks  for  the  possession  of 
the  board  of  trade  buttons,  Dave 
Stocking  defeated  Dlnham  by  a  score 
of  15  to  10,  and  Fectham  won  from 
Bradley   by  a  score  of  9   to  8. 

The  rinks  and  the  scores  follow: 
Baglfy    Uvent — Seiul-Flnalo. 


Class  A. 
I-Jd    Walker, 
A.  .J.  Wasgatt, 
Harry  Dlnham, 
Bert   Dunlop, 

skip — 10 


Class  B. 
Henry  Becker, 
Donald>  Stocker, 
Ed    FurnI, 
Uoyal    Alworth, 
skip- 


Class  A   Finals,    6   o'clock. 


lild   Walker, 
A.    J.    \Va.sgatt, 
Harry  Dinham, 
Bert    Dunlop, 

skip — 13 


Jolin    MacGregor, 
E,    "U'.    Deetz, 
C.  F.  Macdonald, 
Walter    Hall. 

skii 

Board  of  Trade  Buttons. 

Sellar, 


Endion  Methodists  Will 

Have  New  Home  by 

Sept.  I. 

It  is  expected  that  work  will  be 
begun  this'weck  on  the  new  Endion 
Methodist  church,  at  the  corner  of 
Nineteenth  avenue  east  and  First 
street. 

The  -work  on  the  building  has  been 
delayed  some  time  owing  to  the  build- 
ing materials  not  arriving  on  s.-hed- 
uled  time.  They  are  here  now  stand- 
ing loaded  on  cars  on  the  tracks,  and 
as  soon  as  they  can  be  transferred 
to  the  building  site,  work  will  be 
begun. 

The  excavation  was  made  and  the 
foundation.s  laid  last  November,  but 
during  the  winter  no  work  has  been 
done,  and  the  congregation  of  the 
church  have  been  forced  to  wait  in 
resignation.  The  building  contract 
calls  for  the  church  to  be  flnisihed 
Sept.  1  next,  and  until  th»  n  services 
will  continue  to  be  held  in  the  old 
church,  which  has  been  moved  uovvn 
the  avenue,  to  make  room  for  the  new 
building. 

The  new  church  will  be  a  hand- 
some structure,  built  of  dark  red 
brick  and  trimmed  with  Flemish 
oak.  In  this  respect  It  will  some- 
what re^^emble  the  Minneapolis  ciub 
building.  The  brick  work  will  ex- 
tend to  the  gables,  which  will  be  of 
timbers  and  plaster.  Judging  from 
the  plans,  t'ne  new  Endion  church  will 
be  a  structure  well  in  keeping  with 
the  beautiful  homes  in  the  East  end. 
When  it  is  finished  and  furni.shed.  the 
entire  cost  of  the  church  will  be  ap- 
proximately   $40,000. 

WINS  FIVE-MILE  RACE. 


^MHM^-JjHMHNHIHMHMHNHiHH;  ***^Mt** 


INDSUAL 
PROBLEMS 

Mr.  MacVeagh  Grapples 

TasK  of  Hit  or  Miss 

Finance. 


George  Bonhag  .Also  Beats  Record 
Mjide  by  Tom  Collins. 

Madison  Square  Garden,  New  York, 
March  17. — George  V.  Boniiag  of  the 
Irish- American  A.  C.  gave  a  grand  ex- 
hibition of  his  prowess  as  a  runner 
when  he  won  the  five-mile  rate  at  Madl- 
.«on  .Square  Garden  last  night  in 
1:4:59  2-5.  This  beat  the  best  previous 
record  of  25:19  2-5  made  by  Tom  Collins 
at  the  indoor  championship  heie  last 
year. 

In  the  second  trial  heat  of  the  70- 
yards  high  hurdle  handicap.  A.  B. 
Shaw  of  Dartmouth,  from  scratcli, 
equalled  the  w-orld'.s  record  of  9  1-5 
seconds.  In  tlie  final  heat  Shaw  was 
beaten  by  a  few  inches.  Dwiglit  of 
Princeton,  w-iih  12  feet,  winning.  These 
few  inches  deprived  Shaw  of  making 
a    new    world's    record. 


duct  ion  of  the  necessities  and  luxuries 
wiihin  the  United  States,  that  some  of 
the  possibilities  of  tariff  revenue  have 
been  destroyed.  This,  together  with 
the  great  increase  in  tlie  running  ex- 
penses of  the  government  and  the  un- 
usual expenditures  for  the  causes 
above  explained  has  brought  about  a 
deficit    of    unusual    proportion.  The 

two  most  obvious  courses  left  open  to 
him  are:  First,  the  issue  of  bonds. 
.Second,  the  restoration  of  some  of  the 
war  revenue  taxes  which  disappeared 
shortly  after  the  war  with  Spain. 
Interunl    Revenue    Smaller. 

"A  widespread  wave  of  prohibition 
and  the  relief  of  denatured  alcohol 
from  taxation  have  tended  to  decrease, 
rather  than  Increase,  the  receipts  from 
internal  revenue,  and  the  secretary  of 
the  treasury  will  probably  find  it  ab- 
solutely necessary  to  replace  the  in- 
ternal revenue  stamp  upon  telegrams, 
railroad  and  steamship  tickets,  etc.,  to 
fill  the  void  caused  by  the  prohibition 
of  the  sale  of  Intoxicating  liquors  in 
large  sections  of  this  country. 

"The  (ountry  has  undertaken  to  con- 
serve its  natural  wealth;  It  costs 
money.  The  country  has  undertaken 
to  regulate  abuses  in  bu.siness:  it  costs 
money.  The  country  has  undertaken 
the   greatest      engineering     problem   of 


the  century:  it  costs  money.  The  coun- 
try has  entered  into  an  ambitious  ex- 
tension of  its  domain  to  the  Philip- 
pines: It  costs  money.  There  has  been 
more  trouble  on  the  beat  of  the  police- 
men of  the  Western  Hemisphere:  It 
costs  money.  The  extersion  of  the 
rural  free  delivery,  the  developments  of 
the  department  of  agriculture  and  the 
safeguarding  of  the  food  products  of 
America,  all  take  mon?y.  No  one 
doubts  the  wisdom  of  these  expend- 
itures, because  many  of  :hem  are  an 
insurance  against  soclall.^m  and  they 
will  all  pay  big  dividends  to  posterity, 
yet  that  offers  little  consolation  to  the 
secretary  of  the  treasury,  who  is  face 
to  face  WMth  a  deficit  alr?ady  for  the 
fiscal  year  of  approxiraately  $90,- 
000,000." 


All  wKo  *uffer  from   hacking   Cough,   or  any  troubia 

■vvitli  llie  Throat  aial  l.\ing?.  will  Hid  rellff  liy  usIiir 
Uniwn's  Hroncliial  Trcclns.  A  safe  anJ  siinpio 
rtnieO)',  long  held  In  the  lilghest  isttein  by  clergy- 
men,   singers    and    spruit  i-.'. 


Ro<*kofeller  GIvc'i  In. 

Chicago,  March  17. — Gifts,  amount- 
ing to  $176,960  from  John  D.  Rocke- 
fellei-  to  the  University  of  Chicago,  are 
announced  by  President  Harry  Pratt 
Judson. 


IS  APPRECIATED. 


O.    K 
Frank    Pierce, 
A.   W.   Withrow, 
D.    Stocking, 

skip — 15 

.lay    Finkelson. 
C.  F.  Naughton, 
K.    A.    Vivian, 
G.    H.    Feetham, 

skip —  9 


Gilbert  Magie, 
I/.  Ciirudinskv, 
Will   Dinham; 

skip- 


-10 


J.    ir.   Truax. 
Kd  Rhelnberger, 
A.  W.  Roden. 
Ralph    Bradley, 

skip —  8 


Phone  yotir  want  ads  to  The  Htrald. 
Both  phones,  324. 


Venerable  Archdeacon  Appleby  At- 
tracting Attention  in  England. 

In  appreciation  of  his  good  work. 
the  parishioners  of  'Wyberlon,  Lincoln- 
shire. England,  recently  presented 
Venerable  Archdeacon  T.  jI.  M.  V.  Ap- 
pleby, first  archdeacon  of  Minnesota, 
with  a  gold  pencil  an"d  an  illuminated 
address,  bearing  seventy-six  signa- 
tures, whicli  was  executed  in  Boston, 
Lincolnshire,  Archdeacon  Appleby'^ 
native    town. 

Archdeacon  Appleby  le  coming  in  for 
a  good  deal  of  attention  in  England, 
and  on  Feb.  28.  the  occasion  of  the 
first  visit  to  Beverly  of  the  Hon.  Cosmo 
Gordon  Lang,  archbishop  of  Yor'K. 
Archbishop  Appleby  was  the  officiating^: 
clergyman  at  the  ceremonials  held  in 
honor  of  his  grace.  He  wlil  return 
to  Duluth  early  in  June  to  look  after 
some  business  interests  here. 


Situation  Confronting  the 

Treasury  Head  Analyzed 

by  R.  B.  Armstrong. 


Chicago.  March  17.— ""Until  the  United 
States  can  have  a  ciiancellor  of  the 
exchequer,  a  minister  of  finance,  or  a 
secretary  of  the  treasury  clothed  with 
absolute  power  to  control  the  budget 
of  expenditures,  the  United  States  gov- 
ernment income  and  outgo  will  always  j 
be  a  question  of  'iiit  or  miss,'  ''  declared  i 
Robert  B.  Armstrong,  formerly  assist-  ! 
ant  secretary  of  the  treasury,  In  point- 
ing out  the  unusual  problems  which 
will  beset  the  secretary  of  tlie  treasury 
during  the  Taft  administration.  "A  de- 
ficit is  always  a  pos^^ibility,  "  he  said; 
"extravagances,  duplication  of  work  and 
eccentricities  in  government  expense 
are  ever  present  and  an  Increasing 
menace  to  proper  government  financial 
management. 

"One  of  the  queer  anomalies  of  the 
American  form  of  government  is  that 
there  i.-s  no  absolute  re.'rponsibillty  for 
government  expenditures.  We  have  no 
budget.  The  secretary  of  the  treasury 
must  transmit  to  congress  the  requests 
of  all  executive  departments  for  appro- 
priations. The  formula  in  Washington 
for  an  appropriation  is  this:  Find  out 
uhat  you  think  you  want,  multiply  it 
by  two,  and  take  w'hat  you  get. 

"All  of  the  demands  for  expenditures 
are  concentrated  In  the  apjiropriation 
tommittees  of  both  liouses  of  congress, 
and  there  pressure  i.«  exerted  without 
let  or  hindrance,  except  the  rebellion 
of  the  members  of  that  committee.  No 
executive  officer  of  the  government 
has  the  power  to  limit  or  co-ordinate 
the  denands  for  expenditures.  It  is 
the  executive  department  of  the  gov- 
ernment arrayed  against  the  legisla- 
tive to  get  all  it  possibly  can  In  the 
way  of  appropriation,  and  then  it 
cheerfully  puts  the  blame  upon  congress 
for   whatfver  there   may  be." 

"Hit    or    MiMM"    Pinnnce. 

Of  the  problems  und^^rtaken  by  Sec- 
ertary  MacVeagh.  a  Chicago  man,  Mr. 
.'Vrmstrong  has  appreciation  from  his 
experience  in  the  treasury  during 
which  time  he  was  for  several  months 
.Kting  secretary,  although  the  prob- 
lems liave  been  greatly  complicated  by 
conditions  which  have  developed  since 
tliat  time.  Mr.  Armstrong,  now  presi- 
dent of  the  Consolidated  Casualty  com- 
pany, of  Chicago,  called  upon  to  ana- 
lyze the  present  tremendous  burden 
taken  up  by  Secretary  MacVeagh. 
pointed  out  the  financing  of  cncle  Sam 
is  "hit  or  miss"  and  the  elements  that 
enter  Into  the  calculation  of  the  treas- 
ury's head. 

"Three  unusual  problems  confront 
the  secretary  of  tlie  treasury  now,"  he 
.=aid.  "A  growing  deficit,  accompanied 
by  a  disturbance  of  income  both  in  In- 
ternal revenue  and  cu.stoms.  The  en- 
forcement of  the  new  tariff  law.  Tiie 
safeguarding  of  expenditure  in  the 
colossal  undertaking  of  paying  for  the 
coiist.' uctlon  of  the  Panama  canal,  with 
its    dally    drain    of    dollars. 

"In  addition  to  the^e  abnormal  and 
unusual  expenditures^  the  amount  nec- 
essary for  the  ordinary  expenses  of  the 
government  is  greatly  increa.«ed.  While 
the  wall  erected  by  the  framers  of  the 
i;;ngley  tariff  was  sut^iclently  high  to 
protect  American  commerce  from  for- 
tign  invasion  at  the  time  It  was 
framed,   It   has  so  stimulated   the  pro- 


During  the  warm  Summer  months  Catarrh  suffere-s  are  not 
troubled  with  the  effects  of  the  disease,  as  in  Winter.  This  is  true  be- 
cause in  the  heated  season  every  pore  and  outlet  of  ihe  skin  is 
open,  and  a  constant,  copious  evaporation  carries  off  with  it  a  large 
percentage  of  the  impurities  and  poisons  which  produce  Catarrh.  But 
at  the  first  sign  of  cooler  weather  the  sufferer's  comfort  end:; ;  the  skin 
does  not  secrete  as  freely,  a  congested  condition  of  the  system  takes 

place,  and  soon  every  ^ 

miserable  symptom  of 
Catarrh  is  harassing 
and  causing  discomfort 
to  the  unfortunate 
ones. 

Catarrh  is  a  deep- 
seated  blood  disease, 
one  which  no  amount  of 
local  treatment  will  ever 
reach  and  permanently 
cure.  The  beneficial 
effects  of  washes, 
sprays,  inhalations,  lo- 
tions, etc.,  are  only 
temporary,  and  when 
left  off  the  old  condi- 
tion returns  because 
the  blood  is  infected 
with  catarrhal  *  matter 
and  impurities.  This 
inflames  and  irritates 
the  mucous  membrane 
and  tissues  and  pro- 
duces the  symptoms  of 
ringing  noises  in  the 
head  and  ears,  mucus 
in  the  throat,  head- 
aches, watery  eyes, 
partial  deafness,  sore 
throat,  general  impair- 
ment of  the  health,  etc. 

To  cure  Catarrh 
permanently  the  blood 
must  be  purified,  and 
the  system  cleansed  of 
all  morbid  matters,  and 
at  the  same  time  strengthened  and  built  up.  Nothing  equals  S.  S.  S- 
for  this  purpose.  It  attacks  the  disease  at  its  head,  goes  down  to  the 
very  bottom  of  the  trouble  in  the  blood,  and  makes  a  permanent  and 
lasting  cure.  S.  S.  S.  removes  every  particle  of  the  catar-hal  matter 
from  the  circulation,  making  this  vital  fluid  pure,  fresh  and  healthy. 
Then  the  inflamed  membranes  begin  to  heal,  because  they  ars  nourished 
with  pure,  health-giving  blood,  the  head  is  cleared,  niucus  stops 
dropping  back  into  the  throat,  every  symptom  disappears,  the  constitu- 
tion is  built  up  and  health  restored.  S.  S.  S.  is  the  greatest  of  all  blood 
purifiers  and  cures  Catarrh  by  driving  out  the  cause  from  ihe  system. 
Being  made  entirely  of  healthful  vegetable  ingredients  S.  S.  S.  does 
not  contain  any  habit  forming  drugs,  which  really  do  not  cire  Catarrh 
but  often  ruin  the  health  ;  nor  will  S.  S.  S.  injure  the  most  delicate  sys- 
tems,   book  on  Catarrh  and  any  medical  advice  free  to  all  who  write. 

THE  SmFT  SPECIFIC  CO.,  ATLANTA,  GA» 


HOSB  STOPPED  UP  AND  INCESSAWT  COlfGH. 
Gentlemen:— I  suffered  for  a  long  time  with  .i  bad  case 
of  Catarrh,  and  tool*  A  great  deal  of  medicine  without  any 
benefit.    Several  doctor*  told  me  I  could  not  be  ci.red. 

I  had  a  continual  headache,  my  cheeks  bad  grown 
pnrple,  my  noso  was  always  stopped  up,  my  br:ath  had  a 
sickening  and  disgusting  odor,  and  I  coughed  incessantly. 

I  heard  of  your  S.  S.  S.  and  wrote  to  you.  On  your 
recommendation  I  coramtnced  to  use  it,  and  af  :cr  taking 
seTcral  bcttles,  I  was  cured  and  have  never  sine :  had  the 
slightest  symptom  of  the  disease.  I  will  always  be  glad 
to  recommend  it  to  other  sufferers. 

ResDcctfully,       MRS.  M.  L.  WESSliRMAN. 
2710  Caroline  St.,  St.  Louis,  Mo. 

CURED  OF  CATARRH. 

Dear  Sirs-.— At  the  age  of  five  years  I  contracted  a  bad 
case  of  Catarrh.  It  began  with  a  profuse  water j  discharge 
from  my  nose.  The  niattci-  falling  into  my  thio.it  kept  me 
constantly  hawking  and  spitting,  and  my  breath,  too,  was 
fearfully  offensive,  but  S.  S.  S.  has  cured  me  sound  and 
well  of  the  Catarrh  and  I  cheerfully  recommend  it  to  the 
public. 

When  I  began  taking  S.  S.  S.  it  was  for  anotier  disease 
which  the  doctor  called  Tuberculosis  of  the  bone,  and  since 
I  began  the  use  of  your  remedy,  S.  S.  S. ,  four  of  the  five 
tubercles  have  healed  amd  I  feel  as  well  as  I  ever  did  in  ray 
life.  OSCAR  WARB. 

4516  Garfield  Aw. ,  Kansas  City,  Mo. 

LOST  HIS  VOICE. 

Goldsboio,  W.  C. 
1  suffered  scTCrely  with  Catarrh  for  a  numbsr  of  years 
and  for  eighteen  months  the  disease  was  so  bad  that  i  lost 
my  voice  in  consequence  of  it.  I  tried  various  jeatments 
and  doctors  and  was  finally  given  up  to  die.  I  then  took 
8.  S.  S.  according  to  directions  and  indue  course  of  time 
my  Catarrh  was  entirely  cured.  My  voice  wi.s  restored 
and  I  have  enjoyed  good  health  ever  since. 

W.  H.  GRIFFm. 


CHEERFULLY  RECOMMENDS  S.  S.  {;. 

For  the  past  twenty-five  years  I  have  been  in  the  habit 
of  taking  a  course  of  S.  S.  S.  every  spring  as  a  slood  puri- 
fier, and  have  eiways  been  well  pleased  with  the  results. 
I  had  Catarrh  for  a  number  of  years  which  wai  cured  by 
S.  S.  S.  I  cheerfully  recommend  S.  S.  S.  as  the  best 
blood  purifier  on  earth.  Not  only  did  it  cure  riy  Catarrh 
but  I  have  known  of  its  being  used  in  other  cases  with  en- 
tirely satisfactory  resulu.  LOCK  McD AND  X, 
Houston,  Texas.  U.  6.  Dist.  i.tto.Tiey. 


(928) 
SUMMONS      I.N      APPLICATION      FOR 

HEGISTRATION     OF    LAND — 
State       of       MinneHuta,     County     of     St. 

LouIk— ss. 
Dl.striet  Court,  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict. 
In  the  matter  of  the  application 
of  Howard  Investment  Com- 
pany, to  register  the  title  to 
the  following  de.stribed  real 
estate  situated  in  St.  Louie 
County,  Minnesota,  namely: 
East  half  (E»^)  of  Lot  four- 
teen (14),  Block  three  (3), 
Helm's  Addition  to  iJuluth, 
according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof,  on  file  and  of  record 
In  the  office  of  the  Register  of 
Deeds  in  and  for  said  St. 
Loula   County,  Applicant, 

vs. 
All  persons  or  parties  unknown, 
claiming  any  right,  title,  es- 
tate. Hen  or  Interest  In  the 
real  estate  described  In  the 
application   herein. 

Defendants, 
The    State    of    Minnesota    to    tlie    above' 
named    defendants. 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  of 
the  applicant  In  the  above  entitled  pro- 
ceeding and  to  file  y<>ur  answer  to  the 
said  application  in  the  office  of  the 
Clerk  of  said  court.  In  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the 
service  of  this  summons  upon  you,  ex- 
clu.'^ive  of  the  day  of  such  service,  and, 
if  you  fail  to  answer  the  said  appli- 
cation within  the  time  afor»'.>-ald,  the 
applicant  in  this  proceeding  will  ap- 
I)ly  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded  therein. 

Witness,  J.   P.  Johnson,  clerk  of  said 

court,  and  the  seal  'thereof,  at  Duluth, 
in  said  county,  this  10th  day  of  March, 
A.    D.    1909. 

(Seal,  District  Court,  St.   I^ouls  County,- 
Minnesota.) 

J.    P.    JOHNSON, 

Clerk. 
By  V.  A.  DASH. 

Deputy. 
E.  P.  TOWNR, 

Attornev   for   Applicant, 
No.    500-.".d3   Torrey   Bldg.,   Duluth,   Mln-- 

nesota. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald,    March    10,    17 
and    24,    1909. 


ORDER    OF    HEARINC}    ON    PETITION' 

FOR   ADMINISTRATION.— 
Stale     of     Minnesota,     County      of     St, 

Louis.- — ss. 

In  Probate  Court, 
In    the    matter    of    the    estate    of    John 

Rus,  defendant. 

THE    PETITION    of    Franclska    Rus 

having  been  filed  In  this  Court,  repre- 
senting, among  other  things,  that  John 
Rus,  then  being  a  resident  of  the 
County  of  St.  Louis,  State  of  Minne- 
sota, died  intestate,  in  the  County  of 
St.  Louis,  State  of  Minnesota,  on  the 
4th  day  of  September,  190S.  leaving 
estate  in  the  County  of  St.  Louis.  State 
of  Minnesota,  and  that  said  petitioner 
Is  the  widow  of  said  decedent,  and 
praying  that  Letters  of  Administration 
of  the  estate  of  said  decedent  be  grant- 
ed  to  her. 

IT  IS  ORDERED,  That  said  petition 
be  heard  before  this  Court,  at  the 
Probate  Court  Rooms  In  the  Court 
House  in  Duluth,  in  said  County,  on 
Monday,  the  5th  day  of  April,  1909  at 
ten  o'clock,  A.  M.,  and  all  persons  In- 
terested in  said  hearing  and  in  said 
matter  are  hereby  cited  and  required 
at  said  time  and  place  to  show  cause. 
If  any  there  be.  why  said  petition 
should    not    be    granted. 

ORDERED  FURTHErt.  That  this 
Order  be  served  by  publication  in  The 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,  according  to 
law,  and  that  a  copy  of  this  Order  be 
served  on  the  County  Treasurer  of  St. 
Louis  Cov.nty  not  less  than  ten  days 
prior    to    said    day    of    hearing. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  9th, 
1909. 

By   the  Court,  « 

J.    B.    MTDDLECOFF, 

Judge  of  Probate. 
(Seal.   Probate  Court,  St.   Louis  County, 

Miiin.) 


STATE   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY    OF 

ST.    LOULS — SS. 
District   Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
E.    P.    Ale.\ander, 

Plaintiff, 
*^ 

I..  B.  -\rnold,  C.  M.  Hill  Lumber 
Company,  a  corporation,  and 
Duluch  &  Iron  Range  Rail- 
road Company,  a  corporation, 
and  also  all  persons  «)r 
parties  unknown.  claiming 
any  right,  title,  estate,  lien  or 
interest  in  the  real  estate  de- 
scribed in  the  complaint 
herein. 

Defendant.". 
Notice  Is  hereby  given,  that  an  action 
has  been  commenced  in  this  court  by 
the  above  named  pialniiff  against  the 
above  named  defendants,  the  object  of 
which  is  to  obcain  a  judgment  that 
said  plaintiff  Is  the  owner  in  fee  of 
the  following  described  real  property, 
and  that  said  defendants  and  each  of 
them  have  no  estate  or  Interest  therein 
or  Hen  thereon:  The  Northwest  quar- 
ter of  the  Northwest  <iuarter  (NW\4 
of  NW'4)  of  Section  Twenty-one  (21), 
Township  Fifty-nine  (59)  North  of 
ICange  Fourteen  (14)  West  of  the  4th 
P.  M..  St.  l^ouls  County.  Minnesota. 
Dated  March  12,  1909. 

J.  A.   SINCLAIR. 
Attorn«y   for   Plaintiff, 
709   Lonsdale   Bldg..    Duluth.    Minn. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald — March    17-23- 
30.    Feb.    6-13-20,    1909. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909. 


11 


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The 

Baking  Powder 

Story  in  a  nut-shelL 

/Adulteration         \  Cheap 
Impurity  >  Baking 

Unhealthfulness  )  Powder 


CMICAOO 


High  Price 
IndifFerent  Leavening 
Residue  of  Rochelle  Salts 

Most  Leavening  Power 
Purest  Ingredients 
Moderate  Price 


Trust 

Baking 

Powder 

CALUMET 

BAKING 

POWDER 


m  TiHiE  mm  Mi^ 


Received  Highest  Award 

World's  Pure  Food  Expo«itiott 

Chicago,  1907. 


PRINTING 


of  ihe  better  class  is  a  feature  of  our 
business.    Give  us  a  trial  order. 

MERRITT  &  HECTOR,  Priniers 

"SUSU  ORDERS  A  PLEASURE" 
Both  Phones  30-32  Hesi  First  Street 


NURSE  WILL 
BE  EMPLOYED 

Active  Campaign  Against 

White  Plague  Begun 

in  DulutJL 


DEMO(  RATS  WILL  BIND 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


Churches    and    Labor 

Unions  Are  Asked 

to  Aid. 


At  the  meeting  of  the  Commercial 
club  of  the  Duluth  anti-tuberculosis 
committee  last  evening,  plans  were 
outlined  for  the  work  of  the  commit- 
tee during  the  present  year.  It  was 
decided  cat  a  vlsitiiif;  nuise  should 
be  engragcd  ^l  'i  salary  of  %\o  a  month 
and  liiat  the  auty  of  this  nurse  should 
be  to  visit  and  care  for  the  consump- 
tives of  the  city  who  come  under  the 
notice   of   the   committee. 

This  nuis«'  will  be  one  who  has  had 
cxptricnci-  in  the  work.  It  is  not  the 
Intention  of  the  members  of  the  com- 
mittee to  have  pauper  cases  of  tuber- 
culosis treated.  Dr.  II  L.  Tuohy.  who 
has  I. ad  experience  with  work  of  this 
nature,  pointed  out  to  the  members  of 
th«  committee  that  it  had  not  been 
found  practical  to  treat  these  cases  in 
this  wav,  and  that  arrangements  had 
Iv-en  made  with  the  poor  farm  for  the 
care  of  consumptives  who  have  no 
hornes.  „.    ^ 

The  Duluth  committee  will  be  part 
of  the  state  organization.  As  such  it 
w^lll  contribute  part  of  Its  funds  to 
the  state  ttrganization,  but  will  not 
contribute  tunds  that  have  been  spe- 
ciallv  contributed  to  the  local  orsjan- 
IzatloM.  The  memberslilp  fee  of  the 
organization  was  fixed  at  $1.  and  it  is 
evpecttd  that  over  1,000  members  will 
be  secured  from  among  the  business 
men  of  this  city.  A  special  committee 
will   ca'.vass   the  city  for  members. 

It  is  believed  that  churches,  labor 
unions  lodges,  and  organizations  of 
everv  nature,  will  lend  every  assist- 
ance' to  U-a  work  of  the  committee. 

B  P.  Ntff  t.-j  the  president  of  the 
Duluth  organization.  The  work  is  now 
lipon  a  businesslike  basis,  and  from 
now  on  tlie  work  of  caring  for  the  con- 
sumptives of  the  city  will  be  in  the 
Jiands  of   competent   persons. 

Progress  was  reported  upon  the  bill 
before  the  state  legislature,  providing 
for  the  construction  of  a  county  sani- 
tarium for  consumptives,  and  the 
members  of  the  executive  committee 
were  In.stmct'd  to  keep  in  touch  with 
the  bill.  The  future  meetings  of  the 
comii'ittee  will  be  held  at  noon,  so  that 
more  of  the  members  of  the  general 
committee  can  be  present.  No  date 
has  been  set   for  the  next  meeting. 

Following  are  the  standing  commit- 
tees : 

Finance — P.  S.  Annecke.  G.  G.  Hart- 
ley. B.  G.  Seg'og,  \V.  D.  Underbill,  John 
G.'  VVilllams.  „    ,       ._  -r, 

I.egl.'«lation — George  K.  I.Aybourn,  R. 
F.  Grant,  Dr.  David  Graham,  R.  E. 
l)»-tiff-l.l.   H.   V.   Eva. 

Publicity — C.    S.    Mitchell,    J.    S.    Par- 
dee.  S.    H.    Bingham.  George   M.    .Jensen. 
Sanatorium  site — T.  W.   Hugo.  Dr.  TV. 
R      Baglev.     Dr.    John    Jackola,    George 
&I    Gray.    Mrs.   J.    L..    Washburn. 

Membership — The  whole  organiza- 
tion. 

Committee  of  Management — The  ex- 
ecutive  committee. 


approval  of  assignments  with  Mr. 
Clark. 

During  the  debate  on  this  resolu- 
tion the  alleged  noit  of  Democrat.s  was 
discus.sed.  Representative  Kellhar  of 
Massacliusetts  defended  his  course  In 
voting   for   the   Fitzgerald  ameiulnients. 

"Mv  people  wanted  some  relief  from 
those"  rules,  and  I  was  willing  to  give 
them   what   I  could  get."   he  declared. 

Questions  were  asked  of  him  from 
several  members*  and  finally  the  Massa- 
ciiusetts   man   shouted; 

•The  I>omacratic  party  will  not 
amount  to  much  until  it  gets  more  men 
from    ilie  North   In   it."  ..  ^,     .   , 

Representative  Harrison  said  that  he 
believed  he  was  not  bolting  In  voting 
for   the    Fitzgerald    amendment. 

•'I  would  vote  the  same  way  under 
similar  circumstances."  he  added.  'Buc 
I  am  alwavs  willing  to  abide  by  the 
caucus  of  mv  party.  I  attended  tlie 
caucus  Monday  night  that  adopted  the 
resolution  placing  with  the  minority 
leader  the  approval  of  all  committee 
assignments  of  Democrats.  I  shall 
abide  by  that  action."  He  was  greeted 
with  loud  applause.  ^       .    , 

Iiepresentative  Broussard  attended 
the  caucus  but  did  not  speak.  Repre- 
sentative Fitzgerald  was  not  present. 
There    were    i:!7    members    present. 

Another  caucus  will  be  held  March 
22  to  act  on  the  rules  to  govern  future 
meetings   of   the   Democratic   members. 


HIBBING  QUIET 
AFTER  ELECTION 

Gambling  Is  Thing  of 

Past  and  Everyone 

Awaits  Spring. 

Hlbblng,  Minn.,  March  K.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Hlbbing  Is  enjoying 
a  quiet  spell  after  election.  There  is 
no    gambling    whatever   going    on. 

Everybody  seems  to  be  waiting  for 
spring,  the  first  signs  of  which  ap- 
peared the  other  day  with  the  advent 
of   several    tramps. 

Chief  Wring  of  the  local  police  force 
is    in    Duluth    on    business. 

Peter  Bardesson  has  been  in  Two 
Harbors   on    business,   the   past   week. 

A  young  man  suffering  from  de- 
lirium tremens  was  brought  to  Hlbbing 
from  Chisholm  last  evening.  Owing 
to  his  condition,  it  was  Impossible  to 
ascertain  his  correct  name.  He  was 
taken  to  Duluth  this  morning  by  Dep- 
utv    Sheriff    Donahue. 

The  flKbt  sclieduled  for  tonight  be- 
tween Whitehead  and  Shreck  has  been 
declared    off. 

Invitations  are  out  for  a  party  to 
be  given  at  the  home  of  Miss  Frances 
Kleffman.    tomorrow    evening. 

Dr.  Blacklock.  who  left  several 
months  ago  for  an  extensive  trip 
I  through   Europe,  returned  home  yester 

M.  H.  Godfrey,  the  new  superintend- 
ent of  the  Ohisholm  district  of  the 
Oliver  Iron  Mining  company,  is  In  Du- 
luth  on    business. 

Dr.    J.    W.    and    Thomas    Dryden 
yesterday    for    Ontario,    (.'anada 
sponse    to    a    telegram, 
burial    services    of 


ek..was  held  yes- 
erment  was  made 
Rev.    Davtd 


left 
in  re- 
to  attend  the 
their  father. 
Mrs.  R.  J.  Brown,  who  lias  been  vis- 
iting her  daughter.  Mrs.  F.  F.  \N  le, 
has  returned  to  her  home  in  Reed 
City.    Mich. 


SDPT.CHAS.  YOUNG 
IS  GOING  SOUTH 

Popular  Head  of  Hlbbing 

Schools  Will  Seek 

Milder  Climate. 


to 


CHARGE  TO  THE  JURY 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


had  been  done,  as  a  reasonable  person 
would  have  regained  self-control,  and 
a  killing  under  these  circumstance* 
woulci  be  deemed  by  the  law  malicious 
and  rot  the  result  of  provocation,  and, 
th'iefore.  murder.  In  other  words.  If 
tiitre  had  been  sufficient  time  for  the 
pa.vsion  to  cool  the  provocation  will  not 
miiiKate  a  subsequent  killing  to  man- 
slaughter. ,     ^. 

"The  question  Is  not  whether  the 
blow  actually  struck  in  the  contin- 
uance of  passion,  but  whether  there 
had  been  a  reasonable  time  for  the 
passion  to  cool  In  the  case  of  any 
ordinary  person.  This  must  depend 
upon  the  circumstances  of  the  parti- 
cular case   under  Investigation. 

"Involuntary  manslaughter  is  a  case 
of  killing  where  it  plainly  appears 
that  death  was  not  intended,  but  was 
the   result   of  some   unlawful   act. 

"You  enter  upon  this  investigation 
with  the  presumption  that  the  defend- 
ant Is  not  guilty  of  any  crime,  and  this 
presumption  stands  as  a  witness  for 
him  until  it  is  rebutted  and  overturn- 
ed by  competent  and  creditable  proof, 
sufficiently  strong  to  satisfy  you  be- 
yond a  reasonable  doubt  that  the  de- 
fendant is  guilty  of  some  one  of  the 
offenses  which  have  been  heretofore 
defined  and  explained  to  you." 


Hlbbing,  Minn..  March  17. — (Special 
The  Herald.) — Supt.  Charles  E. 
Young  of  the  public  schools  has  handed 
in  ills  resignation  to  take  effect  at  the 
close  of  the  present  school   term. 

Mr.  Young.  who  came  to  Hlbbing 
about  four  years  ago.  has  done  much 
to  increase  the  attendance  and  also 
toward    the    building    of    new    schools. 

Mr.  Youngs  decision  to  resign  came 
as  a  great  surprise  to  liis  many  friends. 
He  and  Mrs.  Young  have  been  very 
popular  socially  lind  will  be  sadly 
missed.  Mr.  Young  has  not  as  yet  de- 
cided upon  his  future  home,  but  owing 
to  his  poor  health,  will  seek  a  milder 
climate. 

DROPS  DEAD  IN  SALOON. 

John  Suanson  of  Chisholm  Dies  in 
Brother's  Establishment. 

Clilsholm,  Minn..  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  funeral  of  John 
Swanson,  who  died  Saturday  niglit  In 
the  saloon  of  LundquLst  &  Swanson. 
took  place  yesterday  afternoon.  The 
deceased  was  a  brother  of  -'V.  Swanson 
of  the  firm  owning  the  saloon  In  which 
he    died.      He    died    of    heart    failure. 

State  examinations  are  being  held  at 
the  local  schools  this  -week. 

The  girls  basketball  team  of  the 
local  high  school  will  go  to  Rveleth 
Saturdav  to  plav  the  team  of  that  city. 

The  dance  given  Friday  night  at 
Karl's  hall  by  the  Chisholm  Athletic 
association  was  well  attended.  Music 
was  furnished  bv  tlie  Heine's  orchestra. 


Wednesda.v  of  last 
terdn.v  afternoon.     If 
in    Greenwood      centatey?, 
Castren   ofiiciating. 

The  remains  of  Harry  Furey,  who 
died  here  .Sunday  afternoon,  was  taken 
to  Ashland  today  for  burial.  The  de- 
ceased was  about  *3t  -years  old  and 
single.  He  had  been  engaged  running 
a  stationary  engin*^  fty  the  Duluth, 
Rainy  Lake  &  Winitlpea  Railway  com. 
pany.  Henry  Rotell.  a\  uncle  of  the 
deceased,  came  up  from  West  Duluth 
and  took  charge  of  the  p^mains. 

DR.  KNAUFF  IS 
CHOSEN  MAYOR 

Independent  Candidate  Is 

Elected   Mayor  of 

Two  Harbors. 

Two  Harbors.  Minn..  March  17. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald) — By  a  plura- 
lity of  24  votes  over  Essen,  candidate 
for  mayor  on  the  City  ticket.  Dr.  N.  K. 
Knauff.  nominee  on  the  Independent 
ticket,  was  yesterday  elected  mayor 
of  this  city.  Rose,  the  candidate  of 
the  Public  Ownership  or  Socialist 
party,  was  37  votes  belilnd  the  winner, 
the  Socialists  failing  to  poll  as  large 
a    vote    as    they    expected. 

Others  elected  were:  Thomas  Martin, 
treasurer;  W.  D.  Woodward  and  T.  K. 
Phillips,  Justices;  August  Tabor,  as- 
sessor; F.  E.  Svans,  Jolin  Norien  and 
A.    O.    Hulberg,    aldermen-at-large. 

The  ward  aldermen  elected  are:  First 
ward.  L.  P.  Christenson;  Second.  J.  W. 
Brownell;  Third.  J.  T.  Engstrom; 
Fourth.    E.    N.    Owens. 

The  vote  was  as  follows:  For  mayor. 
Knauff,  Independent.  263;  Essen.  City 
tickt  239;  Rose,  Socialist.  226;  treas- 
urer.' Martin.  h^%\  Justices.  Woodward. 
390,  Phillips  377.  Holiday  243;  asses- 
sor. Tabor  2'(o,  Johnson  .249;  aldermen- 
at-large.  Evans  411..  Hajberg  333.  Pa- 
per 272,  Anderson  Z^^>.  Peterson  193. 
Norien  346.  Bower  2G0:  aldermen  by 
wards:  First.  Christenson  9S.  Rolef  58: 
Second,  first  precinct.  Brownell  113. 
second  precinct.  Brownell  82;  Third 
ward.  Engstrom  97.  Borgren  72;  Fourth 
ward.   Owens   132.   Wvstliind  74. 

SAVE  HORSES  FROM 
BEING  CREMATED 

Twelve   Animals    Have 

Close  Call  in  Eveleth 

Livery  Fire. 

Eveleth,  .Minn..  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Twelve  horses  came 
near  being  cremated,  early  this  morn- 
ing, when  fire  was  discovered  in  Wll- 
sons  livery  barn,  and  the  animals  were 
led    to    safety. 

Four  men.  who  were  going  home 
about  2  a.  m..  saw  smoke  pouring  from 
the  barn  and.  after  turning  in  an 
alarm,  dashed  Inside  and  led  out  the 
horses.  The  various  rigs  were  also 
pulled  out.  The  fir*  department  found 
a  big  blaze  in  the  hay  In  the  loft,  that 
lad  probably  been" started  by  tramps, 
and  sojn  had  the  fire  extinguished,  al- 
tliougl!  It  was  railici-*cyrtic«lt  to  get  at. 

The  total  loss  will  not  exceed  $200. 
If  the  men  returning  home  had  not 
discovered  the  fire,  the  horses  would 
probably  have  perished. 


DULUTH, 

Superior  St.  and 
First  Av».  W. 


SUPERIOR. 

Cor.  Tower  Ave. 
and  Broadway. 


HE  W  SPRING  SUITS  I 

We  are  showing  a  very  attractive  line  of  Tailored  Suits  in 
strictly  tailored  as  well  a.s  slightly  fancy  trimmed  models,  in  Seiges, 
Worsteds  and  Novelty  fabrics.     These  models  are  correct  in  e/ery 

detail    Priced  at  $22.50,  $25.00,  $29.50,  $32.50 

Other  swell  models  are  shown  in  Dame  Fashion's  most  recent 
creations,  ranging  in  price  from 

$35.00  to  $50.00  and  Upwards 


ing  in  price 


SEPARATE  SKIRTS 

show  present  splendid  values  in  1 
1  all  the  wanted  shades,  fabrics  ai 

From  $5.00  Upwards 


The  lines  we  show  present  splendid  values  in  the  latest  modes. 
We  have  them  in  all  the  wanted  shades,  fabrics  and  lengths,  rang- 


The  Display  of 

Spring  M/W/nery 

For  early  wear,  hundreds  of  beautiful 
Hats  at  $5.00,  $6.50,  $7.50  and 
$10.00  awaits  you 

Many  of  them  exact  copies  of 
French  models  from  the  most  famous 
artists.  Also  scores  of  original  Hats, 
made  by  our  own  clever  staff  of  mil- 
liners. It's  an  informal  showing.  Yoit 
are  invited. 


New  Laces, 

Embroideries, 

Dress  Nets 

and   Veilings 

Are  being  placed  on  the 
counters  as  this  notice  is 
being  written  and  will  be 
on  sale  tomorrow — crisp, 
beautiful  new  goods,  and 
marked  to  sell  at  prices 
lower  than  you'd  ever  ex- 
pect to  get  them  for. 


NE  W  SILKS  and  DRESS  GOODS 

Women  who  have  their  dresses  made  to  fit 
their  special  needs  and  desires  are  lavish  in 
praise  of  the  styles  and  values,  which  w;e  arc 
selling  here  this  Spring.  Special  attention  is 
called  to  the  beautiful  lines  of  Foulards,  which 
we  show  in  the  choicest  designs  (of  the  spot 
proof  quality)  at  TS*',  85^  *rnd  $1.00,  also 
to  the  much  wanted  satins  ard  Mess.ilines  in 
all  the  newest  shades,  at  75<  md  $1.00. 

The  splendid  values  we  are  selling  in  Wool 
Dress  Goods  is  adding  to  our  reputation  as 
popular  priced  leaders.  The  novelty  and  plain 
Serges,  Prunella  cloths,  Taffetas  and  Mohairs, 
which  we  show  at  SOf,  75^  and  J^l.OO.  can't 
be  equaled  anywhere.  Come  and  see  if  they 
can. 


New 

Waists 

The  most  beautiful 
showing  of  all  thafs 
desirable  in  silk,  net, 
linen  oi  cotton,  for 
practical,  every  day 
wear  or  for  elaborate 
dress  occasions,  rang- 
ing in  price  from 

$1.00  to  $25.00 

are  nov/   on  display. 


New  Jewelry 

Belt  Pins.  Buckles,  Neck  Pins 
and  Hat  Pins.  There  are  hirge 
new  shapes  in  the  Hat  Pins  to 
match   with   the   Belt  Pins. 


New  Gloves 

Our  Spring  order  of  tbe  famous 
Kayser  Gloves  is  here,  also  new 
chamois  ones,  in  cream  and  white. 


New  Neckfixings 

stylish,  dainty  Stocks.  Jabots. 
Ruchings,  Ties  and  Collars  have 
just   been  opened. 


CATTLE  BUYER  KILLED 

RUNMNT.  FROM  STEER. 


Lafayette.  Ind..  March  17. — The  body 
of  George  E.  Lyon,  a  cattle  buyer,  ac- 
cidentally shot  and  killed  on  a  :arm 
north  of  this  city,  has  been  brought 
here  In  an  automobile.  Lyon  was 
watching  the  shooting  of  steers  by 
Frank  Weaver  late  yesterday.  One 
steer  only  wounded,  madly  cliarged 
Weaver,  and,  in  his  elTort  to  escape, 
the  trigger  of  lils  ritle  caught  on  a 
fence.  The  gun  was  discharged  and 
the  bullet  struck  Lyon,  killing  him  in- 
stantly. 

—• 

>Ve9«tou    Mill    Wnlkine. 

Newburgh.  N.  Y..  March  17. — After 
an  eight-hour  rest  at  Flshklll.  Edward 
Payson  Weston  set  out  from  there 
early  todav  on  the  third  stage  of  his 
tramp  from  New  York  to  San  Fran- 
cisco. He  announced  his  intention  of 
making  Hudson  tonight's  resting  place. 
Weston  was  somewhat  behind  his 
schedule  when  he  started  today,  muddy 
roads  having  hindered  him. 


BURY  WAR  VETERAN. 


(ieorge  (oehrane.  Who  Died  hi  Hib- 
biiig  Interred  at  Rapids. 

Grand  Rapids.  Minn..  March  17. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Tlie  funeral 
of  George  Cochrane,  a  veteran  of  the 
Civil  war  and  former  resident  of  this 
place,  who  died  suddenly  last  Saturday 
night  at  Hlbbing.  where  he  was  run- 
ning an  employment  agency,  was  held 
vesterdav  from  the  Episcopal  church 
The  Red" Men  and  G.  A.  K.  attended  the 
funeral,  the  former  participating  In 
the  exercises.  A  son,  Harold  Coch- 
rane, and  a  daughter,  Mrs.  T.  R.  Bettz, 
reside  in  this  city.  The  wife  of  tlie 
deceased  died  in  this  city  last  summer. 


BOOKKEEPER  1\  TROl  BLE. 


Quicker 
Tourist 
Car 
Service 


Rock 
Islafid 


To  California 

Than  via  any  other  southern   route. 

Car  runs  daily  via  El  Paso — through  New 
Mexico — the  quick  way  and  line  of  lowest  al- 
titudes. 

Another  good  route  is  through  Colorado — 
the  scenic  line. 

Very  Loiv  Fares 

will  be  in  effect  daily  during 

March  andApril 

to  Los  Angeles  and  San  Francisco,  North 
Pacific  Coast  and  to  many  intermediate  points 
west.  Only  $31.75  from  St.  Paul  and  Min- 
neapolis for  one-way  ticket  to  California,  with 
correspondingly  low  fares  to  other  points. 
Stop-overs  allowed.  Tickets  good  in  Rock 
Island  tourist  cars  upon  payment  of  berth 
rate. 

Full  information,  with  copy  of  folder, 
"Across  the  Continent  in  a  Tourist  Sleeping 
Car,"  on  request.  » 

W.  L.  HATHAWAY, 

Dis.  Hass.  Agt. 

Minneapolis,  Minn. 


Warrant  Out  for  Mark  De  Long,  Ac- 
cused of  Embezzlement. 

Hlbbing.  Minn.,  March  17. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mark  De  Long,  for- 
merly of  the  Itasca  Mercantile  com- 
pany, and  later  employed  by  the  Ru- 
dolph Weeding  company  as  bookkeep- 
er, is  accused  in  a  warrant  just  issued 
of  embezzling  JIOO.  De  Long.,  who 
.has  been  drinking  quite  heavily  of 
late,  was  reported  as  last  seen  in  Su- 
perior. He  lias  any  number  of  friends 
here  who  are  sincerely  sorry  for  him. 
and  who  will,  no  doubt,  adjust  mat- 
ters satisfactorily  for  him  in  a  few 
days. 

ARE  GIVEN  OATHS. 


The  Newly  Elected  Hibbing  Officials 
Are  Sworn  In. 

Hlbbing.  \flnn.,  March  17.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — President  Wurick. 
Recorder  Gaudsey.  Trustees  Ausley. 
McHardy  and  Butchart.  the  fortunate 
candidate  in  the  recent  village  election, 
were  sworn  in  last  night  by  Judge  T. 
F.    Brady. 

EVELETH  SPEAKERS  WILL 
ADDRESS  OTHER  AUDIENCES 


PATRON  SAINT 
WELL  HONORED 

Ireland's   Patron   Saint 
Subject  of  Eloquent  Ad- 
dress in  Eveleth. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  17. — (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.) — Tl^  St.  Patrick's  en- 
tertainment, given  last  niglit  at  Vail 
hall,  was  attended  by  a  large  audience. 
Every  seat  was  taken,  while  standing- 
room    was  at  a  premium. 

The  program  was  opened  by  a  selec- 
tion by  the  Fayal  band,  and  musical 
numbers  were  tlien  given  l)y  a  chorus 
of  mi.xed  voices,  singing,  "Come  Back 
to  Erin."  Miss  Josephine  Sterle  gave  a 
splendid  piano  number.  "Wild  Ride." 
Siie  had  to  respond  to  an  encore.  Rev. 
Father  Floyd  of  St.  Patrick's  church, 
who  had  charge  of  the  entertainment, 
.sang  "The  Wearing  of  the  Green,"  to 
the  great  delight  of  the  audience.  The 
audience    demanded    an    encore. 

A  song  by  Miss  Gertrude  De  Noble 
was  one  of  the  best  musical  numbers 
of  the  evening.  She,  also,  had  to  re- 
spond to  an  encore.  A  string  quar- 
tet, composed  of  A.  E.  Schneider,  first 
violin;  Miss  Margaret  Murphy,  second 
violin;  Miss  Bessie  Murphy,  cellist,  and 
Miss  Josepliine  Murphy,  harpist,  then 
gave  two  numbers,  one  of  which  was 
"Hungarian   Dance." 

CItv  Attorney  James  Boyle  was  then 
introduced  by  Father  Floyd  to  deliver 
the  address  of  the  evening.  Mr.  Boyle 
told  of  the  greatness  of  Ireland  before 
the  English  invaders  had  ravaged  it. 
He  paid  a  tribute  to  St.  Patrick. 
Schools  and  colleges  were  started  by 
St.  Patrick  and  missionaries  were  sent 
forth  from  Ireland  to  educate  the  peo- 
ple of  Europe.  He  said  that  the  Irish- 
man should  be  proud  of  his  ancestors. 
The  hatred  between  the  Englishman 
and  the  Irishman,  the  speaker  said, 
was  dying  out.  The  leaders  in  Eng- 
land are  beginning  to  see  the  justice 
of  the  Irish  demands.  There  is  hope 
that  the  old  nationality,  language  and 
customs  will  be  revived;  that  the  dread 


disease  will  soon  be  stamped  out.  He 
told  of  the  various  leagues  which  are 
trying  to  accomplish  by  thorough  and 
quiet  means  those  ends.  The  speaker 
lauded  the  great  things  done  by  Irish- 
men in  the  Revolutionary  war  and  of 
the  society  called  "The  Friendly  fcons 
of  St  Patrick."  From  a  careful  study 
of  the  situation.  Mr.  Boyle  said  the 
time  Is  not  far  distant  wlien  the  Irish- 
man will  have  life,  liberty  and  all  tiiat 
goes  with  that,  and  that  home  rule 
will  be  granted  to  them  by  the  Eng- 
lish   people.  ,         .   . 

The  program  was  then  clo.sea  by  a 
number  of  musical  selections,  a  cornet 
solo  by  Mr.  Osborn  and  some  string 
numbers. 

COLERAINE  CELEBRATION. 

Memory  of  St.  Patrick  >M11  be  Hon- 
ored Wednesday  Evening. 

Coleralne.  Minn..  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  concert  In  honor 
of  St.  Patrick  will  be  given  In  the  high 
school  auditorium  this  evening  under 
the  direction  of  O.  Wiggins  of  Duluth. 
Those  who  will  participate  are  Miss 
Donna  Louise  Riblette.  soprano:  C.  L. 
Paul,  basso;  Dr.  Emll  Bromund.  bari- 
tone. Miss  Nellie  Brown  and  Mrs.  N.  I. 
Shaftlg.    solo    pianists. 

Tlie   program    follows: 
Piano   solo— Dev.    Frelrchutr    ■•■•■■•■ 

Mrs.  N.  I.  .Shaftlg 

Pro'lounge   from    Pagliaccl   ..Leoncavelio 
Dr.     Emil    Bromund. 

Chanson   Provencale    Del  Acqua 

Miss    Donna   Louise    Riblette. 

Solo    **•'•  '^'*"  Ryan 

"Hear  Me  Ye     Winds     and   Waves" — 
Rect.    and      aria    from       Siipio    by 

Handel    .C.  L..  Paul 

Piano    solo— "Polonaise    in    A    major 

Chopin 

Miss    Nellie    Brown. 

Dio  possente   dio   D'Amour    .Gounod  s 

Faust • 

Dr.    Emll    Bromund. 

(a)  "Stars"  France  Leoni 

(b)     'O  Come  With   Me  in  a  Sum- 
mer Night"    ....Von   Der  Sticken 
Miss    Donna    Louise    Riblette. 

"The   Garden   by   the  S<»ea"    Lloyd 

C.   L.    Paul. 


the  firemen  Insisted  that  tie  manage- 
ment of  the  hotel  fix  the  chimney,  so 
as  to  prevent  a  recurrence  of  the 
trouble. 


MRS.LFRE1MUTH 
DIES  IN  THE  WEST 


Body  Will  be  Brought 

Here  From  Red  lands 

for  Burial. 

Mrs.  Caroline  Freimuth,  wife  of 
I.,ouis  Freimuth  of  this  city,  passed 
away  at  Redlands,  last  Fr  day.  March 
12.  Her  husband  is  bringing  the  body 
here  from  Redlands  for  burial.  He  is 
expected  to  arrive  here  tomorrow  at 
2  p.  m.  If  the  train  Is  on  lime  the  body 
will  be  taken  to  Woodlai.d  cemetery 
for  burial  on  arrival  of  the  train.  The 
funeral  services  will  be  icld  at  the 
cemetery. 


IRON  ORE  TONNACiE  TAX 


(Continued  from  pai:e  1.) 


Eveleth,  Minn..  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Assistant  County  At- 
torney James  Boyle,  who  delivered  the 
address  at  last  night's  St.  Patrick's  en- 
tertainment at  Vail  hall,  left  today  for 
West  Duluth.  where  he  will  tonight 
deliver  an  address  at  a  similar  enter- 
tainment. Rev.  Father  Floyd  of  St. 
Patricks  church,  who  had  charge  of 
the  entertainment,  left  today  for  Su- 
perior, where  he  will  talk  tonight  at  a 
St.    Patrick's    entertainment. 


BURY  TRAIN  VICTIM. 

Man  Killed   by  Iron  Range  Train, 
Interred  at  Virginia. 

Virginia.  Minn..  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  funeral  of  Jakob 
Kosola.  who  was  killed  by  a  train  on 
the     Duluth     &     Iron     Range     road     on 


IWSPEPSIA 

^^^  AND    MANV    OTHCR 

Serious  Aihneuts 

"""Hodol 

It  really  doesn't  seem  sensible  for 
anyone  to  neglect  disrestive  derang-e- 
ments  until  they  develop  into  or  lead  to 
diseases  that  may  be  incurable.  Kodol 
prevents  dyspepsia  and  other  serious  ail- 
ments by  giving  the  stomach  effective 
aid  in  its  processes  of  digestion— thus 
making  and  keeping  the  stomach  wel^, 
St  rung  and  active.  And  when  you  have  a 
BOundstomach,you  need  not  worry  about 
dyspepsia,  or  what  it  leads  to.  Kodol  will 
mighty  soon  bring  stomach-comfort. 

Our  Guarantee.  ^^  Soi.'^n 

you  are  not  benefited  — the  drustfist  will  at 
once  return  your  money.  Don't  hesitate;  any 
drutfirist  will  sell  you  Kodol  on  these  term.*}. 
The  dollar  bottle  contitiDS  2jj  times  as  much 
as  the  500  bottle.  Kodol  Is  prepared  in  the 
labordtories  of  E.  C.  DeWitt  &  Co.,  Chicaeo. 


MILLER  TROPHY  ( ONTEST 
CONCLUDED  AT  VIRGINIA. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  March  17.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  Miller  trophy 
contest  closed  at  the  curling  rink  Mon- 
day evening.  Gill's  boys  were  victor- 
ious and  were  each  presented  with  a 
handsome  moss  agate  miniature  curl- 
ing stone  watch  charm  put  up  for  the 
contest    by    Dr.    C.    W.    Miller. 

Beginning  Monday  evening  a  contest 
is  on  between  President  Dr.  C.  a.  l.e- 
nont  and  Vice  President  Norman  Mc- 
Donald, who  have  each  selected  rinks, 
the  losers  of  the  contest  to  provide  a 
banquet   for   the   winners. 

Surer   I.aBda   Smith    In   Jail. 

Hibbing.  Minn.,  March  17. — (.Special 
to  The  Herald.)— John  Smith,  who  has 
been  employed  at  several  of  the  hotels 
and  restaurants  here  become  intoxi- 
cated last  night  and  is  accused  of 
stealing  an  overcoat.  He  was  taken  to 
the    village    lockup    by    Officer    Albert 

Bieder. 

« 

Threr  Sentenced  to  Die. 

Vladikavkaz,  Russia,  "March  17. — A 
sergeant  of  police  and  two  policemen 
were  sentenced  to  death  here  today  for 
the  recent  murder  of  a  rich  nobleman, 
named  Tekarieff. 

■ 

MetliodlMtH    In    Conference. 

Sedalia.  Mo..  Marcli  17— The  forty- 
first  annual  session  of  the  M.  Louis 
conference  of  the  Methodist  Episcopal 
church  convened  here  today.  Bishop 
W  F  Anderson  of  Chattanooga.  Tenn., 
nresUilng.  The  meeting  will  end  Mon- 
day Over  250  ministers  from  bouth- 
ernand  Western  states  are  present. 

TWO  FIRES  FROM 
SAME  CHIMNEY 


was  a  narrow  squeak  for  both  bills,  as 
it    lakes    60    votes    to    carry    a    bill. 

•      «      * 

Representatives  Gartside.  Virtue, 
Grant  and  Wohlunder  this  morning  In- 
troduced a  bill  allowing  baseball  games 
between  1  nd  6  p.  m.  on  Sunday,  if 
they  are  conducted  in  a  quiet  manner. 
«      •      * 

Tlie  senate  reapportionment  commit- 
tee lias  directed  the  preparation  of  a 
bill  reducing  the  senate  from  si.vty- 
three  to  forty-nine  membeis,  and  leav- 
ing the  house  as  It  is.  but  giving  at 
least  one  member  to  each  county,  ex- 
cept Cook.  The  chance  "or  the  pas- 
sage of  a  reapportionment  bill,  how- 
ever. Is   very  small. 

«      *      « 

Representative  McGrath  had  his  bill 
retiuiring  railroads  to  pay  damages  to 
property,  when  they  abanlon  lines  of 
roads,  indetinitely  postponed  when  the 
railroad  committee  reported  it  in 
without    recommendation. 

Hi  «  « 

The  house  committee  on  general  leg- 
islation recommended  for  passage  the 
bill  allowing  the  governor  to  remove 
mayors  for  malfeasance  or  nonfeasance 
in  office. 

*  •      * 

Representative  Congdon  of  Duluth 
offered  a  bill  this  morning  authorizing 
cities  of  the  first  class  to  construct 
roads  and  parkways  outsile  their  cor- 
porate  limits. 

*  *      • 

Senator  C  A.  Johnson  offered  a  bill 
in  the  senate  authorizin;?  public  aid 
to  associations  of  citizen.'^,  whether  in 
corporated  or  not,  who  ccnstruct  pub- 
lic   highways    or    transportation    lines. 


as  follows:  From  townships.  11.000 
per  mile:  from  the  state.  $1,000  per 
mile;  and  from  the  counties.  11.000  per 
mile,  ^he  issuance  of  bonds  for  thla 
purpose    is    allowed. 

•  •       * 

The  phvsical  examination  of  pupils 
in  the  public  schools  in  each  of  the 
three  large  cities  of  the  state  is  au- 
thorized by  a  bill  introduced  in  the 
senate  tliis  morning  by  Senator  El- 
well    of    Minneapolis. 

*  *       • 

Senator  Smith  of  Minneapolis  pro- 
posed, in  a  bill  offered  today,  a  set  of 
rules  of  the  road  for  use  on  the  lakes 
and    streams    of    Minnesota    to    prevent 

collisions. 

•  ♦      • 

Senator  Sundberg  introduced  a  reso- 
lution in  the  senate,  which  was  unani- 
mously passed  under  suspension  of  the 
rules  inviting  the  North  Dakota  men 
who  have  been  approved  to  sit  with 
the  Minnesota  boards  of  grain  appeals, 
participate  In  their  deliberations  and 
urging  the  state  officers  concerned  to 
give    tliem   every   possible  facility. 

*  •      • 

The  following  bills  came  in:  Sen- 
ate forestry  committee,  state  tax  of  a 
tenth  of  a  mill  for  forestry  purposes; 
Senator  Nelson,  prohibiting  pawnbrok- 
ers from  accepting  pledges  from 
minors;  Senator  Nelson,  state  tax  of  a 
tenth  of  a  mill  to  help  tuberculosis 
patients  in  hospitals,  camps  and  sani- 
tariums: Representative  Thayer,  tax- 
ing tlie  income  from  mortgages  10  per 
cent;  Representative  Wasliburn.  creat- 
ing a  state  commission  to  inquire  into 
the  operation  of  the  indeterminate  sen- 
tence plan  in  other  states;  Representa- 
tive Doyle,  appropriating  flOO.OOO  for  a 
state  quarry  at  the  St.  Cloud  reforma- 
tory, capable  of  employing  a  hundred 
prisoners  in  getting  out  stone:  Repre- 
sentative Rosenwald,  raising  the  tax 
on  fast  freight  line  gross  earnings 
to  8  per  cent;  Representative  W.  H. 
I^utnam,  increasing  the  public  examin- 
er's salary  to  J4,6()0  a  year;  Repre- 
sentative Noble,  regulating  and  re- 
stricting the  issuance  of  prescriptions 
for  liquor  In  dry  communities;  Repre- 
sentative Greene  creating  the  office 
of    state    commls-sioner    of    weights. 

In  recognition  of  St.  Patrick's  day. 
Repr«»sentatlve  Brady  of  St.  Paul  acted 
as  speaker  this  morning,  and  before 
the  opening  of  the  session  he  distrib- 
uted green  carnations  to  members. 
While  he  was  in  the  chair  a  resolution 
was  Introduced  providing  that  here- 
after the  state  capltol  shall  be  painted 
green  on  S^t.  Patrick's  day. 

STl  LI-MAN    H.     BINGHAM. 


BEMIDJI  OFFK  lAL  TO 

FACE  SERIOUS  CHARGES. 


BemidjI.  Minn.,  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mayor  J.  P.  Pogue  at 
Monday's  council  meeting  filed  charges 
against  Street  Commissioner  James  R. 
Miller  and  asked  his  removal  from  of- 
fice, alleging  that  Mr.  Miller  improper- 
ly 'O.  K'd"  bills  for  lumber  and  also 
bills   for  team   work. 

The  council  ordered  the  city  clerk  to 
present  Mr.  Miller  with  a  copy  of 
the  charges  and  also  state  tthat  Mr. 
Miller  would  be  given  a  hearing  Mon- 
day evening,   Marcli  29. 


Fire  Department  Called 
Twice  to  the  Ex- 
change Hotel. 

The  fir.e  department  this  morning 
had  two  runs  to  the  Exchange  hotel, 
112  East  Superior  street,  where,  in  an- 
other fire  six  weeks  ago.  a  fireman 
was  killed  by  bricks  from  a  falling 
chimney. 

The  blazes  this  morning  did  not 
amount  to  anything,  and  were  quickly 
extinguished.  Tliey  were  due  to  a  de- 
fective chimney.  The  nrst  call  rame 
about  6  o'clock,  and  by  the  time  the 
tire  department  reached  the  scene  the 
Hames  had  gained  scarcely  any  head- 
way The  fire  was  pUt  out  and  the  de- 
partment   returned   to   headquarter.s. 

An  hour  later  another  alarm  was 
xounded  from  the  same  place,  and  a 
second  run  was  necessary.  The  fire 
in  this  case  was  due  to  the  same 
cause   as   the   first,   and   before   leaving 


I  In  Clothes  Buying  the 
Thing  to  Consider  Is 
Good  Clothes,  Not 
Cheap  Clothes 

Cheap  clothes  are  usually  well 
paid  for  at  any  price.  Buy  the 
garment  with  the  reputation,  and 
that  has  stood  the  wearing  test. 
The  Gately  Clothes  are  not 
cheap.  They  are  the  hest  on  the 
market  at  a  reasonable  price. 
Give  us  a  chance  to  show  you. 


CREDIT 


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ROCKVILLE  STORE  IS 

VISITED  BY  BURGLARS. 


St.  Cloud.  Minn..  March  17. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — A  me.'^sage  from 
Rockville  says  that  Weisman  Bros.' 
store    there    was    burglarized    Monday 


night,  about  $50  worth  of  property  be- 
ing taken. 

A  watch,  .sseveral  pearl  handled 
knivfs,  some  cigars,  tobacco  and  chew- 
ing gum  were  taken.  There  is  no 
clue. 

Phone  your  want  ads  to  The  Herald. 
Both  phones,  324. 


J^^M-Vafu»^ 


nmm 


IRY  @0, 


330  West  Superior  Street, 
Dulutti,  Minn. 


Pay  Us  $9.85— Wc  Hand  You  $18 

That  is  what  we  will  do  for  our  patrons  tomorrow.  Don't  you 
think  that's  paying  you  pretty  well  for  anticipating  your  jewelry 
wants.  Easter  weddings  will  soon  demand  your  attention.  Why  not 
take  advantage  of  our  clearance  sale  and  save  nearly  half. 

REFINEMENT 

Just  as  the  polish  of  culture  and  good  breeding  lifts  a  man  or 
woman  above  the  common,  so  the  way  this  store  is  managed  and  con- 
ducted lifts  it  above  all  others,  and  makes  it  impartial  in  its  own  dig- 
nified realm,  and  you  may  dream  here,  if  you  will,  that  all  jewels 
speak  a  common  langtiage  and  lead  your  thoughts  away  to  light  and 
music  and  festivities,  to  dinners,  receptions,  operas  and  weddings. 

Come  and  enjoy  these  things,  you  are  always  welcome  at  this 
store.  Tomorrow,  Thursday,  March  18th,  1909 — On  this  day  only,  we 
offer  you  many  articles  in  our  store  marked  in  plain  figures  $18.00, 
for  $9.85.    This  will  give  you — 

Any  $18  Watch  for   . : $9.85 

Any  $18  Chain  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Diamond  Ring  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Diamond  Cuft   Links  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Solid  Gold  Locket  for $9.85 

Any  $18  Solid  Gold  Xtck  Chain  for $9.85 

Any  $18  Marble   Statue   for    $9.85 

Any  $18  Umbrella   for    $9.85 

Any  $18  Sterling  Silver   Manicure  Set  for $9.85 

Any  $18  Set  of  Sterling  Silver  Knives  for $9.85 

Any  $18  Masonic  Charm  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Diamond   Scarf  Pin  for    $9.85 

Any  $18  Diamond   Brooch    for    $9.85 

Any  $18  Set    of    Beauty    Pins    for    $9.85 

Any  $18  Solid  Gold  Cross  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Clock    fof    $9.85 

Any  $18  Piece  of  Cut  Glass  for   $9.85 

Anj;  $18  Piece  of  Sterling  Silver  /or $9.$§ 

Any  $18  Set  of  Sterling  Silver  Tea  Spoon?  foY ,$9-85 

Any  $18  StHr'.ing  Silver  Photo  Frame  for $9.85 

Any  $18  Sheffield  Tray   for    $9.83 

Any  $18  Sterling  Silver  Bread  Tray  for $9.85 

Any  $18  Silver  Depositware  Vase  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Baking  Dish  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Four-piece  Coffee  Set  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Flower  Basket  for    $9.85 

Any  $18  Five-li^ht   Candelabra  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  F'our-piece  Tea  Set  for ^ $9.85 

Any  $18  Hammered  Brass  Tea  Kettle  for... $9.85 

Any  $18  Fruit  Basket  for   $9.85 

Any  $18  Set,  Gold  Incrested  Coffee  Cups  and  Saucers  $9.85 

30  and  33  1-3  per  cent  discount  on  all  articles  above  or  below  $18. 

Hundreds  of  articles  not  mentioned  in  this  space  all  included  in 
the  discount   sale. 


CHANCE  OF 
A  LIFETIME 

Duluth  Should  Not  Fail 

to  Secure  Rodin  Statue, 

Says  House. 

Opportunity  That  Most 

Cities  Would  Be  Eager 

to  Grasp. 


Duluth  will  miss  the  opportunity  of 
a  lifetime  should  the  citizens  refu-se  to 
take  advantage  of  the  opportunity  of 
securinK  a  work  of  liodin,  the  famous 
French   sculptor. 

This  statement  is  an  epitome  of  the 
remarks  made  by  F.  E.  House,  presi- 
dent of  the  Duluth  &  Iron  liange  rail- 
road, before  the  members  of  the  Com- 
mercial club,  at  the  weekly  noon-talk 
today.  Mr.  House  pointed  out  tliat 
the  offer  of  the  great  French  sculptor 
was  one  that  must  be  quickly  taken 
advantage  of  If  the  citizens  of  Duluth 
want  the  work,  as  Rodin  is  69  years 
of  age  and  will  have,  at  best,  but  short 
use  of  his  great  ability. 

Mr.  House  stated  that  in  these  days 
of  strenuous  commercial  endeavor, 
when  so  much  stress  is  placed  upon 
the  commercial  side  of  lite.  It  was 
good  to  get  upon  an  artistic  subject, 
and  for  that  reason  he  was  glad  to 
take  up  the  subject  of  the  (Jreysolon 
Du   Lhut   monument. 

He  stated  that  the  question  had  been 
brought  to  his  attention  by  a  promi- 
nent citizen  of  this  city.  The  subject 
was  talked  about  Jpr  some  time,  and 
when  Mr.  and  Mrs.  House  went  to 
France  they  met  M.  Ilodin.  Through 
an  Interpreter  Mr.  House  broached  the 
question  to  the  noted  sculptor,  and  he 
at  once  become  very  much  Interested 
in  It.  Mr.  House  explained  that  it 
would  be  very  fitting  that  the  greatest 
of  living  sculptors,  himself  a  French- 
man, should  commemorate  tlie  gre.at 
French  explorer,  Greysolon  Du  Lhut. 
Will  Cu«t  930.O0O. 
The  idea  caught  the  fancy  of  the 
sculptor.  As  the  negotiations  prog- 
ressed, Rodin  was  sent  maps  and' 
photographs  of  Duluth,  and  has  made 
the  members  of  the  Greysolon  Du  Lhut 
Monument  association  a  defluite  offer. 
His  price  is  530,000.  One-third  of  this 
amount  is  to  be  paid  when  the  com- 
mission for  the  work  is  given;  one- 
third  when  the  work  is  half  completed, 
and  the  remainder  of  the  sum  when 
the  work  le  accepted  by  the  city  of 
Duluth,  or  the  Monument  asHOCiation. 
Inasmuch  as  George  Bernard  .Shaw 
and  other  prominent  men  in  the  world 
of  English  art  and  literature  had  hard 
work  In  persuading  Rodin  to  make  an 
offer  upon  a  monument  of  Shake- 
speare, and  when  he  finally  made  his 
terms,  they  were  $100,000,  the  citizens 
of  this  city  can  see  what  an  oppor- 
tunity they  are  being  offered. 

Mr.  House  stated  tliat  when  Rodin 
became  interested  in  the  Grevsolon 
Duluth  matter,  he  dropped  the  Shake- 
speare negotiations.  That  is  precisely 
where  the  matter  stands  at  the  pres- 
ent  time. 

"Now.  as  to  what  the  Greysolon 
Du  L.1'.  ut  Monument  associatioii  ha.s 
done,"  said  Mr.  House.  "We  have  gone 
about  raising  a  guarantee  fund,  so  we 
might  go  ahead  and  give  Rodin  the 
commission  for  the  work.  I  must  im- 
press upon  you  the  fact  that  Rodin  is 
an  old  man,  and  that  tliere  i.s  need  for 
iiurry  in  this  matter.  We  have  the 
been  as  successful  as  we  anticipated, 
and  we  have  decided  to  let  the  matter 
drop  for  three  or  four  months,  be- 
lieving that  the  times  will  be  better, 
and  that  we  will  have  more  success  in 
lalsJing  the  fund.  Two  or  three  plans 
for  raising  this  fund  are  under  con- 
sideration by  the  members  of  the  as- 
sociation  at   th.e  present    time. 

•'We  are  keeping  up  the  spirit  of  the 
association.  We  are  keeping  it  active, 
so  that  when  the  time  comes  we  will  be 
able  to  go  right  on  with  the  work  of 
raising   money. 

"The  plan  is  to  raise  the  money  by 
subscription.  Of  course,  some  one 
will  have  to  own  the  statue.  It  would 
be  the  property  of  the  men  who  fur- 
nished the  guarantee  fund,  until  it  was 
turned  over  to  the  members  of  the  as- 
sociation. It  is, the  wish  of  Monsieur 
Rodin  that  every  man.  woman  and  child 
in  Dulutli  give  a  little  mite  toward  the 
statue,  and  that  will  be  the  plan  fol- 
lowed in  .securing  the  sub.scriptions. 
Want  All  to  Coutrlbule. 
"We  believe  that  tlie  bulk  of  the 
mon.\v  will  have  to  be  furnished  by 
tiiose  citizens  who  are  able  to  give 
bountifully,  but  it  is  our  wish  that 
every  citizen  give  what  he  is  able 
toward  securing  this  work. 

"There  are  no  great  works  of  Rodin's 
in  North  America.  There  is  a  small 
medallion  of  Rodin's  In  the  Metropoli- 
tan museum  of  New  York.  There  is  a 
small  work  in  New  England.  There  are 
two  statues  in  South  America.  Letting 
alone  the  artistic  side  for  a  moment, 
it  can  be  readily  seen  that  the  citizens 
of  this  city  would  be  getting  a  great 
commercial  bargain.  The  statue  upon 
its  completion  would  be  worth  a  great 
deal  more  than  the  citizens  of  this 
city  paid  for  it.  It  would  make  Du- 
luth a  national  center  of  art.  It 
would  attract  visiters  from  all  over 
the  country  to  Duluth.  People  in  other 
cities  with  whom  1  have  talked  became 
Immensely  intere.sted  in  the  project, 
informing  me  that  if  Duluth  did  not 
accept  the  offer  of  Rodin,  we  were 
missing  the  opportunity  of  a  lifetime. 

"I  believe  that  the  children  of  this 
city  should  be  given  certain  art  ad- 
vantages. I  believe  that  none  better 
than   this   could   be   given   them. 

"When  the  king  of  England  visited 
France,  he  called  upon  Monsieur  Rodin 
before  he  called  upon  the  president  of 
the  republic.  When  Monsieur  Rodin 
went  to  England,  the  horses  were  taken 
from  his  carriage  and  the  crowd  pulled 
his  carriage  through  the  streets.  He 
is  a  great  man  and  a  great  artist.  Be- 
cause he  is  a  great  man.  and  is  above 
pecuniary  considerations,  he  has  given 
us  an  opportunity  to  secure  a  great 
work  at  a  cost  below  its  commercial 
value,  and  we  are  making  a  great  mis- 
take if  we  do  not  take  advantage  of  It." 
Mr.  House  was  Introduced  by  W.  E. 
Magner,  president  of  the  Commercial 
club. 


Values  You  Can't  Refuse. 

The  big  dining  room  furniture  sale 
at  French  &  Basset fs  is  full  of  values 
that  are  certainly  hard  to  pass.  The 
pieces  offered  are  often  times  just  half 
of  their  regular  price.  Why  not  take 
advantage    of    this    .sale    now? 


CUTTY  i 


Monotype    Composltloii. 

Quick    work   by    Thwing-Stewart  Co. 

VasM     Go  to  Jail. 

James  Nelson,  Albin  Johnson  and 
Jacob  Jacobson,  three  vagrants,  all 
drew  jail  sentences  In  municipal  court 
this  morning.  Nelson  got  ten  days, 
Johnson  ten  days,  and  Jacobson  t^ven- 
ty  days  The  latter  has  been  In  court 
before  on  the  same  charge,  which  ex- 
plains   the    heavier    sentence. 

SprlnklinK    AsMenflnientii. 

City  Treasurer  Voss  now  has  the  as- 
sessment rolls  covering  the  cost  of 
last  season's  sprinkling,  and  property 
owners  are  expected  to  pay  over  their 
assessments   to    him. 


SU9BEAM 
THEATER 

Tomprro^T    Nisbt    ia 

SOUVEIVIR  NIGHT 

For   tlie    I<iidie«i. 

Complete  Change  of   I'roernni   Kverj 

Sunday   and    Wedneiday. 

AKW       SO!Vt;s — >KW       SlBJKt  T.S — 

-■VKW    MlSIf. 

AdniiiVHion,     10    Centn. 


T 


Llkl 


One  Cent  a  Word  Uacli  iaaertion— N* 
Advcrtlacmeut  L.eaa  Than  IS  Ccnta. 

HAnpGooTn^— \vE~i^'o  ml^K"  f  rNEi  r. 

better  hair  goods  than  can  be  had 
elsewhere  In  the  city,  and  we  have 
no  liesitancy  in  promising  an  abso- 
lutely undetectable  and  beautiful 
match.  Our  prices  always  moderate. 
Misa   Horrlgan.   New  Christie   Bldg. 

FOR  FINE  PEFIFUMES  AND  SACHET 
powder.«,  go  to  Miss  Horrlgan,  Chris- 
tie   building. 


FOR  SALE— 8-ROOM  MODERN  HOUSE 
except  heat;  lot  50x140;  easy  terms. 
626   East    fceventh    street. 


FOR  SALE— 7-ROOM  HOUSE.  WITH 
water,  gas  and  sewer.  Bargain  if 
taken  at  once.  H.  S.  Merry  729  East 
Sixth    street. 


SWITCHES  AND  PUFFS  MADE  OF 
your  own  combings.  Strictly  first 
class  work  at  reasonable  prices.  Miss 
Horrigan's  Hair  Shop.  New  Christie 
Bldpr.      Both   'phones. 


Examination     Saturda?*. 

The    examination    of    Frank    Moutalt, 
arrested  in  the  town  of  Stuntz  on  two 


FUI^ND — A  GENTLEMAN'S  GOLD  FOB. 
black  ribbon  attached.  Initials  B.  M. 
\V'.  Small  photograph  inside.  Loser 
prove  property  and  pay  charges. 
Call  at  Herald  office. 


BUSINESS  CHA"N'CE— FOR  VALUABLE 
timber  land.  Improved  and  unimproved 
farni.s  In  the  Cow  Creek  Valley,  ad- 
dress the  Glendale  Real  Estate 
Agency,   Glendale,  Or. 


WANTED — BUSS    BOY     AT    THE       ST. 

Louis    hotel. 


WANTED  —   MALE  STENOGRAPHER. 

Out  of  city  position.  Must  be  good 
penman  and  willing  to  assist  upon 
books,  payroll,  etc.  Address  J  77, 
Herlad. 


FACE  AND  SCALP  TREATMENT— 
Switches,  puffs.  Janes.  M.  Kelly, 
opposite    Glass    block. 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 

Charles  O.  Forfod  and  Mary  E.  Stjern, 
both    of   St.    Louis   county. 

Frederick  M.  De  Luze  and  Mabel  M. 
Blanchard.    both    of   St.    Louis   county. 

A.  L.  Ewing  of  Hennepin  county,  and 
Mary    1.    Malone    of   St.    Louis    county. 


DEATHS. 

ANDERSON — Hans    Anderson,    24    years 

of    age,    died    at    St.    Mary's    hospital, 

Mkrch    13. 
LA     VALLE — Mary     La     Valle,     of     428 

East    Sixth    street,    died    March   14_   at 

the  age   of   48    years. 


^ARD^OF^HANI^ 

WE  WISH  TO  EXTEND  OUR  THANKS 
for    kindness    and    sympathy,    during 
the  sickness  and   death   of   H.   Marlon 
Johnson,  to  our  neighbors,  friends,  G. 
S.  Richards,  K.  O.  T.  M.,  and  L.  O.  T.  M. 
MRS.    H    M.    JOHNSON, 
ARTHUR    JOHN.SON, 
MARVIN   JOHNSON, 
J.   A.   JOHN.SON. 


BUIl-DING  PERMITS. 

To  l^eter  O.  Berg,  frame  dwell- 
ing on  East  Cascade  street,  be- 
tween Fifth  and  Sixth  avenue.?   2,000 


charges,  one  of  keeping  a  house  of  Ill- 
fame,  and  the  other  of  selling  liquor 
without  a  license,  has  been  set  for 
next  Saturda.v  morning.  He  was  ar- 
raigned in  police  court  yesterday  aft- 
ernoon, and  pleaded  not  guilty.  He 
could  not  furnish  $1,000  ball,  and  is 
now  in  the  county  jail. 


The  A.  O.   V.  \K\  Notice. 

The  Fidelity  Lodge,  .\o.  10,'>,  will 
give  a  card  partv  Tlnirsday  evening, 
Feb.  IS,  at  the  Maccabee  hall,  to  which 
all  members  of  the  degree  of  honor, 
A.  O.   U.   W.   and   friends  are   invited. 


SnowHhoe    Party. 

T.  W.  Hoopes  of  Hunters  Park  en- 
tertained Monday  evening  at  a  large 
snowshoe  party  About  sixty  guests 
were   present. 


On    Trial    for    ANMault. 

Nestor  Salonen  was  placed  on  trial 
In  district  court  this  morning  on  a 
chajge  of  assault  in  tlie  second  deg'ree. 
He  is  alleged  to  have  assaulted  Eva  B. 
J.arvlnen  with  a  chair  and  a  knife  in 
her  house,  Feb.  8  of  this  year.  Mrs. 
Jarvinen  was.  struck  on  the  head  by 
the  chair  and  the  knife  cut  her  hand. 


Stie    For    Piano. 

The  Hall-Kriedler  Music  company 
filed  suit  in  district  court  this  morning 
against  W.  G.  La  Faver.  They  claim 
?30.^)  as  the  balance  on  a  contract  for 
the   sale  of  a  piano. 


Choir  Rehearaal. 

The  choir  of  the  St.  Stephan's  Luth- 
eran church  will  meet  this  evening  for 
rehearsal  at  the  residence  of  C.  Korah, 
Fifty-first  avenue  west  and  Roosevelt 
street. 


Fire  Board  Meeta. 

The  board  of  fire  commissioners  Is 
holding  a  meeting  this  afternoon. 
There  will  bo  a  reorganization  of  the 
board  for  the  ensuing  year.  Aside 
from  this  nothing  but  routine  business 
was  sclieduled  to  come  up  for  consid- 
eration. 


Wheeler  Will    Speak. 

Bert  Wheeler  will  be  the  speaker  this 
evening  at  the  meeting  of  the  Park 
Point  Improvement  club,  which  will 
be  held  at  the  Mission  hall.  "The  Great 


Receipt  That  Cures 
Weak  Men — Free 


Send    Xaine    and    Addreaa    Today— Yon 

Can     Have     It     Free     and      Be 

Strong     nnd     Vlgroroua. 


F 


I  have  in  my  possession  a  prescrip- 
tion for  nervous  debility,  lack  of  vig- 
or, weakened  manhood,  falling  mem- 
cry  and  lame  back,  brought  on  by  ex- 
cesses, unnatural  drains  or  the  follies 
of  youth,  that  has  cured  so  many  worn 
and  nervous  men  right  In  their  own 
homes — without  any  additional  help  or 
medicine — that  I  think  every  man,  who 
wishes  to  regain  his  manly  power  and 
virility,  quickly  and  quietly,  should 
have  a  copy.  So,  1  have  determined 
to  send  a  copy  of  the  prescription,  free 
of  charge,  in  a  plain,  ordinary  sealed 
envelope  ,to  any  man  who  will  write 
me   for  it. 

This  prescription  comes  from  a  phy- 
sician who  has  made  a  special  study 
of  men,  and  I  am  convinced  it  is  the 
surest-acting  combination  for  the  cure 
of  deficient  manhood  and  vigor-failure 
ever    put    together. 

I  think  I  owe  It  to  my  fellow  man 
to  send  them  a  copy  in  confidence,  so 
that  any  man,  anywhere  who  Is  weak 
and  discouroged  with  repeated  failures 
may  stop  drugging  himself  with  harm- 
ful patent  medicines,  secure  what,  I 
believe,  Is  the  quickets-actlng,  restor- 
ative, upbuilding,  SPOT-TOUCHING 
remedy  ever  devised,  and  so,  cure  him- 
self at  home  quietly  and  quickly.  Just 
drop  me  a  line  like  this:  Dr.  A.  E. 
Robinson,  4671  Luck  Bldg..  Detroit. 
Mich.,  and  1  will  send  you  a  copy  of 
this  splendid  receipt.  In  a  plain,  ordi- 
nary sealed  envelope,  free  of  cliarge. 


OR  the  man  of  quiet  taste  in  clothes,  who 
doesn't  care  for  the  frills  of  fashion,  we  have 

the  best  models  in  the  regular 

*&    //.^amnil       styles  of  overcoats  and  suits. 

Hart  Schaffner  &  Marx 

have  m;ide  them  for  us,  and  we  have  a 
great  stock  for  you  to  select  from. 
You  can  look  at  some  of  the  ultra-fash- 
ionable models,  also,  if  you  choose;  we'll 
sell  you  whatever  you  want;  it's  here. 

Overcoats  $15  to  $35; 
Suits  $18  to  $35. 

This    store    is    the    home  of 
Hart  Schaffner  &  Marx  clother 


(4 


Copyrlfbl  1909  by 
Hart  icbaffocr  &  Marx 


KEHHEY  &  ANKER 

409-41 1  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


1 


American    Failure"    will   be   the   subject 
of  the  address. 

m 
Cord  Party. 
The  members  of  the  Majestic  Rebec- 
ca lodge,  I.  O.  O.  F.,  will  entertain  to- 
morrow evening  at  a  social  and  card 
party  at  Odd  Fellows'  hall  on  Lake 
avenue.  The  members  and  their  friends 
will  be  the  guests. 

a  • 

Maaqnerade   Ball. 
The  Ladies  of  the  Kagles  will   enter- 
tain   at    a    masquerade    ball    tonight    at 
Forester's    hall,    formerly   the   Stelnway 
hall  in   the   Wlnthrop  building  on   First 
street    and    Fourth    avenue    west.      The 
committee    in    charge    is    composed    of 
Mrs.    Minnie    Longstreet,    Mrs.    Rachael 
Duff  and  Mrs.  Julia  Mcintosh.     A  lodge 
is  soon   to   be  organized  in   Duluth. 
a 
Isabel    League   Meeta. 
The    members    of    the     Ladles'     Inde- 
pendent Label  League  were  entertained 
at   cards      yesterday      afternoon   at    the 
home  of  Mrs.   Richard   Hoy   of  107  Cas- 
cade   street.      The   game   was    played    at 
eight  tables.     The  next  meeting  will  be 
held  April  7. 

a 
Store  F^r  Kent. 
The  beautiful  store  room  now  occu- 
pied by  Mrs  Webster  and  R.  R.  For- 
ward will  be  for  rent  after  May  1.  It  Is 
in  the  heart  of  the  shopping  district, 
and  the  best  room  on  the  street.  M. 
W.  Bates  is  the  agent. 

• 

Great  50  and  75  Cents  Values  in 


$260  from  the  resider.pe  of  Omni  Kal- 
ston  on  Oct,  1  last,  for  which  they 
were  held,  was  dismissed,  and  they 
were  set  free,  only  to  be  rearrested  a 
few  minutes  later  on  the  same  charge, 
worded  differently.  ]>Iow  they  are  held 
for  house-breaking. 


St.  Patrick's  D;iy  Banquet. 


This  evening  prom: 
one  for  the  Irlsh-An 
rlor    and    vicinity. 

They  will  gather  fi 
to  partake  of  a  feai 
served  at  the  Sacred  1 
beginning  at  8  o'cloc 
held  each  year  in  i 
memorate   St.    Patrick 


ses  to  be  a  gala 
ierlcans   of    Supe- 

am  far  and  near 
U  which  will  be 
leart  auditorium, 
k;.  The  affair  Is 
Superior    to    com- 

s  day. 


Rebuilding  Docks. 


Fancy  Shirts. 


These  are  new  patterns — soft  front 
shirts — must  be  seen  to  be  appreciated. 
C.   W.    Ericson.   the   clothier. 


MASQUERADE  BALL 

TONIGHT 

GIVEX  BY  LADIES  OF  THE  EAGLES 

at     the     Forester's     hall,     (formerly 

Stelnway),      Fourth     avenue     west. 

PrUes    given.  Tloketa    2."»   eentn. 


BOYS  EXPELLED 
FOR  ROWDYISM 


As  a  result  of  the  rowdyism  on  the 
part  of  the  school  boys  of  the  Nelson 
Dewey  and  Blaine  high  schools,  fol- 
lowing their  basket  ball  game  Mon- 
day evening.  In  which  several  persons 
were  slightly  injured  by  thrown  stones, 
one  boy  was  e.xpelled  from  the  Blaine 
school  and  several  others  may  be  sus- 
pended. 

Principal  Lynch  of  the  Blaine  Is  in- 
vestigating the  affair  as  thoroughly  as 
possible,  in  order  to  place  the  blame 
for  the  "muckerism"  It  is  believed  by 
many  that  the  Blaine  students  were 
the  instigators  of  the  brawl,  as  It  la 
reported  that  only  members  of  the 
Nelson  Dewey  school  were  Injured. 
a 

Out  Again ;  In  Again. 

Gus  .lackson  and  Charles  Leshen  ha^ 
a  "heads  I  win.  tails  you  lose"  experi- 
ence In  the  Superior  municipal  court 
yesterday.        The    charge      of    stealing 


Approximately  $25, 
pended  by  the  Great 
rebuilding  the  old  di 
partially  destroyed  ^ 
of  elevator  "A."  A  li 
Is  already  employed 


000  will  be  ex- 
Northern  road  In 
)cks,  which  were 
vith  the  burning 
irge  crew^  of  men 
)n  the  Job. 


I^SCiilL 


) 


Ralph  I'ineo  left  tills  afternoon  for 
the  Yakima    valley. 

J.  L.  Williams  of  llibbing  Is  at  the 
St.    Louis. 

W.  A.  Williams  o:'  Chlsholm  Is  at 
the   St.    Louis. 

James  Grandery  of  Hlbblng  Is  at  the 
St.   Louis. 

B.  M.  Tredway  of  V'lrglnia  Is  at  the 
St.    Louis. 

Lon  F.  Myers  of  !3veleth  is  at  the 
St.    Louis. 

H.  Kohrt  and  wife  of  Hlbblng  are  at 
the  McKyy. 

R.  C.  Olson  of  Two  Harbors  is  at 
the  McKay. 

Mrs.  Jean  Best  ar  d  Mrs.  Coffin  of 
Minneapolis  are  visiting  Mrs.  J.  C. 
Farie.s  of   Hunters  Park. 


$20  Black  or  B]u<;  Suits  at  $10. 

These      are    snaps      you    cannot      get 
every  day.     C  W.   I'^rcson,  the  clothier. 


COPPER  STOCKS 
SELL  LOWER 


Market  WeaKtns    After 

the  First  Hour  on 

Bearish  News. 


Copper  stocks  wer 
the  opening,  but  dei 
bearish  talk  about  r€ 
and  wages,  and  the  r\ 
ington  concerning  tl: 
selling  of  the  new  si 
a  rally  from  the  low 
last  hour,  but  the  clof 
yesterday's. 

North  Butte  open> 
vanced  to  $68.50,  de< 
lied  to  $67.75  and  cl 
and  $68  asked.  Am 
at  $68,371^!,  advance 
cllned  to  $67.37 »^,  res 
closed  at   $68.50  bid  a 

Greene-Cananea  op 
closed   at    $9.37%    bid 


e  flrin  enough  at 
■lined  later.  The 
ductlons  in  prices 
imora  from  W'ash- 
e  tariff,  caused 
in  res  There  was 
level  during  the 
)€  was  easier  than 

id  at  $68.25,  ad- 
llned  to  $67,  ral- 
)sed  at  $67.75  bid 
i.Igamated  opened 
d  to  $68.50,  de- 
cted  to  $68.25  and 
nd  $68.62%  asked, 
ened  at  $9.50  and- 
and    $9.50   asked. 


oiw 


Butte  Coalition  opened  at  $22.75,  a<W 
vanced  to  $23  and  closed  at  $22.50  bid 
and  $22.75  asked.  Calumet  &  Arizona 
opened  at  $100  and  closed  at  $99.76 
bid  and  $100  asked.  Giroux  opened  at 
$8.50  and  closed  at  $8.37%  bid.  Ana- 
conda opened  at  $41.  advanced  to 
$41.37%,  declined  to  $40.60,  and  closed 
at  $40.87%   bid. 

Word  was  received  today  of  a  strike 
of  ore  on  the  second  level  at  Red  War- 
rior. 300  feet  north  of  the  shaft.  The 
ore  Is  said  to  be  of  rich  quality.  "Tlie 
stock  closed  at  $2.25  bid  and  $2.50 
asked. 

Superior  &  Pittsburg  sold  at  $13.75, 
declined  to  $13.37%  and  closed  at 
$13.37%  bid  and  $13.50  asked.  Globe 
sold  at  $4.87%  and  $5  and  closed  at 
$4.62%  bid  and  $4.87%  asked;  Carman 
at  $1.50  and  clo.sed  at  $1.25  bid  and 
$1.37%  asked;  National  at  54  and  59 
cents  and  closed  at  55  rents  bid  and  60 
cents  asked;  Copper  Queen  of  Idaho  at 
$1.50  and  closed  at  $1.37%  bid  and  $1.50 
asked;  Butte-Ballaklava  at  $16.12% 
and  closed  at  $16  bid  and  $16.25  asked 
and  Chief  Con.solidated  at  98  and  99 
cents  and  closed  at  98  cents  bid  and 
$1    asked. 

Mowltza  was  Inactive  and  closed  at 
$1.37%  bid  and  $1.50  asked.  Savanna 
at  $2  bid  and  $2.25  asked,  Cliff  at  $1.50 
bid  and  $1.75  asked.  Cactus  at  $1.50  bid 
and  $1.62%  asked,  and  Butte-Alex  Scott 
at  S4  bid  and  $4.50  asked.  Butte  S-  Su- 
perior was  $1  bid  and  $1.12  aske<i  and 
Calumet    &    Sonora    $13.50   a.sked. 

Black  Mountain  sold  at  $1.37%  and 
closed  at  $1.25  bid  and  $1.37%  asked. 


1 8  West  Superior  Street, 


WatcK  For  Date 
of  Our 


ERY 


OPENING 


It's  Coming  Soon,    This  paper 
will  tell  you  when. 


4 

i 

' 

1 

i 

i 

1 

1 

1 
1 

. 

~~| 

i 

1 

New  patterns  are  coming  in 
daily,  beautiful  creations  of  New 
York's  foremost  clothes  design- 
ers, made  by  a  house  of  world 
wide  reputation.  Quality  is  the 
foremost  factor,  so  you're  abso- 
lutely right  in  getting  your 
Spring  Suit  at  the  Union. 


ka^^i* 


IVe  Sell  the 
Packard  Shoe. 

If  you  wear  one  pair 
we  will  always  sell 
you  your  shoes. 


I 


^ 


GLOTMINO&SHOEHOUSE 

;  «06-40T  West  Superior  St. 


J' 


MMMiHig 


*  "^      

I 

M 

I  V 


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i 

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i 


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-rt 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909. 


©FTH 


WOODSMAN 
IS  KILLED 

William    Hcberg    Loses 

His  Life  Working  Near 

Leech  Lake. 

Struck  by  Falling  Tree, 

He  Dies  in  a  Short 

Time. 


parade  through  the  streets  of  Calumet 
and    Laurium    at    2:30    p.    m. 

At  the  conclusion  of  the  parade  a 
banyuet  will  be  served  In  the  dining 
room  of  the  Ked  Jacket  town  hall, 
and  in  the  evening  the  students  of  the 
Sacred  Heart  high  school  will  present 
■O'N'eil  the  Great"  at  the  Calumet  thea- 
ter. 


(ONSCIEME  SMITTEN. 


■Walker.  Minn..  March  17.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — William  Hoberg.  a 
woodsman,  was  killed  at  the  Northland 
Pine  company's  camp  on  Leech  lake 
yesterday,    while    at    work. 

Hoberg  was  assisting  in  felling  a 
tree  and  for  some  unaccountable  rea- 
son failed  to  get  out  of  the  path  of  the 
tree  as  It  came  to 
was  struck  on  the 
short   time   after. 

He  has  a  sister  living  at  Akeley. 
who  was  notified  of  the  accident.  The 
deceased  has  worked  in  the  woods  for 
several  winters  pa.«t.  spending  his 
summers  on  his  small  farm  tioar 
liiver.     He  was   »:'•   \  ear^^  old. 


the    ground.      He 
back    and    died    a 


Pine 


Man  V/ho  Beat  Great  Northern,  Re- 
funds Money  NMth  Interest. 

Minneapolis.  Minn.,  March  17. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— Declaring  that 
his  conscience  gave  him  no  rest,  and 
overllowlng  with  religious  fervor. 
George  Watson  of  Crookston,  Minn., 
entered  the  Northern  Pacific  ticket 
office  at  Nicollet  and  Washington 
avenues  Monday,  and  paid  $4,  wliich. 
with  5  per  cent  interest,  was  the  sum 
due  the  company  for  two  rides  which 
lie  stole  four  and  one-half  years  ago 
from  Wadena  to  Fargo  and  from  Me- 
dina to  Jamestown.  N.   D.         ..    ^    ,    ..   . 

Watson  declared  that  he  had  lately 
attended  a  revival  given  by  the  Salva- 
tion Armv  at  Crookston.  and  being 
converted."  wanted  to  make  restitution 
for   his   iniquities. 

THREATENS  BANK  CASHIER. 

Charles  Simmons  Would  Force  Little 
Falls  Banker  to  Make  Loan. 

Little  Falls.  Minn..  March  17. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Charles  Simmons 
of  this  city  was  taken  into  custody 
Monday  on  the  charge  of  threatening 
the  life  of  J.  K.  Martin,  cashier 
First  National  bank,  wliile 
ing  the  banker  in  his  office 
securing  a  loan  of 
land  in  Crow  Wing 
denies  the  cliargc 
was   attempting  to 


Agent  Hoopner  at  Devils  Lake  and 
then  killed  himself.  It  is  asserted 
that  the  father  of  Bryant,  years  ago 
at  Cooperstown.  killed  a  man  and  then 
committed  suicide  in  the  same  manner 
that  liis  son  committed  the  double 
crime. 


best 
North- 


NEW  C.  &  H.  BAND  LEADER. 

George    Barnard     of     Cincinnati, 
Highly  Recommended,  is  Man. 

Calumet.  Mich.,  March  17. — (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.) — George  D.  Barnard 
of  Cincinnati  is  expected  in  Calumet 
this  week  to  take  charge  of  the  Calu- 
met &  Hecla  band,  one  of  the 
musical  organizations  in  the 
west. 

Mr.  Barnard  is  a  first-class  musi- 
cian, leader  and  composer,  and  is  in- 
dorsed by  John  Philip  Sousa  and  other 
well  known  musicians  in  the  public 
limelight.  He  lias  had  twenty  years' 
experience  in  leading  musical  organiza- 
tions an«J  also  is  a  well  known  com- 
poser of  overture  and  medleys,  waltzes, 
marches,  concert  pieces.  quadrilles, 
lancers  and  songs,  many  of  his  com- 
positions have  been  rendered  by  the 
C.  &  H.  band  and  have  proved  very 
popular. 

Among  the  best  liked  of  his  compo- 
sitions  and   those    rendered   by    the   lo- 
cal   band  are   the   waltzes  "Nourhalma 
and     "Anita"    (Mexican).     The  marches 
"Mississippi    Rose."    "Alabama 
"Plckanninies      on      Parade." 
Humming   Hottentots."    "Elks' 
and    "Ann    Arbor    University." 


Dream," 
•Happy 
Parade" 


of   the 
interview- 
relative  to 
$1,000     on     some 
coiincv.    Simmons 
claiming     that     he 
draw   a   pencil   from 


GOOD,  HONEST,  SQUARE- DEAL 


H 


Mediclnesiliia  those  of    Dr.  R.  V.  Pierce  of    Buffalo,  warrant  their  makers  in 
dient,  which  ^hey  do,  upon    their    outside  wrappers,  verifying    the   correctness 
This  open -pilblicity  places  these  medicines  in  a  class  all  by  themselves. 
in  prescritmil  them  largely  as  they  do  in  their  worst  cases. 


printing  their 
cf   the    same 
Furthermore,  it  warrants  physicians 


every  mgre- 
under   oath. 


•(t 


I ;;J)r.  Pierce's  Golden  Medical  Discovery 


ha 


a  anost 


potent  alterative  or  blood-purifier,  and   tonic  or  invigorator  and  acta  especially  favorably 
curative  way  upon   all  the   mucous   lining  surfaces,  as   of  the   nasal  passages,  throat,  branch' 

a   large  per  cent,  of  catarrhal  cases  witether  the  disease  af- 
larynx,    bronchia,   stomach   (as    catarrhal    dyspepsia),   liver. 


Is 

in 

iai   tubes,  stomach  and   bowels,  curing 

fects   the    nasal   passages,    the    throat, 

bowels   {as   mucous  diarrhea),  or  other  organs. 


Is  advised  for 
iar  to  women. 


LOVE  OF  MOTHER 
PROVES  UNDOING 

Maine    Jail-BreaKer  Is 

Caught  Visiting  Parent 

in  Crow  Wing  County. 

Brainerd.  Min^n.,  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Charles  Wilson,  who 
is  wanted  in  Farmlngton.  Me.,  for 
breaking  Jail  while  awaiting  trial  for 
homicide  was  arrested  about  three 
miles  west  of  Pequot,  In  the  northern 
putrt  of  Crow  Wing  county  Monday  by 
Village  Marshal  Grant  of  that  place 
on  toleplionic  orders  from  Sheritf  Fred 
G.   Ktld  of  this  city,  and  is   in  jail  here. 

Wilson  is  said  to  have  sliot  a  man 
r.imed  LeRoy  BreckWr,  and  escaped 
troni  the  Farmingion.  Me.,  Jail  vvhile 
fi  wailing  trial  for  murder  in  July, 
1 -It  His  mother  resides  at  T'equot 
and  for  nearly  a  year  the  authorities 
In  Maine  and  the  local  officers  have 
been  in  correspondence  about  tiie  mat- 
ter. About  a  week  or  ten  davs  ago 
Wilson  came  to  Pequot  to  visit  his 
mother.  Sheriff  Reid  at  once  com- 
municated with  the  Maine  authorities 
end  was  ordered  by  telegraph  to  have 
Wils.jn  arrtsted.  Sljerlff  Keid  received 
a  ■  teK gram  yesterday  that  Sheriff  D. 
S  Cooiidge  of  Farmlngton  had  left  for 
Brainerd  and  he  is  expected  here 
Tliu:---day. 

Wilson  makes  no  denial  of  his  iden- 
t'.tv  and  stales  that  he  will  return  to 
Maaif  without  extradition  papers.  He 
talks  treelv  of  ilie  shooting  and  claims 
lie  fired  in"  self-defense.  He  refuses  to 
talk  however,  regarding  his  escape 
from  the  Farmlngton  Jail,  beyond  say- 
ing that  the  jailor,  who  was  accused 
of  assisting  him.  was  innocent.  He  had 
outside  help  he  says,  but  will  never 
tell    who    assisted    him. 

MIDDLE  RIVER  "DRV." 

Sabon.s  All  Closed  as  Result  of  Re- 
cent Eleetiou. 

Middle  River.  Minn.,  March  17 — (Spe- 
cial    to    The      Herald.) — Although 
vote    on    the    question    of    closing 
Baloons    at    the    recent    election 
tie.     the    city     council. 


ills  pocket  during  an  animated  con- 
versation Willi  the  banker,  when  the 
latter  jumped  on  him  and  drew  his 
weapon    in   self-defense. 

Acf*ording  to  Hanker  Martins  story, 
he  tola  Simmons  he  would  look  the 
land  over  and  would  let  Simaions 
know  his  decision  in  a  few  days.  He 
further  stated  that  he  would  assist 
SUnmons  out  of  the  difficulty  if  pos- 
sible, and  that  he  might  expect  an 
answer  promptly. 

\t  this  .Sirntuons.  he  says,  became 
excUed  and  said  that  it  was  impera- 
ti'-.'  that  he  have  the  money  at  once. 
Mr  Martin  responded  that  it  was  Im- 
p.>s.sible  to  make  liim  the  loan  without 
tirst  looking  up  ilie  land.  Simmons 
tlun  said  that  no  few  days  would  go. 
but  that  he  must  have  tiie  money  at 
once  and  is  alleged  to  have  pulled  out 
a  38  Iver  Johnson.  Mr.  Martin  grabbed 
.Simmons  and  lield  his  arms  while  he 
called  for  assistance  from  those  in  the 
front  of  the  bank.  Simmons  was  over- 
powered and  relieved  of  his  weapon. 
He  was  then  turned  over  to  Deputy 
Sheriff  F.  X.  Heroux  and  placed  in  tho 
county   Jail. 

"SPINSTERS'  CONVEMIOX." 

Farce  to  be  Presented  by  New  Du- 
liith  Church  Society. 

New  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  17. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  Ladies'  So- 
cial League  of  the  Presbyterian  church 
will  present  a  farce 
Spinstera"  Convention." 
on   Saturday   evening. 


PRAISES  WISCONSIN  CENTRAL 

Canadian  Pacific  Official  Surprised 
at  Road's  Good  Condition. 

Milwaukee.  Wis..  March  17. —  (Special 
to  Th"?  Herald.) — Sir  Thomas  Shaugh- 
nessy,  president  of  the  Canadian  Pa- 
cific, while  here  after  a  partial  trip 
o\er  the  Wisconsin  Central  with  Presi- 
dent Pennington  and  General  Super- 
intendent Potter  of  tlie  flatter  road 
expressed  himself  as  pleased  with  the 
condition    of   the   property. 

"1  was  pleasantly  surprised  at  see- 
ing the  g'ood  condition  of  the  road,"  he 
said.  "I  believe  that  with  the  proper 
development  the  Wisconsin  Central 
can  l>ecome  one  of  the  most  valuable 
pieces  of  railroad  property  In  the  coun- 
trv'.  The  road  runs  through  the 
of"  the  farming  section  in  this 
and  there  is  none  finer  on  the 
nent.  As  tliis  Is  my  first  trip 
spoction  over  the  ro.id  I  can 
comparison  between  its 
and  present. 

"  \s  for  tlie  plans  which  the  directors 
liave  in  view  1  do  not  wish  to  say  any 
thing  at   the   present    time. 
is  not  the  wish  of  Mr. 
any    plans   should   be 
time.  ■  .  ,  ,, 

Sir  Thomas  said  that  the  road  would 
be  transferred  to  the  Soo  Inside  of  a 
month,  following  which  the  proposed 
improvements  would  no  doubt  be  an- 
nounced. ^^      _,. 

"There  Is  no  question  that  the  Wis- 
consin Central  will  be  strengthened  in 
everv  department  by  the  strong  con- 
nection whicli  it  will  receive  by  the 
union  with  the  Soo  road."  he  continued. 
"It  will  make  a  great  system,  and  ^he 
old  Central  road  will  have  a  chance  to 
develop    as    it    should    and    as     it    de- 


Dr.  Pierce's  Favorite  Prescription 

the  cure  of  one  class  of  diseases  only— those  peculiar  weaknesses,  derangements  and  irregularities  pecul- 
It  is  a  powerful  yet  gently  acting  invigorating  tonic  and  nervine. 

For  weak,  worn-out,  over-worked  women— no  matter  what  has  caused  the  brtak-down,  ** Favorite  Prescription'* 
will  be  found  most  effective  in  building  up  the  strength,  regulating  the  womanly  functions,  subduing  pain  and 
bringing  about  a  healthy,  vigorous  condition  of  the  whole  system. 

A  book  of  particulars  wraps  each  bottle  giving  the  formulae  of  both  medicines  and  quoting  what  scores  of  eminent  med- 
ical authors,  whose  works  are  consulted  by  physicians  of  all  the  schools  of  practice  as  guides  in  prescribing,  say  of  each 
ingredient  entering  into  these  medicines.  j     r     i        • 

Both  medicines  are  non-alcoholic,  non-secret,  and  contain  no  harmful  habit-forming  drugs,  being  composed  of  glyceric 
extracts  of  the  roots  of  native,  American,  medicinal,  forest  plants.  They  are  bcth  sold  by  dealers  m  mfdijrine.  You 
can't  afford  to  accept  as  a  substitute  for  one  of  these  medicines  of  known  composition,  any  secret  " 


-iri  ■ 


nostrum.     Don't  do  it. 


heart 

state. 

contl- 

of    In- 

draw    no 

condition   past 


I   know   It 
Pennington   that 
discussed   at   this 


Masonic  temple  in  this  city,  with  a 
large  class  from  over  the  state  in  at- 
tendance. Deputy  Inspector  General 
Scott   is   in    charge   of   the    work. 


serves. 


•The 
hall. 


De- 


secretary — 


the 
the 
was  a 
acting  on  the 
opinion  of  the  attorney  general 
the  advice  of  the  village  attorney 
vote  of  three  to  two, 
loons  closed  and  this 
for    the    first    time 

The  question 
ago  and  license 
joriiy,  and 


and 
by  a 
ordered  the  sa- 
village  Is  "dry" 
in  four  years, 
was  voted  on  a  year 
carried  by  a  large  ma- 
section  1528  of  the  revised 
laws  of  1905  says  where  a  vote  is 
taken  upon  the  question,  such  a  vote 
stands  until  reversed  by  a  subsequent 
election.  On  this  section  tlie  majority 
of  the  council  take  their  stand.  In  a 
written  opinion.  Judge  Watts  of  this 
di.strict  holds  the  same  view,  as  do  also 
the  majority  of  the  attorneys.  The 
matter  will  probably  be  taken  Into  the 
courts   by   the   saloon   men. 

HIBERNIANS  PARADE. 

Extensive   Observance   of  St.   Pat- 
rick's Day  in  Copper  Conntry. 

Calumet.  Mich.,  March  17. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  various  branch- 
es of  the  Ancient  Order  of  Hibernians 
gathered  here  today  for  a  fitting  cele- 
bration of  St.  Patrick's  day.  Members 
of  the  order  attended  sacred  services 
In  the  various  towns  during  the  morn- 
ing, and  this  afternoon  are  coming 
here    bv    regular    and   special    traln.s. 

The  Calumet  Hibernians  are  meet- 
ing the  visitors  at  the  Copper  Range 
depot,     after     which     there     will     he     a 


Genuine  Must  Bear 
Fac-Simiie  Signature 


entitled 
•  at  the  fire 
March    20. 

The  cast  of  ciiaracters   follows: 

Josephine    Jane    Green,    president    of 
Young    Ladies"    Single    Blessedness 
bating  society — Mrs.   C.   Beckllnger 

I'ri.scilla    Abigail    Hodge, 
Miss  Constance   Willner. 

Calamity    Jane    Hlgglns,    treasurer — 
Mrs.    L.   S.   McKay. 

Rebecca    Raciiel    Sharpe — Miss    Maud 
M'Uer 

Je'iisha        Matilda        Sprlgglns — Miss 
C,eorgia   McKay.  ,.    ^    ,., 

.Sophia  .Stuckup — Mrs.  L.  C.  Tower. 

Juliet    Long — Mrs.    Jolin    Bernt. 

Cleopatra  Belle  Brown — Mrs.  J.  J. 
Palmer.  ,.         ^     ,^      _,, 

Charity  Longface — Mrs.  C.  H.  Gld- 
dingr. 

Ptrllv  Jane  Pratt — Mrs.  P.  Knudsen. 

Violet  Ann  Ruggles — Miss  Jennie 
Hicks 

Belinda  Bluegrass — Miss  Ethel  Beck- 
linger. 

Piaiices     Touchmenot — Mrs.     Charles 

^Vlll.>.  „  ^^      . 

Hannah      Biggerstaff— Mrs.      Charles 

Peters. 

Prof.    Makeover — Charle.s    F.    Wills. 

N.  D.  MINISTERS  MEETING. 

Ministerial  Association  of  State  in 
Session  at  Grand  Forks. 

Grand  Forks.  X.  D.,  March  17. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— The  North  Dako- 
ta Ministerial  association  is  in  session 
here  today  and  will  continue  In  ses- 
sion until  Friday  afternoon.  during 
which  time  a  well-selected  program 
will    be    discussed. 

An  event  of  the  session  will  be  the 
lectures  by  Dr.  R.  W.  Rogers  of  the 
Drew   Theological    seminary. 

BANKER  UPHAM  VERY  ILL. 

Veteran  Financier  of  St.  Paul  Re- 
ported Near  to  Death. 

St.  Paul,  Minn.,  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Henry  P.  Upham, 
cha-ripan  of  the  board  of  directors  cf 
the  First  National  bank,  and  dean  of 
the  bankers  of  St.  I'aul,  dating  his 
banking 
seriously 
avenue.  ^ 

.Mr.  Upham  has  long  suffered  with 
asllnna,  and  complications  arising 
from  it  have  given  his  illness  a  seri- 
ous aspect  that  occasions  alarm  among 
his    family    and    friends. 

2.1'-  Upham  has  not  given  much  time 
to  tho  bank  for  several  years,  the  state 
of  his  health  compelling  him  to  seek 
milder  winter  climates.  For  the  last 
two  years  he  has  felt  too  HI.  even,  to 
undertake  to  find  relief  by  traveling. 
He    was   72   vears   old    In    January. 


RAaPvOAI)  MEN  WILL 

BE  HEARD  MARCH  30. 


Madison,  Wis..  March  17.— Hearings 
on  the  railroad  bills  before  the  assem- 
bly committee  on  transportation  will 
begin  March  30  and  continue  until  all 
these  bnis  are  disposed  of.  Assf>mbly- 
man  Le  Roy,  chairman  of  the  commit- 
tee has  decided  on  that  date,  fixing  it 
so  'far  In  advance  that  all  interested 
can    arrange   to   be   preserit. 

The  most  important  of  the  bills  be- 
fore the  committee  are  those  relating 
to  train  service.  These  will  be  strong- 
ly supported  by  the  Brotherhood  ol 
Trainmen  and  hotly  opposed  by  the 
railroads.  There  will  be  a  large  at- 
tendance on  both  sides  when  these  bills 
come  up.  ^      

PROVOKED  BV  SISTER, 

YOLTH  KILLS  HIMSELF. 


-year-old 
parents 


Stevens   Point,    Wis.,    March    17. — Be- 
cause  his   sister  had   gone    through    his 
pockets,   Albert   Krueger,  a  21- 
paper    maker    living    with    his 
here,   committed   suicide. 

An  unpleasant  argument  had  arisen 
when  the  yuung  man  discovered  that 
his  sister  had  made  a  searcii  of  his 
clothes  and  when  their  father  took  his 
daughter's  part  the  young  man  became 
enraged  and  In  white  heat  cried  out 
as  he  slammed  the  door  on  leaving  the 
house:  "When  I  v/ill  come  back  again 
I  will  come  back  dead." 

He  then  went  to  the  home  of  a  friend 
land  borrowed  a  revolver  under  tlie  pre- 
I  tense    that    he    intended    to    kill    a    dog 
'  He  then   walked  a  short  distance   until 
I  he  come   in     front   of  the     Bruce  hotel 
iwhen  he  whipped  out  the  revolver  and 
I  shot    himself    in    the    temple,    dying    In- 
'  stantly.      No    one    was       on    the    street 
when    the    fatal    shot    was    fired       and 
when    the   hotel    attendants    rushed    out 
they    came    near    falling    over    the    sui- 
cide. 


FATHER  STOPS  UEDDING. 

Hancock  Parent  Prievents  Son  From 
Completing  Romance. 

Menominee,  Mich.,  March  17. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald. )T^Chief  Cook  of  the 
Marinette  police  ijorce;  acting  on  a 
telegram  from  J.  CX>Doi^hue,  a  wealthy 
Hancock.  Mich.,  merchant,  arrested 
Major  Donahue,  agftd  !l9.  his  son,  and 
thereby  prevented  hltn  from  marrying 
Mercedes  Arceneau:.- pi^r  clerk  in  the 
.Scott  hotel  at  Hancg^c^,  with  whom  the 
youth  had  eloped  here. 

The  couple  left  Haneock  Friday  and 
registered  here  at  a  .tv^U-known  hotel 
Sunday.  Failing  t«^  secure  a  marriage 
license  here,  they  went  to  Marinette 
and  were  getting  a  license  there  when 
Chief  Cook  appeared  on  the  scene  with 
a  message  from  tlvfi  fljoy's  father  to 
arrest  him  and  bring  him  home. 

The  girl  Is  a  pretty  brunette,  the 
daughter  of  a  Superior  contractor,  and 
the  boy  is  said  to  have  b^en  smitten 
with  her  for  several  weeks,  succeed- 
ing only  recently  in  persuading  her  to 
eloiJe   with   him. 

AFTER  DISTRICT  ATTORNEY. 

Marinette  County  Bar  Association 
Joins  in  Attacking;  Him. 

Marinette.  Wis.,  March  17.— (.Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Following  a  dispute 
between  practically  every  lawyer  in 
the  city  and  District  Attorney  Schwlt- 
tay,  the  Marinette  Qounty  Bar  asso- 
ciation formally  declared  for  grand 
lury.  The  bar  Is  determined  to  oust 
Schwlttay,  hare  k  st^tial  prosecutor 
appointed  and  conduct  the  investiga- 
tion of  the  city  and  county  affairs. 

Criminal  charges  have  been  made 
against  the  district  attorney,  one  of 
tliem  being  forgery.  These  charges 
liave  been  submitted  to  Governor 
Davidson. 

OWNS  ITS  WATER  PLANT. 

Eau  Claire  Sends  Big  Sum  to  New 
York  to  Complete  Purchase. 

Eau  Claire.  Wis..  March  17.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Pursuant  to  an  order 
granted  by  Judge  O'Neill,  the  |253,000 
paid  by  the  city  for  the  waterworks- 
plant,  including  intea-est  thereon  from 
March  6  190S,  to  date,  at  the  rate  of 
3  per  cent  was  sent  yesterday  to  the 
Farmers'  Loan  &  Trust  Company  of 
New   York. 

The  Union  National  bank  sent  one- 
lialf  of  the  amountiaud  tlie  Eau  Claire 
National  the  other  half,  each  bank  hav- 
ing been  made  the  depository  of  half 
of  the  total  amount.  Tlie  money  was 
sent  by  drafts  on  New  York  corre- 
spondents   of    tlie    hanks. 


Ada — A  very  largely  atended  farm- 
ers Institute  vvas  held  Friday.  Forrest 
Henry  of  Dover,  Minn.,  spoke  on  clov- 
er raising.  C.  O.  Carlson  of  Erskine, 
Minn.,  giive  a  lecture  on  dairying  and 
Charles  Brown  of  Elk  River,  Minn., 
spoke  on     potato  raising. 

St.  Cloud — George  D.  Webb  of  Wor- 
cester, Mass.,  who  is  at  the  head  of  one 
of  the  largest  granite  concerns  in  the 
East,  was  in  the  city  Monday  visiting 
the  local  quarries  and  granite  shop.s 
While  In  the  city  he  placed  an  order 
for  a  large  column  cutter  with  the 
St.  Cloud  Iron  works.  This  machine 
is  one  of  the  largest  used  in  the  gran- 
ite   business. 

Onamia — John  Campbell  of  Royalton 
hauled  what  Is  claimed  to  be  the 
largest  load  of  logs  hauled  by  one 
team  into  Onamla  tliis  winter.  The 
logs  were  hauled  from  about  four 
miles  east  of  town  and  were  estimated 
to  contain  over  3,0000  feet  of  lumber. 
Marshall — State  Superintendent  of 
Public  Instruction  C.  G.  Schulz,  Sena- 
tor A.  D.  Stephens,  Supt.  Robertson  of 
tlie  (Crookston  agricultural  school,  and 
V.  B.  Seward  addres.sod  about  300  rural 
school  officers  at  the  courthouse  liere 
Friday. 

Warroad — Will  Wilier,  son  of  Adolpli 
Wilier  of  Middle  River,  who  is  employ- 
ed bv  the  Great  Nortli^^rn  here  sus- 
tained a  serious  Injury  Friday  morning 
from  falling  headlong  down  a  flight 
of  stairs.  His  cellar  bone  and  a  cou- 
I)le  of  ribs  were  broken  and  a  hip 
bruised  badly,  besides  other  minor 
bruises. 

St.  Cloud — The  annual  meeting  of 
the  Great  Nortliern  Agents'  association 
of  the  Fergus  Falls  division  was  held 
here  Sunday  In  the  Commercial  club 
looms  and  there  was  a  large  attend- 
ance. Better  methods  of  handling 
business  were  discussed  In  interesting 
papeis  presented  by  A.  H.  Pike  of 
Monticello:  James  Norrls  of  Sauk  Cen- 
ter, and  E.   Barnes  of  Ashby. 

Albert  Lea — John  Sollie  of  Clarinda, 
Iowa,  Is  here  assisting  in  tiie  work  of 
iivstalllng  the  machinery  of  the  Free- 
born   County   Creamery   company. 

Mille  Lacs — The  Mille  Lacs  Trans- 
portation company  has  been  incor- 
porated by  C.  O.  Baldwin,  Alliert  Bald- 
win and  J.  L.  Pearson  of  Duluth  with 
a  capitalization  of  $50,000.  The  gen- 
eral nature  of  Its  business  shall  be  to 
carrv  on  a  general  transportation 
business  on  Mille   Lacs  lake. 

Little  Falls — Bishop  James  D.  Mor- 
rison of  Duluth  was  in  the  city  Mon- 
day. Here  he  was  joined  by  Rev.  G.  E. 
Piatt  and  left  for  a  visit  at  the  dif- 
ferent missions  over  which  Mr.  Piatt 
has      charge. 

Minneapolis — The  Minneapolis  Bar 
association  Monday  afternoon  elected 
Frank  D.  Larrabee  to  ttie  board  of 
directors  to  take  the  place  of  Judge 
Frederick  V.  Brown,  resigned.  Fred- 
erick W.  Clapp  was  also  elected  treas- 
urer of  the  association  in  the  place  of 
E.    C.    Waters,    who    recently    resigned. 

Brainerd  —  Col.  Freeman  Thorpe 
came  from  Hubert  Monday  and  went  to 
MinneapolLc.  From  there  he  will  go  to 
Dulutli  to  resume  work  on  portraits 
of  well  known  people  of  that  city, 
which  he  has  been   painting. 


FREE 


m  .,^."i^vADVICE 


LET 


EVERY 
SUFFERING 


MAN 


WRITE  FOR 
THIS  BOOK 


FREE! 


■    ^0 
/MEN 

S^   PACES 


i     46  FREE 

11  PRESCRIPTIONS 


It's  a  Reliable  Authority  on  Men's  Diseases 
242  Paget.   46  Free  Pretcriptiont,  prepaid  to  all  who  write  for  it. 

All  we  ask  Is  to  simply  nenii  your  name  and  address.  metitionin(f  this 
paper,  and  we'll  geiid  you  our  8't2  page  I'rWate  Medical  Book  t  reo  pre- 
paid, contalniuK  M  ir'ev  Receipts  ttiiJ  iiuany  cKapterh  of  advice  to  young 
middle  atfed  and  old  men  about  lliemselxes  aud  tlieir  diseases— ti-lliug 
how  to  sret  Cured  auJ  how  to  avoid  dioeajses.  We  want  no  mouey  for 
the  book  or  for  the  fuipeiise  of  Beuding  It  to  you  prepaid,  nor  does  It 
place  you  under  any  obliKatlonsto  u»  of  any  kii-.d  whatever. 

WHAT  DO  YOU  KNOW  ABOUT  THESE  DISEASES? 

Bladder  trouble.  Blood  Poison,  Eczema,  BriRht's  Di.-iease,  Kidney 
Trouble.  Catarrh,  Enlarged  Prostate  Gland,  Diabetes.  Liver  Trouble, 
Hydrocele.  Varicose  Veins.  Nervous  WeakuesB,  Kupture,  Scrofula.  Ob- 
struction, NerTous  Debility,  Varicose  Ulcers  and  the  many  contagioua 
di.seases;  Antidotes  for  Poison,  Care  of  the  Person,  Harriage,  Ktc. 
This  book  tells  all  about  the.se  dl.'<ea^e9  and  other  subjects  mentioned 
and  more  too,  and  if  vou  do  not  know  anything:  about  the  above  diseas- 
es or  are  afflicted  and  need  advice,  writ*  for  this  valuable  l>ook  today. 


Ig-norance  betfcts  misery,  knowledge  brings  health  aud 
happiness."    All  correspondence  strictly  confidential. 

HB^^^Thousands  of  men  are  in  need  of  this  valuable 
W^^    wortc  and  are  sending  for  it  »o  write  today  to  ttie 

HEIDELBERG  MEDICAL  INSTITUTE sTpiCi ".'%'' 

I1<0,000  Capital       Incorpo  -ated  under  the  State  Laws  of  Minnesota 

■  }^r   Over  120, 000  Men  have  applied  to  us  tor  Treatment   "^X 


-r^  f 


of  the  offic>,  and  W. 
state    normal   school 


C. 
at 


career 
ill   at 


here    back    to 
hla   home,   476 


1863,    i.s 
Summit 


REFUSE  SUBSTITUTES. 


HEADACHE 


ALLEGED  EMBEZZLER  IS 
RETURNED  FROM  SEAHLE. 


PosttlTcly  cured  by 
these  Little  Pills. 

They  alao  reUere  I>t» 
trefls  from  Dyspepsia.  Iop 
dl^eetloa  and  Too  Hearty 
Eatice..  A  perfect  rem- 
edj  tor  Dizziness.  Nausea 
DrowBl&esa.  Bad  Taaa 
La  the  Mofoth.  Coated 
Tongue,  Pain  In  tbe  Sldti 
TORPID  LIVKR.  HmV 
legTzlato  tbe  Bowols.   Purely  Vegeutble. 

BMALLPILL  SMALL  DOSL  SMALL  PRICE 


CARTERS 

llTTLE 

IVER 

PILLS. 


GARTERS 

■frrTLE 
■  IVER 


Genuine  Must  Beflr 
Fac-Simite  Signaturt 


REFUSE  SUBSTITUTES. 


East  Grand  Forks,  Minn..  March  17. — 
(Siecial  to  The  H«rald.) — Thomas  Fla- 
herty, accused  of  the  embezzlement  of 
Sr)OC.  from  the  Gund  Brewing  company, 
vl>ile  acting  as  an  afeent  of  tfce  Minot, 
N.  D  branch,  was  brought  back  from 
Seattle  yesterday.  He  was  taken  be- 
fcre  Judge  T.  A.  Sullivan,  his  case 
wts  continued  to  March  -*9,  and  he  fur- 
jiished  bonds  in  the  sum  of  $1,000.  It 
is  generally  believed  that  Flaherty  will 
make  good  the  amount  of  the  defal- 
cr.tlon  and  the  prosecution  will  be 
dioi-ped. 

ST.  CLOUD  BISHOP  IS 

GOING  TO  VISIT  POPE. 

St.  Cloud,  Minn.,  March  17. — ^Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Announcement  was 
made  in  all  the  Catholic  churches  of 
the  diocese  of  St.  Cloud  Sunday  thac 
next  Sunday  the  annual  Peter'.=;  pence 
collection  would  be  taken  up.  and  that 
the  amount  realized  from  the  collection 
would  be  taken  to  Rome  by  Rt.  Rev. 
Bishop  James  Trobec  shortly  after 
Ka.ster  and  presented  to  the  holy 
father. 


FEDERAL  BUILDING  SITE 

SELECTED  IN  MINOT. 

Minot,  N.  D,.  March  17.— The  gov- 
ernment has  selected  the  quarter  of 
the  block  at  the  corner  of  Second  and 
Relshus  streets,  as  the  site  for  the 
new  federal  building,  which  will  be 
erected  in  Minot,  at  some  time  in  the 
not  far  distant  future.  The  lots  are 
owned  by  T.  P.  Kulaas  and  Andy  Botz, 
and  will  cost  in  the  neigliborhood  of 
$15,000. 

—m 

DulutlilauM    iu    Hancock. 

Hancock,  Mich.,  March  17. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  F. 
McCarthy  of  Duluth  arrived  in  Han- 
cock Saturday  from  tlieir  honeymoon, 
and  are  visiting  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
McCarthy's  mother,  Mrs.  Amelia  Wash- 
burn Mr.  and  Mrs.  McCarthy  recent- 
ly returned  from  a  trip  to  Old  Mexico, 
where  they  went  after  their  narrow  es- 
cape from  drowning  in  tlie  wreck  of 
the  Republic  on  which  they  had  em- 
barked   for   a   P^uropean    tour. 


CAPT.  JOHN  MimRISON 

ENTERS  ETERNAL  HARBOR. 

Menominee.  Mich..  March  17. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Capt.  John  Mor- 
rison one  of  the  bfst-known  lake  cap- 
tains in  this  sectton  Of  the  country, 
died  ye.sterday  at -Chicago,  Cal.  He 
was  70  years  old.      •        • 

Capt.  Morrison  began  hl.s  marine 
career  when  14  years  old,  and  fol- 
lowed the  pursuit  c«*ntlnually  until 
last  year.  He  sailed  the  Katy  Reed, 
Mary"  Reed  and  Bolsford  for  thirty 
years. 

LOWRY  WILL  PROBATED. 

Minneapolis,  Minn..  March  17, — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  will  of 
Tliomas  Lowry,  traction  magnate  and 
president  of  the  Soo  road,  who  died  at 
liis  home  here  recently,  has  been  ad- 
mitted to  probate.  William  H.  Bennett, 
one  of  the  witnesses  to  the  document 
liaving  died  since  It  was  executed.  It 
became  necessary  to  prove  his  signa- 
ture before  the  court  made  the  usual 
order. 

Tiiere  were  no  objections  to  admitting 
the  will  to  probate  and  letters  of  ad- 
ministration were  granted  Horace  Lovv- 
rv,  Beatrice  M.  T^owr>  and  Calvin  Good- 
rich, the  executors.  The  executors 
have  three  months  in  which  to  make 
and    file   an    inventory    of    tlie   estate. 


the  Incumbent 
Hewitt  of  the 
Oshkosh. 

Janesvllle — The  third  mysterious  dis- 
appearance this  winter  was  reported  to 
the  police  when  PhHIp  Rogner.  a 
plumber,  who  was  last  seen  Thursday 
niglit,    was    said    to    be    miiising. 

Appleton — Alexander  Gilgnon,  aged 
about  70  years,  and  Lo  ils  Grignon, 
aged  40,  father  and  son,  respectively, 
are  in  a  critical  condition  as  a  result 
of  a  stabbing  affray  at  tlie  Iiome  of  the 
former  near  Combined-I..ocks  Sunday 
night.  The  son  is  at  Si.  Elizabeth's 
hospital,  and  Is  not  expected  to  sur- 
vive. 

Marinette — Theodore  P  umpheyville. 
an  educated  Menominee  Indian  from 
tlie  reservation,  who  is  in  a  hospital 
liere  recovering  from  an  accident,  says 
the  exijeriment  of  a  saw  mill  run  by 
Indians  on  tlie  reservation  Is  a  failure 
and  win  be  a  loss  to  the  rich  Menomi- 
nee tribe. 

Oshkosh — John  Toba  of  Red  Granite 
is  in  a  serious  condition  ss  a  result  of 
having  been  sliot  tliroiigh  the  left  lung, 
and  his  alleged  assailant  is  In  Jail  at 
Wautoma. 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


Houghton — Ex-SherilT  /'.ugust  Beck 
left  Monday  for  Seattle.  Wash.,  and 
Portland,  Or.,   on   a   business   trip. 

Calumet — John  Daniell  and  Charles 
Chvnoweth,  president  aid  secretary, 
respectively,  of  tlie  Superior  &  Globe 
Mining  company,  have  left  on  a  visit 
to    the    property. 

Houghton — Joseph  Vivian  has  ar- 
rived from  Butte,  summoned  by  the 
serious  illnes.';  of  his  father,  Capt. 
Johnson  Vivian.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Phil 
Tliomas  of  Superior  are  also  here. 

Hancock — Webster  Doct.  has  been  se- 


C. 
will 
held 


lected  as  toastmaster  for  the  social 
session  to  follow  the  meeting  of  the 
Knights  of  Pytlilas  on  Friday  evening 
next,  and  the  program  for  the  event  la 
in  cliarge  of  a  committee  composed  of 
Victor  Fredd,  T.  J.  Gregory  and  Jay 
Pierce. 

Laurium — At  Sunday  night  s  meet- 
ing of  tlie  trustees  and  members  of  the 
congregation  of  the  M.  E.  church.  It 
was  reported  that  a  total  of  $5  200  had 
been  subscribed  for  the  contemplated 
enlargement    of    the   church. 

Negaunee — Four  of  the  children  ot 
Samuel  Davis,  a  well  known  resident 
of  Palmer,  are  suffering  with  dlph- 
tlieria.  Two  of  them  attended  school 
last  week.  It  is  reported  that  the 
cases  are  all  well  developed  and  the 
children  are   in    a  serious   condition. 

Ishpeming — Rev.  John  McGeough, 
S.  S.  S.  R.,  a  missionary  father, 
be  In  charge  of  tlie  mission  to  be 
at  St.  John's  church  for  a  week  com- 
mencing a  week  from  next  Sunday,  the 
"Sth  Rev.  McGeough  conducted  a  mis- 
sion  at  tiie  church  some  sixteen  years 

Manistique — J.  J.  Heffernan  of  Manls- 
tique  has  started  a  canva.s  glove  lac- 
tory  on  a  small  scale  and  is  turning 
out  goods  for  which  he  finds  a  ready 
sale  among  the  local  dealers.  Later, 
as  the  business  grows,  he  will  install 
machinery  operated  by  electric  power 
and    branch    out    more    extensively. 

Houghton — Stone  &  Webster  of  Bos- 
ton announces  that  a  semi-annual  div^ 
ident  of  $3  per  share  has  been  declared 
on  the  preferred  capital  stock  ot 
Houghton  County  Traction  company 
jjavable  April  1, 
record  Marcli   17. 

Calumet — While  working  at  the  No. 
1.".  sliaft  of  the  Calumet  &  Hecla  mine. 
Cliarles  Perlnen,  a  trammer,  met  with 
injuries  .vhlch  will  confine  him  to  his 
home  for  some  time.  Perlnen  was 
filling  a  car  when  one  of  tiie  large 
pieces  of  rock  slipped 
fell,  inflicting  a 
leg. 


,■       i* 


off  the   car 
severe    gash    on 


and 
hla 


DAKOTA  BRIEFS 


ScottiMh    Rite    >IeetluK. 

Fargo  N.  D..  Marcli  17. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  spring  reunion  of 
the  Scottish  Rite  Masonic  bodies  of 
North    Dakota    Is     being     held     at    the 


MURDER  AND  SUICIDE 

HABIT  WAS  INHERITED. 


Fargo,  N.  D.,  March  17. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Like  father,  like  son. 
was-  illustrated  in  the  case  of  E.  S. 
Bryant,  who  murdered  Great  Northern 


The  Woman 
Who  Worries 

Fretful,  nervous,  worrying  women 
come  in  for  a  good  deal  of  censure  for 
the  discomfort  they  cause  others,  but 
according  to  the  medical  profession 
they  are  rather  to  be  pitied  than 
blamed. 

Discussing  this  matter  recently,  an 
eminent  physician  said:  "I  cure  wom- 
en with  the  following  simple.  Inexpen- 
sive prescription,  which  any  good 
druggist' can  fill:  Alpen  Seal,  2  ounces; 
Fluid  Extract  Black  Haw,  1  ounce; 
Pure  Water.  5  ounces.  A  teaspoonful 
of  this  preparation  before  each  meal 
and  at  bedtime,  taken  for  a  few  days 
before  during,  and  after  each  period; 
will  stop  all  pain,  soothe  the  nerves, 
cure  cramps,  banish  menstrual  head- 
aches, and  clear  the  complexion,  If 
taken  faithfully  as  directed  by  women 
who  suffer  needlessly  each  month,  will 
solve  the  problem  of  the  Woman  Who 
Worries  as  a  result  of  painful,  profuse, 
scanty   or  irregular  menstruation." 


BRIG.  GEN.  POOLE  IS 

OUT  OF  STATE  GUARD. 


Bismarck,  N.  D..  March  17. —  Adjt. 
Gen.  Peake  has  made  the  findings  of 
the  court-martial  which  tried  Brig.  Gen. 
T.  P.  Poole,  retired,  late  adjutant  gen- 
eral of  the  state,  on  the  charge  of  dis- 
obedience of  the  governor's  orders  and 
conduct  unbecoming  an  officer  and  a 
gentleman. 

With  slight  modifications  the  charges 
were  found  proven  by  the  court  and 
sentence  of  dismissal  from  the  state 
guard  was  unanimously  Imposed.  The 
findings  have  been  approved  by  the 
governor. 

DESPONDENT,  ENDS  LIFE 

VIA  MORPHINE  ROUTE. 


Bismarck  N.  D. — Doctors  J.  H.  Rind- 
laub  and  Carpenter  of  Fargo  and  Ran- 
stad  of  Bismarck,  as  a  committee  ot 
tlie  state  medical  association,  appear- 
ed before  Governor  Burke  Monday  and 
asked  him  to  veto  the  measure  which 
gives  the  osteopaths  the  riglit  to  cre- 
ate an  examining  board. 

Fargo,  N.  D. — A  meeting  of  the 
North  Dakota  embalming  board  will  be 
held  here  Thursday  for  the  purpose  of 
marking  and  grading  the  examination 
papers  of  the  applicants  for  state  cer- 
tificates who  took  the  state  examina- 
tions at  Grand  Forks  on  Feb.  18. 

Valley  City,  N.  D.— There  will  be  a 
district  gathering  of  Methodist  preach- 
ers and  church  officials  at  Bismarck  on 
April  11,  to  dedicate  the  new  Methodist 
church.  Among  other  matters  of  Im- 
portance to  be  discussed  at  this  gath- 
ering is  the  plan  for  a  girls  dormi- 
tory to  be  erected  in  tills  city  In  con- 
nection with  the  state  normal  school. 

Fargo.  N.  D. — The  state  board  of 
pharmacy  examiners  opened  a  session 
at  the  AgVicultural  coUej^e  Tuesday 
morning,  when  one  of  the  largest 
classes  in  the  iiistory  of  the  state  be- 
gan the  examinations  for  certificates 
to  practice  the  profession  In  North  Da- 

Ico  t  ft 

Edgely,  N.  D. — Fred  "A.  Cornell  died 
very  suddenly  as  a  result  of  a  stroke 
of  apoplexy.  He  was  54  years  of  age 
and   a  pioneer  resident   of  this   section. 

Bismarck,  N.  D.— W.  F.  Cushing  has 
resigned  his  position  as  managing  edi- 
tor of  the  Bismarck  Tribune  and  will 
become    a    member    of    the    public    land 

^''^fntVv.^N.  D.-W.  O.  Heath  will 
build  and  operate  a  hotel  here. 

Dickinson,  N.  D.— As  a  result  of  the 
passage  of  a  new  ordinance  there  will 
be  six  wards  In  this  city  hereafter. 

Grand  Forks.  N.  D.— \\  iUlam  A. 
Stewart,  one  of  the  oldest  members  of 
the  local  Masonic  order  and  at  one 
time  worshipful  master,  was  gnven  a 
royal  farewell  at  the  Masonic  temple 
on  Saturday  evening  by  his  fraternal 
brothers,  anent  his  departure  \vithin  a 
few  days  for  Northwestern  Canada, 
where  he  expects  to  locate. 


SPECIAL  SALE 

—OF— 

SUNKIST  ORANGES 


ALL  THIS  WEEK 


SUNKiST  ORANGES  FOR  HEALTH 


aa 


Iron  Mountain,  Mich..  March  17. — 
Despondent  over  financial  and  family 
troubles.  John  B.  Kay--  took  mL>rphine 
and  died  yesterday  •  afternoon.  He 
leaves  a  wife  and-  6-year-oId  daugh- 
ter. 

• — '■. 

AVhtMt    Players'   To<irnainent. 

Fargo,  N.  D.,  MarcJi  17. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  -  whist  players  of 
the  Red  River  valley  are  to  hold  a 
tournament  in  Fargo  March  24  and  26. 
Teams  will  be  here  from  Fergus  Falls, 
Stephen,  Warren  and  probably  Crook- 
ston, Minn.,  and  from 'Mayville,  Grand 
Forks  and  Fargo  im  this  state.  The 
play  win  be  for  the  cup  won  last  sea- 
son  by    the   team   at  Mayville,  N.   D. 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS 


Ashland— The  chief  of  police  of  Mil- 
waukee has  notified  Chief  Blair  of 
this  city  that  Fred  Hogan.  now  serv- 
ing time  in  the  county  jail.  Is  wanted 
at  Milwaukee  for  embezzlement.  Ho- 
gan was  sent  up  from  Mellen  for  lar- 
ceny He  Is  wanted  at  Milwaukee  for 
the' embezzlement  of  Jl'-i  from  J.  Fltz- 

^'Madls'on— Prof.  L.  W.  Wood  of  Neills- 
vllle  former  state  Inspector  of  rural 
schools  has  filed  his  nomination  pa- 
pers In  the  office  of  the  secretary  of 
state  as  a  non-partisan  candidate  for 
state  superintendent  of  public  instruc- 
tion He  is  the  third  candidate  to  file 
papers,  the  two  others  being  C.  P.  Gary, 


'^0i',     ».»fc  afi^tii  ^ 


I 


OF  DULUTH. 


1 


ti 


14 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909. 


WHEAT  HAS 
FimONE 

Closing  Prices  Are  Frac- 
tionally Higher  Than 
en  Privious  Day. 

Flax  Soft  and  May  Option 

Loses  More  Than 

Point 


»***iiHim*iHi-****ii*»**tHitm,***^^^ 


Duluth  Board  of  Trade.  March  17. — 
Wheat  was  on  a  steadier  basis  tlmn 
yesterday  and  the  level  was  liigher,  at 
almost  every  stage.  Clossing  prices 
■howed    sligtit    gains. 

There  was  nothing  particularly  bul- 
lish in  the  news  and  receipts  continue 
large  In  the  Northwest,  hut  the  senti- 
ment was  that  the  market  had  been 
sold  enough  and  that  a  reaction  was 
Inevitable.  ,   ., 

Cables  were  lower  as  a  result  of  the 
weakness  oji  this  side  yesterday.  Liv- 
erpool   closed    unchanged    to 


Uc    lower    and 


^sd    lower. 
Antwerp    un- 


Budaptst 

changed.  ...         , 

The  >Iav  option  closed  Ue  higher  Iti 
Duluth.  U'u'^c  higher  In  Ohlcago  and 
St-  Louis,  a  shade  higher  in  Minne- 
apolis, uiiclianged  in  New  \  ork,  -sc 
higher  in  Kansas  City  and  »sc  lower  in 
Winnipeg.  The  July  option  closed  'ic 
higher  In  Duluth.  a  shade  highe^  in 
Chicago  and  St.  Louis.  Uo  higher  In 
Minneapolis,  v^c  lower  in  New  \ork 
and  a  shade  lower  in  Winnipeg. 

Mav  corn  closed  1»8S1**<"  lower  m 
Chica'go  and  i^d  to  Sd  lower  in  Liver, 
pool.  May  oats  closed  -'gC  lower  in 
Chicago. 

Broomhall   cabled   from  Liverpool: 
•Wheat — The       decline     in     American 
markets    vcsierday,    together    with    the 
bearisli  Bradstroets  statement,  and  the 
continued  private  reports  received  from 
i  America     regarding     the    winter    wheat 
\  outlook,    stimulated      larger      offerings 
■  here,    which    resulted    In    a    decline    of 
^4     to     Sd.       The    decline    was    checked 
for  a   time   bv   newspaper    talk   regard- 
ing the   unfavorable  political    situation, 
and    shorts     became    nervous,    but     the 
comparative    steadiness    of    the    consols 
dispelled   earlier   apprehension,   and   re- 
newed  pressure  developed.  The   market 
on  the  whole  was   narrow,  and   at  mid- 
dav     the     undertone    was    easier,     with 
values    '*    to    ^d   lower  tlian   yesterday, 
with  the  principal  pressure  In  the  far- 
distant    months. 

•Corn  was   steady   at   the   start,   with 


THE  MARKETS  AT  A  GLANCE. 


Duluth  May  wheat  closed  y^c  higher. 

Chicago  May  wheat  closed  Y^c  to  ^/sc  higher. 

Minneapolis  May  wheat  closed  a  shade  higher. 

Liverpool  wheat  cables,  unchanged  to  %d  lower. 

Duluth  May  flax  closed  IVgC  lower. 

New  York  stocks,  strong. 

Boston  copper  stocks  closed  easier. 

Duluth  curb  coppers,  weak. 

Chicago  live  stock :    Cattle,  weak ;  hogs,  higher. 


iU*»«i«»»«*»*»*»««*»*«**********«******************** 


it 
n 
a 

j  ^ 
i  i 

i  » 
i  i 

i  h 

ii 

n 

it 

it 
it 
it 

n 


Corn,  bus 

Oats,   bus 

Hye.    bus 

Barley,   bus 

Car  lot  rtcelpls 


,.  269.1<^0 
..  328.400 
5,000 
..  1S4.500 
Wheat.  38 


309,300 
331.600 
4.000 
33,700 
cars,  with 
11  of  contract  grade:  corn.  127  cars, 
with  3  of  contract  grade;  oats.  81  cars. 
Total  receipts  of  wheat  at  Chicago, 
Minneapolis  and  I>uluth  today  were  170 
cars,  compared  with  332  cars  last  week 
and  379  cars  the  corresponding  day  :• 
year  aco. 

Close:       Wheat— May,     Jl.lo^:     July. 
J1.14»ri;     September.     97%  (ii  97^*0;     De. 
cember,    98V"C.         Corn — March,      e.'i'^c; 
Mav.    t>6c:    July,    eSTsliCec;    September,; 
«r.*\c:     December,     58»ic.         Oats — May. 
'•Ic:  .Inly.  4Sii,c:  September,  40V8O.   Pork  i 
— Mav,       $lV.77i5fi  17.S0;      ,luly.      $17. SO;, 
September.    $17.80.    Lard — May,    $10.22  VbIJ 
Julv.   $10.3.'):   September.   $10.47^^-     Itlbs  | 
—Mav.    $9,371^;    July,    $9.52 V^:    Septem 
her,      $9.6.1  (tT  9.67  Vt.        Rye — Cash 


THE  COPPER  STOCKS. 


-^ 


The  following  aie  the  closing  quota- 
tions of  copper  stocks  at  Boston  today, 
reported  by  i'aine,  Webber  &  Co.,  Iloom 
A,  Torrey  building:  


STOCKS — 


May,  80c.  Barley — Cash,  65^  69c.  Tim- 
othy— March.  $:1.S0.  Clover — March, 
$8.75.  Cash  wheat — No.  2  red,  $1.14  &■ 
1.24:  No.  3  red.  $1.16®  1.22:  No.  2  hard. 
$1.14^(&  1.1**^  :  No.  3  hard.  $].10ii 
11.5^:  No.  1  northern.  $1.17  Ca  1.19^1  :  No. 
2  northern.  $1,151.18;  No.  3  spring.  $1.10 
(S  1.17.  Corn— No.  3.  65\(&66c;  No.  3 
white,  67  V4  Cf  67V^o:  No.  3  yellow,  66® 
Gfi^Ac;  No.  4.  64'&64V2C.  Oats— No.  3 
whftc,  o3^54c;  No.  4  white,  51@53c; 
standard.   o4',^c. 


Amalgamated 
Anaconda  .  .  . 
Adventure   .  . . 

Alimeek    

Allouez  . 
American 
American 

Atlantic 

Arcadian    

Arizona  Commercial 

Begolc    

Boston   Cons 

,  Boston    Corbin    .  . . . 
Sic;  I  Black   Mountain 


Telephone 
Zinc    


THE  MINNEAPOLIS  M.\RKET. 


values  unchanged 


to 
to 


lid   lower 
a^d,  with 


I^ater, 
the  un- 


prlces  declined     _  ,    . 

Sertone  easy.  I'ressure  resulted  from 
the  lower  American  cabcls  and  a  small 
spot    trade." 

Car  receipts  of  wheat  at  Duluth  were 
40  against  50  last  year,  and  at  Minne- 
apolis 92  against  329  last  year,  mak- 
ing a  total  for  tlie  Northwest  of  132 
against  319  last  year.  Chicago  received 
38  against  IS  last  year.  Winnipeg  re- 
ceived  118  against  101    last   year. 

Prlmarv  receipts  of  wheat  were  396.- 
000  bus-,  "last  year  582.000  bus.  Ship- 
ments 237.000  bus,  last  year  341.000  bus. 
Clearances  of  wheat  and  flour  were 
136,000   bus. 

Primarv  receipts  of  corn  were  430.000 
bus.  last' year  555.000  bus.  Shipments 
653.000  bus,  last  year  551.000  bus.  Clear- 
ances  of  corn   were   34.000. 

Wheat  was  active  during  the  entire 
eesslou  in  Duluth.  May  wheat  opened 
\itc  higher  at  $1.14^^,  advanced  to 
declined    to    $1.15».4.    reacted    to 


$1 


off    to 

nod    to 
a    gain    of    ^' 
wheat  opened 


14  ^iS 

3.. 


rallied 


over    yester- 
>bC   higher   at 


i  1.15*8 
1.1524.   went 
to    $1.15.   decl 
at    $1.14-8 

day.     May .. 

11.15  »4.  advanced  to  $l.lo7<..  declined 
to  $1.15-\.  reacted  to  $1.16»i,  declined 
to  $1.15>Bf»''4  ii'icl  closed  at  $l.lo'4,  a 
gain    of    'sc    over    yesterday. 

Durum  wheat  closed  Uc  lower  and 
cash  spring  wheat  was  selling  on  a 
basl.«  of  Ic  over  May  for  No.  1  northern. 
Flax  was  quiet  until  the  last  hour, 
when  considerable  selling  knocked  the 
prices  off  more  than  a  point.  July  flax 
was  Inactive  and  closed  at  $1.62 1^  bid. 
October  tlax  sold  at  $1.37 1-2,  declined 
to  $1.35 !«.  and  closed  there.  Septem- 
ber flax  "sold  at  $1.42 1^,  declined  to 
$1.39    and   closed   at   $l.o9>2. 

Oats     closed     \^c     lower     and     other 
coarse    grains    were    unchanged. 

Following  were  the  closing  prices: 
Wheat — No.  1  hard  on  track,  $1.16"fe. 
To  arrive:  No.  1  northern,  $1.15''s; 
No.  2  northern.  $1.13  7^.  On  track:  No. 
1  northern,  $1.15-8;  No.  2  northern, 
$1.137.i,:  Mav.  $1.14-s;  July,  Jl.loli: 
Sej.ttmber.  $101»^.  Durum  on  track. 
No.  1.  $1.0:{ii;  No.  2.  $1.01  Vi;  May  dur- 
um. $1.0214;  July  durum.  $1,021^  Flax, 
to  arrive.  $1.64  U;  flax  on  track.  $1.64  ^  : 
Mav.  $1.6314:  July.  $1.62  Ms;  September, 
$1.3"9»*;  October,  $1.35 14.  Oats  to  ar- 
rive. 50i^c;  oats  on  track,  50 ^c;  rye, 
72-75c;    barley.    61-63V2C. 

Cars  Inspected;  Wheat,  40,  last  year 
60;  oats,  4;  barley,  4;  flax,  7.  last  year, 
12. 

Receipts:  Wheat.  113,696;  oats.  19,- 
677:   >>arley.   16.652;   flax.  7,383. 

Shipments:      Oats.    4.056;    barley,    354. 


Flour  Shipments  Conipaie  Unfavor- 
ably With  Those  of  W  eek  Ago. 

Mlneapolls,  Minn.,  March  17. — Local 
elevator  stocks  decreased  100,000  bu.sh- 
els  for  four  days.  Receipts  were  light, 
and  the  market  opened  strong.  Chicago 
•and  Minneapolis  fell,  and  went  as  low 
as  $1.14>/8.  closing  at  $1,141,4  @1. 14%. 
Receipts  today:  Minneapolis  92,  against 
329;  Duluth  40,  against  5;  Winnipeg 
118,  against  101.  May  opened  $1.14%: 
high.  $1.15%  (fi;%;  low,  $1.1414:  close. 
$l.]4i4&'%.  Julv  opened  $1,151-4;  high. 
$1.16 14  :  low,  $1.14%®*,^;  closed.  $1.15  >fe. 
Cash  wheat  was  In  good  demand.  Offer- 
ings were  light,  and  millers  were  eager 
buyers,  especially  those  representing 
country  mills.  No.  1  nortiiern  sold 
1*4  0  2c  over  May.  and  No.  2  for  I4C 
under  to  the  even  May  price.  Close: 
No.  1  northern.  $1.15*4  (?j  1.16;  t*^  arrive. 
$1.15*4  @1. 16;  No.  2  northern.  $1.13*4  <!t 
1.14:  to  arrive,  $1.13'?4  r^  1.14;  No.  3 
wiieat.  $1.10'?/ 1.12;  No.  3  vellow  corn. 
61^4(f(  62'ic;  No.  3  white.  oOig  C^ 51  Vhc;- 
No.   2  rye.   74-4  ^»  76*4  0. 

Flax  receipts,  7  cars  today  against 
44:  no  shipments:  Lack  of  offerings 
made  an  inactive  market.  Demand 
was  good  and  prices  were  quoted  the 
same  as  Duluth  May.     Close,  $1.63. 

Barley  receipts.  30  cars  against  17: 
shipments,  50.  Today's  market  was  a 
little  easier,  i/4  to  ^c  lower.  Demand 
only    fair.      Close,    62<g63iAc. 

Millstuffs  shipments.  1.535  tons.  De- 
mand was  very  strong  and  business 
favorable  to  milling  interests.  Bran 
in    bulk.    $23.00@23.50. 

Flour  was  In  slow  to  fair  demand. 
Shipments  compare  favorabl.v  with 
those  of  a  week  ago.  Country  millers 
reported  fair  to  good  business.  Slilp- 
ments.  45.923  barrels.  First  patents, 
$5. 65 (§5.75;  second  oatents.  $5.55®  5.65; 
first  clears,  $4.40@4.50;  second  clears, 
$3.15®  3.25. 


Bid     I  Asked 


68'^  I      68% 

41%  I 

7^  !      J 
146  175 

38  39 

129%       129% 


Maj— 
Open     . .  . . 
Jllgh      . . . 

lyOW        

Close    

Clofe  16. 

July— 

OjM'n  ... 

High  . . . 

Low  .... 

Close  . . . 

Close  18. 


Amerlcnn    Wheat    Mnrke<n. 

Imluth.  .Minneapolis.  CliUago.     New  York. 


cur- 


st.   LouU— 
May 
Jul; 

Kansas 

May     

July    

Wlniilpec- 

.May    

July  


S1.11»4K 
l.l^^ii 
l.H«i-*4 
1.14%B 
I.H*i 

1.1o>;B 
I.IA^ 
.   1.15H-14 
l.n'41! 
1.15'* 


»1.14H 

1.14H 
1.14>4- 

M>4 


u 


1. 


$1.16li- 
l.KiA^ 
I.IjH 
»iA  1.13% 
1.1J«4- 


$1.2011 
1.2il»* 
1.19H 
1.19^ 
l.U'»4 


15'i 

l.-.H 
14  H 


'% 


I.n4-H 

l.OJti 

i.o:i«Vi 

1.04-^.\ 

1.04 
Close    i:th. 
....$l.i:i-ii 
. ...   1.01V4 


1.06*4- 
96% 

1.12H 
1.13T4 


\ 


1.12'4 
1.12=H-'4 
1.11^-5. 
l.ll^B 
1.11's 
Close    I61I1 
»l.li»* 
l.lil'g 

l.f'6U-*i 
96ii->4 


14 


1.121* 
1.14 


Chicago  Cora, 


Open 
High 

Close 


Ontn 

O..U. 

May. 
..34% 
..54% 

..5?,% 


and  Pork. 


(■(.rn. 
.May. 

n7% 

t;s*4- 

66A 


rcrk. 
May. 

ji:.«2 


So. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

No. 

Puruiii. 

Durum. 

iMiniui. 

I>urum. 

Barlpy, 

B*rley. 

rux.  1 


Canh    SuIeH    \\'ednesday. 

nonhtvn   wheat.    2  cars 

ndrthem.   2  oars 

i.ortheni.  1  I'^r 

northirn.  21'  bu  ID  lbs 

northern.   2.(KI0  bu  to  arrive 

northern.   1  car 

nonheni.  2  cars ,  • 

:.2  bu  No.    J. 

235  bu  50  lbs 

1   cur  No.   1.. 

1   car  >io.   2. . 

1  .ar 

1  car 

oar 


Xo.   1. 


l.ir.l, 
1.16S 
l.lfiV* 
1.1!,% 
1.16% 
1.14-, 

l.o;?%. 
1.03ii 
1.03N 
1.01%i 

.62H 

.63 
1.66 


Duluth  Car      initpeotion. 

Whent— Xo.  1  nortlKm.  lit;  .No.  2  northern. 
Xo.  3  spring,  i;  Xo.  1  duram.  8;  Xo.  2  durum 
Xo. 


3: 
.T: 
3   durum.    3.      Tot^il   uf   durum.    14:    vehet   chaff. 
Total    of    wheat.     40;    last    year.     .=>0. 
Flax— Xo.   1,   7.     Total  of  flax.   7 :   last  year, 
Oats.    4;    barley.    4. 
Total  tf   all   cars.    5.".     i'ars   on   track  today. 


Butte    Coalition     

Butte  &  London    

I  Calumet  &  Arizona    .  . 

I  Calumet  &   Hecla    

;  Centennial     

1  Consolidated    Mercur 

!  Copper  Itange    

I  Cumberland    Kly    

Daly- West    

Davis-Daly     

Dominion    Copper    

East   Butte    

Franklin    

First   National    

Giroux    

Gran by    

Greene  Cananea   

Hancock  Consolidated 

Helvetia    

Isle  Royale    

Keweenaw    

Lake    Copper    

La   Salle    

Mass.   Consolidated    •  • 

Mass.    Gas     

Mexico   Mining    

Miami   Copper    

Michigan     

Mohawk     

Nevada    Con.s 

Nevada  Utah    

Newhouse    

Nipplsing    

North   Butte    

Ojibway   

Old    Dominion    

Osceola    

Parrott    

Pneu.    Ser 

Quincy    

Raven     _■  •  • 

Sante   Fe    '. . . 

Shannon    

Shoe  Michigan 

Superior  Copjier    ...    . 
Superior  &    Pittsburg 

Tamarack    

Trinity    

I'nited   Copper    

United   Fruit 

U.   S.   kilning   

pfd    

V.   S.   Oil    •• 

Utah    Apex    

Utah    Cons    

I'tah   Copper    

Victoria    

Winona    

Wolverine     

Wyandot    

Yukon   Gold    

Arizona   Michigan    . . 

American   Saginaw    . 

Boston   Kly    

Butte-Ballaklava    . . . 

Butte    &    Superior     . 

Chief    Cons 

Cactus     .  .  . 

Calumet    & 

Calumet    & 

Calumet  & 

Carman    

Chemung    

Clllt    

Copper  Queen    

Cordova    

Denn-Arlzona    

Duluth    &    Moctezuma . 

Globe    Consolidated     . 

Goldfleld  Consolidated 

I.,lon    Gulch     

Live  Oak    

Lake  Sup-?-ior&    Sonora 

Mowltza    

National  Exploration 
North    Lake    

Ohio    Copper    

Rawhide  Royal    

Ray    Consolidated    .. 

Red     Warrior     

Rawhide    Coalition    . 

San    Antonio     

Savanna     

Shattnck     

Superior    &    Boston.. 

Superior    &    Globe.  .  . 

Torre    Roca     

Tonopah  Nevada  . . . 
Wolverine  &  Arizona 
Zenith  Lead    


Corbin  . 
Sonora  . 
Montana 


.82 


12. 


51. 


Liverpool    lirniun. 

Uverpcol.  March  17.— lU'?ing:  Wheal —Spot  strong: 
Xo.  2  red  western  wlnttr.  8»  O'ad;  futures  <iulet :  May. 
8s  •Z\i\:  July,  8s  A%d:  Keptembtr.  7s  lid.  Corn— 
Spot  Quitt;  new  American  mlsed.  .'•»  lid;  futures 
quid;   March.    5s    '.''id;    .May.    :.s    loHtl. 


»w    York   Grain. 

New  York.  March  17. — Close:  Wheat  — 
Mav.  $1.19%i:  Julv.  $1.11%.  Corn — May. 
73>4c;    July,    731^0. 


THE  (HK A(;0  MARKET. 

Falling  Off  in  Wheat  Receipts  Dis- 
heartens the  Bears. 

Chicago.  March  17. — -A  marked  falling 
off  In  receipts  of  wheat  at  Minneapo- 
lis and  Duluth  disheartened  the  bears 
In  the  wheat  pit  today,  and.  as  a  re- 
sult, offerings  were  light  during  the 
earlv  part  of  the  session  and  a  strong 
tone^  prevailed.  May  advanced  Ic  from 
the  previous  clase,  and  the  July  de- 
liverv  made  a  gain  of  »4c.  A  decline 
of  'id  to  =*sd  at  Liverpool  tended  to 
check  demand.  Prices  at  the  start 
w^ere  unchanged  to  ^^ti'MC  higher.  May 


HEARD  ON  THE  FLOOR. 


23 -v^ 

24% 

14 

14'^ 

4Ti 

5% 

34-'i 

36 

14  >^ 

15  M. 

11  Ms 

11% 

18 

18% 

I'A 

1% 

221.4 

22% 

25c 

27c 

99% 

100 

615 

620 

29 

29  Vi 

31c 

34c 

74  V4 

74V4 

7    1-16 

10 

10% 

4% 

9c 

i2c 

14 

14% 

13% 

14% 

6% 

6%. 

8% 



90 

92 

9% 

91/4 

11  >* 

12 

3% 

314 

25% 

26 

syg 

4% 

16% 

16^! 

141.4 

15 

4% 

4% 

63% 

64% 

4 

4% 

13% 

13% 

10 

10% 

60  »i 

61% 

17  =1, 

17% 

2T8 

3 

31/4 

3% 

10!^ 

10% 

67% 

68 

13% 

13% 

49% 

50 

128 

81 

31% 

9% 

9% 

S5 

86 

38c 

40c 

21-8 

2% 

14 

14% 

■06% 

57 

42 
13% 

42% 
13% 

78 

80 

13i,i 

14 

12 

12% 

132% 

133 

40% 

41 

44% 

45 

31 

31% 

5% 

6 

39ii 

40% 

41 

41% 

4% 

413 

51^ 

6 

138 

140 

2% 

2% 

414 

4   5-16 

1% 

1% 

3% 

1% 

16 

16% 

1 

1% 

98c 

1    1-16 

1% 

1% 

1% 

13% 

15c 

17c 

1% 

1% 

19 

19% 

1% 

1% 

1% 

1% 

Hfe 

2% 

3% 

4 

3% 

4% 

4% 

7% 

7% 

11 

5% 

6 

3^ 

3% 

1V4 

1% 

55c 

60c 

4% 

5 

8   5-16 

13c 

15c 

12 

12% 

2% 

2% 

63c 

fi6c 

!      131/2 

14% 

0 

2% 

.       15% 

14% 

14% 

96c 

99c 

3 

6% 

6% 

114 

1% 

2% 

ADVANCES 
IN;SrOCKS 

Market  Started  With  Triv- 
ial  Changes,   But 
Became  Strong. 

United  States  Steel  Rose 

on  Publication  of 

Annual  Report. 


New  York,  March  17. — ^Trivial  price 
changes  resulted  from  the  light  open- 
ing dealings  in  stocks  today  and  the 
market  showed  no  pronounced  tone. 
Minneapolis  &  St.  Louis  ran  off  1%, 
and  Consolidated  Gas  %.  Cleveland.  C. 
C.  &  St.  Louis  rose  1.  and  American 
Smelting    %. 

Business  Increased  largely,  and  there 
was  an  active  demand  for  tlie  metal 
stocks.  United  States  Steel  rose  to 
45%  and  the  preferred  to  110%  after 
tlie  publication  of  the  annual  report. 
The  active  railroad  list  did  not  rise 
proportionately  with  the 
The  entire  market  eased 
o'clock.  ,  , 

The  advance  met  realizing  sales,  and 
prices  reacted,  and  the  general  le\ei 
A'as  carried  under  last  night.  The 
market  then  steadied  and  become  dull. 
Bonds   were   Irregular. 

The  market  closed  strong.  The  up- 
ward movement  lost  its  force  after 
Reading  had  risen  3  points  over  last 
night,  and  some  reaction  followed. 
Westinghouse  Electric  gained  2,  Union 
Pacillc  1%.  and  Ontario  <k  Western  and 
Hocking  Coal  1.  Chicago 
ern  preferred  "B" 
stiffened  again  in 
an  hour. 


KI::MTU.  1404.  I>UL.UTH.  1S71. 

RBFRItEiNCISSi 

City   National   llnuk. 

FIrat    National    Bank. 

MARTIN 

ROSENDAHL 
&  CO.,  Inc 

Capital  $50,000.00. 

Copper  Stock  Brokers. 

414  ^VKST   SUPKUIOn    STREET. 
10-.:-103       aiANHATTAN        Bl.UO. 


My  •irn  wlren  to  Ihe  Copper  ooun- 
(ry.  Alau  connection*  tu  kiftmtKrm 
Markets. 


industrials, 
off      at      11 


lost 
the 


Great  West- 
a  point.  Prices 
final   quarter   of 


"^ew    York    stoc-k 
by   Piptr.   Jchiison 


quotAtioiis 
&   Cass. 


furnlsUtd    Tlie    Herald 


I  Open.  I  nigh.  I   Low.  |  Close. 


Alls   Chalmers    

a,>  I'fa  

.\mnl8ani»'tkl   

American  Sugar 

Anuriran  Ciir  Foiimlrj'. 
Americin  Loeoniotive  .  . 
.Kmericiii     Cotliiii     Oil.. 

Ameriran  Stnelnn   

.\naconda      

.\lclilson    

do    pfd    

IlultlnK  re  &  Ohio   

nrookljji    Riil>ia    Traiult 

Clier:!P«ake  &  Ohio    

Central  l/eailier  

Clilcago-vU.  Wesltni  com 
Chieago-Creat  Westiru  A 
Clilragu-Great    Weslcni    B. 

C.  M.  &  St.  Paul 

«'oloraU )   Kuel   «>:   Iron.. 

Colcrailo  Southi  ni    

Coi.&i)Uili;i<(l  Vai    

Caii.-idian   P,-iclfK'    

lielaware  &  Hudson  .. 
l»cii\<r   &    Ulo   Grande.. 

J»istlll«  r*    

I)..   S.   S.   &  A 

I-:rle    

do  2nd  pfd    

do   1st  pfd 

Grput  Ncrllurn   

Cirtat    Norlhtrn    Ore    . 

Inter-Mel      

Illinois    Cintr*!    

I'.iwa  Cmtral    

Kans.^s  «"Uy  Southern    . 
I^ulsvUIe   4:    NafhvlUe. 

.Mexican    Centr.tl     

.MIs-<ourl.   Kansas  &  Texas 

NUsMHirl    Pacific     

National    I.<  ad     

.New  York  C«MitraI  . . . 
Norfolk  &  Weslem    ... 

.Northern    Pacific    

Ontario   &.   Wtstern    . . . 

Prniif >  Ivanifi,    

Pf<.plc's   Cias    .  .    

Prts>ed  Steel  Car  .... 
llei.ub'.li-  Ircn  tc  .Steel. 

do  pfd    

Rock    Island    

do  pfil    - 

Itcading    I 

Slost-.shitrield   

Soo  Line   

Sonthem  Ilallw.%y  

io    pfd     

Telini-spce     Copper      

Teias    I'aciflc    

Tldrd   .\venue    

Twin    llty     

Cnion     Pacific      

I'tah    Coper     

V.  S.   .Steel      

do      pfd      

Wabash      

do  pfd    

Westinghouse      

Western   Vnlon    

Wlsi-onsin  Central    


(In     pfd 


VS% 

43 

68  \i 
129 

48>.i 

.51 

52% 

83% 

41 

103H 
102Vt 
1«"*,4 

:iH 

67  Vi 

28 

6 

27  H 

8 

143 
32% 
63H 

12'J% 

166 

174^4 
44 

34  5,^ 
17T4 
24  H 

140% 

66  <4 

13 
I42H 

•19 

44 'i 
129  vti 

21 

40  H 

6i)hi. 

70 
123 

87  4 
137  S 

43Vi 
120% 
113% 

3514 

20% 

"22% 

62 
126^41 

73% 
145 

24 

62U 

41% 

32'!4 

38 

i77" 
41 

43% 
110% 
17% 
44% 
78 
66 
48% 
87% 


13%| 

43% 

68% 

130 ',4 

49 

51% 

.'<2% 

84% 

41% 

103% 

102% 

107% 

72% 

68% 

28% 

6% 

28% 

8% 

144 

33%  I 

63% 

130% 

166% 

174% 

45 

34% 

17% 

24% 

'39'" 
141% 

67 

15% 
142% 

29% 

45% 
130% 

21 

41% 

69% 

76% 
125% 

88% 
138% 

46 
130% 
113% 

36 

20% 

23 
62% 
1  29% 

74 
145 
24% 
62% 
41% 
32% 
38% 


13% 

43 

67% 
129 

48% 

51 

02% 

83% 

40% 
102% 
102% 
107 

70% 

66% 

27% 
5% 

27% 

142% 
3: 
63% 

129% 

166 

174 
43% 
34% 
17% 
24 

"38% 
140 

66 

13 
142% 

29 

44% 
li!<J% 

20% 

40% 

69 

75% 
124% 

87% 
137% 

44% 
129% 
112% 

35% 

20% 

22% 
62 

126% 
72 

144%! 
23%! 
61% 
40% 
32% 
37% 


>\KD.\ESDAV,  M-\KCII   17.   1009. 
The    locnl    curb    market    qnlct    nl- 
thonsli    pricen    arc    lioldluK    flrin. 

Iliittc  *  Alex  Scott,  hoth  »Z  puld 
and  full  paid  in  good  dciiinud.  Tbc 
9'2  paid  cloMcd  at  S4.U0  bid  for  auy- 
thing  up  to  1,000  Mbarcn.  Ilid»  of 
ItH-UO  aud  9N.U5  on  tbe  full  paid 
brought   no   Mtock   out. 

Butte  i)^  Superior  cloned  at  $l.<Mi 
to  91.12V.>.  -\cw«  wbould  be  forlh- 
coniing  from  the  mine  at  almoat 
any  time  that  they  have  reached  the 
Elm  C»riu  lead  for  %vhich  they  ha\e 
been  drifting  the  last  t^^o 
^veekM.  They  are  now  17i 
thia    drift, 


Duluth  Copper  Curb  Market. 

N.  S.  MITCHELL  &  CO. 


Private   A^'lrca. 
City    'rbonea,    ISOS. 


202-204    MANHATTAN    BUILDING. 
Rcferenceat 
CITY    NATIONAL   BANK. 
Dniutb.  Minn. 

MARCH   17,   1909. 


Private  I.onis  Distance. 
'Phones,  1657- ISOS. 


I     Bid.)    Ask. 


or    three 

feet    In 

tbciu    very 


which    brings 
vlune   to   thin   vein. 

Calumet  A:  .Sonora  holdinK  firm  at 
fl4  bid.  There  In  very  little  ol  thin 
Htock  on  the  market  at  the  present 
time.  ThlM  one  should  do  a  good 
deal  better  when  they  get  returns 
from  the  lirst  shipment.  This  will 
not  be  long  as  the  .spur  to  the  Hbat't 
Is  almost  completed  aud  regular 
shipments  should  soon  commence. 

Carman    inactive    around    91.37. 

lied  Warrior  made  another  strike 
on  tbe  second  level  and  .from  re- 
ports received  from  the  mine  the 
ore    runs    very    biKh    In    values. 

Rawhide  Koyal  trading  around  14 
cents    with    very    little   Mtock   offered. 


Aniericnn  8a)?tnaw  .. 
Arlz.-MlclilKnii     .... 
Klack  Mountain   . . . . 

Ituttc  Montana 

Butto    &    Superior... 
Ilultc  Rnllnklava    .  . 
Calunu't  &   Arl/.oifs.. 
Cal.  &   Montaiui    .  .  .. 
Caluniet    &    Sonoi«.. 

Camiun    Cons , 

Cliff 

Copper    Queen     ..... 

Coitlova    

Cactus     

Donn- Arizona    

Kast    Butte     

Globe    Cons. 
Greene    Cananea 


•    •   a  •  • 


3.50 
1.25 
1.37 
.41 
1.06 
16.25 
90.00! 
.151 
13..501 
1.251 

i..-.oi 

1.37 
2.00 
L.'SO 
3.75 
13.75 
4.62 
9.25 


I     Bid.l     Ask. 


3.7.">       Fieweenaw ••. 

1.50       Live   Oak    

1.62  .  I>ake  Sup.  &  Sonora.. 

.43       Mowltza    

1.06       Nlplssinc:    « 

16.75      National    

99. .50       North    Butte    

.17       Red  Warrior    

13.75    ;  Rawliide  Royal 

1.37    ,  S«n    Antonio     

1.7.'>    '  Savanna    

1.62       Sup.  &  Pittsburg 

2.12    j  Sup.    &    Boston 

1.75  1  Sliaituck-Arlz.ona    ... 

4.00  Suiierior  &  Globe... 

14.00      Tuohinnie 

4.87       Warren 

9.50  Zenith  Lead  &  Zinc. 


4.00! 

5.75 

3.251 

1.251 

10.75! 

..541 

67.501 

2.25) 

.141 

13.251 

2.001 

13.501 

14.251 

14.75' 

.96 

1.75! 

3..'>0 

1.87 


4.50 

6.00 

3..50 

1.37 

10.87 

.56 

67.75 

2.37 

.15 

13.50 

2.12 

13.62 

14. .50 

15.25 

1.00 

1.87 

3.02 

2.12 


llibbinie. 


— BUANCH  OFFICES— 

PUD  UP  CAPITAL  $50,000.00 

W.  LEE  &  CO.y 

BANKERS  AND  BROKERS. 


Superior. 


Inc. 


Prtvnte  Wires  to  C»pper  Country,   Ranse  aud 
.Both   'pbones,   2UU3. 


all   Kastern   Markets. 
410  West   Superior  Street. 
DIMTH  rVIlB   STOCKS. 


178% 
41% 
45% 

111% 
18 
45%! 

7»  I 
66  I 
49%i 
88      I 


176% 

41 

44% 
110% 

17% 

44% 

78 

66 

48% 

87 


13% 
43% 
62% 
130% 
49 
51% 
52% 
84% 
41% 
103% 
102% 
107% 
72% 
68% 
28% 
5% 
28 'i 
7% 
144 
33 
63% 
130 
100% 
174% 
43 
34% 
17% 
24% 
30%L' 

39 
141% 
66  U- 
13 
142% 
29% 
45% 
130% 
20% 
41% 
69% 
76 
125>s 
88% 
138% 
46 
130 '4 
113 
36 
20% 
71%t 
23 
62% 
129V« 
73 
145 
24  >« 
61% 
41 

32% 
37  "- 
104%! 
178% 
41% 
45% 
IIIV4 
18 
45 
79 
66 
49% 
87% 


Orarse,  cLern  or  i>ear 3 

POF    COKN. 

Choice,    per    lo 

Hlee  com,    sLeL'ed    

UUESSKD    POULTKT. 

SprliiKH,    per    lb 

Hens,     per    lb 

Turkeys,    per   lb 

r>u^S4.   pet   lb 

Geese,    per    lb 

FISH. 

Pike,  per  lb 

Perch,    per    lb 

Fresh  talmcn.   per  lb 

Pichrrel,    per   lb 

\\1iUe.    per   lb 

Fresh    lake    truut    

UcrrliiK.   per  lb.    

HAT. 

Timotli;,    per    ton 

Cpland.    No.    1,    per  ton 

FLKD. 

.Shorts,    per    ton 

Bran,   per  ton 

Oats,   per   bu 

MEATS. 

Beet    

,MutU>n    

I.ard    

Pork  li4na  

Veal    

Lambs    


60 


4 

& 

s 

B 

15 

«» 

17 

IS 

& 

16 

22 

& 

33 

17 

a 

18 

14 

« 

15 

8 

7 

@ 

8 

n 

& 

19 

T 

• 

10 

a 

11  00 

9  50 

27  00 

26  00 

57 

7 

@ 

10% 

9 

11% 

11 

7 

& 

9% 

12 

& 

13 

Both   'Phones.    14KS. 

ROOM  "B,"  phoe;«ix  block. 

J.  H.  ROBBERS, 

Copper  Stocks  iind  Bonds 

Curb    Stocks    a    tipecialty. 
Listed    Seenrltles. 


ChlcaRO. 

Chicago.  March  17.— Buttei  — Market  stearty;  crem- 
eries.  U2^28c;  dalrlef.  20«2,5c.  Kgffs— Market  ttea.Iy 
at  mark;  firsta.  17 'ic;  prime  firsts.  18%c.  Cheese— 
.Market  flmi;  ilaisira,  Io%Col6c;  twins.  14%^l.'»c: 
yoini*  .\merlcas.  12%f;  long  horns,  13% @  17c.  Po- 
totoea— Marloet  steady;  choUe  to  fancy,  88@90c;  fair 
to  good.  85in;87c.  Poultry— Market  fimi;  turkeys,  17c: 
clilckeiis  15c;  springs.  IJc  Veal— Market  firm;  TiO 
lo  60-pound  Heights,  7%(n8c;  60  to  85-pound  weights. 
8%(S9%c;  83  to  110-pound  weights,  10311%c. 
s 
New    York. 

New  York.  March  17.— Mutter— Market  firm:  re- 
ceipts J. 287  packagts;  creamery  specials,  20c;_<>n'lcl;ils. 
29@29%c;  prooesa,  common  to  spe<lal.  17(S;!3%c; 
westtrn  factory  first.  191!i%c.  Cheese— Market  firm 
and  unchai.gcd;  receipt.,  l.MO  Loses.  >:toES— Market 
firm;  rei-elpu,  21,495  cases;  weetem  firsts,  19c;  sec- 
onds!   18  %c. 

HIDES,  SKINS  AND  FURS. 


N.  E.  LUGOFF 

STOCKS  AND  BONDS. 


All    Orders    Promptly    and    Confiden- 
tially   Kxceiited. 

600-501-502    LONSDAIE    BriLniNG. 
Old    phone    1025;        Zenith   pboue   977. 


TotJil    shares.    687,000. 
Money,    Z    per    cent. 


Miiin'-apolls     puts     wirr     JLlS^i     and     $1.13%     anii 
calls.     $1.15    and    $1.1.''.('' l.I"%. 

July  May  downs  were  $l.U%(f«  1.14%. 
ups    were    $1.01%(«  1.04%    and    $1.01%, 
$1.03%(&1.03%    aud    $1.0311.-!%. 


CIdcagn  Jub 
and    downs, 


$1.16' 


to 


$16.16>4.    and    July 

Early    in    the   day 

$1.16»/2,    while    July 


was      reached      at 


being   at 

at  $1.04  to  $1.04% 
May  advancfd  to 
Bold    up    to    $1.05. 

The  top  for  May 
|l.l*i*4.  and  for  July  at  $1.0514.  The 
market  slumped  sharply  in  the  final 
hour  on  general  selling  prices  declin- 
ing more  than  Ic  for  all  deliveries.  May 
dropped  to  $1.15»/2  and  July  to  $1.03%. 
The  close  was  weak,  although  prices 
were  still  a  trifle  above  yesterday's 
final  qutitations.  May  closed  at  a  net 
gain  of  \^(li\c  at  $1.15.%.  July  was 
a  sliade  higher  at  $1. 04ft  '4. 

The  .«;trtngth  in  wheat  caused  mod- 
erate flrmntss  in  the  corn  market, 
despite  favorable  weather  for  the 
movement.  Trade  was  dull  owing  to 
the  scarcity  of  offerings.  May  opened 
unchanged  to  a  shade  lower  at  67*40  to 
67»8<a67»4c   and    advanced    to    67  ^c. 

The  market  became  extremely  weak 
In  the  last  half  of  the  day  on  general 
selling  by  commission  houses.  May 
declir.ed  to  f.554^'Tfec.  The  close  was 
weak  with  May  off  114® ',4c  at  66c. 

Oats  were  firm  because  of  a  fair  de- 
mand bv  some  of  yesterday's  short  sell- 
ers. The  market  was  chiefly  affected  by 
the  strength  of  wheat  and  corn.  May 
opened  unchanged  to  ^4c  higher  at  54  V4 
1^o4\-'C  and   advanced   to   54  %c. 

An  advance  of  5Cd>10c  in  the  price  of 
live  liugs  caused  a  firm  tone  in  provi- 
sions Tradin..  however,  was  quiet. 
Price's  at  the  operting  were  a  shade  to 
6c  liigiier. 

Articles.  Receipt.s.  Shipments. 

Flour,    bbls 41.400  3n.3O0 

•Wheat,   bus 84,C09  45.800 


Midway   H«rse   Market. 

Minnesota  Tn.iiJfir.  St.  iMul.  Mliiii..  .Marcli  17.— 
narp?tt  &  Zimmenn.iii  report:  All  ti-cftil  classes  met 
with  ea.«y  clKi  ranee  r.nd  the  nicTenunt  for  today 
would  have  betii  much  heavier  but  for  the  fact  that 
:i  large  nunibtr  af  bujirs  preferred  to  wait  and 
fill  their  crders  at  tomorrow's  big  auction  sale,  when 
11  Ue  r>ni  of  n'.l  classoi  of  horses  arrived  durliig  the 
(lay  and  will  be  sold  In  the  ring  tomorrow.  With 
the  approach  of  spring  work  the  demand  for  farm 
horses  will  l)?<umc  more  urgent.  .«onie  big  con- 
sigiunents  of  big  logging  horses  are  billed  to  atriic 
<n  the  market  in  a  few  days,  which  will  meet  with 
ready  takere.  Tills  market  has  never  lieen  able  to 
get  enough  of  big  work  hones  out  of  the  woods  tti  half 
mwt   the   demand.  .,.r,-oi- 

nrafteri.    extra    »16j(g,!4.i 

Rrafters.    choice    liOCilOO 

lirafters.   comaicn  to  good 65(«1I:) 

Farm   marts  and   horses,    e.xtra 145©  160 

Farm  mar'.-s  and  horses,  choice 110(a  1.3j 

Farm   marts,    common    to    good 60fein 

neUvery     }S?® '^ 

Drivers     and     saddlers     '-•'*' ijr!! 

Mules,     ftccordhig    to    size 140(n23d 


JUROR  ASKED 
FOR  A  JOB 


James  M.  Campbell  forgot  for  a  mo- 
ment, the  responsibilities  and  duties 
of  a  jurvman  tliis  morning,  and  as 
a  result  the  trial  of  tlse  $30,000  per- 
sonal injury  damage  suit  of"  Edward 
L.  Madden  against  the  Dulutli  &  Iron 
Range  railroad  was  stopped  when  it 
was   nearly    ready    to   go   to   the   jury. 

I>uring  a  recess,  Campbell  ap- 
proaclied  John  Shea,  roadmaster  of 
tlie  railroad,  and  asked  him  about  a 
job  as  flagman,  which  he  had  In  sight. 
When  Mr.  Shea  dl.^covered  that  Camp- 
bell was  on  the  jury  in  the  case  in 
which  he  was  interested,  lie  imme- 
diately reported  the  conversation  to 
C.  O.  Baldwin  and  Mr.  Baldwin  re- 
ported it  to  the  court.  The  trial  was 
immediately     stopped. 


NcTV     York     Money. 

New  York.  Marcli  17. — Money  on  call, 
easy,  l%<ri2  per  cent:  ruling  rate  1%; 
closing  bid.  no  bid;  offered  at  i%.  Time 
loans  very  soft  and  dull;  60  days.  i;'4 
to  L'14  per  cent;  90  days,  2*^.  and  six 
montlis  2^*4  to  3  per  cent.  Close:  Prime 
mercantile  paper.  3',^  to  4  per  cent. 
Sterling  exchange  steady,  with  actual 
business  in  bankers'  bill  at  $4.S6.25  and 
$4.S5.35  for  60-day  bills  and  at  $4.88.25 
for         demand.  Commercial  bills, 

$4.86.88 's-  Bar  silver.  50»^c. t  Mexican 
dollars.  44c.  Government  bonds  firm; 
railroad    bonds    Irregular. 


UIDliS. 

Green  failed  heavy  steer  bides,   orer 

60     lbs 

Green  sailed    cows.    25    Ibe.    and    up. 

and  steers  undtr  60  lbs 

Green  salttd    bulls,    stags    and    oscn, 

40   lbs.   and   up 

Green  salted   long  haired   kips,    8   to 

25  lbs 

Green  salted  veal  kll)S.  15  to  25  lb«. 
Green  salted  veal  calf.   8  to  15  lb«,. 

Green  salted  hog  skins,   each 

Grc*n  saltid  horse    and    mule    hides. 

larg.  each   

Green  and   frozen   heaiy   steers,    over 

60  IbJ 

Dry    flint    Indian      trimmed      Iddw, 

heavy,  over   16  ibe 

Dry   salted    bides,    all   •ecUont.    ovci 

12   lbs 

Green    and   green   salted   deer   skins, 

ail     sectluu 


No.  1.       No.  t 


Chloaso   Livestock. 

Cldcago.  March  17.— Caltlt — Keieipts  estimated  at 
19  000-  market  weak  In  10c  lowir;  beeves.  $4.60(« 
7  if  Tex.is  steers,  $4.10«a5.3;;  western  steers.  $4.00 
^.-1,50;  stwkirs  and  fecdew.  $,T40«f5.3o:  cows  snd 
heiurs.  *l.UO(<i.-,.60:  calves,  $6.00(<i  8.2.1.  Hogs— Re- 
ceiptri  esUmatctl  at  28,000;  market  mostly  10c  higher: 
Ught.  $6..';.i(o6.80;  mixed,  $6.4.';(s6.8J:  lieavy.  $6.or><g 
7  00-  rough  $6.5.'>@C.70;  gooel  to  choice,  heaTj,  $6.70 
(37  00-  pigs  $."p.20(<<6.Ut:  bulk  of  sales.  $6.7U(a6.90. 
Sh-ep— Hec-^iDts  eslimaled  at  Ij.OO.I;  market  steady; 
native  $3. Lie 3.65;  we-stern.  $3.2.1go.8.' ;  yearlings. 
$5  751.47.00;  lambs,  native.  $5.50(g7.75;  western.  $.j.50 
(a  7.80. 

• 

St.  Panl   Livestock. 

St  Paul.  Mliui..  .Manh  17.  -fatlli  Ke<Plpts.  1.100. 
steers  generally  10@1.)C  lower  at  $4.00^6.25;  cows 
iiisd  heifen.  tnisler  and  tmchaiiged;  stockers  and  feed- 
i-rs.  unchangeel.  Hogs— Re<-cipts  2,700; 
Idgher;  range.  $6.25@6.65:  bulk 
.Shetp— llcccipts.  1.000 
lambs,    unchanged. 


30 
28 
26 
22 
16 


@ 


® 


32 
30 


17 


20     @       21 


@ 


IS 
16 

18 
20 


market    10c 
of   sale.    $6.4ri(«6.j."i. 
market  steady  and  unchanged; 


The  Cotton  Market. 

New  York,  March  17. — The  cotton 
market  opened  at  an  advance  of  4  to 
7  points,  and  during  the  middle  of  the 
morning  ruled  about  4  to  5  points 
higher. 

Spot  closed  quiet:  middling  uplands. 
?.65;  middling  gulf.  9.90.  No  sales. 
Futures  closed  steadv.  Closing  bids: 
.March.  9.38:  April.  9.32;  May.  9.33;  June. 
!'.2C;  Julv.  9.26:  Atigust,  99.22:  Septem- 
}>er  rnd  October.  9.19;  November,  9.15; 
December,  9.15;  January,  9.12. 


CASH  SPENT  IN 
VOTE  SECURING 


Madison,  Wis.,  March  17.— H.  C. 
Keller  of  Baraboo,  was  the  first  wit- 
ness in  the  senatorial  primary  inves- 
tigation today.  Tlie  total  amount  he 
received  from  the  Stephenson  fund  was 
$200.  He  was  not  manager  for  Stephen- 
son in  Sauk  county,  but  supported  him. 
Keller  conferred  with  Manager  Ed- 
monds in  Milwaukee  and  was  told  to 
do  whatever  he  thought  necessary. 
Most  of  the  $200  was  spent  in  livery 
rigs,  hotel  bills  and  trips  to  Milwaukee, 

Henry   Overbeck,    former    state    game 
warden,   was   next   called.     He   said 
supported    Stephenson     in    the 
and    received    about    $700 
paign    fund.     He   did   not 
count     or     memorandum 
paid   out. 

Witness  said  he  gave  three  men 
in  Kewaunee  county  $250  or  $260  and 
$100  to  Former  Congressman  £.  S. 
Minor,  in  the  Green  Bay  district.  The 
amount  to  Minor  was  to  be  spent  in 
getting  votes  to  the  polls.  Most  of 
the  remainder  was  spent  by  himself 
during  six   weeks  of  campaigning. 

Overbeck  said  he  "made  preliminary 
arrangements  "  with  a  man  named  Has- 
lan  of  Appleton.  He  said  he  spent  $100 
more  than  he  received.  Asked  as  to 
how  he  knew,  witness  said  lie  had  a 
"Stephenson  pocket"  and  a  personal 
pocket." 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 

Prices     are     .steady     and     unchanged. 

Thfl    following    quotatlcns    were    rjRtished     bj    to* 
secretary    of    tbe    produ«-c    exchange. 
BUTTiai. 

Creamery    prints 

Tubs    

Itenovated   

Ladles     

Packing  stock   ^^^.. 

'^"*"  ^'^  cmi^n. 

F\ill  cream,   twins   • 

Wisconsin  flats    ••• 

Block   and   wheel   cliecse 

Umburger.   full  cream   

Primost    • 

NevT   fancy   white   clover,    per   lb.... 

do    per    esse    

MAPLE    8YHUP. 

Vermont,   r«r  lb 

Maple    s>Tup,    lO-lt.    <^^i;_i 

Fllt<rts.    p«r   lb 

French    vfalnuts,    >*r   lb 

CaUfonil4    soft-sIwUed    irslnuu,    pet 

lb    

CocanuU,   per  do« 

ItrazJla.   per  dos 

•Mixed    nuts,    per    lb 

Peanuts,    per    lb 

(:be«tnuts.   per  lb 

FRUIT!*. 

Bananas,   per  lb 

Malaga    grapes,    per   keg    

Dates,    hard.    12  lb.    box r. 

Dates,   sugar  walnuts.  lO-lb.   box.... 

rigs.   Smyrna,    10- ib.   box 

Ifigs.    Calif  ornl»    '  •  • 

Oranges    

Lemons.    Caii«*'fl^*     •• 

Limes,  per  box   

Crape  fruit,  per  box 

Apple  8    ' 

Cranlierrles.   per   bbl 12  50 

Florida  pineapples,   per  cruu    «  50 

GHKEN    VKGLTABLES. 


Tallow. 

Tallow, 

Tullcw. 

Grease, 

Grease. 

Grease, 

Grease, 

Old  butter  . . . 

Bough  tallow. 


No.  1. 
No.  1, 
No.  2 
v.hite. 
ye  lie  w 
brow  n 


TAI.LOW. 

In  rakes 

in   barels 

choice 

or   dark. 


includhig  skunk  and  soon  oil 


12M 

IIH 

IIH 

lOH 

9^4 

SH 

lUi 

10 

12',i 

11 

15^ 

14^4 

2J 

15 

20 

2  20 

11 H 

leii 

17  H 

11% 

1> 

13 

11 

»=>» 

i% 

4% 

8\i 

t^i 

3% 

3% 

«    9 

6 

2H 

With  our  own  prlvrtte  wire 
connections  with  New  York. 
Boston  and  the  copper  countries 
of  Michigan,  Montina,  Nevada, 
Utah,  Arizona  and  Mexico,  we 
are  the  best  equl])ped  to  give 
you  quick  executio:is  on  all  the 
leading  local  stocks  ol  any  brok- 
erage house  in  the  city. 

PAINE,  WEBBER  &  CO., 

3 IS  WEST  STTPI:RI0R  ST. 
Torrey  touilding. 


FURS. 


tVlsccnsln  and  D»- 


Prlnvs 
Large. 


IS 
IS 

17 
ID 
10 

17 
90 

IS 
39 

14 
19 

18 

fiO 
SO 
13H 
8 
IS 


a 


lU 


B  00 


t     ®         4H 


19 
10 
25 
85 
75 
00 
40 
00 
00 


15  00 


10  00 


«  50 

2  50 

3  90 
30 
18 
10 
OS 
•0 

50 

30 
20 

12  00 
8  DO 


@ 


1  25 

3  25 


4  53 

5.50 


lie 
primary 
of    his    cam- 
keep  any  ac- 
of     what     he 


Wax  beans,   per  liasket   

Pie  plant,   per  box 

Cucumbers,  hothouse,  doi 

Fancy  Golden  Hunt  celeiy 

llndlves.   per   bus 

Lettuce,   hothouse,   per  bus 

RadUhes.    per   co* 

Long   radishes,   pci  Uoa 

Spinach,  per  crate 

Tomatoes,    six    L<asket« 

VEGICTABLKS. 

Pumpkins,    per    aoi 

Hubbard   soaash.   per  doz 

Cabbages,    pir    crate. 


SO 
29 
00 
35 
00 
25 
75 
76 
75 
SO 

SO 
SO 
3  00 


9      «s 


9  1  00 


Onlcns.  Spanish,  per  cat* 3  OO 

Horseradish,    per    bU 8  50 

Red  Glol>a  cnlons.   new.  oer   100  lb*     1 

Potatoes,    per   bushels 

Sweet   potstoe(.   per   bus 1 

Brown    beans     3 

Beets,  per  bus 

New    carrots,    per    bus 

Turr.lpa.   per   bus 

Bagas.    per    bus 

Parsley,    per    doz 

Oyster  plant,  per  doz 

NEW    CIDER. 

New  apple  cider,  per  k«s 

Dlack    raspberry    iulce 


50 
05 
1  7S 
3  00 
79 
7* 
75 
75 
40 
79 

3  50 
5  M 


1  00 


Bear — 

Black  Minnesota, 

kot*     ■  • 

Black  yearll.-.g.   Mlnne^cta  Wisconsin 

and  l>aki  t»   

Black   cubs,      Minnesota,      Wisconsin 

and    Dakct* 

Badger — 

Northern    

Cat— 

Wild.   Ncrihern 

House,  black,  winter  killen 

House,   .Malti  se,   wlntei  killed 

House,  sundry  c-olors,  winter  killed.. 

Civet,  all  sections 

ItingtAlled     

Dog- 
Black  long  h.-Ured.  winter  killed 

U.iig    haired,    sundry    colors,    winter 

kUled    

Short  haired,  all  colors 

Fisher— 

Northern,    iark 

Northern,   brown  or  pale 

Fax  — 
Black-Prices     vnry     as     to     color, 

beauty  and  fineness 35D  00 

Silver  Grey— Piiccs  vary  as  to  color, 

beauty  and  fineness — dark 200  00 

Silver  Grey— Pritcs  vary  as  to  color. 

beauty  ar.d  flrencfs— pale 80  00 

Cross— Prices  vary  as  to  color,  beauty 

and  fineness— dark 15  00 

Cross— Prices  vary  as  to  color,  beauty 

and    flner.ess — pale 7 

Red.  Northern   •> 

Red.  Nebraska  snd  Wisconsin 8 

Grey,    Northern I 

Kilt   or   iSwlft I 

L5nx — 

Dark   

Dark    brown 

Ugiit  brcwn  or  pale 

Mink— 
Mlnntsota,    Wisconsin.   Upper  Michi- 
gan   and    North    Dakota— dark    or 

dark  Ircwn • 

.MInni'sota,    Wisconsin.    Uppfr   Michi- 
gan and  North  DakoU— light  brown 

or    pale    

Cotton  or  Wldte  Grounds,  all  sections 

Otter— 
Minnesota.  Wisconsin,  Iowa  and  Da- 
kota—dark    

Minnesota.  Wlsccnsln,  Iowa  and  Da- 
kota— bicwn   or  pale 

Raccoon — 

Black    

ktlnnesota,  Wisconsin,  Northern  Iowa 

and    Dakota 

Skunk- 
Black,    ca8c<! 

.Short   striped,    cased 2 

Long,  narrow  striped,  cosed 1 

Broad  striped  and  white,  cased 

Weasel — 

White,  winter  caught,  with  tails 

Winter  caught,    badly  stained,    with- 
out tails,  or  damaged 

■    Wolf- 
Mountain    Timber,     Northern,     cased 

and     open 

Buffalo  and  Brush.  Northern,  cased. 
Buffalo  and  Brush.  Northern,  open.. 
Pralrio  and  Coyote,  Northeiu,  cased 
Prairie  and  Coyote.  Northern,  open. 
Tlml>er,  Southwetteni.  cased  and  open 

Beaver,   per  skin 

Muskrat     


1  r'jnz 
Small. 

10  00 


75 

00 

75 

50 
18 
10 
6 
So 
35 

20 

12% 
10 

75 
25 


GOVERNOR  HEEDS 
APPEALOl'  A  VflFE 

Johnson  Hold;  Requisi- 
tion Papers  tie  lias 
Already  Signed. 

Minneapolis,  Mir.n..  March  17. — (Spe- 
cial to  Tlie  Herald.) — i;epresenting  that 
the  charge  of  bigam:-  sworn  out  in 
Missouri  against  Mitciioll  McDonald,  a 
wealtliy  lumber  and  mine  operator, 
now  in  the  Hennepir  county  jail,  is 
only  a  sclieme  to  ext<  rt  money  in  ad- 
dition to  thousands  he  has  already 
paid,  Mrs.  Catherine  McDonald,  his 
wife,  told  Governor  Jolinson  such  a 
pitiful  story  today,  tliat  tlie  governor 
held  tiie  retiuisition,  i.  appears  he  had 
already  signed  and  signified  hi.s  in- 
tention of  according  McDonalds  coun- 
sel   a    hearing.  ^ ,   .     »,   r^        ,.,    , 

Tiie  warrant  on  wUcli  McDonald  is 
arrested  was  issued  in  Jackson  coun- 
ty, Missouri,  by  Horry  B.  Swingley. 
It  alleges  that  one  Helle  Hamilton,  said 
to  now  be  in  Kansas  City,  was  mar- 
ried J4ay  10,  1908.  0  McDonald.  In 
Essex  county,  Ontario,  and  that  she 
lived  with  him  as  his  wife  during 
September  October  and  November,  in 
190S,  in  Ivansas  City.  It  alleges  iliat 
at  tliat  time  McDon.ild  was  married 
to    Catherine    McDona  d. 

McDonald  has  offices  in  Dulutli  and 
St.  Louis,  as  well  as.  in  Minneapolis. 
His  wealth  is  esti  nated  at  about 
$1,000,000. 


pipe:r., 

JOHNSON 

(Si  CASE 
BROKERS 

MEMBERS: 

Boston  Siock  E.\change 
New  York  Stock  Exchange 
New  York  Produce  Excliange 
Chicago  Stock  Exchange 
Chicago  Board  of  Trade 
Mpls.  Chamber  ol  Commerce 
Duluth  Board  of  Trade 
Winnipeg  Grain  Exchange 

406-411  Chamber  of  Commerce  and 

New  York  Life  Arcade. 

Minneapolis 

102  Pioneer  Press  BIdg.,  St.  Panl 
Grain  Exchange  Winnipeg 

DULUTH: 

Temporary  Office  — 

18  3rd  Avenue  West, 

R.  G.  Hubbell,  Manager. 

BELL  PHONE  73).         UNIfH  PHONE  7M. 


I  FRED 


IS 

9 

6 


00 

00 

as 

25 
00 

00 
00 
00 


6  0} 


ISO  00 

T5  00 
S.^  00 

7  50 

8  T5 
3  25 
3  09 

75 
55 


8  00 
4  50 
3  00 


3  00 


H.  MERRITTl 

BROKKR. 

Stocks,  Bonds,  Grain. 

328    AVKST    SUPERIOR    STRKF:T. 
TelepIioneH:  Uuliitb  1408;  KenKh  071. 

3L\RCH    17,    1909. 


50 

25 


13  00 

14  00 
4  00 
2  00 


2  85 
25 
60 
63 

35 

20 


25 
75 


9  00 
7  00 
2  00 
1  00 


15 
75 
13 
35 

20 

10 


4  50 

2  00 

3  00 

1  60 

2  50 

1  35 

2  50 

1  35 

2  00 

1   15 

2  50 

1  35 

8  00 

3  SO 

36 

28 

Treasury   Balance*. 

Washington.  March  17.  —  Today's 
statement  of  tlie  treasury  balances: 
Available  cash  balance.  $1,36.168,981; 
gold  coin  and  bullion.  142,697,199;  gold 
certificates,  $43,885,470. 


(929) 
SUMMONS      IN      Al'l'l.lOATlON         FOK 

KEGlSTltATlON     Ol-'    l.ANl>— 
State  of  Minnesota,  Ccunly  of  St.  Louis. 

District  Court,  lOleveith  Judicial  Dis- 
trict. 
In  tlie  matter  of  th^  apulioa- 
tion  of  the  Ui«watd  Invest- 
ment CympHiiy.  to  ri'gisttM-  the 
title  to  tlie  following  dc- 
scrllu'd  real  estat*,  .«ttu;iU'd 
in  St.  l.ouls  «'oiiiit\,  Minne- 
sota, namely:  l-ots  one  ill, 
two  (21,  three  Clt.  lour  (4). 
in  Bkxk  nine  (.'.•>,  Hunters 
Grassy  I'olnt  Addition  lo  Du- 
lutli, according  to  the  record- 
ed plat  iliereof.  on  file  and  of 
record  in  the  office  of  the 
Register  of  Deeds  n  and  for 
said    County, 

A  pplicant, 
vs. 
All  persons  or  parties  unknown, 
claiming  any  right,  title,  es- 
tate, lien  or  interest  in  the 
real  estate  descrlted  in  the 
application  herein. 

Defendants. 
The  State  of  Minnesjta,  to  the  above 
named  defendants: 
You  are  hereby  simmoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  of  the 
applicant  in  the  ab  >ve  entitled  pro- 
ceeding and  to  file  your  answer  to  the 
said  application  in  the  office  of  the 
Clerk  of  said  court  In  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the 
service  of  this  sun  mons  upon  you, 
exclusive  of  the  day  of  such  service, 
and  if  you  fail  to  answer  the  said 
application  within  the  time  aforesaid, 
the  applicant  in  thi j  proceeding  will 
apply  to  the  court  lor  the  relief  de- 
manded  therein. 

Witness.  J.  P.  Johrson.  clerk  of  said 
court,  and  the  seal  thereof,  at  Duluth. 
in  said  county,  this   10th  day  of  March, 

A.   D.   1909. 

J.    P.    JOHN.SON. 

Clerk. 
By    v.    A.    DASH. 

Deputy. 
(Seal    of    District   Co  art,   St.    Louis   Co., 

Minn.) 
1:.    P.    TOWNR. 

Attornev   for   Applicant. 
No.   500-503   Torrey  Eldg.,  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota. 
Duluth    Evening  Heiald — March    10,   17 
and   24.    1909. 


1 

Bid.  1 
$8.35 

Ask. 

B.-AIcx  Scott  full  pd  . 

Ili!tto-A.  Scott  $2  pel  . 

4.00 

BiKtc-Hallaklava   .... 

16.2.>I 

Btitte  &  Superior.  ..  . 

1.00 

$1 .06 

Ca<tiis    

1.50 

("alunict  &  Sonora..  . 

13,00 

Carman 

1.25 

1.2.% 

Chief  Cons 

.97 

.99 

Copper  Queen    

1.37 

l.,>0 

Cordova  .$2  p<l 

2.00 

Deiin-Arizona 

3.87 

4.0() 

Gli^jux    

8.37 

CJlobe    Cons 

4.87 

5.66 

filobe  $2  |)d 

2.00 

Greene  Cananea    .... 

9.37 

9.50 

iMlic  S.  &  S.  $2..->0  pd  . 

3.50 

lilon  Gulch 

10.,50 

11.66 

Live  Ooak  $2  pd 

5.87 

6.00 

Mowitza 

1.25 

Itawliide  Royal 

.13 

.14 

Red  Warrior    

2.37 

San  .-\ntonio  $1  pd.  .  . 

13..>0 

Savanna   $2   pd 

2.00 

Shattuek-Arlzona     .  .  . 

15.37 

•  ■    >    •    •    ■ 

Sup.    &    PittJ^burg.  ,  .  . 

I3..>0 

1 

Zenith    

2.00 

1 

I.ATKST  \K\V)« — niiyinK  ordorn 
are  iiuiiicroiiM  ruuiiR'li  to  nbKorb  nil 
oflTeringN  ami  with  coutlniied 
Mtreiifcth  Kant  yoii  onii  rraNuuably 
expret  Kood  ndt  aiiocH  locally.  The 
only  tliiiiK  iieceK.sary  now  In  n  {cood 
MtrouK  leader,  but  an  yet  no  one 
particular  otoek  jclvex  evl«l«-noe  of 
liiiiiirtlinte  lenderwlilp.  l,lto  Oak, 
Miiltc-  \lest  Seolt,  l/nkr  Superior  * 
Suitora,  l,lon  (iuleb,  Ued  AVnrrior, 
.Mowlty.a.  (ilroux  or  San  Antiuilo  are 
teelinlcally  NtrotiK  nnd  eilber  could 
be  caNily  advanced  and  iiinde  n  lend- 
er. l>evelo|iiuentM  tiurInK  <l>e  next 
few  lioiirM  will  undoubtedly  Indtcnte 
Jn(.t  which  one  will  be  the  star  uer- 
fornier. 


ORDER    OF    HEARING    ON    PETITION 

FOR    ADMINKSTRATION — 
State   of  Minnesota,  Countj' of  St.  Louis. 

In  Probate  Court. 
In    the    matteiv  of    the    estate    of    John 
.Spina,  Decetfent. 

THE  PET;TI0N  of  Eugene  Piccolo 
having  been  filed  in  this  Court,  repre- 
senting, among  other  things.  that 
,Tohn  Spina,  then  being  a  resident  of 
the  County  of  St.  Louis,  State  of  Min- 
nesota, died  Intestate,  In  the  County  of 
St.  Louis,  State  of  Minnesota,  on  the 
2Gth  day  of  November,  1908,  leaving 
estate  In  the  County  of  St.  Louis,  State 
of  Minnesota,  and  that  petitioner  is 
the  attorney-in-fact  for  widow  of  said 
decedent,  and  praying  that  Letters  of 
Administration  of  the  estate  of  said 
decedent  be  granted  to  Anthony  G.  Fls- 
kett 

IT  IS  ORDERED,  That  said  petition 
be  heard  before  this  Court,  at  the  Pro- 
bate Court  Rooms  In  the  Court  House 
in  Duluth,  in  said  County,  on  Monday, 
the  12th  day  of  -\pril,  1909.  at  ten 
o'clock,  A.  M.,  and  all  persons  interest- 
ed in  said  hearing  and  In  said  matter 
are  hereby  cited  and  required  at  said 
time  and  place  to  show  cause.  If  any 
there  be,  why  said  petition  should  not 
be   granted.  _ 

ORDERED  FURTHER.  That  this 
Order  be  served  bv  publication  in  the 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,  according  to 
law,  and  that  a  copy  of  this  Order  be 
served  on  the  County  Treasurer  of  .St. 
Louis  County  not  less  than  ten  days 
prior   to   said   day   of   hearing. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  17th, 
1909. 

By  the  Court, 

J.  B.   ^^DDLECOFF. 
Judge   of  Probate. 
(Peal.  Probate  Court,  St.  Louis  County, 

Minn.) 
Duluth    Evening   Herald,    March    17,    24 

and   31. 


■\- 


V 

-•  1 

» 

f 

I 

1, 

1 
( 

-   ,. 

1 

. 

4 

3 

i 

i 

\ 
■ 

1 
1 

t 

.iii^n 


- 


I 

! 

I 


i 


*i. 


I   *■        ■  Wt»m. 


I 
I 

I 

I 
I 

■  ■  "   ■ 


^^^^ 

^^^^ 

^ 

- .      ...    ...   . 

i 

1 

i 

1 

; 

i' 

1 

1 

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■ 

j  ^ 

» 

li 

i       1 

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f 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     WEDNESDAY,    MARCH    17,    1909. 


A  Fine  Investment::  i DESIRABLE  PROPERTY 


19500  ""^ "'' ' ' 


centrally  lo- 
catod.  with  9.- von  houses, 
brir.Kingr  a  rental  of  $160  per  month. 
Houses  have  six  rooms  and  oatn. 
with  good  plumbing,  and  always 
rent      readily      to      good      tenants. — 

#i>lhnn  Takes  one  of  the  best  lo- 
#4||UU  rated  cottage  homes  on 
Park  Point:  three  beautiful  lots,  on 
bay  side  of  Minnesota  avenue,  wun 
4-room  cottage;  good  store  house 
and  boathouse. — (4736.) 
#CeA  Takes  50x132  feet  on  upper 
vOwU  side  of  Fourth  street,  near 
rorty-flrst  avenue  west;  Tery  cheap. 
—  M3.'5.) 

^■ICA  Takes  100x140  foot  corner. 
wfuU  on  Second  avenue  east  and 
Ninth  street. — (4653.) 
•  OJflA  A  handsome  home  on 
#04UU  Park  Point.  6  rooms  and 
balli.  gas  and  electric  light;  hard- 
wood floors;  lot  60x100,  in  very  best 
locTi  t  Ion. 
#OCn    l^or     ^^    acres 

«9llU    half  mile  this 

I>.tk<\    or    will    sell    forty    acres    for 
94NO. 

BO  tfft  on  Rant  Superior  «treet  can 
be  leaHFd  for  a  lonR  time  on  favor- 
able   terinn. 

FiirnNlKMl  hoiiMeM  In  Hnnters  Park. 
*er.v  tlfslruhle  luratiou,  for  rent  for 
the   Miiiiiiiier. 

MI>\KV    OX     H.\>'r> 
Ft»R    t;Ot>U    LOA>'S. 

STRYKER,  MANLEY  &  BUCK 


about 
side  of 


one- 
Pike 


f3,T50— Six  rooms,  hardwood  finish 
throughout.  Bath.  gas.  electric 
light,  cellar.  Back  plastered.  Ce- 
ment sidewalk.  New  house.  1907. 
Lot  50x150.  London  road,  near 
Fifteenth  avenue. 

^^OO— .Seven -room  house,  hardwood 
rtoor.s  throughout.  Electric  light. 
Parn  In  rear.  Fine  corner  lot. 
Fifth   avenue  east. 


We     write 


innuranre     In 
panteH  only. 


.'M     com- 


GHAS.  P.  CRAIQ  &  CO. 


OCEAN    »TE.\M.«»mi»S. 


EUROPE 

70  TOrus,  de  I>uxe  and 
Vacation,  for  1909;  Cover 
All    Europe. 

$150  to  $1195 

AU  Tr«velln>  Expenses  Inclu  led. 

THOS.COOK&SOii 

245  Broadway,  New  York 

Cook's    Travelers'    Checks 
are   Good    Everywhere. 


LONG  TERM 
LEASE 

The  undersigned  are  prepared  to 
make  a  long  term  lease  on  the 
southeast  corner  of  First  street  and 
I'irst  avenue   east. 

Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

First  National  Bank  Building. 


ARTICLES  OF  INCORPORATION 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

DILUTH.  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY, 

Office:     426  Went  Superior  St. 
'Phone.     068. 


For  Hlbbing,  Virginia.  Eveleth. 
Coleruine,     ••Mountain    Iron, 


•7i40  AM 


••Sparta.    ••Blwabik... 

For      Hibhlng,      Virginia. 
••Eveleth.    Coleraine.  . . 

For  Virginia.  Cook,  Ranler. 
Fort  Frances.  Port  Arthur. 
Beaudette,  Warroad  and 
Winnipeg   •7:10 

•Daily.     ••Except  Sunday. 

Cafe.  Observation  Car,  Mesaba  Range 
Points.  Solid  Vestibuled  Train.  Mod- 
ern  Sleeper  through   to   Winnipeg. 


.•3rf»0  PM 


PM 


THE  DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  RAIL- 
ROAD COMPANY. 

"THE  Vi:il.MlMON   KOUl'BV' 

nn.lTH.        '  I     Arrt»«. 


Lgare.     [ 

I  (      Knife   Hi*  or.   Two   Har-      ! 

«7-30  a»ij  1  bon.     Tuwer.     Hy.     Aurora.  I 

*i  IS  pra    \  UlwaUk.    itctvlnley.    SyarU,  ^ 

t7.45am    |  Evtleth  aud  | 

1  I  Virginia. J 


i*  12.00  ni 
«7.4S  pm 
t6.43pia 


•  Daily    iieept   .Suniiay.      tSiinday   only. 


Dulufh  &  i\orlhern  >linnesota  Railway 

Oirice!*.  510  LoJisdMle  Uldsc.,  Uulutb. 

Trains  leave  Knife  Iciver,  1:0  miles  out 
on  the  1).  &  1.  R  R.  every  day  except 
Sundays,  on  arrival  of  the  train  leaving 
Union  station.  Duluth.  at  7:30  a.  m.  Re- 
turning connections  are  made  at  Knife 
River  with  trains  due  in  Ouluth   Union 

ttatl'iii  at  7:15  p.  in.  «'i  niiectioiis  are  ni.iJo  dally,  ex- 
cept .Siinilay  at  HapUim  Kl»er  with  stage  liJie  for 
Oraiid   Marala   and  »U  imrtli  sjljore  points. 

NORTHERN  PACBFIC  RAILROAD 


Le.ivo.     I 

•  4.00  pm Ashland    and    East 

•8.00  amj AJliland   a'lrt   Ka«t 

•7.30  pm,.    .Minn,  aud  Dakota  fjiiwess. 
•8  15  ami North  Coa:§t  Uralted 


Arrive. 

Ml.  13  am 

•6.40  pm 

*8'  15  am 

•6.2S  pm 


"l>ulutli   Short   Une." 


lieave. 
t9.00  am 
•  1.35  pm 
•II.  10  pw 

•Dally.      fDiilly  exct-pt  .Sunday.     'Phoue.  211.   L'ulon 
Depot  »nd   vn  Wftjt  Suprrlor  «troet 


8T.    PAUL 

MINNEAPOLIS. 


Arrive. 
•6.30  am 
OS  pm 
00  pm 


11 


N^TrTH^WE STERN  IINEI 


Uv  Du!uth  a^  ^opfXi 
1  ,v  Suv>eT  i  T  T^  S5V^ 
Ar  Eaii  CUirc  85^^111 
Ar  Madi  >oii        3  15.1111 

Ar  Mii-.  aiifccc    

Ax  Janr^ville  4a$am 
Ai  CZhica^co  7  coam 
ftLaily.     t>Kxc<i>t  Sunday 


1.5  I5l>ni 

5  ISP™ 

JO  JulJIIl 

1  4kJ.iin 

740.1111 

450011. 

730*111 
Uy. 

Lv  Iiuluth 
l.v  Superior 
\t  St.  Paul 
At  M'p'jlis 


4  10pm 

5  5P"> 


24  -isr"" 

955pm 

ID  25pm 


Pullman  sleepers  and  chair 
cars  lo  Chi'-ago.  Parlor  and 
:af.r  cari  to  Twin  Cities.  Office 
—  303  W    Superior  St.,  Duiuth* 


DULUTH,  SOUTH  SHORE*  ATLANTIC 


CERTIFICATE  OF  INCORPOR.\TION 

— OF— 

GOPHER-EMPIRE  MINING  CO. 

We.  ll'.H  under.signed.  hereby  assio- 
ciate  ourselves  toKether.  agree  upon 
and  adopt  the  following  certificate  of 
incorporation,  under  the  provisions  of 
Chapter  58  of  the*  Revised  Law.^  of  the 
State  of  Minnesota,  for  the  year  190i>. 
and  acts  amendatory  thereof  and  sup- 
plemental   thereto. 

ARTICLE   I. 

The  name  of  this  corporation  shall 
be  (lOPHKR-BMi'lRK  MINING  COM- 
PANY. Tlie  principal  place  of  tran.s- 
actlng  its  business  shall  be  Duluth, 
Minnesota.  The  general  nature  of  its 
business  shall  be  the  mining,  smelting, 
reducing,  retlning  and  working  of  iron 
ores  and  other  minerals,  and  the  manu- 
facture of  iron,  steel,  copper  and  other 
metals. 

ARTICLE    IL 

The    period    of    its    duration    shall    be 
thirty    (30)    years,   and  the   date   of   the 
comment  einent      of      this      corporation 
.shall  be  March  20th,  ia09. 
AltTICLE   HI. 

The  names  and  places  of  re'^idence 
of  the  Incorporators  of  this  corpora- 
tion are  as   follows: 

William  Harrison.  Duluth.  Minn. 

.S.   T.   Harrison.  Duluth,   Minn. 

E.    H.    Mather.    Duluth,    Minn. 

J.   .1.   Robinson.   Duluth.    Minn. 

Julius  D.   Howard.  Duluth.   Minn. 
ARTICLE    IV. 

The  management  of  this  corporation 
shall  be  vested  in  a  Board  of  Directors, 
consisting  of  five  (5)  members.  The 
names  and  addresses  of  those  com- 
posing the  Board  of  Directors  until  the 
first    election    are    as    follows: 

William    Harrison.   Du'uth,   Minn. 

S.   T.    Harrison.    Duluth.  Minn. 

E.    H.   Mather.   Duluth,   Minn. 

.1.  J.   Robinson,   Duluth,   Minn. 

Julius   D.    Howard,   Duluth,   Minn, 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  stock- 
holders of  this  corporation  for  the  elec- 
tion of  Directors  and  the  transaction 
of  other  business  shall  be  held  on  the 
first  Monday  in  March  in  each  year, 
except  when  that  day  i.s  a  legal  holi- 
day, then  on  the  following  day,  at 
such  place  as  may  from  time  to  time  bo 
determined  bv  bv-law  or  resolution  of 
,the  Board  of  Directors.  The  first  meet 
ing  of  the  corporation  shall  be 
the  20th  day  of  March.  1909. 
o'clock  P.  M..  in  Room  6'>9, 
Building.  Duluth,  Minnesota, 
notice. 

ARTICLE  V. 

The  amount  of  the  capital  stock  of 
this  corporation  is  Five  Hundred  Thou- 
sand Dollars  <  $r,00.000.00).  divided  into 
One  Hundred  Thousand  f  100.000)  shares 
of  the  par  value  of  Five  Dollars  ($5.00) 
each,  to  be  paid  In  as  the  Board  of 
Directors  may   determine. 

This     corporation     may     begin     busi- 
ness when  four  thousand  M.OOO)   shares 
of  its  capital  stock  are  subscribed  for. 
ARTICLE   VL 

The  highest  amount  of  Indebtedness 
or  liability  to  which  this  corporation 
-shall  at  any  time  be  subject  is  Five 
Hundred  Thousand  Dollars  ($500,- 
OiiO.OO). 

IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF.  We  have 
hereunto  set  our  hands  and  seals  this 
9th   dav  of  March,    1909. 

WILLIAM     HARRISON. 
S.    T.    H.VRRISON. 
E.    H.    MATHER. 
J.   J.    ROBINSON. 
JULIUS   D.    HOWARD. 
J.    McCLEARN. 
H.    LONG  LEY. 


Know  all  men  by  these  presents, 
that  we,  the  underelgned.  do  hereby 
associate  ourselves  together  for  the 
purpose  of  forming  a  corporation  under 
the  laws  of  the  State  of  Minnesota. 
ART.    1. 

This  corporation  shall  be  known  as 
the  Duluth  Handle  Company.  Its 
principal  place  of  business,  Duluth, 
Minnesota. 

ART.  II. 

The  general  nature  of  the  business 
of  this  corporation  shall  be  the  manu- 
facturing of  handles,  handle  blanks, 
lumber,  lath  and  shingles.  To  sell, 
handle  and  dispose  of  said  products 
BO  manufactured.  To  buy,  hold  and 
possess  such  land,  timber  and  raw 
material  as  may  be  necessary  to  carry 
on  such  manufacturing  business. 
ART.  IH. 

This  corporation  shall  endure  for  a 
period  of  thirty  years  from  January 
first.   A.    D.    1909. 

ART.  IV. 

The  names  of  the  persona  forming 
Ihi.s  corporation  are; 

Delbert  A.  Crosby  of  Duluth,  Minne- 
sota. 

Thomas  C.  Himebaugh  of  Duluth, 
Minnesota. 

Lillian  M.  Himebaugh  of  Duluch  Min- 
nesota. 

ART.  V. 

The  management  of  this  corporation 
shall  be  vested  In  a  board  of  three 
directors,  who  shall  be  elected  on  the 
first  Tuesday  of  January  of  each  year. 
The  names  of  the  first  board  of  direc- 
tors are: 

Delbert   A.   Cro.-<hy, 

Thmnas  C.   Himebaugh, 

Lillian  M.  Himebaugh,  residing  as 
above. 

ART.  VL 

The  capital  stock  of  this  corporation 
Is  twenty  thousand  dollars,  divided  Into 
two  thousand  shares  of  the  par  value 
of  ten  dollars  each,  which  shall  be 
paid  In  as  the  business  demands,  at  its 
par  value. 

ART.  VIL 

The  highest  amount  of  Indebtedness 
or  liability  to  which  this  corporation 
shall  at  any  time  be  subject  shall  be 
five   thousand  dollars. 

ART.    VIIL 

The  first  officers  of  this  corporation 
are; 

Delbert    A.    Crosby.    President. 

Thomas  C.  Himebaugh.  Secretary 
and  Treasurer. 

DELBERT    A.    CROSBY. 
THOMAS  C.  HIMEB.\UGH. 
LILLIAN   M.   HIMEBAUGH, 
Signed,  Sealed  and  delivered  In 
presence  of:     Witness — 

JOHN  H.  BRIGH.VM. 

D.    N.    WHEELER. 


ADDftlONAL  WANTS 

^ROM  PAGE  16. 


I  ^^^i^^i^^i^^^^a^^^ 


»^«P^^i^^^^^^ 


FOR  SALE— 640  ACHftS  BEST  SEC- 
tlon  of  farm  land  in  Douglas 
county,  Wisconsi|n  tliree-quarters  of 
a  mile  east  of  Ftrplar,  on  Northern 
Pacific  railway;  no  improvement;  nice 
creek,  plenty  of  ^nU»er;  a  fine  stock 
and  dairy  and  trjkcl^  farm.  Price, 
112.50  per  acre;  half  cash,  balance 
in  five  equal  annual  payments.  6  per 
cent.  This  will  be  on  the  market 
for  a  few  days  only  at  this  price. 
Call  or  write  for  information.  Isaiah 
Henry  Bradford,  213-214  Torrey 
building. 


FOR  SALE — THE  LAND  DEPART- 
ment  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
Railroad  company  is  preparing  to 
put  on  the  market  a  number  of  ten 
and  twenty-acre  tracts  for  poultry 
farming  and  truck  gardening  at 
Meadowlands.  These  lands  will  be 
well  ditched  and  drained  and  sold 
on  easy  terms  and  long  tnme.  For 
further  information,  address  Land 
Commltsioner,  Duluth  &  Iron  liange 
Rcilroad  company,  512  Wolvln  build- 
ing.   Duiuth,    Minn. 

FOR  SALE— .MINUTES  OF  HOME- 
stead  of  120  acres,  small  house  and 
clearing:  one  and  one-fourth  mile 
from  town  and  station;  a  bargain. 
Address   L   45.   Herald. 

FAR.M  LANDS— 128  ACRES.  HUBBARD 
county;  Iron  lands;  on  lake  shore; 
Jl,200.  A  snap,  Isiuh  Henry  Brad- 
ford, 213-214  Torrey  building. 

FOR  SALE— WHITE  EARTH  RESER- 
vatlon  In  Minnesota.  An  agricultural 
paradlre  of  unlimited  resources; 
thousands  of  acres  of  prairie,  brush 
and  timber  lands  at  $8  to  $15  per 
acre.  Beaulieu  &  Dahl,  317-19  Palace 
Building,  Minneapolis. 


AGENTS  WANTED.  ^ 

AGENTS  ARE  GETTING  RICH  SELL- 
Ing  our  new  wonderful  invention. 
Jones,  Nebraska,  averaged  $18  day 
first  fifteen  days.  No  experience; 
(4Ulck  sales;  millions  needed.  Get 
best  territory.  Toledo  Cooker  com- 
pany, Toledo,   Ohio. 


1^  lif  lie  A  3l 

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AGENTS  —  NEW  FIELD;  200  PER 
cent  profit;  exciting  business;  sell  at 
every  home.  Mr.  Bleckner  made  $161 
In  two  days;  never  falls  below  $20 
a  day.  No  deposit  required.  Write 
for  county  territory.  Fire  Appliance 
Sales  company,  Toledo,  Ohio. 


(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 


State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis 
gs 

On  this  27th  day  of  Feby..  A.  D.  1909. 
before  me  personally  appeared  Delbert 
A.  Crosby.  Thomas  C.  Himebaugh, 
Lllllam  M.  Himebaugh,  to  me  known  to 
be  the  persons  described  In  and  who  ex- 
ecutt'd  the  foregoing  Instrument,  and 
acknowledged  that  they  executed  the 
same  a.s  their  free  act  and  deed. 
JOHN  H.  BRIGHAM, 

Notary   Public. 
St.  Louis  Co..  Minn. 
(Notarial  .Seal.   St.   Louis  Co.,   Minn.) 

My    commission    expires    on    Nov.    16. 
1911. 


State      of     Minnesota      Department     of 

State. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument was  filed  for  record  in  this 
office  on  the  6th  day  of  March,  A.  D. 
1909.  at  11  o'clock  A.  M..  and  was  duly 
recorded  In  Book  R-3  of  Incorporations, 
on    page    181. 

JULIUS  A.  SCHMAHL. 

Secretary  of  Scate. 


FOR  SALE— TWENTY -A<:RE  FARM, 
two  miles  from  car  line;  splendid 
six -room  cottage;  large  barn  and  hen 
house;  will  sell  In  five-acre  lots 
if  so  desired.     Address  H  55.  Herald. 


FOR  SALE— 40  ACRES  IN  TIMBER; 
also  40  acres  cultJvaited;  railroad  and 
depot  in  center  of  same:  two  wells; 
furnished  house.'  cost  $2,600;  good 
stable;  three  milclr  cows;  granary 
and  complete  failln  machinery;  twen- 
tv-six  miles  from,  Dyluth.  Part  cash, 
balance  easy  terms.  Inquire  J  79, 
Herald  office. 


FOR  SALE— HORSES. 

FOR    SALE — 

HORSES  HORSES  HORSES  HORSi^S. 
We  art  leaders  in  our  line  and  can- 
not be  undersold.  Our  motto,  "quick 
sales  and  small  profit."  We  have  from 
400  to  600  head  of  horses  on  hand, 
consisting  of  draft  horses.  farm 
mares,  delivery  horses  and  mules. 
Wo  can  sell  yoa  one  horse  or  a  car- 
load. Auction  every  Wednesday  at 
1:30  p.  m.  Private  sales  daily.  Part 
titne  given  if  desired.  Take  interur- 
ban  cars  from  either  city.  Barrett  & 
Zimmerman,  Midway  Horse  Market. 
St.   Paul. 


lt*ttttttt*t*illitt*ttt*t***tt*t*i******tt'$ 


DULUTH 'S 

PROGRESSIVE 


FIRMS! 


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Something  iis  Always  Wanted.  Just 
what  it  is,  who  makes  it,  sells  it,  or 
does  it,  and  where  it  may  be  obtained 


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AUTOMOBILES. 

Thomas  Fivers,  40-hp.  6-cylinder.  $3,000 
Thomas  Flyers,  60-hp.  6-cyllnder.  4,500 
Thomas  Flyers,  70-hp.  6-cyllnder.  6.000 
Chalmers  Detroit,  30-hp.  C-cyl....  1.500 
Most  perfect  cars  In  America.  Mutual 
Auto  Co.  Garage   rear  B.   oT  T.,  Duluth. 


ATTORNEY. 


FOR  SALE— A  DAPPLE  GR-A-Y  TE.\M 
7  years  old,  guaranteed  sound, 
weighs  2,800  pounds,  can  be  bought 
cheap;  part  time  given  If  necessary. 
608  North  Fifty-sixth  avenue  wesU 
Zenith  'phone   3001. 


For  Sale — Draft,  delivery,  farm  mares 
and  drivers  always  on  hand  at  our 
n.MV  .stables.  308  East  First  St.  Also 
wagons   of   all    kinds    L.    Hammel 


Co. 


For  Sale — Horses,  mill  wood.  Also  ashes 
removed.  2119  w.  Ist.  Old  'phone  1937 -M. 


WANTED    TO    BUY. 

We  buy  furniture  and  stoves.  Joe  Pop- 
kin,    22    W.    1st   St.   Zenith    1857-X. 


WHITE  EARTH  RESERVATION 

lands  in  Minnesota;  good  lands  at 
low  prices:  the  lands  are  very  fertile, 
heavy  black  loam  over  clay  sub-soil; 
we  havL-  large  or  -email  prairie  or 
timbur  tracts,  from  $8  to  $15.  accord- 
ing to  location  and  cultivation. 
Beaulleu  &  Dahl.  317-319  Palace 
building,  Minneapolis.  Minn. 


WHOLESALFJ  BARGAINS   —   12,800 

acres  in  Montana  at  $5.75  per  acre; 
40,000  acre.s  In  Texas,  at  $1.75  per 
acre.  Jay  P.  Morrill.  Palace  building. 
Minneapolis. 

FOR  SALE— EIGHTY -ACRE  FARM 
twelve  miles  from  town,  on  Rice 
Lake  road.  Will  sell  cheap  for  cash. 
J  6  4,  Herald. 


held  on 
at  two 
Torrey 

without 


OFFICE   OF   REGISTER  OF  DEEDS. 
State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

99. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument was  flle<i  in  th.ls  office  for 
record  March  9,  1909,  at  12:30  p.  m..  and 
was  duly  recorded  in  Book  9  of  Misc., 
page   431.- 

M.  C.  PALMER. 

Regi.ster    of   Deeds. 
By  THOS.  CLARK, 

Deputy. 
Duluth    Evening    HeraM — March    16-17, 
1909. 


A.M 


3  I  No.  8  I 
.  1  P.-M.  \ 


No.  7 
A.M. 


No.  5 
P.M. 


t7.45     'LOO 

Lt Duluth    Ar 

•10. 30 

fLir, 

•8.05     •5.15 

Superior   

•fO.I5 

t6.40 

P.M.      .*..M. 

P.M. 

t7.45     '5.40 
8.35     ♦6.30 

Ar. . . .    Houghton    ....Lt 

•10.30 

Calumet    

•9  40 

P.M. 

A.M. 

tS.55     '3. 50 
17.45     »4.30 

blipemlng    

•12  25 

t7  55 
+8.4J 

Marquette    

•11.30 

*I0.I5 

Skull  ste.   Marie 

•5.30 

•8.00 

Muntreal 

•9.50 

•8.15 

Bodtoa  

•  10.00 

A.M.  I  P.M.  I 

t8.50[   •7.10  L»....     Moil 

P.M.     A.M. 

fO.OO!    •7.l8!Ar New 


A.M. 

M»l      . 

..At 

•7.30 
P.M. 

York.. 

..L» 

•7.00 

P.M. 

tlO.I5 
A.M. 

to. 45 


•Dally.       tl>«l'y    erccpt    Sundaj. 
Trains   .Nus.    7   and   S. 


Olulua    car    on 


(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 


H. 
H. 


State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 

On  this  10th  day  of  March.  1909.  l)e- 
fore  me.  a  Notary  I'ubllc  within  and 
for  said  Countv.  personally  appeared 
William  Harrison.  S.  T.  Harrison.  E.  H. 
Mather,  J.  .1.  Robinson  and  Julius  D. 
Howard,  to  me  well  known  to  be  the 
persons  described  In  and  who  executed 
the  foregoing  instrument,  and 
knowledged  that  they  executed 
same  as  their  free  act  and  deed.  * 
H.  J.  McCLEARN, 

Notary  Public. 
St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn. 
(Notarial    Seal.   St.    Louis  Co.,   Minn.) 

My  commission  expires  Aug.  18,  1910 


(9:12.) 
SI'MMONS      IN      APPLICATION        FOR 
REGISTR.\TION     OF     LAND — 

State  of  IMiniiesota.  County  of  .St.  Louis. 

ftS. 

Dl.=?trlct    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
In   the   matter  of  application   of  j 
Howard    Investment   Company  i 
to  register     the     title  to     the 
following     described     real  es- 
tate    situated      In      St.      Louis 
County,      Ml'inesota.      namely: 
Lots      fifteen    (15).      and      six- 
teen   (16),    Block      eight       (8), 
Hunter's     Gras.sy      Point      Ad- 
dition   to      Duluth,      according  i 
to  the  recorded     plat     thereof 
on    file  and   of  recor-l    in      the 
office     of     the       Regi.-iter     of 
Deeds       In        and        for       said 
County.  Applicant, 

vs. 
All  persons  or  parties  unknown, 
claiming  any  right,  title,  es- 
tate, lien  or  Interest  in  the 
real  estate  described  in  the 
application  herein. 

Defendants. 
The    State    of    Minnesota    to    the    above 
named    defendants. 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  of  the 
applicant  in  the  above  entitled  pro- 
ceeding and  to  file  your  answer  to 
the  said  application  in  the  office  of 
the  Clerk  'if  said  court,  in  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the  ser- 
vice of  tills  -summons  upon  you,  ex- 
clusive of  the  day  of  .such  .service,  and, 
if  you  fail  to  answer  the  said  applica- 
tion wlthiit  the  time  aforesaid,  the 
applicant  in  thl.s  proceeding  will  ap- 
ply to  the  court  for  tl:e  relief  demand- 
ed  therein. 

Witness,  .1.  P.  Johnson,  clerk  of  said 
court,  and  the  seal  thereof,  at  Duluth, 
In  said  county,  this  10th  day  of  March, 
A.  D.,   1909. 

J.   P 


BUSINESS  CHANCES. 

BL'SINE.SS  CHANCE- FOR  SALE— 
Two  lunch  cars.  Twenty-slxtii  ave- 
nue west  and  Michigan  street. 


Highest  prices  paid  for  2d-hand  furni- 
ture and  clothes  619-D,  Zenith.  1 
West   Superior   street. 


William    Marx. 
Burrows    bldg. 


Attorney   at    Law.    510 
Zenith   'i)hone   384 -A. 


BLACKSMITHS   AND   WAGON 
MAKERS. 

Horseshoeing    and    repalrl  ig — Devaney 
&    Jordan,    20-22    First    uvenue    west. 


BOATS  AND   LAUNCHES. 

All  kinds  built  to  order  und  for  sale; 
also  gas  engines.  H.  15.  Patterson, 
Railroad   street  and  Sixth    Ave.   west. 


HARDWARE  AND  TOOLS. 


O.    A.    Geise.    10 
class  tin  shop 


W.    1st    St.    with    first 
in  connection.  'Phones. 


IMPROVED    SHOE    REPAIRING. 


GOPHER  SHOE   WOKK.^- 
avenue  west  and   12   4th 


-Shops   10   Ist 
avenue  west. 


KODAKS  AND  CAMERAS. 

Eclipse   View   Co..   Inc..    30   4lh   Ave.    W. 
Develops    and    finishes    for    amateurs. 


LAND  FOR  SALE. 

We  always  have  bargains  in  wild  and 
improved  land.  List  with  us.  E.  H. 
Ho  be  Land  &  L'ber  Co.  10  dth  av.  W. 


LOAN  OFFICE. 

Money   loaned    on    all    articles   of  value. 
City   Loan  Office,  524    W.  Superior  St. 


COAL  AND  WOOD. 


WANTED     TO     BUY— IF    YOU     WANT 

to  sell  or  buy  property,  any  kind, 
anywhere  write  the  Northwestern 
Business   Agency,    Minneapolis     Minn. 


WANTED 
trunk.    L 


TO 

59. 


BUY  — 

Herald. 


DRESSER 


WANTED  TO  BUY— DOUBLE  SET  OF 
work  harness;  must  be  in  good  con- 
dition and  cheap.  Call  evenings.  Old 
'phone    87-M.  

Highest  price  paid  for  cast 
M.   Stone.    213    W.    ist   St. 


■off  clothing. 
Bell    1834-L. 


WANTED     TO     BUY— A      LARGE       OR 

small    tract    of    land    for    Investment. 
I    69,    Htrald. ____^___ 


BUSINESS  CHANCE  —FOR  SALE— UP- 
to-date  restaurant  in  the  West  end. 
Complete  outfit.  Doing  good  business. 
Other  business  to  attend  to.  In- 
quire 614  West  First  street. 


BUSINE.SS  CHANCE— HAIR  DltESS- 
Ing  i>arlors.  doing  good  business; 
best  in  cfly;  wMU  sell  reasonable  price 
to  responsible  party.  Address  J.  80. 
Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHA-NCE  —  FOR  SALE 
rooming  house;  15  rooms,  well  fur- 
nished, best  location  In  city;  reason 
for  selling,  leaving  the  city.  Ad- 
dress L.  55,  Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES— LAMB  MARINii 
Engine,  best  on  earth,  for  sale  by 
T  W.  Wahl.  20S  Lon.sdale  V)uildlng. 
Our  representative  will  call.  upon 
'phono  message.    Both   'phones,   439. 


BUSINE!-^S  CHANCE— FOR  SALE,  14- 
ro.,ni  boarding  house,  very  central, 
J    73,    Herald. 


ac- 
the 


THE  GREAT  NORTHERN 


~f6".00  sniTT 
•3.25  pml  i 

•11.10  PM|    i 

•8  45  a<ii|  f 
•8.55  pmi  ; 
t2.20  pmi 
tS.OO  anij 
•Dalljr. 
ready  at  9 


STATION.^. 


Arrlre. 


ST.   PAUL  I 

•aH  \ 

MINNEAPOLIS.  i 

f    Crookstfin.     (iriiml     Forks,     | 
;  Montana  and  Coa.'it.  J 

.Swnn    lUver.    Illbbiiig.    Virginia 
St.   Cloud.   Wllmar,   Sioux  City 

t  bully  fxrept  Sunday.     Twin  City 
p.   m.     umcc.  Spalding  hotel. 


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State    of     Minnesota,     Department     of 

State. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument was  filed  for  record  in  this 
office  on  the  12th  day  of  March.  A.  D. 
1909  at  11  o'clock  A.  M.,  and  was 
duly  recorded  In  Book  R-3  of  Incor- 
porations, on  page  197. 

JL^LIUS   A.   SCHMAHL. 

Secretary    of   State. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES  —  FOR  SALE, 
large  twentv-room  modern,  steam- 
heated  iiotel.  Including  large  sample 
room,  parlor.  et<;.:  fine  lawn,  good 
town,  big  business;  will  sell  on  easy 
terms.  George  McDonald,  Sr..  City 
Hotel.  Hawley.   Minn. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE- 
for   driving   horse. 


-Will   trade   piano 
123    W.    First    St. 


BUSINESS   CHANCES- 
will    trade    for   good 
grocery  store;     good 
good   business;   have 
on   hand   and  cai^not 
58,    Herald. 


-FOR   SALE   OR 

real     estate,      a 

location,  doing 

other      business 

attend  to  it.     L 


DYE  WORKS. 

ZENITH  CITY  DYE  WORKS— LARG- 
est  and  most  reliable.  All  work  done 
In  Duluth.  Work  called  for  and  de- 
livered. 'Phonos:  Old,  1154-R;  new, 
1888.     232  East  Superior  street. 

Duluth  Dye  Works — French  dry  clean- 
ing; fancy  dyeing.  Old  'phone 
1202-R;  new    11 91 -A.     330  E.  Sup.  &t. 


City    Wood    Yard. 
J.   D.   O'Connell, 


Prompt    deliveries. 
Prop.     Both   'phones. 


CIVIL   ENGINEERING. 

Duluth  Engineering  Co.,  ^V^  B.  Patton. 
Mgr.,  613  Palladio  Bldg.  Specifications 
prepared  and  construction  superin- 
tended for  waterworks,  newerage.  et<'. 


DENTIST. 


Dr.   W.   H.   Olpon.  222  New  Jersey  Bldg. 
All   work   guaranteed.      ;ioth   'phones. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICE. 

Natl    Emp.  Co  5  S.  5th   Av.   W.      Est'h. 
1882.   "We   get  the  men."   Phones   376. 


LYCEUM  SCENIC  STUDIO. 

Photographic     background     painted     to 
order,  decorating  all  kinds.     Lyceum. 


LAUNDRY. 

Model   Laundry,   126    E.    1st 
the   work."      Old,    2749-L. 


St.     -We 

New.    i; 


do 

02. 


MATTRESS  MANUFACTURER. 

Duluth    Bedding   Co.,    308    Lake   Ave.   i 
Mall    orders    a    specialty.      Zen.    173 


MUSICAL  MERCHANDISE. 


Boston  Music  Co. 
ty.   121   W,   1st. 


Mall  orders 
Old  2787-M 


a  special - 
New  «73. 


ENGRAVIN(i. 


Northwestern  Dyeing  &  Cleaning  Co.. 
oldest  reliable  dyers  and  French  dry 
cleaners  In  Northwest.  15  Lake  Ave. 
north.   'Phones:   Now.    1516;   old.    1337. 

dry 
city. 

257. 


BURKE  BROS. — Most  up-to-date 
cleaning  establishment  In  the 
22    East    Sup.    St.      Both    'phones 


FOR  SALE— COWS. 

FxTlTTALE^^^X^r^LEVINE  WILL  AR- 
rive  with  a  carload  of  fresh  milch 
cows.  Sunday,  March  14.  821  Fourth 
avenue    east.      Zenith    'phone    1708-D. 


FOR  .SALE— FINE  JERSEY  COW  6 
vears  old;  giving  milk,  but  not  fresh. 
Old  'phone  5031-L.  Call  evenings, 
after    7. 


FOR  SALE — S.  .M.  KANER  WILL  AR- 
rive  with  a  carload  of  fre.sli  milch 
cows,  Sunday.  March  14.  1219  East 
Seventh    street.      Both    'phones. 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES. 

FOR  SALE— 6- ROOM  HOUSE  IN  WEST 
Duluth.  Water  and  gas.  Parties  leav- 
ing the  city.  Snap  If  taken  at  once. 
Call    2821    West  Third   street. 

FOR  SALE  —  FOUiTrOOM  HOUSE, 
small  barn  and  sixty-five  chickens. 
Price  $300,  Inquire  at  224  Forty-fifth 
avenue   west. 


Jewelry  and 
Dul.    Eng. 


Silverware, 
Co.,    4  th    a  v. 


lowest 
W.    & 


prices. 

1st    St. 


FINANCIAL. 

Buy    Germanla-Tungsten    jtock,    $100.00 
share.  Hoffman,  60.^  Man.  Zen.  1731-D. 


FLORIST. 

W.    W.    Seeklns.    302    E.    Sup.    St.      Cut 
fiowers  and  Moral  emblems,  all  kinds. 


FURS  STORED  AND   REPAIRED. 

Fur  garments  made  to  orier  a  special- 
ty.    Duluth   Fur   Co.   321    W.  First   St. 


PROFESSIONAL. 

DR.  MITCHELL,  electro-magnetic  spe- 
cialist, has  positive  cure  for  kidney, 
stomach,  liver,  heart,  deafness,  blind- 
ness, piles,  sexual  weakness,  all  fe- 
male troubles.     325  West  First  street. 


PHOTOGRAPHER. 

Snap     shots,     25c    a    dozen     at    McKen- 
zle's,    30    East    Superior    .St.,    upstairi^. 


PLUMBING  AND  HEATING. 


Geo.   McGurrln 
Old,   815. 


Co..    329    E 
JOBBING. 


Superior  St. 
New,  9S3. 


PAINTS,  OILS  AND  GLASS. 


FAMILY    THE/^TER. 

SAVOY — Vaudeville     and     feature 
tures,    afternoon    and    evening. 


plc- 
10c. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE- A 
restaurant  and  confectionery  outfit, 
including  dishes,  '  lunch  counter, 
stools,  showcases,  .shelving  and  re- 
frigerator. Will  sell  separate.  231 
Central    avenue    west,    upstairs. 


By  V 
District  Court.  St 


JOHNSON. 

Clerk. 
A.  DASH. 

Deputy. 
Louis  County, 


(Seal 

Minn. 
E.    P.  TO\>  - 

Attornev   for   Applicant. 
No.  500-50:;  Torrey  Bldg.,   Duluth,  Minn. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald.    March    10,    17, 

and   24.      1909. 


iletvcn 


HOTCLr  LrEMOX 

M'^st    thoroughly    equipped    In    th« 
Northwest.      Sanitation   perfect. 
EUROPKA.N,    tl.OO   AND    UP. 
AMKKICAN,    II2.0O    AND    UP. 


ORMONDE  HOTEL 

221--23  Lake  .\veiJHe  Soutb. 

The   Only    Fir»t-Cl»s.i   $1.00   Per   Day 

iiotel   In   the  City. 

Every      room     heated     and     modern 
throughout. 


Anieiiean  and  European  Plan. 
MIKE    GLEESON,   Prop. 


M 


Every  Womail 

It  lnterest«d  and  should  know 

at>oat  the  wonderful 

MARVEL  Whirling  Spray 

I  The  nevr  Taglaal  Syrlago.     Jr.Jfc- 
lion  and  •'iuriinn.  lJe«t— Saf- 
est—M'>at  Conrenlent. 
IlCUsoic*  Initaatly 


Aak  Jtmr  dranlit  for  It. 
If  he  cannot  supply  ihB 
MARVKl.,  aciept  no 
otht-r.  but  send  at.<\iiii>  for 
tUiiairaie^  bfiolc— •»»ir<.    It  irtrea 
full  |i»mcii!«™  and  •llrt-<nio!i»  li, 
TaUi><l>l<^t'>lai1les.  mAKVKI,  CO., 
A«  K-  XaO  ST..  SKIV  K^HK. 

For    Sal*    by    Max    Wirth,    Oruiglst. 


OFFICE   OF   REGISTER   OF   DEEDS. 
State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis 
— ss. 

I    hereby   certify  that    the   within   In- 
strument   was    filed    In    this    office    for 
13,    1909.    at     10     A.    M., 
recorded    In    Book    9    of 


record     March 
and    was    dulv 
Misc..  page  436. 
M 


Duluth 
1909. 


P.\LMER. 
Register  of  Deeds. 
By  THO.S.  CLARK, 

Deputy. 
Evening    Herald — March    16-17, 


ORDER   FOR  HEARING  ON  CLAIM.S — 
State   of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis. 

In    Probate    Court. 
In  the  matter  of  tlie   Estate  of  George 

A  von  Lingen.  Decedent. 

LETTERS  testamentary  thla  day 
having  been  granted  to  Charles  W. 
Field  and  Henry  G.  Hllken. 

IT  IS  ORDERED,  That  the  time 
within  which  all  creditors  of  the  above 
named  decedent  may  present  claims 
against  his  estate  In  this  court,  be,  and 
the  same  hereby  Is  limited  to  six  (6) 
months  from  and  arter  the  date  hereof; 
and  that  Monday,  the  sixth  day  of  Sep- 
tember, 1909,  at  ten  o'clock  A.  M.,  In 
the  Probate  Court  Rooms,  at  the  Court 
House  at  Duluth.  In  said  County,  be 
and  th?  same  hereby  is.  fixed  and  ap- 
pointed as  the  time  and  place  for  hear- 
ing upon  the  examination,  adjusting 
and  allowance  of  such  claims  as  shall 
be  presented  within  the  time  afore- 
said. 

Let  notice  hereof  be  given  by  the  pub- 
lication of  this  order  In  The  Duluth 
Evening   Herald   as    provided    by   law. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minn..  Marcli  2.  1909. 
J.    B.    MIDDLECOFF, 
Judge   of   Probate. 
(.Seal,     Probate    Court,     St.     Louis     Co.. 

Minn.) 
Duluth    Evening   Herald,      March    3.    10 

and  17. 


(.930.) 
SUMMONS      IN      APPLICATION      FOR 

REGISTRATION      OF      LAND — 
State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

33. 

District  Court,  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict. 
In  the  matter  of  the  application 
of  Howard  Investment  Com- 
pany to  register  the  title  to 
the  following  described  real 
estate  situated  In  St.  Louis 
County,  Minnesota,  namely: 
Lots  twenty-eight  (28)  and 
twentv-nine  (29),  Block  three 
(3).  Chandler  Park  Additioti 
to  Duluth.  according  to  the 
recorded  plat  thereof  on  file 
and  of  record  In  the  office  of 
the  Register  of  Deeds  for  said 
County, 

Applicant, 
vs. 
All  persona  or  parties  unknown, 
claiming  any  right,  title,  es- 
tate, lien  or  Interest  In  the 
real  estate  described  In  the 
application  herein. 

Defendants. 
The   State   of   Minnesota   to   the   above- 
named    defendants: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  of 
the  applicant  in  the  above  entitled 
proceeding,  and  to  file  your  answer  to 
the  said  application  in  the  office  of 
the  Clerk  of  said  court.  In  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the 
service  of  this  summons  upon  you.  ex- 
clusive of  the  day  of  such  service,  and 
if  you  fall  to  answer  the  said  applica- 
tion within  the  time  aforesaid,  the  ap- 
plicant in  this  proceeding  will  apply 
to  the  court  for  the  relief  deman(led 
therein. 

Witness,  J.  P.  Johnson,  clerk  of  said 
court,  and  the  seal  thereof,  at  Duluth. 
in  said  county,  this  10th  day  of  March, 
A.   D.    1909. 

J.  P.  JOHNSON, 

Clerk. 
By  V.  A.  DASH, 

Deputy. 
(Seal    of   District   Court.    St.    Luuls    Co.. 

Minn. » 
E.    I*.    TO^^'■NE. 

Attorney   for   .\pplicant. 

Nos.  500-503  Torrey   Bldg., 
Duluth,  Minnesota, 
Duluth    Evening    Herald — March  10-17- 
24.   1909. 


FOR  RENT— HOUSES. 

FOR  RENT— MODER.N'  Fl'RNISHED 
house;  centrally  bicated.  Call  Getty- 
Smith  company,  201  Manhattan  build- 
ing. 


FOR  RENT— NEW  6-ROOM  HOUSE  TO 
coupl.^  without  children;  rent.  ?2r,.  809 
East  Third  street.  'Phone  1388-K.  old. 


FOR  RENT— EIGHT-ROOM  DWELL- 
Ing;  water,  etc.;  Forty-fifth  avenue 
west,  one  block  from  street  car  line: 
rent  reasonable.  Dlckerman  Invest- 
ment   coinpany.    Lonsdale    building. 


FOR  RENT — 12-ROOM  HOUSE  ON 
Park  Point.  Zenith  'phone.  1063.  Also. 
3 -room   house. 


FOR  SALE— ELEVEN- ROOM  HOUSE, 
50-foot  lot.  In  Minneapolis;  easy 
terms,  or  will  exchange  for  prop- 
erty In  Duluth.  A  bargain  for  some 
one.  R.  C.  Black.  314  West  First 
street. 


FOR  SALE— EIGHT-ROOM  HOUSE. 
With  all  modern  conveniences.  To 
deal  with  owner.  Zenith  "phone 
2005-X.      1016   East  Sixth   street. 


FOR  SALE— SEVEN- ROOM  HOUSE, 
water,  electric  light,  sewer,  bath; 
double  lot  concrete  foundation  and 
walks;  reasonable.  Reason  for  sell- 
ing, owner  leaving  city.  116  Vernon 
street 


DANCING  ACADEMY. 

("■OFKI.N'H.      IH    l.nkf  iiTciiue  ti'jrth.      New   'r)!i'<tu'    1^42. 
Old    'plinne    1427-U.    Dprii    aflunumiis    and    evenlngn. 


FURNACE  AND  SHE12T  METAL. 

Work    done    on    short   notice.    Burrell    & 
Harmon.  308  E.  Superior  St.     'Phones. 

FURNITURE  RECOVERED. 

Li^r^\n^^^rr^o^Tourn[fpi[OLSTEI^^ 
334  E.  Superior  St.  or  'phone  Zen.  949. 


FURNITURE  AND  PIANOS. 


Polished    and    repaired. 
Hill.  836  E.  Sup.  St.  Old 


Thompson    & 
phone  1202-L. 


FURNITURE  AND  STOVES. 

All  kinds  at  lowest  priceii.     Shapiro,  12 
First  avenue  west.     Zen.  'phone  1032. 


FRENCH  CLEANER  iVND   DYER. 


Zenith  Valet,  213   W.  Ist 
pairing     and     tailoring, 


St.  Expert  re- 
Old     1834-L. 


HOME  BAKERY. 

The  Zenith   will   furnish   .'-ou   bread  and 
pastry.      Zen.    1879-D.      411     E.    4th    St. 


k 


Tho   Lllth-    Paint   Man    says: 

Slherwin-Williams    Is   the    beMt. 

NOKTHWE.STERN  PAINT  CO. 

323    West    First    Street. 


PAINTERS    AND    DECORATORS. 

JtHuT'T^^gaiP&^'TJoiri^  ETTsTlst .  "Tlet 
us   figure  on   your  work.     Zenith   741. 


PRINTERS  AND  BOOKBINDERS. 

Merritt  &  Hector.  Railway  and  commer- 
cial printing.  30-32   W.  1st  St.  Phones. 


PLASTERING  AND  BRICKWORK. 


Estimates 
'phone. 


furnished.  W 
1224-A;     old 


J.  Darby.  New 
'phone.     424-M. 


RELIABLE  SHOE  STORE. 

.Shoes  that  wear  and  fit  for  all.     Lowest 
prices.  Joe   Williams,   123   1st   Ave.   W. 


ROOFING  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work    executed    promptly.       Burrell    & 
Harmon,  308  E.  Superior  St.  'Phones. 


SHIRTS  AND  UNDERWEAR. 


Made     strictly 
teed.      C.    C. 


to     order. 
Smith,    409 


fit     giiaran- 
Torrey   Bldg. 


TYPEWRITING. 

Pirtillc  stenographer  and  notary   public. 
Miss  Orton,  433  Man.  Bldg.  Zen.   1598. 


HAT  MFR.  AND  C3.EANER. 

Geo.    G.    Moosbrugger.    successor    to    C. 
VoUand.  24  First  avenue  E.     'Phones. 


FOR     RENT— 407 
avenue  west,   |20 


celain    bath; 
floors  on  first 
tlon     Little  & 


TWENTY- FOURTH 
water,  sewer,  por- 


five  rooms;  hardwood 
floor;  first-class  condi- 
Nolte,  agents. 


CLAIRVOYANTS. 

MADA.M  ROswELL  Egyptian  palm- 

Ist,  118  Third  avenue  west,  tells  past, 
present  and  future  on  all  affairs^  of 
life;    satisfaction    guaranteed.         "^^^ 


MADAM  STERLING,  PALM  READING 
25c.  Card  reading  50c.  114  East  Su- 
perior   street 


MEDICAL. 

LADIES — $1,000  reward:  I  positively 
guarantee  my  great  successful 
"Monthly"  remedy.  Safely  relieves 
some  of  the  longest,  most  obstinate, 
abnormal  cases  In  three  to  five  days. 
No  harm,  pain  or  interference  with 
work.  Mail,  $1.50.  Double  strength, 
$2.  Dr.  L.  M.  Southlngton  R  Co.. 
Kansas  City.   Mo. 


LADIES— DR.  LA  FRANCO'S  COM- 
pound;  safe  speedy  regulator;  25c. 
Druggist  or  mall.  Booklet  free.  Dr. 
La   Franco,   Philadelphia.   Pa. 


SWEDISH  MASSAGE. 

A.     E."haNSEX   MASSEUR.     400   NEW 
Jersey    building.    Old    'phone    1826-K. 


Mrs    H.  Wiking,  Swedish  massage.  Flat 
2,    2018    W.   Sup.   .«?t.       Zenith.    1894-D. 

Maria  Grindereng,  graduated  masseuse. 
Dr   Averdson's  Inst,  Sweden.  Zen.  844. 


HAY,  SEED  AND   FARM  MCH'Y. 

T.   A.  Scarlett,   127   W^  Is:  St.     'Phones. 
Make  Lakeside  Tuesdays  and  Fridays. 


TURKISH  BATH  PARLORS. 

Guaranteed     cure,     all     rheumatic     ail- 
ments.   S.  Kasmlr,  under  Hotel  McKay. 


UMBRELLAS  RECOVERED 

And  repaired.     It  pays  to  do  them  now. 
Gingold,   Mfr.,    125   E.   Superior  St. 


(931) 
SUMMONS     IN      APPLICATION        FOR 

REGISTRATION    OF    LAND— 
State  of  Minnesota,  Couni  y  of  St.  Louis. 

— ss. 
District 

trlct. 
In    the 


Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dla- 


(927) 
SUMMONS     IN      APPLICATION        FOR 

REGLSTRATION    OF    LAND— 
State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louia. 


matter 


In    .St     Louis 
sota,    namely: 
and     twelve 
Fifth    street, 


Remarkable  /i 
Values 


Call  on  US 

for 
Information 


92,500  buys  a  home  In  East  end,  cor- 
ner lot,  50x75  feet;  seven  room.s, 
gas,  water,  bath;  hardwood  floors 
on  first   floor. — 20-4. 

98.350  for  new  brick  flat  building  In 
West  end;  rents,  $80  per  month; 
three  flats:  hot  water  heat;  mod- 
ern plumbing;  hardwood  floors. — 
51-7. 

91,000  buys  lot  on  upper  side  of  Jef- 
ferson street,  between  Twentieth 
and    Twenty-flrst  .avenues. — 169-1. 

94."iO  for  50x140  feet  on  upper  side  of 
Eighth  street,  between  Third  and 
Fourth  avenues  east.  Snap. — 245-1. 

975  buys  lot  on  .b«ach,  between 
Twenty-seventh  and  Twenty- 
eighth   streets.  Park   Point. — 279-6. 


92,nO0  buys  another  neat  home  in 
East  end;  avenue  paved;  modern 
plumbing;  porcelain  bath;  stone 
foundation;  hardwood  floors  on 
first  floor;  seven  rooms;  electric 
light.— 20-6. 

94,500  for  75x140  feet  on  East  Second 
street,  between  Twenty-fifth  and 
Twenty-sixth  avenues;  all  improve" 
menta. — 289-13. 

fSOO  buys  50  feet  on  East  First  street 
near  Twenty-eighth  avenue,  upper 
side;  lays  fine;  water  In — 291-7. 

9S0O  for  lot  on  Minnesota  avenue. 
Upper  Duluth.  near  new  Athletic 
Park;    easy    terms. 

9125  buys  a  lot  on  St.  Louis  avenue. 
Park    Point.— (128.) 


A  Hiirh-elaMR,   Central  Improved   Property   for   Sale 
We  Will  Biilld  a  90.000  Home    on    Small    Caiib 

RE.IL  EST.4TE  L.O.'i\'S. 


It  a   Saerlllce. 
Payment. 


of  the  appllca-  | 
tion  of  the  Howard  Invest-  | 
ment  Company,  to  register  the 
title  to  the  followlr  g  de- 
scribed real  estate,  situated 
County,  Mlnne- 
Lots  t<m  (10) 
(12).  on  West 
Duluth  Proper, 
First  Division,  accord' ng  to 
the  recorded  plat  thereof  on 
file  and  of  record  In  the  of- 
fice of  the  Register  ol  Deeds 
in  and  for  sala  County. 

Applicant, 
vs. 
John  Wold,  City  of  Duluth,  and 
all  other  persons  or  parties 
unknown,  claiming  an  ,•  right, 
title  estate,  Hen  or  Interest  in 
the  real  estate  descr.bed  In 
the   application   herein 

Defendants. 
The   State   of   Minnesota,    to    the   above 
named    defendants: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  aprlicatlon  of  the 
applicant  in  the  above  entitled  pro- 
ceeding and  to  file  your  answer  to  the 
said  application  In  the  oCfice  of  the 
Clerk  of  said  court,  Ir  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  da:s  after  tbe 
service  of  this  summons  upon  you. 
exclusive  of  the  day  ol  such  service, 
and  if  you  fall  to  answer  the  said 
application  within  the  time  aforesaid, 
the  applicant  In  this  proceeding  will 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded therein. 

Witness.  J.  P.  Johnsor.  clerk  of  said 
seal  thereef.  at  Duluth. 
this  10th  day  of  March. 


II       no 

District 
trict. 
In    the 


Court.    Eleventh    Judicial   Dis- 


matter    of    the 


court,  and  the 
in  said  county, 
A.   D.   1909. 


J.    P. 


By 


District 


(Seal    of 

Minn.) 
E.    P.    TOWNE. 

Attorney   for  Applicant. 
No.   500-503   Torrey   Bldg.. 

nesota. 
Duluth    Evening   Herald- 

and  24.   1909. 


JC  HNSON. 

Clerk. 
V.    it.    DASH. 

Deputy. 
Court,    St.    Louis   Co., 


Duluth.  Mln- 
March    10,    Vi 


applica- 
tion of  the  Howard  Invest- 
ment Company,  to  register  the 
title  to  the  following  de- 
scribed real  estate,  situated 
In  St.  Louis  County,  Minne- 
sota, namely:  Lot  tliree  hun- 
dred twenty-five  (325),  in 
Block  one  hundred  sixtv-six 
(166),  Duluth  Proper,  Second 
Division,  according  to  the 
recorded  plat  thereof,  on  file 
and  of  record  In  the  oflflce  of 
the  Register  of  Deeds  In 
and  for  said  County, 

Applicant. 
Ya 

City  of  Duluth,  ble  Elver,  and 
all  other  persons  or  parties 
unknown,  claiming  any  right, 
title,  estate,  lien  or  Interest 
In  the  real  estate  described  In 
the  application  herein. 

Defendants. 

The   .State    of   Minne.'^ota,    to    the   above 
named    defendants: 

Y'ou    are    hereby    summoned    and    re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  of  the 

applicant  in  the  above  entitled  pro- 
ceeding and  to  file  your  answer  to  the 
said  application  In  the  office  of  the 
Clerk  of  said  court.  In  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the 
service  of  this  summons  upon  you. 
exclusive  of  the  day  of  such  service, 
and.  If  you  fail  to  answer  the  said 
application  within  the  time  aforesaid, 
the  applicant  In  this  proceeding  ^vlll 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded therein. 

Witness,  J.   P.  Johnson,  clerk  of  sjCTTJ^ 
court,  and   the  seal   thereof,  at   Duluth, 
this  10th  day  of  March. 


■«  ■ 


•••■i^ 


tt^Mlgiri'     «5H.«>TJiMi 


4 


I 


said  county, 
D.    1909. 


J.    P 


District 


JOHNSON. 

Clerk. 
A.    DASH. 

Deputy. 
Court,   St.    Louis  Co., 


By    V 


(Sea!    of 

Minn.) 
E.    P.    TOWNE, 

Attorney   for   Applicant. 
No.   500-503   Torrey   Bldg.. 

nesota.  " 
Duluth    Evening   Herald — March 

and  24.   1909. 


Duluth.  Mln- 
10,    17 


I 

I 


DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD.    Wednesday,  march  it.  1909 


Yes,  You  May  Get  a  Job  Withouti  A(lvei1ising--Sometimes,  Perhaps 


One  Cent  a  "WordEat-h  Insertion. 
Jio  Aclvertis*'nient  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

'  SHOPPING 

BY  TELEPHONE. 


Old 

New 

'Phone. 

'Phone. 

MRAT    MA  RETS — 

H.    J.   Toben    

...      22 

Alork    J^ros 

...1690 

189 

LAI  .\DHIKS — 

Vale  l^aundry    .  .  . 

...    479 

479 

Lutes  Laundry   . . . 

...    447 

447 

Trov    Laundry    . .  . 

...    257 

257 

DRUGGISTS — 

Eddie  Jeronlmus    . 

.  .  .124.-? 

1027 

Bovce    

...    163 

163 

BAKiCRIGS — 

The    Bon    Ton    

.1720-L 

1128 

HEATING    AXn   l»l.t>IBIXG — 

Ariliie    MoDoutjal 

. .  .i:::3 

916 

AVOOI) — 

\V.   S.    KUinpTPen 

17.30-A 

REAL  ESTATE,  FIRE 

INSURANCE  AND 
RENTAL  AGENCIES. 

John  A.  Stephenson.  Wolvin  buildingr, 
E.  D.  Field  Co..  203  Exchange  building. 
L  A.  Larsen  Co..  Providence  building. 
Pulford.  How  &  t\i..  309  Exchange  Bldg. 

"  MUSIC 

PH^NOGirArHS^'TND^^U?^^ 

etruments.  Send  your  orders  for 
popular  songs  and  records  to  Zenith 
Music  company,  Xo.  6  East  Superior 
street,    Puluth     Minn. 

HTsTt  ANf^irsirAriSsfK^iMESfs^UFTrvfiHY 
■^  irtCTlptlcn.  Edlsoa  phouo- 
(iraph*.  band  and  or- 
c  h  e  9  t  r  a  Instruments. 
I>ienu8  and  rrgans.  Ing- 
wald  WKSTOA.\RD,  7 
iiid    »    Flm    Avenue    West. 


FOR   RENT—FLATS. 

rOU  JVEST^^^VOVir^ROoSd^  FLAT — 
modern  except  heat.  1324  Jefferson 
street.  Inquire  J.  V.  Wilde,  basement 
tiat. 

FOR  RENT— MODE R.V  5 -ROOM  BRICK 
flat:  heat,  liardwood  finish.  607  East 
Sixth  street.     Zenith  "phone  1705-Y. 

FOB  RENT— FIVE- ROOM  iPLAT  AT 
123^     East    Fourth    street. 

I'OR  RENT— AT  120  WEST  FOURTH 
street,  modern  5-room  Hat;  new  bath 
and  hardwood  floors,  W.  C.  Sher- 
wood &  Co.,  118  Manhattan  Bldg. 

FOR  RENT— STEAxThEATED  FLATS, 
With  all  modern  conveniences;  gas 
range,  steam  laundry;  first  flat.  M. 
W.  Allen,  West  end.  Zenith  'phone 
1048. 

FOR  RENT— NEW  FIVE  ROOM  FLAT 
all  modern  conveniences,  except  heat, 
at  Twenty-seventh  avenue  west  and 
Third    street.      Zenith    'phone    2208-X. 

FOR  RENT— FIVE  ROOM  FLAT,  UN~ 
furnished,  steam  hoat,  electric  lighi 
and  gas.   315  West  Fourth  street. 

FOR  RENT— FIVE  ROOM  NEW  FLAT; 
hot  water  heat;  hot  and  cold  water; 
janitor  service.  2308  West  Third 
street.      Zenith    'phone.    762. 


FOR  RENT— SIX-ROOM  .STEAM  HEAT- 
ed  flat,  hot  and  cold  water;  single  or 
suitable  for  two  families;  also  two 
furnished  rooms  for  light  house- 
keeping,     1030   West  First  street. 


FOR  RENT— NICE  FLATS,  FOUR  AND 
five  rooms,  opposite  new  courthouse. 
Call    508    West   Third   street. 


FOR  RENT— 6 -ROOM  LOWER  FLAT, 
bath,  electric  light.  1325  London 
read.  Inquire  lyl3  London  road. 
Zenith     'phone,     1535. 

FOR  RENT— 6-ROOM  BRICK  FLAT; 
all  conveniences.  Corner  of  Twentieth 
avenue  west  and  Second  street  $20 
per  month.  Inquire  127  East  I'lrst 
street. 


FOR  RENT— FIVE-ROOM  FL.\T,  312  Vi 
West  Fifth  street,  hardwood  floors, 
electric  light,  gas.  Inquire  Bridge- 
man  &  i:ussell.  or  call  old  'phone, 
806. 

FOR  RENT — NEAV  SIX-ROOM  FLAT. 
St.  Regis  apartments;  conveniently 
arranged;  heat,  water  and  janitor 
service.  M.  H.  Alworth,  100  Alworth 
building. 


PERSONAL. 

PERSON  A  L-^lIaDIES?  ASK  YOUR 
druggist  for  Chichesters  Pills,  the 
Diamond  Brand.  For  2o  years  known 
as  best,  safest,  always  reliable.  Buy 
of  your  druggist:  take  no  other. 
Chichesters  Diamond  Brand  Pills 
are    sold     by    druggists    everywhere. 

PERSON.VL— IF  INTER  E  STED  IN 
Hypnotism.  Mind-reading,  Clairvoy- 
ance, etc..  take  my  private,  practical 
cour.-'e  on  Mental  Science  and  learn 
to  apply  them.  Scienliflc  Demon- 
strators, Box   586.  City. 

l'ERSONAI^.\  LADY  IN  THE  CITY 
wishes  the  companionship  of  a  gen- 
tleman. For  further  particulars,  ad- 
dress J    89,  Herald. 

PERSONAL  —  MANICURING.  SHA.M- 
pooing  and  massage,  done  at  your 
nome.  Address  Nellie  .Maize,  123 
West  Second  street.     Old  'phone,  2718. 


PERSONAL — WHY  DONT  YOU  FIND 
out  how  to  take  care  of  your  hard- 
wood floors?  It  costs  nothing  to 
have  the  floor  expert  call  on  you.  M. 
J.   Roos,  313  West  Third  street. 


PERSO-VAI.1 — Foot  specialist;  corns  ex- 
tracted. 25c;  Inverted  nails  and  bun- 
lon.«!   cured.      Scott,    17   E.   Sup.   street. 

PER.SON.M. — Electric  cabinet  Turkish 
baths.     Knauf  Sisters,   24  \V.  Sup.  St. 


Personal — Manicuring,    massage,      scalp 
treatment.  81 J   Torrey;    phone   946-X. 


PER.'^ONAL  —  LEARN  HYPNOTISM. 
Free  lessons  and  particulars.  Box 
152   Estherville.   Iowa. 


Wanted  old  clothes,   furniture,  etc.  Sal- 
vation Army.  Old  1003-K;  new  2134-X. 


PKItSONAL — F'AINTING   AND   PAPER- 
hanging.     Zenith,   1518-X.     C.  Gill. 


PERSONAI.— OLD     MIRRORS     RESIL- 

vered.      St.   Germain   Bros.,    121      First 

a\f-nue    ve.>it. 


CARPET  CLEANING. 

INTERSTATE  C.\RPET  CLEANING 
Co..  Slnotte  &  Van  Norman,  com- 
pressed air  cleaners  and  rug  weavers. 
Both   'phones.      1701-03   W.   Mich.   St. 


STENOGRAPHERS. 

TYPEwluirUNGr^EK^GRAPHY    AND 
copying.     Lenox  hotel   notary 


GRACE  BAKNETT.  FIRST  NAT.  BLDG. 
E.  J.   P'ARP.ELL.  yceura  Bldg.  Old  2380. 


SHEET   METAL   WORKS. 

Roofing,  guttering,  eave  troughs,  con- 
ductor pipes  a  specialtv.  H.  Popkin, 
29  Fifth   avenue   west.  Zenitli   2062-D. 


PIANO  TUNING. 

C.  A.  GREGOHyT^EnTth'^PFIO.NE  606. 


VISITING  CARDS. 

100    VISITING    CARDS    FOR    25c. 
Mailed    on    receipt    of   price.      Ed   Siren, 
Box    277,    Duluth,   Minn. 


One  Cent  a  Wort!  Kaeh  Insertion. 
No  .Vdvertlstnient  Les.s  llian  15  Cents. 

FOR     SALE  —  MISCELLANEOUS. 

FOlT'sALE^^^^SAFESpOJ^^ 

ture.  architects'  and  engineers'  sup- 
plies, tvpewriters  and  supplies.  J.  S. 
Ray  Co..  40G  W.  Sup.  St.   Both  phones. 


FOR  SALE— SEND  US  YOUR  NAMFi, 
We  will  mail  you  the  new  Victor  and 
Edison  record  lists  each  month.  Free 
of  cliarge.     French  &  Bassett. 


FOli  SALE— NEW  VICTOR  AND  EDI- 
son  records,  direct  from  the  factory. 
Full-toned,  perfect  records.  They 
last  longer  and  sound  better.  Buy 
them   of   French   &   Bassett, 

FOR  SALE— THE  NEW  STYLE  VIC- 
tor  "O."  A  genuine  brand  new  Victor 
maclilne  with  horn,  needles  and  len 
10-inch  new,  perfect  records.  Direct 
from  the  Victor  factory.  All  com- 
plete for  |2?.50.  Easy  terms.  French 
&  Bassett. 


FOR  SALE— BABY  GO-CARTS— THE 
new  Princess  one-motion  collapsible 
Is  the  finest  folding  go-cart  in  the 
world;  prices  |6.u0  up;  call  and  look 
"em  over,  or  send  for  free  booklet. 
Bayha  &  Co.,  Duluth. 

FOR   S.\LE— ONE  MAHOGANY'  PIANO. 

nearly  new  and  In  good  condition;  a 
splendid  bargain;  $10  cash  and  $5  a 
month.     French   &   Bassett. 

FOR  SALE  —  PHONOGRAPHS  AND 
records;    don't    buy    till    you    get    our 

f trices.  We  carry  by  far  the  largest 
ines  of  Victor  and  Edison  machines 
and  records  In  Duluth;  only  new  and 
perfect  good.s.  Outfits  $10  up;  cash 
or  easy  payments;  catalogues  and 
record  lists  on  request.  Bayha  &  Co. 


FOR  SALE— 25-FOOT  LAUNCH,  FULL 
cabin,  drop  windows,  leather  cush- 
loTis,  full  brass  fittings,  etc.;  6-ii.-p. 
engine,  used  but  few  weeks.  Zenith 
'phone,    b040. 


FOR  SALE  —  36-FOOT  CRUISING 
launch;  good  reliable  engine;  toilet, 
cooking  galley,  ice  boxes,  sleeping 
capacity  for  six  persons;  storage  de- 
partment on  top;  electric  lights, 
nickel  plated  trimmings  and  complete 
in  every  respect.  inquire  28  East 
First   street. 


FOR  SALE— $76  TAKES  ELEGANT 
upright  piano.  Can  be  seen  room  16, 
Phoenix   block. 


FOR    SALE— THREE     RAT     TERRIER 
puppies     26    East   Second    street. 


FOR  SALE  CHEAP— NEW  EDISON 
graphophone  with  twenty-seven  late 
records.     Address  K  90,  Herald. 


FOR  SALE— NICE  FAMILY  HORSE, 
two  carriages,  cutter,  wagon;  an 
opportunity  to  get  a  g'ood  outfit  at 
a  low  cost.  Call  9  East  Superior 
street,     between  12  and  1  o'clock. 


FOR  SALE— COMPLETELY  FURNISH- 
ed  five-room  cottage;  cheerful,  com- 
fortable and  convenient,  on  leased 
lot.    Park    Point.      B    49,    Herald. 

FOR  SALE— 24-FOOT  LAUNCH  4^ 
horsepower  engine;  also  tent  and 
camping  outfit.  Call  631  East  Supe- 
rior   street,    or    old    'phone,    2778-11 


FOR  S-\LE  —  M.\HOGANY  PARIOR 
cabinet  and  oak  china  closet  at  118 
East  Fourth  street,  flat  D.  Call  be- 
tween  9  and    12   o'clock. 


I  OK  SALE — HOW  BOATS,  THE  BEST 
IB-fooi  square  stern  row  boats,  made 
for  general  purchase;  these  boata 
are     new    and     extra    fine    finish,     at 

i30  each  on  board  cars  White  Bear 
,ake,  Minn.;  we  have  made  these 
boats  for  nearly  forty  years,  and 
some  of  tiiem  tnat  have  been  used 
twenty  years  are  In  good  service 
yet.  Leaman  Boat  Works,  White 
Bear  Lake,  Minn. 


FOR  SALE— STRICTLY    FRESH  EGGS, 
2215    West   Fifth   street. 


FOR  SALE— SEND  YOUR  SUBSCRIP- 
tions  and  renewals  for  the  Ladies' 
Home  Journal  and  Saturday  Evening 
Post  to  Miss  .L  Kluge,  agent,  care  of 
Herald. 

FOR  SALE— ICE  BOX,  KITCHEN  CAB- 
Inet  and  few  odd  pieces  of  furniture. 
115  Tenth   avenue  east. 


FOR  SALE— $375  UPRIGHT  GRAND 
piano,  good  as  new,  $150.  319  West 
Fifth   street. 


FOR    SALE — STEEL    RANGE,    WARM- 

in  closet,  six  holes  and  hot  water 
back;  used  since  last  November  for 
light  housekeeping,  $15;  fine  oak 
dresser  and  commode,  very  fine  suite, 
large   size.      26    Fourth    avenue    west. 


FOR  SALE  CHEAP— NEW  ROLL  TOI' 
desk.  A.  Berglln,  116  West  Superior 
street,    upstairs. 


FOR  Ha^^ — OFFICE  FURNITURE, 
desk,  typewriter,  letter  press.  Atlas' 
of  Duluth  and  Superior.  Old  'phone 
1366-M. 


FOR   SALE— 

CA.Srl    REGISTERS. 
We   manufacture   a   cash   register 
every   two  minutes.     Liberal  allow- 
ance for  exchange  of  registers. 
Call  and  see  our  1909  models. 


THE  NATIONAL  CASH  REGISTER 

COMPANY. 

E.   W'.   Russell,   Sales  .\gent, 

425  West  Superior  Street. 

Zenith,  817. Bell,  2585. 

FOR  SALE— CHICKERING  &  SONS' 
upright  piano,  cheap  for  cash,  or  will 
take  bankable  note  for  $165.  but 
must  have  the  money.     J   100,  Herald. 


FOR  SALE— BIG  BL'NCH  OF  $2,000, 
also  sample  to  make  one  quart  of  rye 
whisky  by  mail  for  50  cents.  Ernest 
G.  Carlson,  Mandan,  N.  D. 


FOR  SALE  —  FURNITURE,  STOVES, 
carpets,  draperies  and  house  furnish- 
ings of  every  description  at  money- 
saving  prices;  cash  or  easy  payments. 
Bayiia  &  Co.,  Duluth's  largest  huuse- 
furnishlng  concern. 

FOR  SALE — KIMBALL  PIANOS  NOW 
sold  direct  from  factory  to  your 
home.  No  canvassers',  no  agents",  no 
dealers'  profits  for  you  to  pay.  Come 
In  on  your  own  accord  and  buy. 
Korby  Piano  Co.,  the  Kimball  factory 
store,  201   East  Superior  street. 

FOR  SALE  —  ADDRESSOGRAPHING 
machine,  cheap.  It  can  be  seen  at 
Bayha  &   Co.'s. 


FOR  SALE— SAFES  AND  VAULTS 
opened,  combinations  changed;  fire 
and  burglar-proof  safes,  vault  doors, 
safety  deposit  boxes  and  bank  vaults. 
Clirlstle.,  Lithograph  &  Printing  Co.. 
Northwestern  agents.  Herring,  Hall, 
Marvin  Safe  company,  manufacturers 
of  the  original   Hall   safes. 


FOR  SALE  —  ONE  OAK  PIANO, 
splendid  tone,  fine  action.  This  in- 
strument Is  a  big  snag  for  the  lucky 
buyer.  Price  only  $17o;  $10  cash  and 
$5  a  month.     French  &  Bassett. 


For  Sale — Typewriters,  safes,  cash' reg- 
isters, cabinets.   Edmont,   116  W.  Sup. 


FOR  SALE  —  WOOD  AND  IRON- 
working  machinery:  sawmills,  edgers, 
lathmills,  saw  tables,  surfacers, 
sharpers.  Northern  Machinery  com- 
pany,   Minneapolis. 


OPTICIANS. 

C.^CT^STAACKE.  203  NEW  JERSEY 
building,  106  West  i-uperior  street. 
Wednesday  and  Saturday  evenings. 


STOVE  REPAIRS. 

We'^'^RRY  in  STOCK  REPAIRS 
for  10,000  different  stoves  and  ranges. 
C.  F.  Wiggerts  &  Son.  410  East  Su- 
perior street.       Both  telephones. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Eaeli  Insertion. 
Xo  .Advert  Isenient  I.-ess  Tlian  13  Cents. 

HELP  WANTED— FEMALE. 

WANTED — A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  Must  be  good 
cook;  good  wages.  24  Butte  avenue, 
Hunters   Park.     Old    phone    1011. 


WANTED — LADIES  TO  CALL  AT  THE 
daylight  trunk  store.  Our  goods 
stand  the  sunshine.  A  square  deal. 
Try  us.  Repairing  reasonable.  North- 
ern Trunk  company,  :;28  W.  First 
street,   opposite    Wolvin    building. 

WANTED — FIR.ST-CLASS  GIRLJ  AT 
1510  East  Second  street,  three  in 
family. 


WANTED — A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework;  good  wages. 
4232  London  road. 


WANTED— A  THOROUGHLY  COMPE- 
tent  working  housekeeper,  three  in 
family;  small  modern  home;  wages 
$20.  Sail  after  C:oO  p.  m.  Old  'plione 
1689-L. 

WANTED— GIRL  FOR  HOUSEWORK. 
1119   East   Fourth  street. 

WANTED — DINING  ROOM  GIRL.  5310 
Roosevelt    atreet. 


W  ANTED — THE  LADIES  TO  KNOW 
that  Mrs.  C.  F.  Morgan  has  removed 
her  dressujaking  parlor  from  23 
Columbus  block  to  214-216  West 
First  street. 


WANTED  —  AN  APPRENTICE  TO 
learn  dressmaking:  can  work  If  you 
like  for  room  and  board.  24  West 
First    street. 


WANTED— GIRL  FOR  GE  N  E  R  A  L 
housework.  Mrs.  A.  L.  Miles,  1520 
East    Fourth    street. 


Wanted— $2    per    day    paid    to 

one  lady  In  each  town  to  distribute 
free  circulars  and  take  orders  for 
Concentrated  Flavoring  in  tubes:  per- 
manent position.  J.  S.  Ziegler  com- 
pany, Chicago,  111. 


WANTED  — EXPERIENCED  SHIRT 
makers.  Apply  Dakotah  Garment 
Mfg.  Co.,  225  South  Fifth  avenue 
west. 


"WANTED — TWO    DISHWASHERS  AND 
scrub  girl.     Boyles'  restaurant. 


W.\NTED — VEGETABLE  COOK;  NO 
Sunday  work.  Vienna  Bakery,  207 
West  Superior  street. 


WANTED  —  EXPERIENCED  DRY' 
goods  saleslady,  one  who  speaks 
Norwegian  or  Swedish  preferred.  Do 
not  apply  unless  experienced.  Bos- 
ton store.  West  Duluth. 


WANTED— COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework;  no  washing. 
1810  East  Fifth   street. 


WANTED  —  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework:  must  be  good  cook;  fam- 
ily of  three.  Apply  1026  East  Su- 
perior street. 


WANTED — NORWEGIAN  GIRL  FOi: 
kitchen  work  in  boarding  house.  Ad- 
dress M.  Edwardson,  Two  Harbors, 
Minn. 


WANTED— A 
housework. 


GIRL     FOR     GENERAL 
1210   East  Second  street. 


WANTED  —  GIRL  FOR  GENER.«lL 
housework.  Mrs.  J.  A.  Hanks,  808 
East  Third  street. 


AVANTED — DISHWASHER,  AT  1919 
AVest  Superior  street. 

WANTED— LADIES  TO  SEND  THEIR 
subscriptions  and  renewals  for  the 
Ladies  Home  Journal  to  Miss  L. 
Kluge,    agent,    care    of    Herald. 

WANTED  —  GIRL      FOR       GENERAL 

housework.      Apply      104      South    Six- 
teenth av-enue  east. 


WANTED  —  DISHWASHER.  SECOND 
cook  and  dining  room  girl.  Central 
hotel.    Proctor.      Old    phone   54. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICES. 

MRS.     SOMERS'       EMPLOYMENT      OF- 
flce,    17    2nd    Av.     E.       Botth     phones. 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE. 

FOR  SALE — NIOW  9-ROOM  HOUSE  IN 
perfect  condition.  East  end;  50-foot 
lot,  most  desirable  location.  B.  48, 
Herald. 


FOR      SALE — EIGHT      ROOM      HOUSE 
and    lot.    2918    West   Third    street. 


BOARD  OFFERED. 

Two  desirable  rooms  with  board  at  the 
Colonial.    16   West    Second   street. 


BOARD  OFFERED  —  FURNISHED 
rooms,  steam  heated,  with  or  with- 
out   board.    122    East    First    street. 


FOR  RENT — BOARD  AND  LARGE 
front  room  with  alcove  for  two  peo- 
ple, private  family  in  East  end.  Call 
old   'phone,    2806-R. 


BOARD  OFFERED— A  CHANCE  FOR 
two  gentlemen  to  secure  board  and 
room  in  private  familj-;  East  end; 
walking  distance.  Zenith  'phone 
2138-D. 


BOARD  AND  NICELY  FURNISHED 
room  In  private  family  In  East  end. 
Address   B.    53,    Herald. 


Room    and    board — 301    East    Third    St. 


Room    and    Board — 318    W.    Second    St. 

BOARD     AND     ROOM     OFFERED — 426 
East   Third   street. 


ARCHITECTS. 

Olsen  &  Magney.  513-14  Sellwood  Bldg. 
FRANK~L.  Y'OUNG  &  CO..  201~Pal.  Bldg 


TENTS  AND  AWNINGS. 

POIRIER    &    CO.,     lOS    E.    Superior    St. 


PATENTS. 

PATENTS — ALL   ABOUT   PATENTS. 

See  Stevens.   610   Sellwood   building". 


BOARD  WANTED. 

BOARD  AND  ROOM  WANTED— LADY 
desires  furnished  or  unfurnished 
room,  with  board.  Address  B  300, 
Herald. 


MILLINERY. 

M.    A.    COX,  "?30'15aSt'¥oURTH    ST. 
MRS.    BRANDT,  114  WEST  FOURTH  ST. 


CLOTHES  CLEANED  &  PRESSED 

Suits  pressed,  50c:  pants,  15c.  Ladies' 
skirts  cleaned  and  pressed,  50c.  Zen 
1852-X.  J.   Oreckovsky,    10   4th  Av.   W 


Fine  ladles'  tailoring  a  specialty.  Bring 
your  alterations  and  rellning  coats 
before  the  rush.  Mueller.  208  West 
F'Irst   street. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
Xo  Advertl.sement  Less  Than  15  Cents. 

WmrnuK 


SITUATIONS  WANTED— 
FEMALE. 

SITUATIO.N  WANTED— YOL'NG  LADY 
desires  position  In  doctor's  office.  Ad- 
dress K  99,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  WORK  BY 
the  day.  Anna  Wesley,  116  West 
Second    street. 


SITUATION  WANTED— EXPERIENC- 
ed  lady  desires  laundry  work  by  the 
day.  Zenith  'phone  1140-\'.,  after  6 
p.   m. 


SITUATION  WANTED— YOUNG  LADY^ 
desires  office  position,  doctor's  office 
preferred.     Address  H.   87,   Herald. 


SITUATION     WANTED— PLAIN     SEW- 
ing   by   day,  a,L  once.      J   75,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  CITY  Posi- 
tion by  first-class  accountant  and  ex- 
pert stenographer;  best  of  references. 
Now  employed.  Address  K  100,  care 
of  Herald. 


SITUATION 
keeper,    in 
Herald. 


WANTED — -\S    HOUSE- 
or       out    of    city.       J    93, 


SITUATION  WANTED— A  COLORED 
^K'on.an  wants  cooking  In  our  out  of 
city,  or  work  out  by  the  day.  1020 
West  Superior  street;  new  'phone 
2151-Y.     Mrs.  L.  Carroll. 


SITUATION  WA.XTED — Y'OUNG  LADY"^ 
desires  a  position  at  office  work.  Ad- 
dress    H    94,    Herald. 


SITUATIONS   WANTED  —  MALE. 

SITUATIO.N'  ^V^Ai«TED^^^YOUN^^"7IAN 
conversant  In  German,  French  and 
English  would  like  any  position  sev- 
eral hours  dailv.     J   92,   Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— POSITION  AS 
window  trimmer  or  would  go  as  as- 
sistant; can  give  good  references. 
Address  Martin  Hollister,  311  South 
D.  street,  Marlon,  Ind. 


SITUATION  WANTED— A  FIRST- 
class  window  trimmer  and  card  writer 
wants  position,  also  able  to  sell 
goods;  best  of  references.  Reply  to 
S.  H.  723,  Fifty-fourth  avenue.  West 
Duluth.       Zenith    'phone    3222-D. 


WANTED— BY  GOOD  CARPENTER, 
work  at  once;  stranger.  Address  11 
83,  Herald. 


SITUATIO.N  WANTED  —  PRUDENCE 
Robert,  public  janitor  and  porter, 
windows  washed,  floors  mopped,  etc. 
Brancli   Bethel,  508  W.  Sup.  Zen.   391. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN. 

Money  loaned  In  Duluth  or  Superior  to 
balarled  people  without  security;  also 
on  pianos,  furniture,  horses,  wagons, 
etc.  Business  absolutely  confidential. 
Call  and  get  our  rates  and  terms. 
Monthly  or  weekly  payments  as  de- 
tired.  No  good  applicant  refused. 
WE.STERN  LOAN  CO., 
521    Manhattan    Building. 

New  "phone    930.  Old    plione,  1036. 


DONT  BORROW  MONEY 
at  exorbitant  rates.  Give  us  a  trial. 
Thousands  of  satisfied  customers  our 
best  references.  We  are  an  old  and 
established  firm,  with  unlimited 
capital.  Therefore  we  can  loan  at  the 
LOWEST    RATES. 


—SALARY     AND     CHATTEL   LOANS— 


DULUTH    FLN'ANCE    CO. 
301    Palladlo   Bldg.  Both   'phones. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  PIANOS.  FUR- 
niture.  horses,  wagons  and  fixtures 
at  low  rates  and  on  small  payments. 
A  liberal  discount  If  paid  before  due; 
business   confidential. 

Y'OU    C-\N    GET    IT    TODAY'. 

Security   Mortgage   Loan   Companv, 

401     FIRST    NATIONAL    BANK    BLDG. 

Zenith    phone,  612. 


MONEY  TO   LOAN 
On     real     estate    or     household     furni- 
ture.    Business  confidential. 

MUTUAL  LOAN   COMPANY, 
2104    West    Superior    street,    over   Moe's 
department  store.     Side  entrance.     New 
"phone,    1679-A. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  DIAMONDS, 
watchw,  furs,  rifles,  etc.,  and  all 
goods  of  value',  $1  to  $1,500.  Kevstone 
Loan  &  Mercantile  Co.,  16  W.  Sup.  St. 


Money  supplied  to  salaried  people  and 
others,  upon  their  own  names,  with- 
out security.  Easy  payments.  Offices 
in    66    cities.     Tolman"s.    509    Palladlo. 


Furniture  and  salaried  loans   by  Union 
Loan  company,  303  Palladio  building. 


MONEY'  TO  LOAN— ANY'  AMOUNT 
from  $500  to  $5,000,  on  improved  real 
estate.  No  delay.  J.  B.  Greenfield, 
306    Burrows    building. 


MONEY  LOANED  ON  PERSONAL 
PROPERTY'.  Minnesota  Loan  com- 
pany, 205   Palladio  building. 

MONEY'  TO  LOAN— LOANS  M.\DE  ON 
farms  and  timber  claitns.  Guaranty 
Farm  Land   Co.     416  Lyceum. 


DRESSMAKING. 

DRESSMiUONG— reliable"  DRESS- 
maker  and  ladles'  tailor,  with  ten 
years'  experience  In  Twin  Cities,  will 
make  suits,  skirts  and  waists  at  rea- 
sonable prices.  All  work  guaran- 
teed. 331  West  Third  street.  Zenith, 
1602 -A. 

MISS  VICTORIA  GAJEWSKI.  DRESS- 
making,   817  First   avenue  east. 

Mrs.  J.  R.  SLOAN,  119  WEST  FIRST 
street.  Old  'phone  2137-L;  Zen.  2083-D 

FANCY  DRESSMAKING  AND  TAIL- 
oring.     515  East  Fourth  street. 

DRESSMAKING — GOOD  DRESSMAKER 
can   be  secured   by   1717-Li. 


LIQUOR   HABIT   CURED. 

Prof.  J.  B.  Flssette.  Anti-Liquor  Cure; 
guarantees  to  cure  the  worst  habit- 
ual drunkard  in  two  weeks,  or  mon- 
ey refunded.  No  danger  to  health. 
Investigate.  Testimonials,  advice  free. 
Call    or    write    816    West    Superior    St. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
X^o  .Advertisement  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

HELP  WANTED^MALE^ 

.salesmen.       Howard.     Farwell     &    Co., 
120    East    Superior  St.,    Duluth.    Minn. 


WANTED — 100   MEN  TO   BUY'   Watches 
at     Esterly's    Spalding  Hotel  Jeweler. 


WANTED— LEARN  BARBER  TRADE, 
big  demand  for  barbers;  big  wages; 
easy  work,  short  time  to  learn;  tools 
given;  catalogue  free.  Moler  Barber 
College,  27  E.  Nicollet  avenue,  Min- 
neipolis. 


WANTED — YOUNG  MEN  TO  SEND 
their  subscriptions  and  renewals  for 
the  Saturday  Evening  Post  to  Miss 
I>.    Kluge,   agent     care   of   Herald. 


WANTED— RAIL"WAY    MAIL   CLERKS. 

Salary  $800  to  $1,400.  Examinations 
in  Duluth  May  15.  Common  educa- 
tion sufficient.  Candidates  prepared 
free.  Write  immediately,  Franklin 
Institute,    Rochester,   N.    Y. 


WANTED — ENGINEER  FOR  McGIF- 
fert  log-loading  machine.  Peter  E. 
Meagher,   409    West   Michigan   street. 


WANTED — PARTNER  WITH  A  GOOD 
team  to  go  In  Junk  business.  J.  74, 
Herald- 


WANTED  —  SALESM.\N  IN  EACH 
cotinty  for  combination  wrench  and 
other  fast-selling  hardware  special- 
ties; exclusive  territory;  salary  $3 
per  day  and  commission.  Lambert 
Wrench  company,  90  Market  street, 
Chicago. 


WANTED— YOUNG  MEN  W^HO  WISH 
to  become  moving  picture  operators. 
Answer  immediately.  Address  L.  45, 
Herald. 


WANTED— YOUNG  MAN  TO  WORK  IN 
Store.  Mies,  the  tailor.  110  Third 
avenue  west. 


WANTED  —  EXPERIENCED  CLOTH- 
Ing  salesman.  Harry  Mitchell,  18 
East   .Superior  street. 


WANTED  —  INSURANCE  MEN  TO 
handle  best  line  of  health  and  acci- 
dent policies,  costing  $1  per  month 
and  up.  Include  latest  and  most  at- 
tractive features.  Big  money  to  be 
made  under  good  contracts.  Call  or 
write  National  Casualty  company,  506 
Palladlo    building     Duluth. 


FOR  RENT— STORES  &  OFFICES. 

F^OlT^EN'F^^^^ljr^V^EST^^ 

Central  avenue,  fine  corner  store, 
with  basement,  and  warehouse  in 
rear;  steel  ceiling;  hardwood  floors 
in  both  store  and  warehouse;  one 
of  the  beat  corners  on  Central  ave- 
nue. For  rent  from  May  1.  W.  C. 
Sherwood  &  Co.    118  Manhattan  block. 


FOR  RENT— STOREROOM  SUIT.\BLE 
for  grocery  store  and  meat  market. 
Inquire  on  premises.  1804  Piedmont 
avenue,  or  Cooley  &  Underhlll,  209 
Exchange   building. 


FOR  RENT— NO.  114  WEST  MICHIGAN 
street;  four-story;  25x90;  railroad 
tracH  at  the  rear;  elevator,  refrig- 
erators and  office  all  in.  P.  Beneteau. 
St.    Paul,    Minn. 

FOR  RENT — DESK  ROOM;  U&E  OF 
both  'phones;  $7  per  month.  A  snap. 
Inquire    1010    Torrey    building 


PICTURE  FRAMING. 

GlSTAVTlENNEC^KK^2TpEr^'P.  ST. 


LOST   AND   FOUND. 


IF    YOU     LOSE    ANYTHING— Advertise    it 

here.  It  "ill  Iks  rt-tunifd  to  jroii  If  an  honest 
pcrxon  finds  It.  Rem.irkable  rcroverits  arc 
bivi.ght  about  every  day  through  this  column. 

IF   YOU    FIND   ANYTHING   bring  It  to  the 

HERALD  OFFICE. 

Get  a  claim  check.  Have  It  advertlaed. 
Hr<lalm  It  If  the  owner  does  not. 

THE  LAW — "Every  pcrion  who  (hail  find 
lest  property  under  circumstances  wliich  gave 
him  knt'Wiedge  or  means  of  Inqidry  as  to  the 
true  owntr.  who  shall  appropriate  such  prop- 
erty to  his  own  use.  or  to  the  use  of  another 
person  not  entitled  thereto,  without  haiing 
first  m.ide  reasonable  cfTcrt  to  find  the  owner 
and  reatore  the  pr9perty  to  him.  shall  bo 
guilty  of  larceny." — SecUon  5088,  Revised 
Laws,    MlnnesoU,    193:>. 


LOST— WILL  THE  PARTY  WHO  TOOK 
the  grey  wolf  fur  from  Temple  rol- 
ler rink  return  same  to  The  Herald 
and  avoid  trouble,  as  they  are 
known.  

LOST— GENT'S  GOLD  WATCH  FOB 
and  green  17th  of  Ireland  check  at- 
tached, on  Superior  street,  near  Fifth 
avenue  west  and  Spalding  hotel.  Re- 
turn   to    this    office    for    reward. 

LOST— BLACK  HAND-BAG  CONTAIN- 
ing  small  black  purse,  $20  in  bills, 
some  loose  change,  calling  cards, 
etc.,  lost  between  No.  6  East  Fifth 
Ftreet  and  Forest  Hill.  Return  to 
Iferald    for   reward. 

LOST— FRIDAY  MORNING,  A  LARGE 
black  and  white  dog.  Finder  please 
return  to  2801  Wellington  street,  or 
call    old    'phone    1739-L. 


LOST  —  BETWEEN  EIGHTH  AND 
Eighteenth  avenues  east  on  London 
road,  satchel  engineer's  tools.  Finder 
please  return  for  reward  to  A.  Carl- 
son, 1915  West  First  street.  New 
'phone  1677-Y. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITAL. 

PRIVATE  HOSPITAL — PROSPECTIVE 
mothers  will  find  a  pleasant  home 
during  confinement  at  the  Ashland 
Maternity  Home,  with  best  of  doc- 
tors; confidential;  may  board  or 
adopt  Infants.  Mrs.  K.  Hess.  923 
Second   avenue   east,   Ashland,    Wis. 

MRS.  HANSON.  GRADUATE  Mllv 
wife;  female  complaints,  413  Seventh 
avenue  east.  Old  'phone  1594;  Zen- 
ith   1226. 

Private  home  for  ladies  before  and 
during  confinement;  expert  care; 
everything  confidential;  Infants  cared 
for.  Ida  Pearson,  M.  D.,  284  Harrison 
avenue,  St.  Paul. 

Mrs.  H.  Olson,  graduate  midwife;  pri- 
vate hospital,  329  N.  B8th  Av.  W.  Zen. 
3173. 


HOSPITAL  FOR  LADIES  DURING 
confinement.  Mrs.  W.  K.  Cody,  508 
East  Lake   street,   Minneapolis. 


MRS.    ANN.V    RONGE— Graduated    mid- 
wife.  2018  W.   Sup.   St.  'Phone  1894-D. 


Mrs.    J.    C.    Haglund,    grraduated    mid- 
wife, 634  N.   56lh  Av.   W^.  Zen.   3174-D. 


w- 


"m 


m 


h: 


F  yon  have  anything  for  sale,  if  you  want  to  buy  anything,  if  you  want  bet- 
ter employes,  if  you  want  better  servants,  if  you  want  horses,  cows,  bug- 
gies, etc.,  if  you  have  lost  anythhig.  place  a  want  ad  in  The  Herald.  Step 
to  the  phone  and  call  No.  324  or  write  or  bring  your  ads  to  The  Herald  office. 
Results  are  certain.  Nearly  everybody  in  Duluth  and  Northern  Minnesota  reads 
The  Herald. 


One  Cent  a  Word  E;»ch  Insertion. 
Xo  Advertisement  l^ess  llian  15  Cents. 

^FORnRENT^l^OOMS^ 

'»                           FOR  RENT,  # 

*  *• 
-^  A  Carpenter  Shop:  good  stone  i^- 
^  building,  rear  of  2"  East  Supe-  # 
*■  rior  street.  Call  Vienna  bakery,  -A* 
■^  207  West  Superior  street.  *• 

*  * 

tOTEL,  * 

nd  First  ave-  ii- 

e-like    rooms,  •j^ 

it  water  heat;  •^ 

ng     water     in  i^ 

now  making  f^ 

winter. 

Y,   Prop 


#  FREDERIC  1 
^  Corner  First  street  a 
H'  nue  west.  106  hom 
i^i  single  or  en  suite;  h< 

#  hot  and  cold  runn 
^  every  room.      We  art 

#  special  rates  for  the 
';.t  JOHN   J.    HALE 


Volk,  W 


SECRET  SOCIETIES. 


MASONIC 
PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79, 
A.  F.  &  A.  M. — Regular  meet- 
ings first  and  third  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month,  at 
7:30  o"clock.  Next  meeting 
March  29,  1909.  Work — Sec- 
ond degree.  Andrew  C. 
M. ;  H.  Nesbltt,  secretary. 


IONIC  LODGE.  NO.  1S6.  A.  F. 
&  A.  M. — Regular  meeting 
second  and  fourth  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting, 
special,  Wednesday,  March 
Work — Flr.st  degree.  Clar- 
MlUer,     W.     M.;    Hugo    Burgo, 


17,     1909. 
ence     B. 
secretary 


^^^^-^^^ffW.Wli* 


FOR  RENT  —  MODEI:N  FURNISHED 
room  In  private  family;  reasonable. 
Zenith   2138-D. 

FOR  RENT  —  FI'RNISHED  ROOM ; 
electric  light;  cooking  allowed.  111',^ 
East   Fifth  street. 


FOR  RENT — THREE  ROOMS  FOR 
light  housekeeping,  or  two  rooms 
furnished  for  gentlemen,  1718  West 
Second  street. 


FOR   RENT— THREE     UNFURNISHED 
rooms.     714    West  Se:ond. 


FOR   RENT— FURNISH  ED  ROOMS,  229 
East  Superior  street. 


FOR  RENT  —  NEATLY  FURNISHED 
front  room,  first  floor;  gas  light  and 
use  of  'phone;  $2  per  week.  440 
Mesaba   avenue. 


FOR      RENT  —  THREE      ROOMS      IN- 
quire  at  628  West  Fir.st  street. 


FOR   RENT— 3-ROOM    BASEMENT,    AT 
720   East  Third   street. 


FOR     RENT  —  TWO     UNFURNISHED 
rooms,  cheap;  at  2514  East  Fourth  St. 


FOR  RENT  —  TWO  NICELY'  FUR- 
nlshed  front  rooms  for  liousekeeping, 
steam  heat,  hardwood  floors,  electric 
light  and  gas;  will  r<mt  to  party  who 
will  buy  furniture.  Reasonable  rent. 
Call  after  7  p.  m.  at  409  old. Masonic 
Temple. 


FOR  RENT— TWO  OR  THREE  PLEAS- 
ant  rooms  for  light  housekeeping; 
one  furnished,  if  desired.  521  West 
Fourth   street. 


FOR  RENT— NICELY  FURNISHED 
rooms,  strictly  modern,  in  private 
family.    315    East    Fii'st    street. 


FOR  RENT— TWO  ROOMg,  FUR- 
nished  for  light  housekeeping.  110 
East  Superior  street 


FOR  RENT  —  TWC'  FURNISHED 
rooms  for  light  hoasekeeplng;  gas 
and  electric  light  and  heat.  16  West 
Fifth  street. 


FOR  RENT— FURN:  SHED  ROOM, 
suitable  for  two.  Fates  reasonable. 
Board  if  desired.  512  Fourth  avenue 
east.      Zenith    'phone,    2321-X. 


FOR  RENT  - 
modern,  with 
eight  avenue 


FURJ^'ISIIED      ROO.M, 


gas. 
west. 


1520  North   Flfty- 


FOR   RENT — FURNISKED   BOOMS,  331 
West  Third   street.  * 


FOR  RENT — VERY'  PLEAS.\NT  FRONT 
room,  private  family.  Old  'phone, 
1111-M.      313    Third    avenue    west. 


FOR  RENT  —  TWy  DESIRABLE 
rooms.  East  .Superior  street,  near 
Fourteenth  avenue.     Did  'phone  252-L. 


FOR  RENT  —  TW'O  HEATED  FUR- 
nished  rooms  for  lighthousekecplng 
2609  Huron  street. 

FOR  RENT— TWO  1  .ARGE  ROOMS 
for  light  housekeeping;  all  modern. 
Both  'phones;  old,  1714  K;  new, 
689-A. 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  ROOM,  218 
West  Fourth  street,  first  floor,  side 
entrance. 


FOR  RENT — TWO  NICELY  FURNISH- 
ed  rooms,  with  use  of  telephone. 
Call  evenings;  references  required. 
310    East    First    street. 

FOR  RENT  —  FUR1<1SHED  ROOM, 
heat  and  bath;  eleci.rlc  light.  $6.50 
per   month.      456    Meiaba   avenue. 


FOR  RENT— 1  FURNISHED  ROOM, 
all  conveniences,  $6  per  month.  316 
West  Fourth  street. 


FOR  RENT— 3  FURNISHED  ROOMS; 
complete  for  housek«:eping.  A.  Camp- 
bell, 2805  West  Railroad  street. 


FOR  RENT— IN  BOARD  OF  TRADE 
building,  large  room  on  Third  ave- 
nue west;  also,  several  offices.  Apply 
Secretary,    Room   200 


FOR  RENT — THOROU:iHLY  MODERN 
furnished  room.  References.,required. 
116 »/i    West  Fourth   street. 


FOR    RENT  —  THREi:      ROOMS      FOR 
housekeeping;     modern.  626    West 

Third    street. 


FOR  RENT  —  FIVE  AND  SEVEN 
rooms:  all  modei-n  conveniences.  Ap- 
ply A.  H.  W^  EcksK  in,  301  Burrows 
building. 


FOR  RENT  —  NICELY  FURNISHED 
room,  224  West  Third  streetf  St. 
Marco   flats,    flat   F. 


FOR  RENT  —  LARGE,  DESIRABLE 
furnished  room;  all  conveniences.  316 
East    Second    street. 


FOR  RI:NT— A  BEAUTIFUL,  LARGE 
furnished  room,  all  modern  conven- 
iences, private  fan:ily;  reasonable. 
320   East  Second  street. 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  FRO.NT 
room  and  alcove,  heat,  light  and 
bath.     608 '/i    West  Second   street. 


FOR  RENT  —  A  SUITE  OF  TWO 
pleasant  furnished  fi  out  rooms,  suit- 
able for  two  or  fjur,  or  rented 
singly;  modern.  5  23  West  Second 
street. 


FOR  RENT  —  L.vRGIi:  FURNISHED 
front  room,  first  floor,  with  use  of 
telephone  and  bath;  cuitable  for  man 
and  wife  or  two  gentlemen,  with  or 
without  board.  329  Fourth  avenue 
west.     Zenith   'phone  778. 


TIMBER   LANDS. 

SHELDON^^MATHEETa'TMBER  CO.      309 
Fist  National  Bank    oldg.     'Phones. 


TIMBER  AND  CU'.'-OVER  LANDS 
bought:  mortgage  loans  made.  John 
Q.  A.  Crosby,  209  Pa  ladlo  building. 


I    buy    standing    timber;    also    cut-over 
lands.    Geo.  Rupley.   122  Lyceum  bldg. 


WATCHES  REPAIRED. 

Guaranteed    .Main    Spring,    $1.00;    watch 
cleaned.  $1.     Garon  Bros..  213  W.   1st. 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER,  NO. 
20.  li,  A.  M. — Stated  convoca- 
tions second  and  fourth 
Wednesday  evenings  of  each 
month  at  7:30  o'clock.  Next 
meeting.  March  24th,  1909. 
Work— P.  M.  and  .M.  E.  M.  degrees.  Will- 
iam D.  Underhill,  H.  P.;  Alfred  L© 
Richeux,    secretary. 


DULUTH  COUNCIL,  NO.  6.  R. 
S.  T. — Regular  meetings  first 
and  third  Friday  evenings  of 
each  month  at  7:30  o'clock. 
Next  meeting,  March  19.  1909. 
Work  —  Roval       and       Select 

Master    degree.     Andalla    W.    Torrance. 

T.    I.   M.;   Alfred    Le    Richeux,    recorder. 


DI'LUTH  COMMANDERY  NO. 
18,  K.  T.— Stated  conclave 
first  Tuesday  of  each  month 
at  7:30  o'clock.  Next  conclave 
will  be  held  Tuesdav.  March 
16.  Work— Drill,  C.  E.  Peas- 
lee,  acting  E.  C;  Alfred  Le  Richeux, 
recorder. 


SCOTTISH  RITE —REGULAR 
meetings  every  Thursday 
evening  at  7:30.  Next  meet- 
ing. March  18.  1909.  Work — 
Twenty-seventh  degree.  J.  E. 
Cooley,  secretary. 


ZENITH  CH.\PTER,  NO.  26, 
Order  of  Eastern  Star.  Reg- 
ular meetings  second  and 
fourth  Fri<lay  evenings  of 
each  month.  Next  meeting, 
Friday.  .March  26.  1909.  Work, 
regular  business  and  inlation.  Gertrtide 
Bates,  W.  M.;  Ella  F.  Gearhart,  secre- 
tary. 


EUCLID  LODGE,  NO.  198.  A. 
F.  &  A.  M. — Regular  meetings 
second  and  fourth  Wednes- 
day evenings  of  each  month 
at  7:30  o'clock.  Next  meet- 
ing,  special,   March    10.   Work 

— Second  degree.   Martin  J.   Murray,  W. 

M.;    A.    Dun  lea  vy,    secretary. 


W.    B 

secretary 


DULUTH  CHAPTER,  NO.  69, 
R.  A.  M. — Meets  at  West  Du- 
luth first  and  third  Wednes- 
days of  each  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  March  17, 
Work— Royal  Arch  degree. 
Getchell,    H.    P.;    A.    Dunleavey, 


UrLVTH     L01>0E.     NO.     28.    I.     O.     O.     F.— MKKTS 

every     Friday     evening    at    Odd     relli'Wi 

hall.   18  Lake  .Tvenue  north.   Next   meeting 

M;.rfh    llMli.      Work— First   d<gre<>.    W.    11. 

Koiiklrr.    noble   gmnd;    Edwin    B«  rgstrom, 

recording   sttreury;   A.    H.    Paul,    financial   st^retuij. 


K.  O.  T.  M. 
nn.T'TH  TKNT.  NO.  1.  5n:ETS  EVERT 
Wediieoday  eveidng  at  Maccabee  hall,  234 
West  First  strett.  Vlsltlns  memb«rs  wel- 
(fime.  A.  J.  Anderson,  commander,  601 
Ea»t  Fourth  strett;  J.  B.  Golliieau.  rec- 
ord ke»i)tr.  Office  In  hall.  Hours.  10  a. 
m.   to   1  p.   m.     ZejUlh   'phone  uyl-X. 


buIldli.K . 
Hans   invited. 


MODEltN  SAMARITANS. 
Al.rUA  COINCII.  NO.  1— MEETS  AT 
Elks'  hall  evirj-  Tlmrsday  evtnlng  at  » 
o'ch-ck.  Benpftfpiit  degree,  flr<t  and  third 
Thursday:  Samaritan  degree.  seo<ind  and 
fouith  Thuretlii.vs.  A.  Nelson,  O.  S. ;  Luc5 
M.  rimiy.  L.  O.  S. ;  T.  A.  <5all.  fin- 
ancial scrilje.  501  FirA  NaUtnal  Bank 
Wallace  P.    Wellbanks.   scrtbc.      All   Samar- 


A.  O.  U.  W. 
riDEUI'Y  LODGE.  NO.  105— MEETS 
at  .VIaccitl»?e  hall,  224  West  First  street, 
evtry  "niursday  at  8  p.  m.  VlsiUng 
members  welcome.  (Just  l>ahUn.  M. 
W  ;  A.  E.  PiirinB.  recorder:  O.  J.  Mur- 
Told.    finandir.    217    I':ast    Fifth    slret. 


DILITH  LODGE,   NO.    10,   A.  O.    U.   W. 

—Meets  at  Odd  Fcl'ows'  liall.  18  Lake 
avenue  north  every  Tuesday  evening  at 
8  o'clock.  Visiting  brothers  welcome. 
Norman  Johnson,  master  workman ;  H.  O. 
Foote.  recorder;  T.  J.  St.  Germain,  finan- 
cier,  121  Flist  avenue  weat. 


I.  O.  F. 
COl'RT  COM-MERCE.  NO.  3283,  tNT)E- 
peiident  Order  of  Foresters,  meeu  first 
and  third  Fri<lay  erenlngs  at  8  o'clocli 
at  Rowley's  hall.  No.  112  West  First 
•street.  Next  regular  meeting.  Kridaj. 
March  19Ui.  C.  A.  Carlson.  C.  K.  W. ;  W. 
Uoopee,    R.    8. 


fNlTEH  ORDER  OF  FORESTERS— 
.North  Star.  No.  49.  meet*  every  second 
'.nd  fourth  Mondays  at  I,'.  O.  F.  hall, 
■oriiir  Fourtli  avenue  weet  iind  First 
^irift.  M.  E.  Rain.  C.  R..  2  Osbcmo 
UI(*k;  E.  .M.  Stewart.  secnU-y.  222  Tliird 
■ivdiue  wcft :  II.  U.  Young,  treasurer,  63i 
West   Third  strict;  1732-K.  old   "plione. 


UNITED  OUl>ER  OF  FORESTERS— 
tV'urt  Eastern  Star.  No.  80,  meets 
every  first  and  third  Tuesday  at  U.  O. 
F.  hall,  corner  Fourth  avenue  west  and 
Fln-t  ftr<:et,  A.  L.  Foster.  C.  R..  107 
East  Ninth  street;  C.  E.  Paul,  secretary, 
3  West  Superior  street;  Harry  Millies. 
Rotm    23,    Wlnthrop    block;    Zeiiltil    'pboue 


M.     W      A. 
IMrEr.L\L   CA-MP   NO.    2206   —   MEEIM 
at  Stelnway  hall.  Fourth  avenue  west  and 
First   street,   second  and   fourth   Tues<lays 
cf   each    month. 

F.    E.    l»orcinus.    consul. 

C.    P.    Earl.    (lerk.    Box    411. 

NORTH  STAR  LODGE  NO.  5,  K.  of  P. 
— Itleets  e»try  Tuesday  night  at  Ellti' 
hall,  lis  Wist  Superior  slreit.  Next 
n'«-li!ig.  Turs<lay  evening.  March  16. 
Work— Rank  of  Page.  Visiting  Kiiighta 
weici'rue.  Louis  Dworshak.  C.  C. ;  L.  L. 
Sparks.    K.    of   It.    aiid   S. 


z:p:^ 


CLAN    STEWART,    NO.    50.    O.    S.    C  — 

Meets  first  and  third  Wednesday*  each 
month,  8  p.  m..  Folz  hall,  116  Weat  Su- 
perior street.  Alexander  G.  Mulvnight. 
chief;  Den  Mcl.i-nnan.  secretary:  John 
Ruinett.  fin.incial  secretary,  413  First 
National  Hank  building.  Nest  regular 
meeting  March  17,  l%li.     Dancing  from  9  to  12  p.  m. 


UPHOLSTERING  8:   REPAIRING. 

ED  OTT.   132  1st  Ave.    SV.   Both  'phones. 


CUTTING    &    SEWING   SCHOOL. 

PupiLs     enter     any     time — Miss     Grav, 
Third  floor.  Gray-Tallant  Co. 


ASHES  AND  GARBAGE. 

ashes!    garbage     ^and    manure 

hauled.     Dick   Barrett.  Zenith  'phone 
1274-Y. 

REMOVED — GUST    HOLMGREN,       1906 
London  road.     Old  'plione,  331-M. 


Fir-t 


ROYAL  LEAGUE. 
'ZENITH  CULNCIL.  SO.  161.  ROYAL 
League— MeeU  In  Elks'  hell  first  and 
third  Monday  evenings  at  8  oVlick.  G. 
L.  Harifraves.  scribe,  care  of  Northern 
Sho«  company;  W.  W.  Booth,  arclion. 
<arc   cf   Marshall-Wells. 

WOODMEN  OF  THE  WORLD. 
ZENITH  CITY  CAMP,  NO.  5.-MEETS 
every  second  and  fourtli  Wednesdays  at 
Uie  old  Masonic  temple,  fifth  floor.  John 
Haugen.  C.  C. ;  A.  M.  Holmes,  banker, 
720  West  Fifth  street,  flat  E;  Robert 
Forsyth,    clerk.    817    East    Second    itreM. 


ZENITH  CITY  TICNT.  NO.  1044. 
Knights  of  the  Modem  Maccabees,  meets 
every  secoi«I  .ind  fourth  Friday  evening* 
(if  each  mi  nth  in  Maccabee  hall,  224 
We*t  First  strett.  It.  M.  Rlker.  com- 
mander: C.  H.  I>oomls.  IC  K..  1U30  WMt 
street.      Zttdth    'phone    2243-Y. 


ROYAL  ARCANl-M,  Duluth  Council,  No. 
lJ8:i,  meets  first  and  third  Friday  even- 
ings. Kilts'  hail.  Clinton  Broulis,  tec- 
riiary.    401    Burrow*    building. 

SUsaba    Council.    No.    Ij)t3,    meets    first 
,ii(l   third  Wednesday   evenings,    Columbia 
!iall.    West    end.      A.    M.    Johusuu.    aecre- 
Nonb  TwtnUetlk   ateuue  wot. 


tary. 


i^«aaaaaB'-b 


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<-       » 


M 


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t 

, 

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1 
j  • 

1  ■ 
1 

1 

I 


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— 


r 


DULUTH  F^VENINO  HERALD 


MINNkSOTA 

1IST0RICAL 


I 


TWENTY-SIXTH   YEAR. 


LAST    EDITION. 


THURSDAY,  MARCH  18,  1909. 


TWO  CENTS. 


HOUSEUKESHfiRDBLOWAT 
NORTHEASTERN  MINNESOTA 


BY  FAVORING  TONNAGE  TAX 


Bill  Goes  Through  With 

Only  One  Vote  to 

Spare. 

Result  Made  Possible  by 

Many  Members  LacK- 

ing  Backbone. 

Splendid  Pight  by  SL  Louis 

County  Delegation  Was 

Unavailing. 


<Froin   a    Stall   forrenpondent.) 

Bt.  Paul,  Minn..  March  18.— (Special 
to  Tlie  lltrald)— Because  It  had  the 
power,  anil  not  becaus-e  arty  consider- 
able number  of  He  members  believed 
that  they  were  doing  the  right  thing. 
tiie  house  yesterday  afternoon  passed 
the    Bjorge   tonnage   tax    bill   by   a   vote 

of    61    to    57. 

This  was  one  vote  more  than  was  nec- 
eFsarv  to  pass  it,  and  It  was  the  dos- 
eet  fight  that  has  l>een  made  this  ses- 
sion. Only  one  member  was  absent. 
and  this,  too.  was  an  unusual  mcident. 
as  usually  there  art^  from  half  a  dozen 
to  thirty  or  more  members  absent  on 
roll  call.  ,    ,        ..  „    .  ,,, 

One  member  who  voted  for  the  Dill 
■aid  last  night,  as  he  walked  away 
from    tJie    capitol: 


«  "I  am  not  proud  of  it.  In  fn<"«.  * 
*  it  U  the  oaMtieKt  «li««ig  that  I  ever  ^ 
rrniciiilKT  knvtiiK  happeued  to  i»»e.  ^ 
I  bad  pledsed  myself  ««r  o  *""-  T 
nnjfe  tp.x  viithout  kuo>\loir  «•>«*  T 
it  ^\n«.  I  bave  foiiud  out  that  It  * 
IM  uujuHt.  «ippreKsi^e  aud  tyrou-* 
Bleul.  Vet  to  Uetp  iu>  pledge  I  «^ 
bad   to    »ote    tor   It.*'  * 

»jMe-MH»»»»  »  »  »  »  »»oM^)H  *%****** 

There  are  twenty  or  more  other 
men.b*  rs  of  the  house  in  the  same  situ- 
ation Hardlv  one  of  them  had  the 
backbone  or  the  man>iood  to  vote  his 
convictions  and  go  home  to  face  his 
people    and    tell    them    that    they    were 

(Continued    on    page   7.    fourth   column) 

LOS  ANGELESTO 
AIR  A  SCANDAL 

Special  Grand  Jury  Will 

Probe  the  Municipal 

Government. 

Lee  AnKelt.*^.  Cal..  March  18.— Twenty- 
eight  citizens  of  Los  Angeles  county 
apfeaied  in  superior  court  this  morn- 
ing in  response  to  summons  for  grand 
jury  duty.  From  this  number.  Judge 
James  hopes  to  be  able  to  select  nine- 
teen wi.o  will  constitute  a  special 
gmiid  jury,  ordered  in  response  to  the 
It  quest  of  District  Attorney  Freder- 
icks for  tl.e  purpose  of  investigating 
the  condition  of  tne  municipal  govern- 
ment. 

A  score  of  persons  have  been  sum- 
mc-ned  as  witnesses.  Among  them  is  A. 
C  Harper,  tonner  mayor,  who  arrived 
here  from  Corcoran  yesterday,  and  Ed- 
ward Kern,  former  member  of  the  board 
tt   public    workb   and   former    chief      of 

Aionso  Durand,  an  associate  of  Nick 
Osv.-ald.  Is  In  iail  waiting  a  call  by  tlio 
grand  jury,  and  is  also  to  Ijave  a  pre- 
liminary hearing  on  a  ciiarge  of  at- 
tempting to  evade  summons,  Oswald 
Is  now  across  the  border  at  Tia  Juana. 
Mex..  with  W'jiliam  Lawrence,  and  botii 
are   wanted  to  testify  before  the  grand 

tarIfFbTll 
is  reported 

Committee  on  Ways  and 

Means  Makes  No 

Amendment. 

Democrats'  Refusal  Pol- 
icy Is  Causing  Mucli 
Speculation. 


Wafshirgton.  March  18. — Immediately 
after'  the  l;ouse  convened  today,  Mr. 
Payne  of  New  York,  chairman  of  the 
committee  on  ways  and  means,  reported 
teack  tlie  tariff  bill  without  amendment. 
Mr  Payne  offered  a  resolution  pro- 
viding for  the  printing  of  30.000  copies 
of  it  -5  000  of  which  shall  be  in  docu- 
ment form  and  embodying  the  views  of 
the  minority.  After  a  good  deal  of  dis- 
cussion tl;e  resolution  was  adopted. 

It  is  not  doubted  that  the  tariff  ques- 
tion Will  occupv  the  attention  of  the 
house,  to  the  exclusion  of  almost  any 
other  business,  from  now  on.  Mr. 
Crumpackt-r.  however,  is  hopeful  of 
obtaining  action  on  the  census  bill,  and 
he  was  exerting  himself  to  have  it 
taken  up  today  by  unanimous  consent, 
with  seine  prospect  of  success. 

Just  how  far  the  Democrats  will  go 
In  their  policy  of  refusing  committee 
appointmiiits.  unless  first  approved  by 
Mr.  Clark,  the  minority  leader,  is  the 
Bubjec-t  of  much  speculation  on  the 
floor.  There  are  yet  to  be  appointed 
two  couirnitteenien  of  tlie  five,  whicii 
it  has  been  decided  to  name  to  do  busi- 
ntss  at  thl.s  session,  those  on  printing 
and  on  accounts,  and  there  is  the  pos- 

(Continued   on  page   5.   fourth   column) 


THE  ROLL  OF  DISHONOR. 

These  are  the  members  who  voted 
last  night,  after  five  hours  of  argu- 
ment, to  impose  a  tax  wliich  robs  a 
needy  section  of  the  state  for  the  bene- 
fit of  a  richer  and  more  fortunate  part 
of  the  commonwealth,  and  Oiat  for  a 
pound  of  flesh  in  the  shape  of  tax  re- 
lief for  that  large  and  prosperoiis  sec- 
tion, jeopardizes  the  hope  of  North- 
eastern Minnesota  that  l)uluth  may  be- 
come a  great  steel  manufacturing  cen- 
ter' 

Klmer    E.    Adams.    Ftrgus    Falls. 

Joiin    Baldwin,   Jacks*. n. 

C.  M.    Bendixen.   Morgan. 
W    C.    Bicknell.   Morris. 

H.    O.    Bjorge.    Luke   Park. 

W.    A.     Campbell.     Minneapoll*. 

Hubbard  Carey.  Adams. 

J.   A.   Carley,   I'ialnview. 

C.    J.  Carlson.   Cokato. 

K.    E.   Conlev.   Rochester. 

Joseph   Davies,   tit.   James. 

George   Denzcr,  I>e  Sueur 

J.   H.   Dorsey.  Glencoe. 

S   B.   Duea.   Rushton. 

Matt    Fitzpatrick,    .Stewartville. 

Joseph    Frledmann.    Eden   Valley. 

J.   O.    Haugland,   Montevideo. 

O    F.    Herzberg.   Good   Thunder. 

N.    J.    Holmberg.    Renville. 

John    Holten,    Fertile. 

C     E.   Johnson,   Atwater. 

J.    N.    Johnson,    Canby. 

J.    T.    Johnson,    Fergus    Falls. 

Hans  Jorgenson.  Mankato. 

F     L.    Kelly,    Madelia. 

Iver  J     Lee,   Glenwood. 

Edward   Lende,   Appleton. 

F      E.     Lobeck.    Alexandria. 

G.    H.    Mattsun,    Roseau. 

Jt.hn    McCSratli,    Barnesville. 

Flnlev  McMartin,   Claremont. 

Alex  "McNeill,    Hennepin    county. 

C     K     Melbv,    Minneota. 

R.    L.    Mork!    P.rvcelyn. 

D.  J.    Murphy.    Waseca. 

E.  .M.    Nageh    Bufialo. 
Herman   Nelson,   Slayton. 
O     B.    Nelson,   Spring  Grove. 
T     E.    Noble,   Albert   Lea. 
W.   A.   Nolan,  Grand  Meadow. 
J.    J.    Opsahl,   Bemidji. 
Joseph    Peters,   Farmington. 
Albert    Pfaender,    New   Ulm. 
Ole   Peterson.   New  Ulm. 
J.     R.     Phillips,     Faribault. 
H     A.    Putnam,    Amoi  y. 
Donald     Robertson.    Argyle. 
J    F.   Rosenwald,  Madison. 
John    Rustad,    Whalen. 
John    A.    Sampson,    ^-itchfield. 
John   Saugstad,  Climax. 
Theo  Sikorski,  Winona. 
L.  C.  Spooner,  Morris. 
C.   L.   Sulerud.   Halstad. 
C.  J.  Swendsen,  St.  James. 
Burnett   Thayer,  Spring  Valley. 
A.  K.  Ware,  Northfield. 
R.    J.    Wells.    Breckenridge. 
W     H.   Westcott,    West    St.    Paul. 
William    Wohlhuter.    Albert    Lea. 
C     J.    Wright,    Fergus    Falls 


I      THE  ROLL  OF  HONOR.      J 


Mft        Follo'««lnK    were    the    flfty-seveo   ^if■ 
it  vrho    voted    for    fair    play    and    for   4t 

*  KivluK    St.    I.ouin    fount  y    a    chance  # 

tto    oar*e    out    Ita    deMlny    «>ithout 
the    handicap    of    aectlunal    preju- 
•Ht  dice  I 
* 

*  HVGH   X.   ALL,E:\,  ^IlnncapolU. 

*  ANDUKAV   A:VIIEKSt)N.  I,"keland. 
JOSI<:i>H    Al  ST1>,   (hiMholni. 
ANTO.N    UtUtGKN.   Dulutb. 
T.   J     UH.4l>V.   St.    Paul. 
L,.   U.    BKOW  :^.   I.Ittle   Fallii. 
GEOHtiB    W.    BlfK.    Unlutb. 
.1,    A     A.    BlKXftllST.   St.    Haul. 
OSCAR       F.       CHHISTKXSON,       St. 

^        Haul. 

*  CHKSTKR   A.   Ct>.>GDO!V,   Dulutb. 

*  J.    F.   COMtOli',   -MlnneapollM. 

*  JOHN    A.    DAI..ZE1..I.,    Worton. 
«    A!Sl>llK\^     UAVIS.    Elk    Hlver. 
»   WII^MA.M    OOWEH.    Wadena. 
»   OTIS    F.    UOVLE,    St.   Cloud. 
^    HENKY   EMMEI,.    .Melrone. 
^   T.    M.    FEKGl  SON,    Harker. 
$   F.    E.   GARTSIME,   Winona. 

J.    A.   GATES,   Kenyon. 

JOHN   GOODSPEED,   MInneapolU. 

DAVID   G1I.41IAM.    Dulutb. 

H     F.    <iRA.\T.    Dulutb. 

T.'  J.   GREE.NE,  St.   Paul. 

JAMES    HAXDI.A\.   St.    Paul. 

JOHN    C.   HE.MIV,   I.ewlwton. 

E.   H.   HINDS.   Hubbard. 

T.  H.    MOIITON.   .North   Branch. 

L.   H    JOHNSt»N,   MInneapolU. 

*  E.   a'.   KI.ING,    Little  Fall". 
^  THOMAS    KNEEL.4ND.    Mlitneapo- 

*  Ha. 

4  J.  D.  KR.Al'SE.  Norwood. 
4  JOHN     G.     LENNON.    Mlnneapoll". 

*  GEORGE  A.  MaeKEN/.IE.  Gajlord-   * 
^   P.    H.    Mfti.\RKV.    walker.     -  * 

" '  * 


THOMAS  F.  COLE  RESIGNS 
AS  PRESIDENT  OF  THE 


OLIVER  MINING  COMPANY 


Will    Sever   Connection 

With  United  States  Steel 

Corporation. 

Will  Enjoy  Necessary  Rec- 
reation  and  Ade- 
quate Rest 

William  J.  Olcott  Is  Men- 
tioned as  His  Prob- 
able Successor. 


COMPANY  ORGANIZED  TO 
BUILD  DULUTH  EXTENSION 
OF  CANADIAN  NORTHERN 


^|^  F*   E.   NIMOCKS.   MInneapolla. 
^  GEORGE  M.    NVE,  MInneapolla. 

*  J.   D    O'BRIEN,   St.   I'aul. 

*  R.  G.   PEIIRV,  St.  Paul. 

*  W,   H     PITNAM,   Red   Wing. 

*  HENAY   RINES.  Mora. 

Z  GEORGE      W.      RODENBERG,      St. 

*  Paul. 

£   A  IAIN   ROWE,  St.  Paul. 

i   E    F.  S.\HLER,  MInneapolla. 

*  C*  L     S\WYER,    Minneapolis. 
£  .lOHN    F.    SELB.    St.    Paul. 

i  C4L  E.  STONE,  St.  Paul. 
^   D    A.   STl  ART.  WIndom. 

*  M    J.   sri.I.IVAN.    MlunenpollM. 

*  L*  VIRTIE,    Blooming    Prmrle. 

I  CARL  L.  WALLACE,  Minneapolis. 
4  W.  D.  W  ASHBIRN,  JR.,  Mlnue- 
$        apollN. 

H     P.    AVEBB,   Sandsitone. 

pj,   WEI/rER,   New    Market. 

FRANK  T.  W  HITE,  Elk  River. 

F    B.  WRIGHT,  Minneapolis. 

JOHN    ZELCH,    St.    Paul    Park. 
4    A.   J.   ROCKNE,  Zumbrota. 


J,MHNH»;4**********^HHMHMHMH|t 


s 

* 

{ 

* 

t 

I 


CASS  LAKE 
VICTORIOUS 

Normal  School  Bill  Passes 

the  Senate  With  Good 

Majority. 

Armour   PacKIng  Plant 

Row  Is  Again  Before 

the  House. 


WILL  CONFER  ON 
BALKAN  CRISIS 

Powers  Are  All  in  Fa- 
vor of  Italian  Prop- 
osition. 

Berlin,  March  li".— Information  re- 
ceived at  the  foreign  oftlce  today  in- 
dicates that  the  powers  are  all  in  favor 
of  the  Italian  proposition  to  summon 
at  once  a  European  conference  to  act 
on  the  Balkan  situation. 

Tills  conference  will  have  a  strictly 
limited  program,  and  will  merely  ratify 
accomplished  facts.  The  official  re- 
plies of  the  powers  to  this  proposal 
have  not  yet  been  received. 


CONSUL  IS 
UNDERGUARD 

Precautions   Taken  for 

Safety  of  Mr.  Bishop 

in  Italy. 

Foreign   Minister  Gives 
Assurance  to  Ambas- 
sador Griscom. 


Rome,  March  18.--^>  mbassador  Gris- 
com had  a  talk  tlus  rr.orning  with  For- 
eign Minister  Tittonl  regarding  the 
threatening  letters  addressed  to  W.  H. 
Bishop,  American  consul  at  Palermo, 
Sicily,  in  the  matter  of  his  activity  in 
running  down  the  men  suspected  of 
con-iplicity  in  the  plot  against  Lieut. 
Petrosinl  of  New  York,  who  was  mur- 
dered  at   Palermo   six   days   ago. 

The  foreign  minister  assured  the 
ambassa-ior  that  precautions  to  insure 
the  safety  of  Bishop  and  the  consulate 
have  been  taken.  The  building  is  be- 
ing closely  watched  and  Bishop  is 
g'uarded  every  time  h€  goes  out. 
• 
Blsbop   Is   Warned. 

Palermo.  March  18. — The  body  of  Jo- 
seph Petrosinl  is  still  in  the  mortuary 
chamber  of  tlie  Rotoll  cemetery  at  the 
disposal  of  W.  H.  Bishop,  American 
consul.      It   Is    being   carefully    guarded. 

Bishop  yesterday  received  an   anony- 


(Continued   on    page    7,   first   column) 


Rumors  which  have  been  current  for 
some  time  to  the  effect  that  Thomas 
F.  Cole,  president  of  the  Oliver  Iron 
Mining  company,  would  resign  his  po- 
sition were  confirmed  by  Mr.  Cole  yes- 
terday. Mr.  Coles  resignation  will  be 
forwarded  to  the  officials  of  the  Steel 
corporation  today  and  it  will  becQnie 
effective  in  the  near  future. 

In  explanation  of  his  resignation, 
Mr.   Cole  says:  . 

••I  have  been  actively  engaged  in 
mining  and  railroad  work  in  tlie  cop- 
per and  iron  districts  of  Lake  Supe- 
rior for  thirty-nine  consecutive  years, 
•with   but   little   rest. 

"The  work  during  the  past  ten  years 
hF.6  been  particularly  arduous,  the 
major  part  of  my  time  having  been 
spent  on  railway  trains  at  night  and 
around  and  in  the  mines  during  the 
dav  lime.  ,   . 

"The  business  detail  requiring  care- 
ful attention  duria,-?  this  period  has 
been  enormous  in  volume,  the  entire 
work  taxing  physical  strength  severe- 
ly 1  have  reelgned  to  take  effect  in 
the  near  future  and  have  planned  to 
heieafter  enjoy  necessary  recreation 
and  adequate  rest.  ,  ,         ,. 

"I     have    formed    no    plans    for     the 

(Continued  on  page   7.  i-econd  column) 

STILLWATER  MAN 
KILLED  BY  TRAIN 

Glen   Downs'    Mangled 

Body  Scattered  for 

Fifteen  Miles. 

Portland,  Or.,  March  18.— Glen  Downs, 
a  young  logger  from  Stillwater,  Minn., 
was  killed  under  a  train  of  the  Great 
Northern  railroad  Tuesday  night  near 
Cverett,  while  stealing  a  ride  on  the 
brake  beam.  His  body  was  found  yes- 
terday scattered  all  *the  way  from 
Lowell  to  Motiroe,  Wash.,  about  fifteen 
miles.  .     ,  ^   ,  ,,  . 

A  leg  was  picked  up  at  Lowell,  part 
of  the  trunk  near  this  city,  and  several 
pieces  with  some  clothing  and  a  blan- 
Itet  were  found  near  Monroe.  A  letter 
and  a  hospital  certificate  Identified  the 
remains,  which  were  ground  beyond  all 
resemblance  to  a  human  body. 

All  dav  the  section  crews  brought 
parts  of  the  body  from  along  the  track. 
A  cousin  of  the  dead  man.  E.  M.  Downs, 
Is  supposed  to  be  a  resident  of  Everett. 


MME.  modje;ska. 

Los  Angeles,  Cal..  Marcn  18.— Word 
was  received  in  this  city  early  this 
morning  to  the  effect  tl.at  Mme.  Mt>a- 
jeska  the  actress,  is  seriously  ill  in 
her  home  near  Newport,  Orange  county 
Her  illness  is  said  to  be  kidney  trouble, 
complicated  with  an  alfection  of  the 
heart. 


(From    a    *'tall    Correspondent.) 

St.  I'aul,  Minn..  March  18.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  bill  by  Senator 
D.  M.  Gunn  of  Grand  llapids,  estab- 
lishing a  sixth  state  normal  school  at 
Cuss  Lake,  passed  the  senate  this 
morning  by  a  vote  of  32  to  25.  The 
bill  now  goes  to  the  house,  where  It 
will  no  doubt  be  sub««tituted  for  the 
house  bill  by  P.  H.  McGarry  of  Walk- 
er, now  on  general  orders.  There  is 
little  doubt  now  that  the  Cass  Lake 
bill  will  pass  and  become  a  law.  The 
principal  opposition  came  from  Be- 
midii,  Thief  River  Falls  and  Warren. 
and  Representatives  Opsahl  and  others 
l>ack  of  these  towns  liave  apparently 
abandoned  all  further  effort,  except 
to  prevent  the  establishment  of  any 
normal  school  whatever.  Tke  temper 
of  the  house,  however,  seerrts  strongly 
in    favor    of    the    Cass   Lake    bill. 

•  •       * 

The  senate  this  morning  defeated  a 
bill  by  Senator  Peterson  of  Moorhead. 
relating  to  attorneys  Hens,  only  6  vot- 
ing for  It  and  28  voting  against  it. 
There  was  no  opposition  to  the  bill 
itself  so  far  as  any  debate  disclosed, 
and  the  action  seemed  largely  personal. 

*  «      * 

Armour  packing  plant  matters  took 
up  a  good  deal  of  the  time  of  the  house 
this  morning.  Lennon  of  Minneapolis, 
started  the  ball  rolling  by  moving 
the      indefinite      postponement      of    the 


I  WHERE  ANGELS  FEAR  TO  TREAD. 


t****itit**************^*******^ 


initt********ttt****t*******ttw:M 


(Continued   on    page    5.   fifth  column) 

ROOSEVELT  WILL 
BE  OWN  BARBER 

Will  Not  Grow  a  Beard 

While  He  Is  In 

Africa. 

Oyster  Bay,  N.  Y..  March  18. — Ex- 
President  Roosevelt  will  be  his  own 
barber  in  Africa  during  the  year  he 
will  spend  there  at  the  head  of  the 
Roosevelt-Smithsonian  African  expedi- 
tion. He  does  not  intend  to  grow  a 
beard  as  has  been  reported  and  pic- 
tured recently.  The  ex-president  has 
purchased  a  dozen  sticks  of  shaving 
soap  at  a  drug  store  here  and  lias  been 
practicing  the  use  of  the  razor  since 
leaving    Washington. 

At  first  it  was  rather  difficult  for 
Mr.  Roosevelt  to  manipulate  the  razor, 
because  during  his  seven  years  occu- 
pancv  of  the  White  House  he  has  been 
shaved  dally  at  his  office  there  by  a 
negro  barber,  who  was  employed  on 
the    executive    office   staff. 

Hundieds  of  offers  of  all  kinds  of 
articles  for  use  on  his  African  hunt 
have  corne  to  Mr.  Roosevelt,  but  he  has 
refused  to  accept  any  of  them. 


COOPER  JURY 
STILL  OUT 

Up  Betimes  for  Break- 
fast and  Arouses  the 
Deputies. 

Judge  Will   Not   Take 
Initiative  in  Making 
^    Move. 

Nashville,  Tenn..  March  18. — Although 
the  jury  in  the  Cooper  Sharp  trial  for 
the  murder  of  former  United  States 
Senator  Carmack  arose  before  daylight 
this  morning,  ousted  the  deputies  and 
then  resumed  delibeiatlons,  several 
hours  have  passed  witlicut  any  intima- 
tion that,  they  had  reached  an  agree- 
ment. 

Judge  Hart  convened  court  at  9  a.  m.. 
and  began  the  regular  grind  of  crim- 
inal cases.  In  one  hour  fourteen  ne- 
groes, accused  of  miner  misdemeanors 
and   felonies,   were   convicted. 

Many  in  the  crowd  who  had  been 
regular  attendants  at  the  Cooper  trial, 
marveled  at  the  expedition  with  wiiicli 
their  cases  were  handled  as  compared 
witli  the  nine  weeks  devoted  to  the  fa- 
mous trial  which  is  rot  yet  finished. 
The  jurors  had  breakfast  at  7  and  re- 
turned to  their  room.  Asked  when  he 
would  call  the  twelve  men  into  court 
the  judge   replied:       ,       ,,,        ,  ,   , 

••It  is  their  move,  I  \.'ill  not  send  for 
them  until  they  send  ^vor(l  to  me  that 
thev    wish    to   see    me." 

Much  loud  argument  marked  the 
morning  deliberations  of  (he  jury.  At 
11  a.  m.  the  voices  died  away  and  the 
jurors  sent  out   for  drir  king  water. 

At  11:30.  Judge  Hart  having  finished 
his  regular  docket,  adjourned  court  till 
2  p.  m..  and  announced  that  he  would 
not   receive  a   verdict    before   that  hour. 

NO  MERiSER, 
THEY  SAY 

Independent  Steel  Pres- 
idents Deny  Tale  of 
Combination. 

Nothing  to  Gain  by  Join- 
ing Forces,    is 
Assertion. 


Philadelphia.  Pa..  Miirch  IS— The  re- 
port from  Pittsburg  that  an  |800,000 
independent  steel  combination  is  being 
formed  is  denied  today  by  men  m  this 
city  who  are  prominert  in  the  iron  and 
steel  industry.  . 

"There  is  absolutelj  no  truth  in  the 
story  "  said  a  high  off  cial  of  the  Penn- 
svlvania   Steel    company. 

"  "I  know  nothing  wl  atever  of  such  a 
combination."  declared  President  Pow- 
ell Stackhouse  of  the  Cambria  Steel 
company.  ^.  . 

The  Philadelphia  representative  of  a 
prominent  firm  of  pig  iron  dealers,  who 
desired  his  name  withheld,  and  who  is 
in  close  touch  with  the  steel  industry 
said  none  of  tlie  com:>anies  which  had 
been  mentioned  as  at  out  to  enter  the 
combination  had  anything  to  gam  by 
it,   and   tliat   he   place<l   no   faith   in   the 

story.  , 

Several  days  ago  rumors  of  a  com- 
bination among  independent  steel  com- 
panies were  received  here,  and  at  that 
time  emphatically  donieft  by  leading 
officials  of  tlie  steel  companies  among 
tliem  being  E.  C.  Felton.  president  of 
the  Pennsvlvania  Ste  ji  company,  and 
Effingham  B.  Morris,  who  is  a  director 
in  l>oth  the  Cambria  .ind  Pennsylvania 
Steel  conipanies. 


Duluth,  Winnipeg  &  Pac- 
ific Company  Is  Name 
of  Corporation. 

Wiil  Construct  New  Line 

Prom  Virginia  to 

Duluth. 

Active  Operations  Wlii  Be 

Commenced  During 

Present  Season. 


For  the  purpose  of  constructing  » 
railroad  from  Virginia  to  Duluth.  the 
Duluth,  Winnipeg  &  Pacific  railroa«i 
was  Incorporated  today,  the  papers  be- 
ing filed  with   the  register  of  deeds. 

The  capital  stock  of  the  company  is 
placed  at  $100,000,  consisting  of  1,000 
shares  of  a  par  value  of  $100  each. 
The  company  is  a  1,000  year  corpora- 
tion, and  the  Incorporators  are:  Wirt 
H.  Cook,  president;  J.  L.  Washburn, 
vice  president;  W.  D.  Bailey,  secretary; 
L.  I.  Feet  ham,  treasurer,  and  J.  F. 
Walsh.  These  men  also  constitute  the 
t)oard   of   directors. 

The  company  is  understood  to  have 
been  lormed  lor  the  purpose  of  build- 
ing the  extension  of  the  Rainy  Lake 
road,  now  a  part  of  the  Canadiar* 
Northern,  from  Virginia  to  Duluth.  It 
was  reported  in  The  Herald  a  few  days, 
ago  that  the  road  would  in  all  prob- 
ability be  built  tills  year,  and  the 
formation  of  the  company  would  ftp- 
pear    to    bear    out    this    statement. 

The  plans  of  the  company  have  al- 
ready been  pretty  thoroughly  outllneA 
in  The  Herald.  The  road  will  come  In. 
to  Dulutli  over  the  hill  back  of  One- 
ota.  and  it  will  have  docks  and  ware- 
houses In  tliat  part  of  the  city,  liavipg: 
alreadv  purchased  land  for  that  pur- 
pose. "There  is  little  doubt  but  thafc 
construction  work  will  be  began  this, 
spring  and  pushed  during  the  summer 
montlis.  altliough  the  officers  of  the 
new  company  are  reluctant  to  give  out 
any  information  regarding  the  sum- 
me'r's  opeiations.  as  they  state  their 
plans  are  not  yet  perfected. 

TAFT  HELPS  TO 
HONOR  THE  DEAD 


Grover  Cleveland  Memo* 

rial  Meeting  Attended 

By  President. 

New  York,  March  16. — With  Presi- 
dent Taft  listening,  the  life  of  Grover 
Cleveland  and  its  influence  upon  our 
national  progress  and  material  welfare, 
will  be  the  theme  of  speeches  by 
President  Taft,  Chief  Justice  Fuller,  of 
ihf  United  States  supreme  court  andi 
otlier  well  known  public  men  at  the 
memorial  exercises  in  honor  of  the  late 
President  Cleveland  at  Carnegie  hall 
late  this  afternoon.  Vonight,  e.\ercisea; 
will  be  held  at  the  city  college  at 
which  Governor  Hughes,  Senator  Root 
and  several  others  will  speak.  Presi- 
dent Taft  will  attend  the  exercises  at 
City  ctliege,  but  is  not  expected  to 
make  an  address.  ,      ,     .. 

The  meeting  at  Carnegie  hall  today 
will  be  presided  over  by  Maj.  McClel- 
lan  and  the  exercises  will  be  held  un- 
der the  auspices  of  the  Clevelanai 
memorial  committee  of  which  Francis 
Lyride    Stetson    is    chairman.  Besides- 

addresses  bv  President  Taft  and  Chief 
Justice  F'ulier,  an  original  poem  Willi 
be    read    by    Richard    Watson    Gilder. 

HE  LEARNED 
SENTIMENT 

Wyseman  Tells  What  He 

Did  For  Stephenson 

Cause. 

Cliarles  S.  Frencli  Alstt 
Before  Senatorial  Pri- 
mary Probers. 


■*ri  ■ 


Madison,  Wis.,  March  18. — Arthur  J- 
Wyseman  of  Manitowoc,  told  the  sena- 
torial primary  investigation  commit- 
tee today,  that  he  had  received  fl35.88 
from  the  Stephenson  campaign  fund. 
Most  of  his  time  was  taken  up  in  as- 
certaining and  reporting  on  the  senti- 
ment where  he  went,  and  in  securing 
poll  lists.  He  stated  that  Dr.  F.  H. 
Gelibe  had  been  asked  to  take  charge 
of    Manitowoc,    but    had    refused. 

Charles  S.  French,  an  attorney  oC 
Lake  Geneva,  testified  to  receiving  $80«>- 
from  Mr.  Edmonds  for  Stephen.^on's 
campaign  expenses.  He  received  word, 
from  C.  M.  Hambright  of  Racine,  to  go 
to  Milwaukee  and  see  Edmonds,  to  ar- 
range for  more  vigorous  work  in  Ke- 
nosha and  Waiworth  counties.  He  re- 
ceived   nothing    for    his    services. 

Witness  kept  no  account  of  his  ex- 
penditures. Asked  how  he  knew  whei*. 
the  money  was  gone,  Mr.  French  sai<lt 
-Ive  been  that  way  before."  He  ad- 
mitted signirg  Cook's  nomination  pa- 
pers, but  told  Cook  s  solicitor  later  of 
his    change    of    heart.     ^.       ,^       ^ 

J  E.  Morgan  of  Oshkosh.  the  next 
witness,  received  J2.&00  from  Senator 
Stephenson  direct.  The  money,  he 
said  was  paid  to  him  after  the  primary 
and  was  to  reimburse  him  for  money 
spent  during  the  campaign.  He  couldi 
account  for  all  but  about  1200,  paid  lifc 
small    amounts    to    worker*. 

t 


n 


•**i 


V, 


_J     Mi^^K^M^H 


I  > 


i 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


w:   \T»IKn-Tl.realenlnB   with    wow   tonight   »nd   pojJlWf  FrIJsy:   roUer   FrtiUir:   moOerite   to 
brisk  t*!it»riy  wliuta.   shUUng   to   wiMterly   wlnOs^ 

NEW  SfflRTS! 

If  you've  been  disappointed  with  the  meap^er 
varieties  of  shirt  styles  and  the  incomplete  assort- 
ment of  sizes  shown  you  elsewhere,  come  in  here 
and  see  what  a  real  shirt  stock  is  like. 

We'll  show  you  hundreds  (not  dozens)  of  new- 
est and  choicest  patterns  and  a  complete  range  of 
sizes  from  13VL'  to  20  (you  big  men  that  can't  get 
fitted  usuallv,  take  note). 

Emery  Shirts $1.50  to  $3.50 

Earl  &  Wilson  Sliirts  $2.50  to  $3.50 
Our  Own  Brand  .  ■  ■  $1.00  to  $2.00 

THE  STORE  FOR.  NEW  THINGS. 


GLAD  COFFEE 
STAYS^FREE 

General  Satisfaction  Tliat 

It  Is  Not  to  be 

Taxed. 


Superior  Street  at  Fourth  Avenue  West. 


-scliedules 


Monotj|i>«.  tJiiinpoiiKlon. 

Quick   work  'by   l^iwlng-Stewart  Co. 


Rrmainii  oBroitftht    to    Duluth 

l>oily     tie    Mis.     l^ouis 


Minnesota  Congressmen 

Approve  the  Cut  in 

Lumber. 


FROM  THK  HERALD 
WASHING'IXJX    BlUKAU 


The 
who    died    at    tt.illaiHis 
arrived     In 
was    accompj 
and    the    pa 


l>iUuth»ilils    aft 
pjeJied&y      Mr. 
irenis    or    the    de 


Freiinuth, 

Cal.,    March    12, 

ernoon.       It 

Freliiiuth, 

eceased.    Mr. 


and  Mrs.  Henty  AJaeles.  and  al.so  Mrs. 
J".  Abeles  of  Ilochester,  N.  Y.  The  re- 
mains were  taken  to  the  Woodland 
cemetery,  where  funeral  services  were 
ovitz  ofl 


held.      Dr.   I.,efkf 


ifficiating. 


Temple    Servlceii. 

"The  Prejudice  of  Life"  will  be  the 
subject  of  the  sermon  by  Rabbi  Lefko- 
vits  at  Temple  Emanuel  tomorrow 
evening. 


ADOmONAl  SPORTS 


ATHLETES 
VERY  BUSY 


,  West  end  athletes  are  active  and  the 
different  schools  are  already  getting 
their  players  lined  up  and  their  sched- 
ules framed. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  Adams  school 
alumni  held  last  night  plans  for  the 
coming  baseball  season  were  discussed. 
The  team  this  year  will  be  fitted  out 
with  baseball  uniforms.  A  commiltee 
•was  appointed  to  pick  out  several  kinds 
to  be  .submitted  for  the  final  selection 
at  the  next  meeting  of  the  association 
to  be  lield  within  a  week. 

I^io.spf'Cts  for  a  winning  team  this 
vear  look  very  bright.  Many  of  last 
j-ear  s  players  are  still  in  the  city  and 
several  new  players  have  been 
sign  (Mi    up.  ,    . 

The  Lincoln  alumni  will  also  have  a 
team  this  vear.  Wtiile  this  school  has 
not  been  actively  engaged  in  athletics 
during  the  past  year  or  so.  the  bbys 
now  intend  to  get  back  into  the  game 
with  renewed  vigor.  They  will  hold  a 
meeting  soon,  at  which  time  a  baseball 
nine  will  be  organized  and  the  officers 
ele<''ted. 

The  Irving  .'jchool  will  be  m  the  game 
this  vear  with  as  strong  a  t»  am  as  ever 
represented  the  school.  The  Tigers 
alwavs  have  a  good  team  In  whatever 
line  of  sport  they  enter,  and  they  will 
probablv  make  the  other  teams  bustle 
to  keep  pace  with  ihem.  They  will 
this  vear  be  stronger  than  ever  and 
branih  out.  playing  more  of  the  teams 
from   out   of  town. 

The  Longfellow  association  has  been 
busy  for  some  time  and  they  are  now 
readv  at  any  time  to  start  the  season. 
It  will  be  the  first  season  In  some 
time  that  they  have  attempted  to  get 
a  team  together  for  an  entire  season  s 
play  3nd  thev  promise  to  make  up  f or  ^ 
lost  lime  bv  entering  the  ranks  of , 
amateur  baseball  teams  this  year,  with 
a  strong   bunch  of  diamond  stars.  I 

■The     Falrmount     boys     have     secured  j 
grounds    of    their    own    this    year    and 
will    plav    most    of    their    games    there.] 
They    plan    on     bringing    a    number    of 
outside     teams     to     their     grounds     for 

Sunday  games.  .   ,,      ,      ,   „„,.^ 

There  has  been  some  talk  or  a  league 

to  be  formed  from  among  the  West  end 

schools,    but   the   plans   have   not  as   yet 

b^e.i    thoroughly    gone    over    and    It    is 

not   known   whether   it   will   materialize 

or   i.ot 

B( fides    the    teams    mentioned 

are    a    iiumVier    of    others    in    the 

end    and    it    U  oks   as    though 

season     linally     opens. 

eiiuugli    lor    each    nine 


IMPORTANT 
TOWJLITH 

Local  Millers  Interested 

in  Hearing  on  Flour 

Rates. 


there 

West 

when    the 

there     will      be 

to    do. 


There  will  be  a  hearing  before  the 
interstate  commerce  commission  at 
Minneapolis  tomorrow  in  regard  to 
dour  rates,  as  a  result  of  the  attempt 
made  bv  Minneapolis  to  have  the  rate 
on  flour  routed  from  Minneapolis  to 
the  Atlantic  seaboard  lowered  from  23 
cents  per  100  to  -\)  cents  per  100. 

Duluth.  Dakota  and  Northwestern 
Minnesota  millers  have  intervened,  and 
ask  that  if  the  Minneapolis-New  York 
rate  be  reduced  as  requested,  tiie  same 
differential  as  at  present  e.vists  be- 
tween the  Duluth  and  Minneapolis  sea- 
board flour  rates  be  maintained.  The 
rate  from  Duluth  and  £?uperior  at  pres. 
ent  la  18  cents  per  100„  a  differential  of 
5  cents  over  Minneapolis,  and  If  the 
?Jlnneapolis  rate  Is  lowiered  to  20  cents, 
intervenors  ask  that  the  Duluth  rate 
be  lowered  correspondingly.  which 
would  make  che  Duluth  seaboard  rate 
15    cents. 

Fortv  or  fifty  millers  through  the 
Dakotas  and  Northwestern  Minnesota 
have  intervened  In  favor  of  maintain- 
ing the  Duluth  differential.  They  ben- 
efit bv  this  rate  by  .Eastern  shipments 
through  Duluth.  .  Any  Dakota  or 
Western  Minnesota  interest  shipping 
stuff  eastward  through  th^  port  of  r>u- 
luth  gets  the  benefit  of  the  lower  Du- 
luth rate, 

J.  A.  Walter  and  G.  W.  Mandevllle 
of  the  Duluth-Superior  Milling  com- 
panA',  and  other  representatives  of 
Head  of  die  l..akes  millers,  will  be  at 
the  hearing  in  Minneapoll.'*  tomorrow, 
together  with  Charles  F.  Macdonald, 
secretary  of  the  board   of  trade. 

IMMIGRATION 
WILL  BE  HEAVY 


Canadian  Officials  Expect 

Big  Movement  This 

Spring. 


French  Runner  .\irives. 

New  York.  March  18. — Henry  St. 
Ives  a  noted  French  long-distance 
runner  arrived  here  today  on  the  Teu- 
tonic. He  will  make  his  first  Ameri- 
can appearance  in  the  $10,000  Mara- 
thon race  to  be  run  at  the  polo  grounds 
this    city    on    April    3. 

Wiseonsin  <io!t  Meet. 

Milwaukee,  Wis..  March  18. — The 
Wisconsin  Gold  association  will  hold 
its  annual  tournament  in  Milwaukee, 
Aug.  11  to  14  inclusive  and  for  the 
first  time,  will  play  on  an  18-hole 
course  as  Milwaukee  has  the  only  one 
of  Its  kind  in  the  state.  The  tourna- 
ment will  be  held  at  the  Blue  Mound 
Countrv  club.  The  association  com- 
prises "clubs  In  La  Crosse.  Kenosha. 
Madison.  Fond  du  Lac.  Janesville,  Osh- 
kosh.  Green  Bay.  Green  Lake.  Eau 
Claire.  Appleton,  Racine.  Sheboygan 
and   Milwaukee. 


Robert  Creelman  general  agent  at 
St.  Paul  for  the  Canadian  Northern 
railroad,  who  is  In  Duluth  today,  says 
lomierration  ofiicials  expect 
one  of  the  heaviest  years  in  tlie  his- 
tory of  Canadian  Immigration,  and  that 
already  'he  tide  of  Immigration  has 
set    in. 

Mr.  Creelman  was  down  through 
Iowa  and  Wisconsin  last  week,  and 
says  anv  number  of  farmers  from 
those  two  states  are  moving  across  the 
Canadian  border.  The.se  farmers  have 
sold  their  farms  in  Iowa  and  Wiscon- 
sin and  are  taking  their  effects  across 
the  boundary  line  to  their  new  homes. 
Thev  disposed  of  their  Iowa  and  Wls- 
ccorisln  farms  for  a  good  price  and  are 
taking  hold  of  the  cheaper  Canadian 
lands. 

According  to  Mr.  Creelman,  the  steel 
for  the  depot  of  the  Grand  Trunk 
Pacific  and  the  Canadian  Northern 
railroads,  at  Winnipeg,  is  up  and  the 
work  Is  being  rushed  forward  very 
rapidly.  The  freight  sheds  of  the  two 
roads    are    partially    constructed. 


Washington,  March  18. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Probably  the  fact  that 
coffee  remains  on  the  free  list  Is  a 
matter  which  gives  more  general  satis- 
faction than  anything  in  connection 
with    the    proposed    tariff    revision. 

The  United  States  has  in  reality  for 
years  been  paying  an  increased  pi  Ice 
for  coffee  by  reason  of  the  tariff  laws 
of  countries  producing  the  little  brown 
berrv,  and  because  of  the  export  duty 
imposed  by  Brazil,  from  which  country 
about  75  per  cent  of  the  coffee  con- 
sumed in  this  country  is  purchased,  we 
have  been  deprived  of  any  revenue  from 
coffee  tax.  Now  the  Payue  bill  pro- 
vides that  the  United  States  shall  Im- 
pose the  same  tax  on  coffee  as  equal 
in  percentage  as  is  the  export  tax  of 
anv  country  from  which  we  receive  it, 
otherwise    it    will    be    free. 

This  provision  Is  Inserted  In  the  hope 
that  it  may  Induce  Brazil  to  abolish 
her  export  duties.  The  bill  Imposes  a 
ta.x  of  8  cents  a  pound  on  tea.  when 
coming  directly  from  the  producing 
countrv  and  9  cents  when  coming 
through  another  country.  This  later 
provision  Is  alined  at  the  middleman, 
notably  at  Sir  Thomas  Lipton,  the  big- 
gest   tea    jobber    In    the    world. 

r)ata  show  that  the  tea  can  be  laid 
down  iit  our  ports  at  16  cents  per 
pound.  The  ret.ill  price  of  first-class 
lea  ranges  from  50  cents  to  J1.25  a 
pound,  and  It  is  now  duty  free.  This 
eii'rmous  difference  in  price  is  due  to 
combinations  of  jobbers.  It  Is  not  be- 
lieved the  duty  Imposed  on  tea  will 
increase   the   retail   price. 

Step  in  Klgbt  Olrecllou. 
The  consensus  of  opinion  among  Re- 
publican members  from  Minnesota  and 
Wisconsin  iS  that  m  the  main  the  bill 
as  reported  Is  satisfactory  in  its  most 
important  details.  The  members  from 
these  slates,  h.owevcr,  almost  to  a 
man,  would  like  to  see  lumber  put  on 
the  free  list,  but  the  cut  which  is  pro- 
posed is  at  least  a  step  In  the  right 
direction. 

Reduction  of  tariff  ori  iron  and  steel 
is  satisfactory  and  free  coal  is  re- 
ceived with  Joy.  The  reciprocity  feat- 
ure of  the  bill  is  generally  conceded  to 
be  a  good  thing  arid  the  inheritance 
tax   meets   with   approval   generally. 

In  reporting  out  tlie  tariff  bill  to  the 
house  today,  the  ways  and  means  com- 
mittee undertakes  to  give  an  ide^  of 
the  imuortant  character  of  the  work 
in  which  it  has  engaged,  beginning 
witli  the  statement  that  the  preparation 
of  the  bill  has  been  no  easy  task.  The 
popular  demand  for  the  cutting  of  rates 
Is  referred  to.  and  against  this  is  set 
the  Republican  policy  of  protection, 
whose  cardinal  principle,  it  is  said, 
the  protection  of  the  American  Indus- 
tries and  American  workmen  against 
tiie  difference  in  cost  of  production  at 
home  and   abroad. 

The  necessity  for  more  revenue  at 
the  present  time  is  also  discussed  at 
some  length.  It  is  asserted  that  until 
the  recent  depression  In  business,  the 
revenues  under  the  present  laws  hav 
been  sufficient  to  meet  the  expenditures 
of  the  government,  and  the  fact  Is 
pointed  out  that  taking  the  entire 
period  from  1897.  the  date  of  the  en- 
actment of  the  Dingley  blU,  until  1909, 
there  has  been  a  surplus  of  recerpts 
over  expenditures,  amounting  to  $74,- 
555.408.  The  t,otal  receipts  for  this 
period.  excTu.«rtve"  crf'  postal  expenses. 
was  $6,.'.5'ij:i2('.264-and-the  expenditures 
also  exclugive  of  expsnses.  $6,483064.856. 
Comment  is  .flien  made  ort  the  effect 
of  the  present  tndustrlal  ■  depression, 
and    In    that   connection    the    committee 

•It  Is  the  hope  of  the  committee  that 
with  a  return  of  business  prosperity 
the  revenues  will  show  a  large  per- 
centage of  Increase  and  prove  entirely 
adequate  for  any  natural  and  eco- 
nomical   scale    of    expenditures,' 

Ip^ard   Tendeucy   of  Receipt*. 

It  is  then  pointed  out  that  even 
since  the  beginning  of  the  present 
month  there  has  been  an  upward  ten- 
dency   of   receipts. 

In  explaining  the  provision  for  au- 
thorizing the  issue  of  $45,000,000  of 
additional  Panama  canal  bonds,  the  re- 
port savs  that  the  belief  of  the  com- 
mittee Is  that  the  entire  expenditure 
for  the  building  of  the  Panama  canal 
should   be   met    by   a   bond   issue. 

Mr.  Payne  calls  attention  to  the 
great  amount  of  labor  involved  In  the 
preparation  of  the  bill  now  before  the 
house.  For  more  than  two  years  ex- 
perts In  tariff  matters  have  been  in- 
vestigating tariff  rates,  and  consular 
agents    have    been    studying    the    tariff 


Label    Lrague   MretluK. 

The  Women's  Union  I.iibel  League, 
No.  230,  will  meet  next  Monday  evening 
at  their  hall  In  the  Kalamazoo  block. 
Dr.  Mary  McCoy  will  address  the  mem- 
bers of   the  league. 


Received   Only   «1S. 

Matt  Fllipovich  fll.-d  suit  in  district 
court  this  morning  against  Nick  Fili- 
povich.  James  A.'  Robb  and  Fred  A. 
Robinson  for  $485.  He  claims  that  In 
1907  he  furnished  materials  and  built 
a  house  for  Nick  Fllipovich  at  Eve- 
leth.  The  contract  was  for  $500  and 
he  was  paid  but  $15  he  says.  Robb 
and  Robinson  are  joined  with  Nick 
Fllipovich  as  defendants  on  account  of 
liens  they   have   on   the   same   house. 


.Sue  For  PiilpiivoMd. 

B.  M.  Howard  and  T.  M.  Craig  aa 
Howard  &  Craig  filed  suit  In  district 
court  this  morning  against  Frank  .s. 
Colvln  and  .lames  A.  Hobb  as  Colvln  & 
Robb,  for  $4,456,  claiming  It  as  a  bal- 
ance due  on  a  logging  contract 
amounting  to  $47,451.  The  plaintiffs 
claim  they  furnished  pulpwood  to  the 
defendants  In  1"907  and  the  full  bill 
was    not   paid. 


ReleHHed  From  JaU. 

Novan  Anderson,  who  was  convicted 
at  the  last  term  of  district  court  of 
being  the  father  of  a  young  woman's 
child  and  against  whom  a  judgment 
of  $140  was  recorded,  satisfied  the 
judgment  this  mbrning  and  was  re- 
leased from  the  county  jail.  He  was 
held  In  Jail  until  the  judgment  was 
paid. 

CheokN    Were    Wor« hleMn. 

Wenzel  Newes  was  arrested  this 
morning  charged  with  obtaining  money 
under  false  pretenses.  It  is  claimed 
I  that  he  got  Barriev  Gidmark,  barten- 
der at  101  East  Michigan  street,  to  cash 
two  $10  personal  checks,  when  there 
was  no  monfey  iri  the  bank  to  meet 
them. 


UTe^f    a    Knife. 

.Andrew  Wurta  and  lohn  Maki.  two 
Finlanders.  engaged  In  a  fistic  encoun- 
ter on  lower  Lake  avenue  this*  morning. 
Wurta  seemed  to  be  getting  the  worst 
of  It.  until  he  drew  a  knife  and  made 
several  vlcions  slashes  at  Makl.  cut- 
ting bis  coat  In  several  places,  but  fail- 
ing to  readr  the  man's  body  with  the 
blade.  Makl  made  a  hasty  getaway 
and  a  minute  later  Wurta  was  arrested. 
He  drew  a  fine  of  $50  In  police  court, 
with  forty  days  In  jail  as  an  alterna- 
tive. 

Will  Take  Liineli  Together. 

In  order  to  become  better  acquainted 
with  each  other,  the  members  of  the 
school  board  wMl  meet  tomorrow  noon, 
at  the  Commercial  club,  and  take  lunch 
together.' 

It  will  be  purely  a  goodfellowship 
gathering,  and  nO  busi«>«»s  will  be  dis- 
cussed. 

■^      ^ • — 

C'nring   For    Bahy   Girl. 

The  Humane  society  is  caring  for  an 

Italhin    babv    girl, -whose    mother    died 

a    short     tirhe    ago,     leaving     the     child 

alone  in  the  world.     The  society  is  try- 

iig  to   find  a  home  for  the  child. 


Dr.  H.  B-Goelchlus  of  5137  London 
road  left  Tuesday  night  for  a  three 
weeks'   visit   In    New   York   city. 

H.  J.  Forsvtise.  well  known  In  auto- 
mobile circles  In  South  Bend.  Ind.,  ha.i 
arrived  In  Duluth  and  will  probably 
make  his  home  here. 

S.  C.  Scott  ♦f  Hihbing  Is  at  the  Mc- 
Kay. 


T 


WHERE  MEN  GET  CURED! 

Most  Stubborn  Diseases  of  Men  Healed  Success- 
fully By  Hedical  Specialists. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Bnch  laaertlon— .>'• 
AdvertUement  l^mm  Thnn  IS  Cents. 

XlX"1?TYLKSnrN''swTTCHE.S.  PUFFS^ 
curls,  pompadours,  wigs,  toupees,  and 
everything  for  the  hair  at  moderate 
prices,  at  Miss  Horrigan's  Hair  Shop, 
Christie    building. 


COPPER  STOCKS 
DEADLY  DULL 

ttor  •      - 

Share  Market    Is  Very 

Quiet— Curb  Is 

Inactive. 

The  coppBr  stock  market  was  quiet 
and  weak  today.  North  Butte  opened 
at  $67.25,  declined  to  $67.  rallied  to 
$67.50  and  closed  at  $67.12%  bid  and 
$67  50  asked.  Amalgamated  opened  at 
$68.25.  declined  to  $67.87%,  rallied  to 
$68.50  and  closed  at  $6.37%  bid  and 
$68.50  asked. 

Greene-Cananca  opened  at  $9-37%. 
advanced  to  $9.50  and  closed  at  $9.37% 
bid  and  $a.50  asked.  Butte  Coalition 
opened  at  $23,  declined  to  $22.87%  and 
closed  at'$22.ri%  bid  and  $22.87% 
asked.  Oiroux-dpened  at  $8.3*%  and 
closed  at  $8.25  bid  and  $8.37%  asked. 
Anaconda  opened  at  $41.37%,  advanced, 
to  $41.87  Va.  declined  to  $41. uO  and 
closed  at  $41.50  bid.       ^        ^.  .      ,     ^„ 

Begole  was  the  most  active  stock  on 

e    boards.      It: advanced    from    $15    to 


FOR  RENT  —  SIX- ROOM  FLAT  — 
heat  and  hot  and  cold  water  fur- 
nished; hardwood  floors  and  finish. 
Apply  Corporate  Investment  company, 
Torrey   building. 


Have  Cameron    reupholster   your   furni- 
ture.    Both  "phones.     123   1st  Ave.   W. 


Tliat  there  is  much!  and  after   the  cure,   and  you   will   be 


.{  mystery  and  many 
K)f  the  problems  yet 
^o  be  solved  regards 
healing  of  men's  ail- 
ments everyone 
knows,  but  the  fact 
that  thousands  and 
[thousands  of  suffer- 
ers have  been  res- 
'cued  by  the  Pro- 
gressive medical  experts  in  Duluth 
since  1889.  alone  is  convincing  that 
these  specialists  have  solved  many 
and    most    of    the    problems    to    heal 


convinced  that  we  can  do  it.  And  we 
cure  just  as  successfully  Bright's  dis- 
ease. Stomach  trouble,  all  Lung  dis- 
eases, and  those  of  Nose  and  Throat. 
Kczema  and  all  Skin  diseases,  as  well 
as  Cancers,  Tumors,  Growths,  Scroph- 
ules,  Glands.  We  heal  by  our  world 
famous  Dissolving  Process,  a  method 
which  does  away  with  those  most 
painful  and  dangerous  operations 
where  the  knife  was  the  most  impor- 
tant instrument.  Our  method  has 
eliminated  the  knife  entirely  and  your 
operations  will  be  bloodless  and  with- 
out pain.   We  have  found  out  Nature's 


FOR  RENT— 3  ROOMS  FOR  LIGHT 
housekeeping;  second  floor.  627  Hu- 
ron  street. 


FACE  AND  SCALP  TREATMENT, 
shampooing,  manicuring;  large  stock 
of  first  qualllv  hair  goods  made  to 
order  at  Mi.^s  M.  Kelly's,  over  Suffel's. 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 

A.  H.  Hagen  and  Frances  Otto,  both  of 

St.    Louis   county. 
David   Miller   and   Annie   Florence    Hel- 

steln.   both   of   St.    Louis   county. 


closeA    at    $17    bid    and     $18 


the 

$17    and 

Aslccd 

Superior  &  Pittsburg  sold  at  $13.50 
and  $13.25.  and  closed  at  $13  bid  and 
$13  37%  asked.  Butte-Ballaklava  sold 
at  $16.25  and  closed  at  $16.12%  bid  and 
$16  37%  asked;  National  at  66  and  55 
cents,  and  closed  at  54  cents  bid  and 
58  cents  asked,  and  Cactus  at  $1.62% 
and  $1,75  and  closed  at  $1.50  bid  and 
$1.62%    asked. 

Denn-Arl'/ona  was  Inactive  and 
closed  at  $3.75  bid  and  $4.12%  asked. 
Globe  $4.75  bid  and  $5  asked,  Butte  & 
Superior  $1  bid  and  $1.12%  a.sked,  Cal- 
umet &   Sonora  $13.50  asked.   Red  War 


Still  Busy  Showing  Garments 

The  Opening  Days  seem  to  have  brought  women   to   a 

realization  that  it  is  high  time  to  choose 
Spring  wear — The  handsomest  of  the 
garments  are  being  hurried  to  their 
respective  homes,  for  the  women  are 
comin^^  to  realize  more  and  more  each 
year  tViat  it's  wise  to  choose  before  the 
Pre-Easter  rush. 


Walking  Suits: 


present  remarkable 
variety  in  color, 
weave  and  style.  Serge  and  fine  worsted  weaves 
are  ver\  prominent.  A  snit  like  the  cut  here 
shown, 'in  fine  hard-finished  worsted,  of  fancy 
weave,  lined  with  peau  de  cygne  and  trimmed 
with  ve;-y  round  buttons,  %^7    ^O 

It  is  a  strikingly  smart  model,  very  stylish 
and  strictly  serviceable.  A  similar  style  in  satin 
cloth,  trimmed  with  very  pretty  black  braid  orna- 
ments, is  $59.50.  These  are  styles  taken  at 
random.      Scores  of  others  are  equally  attractive. 

A  Fetching  Street  Coat— 

Is  in  a  clialk  striped  worsted,  cut  in  the  prevailing  Hip- 
less  style.  "What  a  pretty  back,"  is  the  remark  that 
every  on<;  involuntarily  makes  at  first  sight  of  it,  for  the 
"Lines"  are  truly  stunnino".  The  Military  Collar,  with 
touches  of  silver  braid  and  buttons,  together  with  large 
buttons  set  in  groups  of  three,  and  large  patch  pockety, 
stamp  it  as  a  Novelty  Coat  of  decid- 
edly good  taste.    The  price  is  but. . 


$32,50 


Messalines    and 
Fancy  Silks — A  pret- 

^6.25 

Pearl 


$7,50 


Tailored  Waists: 

ty  Messaline  Waist,  tucked  all  over, 
is  but 

This  con  es  in  Naw.  Catawba,  Ashes    of    Roses, 
■     Gray,  Bronze,  Jockey  Blue,  Wistaria,  Taupe  and  Black. 
Another  style  with   Frilled  Jabot  effect,  soutache    trim 
ming    and    large 
fancy  buttons  is 

The  New  Soft  Figured  Silk  Waists  in  Tailored   Styles   cost  aboul    the  same,   and   are 
very  pretty. 

■r  f      ^    TVr^-.^#^7^o«       Tet  is  very  styhsh,  and  we  have  just  received  many 

JeWeleU  iSOVeilteS*  p,.eity  Bracelets,  lUickles.  Barrettes,  Brooches,  etc., 
in  tlie  Real  Jet.  Our  Jeweled  Novelties  of  Pompeiian  Gold  with  the  popular  semi-precious 
stone  settings,  are  rare  and  beautiful. 

"S.  M,  (6t!iimt9  $i  (Ha. 

i*- Correct  J)r,iS3  for    Womefi'^ 


HAND  OF  BASHFUL  DA- 
KOTA SWAIN  SOUGHT  BY 
SEVERAL  LONELY  SOULS 


rlor      $2.25      bid      and      $2.37% 


these  stubborn  ills  and  ailments.  Any }  way  of  healing  and  we  can  heal  your 
and  every  doctor's  knowledaje  is  lira- '  trouble.  Our  specialty  is  the  cure  of 
ited.  and  no  one  knows  everything.  |  chronic  ailments  of  men,  and  if  you 
VVe  have  devoted  our  ife  and  labor  to}  nro  suffering  from  that  secret'  vice 
only  one  branch  of  human  ill,  in  which  which  destroys  body  and  soul,  we  can 
no  one   has   ever  been   more    success-  ""    '      "^       '  '- 

ful  than  \vc.  Wo  have  letters  in  our 
office.-^  which,  if.  you  would  read  them, 
would  open  your  eyes  as  to  what  can 
be  done  for  human  ills  and  suffering. 
If  you  think  that  Hot  Springs  is  the 
only  place  to  get  cured  of  syphilis  you 
are   badly    mistaken,    for    no   one    has 


save  you  of  it.  We  also  cure  Gonor- 
rhea, Gleet,  Varicocele,  Emissions, 
Loss  of  Manhood,  Stomach  Troubles, 
Varicose  veins  and  Ulcers,  Heart  dis- 
ease, Piles,  Rectal  diseases.  Rupture, 
and  all  chroiiic  troubles.  We  cure  by 
our  famous  method  and  no  knife  nor 
i  pain    is    in    it.      Your    consultation    is 


cured  this  more  successfully  than  we  i  free.  Come,  any  time  from  9  a.  m.  to 
have.  Come  and  read  the  many  let-  j  8  p.  m.  No.  1  West  Superior  street, 
ters  and  see  the  photographs  before    Duluth. 


BIRTHS. 

HV KNELL — A  daughter  was  born  to 
Mr  and  Mrs.  Charles  Harnell  of  1612 
West    First   street.   March    14. 

CONNELLIY — A  daughter  was  born  to 
Mr  and  Mrs.  John  Connelly  of  2620 
West    Second    street,    March    12. 

r'-VMPBELL — A  son  was  born  to  Mr. 
"and  Mrs.  Fred  Campbell  of  3831  West 
Fifth  street,  March  13. 

QQ^X — A  daughter  was  born  to  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Martin  Doan  of  630  North 
Fifty-fifth    avenue   west,   March    12. 

CHRISTKNSON — A  daughter  was  born 
to  Mr  .and  Mrs.  Chris  Ohristenson  of 
5805    Codv    street.    March    14. 


DEATHS. ^ 

BERGSTROM — Pearl     L.     Bergstrom    of 

204     North     Sixty-first    avenue    west. 

13  years   old.   died   March   14. 
IIOCKZELL — Arvid    Hockviell,    48    years 

old.   1204   West   Michigan   street,   died 

March    14. 
HVIlKONEN — Helma   Harkonen   of   108 

Sl.vtv-slxth    avenue   west,      14      years 

old,  died  Marcli  15. 


asked, 
Mowitza  $1.25  bid  and  $1.37%  asked. 
Cliff  $1.50  bid  and  $1.52%  asked.  Cop- 
per Queen  of  Idaho  $1.37%  bid  and 
$1.62%    asked,    and    Chief    Consolidated 

Bfack    Mountain    sold    at    $1.37%    and 
olo.sed  at  $112%    bid  and   $1.25  asked. 
•       •       • 

As  announced  in  The  Herald  the 
other  dav,  in  a  dispatch  from  Chicago, 
the  directors  of  Black  Mountain  have 
decided  to  Issue  debenture  bonds  pay- 
able on  or  before  three  years,  with  In. 


That  old  adage,  worn  by  old  age. 
which  has  been  tlirown  in  the  flushed 
face  of  many  a  backward,  lovesick 
youth,  which  liath  it  tliat  "faint  heart 
never  copped  out  a  blushing  lady,"  re- 
ceived an  awful  jolt  In  the  material 
contradiction  offered  by  the  case  of  the 
Dakota  man,  who  has  applied  to  Mrs. 
Forgy  of  the  Humane  society,  to  find 
him  a  wife,  because  of  the  fact  that  he 
was    too    backward    to    come    out    and 

hustle  for  himself.  .   .    ^ 

Mrs.  Forgy,  with  rare  good  judgment, 
ciiose  tlie  want  lolunins  of  The  Herald 
as  the  niediuni  through  which  to  find  a 
suitable  life  partner  for  the  mysteri- 
ous visitor  from  the  tall  and  uncut  of 
North    Dakota. 

Did  some  little  trembling  woman 
come  forward?  Rather,  yes.  This  fel- 
low from  North  Dakota  lias  started 
something  that  lie  may  not  be  able 
to  finish.  Seven  women  who  don  t  be- 
lieve that  marriage  is  a  failure  hav© 
come  to  the  rooms  of  the  Humane 
societv  and  have  asked  personal  ques- 
tions "about  "the  man  from  our  there. 

If  the  fellow  with  the  bashful  streak 
in  his  makeup  could  get  a  glance  of 
those   seven   women,   all   apparently   in- 


rate    of    7 


corpora- 


Scope  Md  View  Sale 

A  Stpreos^oplr  trip  through  the  i:.  S.  frnm 
New  Yi,rk  "to  S.-in  Francisco.  25  ramous  »Uip- 
ping  placrt.:  In  i<ai   little  box.    5flo. 

.\lio  our  "IJUI*  Journey  Through  Kinder- 
garten ■■  2i.  vle\«s  of  liappy  chUdhooil  and 
their  ilUle  pels.  JVkeu  fium  life  and  colored 
•true  to  lUd-  .■*•#  ,.    , 

WHilte  f*;  i«at*nt  Scope*.  25c  to  $3.50. 

Wlilte  CK.  "KdUlon  de  Luxe"  Views.  $2   dor.. 

An  llooms.  H.  0.  White  Co..  New  York 
H.  V.  Peijner.  ReprMenlatlve. 

m  saiwooD  building. 

Thursday.  ,ljn..  ^^t..  2  to  G.     Sunday  2  to  3. 


terest    at    the 

wipe    out    the    company's 

and    that   of    the      subsidiary 

The  stock  of  the  Banca  del  Oro  Min- 
ing company,  which  is  the  subsidiary 
companv  whicli  owns  the  Black  Moun- 
tain mines  and  equipment,  will  be 
pledged  to  secure  the  bonds.  This 
stock  will   be  deposited   with  a  trustee. 

It  Is  the  intention  of  the  company  to 
offer  these  bonds  for  subscription  to 
the  stockholders.  The  total  ISsue  of 
bonds  will  be  $250,000.  which  is  a  pro- 
portion of  50  cents  for  every  share 
outstanding.  The  bonds  must  be  sub- 
scribed before  March  29.  If  there  are 
still  bonds  unbought  after  that  date, 
thev  will  be  disposed  of  to  buyers  who 
have  already  secured  their  share  of 
them,    but    want    more. 

TAFT  TALKS  ON 
CLEVELAND  RULE 


New  York,  March  18. — Speaking,  this 
afternoon  at  the  Grover  Cleveland 
memorial  exercises,  President  Taft 
said  In  part: 

"Grover  Cleveland  was  as  complete- 
iv  American  in  his  character  as  was 
Lincoln.  Without  a  college  education 
he  prepared  himself  for  the  bar.  His 
life  was  confined  to  Western  New 
York.  His  vision  of  government  and 
of  tlie  village  and  town  life  of  the 
states.  affected  by  New  England 
ancestrv  and  the  atmosphere  of  a 
clergyman's  home.  His  characteristics 
were  honesty  and  simplicity,  cotirage  of 
his  convictions,  with  a  sense  of  public 
dutv  that  has  been  exceeded  by  no 
statesman  within  my  knowledge. 

"It  wa<<  so  strong,  In  him  that  he 
rarely  wrote  anything  whether  In 
the   form  of  a  private  or   public  com- 


tent  upon  landing  him  what  a  niuUt- 
tude  of  thoughts  would  go  coursing 
through  his  lieated  brain.  Here  are 
seven  women  in  tlie  love  liandlcap. 
Tliey  are  all  facing  the  barrier,  and 
It  Is  up  to  the  chap  from  North  Dakota, 
who.  by  the  way,  has  some  bro^d  and 
fertile  acres,  and  soni'S  ducats  In  the 
bank  besides,  to  say  vrhich  maiden  Is 
the  winner  in  the  cupld  handicap. 

How  are  they — Mrs.  Forgy  and  the 
bashful  beau— going  to  decide  the  win- 
ner of  the  altar  sprint'.'  It  will  be  a 
difficult  task.  Iniagiration.  compari- 
son cross-questioning,  pertinent  ques- 
tions— all  these,  will  probably  have  to 
be  Indulged  in  before  the  chap  with 
the  impediment  in  his  self-confidence, 
can  go  off  alone  and  nake  a  bluff  at 
wooing.  It's  a  shame  to  do  it,  all 
this  business  In  a  plav»  where  senti- 
ment, silly  sentiment  like  lovers  In- 
dulge In.  should  have  the  way.  But 
Mrs.  Forgy  has  taken  the  task  of  se- 
lecting a  good  wlfo  f"r  the  boy  with 
the  ranch,  and  she  Is  going  to  exercise 
her  best  Judgment  In  choosing  his  help- 
mate. .       . 

Besides  the  seven  w:>men  who  have 
applied  In  person  at  the  rooms  of  the 
humane  society.  Mrs.  Fc  rgy  has  a  bunch 
of  letters  in  her  ptssesslon,  from 
women  who  are  anxious  to  be  consid- 
ered In  the  race  for  th<i  man. 


of    all 


per    cent,    to  l  municatlon.    that    the    cbllgation 
Indebtedness    men  to  observe  the  public  Interest  was 
not   his    chief   theme." 


ip  the  Michigan  timber  belt  tlie  pres- 
ent year,  he  says,  and  tHere  will  be  a 
lieavy  movement  of  lumber  from  the 
Michigan  mills. 

BEING  TRIED 
FOR  BURGLARY 


Berger  Mitby  was  placed  on  trial 
before  Judge  Cant,  in  district  court 
this  morning,  on  a  charge  of  burglary 
In  the  second  degree.  Fob.  11,  it  Is  al- 
leged, he  and  another  man  entered  a 
boarding  house  conducted  by  Mrs. 
Martha  Todd  at  605  West  First  street, 
and  were  helping  themselves  to  a 
quantity  of  clothing  owned  by  the 
boarders,  wlien  Mrs.  Todd  discovered 
them.  ^   ,,,  . 

Mrs.  Todd  gave  chase,  and  Mitby  ran 
Into  the  arms  of  a  policeman.  It  Is 
claimed.  He  was  said  to  have  been 
wearing  some  of  the  stolen  clothin» 
when  arrested.  The  affair  took  place 
In  the  afternoon  and  the  case  is  said 
to  hinge  on  tlie  (juestion  of  Mitby's  In- 
tention  in   entering  the  house. 

Two  civil  cases  are  dragging  on  In 
district  court.  Before  Judge  Dibell. 
the  suit  of  Hllding  Gradlne  against  Dr. 
J  H.  Jern  for  $25,000  damages,  on  ac- 
count of  alleged  malpractice.  Is  belngf 
heard.  The  suit  of  Stephen  Foster 
against  the  Duluth  Street  Railway  com- 
pany for  $20,000,  for  Injuries  sustained 
by  an  electric  shock  while  painting  a 
pole  at  Garfield  avenue  and  Superior 
strvet,   is  on  before  Judge  Ensign. 


A  FRACTURE 
OF  THE  SKULL 


William  Ames  of  ;!2  West  Fourth 
street  fell  from  the  fourth  to  the  third 
fioor  of  the  new  couithouse  building 
at  10  o'clock  this  morning,  and  sus- 
tained a  fractured  sku  1.  At  2  o'clock 
this  afternoon  he  wis  still  uncon- 
scious. There  Is  said  to  be  about  an 
even  chance   that  he  will  recover. 

Ames  is  a  carpenter  :>y  trade  and  has 
a    wife      and    several    cnlldren  This 

morning  he  was  work  iig  on  the  third 
lloor  of  the  courthoust,  near  a  pordon 
of  the  floor  which  haci  not  been  com- 
nleted  He  slipped  oi>  the  edge  of  an 
open  space  and  fell  iieaaflr.st  to  the 
tloor  below.  Landing  on  liis  head,  lis 
skull  was  fractured.  Aside  from  this 
no     bones    wero    broken. 

_ • 

Tells  the  Same  Story. 

C  E.  Lytle.  genera  superintendent 
of  the  Duluth",  Soutli  tWiore  &  Atlantic 
railroad,  is  here  today  conferring  with 
local  officials  of  the  -oad.  Mr.  Lytle 
tells  the  same  story  that  about  every 
railroad  official  who  ha.s  come  to  Du- 
luth this  winter  has  repeated,  namely 
that  the  railroad  business  Is  very  quiet 
at    the    present    time. 

Mr.  Lytle  looks  for  a  heavy  logging 
business  along  the  Hie  of  the  South 
Shore  through  the  lAlchlgan  timber 
belt,  and  says  tliat  nil  through  this 
district  the  operators  are  making  ef- 
forts to  get  the  logii  to  the  branch 
lines  before  the  snow  melts  away,  cut- 
ting   out    the    sleiBTh     -oads. 

There  has  been  a  very  heavy,  cutting 


Proves  Up  on  Claim. 

Yesterday  afternoon  Frank  LaBoute, 
a  young  Frenchman,  proved  up  on  hl« 
homestead  of  forty  acres  In  township 
53  range  11  west,  which  Is  about  two 
miles  north   of  Two  Harbors, 

Six  years  ago,  when  he  filed  on  ine 
claim,  after  paying  for  the  filing,  all 
he  had  was  $10.  M-hich  he  spent  In  get- 
ting his  parents  to  the  claim.  He 
owns  his  fram.  a  cow,  a  horte, 
and    chickens. 


now 
pigs 


• 


MANN  NOT  GUILTY. 


Chicago,  March  18. — Luman  C.  Mann 
was  today  declared  not  guilty  of  the 
murder  of  Mrs.  Frances  Gilmor  Thomp- 
son. 


ATHLETIC  ARRANGEMENT 
BETWEEN  TWO  COLLEGES. 


Fargo.  N.  D.,  March  18. — (Special  to 
The  H.M-ald.) — An  athletic  arrangement, 
covering  a  period  of  two  years,  has 
been  agreed  to  between  the  St.  Thomas 
college  and  Manager  Jones  of  the  ath- 
letic department  of  the  North  Dakote 
AthiPtic  club,  providing  for  football, 
basketball  and  baseball.  This  fall  the 
Aggies  will  have  St.  Thomas  here,  and 
play  a  return  game  in  St.  Poul  the  fol- 
lowing vear.  A  similar  arrangement, 
though  "with  the  playing  years  re- 
versed will  be  entered  Into  with  an- 
other of  the  Minnesota  conference  col- 
leges. 

. — • 

Only  One  "EROMO  Q'JININE."  that  l« 

Laicative  B£2I[£2  Q<™^ 

&iresa  Cok? in  One  Day,  Cnpln 2  I>ayi 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


Are  Drugs  Necessary? 
Do  Drugs  Cure  Disease? 
Can  Nature  be  Assisted? 


If  people  were  born  right  and  after- 
wards lived  right,  there  would  be  no 
nee  for  medicine.  Every  doctor  knows 
this.    So  do  other  well-informed  people. 

One  thing  more.  When  a  person  lives 
wrongly,  or  acquires  bodily  weakness  by 
heredity,  medicine  can  do  only  very 
little.  Medicine  cannot  cure  him.  Only 
charlatans  claim  that  medicines  will 
cure  disease.  Medicines  may  palliate 
symptoms.  Medicines  may  urge  the 
powers  of  Nature  to  resist  disease.  Med- 
icines sometimes  arouse  the  efforts  of  the 
human  l>ody  to  right  itself  against  de- 
rangements. This  is  the  most  that  med- 
icine can  do. 

A*  man  accidentally  puts  his  finger  In 
the  fire.  Instinctively  he  wets  bis 
finger  In  his  mouth,  then  blows  on  it 
for  the  cooling  effect.  This  is  no  cure. 
He  knows  it  very  well.  But  it  makes  it 
feel  better  for  the  time  being. 

People  eat  unwisely.  This  produces 
dyspepsia  or  Indigestion.  The  only 
rational  cure  Is  to  eat  correctly.  Yet  If 
»  palliative  is  at  hand  the  pains  of  indi- 
gestion can  be  mitigated,  the  throes  of 
dyspepsia  assuaged.  The  medicine  can- 
not be  said  to  have  cured.  It  simply 
palliates  disagreeable  symptoms.  The 
cure  must  come  through  right  living. 

Take  Peruna,  for  instance.  No  one 
claims  Peruna  Is  a  cure  for  dyspepsia. 
But  Peruna  will  stimulate  the  stomach 
to  perform  its  function  properly.  Peru- 
na will  Increase  the  flow  of  digestive 
fluids,  without  which  digestion  cannot 
be  carried  on  at  all.  It  will  increase  the 
relish  of  fotxl,  the  appetite. 

It  Is  admitted  that  all  this  can  be 
accomplished  by  right  living,  but  there 
are  so  many  people  who  either  will  not 
or  do  not  know  how  to  eat  correctly  that 
a  tremendous  amount  of  good  can  be 
done  by  the  wise  use  of  Peruna. 

A  stomach  that  has  been  frequently 
abused  performs  the  function  of  diges- 
tion very  lazily.  Such  a  stomach  allows 
the  food  to  remain  undigested  for  some 
time  after  it  is  swallowed.  This  leads 
to  fermentation  of  the  food.  Sour  stom- 
ach Is  the  result.  This  goes  on  week 
after  week,  until  the  blood  Is  poisoned 
with  the  products  of  fermentation.  This 
condition  is  very  apt  to  produce  rheum- 
atism. 

It  Is  not  claimed  that  Peruna  will  cure 
rheumatism.  Nothing  will  cure  rheum- 
atism but  correct 'living.  But  it  is 
claimed  that  Peruna  will  assist  a  badly 
abused  stomach  tojoerform  its  work. 


If  a  person  would  correct  his  habits, 
persist  in  right  eating  and  temperate 
ways,  undoubtedly  the  stomach  would 
right  Itself,  the  blood  would  rid  itself  of 
the  poison,  and  everything  would  be 
right.  But  as  said  before  there  are  a 
multitude  of  peoplewhowill  not  or  can- 
not adopt  right  methods  of  living.  To 
such  people  Peruna  is  a  boon.  A  dose 
before  meals  will  assist  the  stomach  to 
do  Its  work.  This  prevents  fermenta- 
tion of  the  food,  brings  about  normal 
digestion,  and  all  the  train  of  ills  that 
follow  Indigestion  disappear. 

In  other  words,  Peruna  is  helpful  to 
those  who  live  badly,  or  those  who 
have  acquired  Bome  chronic  weakness. 
Pci-unadoes  not  cure,  but  It  assists  the 
powers  of  Nature  to  bring  about  a  cure. 

The  whip  does  not  increase  the  power 
of  the  horse  to  pull  a  load,  but  judi- 
ciously used  it  stimulates  the  horse  to 
use  his  powers  at  the  right  time,  with- 
out which  he  could  not  have  pulled  the 
load. 

This  illustrates  the  effect  of  peruna, 
or  any  other  good  remedy  upon  the  sys- 
tem. Taken  at  the  right  time,  it  calls 
forth  the  powers  of  the  human  system 
to  meet  the  en  roachments  of  disease, 
and  thus  cuts  short,  if  not  entirely  ends, 
the  diseased  action. 

No  one  should  ever  attempt  to  substi- 
tute medicine  in  the  place  of  right  liv- 
ing. In  the  end  such  an  attempt  will 
prove  a  disaster.  But  an  occasional  use 
of  the  right  medicine  at  the  right  time 
is  a  godsend,  and  no  reasonable  person 
will  undertake  to  deny  it. 

Those  who  know  how  to  use  Peruna 
find  it  of  untold  value.  By  and  by  the 
world  will  get  wise  enough  so  that 
tliroitgh  correct  living  no  medicine  at 
all  will  be  neetled.  But  that  time  has 
not  arrived.  In  the  meantime,  while 
the  world  is  approaching  that  perfec- 
tion in  which  all  medicine  will  be  elim- 
inated, Peruna  is  a  handy  remedy  to 
have  in  th9  house. 

Slight  derangements  of  tho  stomach ; 
slight  catarrhal  attacks  of  the  liver,  the 
throat,  bronchial  tubes,  lungs  or  bow- 
els; these  attacks  are  sure  to  lead  to 
grave  diseases,  and  can  be  averted  by 
the  judicious  use  of  Peruna. 

WoiUdn't  you  like  to  read  a  few  un- 
solicited testimonials  from  people  who 
have  used  Peruna,  and  who  stand  ready 
to  confirm  the  above  statements  con- 
cerning it.  If  so,  address  the  Peruna 
Drug  Manufacturing  Co.,  Columbus, 
Ohio,  and  we  wi-ll  send  some  prepaid. 


ENGINEERS 
AREJIGNED 

independent  Owners  Have 
N»  Difficulty  Secur- 
ing Men. 

Tomlinson    Announces 
His    List  of    Ap- 
pointments. 


G.  A.  Tomlinson  of  the  Tomlinson 
Steamsliip  company  denies  the  repore 
that  only  the  Pittsburg  Steamship  com- 
pany has  signed  its  engineers  for  the 
approaching  navigation  seasor^  In 
confirmation  of  this  statement.  Mr. 
Tomlinson  says  that  he  has  signed  all 
the  engineers  he  will  use  the  present 
season,  and  that  other  vessel  com- 
panies are  signing  men  every  day. 

Mr.  Tomlinson  says.  futhermore. 
that  the  vessel  owners  are  experiencing 
no  difficulty  in  securing  engineers,  and 
there  will  be  no  delay,  from  the  fact 
that  vessel  owners  can  not  find  en- 
gineers. 

Mr.  Tomlinson  has  one  vessel  for 
which  he  has  not  signed  an  engineer. 
He  says  tliat  he  has  two  applications 
on    file    for    this   position. 

In  some  (juarters  it  Is  believed  that 
the  present  navigation  season  will  be 
very  late  in  opening.  From  a  very 
reliable  source  comes  tlie  opinion  that 
tlie  present  season  will  be  even  slower 
in  opening  tlian  was  the  season  of 
1908. 

With  the  prospect  of  a  late  opening 
of  navigation,  and  very  little  work  for 
the  lake  boats  until  later  In  the  sea- 
son, vessel  owners  point  out  tliat  there 
is  little  likelihood  that  tiie  engineers  or 
the  other  unions  will  attempt  to  force 
lie  issue  of  tlie  t-pen  shop.  The  vessel 
owners  are  anticipating  little  trouble 
upon   this  ocore. 

Followling  are  the  engineers  signed 
hy    the  G.   A.   Tomlinson   eompany: 

Steamer —  Engineer. 

Livingstone    A.   R.   Fortier, 

Berwind    E.    I.    Jenkins. 

F.  C.  Ball Thomas  F.   Birch. 

Socapa     Thomas     Walsh. 

.<?ylvania    Bernard   J.    McCabe. 

Hoover  &  Mason    James  G    Purvis. 

J.    E.  Davidson    Charles  Dowd. 

Ball    Bros J.    G.    Saxe. 

F.  G.   Hartwell   A.  L.  MtLaren. 

Sahara   William  McOarron. 

Sierra    John   B.   Purvis. 

Saxona    Owen   J.    MeCabe. 

Sinola    W.   H.    Phillips. 

Sonoma    Dan   lSlcI>onald. 

Sonora     Joseph    Waterman. 

Sultana      

Yosemitc    W.    J.    Downing. 

BOGUS  MONEY 
OUTFIT  SEIZED 


MUST  CLOSE 
ONJINDAY 

Barbers    Must    Do   No 

More  Shaving  on 

the  Sabbath. 


State  Law  Will  Hereafter 

be  Enforced  in 

Duluth. 


DIRECTORS 
ARE^OSEN 

Officers  of   tlie   Island 

Copper  Company  Are 

Named. 


PURSUERS  LOSE 
REBELS'  TRAIL 

Cuban   Guardsmen  Are 

Still  Ctiasing  Band  of 

Trouble  Makers. 

Havana.  Cuba,  March  18. — Accord- 
ing to  dispatches  received  here  late 
last  night,  the  men  of  the  rural  guard 
have  not  yet  been  successful  In  sur- 
rounding the  band,  headed  by  Ser- 
geant Cortes,  formerly  of  the  rural 
guard. 

Gen.  Monteagudo  has  telegraphed 
that  a  detachment  of  his  men  was  hot 
on  the  trail  of  the  rebels  all  day  long, 
but  lost   it   at    night. 

LEAVES  CHILDREN 
FOR  EKONVICT 

Brainerd  Woman  Said  to 
Have  Run  Away,  De- 
serting Two  Tots. 

Brainerd,  illnn..  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — George  and  Jennie 
White,  two  little  children,  the  oldest 
barely  3  years  of  age,  were  committed 
to  the  state  school  at  Owatonna  by 
Probate  Judge  Sanborn. 

Their  mother  and  father  had  been 
separated  since  last  October  and  last 
■week  the  mother  deserted  the  children, 
leaving,  according  to  tlie  allegations 
of  the  liusband.  with  one  John  Gill, 
who.  according  to  papers  left  behind 
him,  was  a  paroled  convict  from  the 
Wisconsin  penitentiary. 

The  little  ones  have  been  living  with 
the  wife's  father,  but  he  was  unable 
to  care  for  them,  nor  is  the  father  In 
a  position   to  give   them   proper  care. 

INTERUm  DEPARTMENT 

WANTS  Fl  LL  TESTIMONY. 

Ashland  Wis.  March  IS.— (Special  to 
The  Herald,  i— Indian  Agent  Campbell 
has  received  an  order  from  Acting  In- 
dian Commissioner  Valentine  at  VN  ash- 
Ington  demanding  that  the  complete 
testimonv  in  the  Brents  assault  and 
battery  case  and  the  Sero  and  Brents 
hearing  be  sent  to  Washington  as  soon 
as  possible.  .  »     .    , 

Court  Keporter  Thompson  has  started 
work  tvpewriting  the  testimony  from 
his  report  of  the  two  cases-. 

BRAINERD  (iIRL  IS 

SUDDENLY  SUMMONED. 

Brainerd.  Minn..  March  18. —  (.special 
to  The  Herald, > — Miss  Zella  H.  Slipp. 
daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  P.  Sllpp, 
died  at  the  home  of  her  parents  yester- 
dav  at  the  age  of  19  years,  after  an 
Illness  of  only  four  days,  during  only 
two  of  wliich  she  had  been  in  bed.  The 
Interment  will  be  In  Evergreen  ceme- 
t€iy  Brainerd.  but  the  time  of  the 
funeral  has  not  been  set. 


cial  to  The  Herald.) — The  following 
are  the  names  of  recently  elected  offi- 
cers of  Beaver  Bav-  townsiiip;  Super- 
visor, two  years.  James  Potter:  super- 
visor, three  years.  O.  J.  Fonstead:  town 
clerk,  J.  Hahgartner.  Jr.:  treasurer.  J. 
HaigurtTier.  .Sr. :  assessor.  Joe  Betzler, 
Sr. :  justice  of  the  peace.  R.  H.  Slater 
and  J.  Hangartner.  Jr.;  constables,  A. 
Petersen  and  Carl  Betzler:  overseer  of 
roads,    a.    H.   Slater. 


NEW  TRAIN  LIGHTING. 


Northern     Patifie     Experimenting 
\^  ith  New  Idea  That  Looks  Good. 

Brainerd.  Minn.,  March  lf>. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.! — The  Northern  Pacific 
railroad  is  testing  a  system  of  electric 
lighting  for  its  passenger  trains,  and 
t\e  first  trial  of  the  new  plan  was 
r  ade  on  the  train  between  St.  Paul  and 
B>ainerd  Tuesdav  night  and  Wednes- 
Oav  morning.  It  is  a  combination  of 
an"  axle-driven  dynamo  and  a  storage 
bcttery.  the  current  being  switched 
from  one  to  the  other  automatically. 
Bv  use  of  this  system,  which  is  the 
Invention  of  AV.  J.  Bohan.  chief  elec- 
trician of  the  railway,  it  is  expected 
that  the  necessity  for  train  electrician 
will  be  eliminated.  Mr.  Bolian  stated 
that  the  test  was  perfectly  satisfactory, 
ano  though  it  developed  some  weak 
pcirts.  it  sliowed  that  the  success  of 
the  system  was  a  mere  matter  of  de- 
tail   now. 


CUT  INTO  SMALL  I 


Secret  Service  Men  Make 

Raid  Near  Gary, 

ind. 

Chicago.    March    li". — Secret      service 

operatives    returned    to    Chicago    today 

with    a    complete    cbunterfeiting    outfit. 

seized  in  the   home  of  Foid  Predoir,   in 

an  isolated  woods,  seven  miles  from 
Gary.    Ind. 

I'redom  and  his  son,  James,  were  ar- 
rested here  yesterday,  after  they  had 
failed  to  pass  a  counterfeit  half-dol- 
lar, and  the  raid  on  their  home  fol- 
lowed. 

The  operatives  discovered  that  the 
Predom  home  adjoins  that  of  Adam 
Racke.  known  to  the  government  de- 
tectives throughout  tlie  country  as  the 
"wizard  of  counterfeiting."  Hacke,  it 
is  alleged,  began  counterfeiting  in  18S6 
and  has  served  five  terms,  aggregating 
eighteen   years,   in   prison. 

He  was.  it  is  alleged,  sent  to  prison 
from  Illinois,  Missouri.  Wisconsin,  Min- 
nesota and  I'ennsylvania. 

Racke  denied  he  had  made  "any  of 
that  stuff"  In  the  last  three  years.  The 
operatives  claim,  however,  to  have  un- 
earthed two  mold  frames  in  his  cellar 
and  declare  tliat  the  Predoms  learned 
what  they  know  of  making  spurious 
money  from  the  veteran. 


No  more  Sunday  shaving  in  Duluth 
barber  shops.  Chief  of  Police  Troyer 
has  notified  all  the  proprietors  that 
hereafter,  in  compliance  with  tiie  state 
law,  they  must  not  remain  open  for 
business  on  the  Sabbath  day.  If  the 
order  is  not  complied  with,  there  will 
very   likely  be  some  arrests. 

A  delegation  of  boss  and  journeymen 
barbers  called  upon  Mayor  Haven  yes- 
terday afternoon  and  asked  him  to  do 
something  about  nvaking  all  the  shops 
stay  closed  on  Sunday.  The  mayor 
was  greatly  surprised,  and  said  he  had 
no  idea  that  any  of  the  shops  were 
running  on  tlie  Sabbatli.  He  was  in- 
formed ihal  seven  boss  barbers  have 
been  making  it  a  custom  to  keep  their 
places  open  for  business  on  the  first 
day  of  the  week  for  some  time  past. 

The  other  bass  barbers  in  the  city, 
as  weil  as  the  Barbers"  union,  are 
strongly  opposed  to  this  practice,  and 
so  expressed  themselves  yesterday.  It 
is  claimed  tliat  the  men  who  work  on 
Sunday  do  so  because  they  have  to 
hold  their  jobs,  and  not  because  they 
want  to.  Some  of  the  shops  have  been 
doing  a  big  Sunday  business.  In  most 
cases  they  keep  open  from  7:30  a.  m. 
until  nooii.  The  .Sunday  charges  are  1:5 
cents  for  a  shave  and  &*-'  cents  for  a 
hair  cut.  At  this  rate  the  half  day  is 
made  a  profitable  one. 

The  jjractice  of  keeping  open  on 
Sunday  grew  out  of  the  privilege  ex- 
tended leading  hotels  of  the  city  to  op- 
erate one  chair  in  a  private  room  for 
the  convenience  of  guests  of  the  hotel, 
and  no  one  else.  After  working  the 
one-chair  racket  for  a  while,  the  St. 
Louis  and  Spalding  hotels,  It  is  under- 
stood, moved  their  Sunday  'luarters  to 
the  regular  barber  shop,  and  for  a  long 
time  the  shops  have  been  accessible 
to  patrons  on  Sunday  any  time  before 
noon. 

"With  the  removal  of  Sunday  head- 
ciuarters  to  the  regular  shop,  it  is 
claimed  the  proprietors  did  not  can- 
fine  themselves  to  the  transient  trade, 
but  admitted  any  local  man  who  hap- 
pened to  be  so  inclined.  This  led  other 
barbers  in  the  city  to  feel  that  the 
hotels  were  getting  some  of  their 
business  away  from  them,  and  so  other 
shops  began  to  open  on  the  quiet,  until 
seven  were  in  operation  on  Sunday. 
From  one  to  three  men  are  employed 
in  each  of  the  offending  shops  on  Sun- 
day. 

Thfre  Is  a  strict  state  law  against 
shops  remaining  open  on  the  Sabbath, 
and  tlie  understanding  Is  that  it  shall 
be  strictly  obeyed  in  Duluth  here- 
after. 


Original  Dummy  Direc- 
tors Are  Succeeded  by 
Dulutli  Men. 


kim  I 


If  you  are  a  business  man  I  am 
going  to  tell  you  how  you  can  use 
less  than  one  cent  a  day  and  in- 
crease your  business  one  thousand 
times  that  amount  per  year. 


IklWl 


Biff  North  Dakota  Tract  Goes    to 
Smaller  Holders. 

Fargo,  N.  D.,  .March  18.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Another  of  the  large 
Cass  county  farms  has  been  cut  up  in 
the  sale  cf  the  bonanza  wheat  farm  of 
Lieutenant  Governor  Lewis,  near  Buf- 
falo, in  tlie  western  part  of  tl.iis  county. 
There  were  over  five  sections  in  tlie 
farm,  and  all  the  land  was  sold  to 
neighboring  residents.  Some  went  to 
increase  the  holdings  of  adjoining 
farmers,  and  other  parts  to  young  far- 
mers,  who  wanted  places  of  their  own. 


KILLS  HIS  PET  BEARS. 


Slaughtered  for  Market,  Two  Bruins 
W  ere  Very  Heavy. 

Iron  River,  Mich..  March  18.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Will  Sullivan  has 
killed  his  pet  bears  and  shipped  the 
carcasses  to  Chicago.  Mr.  Sullivan 
captured  the  bears  when  cubs  five  or 
si.\  years  ago.  They  were  coal  black 
and  whi.-n  prepared  for  sliipment  one 
weighed  about  475  pounds  and  the  other 
over  500  pounds.  They  were  probably 
the  two  largest  bears  in  the  North- 
west. 


Braver    Bay     Ele<*<lon. 

Beaver    Bay.   Minn..    March    13. — (Spe- 


AGREEMENT  REP(H{TED  AS 
TO  HARBIN  MUNKIPALITY 


Pekin.  March  18. — It  is  reported 
here  today,  on  excellent  authority, 
that  a  representative  of  the  Russian 
railroad  administration  in  Manchuria 
and  the  Chinfse  foreign  board  have 
reached  a  modus  vivendi  in  the  mat- 
ter of  the  administration  of  the  muni- 
cipality of  Harbin. 

. — • 

PhotoKrapbN    By    Telegraph. 

Edward  Berlin,  a  French  engineer. 
I  as  invented  what  is  said  to  be  a  won- 
derful method  of  transmitting  pic- 
tures hv  telegraph.  A  large  photograpli 
<an  be  transmitted  in  half  an  hour  by 
the  new  process.  It  is  said,  loo,  that 
the  ideal  beverage  for  the  home  table 
is  golden  grain  beer.  It  is  the  one 
be\erage  which  Is  as  good  for  ilie 
health  as  it  is  to  the  taste,  and  makes 
for  good  temper  and  enjoyment  of  life. 
Order  of  your  nearest  dealer,  or  be 
supplied  by  Duluth  branch  Minneapolis 
Brewing  company. 


How  '-can  any  person  risk  taking 
some  unknown  cough  remedy  wlien 
Foley's  Honey  and  Tar  costs  them  no 
more?  It  is  a  safe  remedy,  contains  no 
harmful  drugs,  and  cures  the  most  ob- 
stinate coughs  and  colds.  Why  experi- 
ment with  your  health?  Insist  upon 
having  the  genuine  Foley's  Honey  and 
Tar.      Sold    by    all    druggists 


PANAMA  OPPOSES 


BILL  PLACES  BAN 
ON  NET  FISHING 


Would  Repeal  the  Local 

Fish   Laws    In 

Michigan. 

Lansing,  Mich..  March  18. — Senator 
Ming  of  Cheboygan  has  Introduced  in 
the  stale  legislature  a  bill  repealing  all 
the  local  fish  laws  ami  providing  radi- 
cal changes  in  tlie  regulations  govern- 
ing the  business  cf  fishing  in  Micliigan 
waters. 

The  Ming  bill  would  prohibit  net 
fisliing  in  the  connecting  waters  be- 
tween Lakes  Superior,  Huron  and  Erie, 
and  within  half  a  mile  of  the  mouth  of 
f;ny  river,  or  cf  the  outlet  of  an  inland 
lake. 


As  forecasted  in  The  Herald,  the 
personnel  of  the  directorate  of  the 
Island  Copper  company,  was  entirely 
changed  at  the  meeting  of  the  com- 
pany in  the  office  of  T.  F.  Cole  in  the 
Lyceum   building   this   morning. 

The  officers  of  the  company  were 
elected  this  morning,  with  T.  F.  Cole 
as  president.  The  others  officers  are: 
Vice  president,  George  C.  Stone;  treas- 
urer, Edward  J.  Maney;  secretary,  Fred 
W.  Nichols;  assistant  secretary, 
Henry   B.   Paull.     , 

The  following  constitute  the  board 
of  directors:  'i .  F.  Cole.  George  C.  Stone. 
G.  A.  Tomlinson,  Henry  Nolte,  C.  G. 
Barnum,  Fred  W.  Nichols,  Ward  Ames, 
Sr.,  Frank  W.  Helmick  and  O.  J.  Lar- 
son. 

The  directors  and  officers  are  Duluth 
men,  with  the  e.xception  of  Fred  W. 
Nichols,  who  is  of  Houghton.  Mich.  The 
principal  office  of  the  company  will 
be  In  Duluth  and  a  branch  office  will 
be   maintained    at   Houghton. 

The  Island  Copper  company  is  a  $1,- 
000,000  corporation,  incorporated  un- 
der the  laws  of  Michigan.  The  capital- 
ization is  divided  into  40,000  shares  of 
the  par  value  of  |25  each.  All  of  the 
land  on  Isle  Royale,  with  the  excep- 
tion of  some  few  small  tracts  com- 
prised in  summer  resorts,  was  pur- 
chased from  the  Isle  Royale  corpor- 
ation of  Liverpool.  Eng.,  by  F.  W. 
Nichols  and  O.  J.  Larson,  who  went  to 
England  for  that  purpose.  The  deeds 
were  taken  in  the  name  of  Thomas  F. 
Cole  and  were  recorded  In  the  office 
of  the  register  of  deeds  of  Keweenaw 
countf,  of  which  Isle  Royale  is  a  part. 
The  deeds  will  be  immediately  trans- 
ferred to  the  Island  Copper  company. 

Isle  Royale  is  sixty  miles  off  the 
coast  of  the  Keweenaw  peninsula, 
through  which  the  copper-bearing 
lodes  of  Michigan  run.  There  has  been 
a  popular  belief  that  the  lodes  of  the 
Michigan  district  continued  under  the 
lake  to  Isle  Royale.  and  the  new  cor- 
poration is  expected  to  make  a  thor- 
ough exploration.  The  Isle  Royale 
corporation,  which  formerly  owned  the 
land,  explored  in  a  desultory  sort  of 
wav  for  a  time,  but  the  results  were 
disappointing  to  the  English  capitalists 
and  they  withdrew  some  years  ago. 
The  new  company  will  make  a  thorough 
exploration,  it  is  said,  with  the  hope 
of  having  the  property  enrolled  in  the 
list  of  the  numerous  rich  properties  in 
what  are  known  as  the  Cole-Ryan 
holdings. 

An  Ideal  Coush  Medicine. 

"An  an  ideal  cough  medicine  I  re- 
gard Chamberlain's  Cough  Remedy  in 
a  class  by  itself,"  says  Dr.  R.  A.  Wilt- 
shire of  Gwynneville,  Ind.  "I  take 
great  pleasure  in  testifying  to  the  re- 
sults of  Chamberlain's  Cough  Medi- 
cine. In  fact,  I  know  of  no  other 
preparation  that  meets  so  fuly  the  ex- 
pectations of  the  most  exacting  in 
cases  of  croup  and  coughs  of  children. 
As  It  contains  no  opium,  chloroform  or 
morphine  it  certainly  makes  a  most 
safe,  plea.sant  and  efficacious  remedy 
for  the  ills  it  is  intended."  For  sale 
by   all   druggists. 

DESPONDENT,  HE 
SLASHES  THROAT 


Porto  Rican  Student  at 

Valparaiso   Missed 

Remittances. 

Valparaiso.  Ind.,  March  18. — Maldon- 
ado  Florencio,  a  19-year-old  student  at 
the  Valparaiso  university.  Is  dying 
from  a  wound  in  his  tliroat,  self-inflict- 
ed, last  night.  He  was  sent  here  from 
Cocamo.  Porto  Rico,  by  his  parents. 
He  had  not  received  his  usual  remit- 
tance lately,  and  became  despondent. 

"TARIFF  BILL  IS 
DRASTIC^-SCHWAB 


TRI-SIDED  PACT  poSTPONE  WAR 


Do   Children    INccd   Alcohol? 

Ask  your  doctor  how  often  he  prescribes  an  alcoholic  stimulant 
for  children.  He  will  probably  say,  "Very,  very  rarely."  Ask 
him  how  often  he  prescribes  a  tonic  for  them.  He  will  probably 
answer,  "Very,  very  frequently."  Then  ask  him  about  Ayer^s 
non-alcoholic  Sarsaparilla  as  a  tonic  for  the  young.         lo^e'^rMM;: 


Balks  at  Having  to  Rec- 
ognize    Panaman 
Independence. 

Panama.  March  18. — The  latest  in- 
formation received  here  from  Bogota. 
Colombia.  Indicates  clearly  that  the 
three-sided  treaty  among  Colombia. 
Panama  and  the  United  States,  which 
entails,  among  other  things  Colombian 
recognition  of  the  Independence  of 
Panama,  is  meeting  with  considerable 
opposition  in  the  neighboring  repub- 
lic 

It  is  argued  In  Bogota  that  the  agree- 
ment can  be  ratified  only  by  a  national 
congress  legally  elected  on  a  popular 
vote  and  not  by  the  present  legisla- 
tive assembly,  the  members  of  which 
were  all  selected  and  appointed  by 
President  Reyes.  Another  argument 
against  accepting  the  agreement  is 
the  allegation  that  it  was  amended  by 
the  American  congress  before  ratifica- 
tion. 

The  agreement  was  approved  by  the 
present  assembly  at  its  first  reading, 
and  in  spite  of  the  opposition.  Presi- 
dent Reyes  is  confident  of  its  ultimate 
ratification. 

Dintrkt   Odd  FelluvvM  .Mee«. 

Brainerd.  Minn.,  .March  IS. —  (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.) — A  district  session  of 
the  grand  lodge.  I.  O.  O.  F..  was  held 
here  yesterday  afternoon  and  evening. 
The  past  grand  degree  was  conferred 
on  eligible  candidates  from  Brainerd 
Aitkin  and  otlier  surrounding  towns. 
Tjie  evening  session  was  devoted  to  the 
work  of  conferring  of  tht  initiatory 
degree.  An  elegant  sur)per  was  served 
hv  the  members  of  Florence  ledge.  De- 
gree of  Rebekah. 

Grand  !>lMrniM  Oil'ioersi. 

Grand  Marais,  Min..  Maich  12. — 
(Special  Correspondence.) — At  the  vil- 
lage election,  Marcli  9,  the  following 
were  elected:  President,  Fred  Jack- 
son; trustees.  J.  W.  Babb.  D.  B.  McAl- 
pine  and  Samuel  Bally:  clerk.  Louis 
Engelson:  treasurer,  C.  G.  Stubstad: 
asst'ssor.  .1.  J.  Hussey;  constables,  Peter 
Kintk  and  Sam  Zimmerman;  justice  of 
the  peace,  J.  A.   Blackweil. 


TO  SEE  CIRCUS 


Hostilities  Between  Sal- 
vador and  Nicaragua 
Are  Delayed. 

San  Francisco,  Cal..  March  18. — The 
steamship  Acapulco  brings  news  that 
the  war  between  Salvador  and  Nicar- 
agua was  postponed  for  one  day  in 
crder  that  the  citizens  of  Acajulta 
might  enjoy  a  circus  which  was  billed 
to  play  in  that  town  while  the  Aca- 
pulco was  anchored  in  the  harbor. 

When  the  vessel  first  arrived,  martial 
law  had  been  declared,  and  no  one 
was  permitted  to  land,  but  the  circus 
came  to  town,  and  in  less  tlian  an  hour 
the  martial  law  was  declared  off. 


Rural    Mail   t'nrrierH. 

Washington,  March  18. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Rural  carriers  appoint- 
ed, effective  April  1:  Duluth — Route  4. 
William  W.  Schaub.  carrier;  William 
Elves,  sub.  Willow  River — Route  1. 
Vein  F.  Pembleton,  carrier;  William 
E.   Pembleton,   sub. 


"IT  PAYS  TO  PAY  CASH/' 
AND  I  CAN  PROVE  IT. 

THOMASSON 


a 


THE  FURNITURE  mah 

ODD  FEUOWS  RAU  BDILOCIfi, 
18  AND  W  UKE  AVSKVE  NOST& 


»f 


Dtunning  Ouits  to$65oo 
Smartly  1  ailored  Coats  lilwto 

Custom  Tsiilored  Suits  $45  to  $65 

Choose  at  your  leisure! 

See  for  yourself  before  you  decide! 

Get  nic€  clothes  for  Easter;  you  caiv't  be  too 
critical;  be  satisfied  with  nothing  short  of  perfec- 
tion. 

Select  sliapely  garments,  that  combine  both 
style  and  service! 

DON'!  be  hurried  into  buying  by  the  store 
that  is  afraid  to  let  you  '^look  elseu'here.^^  S. 
&  B.  prestige  lies  in  intelligent  comparison;  we 
prefer  to  have  you  ''look  elseivhere.'^ 

As  a  ma  tter  of  fact  there  is  more  real  style  and 
value  in  our  lines  than  in  any  others  at  the  same 
prices ! 

And,  our  prices  are  not  any  higher,  because  we 
protect  you  iso  fully. 

Every  visitor  to  the  store  during  our  "Opening 
Days"  is  an  enthusiastic  admirer  of  the  many  new 
features;  the  atmosphere  of  all  that's  "Style  Cor- 
rect" prevails. 

Ninetee'i  business  days  to  prepare  for 
Easter,  but  we're  prepared  in  every  way  to  do, 
our  share. 

Look  then  at  our  request;  look  as  often  as 
you  care  to;  you're  at  home  in  the  S.  &.  B. 
establishment. 


French  and  Lester  River  Lands 

Did  it  ever  occur  to  you  that  within  twelve  miles  of  the  union  station, 
and  one  to  three  miles  from  the  city  limits  of  L>uluth.  some  of  the  choicest 
land  in  St.  Louis  county  is  situated.  It  has  timher  enough  upon  it  In 
some  cases  to  pay  the  first  cost  of  the  land.  I  am  personally  acquainted 
with  the  section  and  quarter-post  corners,  and  will  personally  show  the 
land  to  you.  Remember  that  the  land  is  selling  fast,  and  some  of  the 
shrewdest  local  businejs  men  have  secured  choice  holdings. 

Apply   for  maps  and  further   information   at 

Lb      Ah       LARS  en       landman. 

214-lS  Providence  Building,  or  'Phone  1]<20.  and  I  Will  Call  on  Yon. 


WIRELESS  MAY 
OFFSET  STRIKE 


London -Paris  Service  is 
Planned  by  the 


British. 


London,  March  18. — ' 
authorities  are  trying 
wireless  telegraphy  ser 
London  and  Paris,  with 
relieving  the  congestion 
strike  of  the  French  t' 
postal  employes.  The 
transmission   of      messai 


'he     postoffice 

to     arrange  a 

vice     between 

the  object  of 

due     to  the 

legraph      and 

delay    in    the 

;es  is   causing 


heavy  losses  to  business  Interests. 
There  is  a  powerful  wireless  .«tation  at 
Clifton  which,  it  is  claimed,  coul<l 
carry  on  regular  communication  with 
the  Eiffel  tower  station. 

NEGROES  HELD  ON  CH.ARGE 
OF  ATTACKING  POLICE  CHIEF. 


Dayton,  Ohio..  March  18. — Dude  E. 
Clark,  alias  John  Lewis,  alias  George 
Johnson,  and  a  companion,  Mamie 
Lewis,  negroes,  were  arrested  this 
morning  as  fugitives  from  I^icholas- 
ville,  Jes.samine  county.  Ky..  where  it 
is  said,  they  made  a  deadly  assault  on 
the  chief  of  police  last  September. 
The  woman  shot  the  chief  and  the 
man   stabbed   him    it   is  claimed. 

Foley's  Kidney  Remedy  will  cure  any 
case  of  kidney  or  liladder  trouble  that 
Is  not  beyond  the  reach  of  medicine. 
Cures  backache  and  Irregularities  that 
if  neglected  might  result  In  Bright's 
dis<ase   or   diabetes. 


Says  Iron-Steel  Schedules 

Should  Not  Be 

Changed. 

Detroit.  Mich.,  March  18.— "The  Payne 
tariff  bill  is  too  drastic.  The  iron  and 
steel  schedules  should  not  have  been 
altered,"'  declared  Charles  M.  Schwab 
in  an  interview  today.  Mr.  Schwab 
arrived  here  to  address  the  Detroit 
board    of    commerce    meeting    today. 

"Labor  will  find  itself  adjusted  to 
the  changed  schedules."  he  continued. 
"The  only  cost  that  enter  into  manu- 
facture Is  the  cost  of  labor.  Remove 
the  protection  from  steel  and  you  re- 
duce the  status  of  the  laborer.  In 
European  steel  mills  women  wheel  the 
coke.  We  can  compete  with  the  world 
on  this  basis,  too.  It  is  all  a  question 
of  labor  in  the  end.  No.  I  do  not 
mean  that  the  tariff  should  be  raised. 
It  should   be  left  as  it   is." 

CONVICTS  MARCH 
AS  FIRE  BURNS 

Are  Put  Back  In  Cells 

en   Verge   of 

Panic 

Pittsburg,  Pa.,  March  18. — Fire 
broke  out  in  the  laundry  house  of  the 
Western  Pennsylvania  penitentiary  to- 
day, partially  destroying  the  building 
and  valuable  contents. 

On  the  verge  of  panic,  650  prison- 
ers, half  the  population  of  the  peniten- 
tiary, were  marshalled  in  the  dining 
room  and  marched  to  their  cells.  A 
general  alarm  sent  a  force  of  armed 
guards  to  the  v.alls  and  no  attempt  to 
escape  was  made. 


JEWELRY  CO. 


BuLUTM.MtMlk 


330  West  Superior  Street, 
Duluth,  Minn. 


Tomorrow  Ifs  $20  for  $10.85 

The  interest  in  this  sale  was  greater  today  than  any  previous  day 
this  week.  The  cla-s  of  goods  the  clearance  sale  now  offers  appeals 
to  everyone  and  nu  ny  future  weddings  and  anniversaries  were  taken 
care  of  today  with  :^ood  sized  savings  for  the  buyers. 

READ    ON.  READ  ON. 

A  Word  About  Our  Prices 


ONE  of  the  M 
above   all   others   is 
MONDS,  JEWELP 
PRICES  are  .\L\V^ 
This  is  the  way  w« 
MARCH  19th,  1909, 
store   marked   in   pi 
everyone  in  Duluth 
are  here  to  stay,  ar 
DOLLARS  worth 
afford  to  lose  from 
FRIDAY  you  can 
ELGIN,  WALTH.^ 
ILLINOIS,     You  c 

$20  Diamoi 
$20  Solid  ( 
$20  Diamo! 
$20  Diamo! 
$20  Beauty 
$20  Back  C 
$20  Candel 
$20  Sheffie 
$20  Masoni 
$20  Diamo 
$20  Diamo! 
$20  Neckla' 
$20  Bracel. 
$20  Four  o 
$20  Clock 
$20  Bronze 
$20  Piece  < 
$20  Piece  « 
$20  Leathe 
$20  Umbre 
$20  Opera 
$20  Worth 
$20  Jewel 
$20  Large 


\NY  things  that  give  this  store  the  right  nf  way 

the    LOW   PRICES   on    EVERYTHING— DIA- 

lY,  CLOCKS  or  SILVERWARE,  and  while  our 

as  LOW,  we  are  alwrivs  pu^hing  up  QUALITY. 

arrive  at  GREAT   BARGAINS.     On   FRIDAY, 

we  will  offer  to  the  Duluth  public  anything  in  our 

ain   figures  $20.   fur  $10  85.     We   do  this   so   that 

and  vicinitv  nay  get  acquainted  with  us,  as  we 

d  intend  to' do  TWO  HUNDRED  THOUSAND 

of   business   each   coming  j-ear.  therefore   we   can 

fine  to  two  thousand  doll.'.rs  on  our  clearance  sale. 

:)uy  a  $20  Watch  for  $10.85.  any  make  in  <tock — 

M,   HAMPDEN,  HAMILTON,  ROCKFORD  or 

an  also  buy  any — 

id  Ring  for  $10.85 

;old  Chain  for $10.85 

id  Locket  for   $10.85 

id  Cuff  Buttons  fur $10.85 

Pin  Set  for $10.85 

omb  for $10.85 

abra  lor   $10.85 

Id  piece  for  $10.85 

c  Emblem  or  Charm  for $10.85 

id  Scarf  Pin  for $10.85 

id  Set  Brooch  for $10.85 

:e  for $10.85 

;t  for   $10.85 

-  Five-piece  Tea  Set  for $10.85 

for    $10.85 


»f  Cut  Glass  for 

)f  Sterling  Silver  for 


Statue  for $10.85 

$10.85 

$10.85 

r  Shopping  Bag  for $10.85 

!la  or  Cane  for $10.85 

Glasses  for $10.85 

of  Silver  Plated  Flatware  for $10.85 

Case  for   $10.85 

Gold  Mirror  for $10.85 


30  and  33  1-3  per  cent  discount  on  all  goods  above  or  below  $20. 
Hundreds  of  articles  in  the  clearance  sale  not  noted  in  this   ad. 


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w9'  .I^^^B^t,:-.   «Wi 


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**m 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909 


©FTIHI 


TOOK  COIN 
OniCTlM 

Bena  Man  Held  to  Grand 

Jury  for  Robbing 

Lumberjack. 

Was  Caught  in  Act  of 

Robbing  Victim  As 

He  Slept 


Cass  Lake.  Minn..  March  18.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  HeralU.  t— John  Carmoly 
was  aneste.l  at  Uena  yisterday  charged 
with  srand  larceny.  He  was  given  a 
hearing  before  Judge  Jolinson  and 
bound  over  to  the  grand  jury. 

Tl!«-  tiime  is.  alleged  to  have  been 
cominiut-d  in  the  saloon  belonging  to 
Fred  Crow.  The  evidence  showed  that 
John  Swen.oke,  a  luinberj;\ck.  who  has 
b.en  hi  the  employ  ot  Krnest  Fleming. 
was  sleeping  in  the  saiucn,  when  Ihreo 
men  who  were  drinking  at  ilie  bar 
notlf.d  Carmoly  putting  his?  li^nd  in 
Sweii--kes  pocket.  They  didn  l  think 
any  more  about  it  unlii  a  few  minutes 
laici  when  they  noticed  Carmoly  di- 
vidint;  some  money  with  another  party. 
Thenthev  wonderea  where  he  made  the 
"raise"  "it  being  known  to  them  ttiat 
he  Tia'd  been  laying  aroun.l  ti>wn  for 
several    days,    broke. 

Vietlni'R  Money  Uour. 
When  .Swenske  awoke  and  felt  for 
hl5  moisov.  it  was  g.me.  Tlie  police 
were  at  once  notified  and  in  a  short 
while  Carmoly  was  under  arrest,  ne 
most  forcibly  maintained  he  never  went 
near  the  man  and  hadn't  seen  a  dollar 
bill  for  a  vear.  When  he  was  brought 
up  before  "the  justice,  a  swamper  in  a 
rerirbv  town  saloon  took  pity  on  luin 
an.i  •ailed  jilm  out  for  a  consultation. 
Wl;.-n  thev  returned,  the  justice  was 
notirt^  tiiat  the  prisoner  had  an  at- 
tornev  The    attorney     attempted    to 

prove'  to  the  court  that  one  of  the  men 
who  had  witnessed  the  prisoner  putting 
his  hj>nd  in  Sv.enske's  pocket  had  .stolen 
the  money  himself.  He  almost  scared 
the  life  out  of  tlie  witness,  but  he  lo.st 
courage  when  lie  came  to  sum  up  hts 
evlden.e.  He  had  entirely  forgotten 
his  argunT=nts  and  told  the  Jiidge  he 
had  nothing  to  say.  Judge  Johnson 
stated  the  crime  was  a  .-crious  one, 
and  there  was  little  doubt  in  his  mmd 
b'lt  that  Carmolv  was  guilty.  Carmoly 
wa.s  therefore  bound  over  to  the  grana 
Jury  in  bonds  of  y2i>0.  Being  unable  to 
fTirnlsh  bonds,  he  was  taken  to  the 
countv  jail.  After  the  hearing,  the 
prisoners  swamper  attorney  intormed 
hiui  tlial  he  would  be  at  Walker  when 
court  meets,  and  guaranteed  to  clear 
him.  .«?hort!v  after  the  trial  the  would- 
be  atioinev  was  givt-n  instructions  to 
get  out  of  town  as  soon  as  possible.  He 
had  been  hanging  around  there  for  sev- 
ci-al    da>>. 

NO  ALLOWANCE 
IS  HARD  BLOW 


Ks  a  big  move,  and  will  give  the  Wells- 
Fargo  company  the  express  lousiness 
over  an  additional  mileage  ol  9.000 
miles,  in  the  network  of  yt.  i'aiil  ra  1- 
roads  between  Clilcago  and  Seattle. 
The  Wells- Fargo  company  has  a  larger 
mileage  than  any  other  company  in 
this    territorv.    or   about   80.000    miles 

"When  this  move  takes  effect.  May 
I  we  e-xpcct  to  take  over  the  business 
of  the  United  States  Express  company. 
Just  as  It  is.  and  will  retain  all  our 
local  employes  of  that  company  in  the 
service."  ^^^ 

GOODRICH  PRESIDENT. 

HcRih  Twin  City  Rapid  Transit.  Suc- 
ceeding Late  Thomas  Lowry. 

Minneapolis.  Minn..  March  18.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  erald.>— Calvin  G.  Good- 
rich was  elected  president  of  the  Twin 
Citv  Hapid  Transit  company  iit  a  spe- 
cial meeting  of  the  stockholders  held 
In   New   Jersey  Tuesday. 

Mr  Goodrich  was  chosen  to  fill  the 
vacancv  created  by  the  death  ot 
Thomas  L.awry.  organizer,  and.  since 
that    time,   head   of   the   concern. 

The  other  appointments  announced 
as  having  been  made  are:  Willard  J. 
Field,  vice  president  and  general  man- 
ager, and  John  K.  Mitchell,  president 
of  the  Capitol  National  Bank  of  St. 
Paul,  director.  succee<iing  Mr.  Lowry. 
Thev  were  not  unexpected,  and  a  frui- 
tion" of  tlio  plans  included  as  a  result, 
a   general   promotion   along   the   line   of 


officials  and  managers,  that  of  Leonairt 
.S.  Cairns  to  be  general 'Superintendent, 
being  one  of  them. 

Mr  tJoodrich,  the  new  president,  was 
born   in   Oxford.   Ohio.   March    12.   1856. 

BUILDING  SH.\FT  HOl  SE. 

WoTk  on  New  Structure  of  Char- 
lotte Mining  Company  Begins. 

Negaunee.  Mich.,  March  18.  — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  new  trame  shafi 
house  is  to  be  erected  at  the  Mary 
Charlotte  Mining  company's  No.  2 
property,  a  short  distance  southeast  •! 
the  Kolllng  Mill  shaft.  Henry  Lehman, 
a  local  contractor,  has  been  awarded 
the  contract  and  has  already  com- 
menced work. 

The  tinihi^r.  which  is  to  be  used  in 
the  structure  came  from  the  West  and 
is  already  here.  The  building  will  be 
eightv-Hve  feet  high  by  twenty-seven, 
by  fortv  feet.  It  will  be  erected  a 
£hort  distance  from  the  shaft  and  will 
be  moved  to  its  permanent  position 
when  completed.  Mr.  Lehman  expects 
to    complete    the    contract    within    sixty 

the  shaft  at  this  mine  is  360  feet  in 
depth.  A  few  cars  of  ore  were  shipped 
from  the  property  last  season  and 
there  is  now  on  the  surface,  a  fairly 
large   stockpile. 

BIRD  MESSENGER  KILLED. 

Carrier  Pigeon  Loses  Life  on  Ben- 
ton County  Lightning  Rod. 

Folev.  Minn..  March  18.  — (Special  to 
The  Herald. — A  carrier  pigeon  was 
.killed  on  Monday  morning  on  the 
farm  of  Dave  McGregor  In  the  town- 
ship of  Minden.  Benton  county,  by 
hitting  a  lightning  rod  on  the  bkg 
barn   on    his   place. 

Upon  being  picked  up  It  wtis  rotinfl 
that  the  bird  carried  a  tiny  band  about 
one  of  its  Ifgs  on  which  was  inscribed 
"R  D.  G. — 1907 — 42.'  The  McGregor 
barn  is  one  of  the  landmarks  in  that 
part  of  Benton  et)unly.  being  a  large 
structure,  and  standing  on  land  that 
is  somewhat  elevated  from  the  sur- 
rounding' country.  It  is  presumed  that 
at  attracted  the  attention  of  the  car- 
rier pigeon  which  sought  -it  for  rei>t 
and  in  doing  so  struck  the  lightning 
rod.  There  have  lately  been  some  car- 
rier pigeon  contests  In  th?  Northwest. 
What  the  letters  and  figures  mean,  no 
one   kno-ws. 


department  that  Aitkin  will  be  given 
a  summer  school  this  year,  the  ncces- 
sarv  appropriation  having  been  made 
by    the    legislature.  , 

St.  Cloud — An  attempt  to  commit  sui- 
cide on  tiie  part  of  John  Schwaller, 
who  was  drunk  ■was  frustrated  at  the 
Star  livery  stable  Monday  night  by- 
two  of  the  employes.  Schwalier  pulled 
a  revolver  and  was  about  to  blow  out 
his  brains  when  one  of  tiie  men  jumped 
on  him  and  took  pos.session  of  the  gun. 
Grand  Marais — In  1883  Joseph  h. 
Mavhew.  who  was  the  county  treasurer, 
received  114.39  salary  and  $10  for  post- 
ag'e  The  total  amount  of  money  col- 
lected by  the  county  that  year  was 
1431.06.  l.A9t  year  the  receipts  amount- 
ed  to  J»>9,.^64.09. 

Aitkin — The  patrons  of  the  Butts 
school  district  have  bought  an  organ 
for  the  use  of  the  school  and  Sunday 
sdiool  and  on  Friday  evening,  March 
19  from  7  to  10  o'clock  will  give  a  pic 
social  for  the  purpose  of  raising  funds 
Crookston — Tuesday  afternoon  at  o 
o'clock  the  old  Sampson's  Addition 
bridge  was  closed  to  trattic,  and  the  | 
newly  completed  bridge  opened.  Tlie 
opening  of  th6  (lew  bridge  is  highly 
gratifying  to  the  residents  of  Samp- 
son's  addition. 

Owatonna — Joseph  Eskra,  an  old  and 
respected  resident  of  Clinton  Falls 
township,  died  Sunday  at  the  age  of 
67  He  was  a  native  of  Bohemia,  but 
for  manv  vears  has  been  a  promincnc 
farmer  "in"Uiis  county.  Tlie  funernl 
was  held  Tuesday  morning  at  the 
«.'hurch   of   the  Sacred   Heart. 

Itanier — The  village  election  here  re- 
sulted as  follows:  Fi-esident,  k--  A. 
Bergeron;  trustees,  James  Sedore.  An- 
ton Philstrom  and  George  W .  Clark ; 
treasurer,  I'eter  Iverson;  recorder,  G. 
A.  Terry;  justices  of  peace,  L.  C.  Nel- 
son and  John  Houska:  constables.  Pet- 
er Krogstad  and  Gus  Johnson. 

Anoka — Uev.  Jolin  Wesley  bmltn, 
formerly  of  Anoka,  but  now  located  at 
Ashley  III.,  is  meeting  witli  marked 
success  there.  He  recently  closed  a 
four  weeks  series  of  revival  meetings 
at  which  there  were  an  unusually 
large    percentage    of    conversions. 

Foley — About  4,000  bushels  of  the 
wheat  which  was  in  the  local  elevator 
destrovcd  bv  tire  Friday  evening  ap- 
pears "to  be  "unharmed  and  is  still  mar- 
ketable Monday  and  Tuesday  a  crew 
of  men  has  been  at  work  clearing 
awav  the  debris  and  loading  the  wheat 
for  siiipment.  Already  two  carloads  of 
1  000  l>ushcls  each  have  been  shippetl. 
Moorhtad— Mrs.  Lena  Kyan  returned 
Tuesdav  morning  from  Stavley,  .\1- 
berta.  N.  W.  T.,  bringing  her  daughter. 
Miss  Jessie,  who  lias  had  a  long  siegv 
of  tvphoid  pneumonia,  leaving  been  ill 
for  "about  six  weeks.  She  stood  the 
journey  well  and  Mrs.  Ryan  Is  glad  to 
have    lier   at   home   again. 

Winona— E.  G.  Schevenell,  for  the 
past  three  years  and  two  months  sup- 
erintendent of  this  division  ot  the 
Northwestern  road,  has  been  succeeded 
bv  William  Wallisen,  formerly  assi.st- 
aht  superintendent  of  the  Galena  di- 
vision of  the  Northwestern  with  head- 
quarters  at   Chicago. 

.\itkin — Steplien  Rowel  iff.  who  died 
here  Fridav,  aged  81  years,  was  buried 
Sundav  at"  Osceola,  Wis..  wli«re  lie 
formerly  resided.  The  interment  was 
under  the  rites  of  the  Masonic  ortier, 
of  whicli  the  deceased  was  a  member 
for    over    fifty    years.  ,    .^    ,.       ,    . 

SttUwaler^— John  Ogreh  left  Monday 
for    Monmouth.  ^lU-'^called  -there    by   n 


telegram. aunouiiciugtJje  death  of  .John 
E  Gagneliu.'j  .formerly  of  btlllwater. 
Mr.  Gagnellus  \vas  a  bro«^er-tn-law  of 
Mr.  Ogren.  .  Mr.  -.-Cagoelius  Jived  in 
Stillwater  a  numbcj;  of  years  ago  and 
conducted  a  clothing -establishment  on 
the  corner  of  Chestnut  and  Second 
s  t  r66ls 

Red  Wing — Torger  Hovland.  one  of 
the  pioneer  settlers  of  Goodhue  county, 
died  Saturdav  at  his  home  at  Zum- 
brota.  He  was  born  at^  Sovde.  Stavan 
ger.  Nor'wav,  .l«n.  *r~t1MM.~  ••He 
America  in  1S57  first  settling 
kuk,  Iowa.  He  moved^lo  Red 
Aug^ist  of  the  same  y 


v^i^^ 


<'aTne  to 
in  Keo- 
Wlng  in 


Walker  Sateons  Suffer  By 

Lack  of  Ready  Indian 

Money. 

■Waik.r.  Minn.,  Marcn  18. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.  >—Tiiere  is  consterna- 
tion among  the  local  business  men, 
particularly  tiie  saloon  men,  over  the 
recent  ruling  of  the  department  of 
Indian  affairs.  discontinuing  the 
Indian  liom  trust  funds  deposited  to 
the  credit  of  the  Reds.  There  are  prob- 
ably 4""  Indians  on  the  reservation  ad- 
jacent to  Walker,  who  have  been  re- 
Cflvirg  this  allowarice  regularly.  A 
great ei  portion  of  lliis  money  was 
squandered  as  soon  as  obtained  and 
the  |4.'»oti.  wliicli  has  mostly  been  spent 
In  the  saloons,  is  no  longer  to  be  re- 
lied UT»on.  .\8  Walkers  six  saloons  de- 
pended somewhat  on  this  Indian  al- 
lowance money,  it  will  not  be  sur- 
prising to  note  that  |>ossibly  one  less 
tliiist  parlor  will  he  in  the  village  in 
the  near  future  as  a  lesult  of  It  all. 
And  the  tliirstv  Indians  are  feeling 
just  a<  ha>l  afiouf  it  as  are  the  saloon 
men. 


CLl  H  HOrSE  F.4V0RED. 

CroolvNtiHi  Commercial  ( lub  Decides 
to  Have  Its  Own  Home. 

Crookston.  Minn..  March  18. — (Spe- 
cial to  Tlie  Herald.  >— The  25,000  Com- 
mercial c!ub  is  now  assured  a  club 
home.  I 

The  board  of  directors,  at  a  special 
8e«!ston  after  listening  to  the  report  ot 
the  ^pKcial  committee  wiiich  has  been 
canvassing  the  sentiment  of  the  mem- 
ber'siilp  decided  that  there  was  prac- 
licallv  unanimity  of  sentiment  in  favor 
of  the  club  home,  and  that  It  could  be 
e.^'tahlislied  with  every  indication  of 
being  a   success. 

Alreadv  eightv  members  have  signi- 
fied tiici"r  intention  of  supporting  an 
ameiiduienl  to  the  articles  ol  incor- 
poration raising  the  dues  from  ?1  to  ?- 
per  month,  and  the  committee  has  se- 
cured subscriptions  to  the  amount  of 
$l,22'r>  to  be  expendofi  in  the  purchas- 
ing.*'" for  the  rooms. 

EXPRESS  DE.\L  BIG  ONE. 

Many  Thousand  Miles   to  be  .\dded 
to  \>  eHs-Fargo  Territory. 

Calumet.  Mich..  Manh  IS.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — H.  L.  Bigelow.  chief 
route  agent  of  the  Wells-Fargo  Ex- 
press <onipanv.  with  lieadquarters  In 
Chicago,  is  a  Calumet  visitor  this 
week  He  came  on  a  tour  of  inspec- 
tion for  his  company,  which  is  to  take 
over  the  business  of  the  Inited  States 
Express  company  after  May  1.  Mr. 
Bigelow  Is  authoritv  for  the  state- 
ment that  Supt.  C  R.  Teas  of  the 
Wells- F'argo  company  expects  to  come 
to  tliis  section  on  a  tour  of  inspection 
in   about    a    montli. 

In  discussing  the  deal  between  the 
two   «'onipanles.    Mr.    Bigelow    said:     'It 


GIVEN  FEDERAL  JOB. 

Grafton.  N.  D.,  March  18.— (Special 
.to  The  Herald.)— Charles  D.  Hamel, 
formerlv  of  the  North  Dakota  univer- 
sity an'd  whose  home  Is  here,  and  who 
has  for  several  years  past  been  with 
Senator  M.  C.  Hansbrough.  has  taken 
a  position  with  tlie  agricultural  depat-t- 
ment  of  the  government  and  will  make 
his    headquarters    at    Boise   City,    Idaho. 

MONTRAIL  COUNTY  IS 

NOW  FULLY  ORGANIZED. 

Minot.  N.  D..  Marcli  18.— Montrail 
countv  is  now  formally  organized,  and 
the  county  officials  are  taking  care  of 
die   business  of   the  county   in   the  reg- 

!ar    manner.  „.     ,         ,  ,        ,  ^ 

Register  of  Deeds  J.  ^^ .  Arnold,  who 
spent  most  of  last  week  at  the  U  ard 
countv  courthouse  familiari^.ing  him- 
self "with  the  records  pertaining  to 
Montrail  county,  stated  that  he  would 
begin  to  do  business  in  Montrail  county 
this  week.  All  real  estate  transfers, 
mortgages  and  the  like  involving  ter- 
ritory in  Montrail  county  will  be  filed 
at  Stanley  Instead  of  at  Minot. 

The  countv  will  receive  bids  on 
transcribing  the  records  on  April  a. 
The  bids  received  a  few  weeks  ago 
were    rejected. 

SUCCEEDS  ANDY  JONES. 


DAKOTA  BRIEFS 


Good  Blood 


Means  good  health,  and  Hood's 

Sarsaparilla  has  an  unapproached 

record  as  a  blood-purifier. 

It  eff(?ct8  its   wonderful   cures,   not 
Biinply  because  it  contains  sarsaparilla 
but  because  it  combines  the  utmost 
remedial  value.«»  of  more  than  20  different 
ingredients.    There  is  no  real  substitute 
for  it.    If  urged  to  buy  any  preparation ! 
said  to  be  "iust  as  good"  you  may  bei 
sure  it  is  inferior,  costs  less  to  make,  | 
and  yields  the  dealer  a  larger  profit.  | 

Oet  Hoods  Sarsaparilla  to<lay.    In  usual  liQuid 
total,  or  lx>  cbuooUMd  tobi«(«  known  as  SanaUbs,  j 


Rugby.  N.  D.,  Elects  Mayor  in  Place 
of  Absconding  Banker. 

Rugbv,  N.  I)-.  March  18.— A  special 
election  was  held  here  Tuesday  to  elect 
a  mayor  to  till  the  vacancy  caused  by 
the  absence  of  Andy  Jones,  the 
absconding  banker,  who  fled  the  coun- 
try about  the  time  his  questionable 
banking  methods  made  things  too  hot 
for  him,  and  who  Is  supposed  to  be  In 
Central    America. 

H  C.  Lander  was  elected  mayor  by  a 
majority  of  33  over  L.  M.  Grant,  the 
vote  beig  Lander.    162.   Grant   129. 

GOV.  BURKE  VKT0E8  BILL. 

Bismarck.  N.  D..  March  ^^---pov- 
ernor  Burke  has  vetoed  house  bill  131. 
introduced  bv  Representative  Traynor. 
making  it  the  duty  of  the  board  of 
university  and  school  lands  to  accept 
payment  in  full  and  issue  a  patent 
for  any  school  and  institution  lands 
for  anvone  holding  a  contract  where 
such  lands  are  required  for  town- 
site  purposes,  on  the  grounds  that  it 
is  in  conflict  with  section  158  of  the 
constitution,  and  that  the  only  method 
by  wliich  the  object  of  the  bill  can 
be  attained  is  by  amending  that  pro- 
vision   of   the    fundamental    law. 

MANY  MINISTERS  ARE 

ATTENDING  MEETING. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D..  March  18. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.  —There  is  a  liber- 
al attendance  of  ministers  at  the  meet- 
ing being  held  here  of  the  Ministerial 
association    in    the   Methodist   churcli. 

Tills  afternoon  Dr.  R  W.  Rogers  of 
Drew  Theological  semlary  will  de- 
liver the  first  of  his  lectures,  speaking 
on  "The  Oppression  of  Egypt."  To- 
night his  theme   will   be  "The   E.\odus." 

. — . » 

Historical  Society  ElectPi. 
Bismarck.  N.  D..  March  18.— .\t  the 
biennial  meeting  of  tlie  State  Histori- 
cal society  held  here,  these  directors 
were  elected  for  the  term  ending  1913: 
Judge  C.  J.  Fisk.  Bismarck;  Senator  W. 
B  Oberson.  Williston:  Col.  C.  B.  Lit- 
tle, Bismarck:  H.  J.  Hagen,  Abercrom- 
ble-  Dr.  J.  D.  Taylor.  Grand  Forks;  F. 
V  'Wardell,  Pembina:  W.  H.  White. 
Fargo,  and  George  B.  Winship.  Grand 
Forks. 


Bismarck.  N.  D— Judge  W.  H  and 
Mrs.  Winchester  and  F.  L.  Conklin  and 
wile  returned  Sunday  from  a  trip  to 
thf»  South  and  Old  .Mexico.  They  were 
gone  some  five  weeks  and  covered 
about   6,01H>  miles   in   that  time. 

Fargo,  N.  D. — A  i>ig  five-event  gym- 
nasium contest  will  ue  pulled  off  tae- 
tw-»n  four  of  th.»  gvinmisium  classes 
of  liie  Y.  M.  C.  A.  on  Marcli  30,  when 
the  high  scliool,  employed  boys,  news- 
boys and  "A"  intermediate  classes  of 
tlie  local  association  will  enter  the  field 
for  tlie  Y.  M.  C.  A.  ribbons. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D. — .Miss  Lillian 
Strum  of  Crarv,  who  was  arrested  Sat- 
urday night  on  a  charge  of  abandoning 
an  infant  chii<!,  was  released  .Monday. 
It  developed  tliat  the  child  belonged 
to  licr  sister  and  the  young  woman 
under  arrest  had  been  sent  here  to 
place    it    in   a  children's   liome. 

Jamestown  N.  D. — Thomas  B.  Lloyd. 
the  first  niavor  of  Jamestown  and  a 
prominent  banker  and  business  man 
here  in  the  early  days,  died  Sunday  at 
his  home  in  Pittsburg.  Pa.  He  was 
S7  years  old  and  for  some  time  liad 
be^n  a  victim  of  Brights  disease. 

Fargo  N  D. — Mrs.  J.  B.  Ashelinan 
suffeied' quite  a  severe  injury  Monday 
when  she  fainted  and.  falling  against 
a  piece  of  furniture.  fractured  the 
bridge  of  her  nose.  No  one  else  was  in 
the  room  at  the  time  and  did  not  know 
of  the  accident  until  Mrs.  Ashland  came 
to  and  found  that  she  was  injured. 
It  was  found  that  the  cartilage  at  the 
bridge  of  the  noSe  was  broken  and 
both  eyes  were  badly  blackened  by   the 

fall.  ,       ,  *       •,, 

Minot,  N.  D. — The  checker  expert  will 
have  a  cliance  to  prove  his  ability  in 
the  near  future  at  a  state  checker  tour- 
nament, which  win  be  held  liere  on 
.March  24.  2.">  and  26,  when  a  large 
number  of  the  graduates  from  the 
cracker  box  at  the  corner  grocery  will 
journey  to  this  city  to  take  part  in  the 
Kreat  event. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D.— At  the  close  of 
the  plaintiff's  case  in  the  trial  of  The- 
odore Paulson  against  the  Great  North- 
ern railroad  in  the  district  court  Tues- 
dav the  defendant's  attorneys  moved 
for  a  directed  verdict,  which  was 
granted  bv  Judge  Templeton.  Mr.  Paul- 
son thereby  loses  his  claim  for  |l,aOO 
damages  for  personal   injuries. 

Fargo,  N.  D. — The  firm  of  Umstot  & 
Overbacker  general  merchandise  at 
Marniarah  Billings  county,  has  filed  a 
petition  in  bankruptcy  with  tlie  clerk 
of  the   federal   court.        ^,       „ 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D.— The  Commercia; 
Union  Fire  Insurance  company  of  New- 
York  lias  been  admitted  to  this  state 
and  A  Webster  of  this  city  has  been 
made  state  agent,  while  A.  E.  Perry  of 
tills    city   is    to   be   special    agent. 

Minot,  N.  D. — Tlie  Graves-Kemper 
street  railway  ordinance  which  was 
presented  to  the  city  council  Monday 
nights  meeting,  will  he  referred  to 
the  people  of  Minot  at  the  city  elec- 
tion April  5.  .,  ^  ,  J 
Bismarck,  N.  D— Monday  marked 
the  opening  of  the  river  and  flood 
service  at  the  United  States  weather 
bureau  here.  Warnings  and  forecasts 
of  floods  will  be  issued  by  Director 
Roberts,  based  on  telegraphic  reports 
from  Montana  and  North  Dakota 
points.  This  service  will  be  maintained 
until  Nov.  15.  „  ..  ..  - 
Grand  Forks,  N.  Dr— At  a  meeting  of 
the  directors  of  the  Northwestern 
Trust  company  the  following  officers 
were  chosen:  Fred  L.  Goodman.  Hi  11s- 
boro  president;  B.  Y.  Sarles.  Hills- 
boro";  D.  H.  Beecher,  Grand  Forks;  and 
J  D  Bacon,  Grand  Forks,  vice  presi- 
dents: J.  R.  Carley.  Hillsboro,  secre- 
tary  and   treasurer. 


Aitkin — County    Superintendent    Hall 
is  In  receipt  oi  a  noUoe  from  the  ital* 


$4.50  Tkinks  at  $2.98 

For  t^moirow  in  the  Trunk 
section,,  wo  feature  a  strongly 
made  titunkjat  a  specially  re- 
duced  lH"ice. 

A  Ifunfe    tltat     will  stand 

hard  iisapr — »  rcffular  $1.50 


Silk  Headquarters  Head  of  Lakes. 
Lake  Avenae,  Micblffaa  and  SnpeHor  Streeu.  Dnlntb.  Mlna. 


;•  A  Few  Words  About  Our  Basement 

Duluth's  Greatest  Housefurnishing  Store 

Wlipr*.  onlv  the  very  best  goods  are  carried  at  all  times,  at  the  very  lowest  possible  prices.  Our  stock  is 
hrtrer  and  better  1  'n  ever  before  for  the  spring  trade.  A  casual  walk  through  this  Intsx-  basement  w.ll  convmce 
ISat  we  carry  nothhtgbu^^^^^^^^^  very  bes^^oSds  made.  You  will  find  here  complete  hnes  ot  the  .ollowmg 
Standard  hi^h-grade  goods  at  lowest  prices.  ,    ,  xxr 

We.r  E..r  ATumtam  War,.  ,  "•"»'"«  |  "^TJV.SuntoS  Good, 

ETitt  Emmel.d  Ware.  Jarfers.  Frary  S  J'"'',' V"'";  ScSS 

^&^^^^^i .™  w.„.         i7s^-^ts:£^pf^^^'-  w„. 

and  potteries  in  the  world.     Now  on  display. 


-N 


Sale  of  Decorated  Austrian  China 


China  Bread 

Plates,  Worth 

25c,  at  10c 

I  omprislng  butter 
and  bread  plates, 
worth  regular  1  y 
2.')C  special  at, 
each — 


lOc 


Dinner  T"  1  a  t  e  s  , 
worth  50c.  special 
at,  each — 


25c  Tea  Pots  I  Oc 


Dew  Drop  Tea 
Pots,  also  blue 
and  white 
China  Tea  Fots 
—  worth  2  5c, 
special,  each — 


lOc 


Bouillon  Cups  and  Saueor; 

wortli    5^v    at,    each 


50c  Cups  and  Saucers  25c 

About  :.'5  dozen  to  sell  at  this  price, 

25c.   instead   of   50c. 

A.  D.  Coffees, 
worth  J  4  per 
doz.,  at  each 


I5c 


A™^;?  Asbestos 


Asbestos 

Sad   Irons — 

a     hot     iron 

and    a    cold 

han  d  1  e  always — 

Laiuitlry  Set  .  $1.75 

SUfvc  Iron    .  ..  .50c 

\i 

5;8.50  Coffee 
Percolators 

$5 

Man  n  i  n  g  & 
)3  o  w  m  a  n 
IsMckle  or  Cop- 
per Coffee  Per- 
c  olators,  worth 
;;S.50,  special 
li'riday  at  $5.00 


Elite  Strainers 


(Just  like 
Cut.) 


at  19c 


The  Elite  Strainers  something  new; 
possibly  the  beat  made — on      4  Q 
•  ale  here  Friday  at,  each, —  >  /  C  | 


Bread  and 

Cake 
Combinetts 

The    Home    Com- 
fort brand;    noth- 
ing better — 
Small  s-lze.  .  .$1.25 

.Medium    $2.48 

liaise $2.98 


Bread 
Mixers 

Universal 
Hr»  ud  Mixer 
—  a  gr  e  a  t 
labor  saver. 

Small  siAC.  $2.00. 

Lai-fic   size.  $2.50. 


-t 
1 

< 

i 

1 

1 

1 

1 

$4.00  Wash  Boilers 
at  $2.98 


Romes'   Hijrh   Grade  all   Copper  Wash   Boll- 
ers:  our  regular  $4.00  leader,  specially  priced 
for  Friday,  at. 
each    


$2.98 


\ 

t 

\ 

'♦ 

4 

!: 

< 
•1 

i 

* 

Stirring  Sale  of  Silk  Petticoats 

A  Saving  of  More  Than  a 
Quarter  and  Nearly  Half 

A  fortunate  purchase  of  500  fine  Silk  Petticoats  at  a  liberal  price  con- 
cession makes  this  offering  possible.  They  are  all  made  ot  the  very  best 
rustling  taffeia  and  chiffon  finished  taffeta,  in  black  and  every  wanted 
shade  to  match  the  new  gowns. 

The  entire  purchase  goes  on  sale    tomorrow    morning  and 

continues  Saturday  at  less  than  cost  of  material. 


The  Entire  Purchase 
Divided  Into  3  Lots 


Silk  Petticoats  Worth 
$7*50— Special  at 

$3.95 

Made  of  excellent  qiiahty  rusding 
taffeta  that  will  give  very  satisfac- 
tory wear,  carefully  made,  with  full 
tailored  flounce,  in  black  and  all  the 
new  shade*  to  match  the  spring 
gowns. 

A  Petticoat  made  to  sell  for 
$7.50;  special  for  this  sale  jo- 
morrow  and  Saturday^  at 
only ^3.95 


$3.95,  $4.95  and  $7.95 

$4.95 


250  Silk  Petticoats 

Worth  $8.50— Special  at.... 

Made   of   fine   quality    rustling   and 
chiffon   fini.>^hed   taffeta,   made   very 
full  with  deep  tailored  flounce. 
Come  in  black  and  every  im- 
aginable new    color;    regular 
$8.50  value,  at $4.95 

$JOSilk  Petticoats  $7.95 

Made  of  extra  heavy  quality  rustling 
and  .soft  finished  chiffon  taffeta, 
with  deep  tailored  ruffle,  in  black 
and  all  colors;  regular  $10.00  value; 

special    at $7.95 

SEE  WINDOW  DISPLAY. 


8ilk  E»adq%MrUn  of  the  Head  of  th»  Lake*. 
Superior  Str»«t— Utk*  Avenue  -Michigan  Street* 


I   I  ■  M   I  I        Ml     -    — 

J       I 

I 

j       I 

4 

I  I 

J 


« 

t 

I 

i 

I 

I 


i«A> 


■    ■    ^1 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS  \ 


Wautoma — John  Toha  of  Red  Gran- 
ite Wi<.  is  In  a  .serious  condition  at 
an'Oshkosh  hospital,  suffering  from  a 
shot  tlirougrh  his  loft  lung  and  his  al- 
leged assailant,  a  man  by  the  name  of 
.Stout  is  at  the  county  jail.  The  shoot- 
ing took  place  Saturday  night  In  the 
saloon  of  a  man  named  l.illlcrap  at 
Red  Granite.  ^         ^  .,  _ 

Mauitowoo— Marrisd      <ouc     muatiia 


aeo  to  T.  H.  Kola.'',  a  former  Milwau- 
kee man.  Miss  Ida  Stolze.  sister  of 
Former  Mayor  Stol/.e,  kept  her  secret 
until  Tuesday  when  her  parents  were 
told  of  the  wedding.  Miss  ftol/e  and 
Mr  Kolas  were  married  at  L.inerl>- 
vllie  111  .  Nov.  28.  the  bride  taking  a 
two-day  trip,  ostensibly  to  Milwaukee. 

P:au  Claire— Ole  Harstad  of  the  Bark 
River  Bridge  &  Culvert  ^  company. 
Bark  Rl\er.  Mich.,  has  moved  his  fam- 
nv  to  Eau  Claire  and  will  commence 
building  operations  immediately  on  the 
old  snag  mill  property  In.  the  Ninth 
ward  fot  establishing  his  factory. 
Preparations  are  being  »"»"«  .*''  ^'iV; 
play  a  large  force  of  men  and  do  an 
extensive  rtousrness. 

Madison— Samuel  L.  Barber,  a  sopho- 
more student  at  the  Unlver.slty  of  Wis- 
consin, has  received  word  from  his 
l.ome  InJSprAgfield.  Ky..  that  a  for- 
tune of  ^200,000  has  been  left  to  him 
ku6  l°is  family  by  his  grandmothe.^ 
Barber  inten^fe  to  pursue  a  »aw  couise 
at  the  university,  staying  heie  four 
years   more.  ,  ,,,   .    ,       „_ 

l.a    Crosse— Although       official       an- 
nouncement    has    not    been     made      the 
[next   secretary   of   the   La   Crosse    Y.   M. 
'c      \     will    be    Abner    C.    Gran    of   Man- 
Ifcato,"  Mion.,  ilow  secretary  oi  tlie  Mau- 


kato  branch.  He  will  arrive  here  In 
July.  The  local  association  will  oc- 
cupy Its  new  $100,000  building  Sept.   1. 

Madison— William  Witt  of  Marsh- 
field  was  unanimously  elected  caiitain 
of  next  vear's  basketball  team.  \\  itt 
has  played  on  the  team  two  years  and 
is  one  of  the  best  guards  in   tlie  ^V  est. 

La  Crosse— The  Rev.  C.  K.  Sybllrud, 
pastor  of  Trinity  Lutheran  church,  bt. 
Paul,  succeeds  the  late  Rev.  Martin 
Gulbrandson  on  the  circuit  comprising 
Westby.  Viroqua.  Cashton  and  tliree 
country    churches.  . 

Madison — A  typewriter  appliance 
which  promises  to  be  of  "^'f'"«  -i? 
stenographers  has  been  invented  by  v\ . 
J  Neidig.  an  instructor  In  Lngllsll  at 
the  University  of  Wisconsin.  The  new 
invention  registers  automatically  m 
plain  view  of  the  operator  the  number 
of  lines  which  can  be  written  on  be- 
fore the  end  of  the  -sheet  of  paper  is 
reached. 


Calumet— Charle!5  Ma<clii   ha.«  arrived 
from  Texft*.  aad  Jaas   accepted  a  yosl- 


tion  with  the  Red  .] 
cornetlst.  under  the 
Tommel.  F.  Gargh 
also  accepted  a  posi 
band,    playing    solo 

Hancock — Miss  K 
luth  has  taken  a  P' 
the  cigar  counter  c 
succeeding  Miss  M 
Superior. 

Houghton — -Vimee 
cock,    has    tendered 
collector     for     the 
Telephone   company 
with   the   firm   of  J( 
Co.,     tailors     of     Ho 

Tamarack — Mrs. 
Tamarack,    has   gon 
she   win    visit    at    tl 
ter,     Mrs      .John     O" 
Calumet. 

Laurlum — Martin 
iuni  who  has  beer 
buslne~ss  at  Chasse 
vada.  where  he  has 
with  the  Haas  con 
looking  up  land 
Daniel  has  cliarge 
ing   lii'^  absence. 

Marquette — S.  W 
telegram  Tuesda> 
deatli  of  MxH.  SUat 


acket  hand  as  solo 
leader.'^hlp  of  Paul 
di  of  Chicago,  has 
tion  witli  the  same 
French  horn, 
itie  Young  of  Du- 
>sition  as  clerk  at 
f  tlie  Scott  hotel, 
erccdes    Asenau    ol 

CatelUer    of    Han- 

hls  resignation  as 
Houghton       Codnty 

to  take  a  position 
seph  St.  -\rmour  & 
iighton. 

John  B.  Either  of 
e  to  Duluth.  where 
e  home  of  her  sls- 
^eary,     formerly     of 

Messner     of  Laur- 
In    the      poolroom 

11,    has    left    for   Ne- 

accepted   a  position 

ipany    of    Houghton, 

prospects,       Floyd 

>f  his   business  dur- 

.    ShauU    received    a 

announcing       the 

ill's  mother,  Mrs.  R. 


.T.  Taylor,  64R  West  Fort  street,  De- 
troit. Mrs.  Shauli  was  called  to  her 
mother's  bedside  two  weeks  ago  and 
was    with    her    to    the    last. 

Ironwood — Amended,  the  proposed 
gas  franchise  has  been  adopted  by  tlie 
Ironwood  common  council  by  unani- 
mous vote.  Preceding  this  action. 
Messrs.  Fife  of  Grand  Rapids  and 
Wallace  of  Detroit  went  over  the  pro- 
posed amendments  with  the  finance  and 
citizens'  committees,  agreement  being 
reached    on   everv   point   In   controversy. 

Houghton — Fred  W.  Davis  of  Detroltj 
commander  of  the  military  branch  of 
the  Micliigan  Order  of  Odd  Fellows, 
with  Ills  official  staff  Is  coming  to  the 
Copp.-r  country  .Saturday  for  the  pur- 
pose of  installing  a  branch  of  the  Pa- 
triarciis    Militant. 

Calumet — .John  J.  Tobin,  who  died 
recentlv  at  Greeley.  Ala.  .was  well- 
known  in  Calumet  and  Houghton.  His 
home  was  at  Ironwood,  and  after  tak- 
ing a  course  at  the  Micliigan  College 
of  Mines  he  went  to  Greeley,  where 
he   lived    up  to  the   time  of  his  death. 

Marquette — H.  Bitters  and  .Mbert 
Pleury  of  the  South  Shore  shops,  have 
gone  "to  Chicago  to  Inspect  a  sample 
of  the  400  cars  recently  ordered  by  the 
Soutii  Shore  road  from  the  AmerioiAaL 
Car   company. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:        THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


Kneumatism 

V    AND       I 

Lumbaeo 


0 


USE 


meea 


Oil 


Omega  Oil  contains  methyl 
•alfcj'late,  which  is  one  of  the  best 
known  remedies  for  Rheumatism  and 
Lumbago.  Rub  the  Oil  into  the  place 
that  hurts,  and  the  pain  will  stop. 
There  is  no  case  so  bad  that  Omega 
Oil  won't  at  least  ^ive  relief.  Trial 
bottle  10c.  Large  sizes,  25c.  and  5Uc. 


rn 


^:!^:«:3i>L?^^ 


Portables 

at  Less  Than 
Factory  Price 

We  have  a  few  Portables 
left  that  are  beauties,  both  in 
design  and  finish,  in  fact,  the 
most  handsome  pieces  of 
workmanship  ever  turned  out 
by  the  manufacturer.  Below 
are  listed  a  few  of  the  bar- 
gains: 

$22.50    Antique    Verde    finish, 
.•\rts     &     Crafts     design,     20- 

d"ol^"'"".' $12.50 

$25     Antique     Verde     finish. 

a'!""""  """■ $12.50 

%35  rich  gilt  finish,  floral  de 

sign  shade, 

at 

$35     Antique     Verde     finish, 
Arts    and    Crafts    design.    22- 

^.'"•"'i $18.00 

$40     Antique     Verde     finish, 
leaded  glass  ^99  IZA 

dome,  at 9uU»uV 

These  bargains  are  the 
greatest  ever  offered  on  port- 
ables in  the  city  of  Duluth. 

SEE  WINDOW  DISPLAY. 

NORTHERN 
ELECTRICAL  Co., 

210  WEST  FIRST  STREET. 


m  TME  BTOi  Mi^lgES  ] 


NIBBING  HONORS 
SAINT'S  MEMORY 


E.  J .  Kelly  of  Duluth 
Delivers  a  Very  Force- 
ful Address. 

Hibbing,  Minn.,  March  18.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — About  50  people  at- 
tended the  St.  Patrick's  entertainment 
given  here  last  night  under  the  aus- 
pices of  the  local  lodge  of  Ancient  Or- 
I  der  of  Hibertuans.  E.  J.  Kelly  of 
Duluth  delivered  a  very  able  and  elo- 
quent address,  choosing  for  his  subject, 
'Ireland   and   Her   Patron   Saint." 

Mr.  Kelly  spoke  for  forty  minutes, 
with   telling  effect. 

The  songs  by  the  children,  trained 
by  Mrs.  Murphy,  were  well  received. 
Miss  Mae  Meehan  and  George  Cobb  re- 
cited In  a  very  masterful  manner  and 
were    higlily    appreciated. 

The  dancing  of  Miss  LaVelle  and  tbe 
singing  of  Miss  Audrey  Miller  sent  the 
large  audience  home  In  a  very  happy 
mood.  Miss  Miller  is  a  young  Hib- 
blng  girl  who  possesses 'a  most  re- 
markable voice,  and  if  slie  should  ever 
decide  to  chose  the  stage  as  her  pro- 
fession In  life  she  will  make  a  great 
success. 

Close's  hall  was  most  tastefully  dec- 
orated In  green,  with  the  American 
flag  and  Ireland's  shamrock  showing 
here  and  there  through  bunches  of 
green. 


the  Alger-Smith  line  alone,  and  with 
the  many  getting  aboard  at  other 
points,  extra  coaches  are  necessary 
on  all  trains  to  handle  the  traffic. 
Many  carloads  of  horses  are  also  be- 
ing sent  from  the  camps  for  their  sum- 
mer's   work    at    other    points. 


EVELETH  MAY 
HAVE  THEATER 


floral  de-     Jy 

$20.00  3 


SIXTEEN  BIDS 
WERE  RECEIVED 


Badly  Needed  Playhouse 

Liable  to  be  Erected 

This  Year. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  18. —  (Special 
to  Hherald.) — If  plans  now  on  foot  are 
carried  out.  Eveleth  will  have  a  flrst- 
class  theater  before  the  year  is  out. 

P.  E.  Dowllng*  who  owns  some  land 
on  Jones  street,  about  half  a  block 
from  Grant  avenue.  Is  planning  to  put 
up  a  theater  with  lodge  rooms  and  a 
dance   hall    in   co^nnectlon. 

Eveleth  is  in  great  need  of  such  a 
place,  as  many  shows  that  otherwise 
would  play  here  do  not  book  this  town 
because    of   the    lack    of   a    theater. 

F.  E.  Carpenter,  manager  of  the  Ly- 
ceum, a  vaudeville  house  is  negotiat- 
ing for  a  lease  if  the  theater  will  be 
built.  Vaudeville  would  then  fill  in 
the  dark  nights.  The  Elks  will 
probably  have  their  lodge  in  the  con- 
templated building.  On  the  first  floor 
tliere    would     be    place    for    two    offices. 

Tearing  down  present  old  livery  .sta- 
ble on  the  proposed  site  will  probably 
commence  as  soon  as  spring  weather 
sets   in. 


Closing  Days  of  the  Great  Sale 


Fy^^  per  yard  for  your 
£  t    choice    of   any  of 


these  fabrics. 


"The  Wadi  Fabric  that  is  WaiOuUe" 


$25.00 

For  a 

SUIT  OR  OVERCOAT 

Made  here  in  Duluth  of  (ood 
honest,  •11-wool  material; 
newest    cut. 

MORRISON, 

8   Lake   Avcnae   Sooth. 


i  WANT  TO  TALK  WITH  \0l 

ABOIT  YOUR  FIRNITIRE." 

THOMASSON 

"THE  FURNITURE  man" 

ODD  nUOWS  BAU  luaoiM^ 
IS  AND  M  LAKE  AVEMUE  IIOBT& 


GOPHER  SHOE  WORKS 


Dl  LITII — Hi    Imt    Are. 

12    4th    Ave,    W. 
Superior — 1418    Tower    Ave. 


Stoddard  Dayton 

$t500  to  $3500 

RAMALEY  QARAGE,  pSSl 

The  Peer  of  All  Electrics 

CATALOGUES   ON  REQUEST 


Minneapolis  Firm  is  Given 

Contract  for  New  tlib- 

bing  Sctiool. 

Hlbblns.  Minn.,  March  18. — (Special 
to  The  Herald..! — The  school  directors 
have  awarded  the  contract  for  erecting 
the  new  Central  school  buildins  to 
Bailey  &  Marsh  of  Minneapolis  for  |81,- 
614.  in  all  sixteen  bids  were  sub- 
mitted. Contractors  from  all  over  the 
state  made  an  effort  to  secure  the 
plum. 

The  foundation  was  laid  last  fall  and 
the  building  is  to  be  rinished  by  Sept. 
1.  For  every  day  the  building  Is  com- 
pleted before  tiiat  date  the  contractors 
are  to  receive  |25  and  for  every  day 
aiu-r  Sept.  1,  that  trie  building  re- 
mains uncompleted,  they  are  to  forfeit 
S25. 

The  following  contractors  submitted 
bids: 

Bailey  &  Marsh  company,  Minneapol- 
is,   181,614. 

Majet:tic  Construction  companv,  Su- 
perior,   $h2,593. 

David    Graham,    Hibbing,    ?84,636. 

C,    E.     Wleschke,    Elv,    $86,186. 

F.   Norlander,   St.    Paul.    $86,897. 

L.   D.    Campbell.    Duluth,   $87,718. 

J.    T.    Schinness.    Superior,    $89,193. 

W.   W.   Bowe.   Hibbing,  $89,999. 

Ole     Siever.son,     Crookston,     $91,400. 

John    Wonder.    Minneapolis,    $91,544. 
McLeod    &    Smith,    Duluth,    $91,u54. 

Smith    &    Yokes,    Superior,    $9^1*00. 

Emil   Sedlecke        Superior,   $83,420. 

C.   A.    Kulander,   Hibbing,   $83,050. 

Theo  Nauffts,  Superior,  $89,250. 

James  Brady,  Red  Lake  Falls,  Minn., 
$119,8o2. 


AIROR.A  TEACHERS  TO 

SEEK  OTHER  FIELDS. 

Aurora,  Minn.,  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Five  of  the  local 
teachers  have  indicated  tlieir  inten- 
tions of  leaving  at  the  end  of  the 
school  year. 

Miss  King,  supervisor  of  music  and 
drawing;  Miss  Parks,  director  of  the 
kindergarten;  Miss  Clark,  who  has 
charge  of  the  sewing  and  cooking  de- 
partments, and  Misses  Curtiss  and 
Wiseman  of  the  first  grade  rooms,  are 
not  applicants   for  next  year. 

Miss  Parks  will  go  to  Cleveland. 
where  she  will  take  up  work  in  a  hos- 
pital. Eventually  she  expects  to  make 
a    specialty    of    children's    diseases. 

Miss  Clark  expects  to  finish  her 
work  as  a  teaciier  this  year,  and  will 
remain  at  her  home  in   Chatham,  N.   Y. 


AURORA  BOY  NERVY. 


Injured  By  Pitchfork   Persists  on 
Returning  to  School. 

Aurora,  Minri..  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Peter  Knutson,  a  boy 
living  at  Colby,  who  attends  the  Aurora 
school,  was  quite  badly  injured  Tues- 
day during  the  noon  hour  by  being 
struck  in  the  face  by  a  pitchfork  in 
the  hands  of  P'rank  Zimmerman,  a 
playmate.  The  blow  was  an  accident, 
and  happened  while  the  boys  were 
playing  in  Gerisch's  barn.  Two  cuts 
were  put  in  the  boys  face,  one  quite 
deep.  After  the  wounds  were  dressed 
Knutson  showe<l  his  grit  by  going  back 
to  school,  although  suffering  a  great 
deal. 


WORK  AT  SELLWOOD. 


>IutuaI  Life  Insurance  Co. 
BMton.   Mm*. 
Standard    I'o;iiii'«.      Liw    Net    O-st. 
C.  H.  GIDDINGS,  General  Aeent, 

311    Lyceum  BIdg.,   Duluth.   Minn. 


WL  De  Gar 

H."**  been  pronoiinp«d 
"Perfection"  by  men 
who  siuoke  It.  Say  th« 
liTord  to  >i>nv  dealer. 

UR  Havana 


.4bout  Fifty  Men  Are  Clearing  Away 
Surface  of  Property. 

Aurora.  Minn.,  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Although  badly  han- 
dicapped by  the  snow,  McArthur  Bros, 
are  making  changes  in  the  surface  at 
the  Sellwood  forty,  north  of  town. 
About  fifty  men  are  at  work.  The 
snow  Is  being  shoveled  awav  and  the 
tracks  are  being  laid.  An  office,  a 
blacksmith  shop  and  a  set  of  camps 
for    the   men    have    been    erected. 

The  work  of  stripping  the  property, 
It  is  thought,  will  be  commenced  soon. 

Owing  to  the  lack  of  stockpile  room 
at  the  Mohawk  mine,  par^  of  one  shift 
was    laid    off    Monday. 

RISHIXO  PILPWOOD. 

Loggers  Working  to  Clear  Up  Be- 
fore Roads  Get  Bad. 

Two  Harbor.s.  Minn..  March  18. — (Rpe. 
cial  to  The  Herald.) — Owing  to  the 
nearness  to  the  spring  breakup,  the 
spoiling  of  the  roads  by  the  soft 
weather,  and  the  large  amount  of  tim- 
ber to  yet  get  out  of  the  woods,  Col- 
vin  &  Robb  are  now  working  their 
hauling  and  loading  force  at  their 
camps  at  Summit,  day  and  night  to  get 
tlie  pulpwood  hauled  to  the  track  and 
loaded  onto  the  cars  while  the  roads 
are  yet  in  condition.  With  their  out- 
put from  that  and  other  points  along 
the  line  they  are  now  receiving  be- 
tween twenty  and  thirty  carloads  per 
day  at  this  point.  The  wood  is  to  be 
stored  here  until  navigation  opens 
when  it  will  be  shipped  via  boat  to  the 
Hammermlll  Paper  company  at  Erie, 
Penn.  They  will  have  about  12,000 
cords  to  forward  this  year.  Last  sea- 
.soij  they  shipped  17,000  cords.  Owing 
to  the  breaking  camp  by  many  of  the 
loggers  and  contractors  along  the  Du- 
luth &  Iron  Range  the  movement  of  the 
lumberjacks  toward  the  cities  is  now 
well  under  way,  and  all  southbound 
trains   are    crowded. 

Monday    about    seventy    came       from 


POLICEMAN  SHOT 
JUDGE'S  CANINE 

Owner  of  Dog  Brings  Suit 

For  Damages  Against 

Officer. 

Eveleth,  Minn..  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Because  of  the  shoot- 
ing of  his  dog  by  Patrolman  Baccka. 
Judge  Prince  has  commenced  a  dam- 
age suit  against  the  officer  In  the 
Virginia  municipal  court.  The  judge's 
dog  and  another  dog  were  fighting  in 
the  street  and  the  officer  shot  at  them, 
laying  the  judge's  dog  low.  The  dog 
was  a  very  large  animal  and  was  much 
prized  by  tlie  judge.  The  latter  states 
that  the  officer  had  no  right  to  shoot 
the  dog  and  is  therefore  bringing  the 
suit  for  damages.  The  dog  had  only 
recently  saved  the  judge's  life  by  wak- 
ing him  when  there  was  danger  of  fire 
from  an  overturned  lamp. 


HlBBINdl  PLUMBER  HURT. 


Other  Late  Happenings  in  the  Bust- 
Hng  Range  Coinmiinity. 

Hibbing,  Minn.,  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — One  of  the  plumbers 
employed  on  the  new  Miles  hotel  build- 
ing, .'"lipped  on  an  Icy  scaffold^  while 
fixing  a  piece  of  cornice  work,  and 
sustained  a  broken  leg.  He  was  im- 
mediately taken  to  the  hospital,  wliere 
iie    is   resting   quietly. 

The  Knights  of  Pythias  have  lea.«ed 
tlie  third  floor  of  the  new  Rood  build- 
ing for  its  lodge  room  and  will  hold 
weekly  meetings,  every  "Wednesday 
night   as  heretofore. 

William  West,  general  superintend- 
ent of  the  Oliver  Iron  Mining  company, 
for  tlie  Hibbing  district,  returned 
home  from  a  trip  to  Washington.  After 
attending  the  inauguration,  Mr.  West 
west  West  as   far  as  California. 

Tiie  M.  B.  A.  lodge  gave  an  apron 
social    last    night    at    Er.spamer    hall. 

Mrs.  Westerfelt  of  the  Central  school, 
who  sustained  a  sprained  ankle  some 
time  ago,  Is  again  able  to  resume  her 
duties. 

D.  D.  McEachin_  manager  of  the 
Itasca  Mercantile  "  company,  lias  re- 
turned from  an  Eastern  purchasing 
trip.  Mr.  McEachin  reports  the  pros- 
pects for  a  prosperous  year  in  the  East 
as   being  very   bright. 

Mrs.  John  O'Reilly  of  Duluth  Is  vis- 
iting  with    friends    here. 

Mrs.  R.  Bodoh  is  entertaining  Mrs. 
B.  Norman  and  Mrs.  Beauchamp,  of 
Ironwood,    Mich. 

Miss  Mildred  Webb  of  Ontario,  Can,, 
is  visiting  her  brother,  William  "Wthb. 

BOX  IN  FULL  DRESS. 


Your  Choice  of 
Any  of  these  Fa- 
brics, per  yd 


7c 


Ivery  day 


Only  two  days  left  in  which  to  benefit  by  this  remarkable 
sale  of  Wash  Fabrics. 

Thousands  of  yards  have  already  been  sold 
the  store  has  been  filled  with  eager  buyers. 

Make  your  selection  now,  while  the  opportmiity  is  here. 
There  are  hundreds  of  patterns  to  choose  from — each  vieing 
with  the  other  in  beauty  of  design,  coloring  and  fineness  of 
fabric. 

Ask  to  see  the  new  Foulard  Silk  Suiting  Sryles  and  the 
new  Pongee  Silk  Suiting  Styles,  almost  an  endh'ss  variety  of 
staple  designs  in  checks,  plaids,  stripes,  dots,  c(»in  spots  and 
other  attractive  patterns. 

Remember  Saturday  is  the  last  day. 

HERE'S  A  FEW  OF  THEM: 

Cardinal  Reds,  Stripes  and  Checks, 


ON  THE  BARGAIN 
COUNTERS. 

Shirting  Prints 

Several  thousand  yards  of 
American  Printing  Go's 
choice  Shirting  Prints — white 
with  black  and  colored  fig- 
ures, dots,  and  stripes,  suit- 
able for  home  dresses,  chil- 
dren's wear,  boys'  waists, 
shlrt.^  etc., 

Puring  This  Sale, 
per  Yard 


6c 


Fajicy  Chet'kod  and  Fiirurcd  Grays. 

Oxfords   and    liight   Gray   Fancies. 

Claret      Ileds — Checks,      Plaids      and 
Stripes. 

Claret  Heds — Fancy  Flgurid  Effects. 

Black   and    Ulilte    Plaids. 

Black  and   \^liite  Checks  with  WlUte 
Dots. 

AMiitc    Grounds,    Black    and      Colored 
Figures. 

Wliitc    Grounds      with      Checks      and 
Plaids. 

.\nd  Innumerable  Others, 


Mercerized   Dress   Ginjthams. 
Indigo  Foulards. 
Calcutta  Fancies. 
Mercerized  Plaids  and  Checks, 
Black  and   Uliite  Plain   Checks, 
Black   and    AATiite   Broken    Check   Ef- 
lectM. 

Blue  Grounds — Striped,      Dotted     and 
Figured, 

Light  Fancy  Cliecks  and  Plaids. 

Foulard  Silk  Fabrics. 

Dress   Gingliam   Styles, 

American   Shirting   Styles. 

Cardinal  Reds — with  Phik  and   Polka 
Dots. 

And    Innumerable   Others. 


THE  BIG 

^CLASS  BLOCK 


WHERE 

QUALITY  IS' 
PARAMOUNT 


Made  Up  Models 
on  Display 

Figures,  dre.ssed  In  made- 
up  models  will  be  shown  both 
-in  our  windows  and  In  the  de- 
partment. These  models  will 
pi\e  a  rood  idf-a  of  the  pos- 
siDilities  of  make  up. 

Fashion  Sheets  for 
1909 

The  New  Fa.shion  Sheets — 
printed  In  colors  and  por- 
traying these  fabrics  made  up 
in  fashionable  dresses  and 
suits  of  the  coming  season, 
will  be  given  free  with  every 
purchase. 


^r\' 


hold  a  patent.  Prospects  of  finding 
are  on  the  land  are  very  good,  and 
the  finding  of  It  will  do  much  to  benefit 
Eveleth. 


ELY  LADIES'  CLLB 


Novel    Stunt    Is  Promised  Eveleth 
Sports  Lovers. 

Eveleth.  Minn..  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  novelty  In  this 
part  of  the  country  will  be  put  on  Sat- 
urday evening  at  Urania  hall,  when 
Nick  Constantine  of  Eveleth  and  Young 
Morgan  of  Chicago  will  go  a  four- 
round   lioxing    exhibition    in    full    dress. 

Constantine  is  a  very  clever  little 
fellow,  and  lia.**  shown  good  form  in 
his  liouts  around  here. 

There  will  also  be  a  wrestling  matcli 
between  Frank  Jarvinen,  a  well-known 
local  wrestler,  and  Fred  Spaulding 
of  Aurora.  Dancing  will  precede  and 
follow  the  two  athletic  numbers. 


EVELETH  BALL  FANS 

MEET  THLRSDAY  MGHT. 


Eveleth.  Minn..  March  18. —  (Special  to 
The     Herald.) — The     city     council     will 

nuet  tomorrow  night  and  a  number  of 
important  matters  will  be  brought  up 
in  connection  with  the  300,000-gallon 
water  lank. 

The  charter  commission  will*  meet 
tonight,  when  the  various  committees 
appointed  at  the  last  meeting  will  be 
assigned  their  work. 

A  meeting  of  baseball  enthusiasts 
will  be  held  tonight  at  the  Glode 
hotel,  when  final  arrangements  will  be 
made  for  putting  r.  baseball  team  in 
the  field.  With  J.  P.  Tredlnnick,  man- 
ager, and  J.  J.  Gleason  secretary  and 
treasurer,  the  club  will  have  compe- 
tent officials.  The  plan  of  raising 
money  to  back  the  club  will  also  be 
decided.  Most  of  the  fans  are  In  favor 
of  selling  shares  in  the  club  at  $5  a 
share. 


Have  Beethoven  Afternoon  at  Mrs. 
J.  D.  Conan's  Home. 

Ely,  Minn..  March  18.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  Beethoven  afternoon 
was  held  by  the  Ladies"  club  at  Mrs.  J. 
D.  Conan's  where  there  was  music  and 
a  discussion  devoted  to  the  great  com- 
poser, the  following  program  being 
rendered; 

Piano   solo — "Sonata   Characterlsque.' 
Miss    Doris    Knutson. 

Paper — "History  of  Music."      

Mrs.    C.    C.    Carpenter. 
Vocal    solo — "In    Questa    Tomba.".... 
Mrs.    J.    A.    Sutton. 

Paper — "Beethoven's     Life." 

Mrs.    J.    D.    Conan. 

Piano   solo — "Fur   Ellse."    

Alice  Cowen. 
"Beethoven's   Most    Famous   Composi- 
tions."      

Mrs.    G.    T.   Ayre.«. 

Piano    duet — "First    Sympliony." 

Mesdames  Osborne  and  Brownell. 


ChlHhoIm  Home  Qoarantlned, 

Cliisholm,  Minn.,  .\larcli  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  home  of  Capt. 
R  Jones,  of  the  Monroe  mine,  is  quar- 
antined for  diphtheria,  his  little  niece, 
who  lives  with  the  family,  having  con- 
tracted  the  disease. 

•  ■■ • 

Vlrirlnia     Spelliui;     Bee. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  Marcli  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Cruntv  Superinten- 
dent of  Schools  S.  W.  Gilpin  has  or- 
dered spelling  contests  to  be  held  in 
each  of  the  county  schools  March  22. 
The  winners  ot  the  fourth,  fifth,  sixth, 
seventh  and  eighth  grades  of  each 
school  will  hold  inter-sch.ool  contests 
March   1:6. 


'I 

N 


A    RellKloua   Atitlior*M    Statement. 

liev.  Joseph  H.  Fesperhan,  Salisbury, 
C.  wJio  is  the  author  of  Several 
books,  writes:  "For  several  years  I 
was  afflicted  with  kidney  trouble,  and 
last  winter  I  was  swddenjy  stricken 
with  a  severe  pain  in  my  kidneys  and 
was  confined  to  bed  eight  days  unable 
to  get  Ut)  without  atsisiance.  My 
urine  contained  a  thick  white  sediment 
and  I  passed  same  frequently  day  and 
night.  I  commenced  taking  Foley's 
Kidney  Remedy,  and  the  pain  gradual- 
ly abated  and  finally  ceased  and  my 
urine  became  normal.  I  cheerfully  rec- 
ommend Foley's  Kidney  Remedy." 
Sold    by    all    druggists. 


that  while  they  consider  it  impodtanl 
to  mnlntaln  party  discipline,  they  are 
not  Inclined  to  carry  such  Inclination 
to  the  extent  of  njuring  their  use- 
fulness to  their  constituents  and  to  the 
country    at    large. 

It  Is  not  understood,  even  among 
the  Democratic  members,  that  Mr.  Can- 
non would  decline  to  listen  to  Mr. 
Clark's  suggestions,  but  his  contention** 
is  that  his  posl-tlon  as  speaker  gives 
him  the  right  to  name  all  the  members 
of  committees  if  he  desires  to  do  so. 
Most.  If  not  all,  of  his  predecessors, 
have    exercised    their    prerogatives. 


(ASS  LAKE  VICTORIOUS 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


TARIFF  BILL  IS  REPORTED 


WICKEY  HAS  GIVEN 

OPTION.  NOT  LEASE. 


Eveleth.  Minn..  March  18. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — fho  report  in  a  Du- 
luth paper  that  Forest  'Wickey  has 
given  a  lease  on  the  Wickey  lands  at 
Cedar  I.Ake  to  A.  M.  Miller,  Jr..  is  un- 
founded, as  Mr.  Wickey  denies  that  he 
has  made  any  such  lease,  and  that  only 
an  option  has  been  given  to  the  Wickey 
Mining  company,  of  yirhich  the  stock- 
holders   are    all    Wickeys.  s 

Drills  have  been  on  the  Wickey 
homestead  for  some  time,  and  ore  has 
been  found  at  the  eastern  end  of  the 
thirty-nine  acres  on  which  the  owners 


The  delicious  flavor  of  "Salada"  Tea 
is  largely  due  to  the  care  used  in  the 
cultivation  and  preparation.  It  is 
packed  in  sealed  lead  packets,  which 
prevents  its  coming  in'contact  with  ar- 
ticles that  would  affect  its  flavor. 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


slblllty  that  the  speaker  will  not  be 
so  lenient  as  he  was  yesterday  when 
he  excused  Mr.  James  of  Kentucky  from 
serving  on  the  committee  on  mileage, 
after  the  house  manifestly  had  voted 
to  the  contrary. 

The  Democratic  members  of  the 
house  probably  will  not  carry  to  an 
extreme  their  adherence  to  their  cau- 
cus pledge  to  accept  no  committee 
assignments  unless  passed  upon  by 
Clark.  This  pledge  was  made  while 
the  house  was  acting  under  the  old 
method  of  appointing  committees,  but 
with  the  resumption  by  the  speaker  of 
his  prerogative  to  himself  to  desig- 
nate all  members  of  committees,  some 
of  Clark's  friends  are  pointing  out. 
and  the  indications  are  strong,  that 
there  will  be  little  more  demonstra- 
tion In  support  of  Clark's  right  to 
name  the  Democratic  committeemen. 

No  more  important  committeee  will 
be  filled  for  the  present,  but  it  Is  ex- 
pected this  work  will  be  taken  Un  by 
the  speaker  as  soon  as  the  tariff  bill 
Is  disposed  of.  and  It  Is  believed  that 
by  that  time  feeling  will  have  suffi- 
ciently died  out  to  permit  him  to  pro- 
ceed without  opposition.  In  all  prob- 
ability, the  committee  announcements 
will  be  made  upon  the  eve  of  the  final 
adjournment  of  the  extra  session,  and 
it  would  then  be  practically  impossible 
no  In  this  way  relieve  from  service  all 
of  the  minority  members.  The  Dem- 
cratlc    members    are    already      saying 


Rowe  bill,  aimed  at  the  Armour  pack- 
ing plant  location,  and  asked  a  call  of 
the  house  on  his  motion.  Then  he 
withdrew  his  motion,  on  the  ground 
that  some  of  the  members  did  not  wi.sh 
action  taken  at  once,  and  moved  that 
the  bill  be  made  a  special  order  for 
Tuesday  afternoon. 

Christensen  of  St.  Paul  wanted  to 
make  it  Thursday,  and  after  a  brief 
debate.  Mr.  Lennon  magnanimously 
consented  to  the  change,  first  askin?^ 
for  and  receiving  a  promise  from  the 
St.  1  ;u;I  delegation  t.j  go  to  biiCv^  t>n 
the  till  without   far.   at   (hat   tlTie. 

Then  Ware  of  Northfleld  offered  a 
resolution  providing  for  a  committee 
of  j^lx  members  and  three  senators  fui- 
t'.ier  to  in%estigi(e  the  packing  plunt 
mailer.  He  nioN  ed  Its  adoption 
and  said  he  hoped  nobody  would  give 
notice  of  debate,  whereupon  Frank 
White  of  Elk  Ri^er  promptly  gave 
notice  of  debate,  sending  the  resolution 
over   for   .-x    day. 

Representative  Pfaender  of  New  Ulm 
called  up  his  resolution  for  a  commit- 
tee of  five  to  investigate  the  proposi- 
tion and  on  motion  of  Representative 
Lennon  of  Minneapolis,  it  was  laid 
upon  the  table. 

•  *      • 

Representative  Krause  introduced  a 
bill  in  the  house  this  morning,  pro- 
hibiting persons  with  guns  and  ac- 
companied by  dogs,  entering  closed 
fields    belonging   to   others. 

•  *      • 

Representative  Washburn  of  Minne- 
apolis, offered  In  the  house,  the  bill 
which  came  into  the  senate  yesterday, 
providing  for  medical  physical  exam- 
ination of  public  school  pupils  in  cities 
over  50,000. 

•  •      • 

Representative  Hinds  was  the  autiior 
of  a  bill  forbidding  the  sale  of  wall- 
eyed pike  caught  in  waters  stocked  by 
the  state. 

•  •      • 

Though  the  village  of  Oak  Park,  ad- 
joining Stillwater.  recently  voted 
against  going  into  that  city.  It  is  go- 
ing to  go  anyway.  This  morning.  Sen- 
ator Sullivan  of  Stillwater  introduced 
and  had  passed,  under  suspension  of  the 
rules,  a  bill  taking  the  suburb  Into  teh 
cit.v.  This  is  because  the  new  state 
prison  is  being  built  at  Oak  Park,  and 
the  constitution  requires  that  tlie  prison 
remain    in    Stillwater. 

•  •       « 

Senator  Wilson,  by  request,  intro- 
duced a  bill  requiring  real  estate  and 
commission  brokers  dealing  In  every- 
thing except  agricultural  products  to 
take  out  licenses  from  county  auditors, 
paying  $100  each  and  giving  $2,000 
bonds  to  Insure  their  patrons  against 
losses. 

•  •       * 

Senator  Fosseen  is  the  author  of  a 
bill  requiring  employment  agencies 
for  women  to  take  out  licenses,  pay 
$100  and  give  bonds,  just  as  agencies 
for  men  are  now   required   to  do. 

•  *       • 

Senator  McColl  of  St.  Paul  offered  a 
bill  providing  that  In  cities  over  50,000 
the  citv  assessor  shall  be  appointed  by 
the  city  council,  shall  get  $4,000  a  year, 
and,  with  four  freeholders  appointed  by 
the  mayor,  shall  constitute  the  city 
board    of  equalization. 

•  •      •       • 

At  noon  the  house  was  engaged  in 
considering  the  employers'  liability  bill. 
Introduced  bv  Representatives  Stuart, 
Nolan.  F.  B.  Wright,  Wells  and  Grant, 
which    was    a    special    order. 

STILLMAN   H.   BIN(JHAM. 


—  (Special  to  The  Herald.) — Tlie  char- 
ter commission  has  N.  L.  Olson,  chair- 
man, and  F.  G.  Nelson,  secretary,  and 
the  men  appointed  by  th?  district  court 
to  draft  a  cliarier  for  t  ils  village  are 
hard  at  it.  They  expect  to  meet  everv 
Friday. 

•  

•'My  3-year-old  boy  wa  5  badly  consti- 
pated, had  a  high  fever  ind  was  in  an 
awful  condition.  I  gave  him  two  dos<-s 
of  Foley's  Orino  Laxative  and  the  next 
morning  the  fever  was  gone  and  he 
was  entirely  well.  Foley's  Orino  Lax- 
ative saved  his  life.''  A.  Wolkush, 
Casimer,    Wis.      Sold    by    all    druggists. 


iECTOI^Y  OF 
^HySEMEiTS 


WHERE  TO  (JO  TOAKiHT 


LYCEl'M — Dark.      Eames   concert   post. 

poned. 
BIJOU— Vaudeville. 


The  Girls  From  HerUn. 

Corinne.  who  scored  a  big  lilt  in 
George  H.  Colian's  "45  Minutes  From 
Broadway,  "  comes  to  the  Lyceum  to- 
morrow and.*plays  Sati  rday  matinee 
and  night  in  "The  Girls  From  Berlin' 
as  originally  produced  bv  Klaw  &  ?"r- 
langer  in  the  Liberty  theater.  New 
York  city.  The  play  is  tie  latest  work 
of  John  J.  McNally,  witli  a  story  said 
to  be  unique  and  afforling  the  star 
ample  opportunity  for  the  display  of 
her  talent.*--.  William  Jeiome  and  Jean 
.Schwartz  have  contributed  some  of 
iheir  beet  lyrics.  Including  such  song 
hits  ,^s  "Beneath  the  Moon,"  "I'd  Soon- 
er be  a  Has-Been,  "  "I  Th  nk  of  You  the 
Whole  Year  Round,"  "Ju  't  Home  From 
College,"  "Poor  Foolish  Little  Man" 
and  "There's  Not  Another  Girlie  In  the 
World  For  Me."  One  of  the  strongest 
of  musical  comedy  casts  has  been  en- 
gaged    to     support     Corinne,     Including 


such  well-known  farceurs  as  Mark 
.'^ulllvan.  Henry  Carl  Lewis,  Lillie  May 
White,  osborn  Clemson,  Pearl  Revare, 
Neil  McKinley,  Franklin  Vail,  Lillian 
^^ilson.  Hazel  Carlton,  Stephen  Stott 
and  Adele  Irish,  together  with  an  ex- 
cellent chorus  of  beautiful  singing  and 
dancing  girls.  The  play  comes  here 
superbly    motmted. 


TEACHERS  AT  CROOKSTON. 

Third  Annual  Convention  of  North- 
western Educational  .4ssociation. 

Crookston,  Minn.,  March  18, — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  city  is  the  host 
to  the  Northwestern  Educational  as- 
sociation, which  began  Its  third  an- 
nual session  here  last  evening  to  con- 
tinue   three    days. 

Last  evening  the  convention  partici- 
pated in  the  exercises,  of  dedicating  the 
new  Franklin  school  building,  for 
which  an  elaborate  program  was  ar- 
ranged. 

This  afternoon  there  will  be  a  gen- 
eral session  of  the  association  with  an 
address  of  welcome  by  President  Mis- 
ner  of  the  Commercial  club  to  which 
there  will  he  suitable  responses.  The 
balance  of  the  day  and  evening  will  be 
devoted  to  addresses  and  discussions. 
Friday  evening  the  Crookston  and 
Moorhead  high  schools  will  have  a 
declamatory  contest.  Tomorrow  after- 
noon all  visitors  will  be  given  an  op- 
portunity to  visit  the  Crookston  school 
of  agriculture  and  the  state  experiment 
farm.  The  Commercial  clul)  has  se- 
cured a  special  train  on  the  Great 
Northern  and  all  who  desire  to  make 
the  trip  can  do  so  for  a  nominal 
charge.  An  opportunity  will  bo  given 
to  tlioroughly  inspect  tbe  buildings 
and  grounds  and  to  make  a  study  of 
the  methods  pursued  by  the  school. 
Prof,  and  Mrs.  Robertson  have  an- 
nounced that  light  refreshments  will 
be  furnished  the  visitors  and  several 
addressts  will  be  made  in  the  course 
of  the  visit. 


AVorklng  un  ('barter. 

International  Falls,  Minn.,   March   IS. 


We  Warn;  You  to  Open  An  Account  Witti  Us 


Moowfli 


107  West   Superior 
StrMt. 


TWO  STORES 


1828.30-32  West 
Superior  St. 


30  Nights'  Free  Trial 

Given  on  this  Genuine  White 
Cotton  Felt  Mattress.  Weight  45 
pounds. 

This  Mattress  we  guarantee  to  be 
satisfactory   in    every   respect. 


Has  a  very  hlgh-grad  ?  fancy  tick- 
ing; would  cost  elsewhere  $11.00  to 
$14.00.  Our  price  $".50  for  one 
part;   two   parts  $7.95, 

We  have  Felt  Mattresses  as  low 
as  $5.75. 

Our  one-motion  co  lapsible  Go- 
Cart  beats  them  all,  it  has  a  sub- 
.«tantial  steel  frame  and  uphol- 
stered in  genuine  English  leather 
cloth  and  is  a  cart  with  a  roomy 
place  for  the  baby. 

Complete  witli  Hoo<l  ^g  r  A 
—Very  Special «PU.  J V 

Wc  have  other  folding  carts  from 
11.85    up   to    $14.50. 


Your  Credit  is  Good  Here 


1 

1 
i 

I 


t. — — 


- « 


■^-^ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18.    1909. 


' "  ,___-    -  T  -rx  ''  all  its  wrath  and  shame  in  ignominious  defeat.     That  js 

THF      FVFNTNG     HERALD  i  the   sort   of    spirit   that   moves    the    Russian    government 
1  nilj      Hj  V  ^^^^}^_y_tfi1:t^  \  upon  an  occasions.     The  word  justice  is  not  found  m 

the  lexicon  of  the   Russian  government. 


AH   INDEPBXUKXT  NEWSl'APKK. 


^^UBhed  ta  Herald  BMr..  First  St..  Opposite  P.  O.  Square, 
THE  HERALD  COMPANY. 

Telephones:      Counting    Ro..n.,    324;    Editorial    Rooms.    11-6. 


Witte  lives  in  Russia  in  privacy  while  second  fiddlers 
wave  the  baton  in  the  imperial   palace.     Naturally  they 


^_____^ ^^^J^    hate   Witte   as  men  of  little   ability,  dressed   in   a   little 

^TTR<;rRTPTION  RATeTpAYABLE^IN  ADVANCE,    brief  authority,  always  hate  a  superior.     They  have  fre- 
SUBSCRIPTION^RATES  PA  ^  Po.«««c  Prepaid.      ^^Uuently  plotted   Witte's  downfall  but  have   never  dared 

Dally,   per  year.  In  advance 

Dally,  six  months.  In  advance... 

Daily,   three  months.   In  advance ^       35 

Daily,    one    month.    In    advam-e \m    ** 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postofflce  as  Second-Class  Matter 


DULUTH  WEEKLY  HERALD    ^^^ 

Per  year.   In   advance [ ' '  _      jj© 

Six    month.s.    In    advance '"      _35 

Three  m;>nths,   in  advance • •  •■,■■■  Matter. 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postofflce  as  Second-Class  Matter^ 


BY  CARRIER,  IN  THE  CITY.  TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

KVKHY    KVKMNU— DKLIVKKKD. 

Plngrle   copy,    dally "'      ^45 

One   month ^ •^' '' '    j^^o 

Three    months * ' ' '_   ^.ao 

Six    months |]_    5UM> 

One  year 

^"subscribers: 

It  is  important  when  desUlng  the  address  of  your  paper 
changed,  to  give  both  the  old  and  new  addj-esses.         ^ 

PREJUDICE  TRIUMPHANT. 
What  passed  the  tonnage  tax  bill  in  the  house  yes- 
terday was  the  popular  prejudice  existing  in  favor  of  the 
measure  throughout  the  state.  It  is  a  tine  thing  to 
thoughtless  people  to  be  able  to  go  into  one  or  two  or 
three  counties  of  the  state  in  which  they  do  not  live, 
and  compel  the  people  there  to  pay  the  state  all  the 
money  necessary  for  the  expenses  of  the  government. 
The  other  eighty-one.  two  or  three  counties  in  the  state 
are  thereby  released  entirely  from  state  taxation.  What 
a  fine  thing  this  is  for  the  eighty  odd  counties  of  the 
state.  With  the  same  stone  the  state  also  brings  down 
the  "steel  trust"  and  the  popular  thirst  for  the  blood  of 
the  hated  trusts,  whether  right  or  wrong,  is  appeased. 

It  was  before  this  blind,  unreasoning  greed  and  preju- 
dice that  the  house  bowed  yesterday  when  it  passed  the 
tonnage  tax  bill  by  a  vote  of  61  to  57. 

There  are  not  a  score  of  members  in  the  house  who 
honestly  believe  in  the  tonnage  tax  principle;  you  can 
count  on   the   fingers   of   one   hand   the   men   who   have 


tSj  to  lay  their  hands  upon  the  man  who  is  so  conspicuously 
1.00  ;  in  the  eyes  of  the  whole  world.  Recently  they  accused 
the  Count  of  disloyalty  and  summoned  him  to  appear 
,^  I  before  them  with  proofs  of  his  loyalty.  He  sent  word 
that  he  would  not  come  and  that  his  record  was  the  only 
proof  he  would  produce;  if  that  be  treason,  make  the 
most  of  it.  This  was  some  months  ago.  but  up  to  date 
they  haven't  made  anything  of  it,  and  Count  Wivte  lives 
on  in  his  retirement  in  peace. 

It  is  an  evil  day  in  any  nation  when  it  plots  the  de- 
struction of  its   greatest  patriot. 


HOTEL  GOSSIP. 

J.  A.  Munro.  wjio  Eves  about  six 
miles  north  of  Gr^nd  'Rapids,  stated 
at  the  Lenox  yesterday  that  the  forma- 
tion of  a  Guernsey  cattle  breeders'  as- 
sociation, was  In  ke.-'plng'  with  the  work 
that  was  being  done  independently 
by  the  farmers  ana  cattlemen  of  the 
northern   part   of   tbe   state. 

Mr.  Munro  stated  tliat  through  the 
effors  and  work  of.Suu't.  A.  J.  McGuire 
o£  the  experiment  farm'  at  Grand  Uap- 
ids.  much  progress  had  been  achieved 
in  the  direction  fit  breeding  better 
cattle  and  cattle  more  rttted  for  that 
section     of     the     state.       For     Instance, 


WHAT  FOOLS  THESE  MORTALS  BE  I 

Politics  makes  strange  bed  fellows  and  hate  makes 
wise  men  play  the  fool.  There  is  nothing  that  will  so 
unhinge  a  man's  reason  and  so  lead  him  into  folly 
as    hate.      Whom    the    gods    would    destroy    they    first 

make  mad. 

This  simple  little  psychological  law  received  a  cur- 
ious and  almost  comical  illustration  this  week,  in  con- 
nection with  the  insurgent  campaign  in  the  house  for  a 
revision  of  the  rules.     Somebody  said  that  a  letter  had 
been  received  by  one  of  the  insurgent  congressmen  from 
Dr.  Abbott,  editor  of  the  Outlook,  urging  the  insurgents 
to   continue   their   fight   no    matter   what   counsel   might 
have  been  given   them  by  President  Taft.     The   Roose- 
velt-hating press  pounced  upon  this  choice  bit  of  rumor 
and  loudly  denounced  their  hat^i  enemy  for  interfering 
with   the  Taft   administration.     It  is   evident,  they  said, 
that    Roosevelt    dominates    the    Outlook.      Look!     look! 
in    the    current    issue    of    the    Outlook    is    an    unsigned 
editorial  warmly  approving  the  insurgent  cause.     Roose- 
velt  did    it!        Roosevelt   did    it!      Subtle,    sly.   insidious 
villain   that   he   is,   he    has   already   begun    to   inrtuence 
public  opinion  by  writing  under  cover.     By  all  the  gods 
at  once,  upon  what  meat  doth  this  our   Roosevelt  feed 
that  he  is  able  to  dominate  the  Outlook  as  he  pleases? 
All  that  was  devilish  in  the  hearts  of  the  Roosevelt 
haters    rose    up    to   meet    the    anger   that    masters    them 


Studied  the  question  and  remain  convinced  of  its  justice.  ^^^^^  ^.^^  ^^^^^  ^^.^^^^  ^^  ^^^  ^.^^  ^^^^^  ^^^^  the  square 
Yet  in  obedience  to  the  greed  and  prejudice  of  their  ^^^^  ^^^^^  ^^^^  ^^^^.^  j^^.^  .^  ^  ^^^^^^^  ^^  ^^^  j^y  and 
unreas.^ning   constituency,   others   to   the   number   of  61  ' 


voted  for  the  tax. 

A  splendid,  thotigh  unsuccessful,  fight  was  made  by 
the  St.  Louis  county  delegation  under  the  leadership  ol 
C.  A.  Congdon,  and  they  were  assisted  by  friends  trom 
all  parts  of  the  state  who  saw  the  unfairness  and  injus- 
tice contained  in  the  Bjorge  bill  and  the  bad  effect  which 
its  enactment  would  have  upon  the  establishment  ot  iron 
and  steel  and  collateral  industries  at  Duluth. 

The  Herald  thoroughly  believes  in  the  honesty  of  the 
people  of  Minnesota,  but  it  is  only  too  well  aware  of 
their  ignorance  and  indifference  concerning  anything 
pertaining  to  iron  mining.  Few  of  the  2.(JO0,000  people  ot 
the  state  have  ever  seen  an  iron  mine  and  they  have 
utterly  no  conception  of  conditions  which  are  as  dif- 
ferent   from    those    under    which    they    live    as    north 


deal;    they  tore   their  hair  in  a  frenzy  of  mad  joy  and 
sputtered  like  a  "nigger-chaser"  on  the  Fourth  of  July. 
But  they  overlooked  three  facts.     First,  Dr.  Abbott 
has  announced  over  his  own  signature  that  all  of  Roose- 
velt's communications  to  the  Outlook  will  be  signed  by 
Mr.  Roosevelt.     It  is  unbelievable  that  Dr.  Abbott  should 
be  lying.     Second.  Dr.  Abbott  denies  having  written  any 
letter  to  any  insurgent  congressman  advising  him  to  any 
course  whatsoever  in  connection  with  the  fight  against 
the  rules.     Third,  in  the  same  issue  of  the  Outlook  in 
which   appeared   the  unsigned   editorial   disapproving  o£ 
the  old  house  rules  (an  editorial,  by  the  way.  which  sim- 
ply reaffirmed  a  position  which  the  Outlook  has  main- 
tained for   several   years)    there   was  also   published   an 
unsigned  editorial  approving  the  retirement  of  Dr.  Crum 
as   collector   of    the    port   at    Charleston   and    criticising 


Mr.  Munro  stated,  that  when  he  came 
to  that  section  of  the  slate  more  than 
lirteon  years  ago.  It  was  very  difficult 
to  rtnd  a  true  type  of  the  'Jairy  ani- 
mal. There  were  cattle  of  »ni'i»\or 
grade,  that  made  no  return  to  the 
farmer.  Today  Mr.  Munro  says  the 
conditions   have   been  altered  Sreallj. 

He  says  that  through  the  aid  ot  y\« 
various  farmers'  associations,  wnicu 
have  been  formed  in  northern  tier  ot 
counties,  cows  of  the  representative 
dairy  type  have  been  secured,  and  oei- 
ter  breeding  stock  has  beea  purchased, 
with  the  result  that  upon  many  ol  ine 
better  farms  In  the  vicinity  of  Giand 
Kapids,  the  poor  c»ltle  have  been 
weeded  out  and  a  representative  type 
of    the   dairy    animal   substituted. 

'The  move  made  by  the  dairy  cattle 
breeders  of  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  s 
a  very  good  one,  and  one  that  is  cal- 
culated to  greatly  Improve  the  type  ot 
dairy  animal  in  the  northern  P-"f  ^i 
the  state,"  said  Mr.  Munro.  ^.^J'l^*^® 
have  been  for  the  past  tew  >  e^"  a 
number  of  men  in  Ijuluth  who  have 
.shown  a  great  interest  In  the  dairy 
animal.  Credit  should  be  S»ven  them 
for  the  efforts  they  have  made  to  m 
nrove  the  strain.  Tliese  men  realize 
knniresota  will  be  a  great  dairy  cenlel^ 
and  that  to  hasten  this  time  It  is  nee 
essary  to  first  Improve  the  general 
breed     of     the     cattle     owned    b>      tue 

^"'creameries  and  dairies  have  been 
started    in    various    parts    of    the    state, 

but  the  thing  of  S'-e*^?«^,.V»\P:^  .  l^Lrn 
to  the  dalrv  interests  of  the  "oitnern 
part   of    the   state,    is    the    Improvenven^ 

^f  the  dairy  type  ol  '-^a'-tjev,,.,^|.\fd  uS 
who  are  working  towi^'d  th  s  end,  up 
around  Grand  Rapids.  think  ot  ine 
propo.sition.  and  1  believe  that  Is  tUe 
best  way  to  look  at  It.  i,ave 

"A  number  of  Wisconsin  men  have 
secured  a  great  tract  ot  land  over 
west  of  Grand  .  Rapids,  with  the  n 
tention  of  utilizing  this  tract  tor  aiii> 
purposes.  The  bringing  to  lh«  "^^^^i- 
;.rn  part  of  Minnesota  ot  a  n'jm«)er  01 
good  dairymen  from  Wisconsin  would 
be   a    move    that    would    heip    the   aauy 

industry  greatly  In  V^^^^^f  ^^^/^.-t  ^^l 
want  good  dairymen  in  thio  .I>'^*^„iO'- 
Miiinesola.     and     the    farmers     "i^^'f" 

o onsln    are    generally    P\f Vr':>nrNv1scon: 
tl..men      But  even  It  men  t'om   wiscon 
s  rion't  come   to   this   Pa'^t   of   Minne- 
sota,   we    are    going      o     through    our 

;\r  up  ^lelxs^'^^whlcli^wltl  tlco'nlt^ne 
of\h"^Sreat  assets  of  Northern  Minne- 
sota." •      •      . 

N.    B.    Shank    of    Bemidji     a   lumber- 
maK    well    known    to   operators    of   this 

f^k  1eSlr,!S^''  Ir.'sf.n^  ^s^V 
L're'stkndlng  still  '"^'i^i^^iui^e'r  linis 
ness.  as  they  are  doing  »"  j^jVe  conll- 
u'o  nT  rn^l^V^^  Ivi  i  n^i^'s  o  J  ^  ^^  m"  f  le^  w  i  1 1 
he    sliehtly    better    than    last    year,    the 

ket  and  the  slow  demand  for  lum- 
ber. ^      ,      , 

.^    Torinus    of    Winton     president 


THE  WEATHER. 

s ■ 1  The    threatened 

SNOW  storm    did    not    ma- 

^^  ^  teriallze  last  night, 

but  today  the  sky 
is  still  cloudy,  and 
the  weather  man 
still  predicts  snow 
flurries.  A     year 

ago  today  It  was 
snowing.  The  sun 
rose  this  morning 
at  6:15  o'clock  and 
win  set  this  even- 
ing at  6:17,  mak- 
ing  twelve   hours   and   two   minutes   of 

■"''r'e' Clark,  acting  forecaster,  makes 
the     following     comment     on     weather 

'°"S'e  Mississippi  valley  high  pressure 
has      moved      slowly      eastward      since 
Wednesdir  morning.    ^f»ng    "[>j7y  \^^^ 
tral    over    the    Upper    Ohio    valley    ana 
overspreading   all    districts   .  f.^,"^  „Vd 
Mississippi  valley  e^f  ^'f '  l.'2;l,'?f  ^es- 
dle  Atlantic  coast.     ^^«}oiher  high  pres 
sure    arc-a,    of    some    intensity      is     ap- 
proaching   over    Oregon.    ^  ^1  «    move 
ment  of   those   two  areas  of  hign  pres- 
fure  has  been  attended  by  sUgh  ly  cool- 
pr    weather    over    the       Atlantic       ana 
Pacmf  coasts,    the    Rocky    Moi.ntams^ 
Uuoer   Michigan    and    the    Southeastern 
states  The    weather      Is       somewhat 

warmer  over  all  other  dlstr  cts^  A 
trough  of  low  pressure,  with  centers 
ove"  MIs..ouri  and  Utah  now  covers 
the  Middle  Western  districts.  Light 
ra?n  or  snow  has  fallen  over  the  new 
Kngland  and  Upper  rtocky  Mountain 
rfiHtrl.-ts  during  the  past  twenty-four 
hourli    due  to  the  influence  of  these  two 


A  piirCt  wholesome, 

reliable  Grape  Cream  of 

Tartar   IBaking  Powder 

The  cream  of  lartar  nsefl  in  Dr.  Price's  Baking 
Powder  is  in  tlie  exact  form  and  composition  ia 
wliicli  it  occurs  in  tlie  luscious,  liealttitnl  grape. 


■ 


fulness  of  the  food 


^o  Alum 


^o_  time 

•phat0 


barometric    depressions. 


Following    were    last    night's    lowest 
temperatures:  .,  ^.  .      a.,  m 

ADllcne    3C    Modlchje   H.t   « 

.VihevlUe    30lMeruphl«    »« 

AUa..U     38,^UU^••lty   |6 

lUttlefonl     S    Milwaukee   »" 

Bismarck    22  ■  NBimedoM  » 

Beaton     2;    .Mcxltua   » 

Buffalo     18  I  Muntgomery    " 

Cairo     42lMo«rhea.l    1^ 

raluary    16lNew  Of^an.   M 

Clwrldilon    44. New  York »» 

Ciiirago    8'>  I  ^'"^;'''' , is 

Com-orOU    4..     N.rti    VUM   M 

Oavsnport   28  ]  OkUluima    »- 

Ktiiver    32'Omaha    " 

LK-tn.U     18;Pl>"™li        ** 


DovlU  Lake   12 

UoJga     8« 

Duluth    IC 

ICilDi'Jiiton   *^  1  ;,  .  .  ,K  - 

Kic«Miha     8  I  Priii.e  .Mtwrt 

(J.ilve»loi\    60  i  Qu-.Vppe  U-    . 

Kl  I'aao   36  I  ll.'Pi«l  «  Ity   • 


Pierre   * 

Plttsliurg   *» 

Port  Arthur   * 

PortlaiiJ.  Or «« 

.'.'.'....■   6 
34 


Improves  the  flavor 
H    and  adds  to  the  health- 

Gve&va 


(Sraii'l   Ha»en   . 
Ortt-n    Bay 

Havre     

Hnlt^na 
H'>uahlon     . 
Huron    .... 
Ja'-lHonvlUe 
Kjiiiloops 

Kansad  CKy   

KniXTlUe    2« 

La  i.'rosse   18 

Laniior     82 

Utile   Ro-k    SI 

Los     .\Ilg0ldS 
Maniucttt    . 


Itj  1  8t.    \jo\iia 

10  j  .St.    Paul    

36  1  .San  .\iUoiilo   

30  I  San  Frauclsco 

2  I  Santa   Fe    

lb  I  .Sault    .St«.    Marie. 

Z<)     S\\lft    Curront 

50 


...36 
...18 
...54 
...48 
...26 


..50 

.Spokane     ^? 

Swltt  Current }^, 

WasliluBtun    f ; 

Wklilta   <*; 

WUll.^loii    15 

.    ..82    Wlnnemucca   ^1 

...   hi  Wiiinlpp*     ^^ 


Department  of  Agriculture.  Weather 
Bureau.  Duluth,  March  \f-Z^^l^n^1^ 
for  twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  p. 
m  Friday:  Duluth.  Superior  and 
vicinity,  including  the  Mcsaba  and  Ver- 
milion   Iron    ranges— Threatening,    v^ith 

ar.ow  tonight  and  P''sf'^\y  , ,^' 'itt^ 
Colder  Friday;  moderate  to  bilftk  east- 
erly,  .hitting  to   we.s^erly   win^s.^_ 

Acting  Forecaster. 


TWENTY  YEARS  AGO 

Taken  From  the  Columns  of  The  Herald  of  This  Date.  1889. 


ing    is    only    in    its    intancy    in    Minnesota    and    that    it  j  mg  01  tne  ^^^  ^^^  ^^^^  ^_^^^  ^^^  ^^^^^^^^  ^^^  Roosevelt 
will   last   50   or   100  years   and  they   will   listen   politely, 


but  you  might  as  well  have  saved  your  breath.  Secure 
in  their  ignorance,  they  do  not  believe  you.  It  is  in 
such  ignorance  that  greed  and  prejudice  flourish,  and  it 
is  to  such  conditions  that  the  sentiment  throughout  the 
state  for  a  tonnage  tax  owes  its  existence 


,ng  at  one  and  the  same  time  to  enhance  the  Roosevelt 
influence  and  to  discredit  it,  to  fasten  the  chains  of 
Roosevelt  authority  upon  congress  and  the  administra- 
tion  and   to   destroy  the   power  of   Roosevelt   with   the 

country.  , 

Naturally,  however,  the  enemies  of  all  that  Roosevelt 


to   gather   and  of  how  famously   the   screws   have  been 
applied  tb  -the  steel  trust."    Of  the  hundreds  of  business 


applied  it  -the  steel  trust."    Ut  the  nunarea.  ox  uu    .  .  >     ..     -^^-  tomor  ovv  thev  will  use  the  same  pages  to  prove 
men  in  the  iron  country,  despairing  ot  the  accumulation     P-^^y^;;^"^;^     .^   discredited  even  in  the   house   of  his 
of  years,  which  they  see  for  the  most  part  swept  away  |  tbat   Roo.e^elt 
in  a  night,  of  the  thousands  of  people  who  will  not  be    tncnds 


able  to  provide  schooling  for  their  children  if  this  bdl 
becomes  a  law,  of  the  impossibility  of  the  municipalities 
of  the  range  country  paying  their  debts  or  maintaining 
a  decent  government  under  the  tonnage  tax  system— 
of  these  things  the  rest  of  the  state  thinks  not  at  all. 
Of  the 


of  ^he"st.'  cVoir  L^umber  conVany.  ^  w 
at  the  St.  LouU  yesterday    ^Mn  T-M.nus 

movement   of    log.s.^      ^ 

T  A  Jovco  of  New  York,  ac  the 
<<r.i:Mln«  yesterday,  says  the  ftnanclal 
nSfse  of  New  York  can  sometime.s  be 
Falilv  accurately  gauged  by  the  prep- 
Lritlons  that  are  being  made  by  the 
femin/ne  member,  of  tbe  smart  set  tor 
he  lamou.s  Easter  parade  I.ast  >ear 
Mr  .lovce  says  the  hnanciai  c.ui 
hVankei  placed  a  damper  upon  the 
crniiv  nlunied  proces.-^ion.  There  v^ere 
nSt  so  many  members  of  the  fancy 
louad   out    nor  was  the   finery  of  such 

Sir'looklng    better    in    N^^.^f  ^i'.llnd 
an  event  to  be  remembered. 

At  the  Lenox: 'j.  E.  ^%^'„fXel%' 
w  Weirs  Pittsburg:  R-  B.  HigT>ee.  ftr 
?xul-  William  Emanuel.  MmneapoUs; 
O     J     Weger    Minneapolis:    H.    Josseen. 

Mi/nerpoft^-'   J-'^%,^:;\f'^"chicin''   R- 

Minneapolis;       M.   ^^'f  ^' ^.„Vnhy    Wood^ 

^      ^,^>^i'Jir"B'H.    I3urelson!'''^t.Vaul; 

All  the  uproar  that  Mr.  Roosevelt's  enemies  are  mak-    ^^e°^?ge  Slast.rson.  ^i=^-ieth-,„,^»-ri|^ 

,__  .,  .._  : «.n..,      The.onn      CurleVj^  S|    j;f^^;4,.^ii;i^\eapoUs;    M.    E. 


torial.     Today  it  is  enough  for  them  that  they  can  use 
the   Outlook's   pages   to   prove   a  horrid   Roosevelt   con 


Chicago.    March       18;— forecast      for 
twenty-four    hours    ending    at    7    p.    m. 

^'^wfs^onsln— Rain  or  snow  tonight 
and  possibly  Friday  warmet-  in  north- 
east   portion    tonight;    colder        FriUay 

''^North*' Dakota-Partly  cloudy  tonight 

^"Mi.fnSl'k-Threatening  with  snow 
and    po.sslhlv    Friday;     colder    Friday. 

Upper    Michigan— Snow    tonight    and 
Friday;  warmer  tonight. 

— •  

The    Opiiniint. 

O  a  bad   old  world. 

And  a  sad  old  world. 

Is   this   world   of  sighs  and  tears. 

With    its    hopes    deceived. 

And   its   hearts   bereaved. 

And   Its   fiood   of  -fruitless   years. 

But   for   you   and   me 

■Tis  the  best  can  be— 

Is   this   bad  old,  sad   old  world. 

O  a  fair  old  world. 

And  a  rare  old  world. 

Is  this  world  of  deeds  and  dreams, 

With  Its  love-crowned  days. 

And  its  nigh.ts  ablaze 

With    the    starlighfs    glory-beams! 

Friend,  for  you  and  me 

'Tis  the   best  can   be — 

Tb  this   fair  old,   rare  old   world. 

18   this^mir^o^  ^,^    CURTIS    CLARIC 


•••Prosid.-nt  Harrison  ha.'i  appointed 
Samuel  U.  Thayt^r  of  Minnesota  to  be 
miu'ster  to  the  Netht-rlands. 

•♦•Chairman  Mallory  and  Secretary 
Gray  of  the  Methodi.n  Church  societj 
of  West  Duluth  have  secured  from  the 
West  Duluth  Land  company  two  lots 
on  Fifth  avenue  and  the  ''O^iety  w  U 
at  once  begin  the  erection  of  a  |3.0ou 
church.  

•••County  Attorney  Sherwood  has 
brought  suit  against  the  Nirthern  Pa- 
cm"  and  St.  Paul  &  Dulu:h  Ra.n^oaa 
companies  for  taxes  ?"  P'^J'tf.^y  ^"^"f/ 
bv  tliem  and  not  used  for  rillroad  pur- 
poses He  claimed  that  thH  companies 
fiave  large  lots  of  vacant  and  put  to 
no  use  whatever,  which  s  'l-i'^je  to 
taxation  as  private  purpo.ses,  as  the 
L^-oss  earnings  tax  law  anly  covers 
property  that  is  "used  for  railroad  pur- 
poses." 

♦••Mrs  A  C.  Robinson  will  leave 
Park 'point  and  take  up  her  residence 
fn  Duluth  with  her  father,  ex-Judge 
Martin.  

•  ••School  district  No,  2  £,t  Tw"  H'^;': 
bor.s  has  decided  to  isrsue  J^^O^^O^ 
bonds  to  provide  more  scaool  accom- 
modations   

•••The  minimum  temperature  In  Du- 
luth this  morning  was  33  degs.  above 
zero.     The  day  has  been  dull  but  warm 

•••Strawberries  and  nice  ones,  too, 
ire  In  Duluth  markets.  Six  consump- 
Uve  box^s  of  pale  red  rasj:  berries  were 
also  seen  today. 

•••Sing  Lee.  better  know  n  as  Charley. 


is   rejoicing  over   the   arrival    of^  ^"^^^"^ 
Tin.    his     '  ..  ji..„«r       ...>r,» 

China. 


12-year-old    son.    direct    from 


ing  does  not  matter  as  far  as  he  is  concerned.  The  coun- 
try has  always  found  him  ready  to  state  his  views  trankly 
over  his  own  signature  when  he  thought  it  was  time, 
and  it  is  quite  confident  that  if  he  has  anything  to  say 


,  things   the  rest  ot   the  state   thinks  not  at  -';    T''"  V    I  ;  .\^  ^^^,  everybody  will  know  who  speaks, 
people  of  the  iron  country  and  what  they  must    he  wdsao    ha^^^^^      >  ^^^y^^^.^^  ^^.^^  ^^^^^^^  ^^^^^ 


lose  and  suffer,  the  rest  of  the  state  does  not  think 
On  the  contrary,  it  is  an  actual  fact,  that  the  popular 
impression  among  the  hundreds  of  thousands  who  have 
never  been  in  the  iron  country  and  have  no  conception 
of  what  it  is  like— the  popular  impression  is  that  there 
are  no  people  in  the  iron  country,  except  a  few  ofltcials 

and  imported  employes  of  the  horrid  -'steel  trust." 

The    time  will   come   when  the   people   of   the   state 

will  realize  the  error  into  which  their  ignorance  has  led 

them.     That  time  has  been  coming,  and  thousands  who 

have  studied  the  conditions  that  exist  in  the  iron  coun- 
try have  entirely  abandoned  their  demand  for  a  tonnage 

tax     The  sentiment  for  a  tonnage  tax  has  been  gradually    ^^  ^^^^^^ 

reversing   itself   and   the  "time   will   shortly   come    when  ,  ^.jj  ^..^j  ^^  subject  to  attack,  therefore,  from  every  sec 

men  who  are  convinced  of  the  unwisdom  of  the  measure 

will   not   be  compelled  by  a   prejudiced  constituency  to 

vote  for  it.  

The  Herald  cannot  believe  that  the  bill  will  pass  the 
senate  Members  who  voted  for  the  measure  in  the 
house,  because  of  pledges  made,  although  convinced 
of  th?  injustice  of  the  bill,  will  use  their  influence  to 
accomplish    its    final    defeat.      Moreover,    the    senate    is 


But  this  playing  the  fool  by  otherwise  wise  enough  men, 
serves  to  point  again  an  old,  old  moral. 

NOW  THE  DELUGE, 

•  Congress  and  the  country  is  now  in  possession  of  the 
new  tariff  bill  as  proposed  by  the  ways  and  means  com- 
mittee. It  will  be  vigorously  debated  in  the  ways  and 
means  committee,  on  the  floor  of  the  house,  in  the  sen- 
ate and  throughout  the  country.  It  will  be  a  veritable 
deluge  of  discussion,  for  a  tariff  schedule  hits  everybody. 
No  matter  how  much  we  may  be  in  favor  of  revision 
downward,  we  are  certain  to  object  to  decreases  in  those 
articles  in  which  we  are  concerned  financially.     The  new 


tion  of  the  country,  from  every  interest,  from  capital  and 

labor  alike^.  .      •   ,      ■ 

The  remarkable  features  of  the  bill  are  the  inheritance 
tax  provisi.m.  the  drawback  to  manufacturers,  the  maxi- 
mum and  minimum  provisions  and  the  very  considerable 
reductions  on  iron  ore,  steel,  lumber,  hides,  and  a  num- 
ber   of    other    staples.      Tremendous    pressure    will    be 

„ ,... ,   !  brought  against  the  inheritance  tax  provision  from  the 

composed   of  men   who   are   not. pledged   and   who   will    ^.^^j^^,^  grates,  thirty-five  of  which  now  have  inheritance 

"  """     tax  laws,  and  from  the  wealthy  classes.    The  demand  tor 


have  the  courage  of  their  convictions  in  this  matter 
Before  the  bill  comes  to  a  vote  in  the  senate  the  iniquity 
of  the  measure  will  be  so  demonstrated  to  the  people  of 
the  state  that  there  will  not  be  honest  sentiment  enough 
through  the  state  to  demand  its  final  passage. 


it  will  be  very  strong  from  the  people,  however.  Ihe 
drawback  will  meet  with  general  approval  as  will  the 
maximum  and  minimum  provisions.  Strenuous  opposi- 
tion will  come  from  special  interests  against  the  heavy 
reductions  on  the  staples  named.  For  instance,  the  iron 
workers  are  already  moving  against  putting  ore  on  the 
free  list  and  reducing  the  duty  on  steel. 

The  bill  in  its  present  form  will  undoubtedly  pro- 
vide sufficient  revenue  to  meet  the  expenses  of  the  gov- 
ernment;   whether  it  is  a  sufficient  performance  of  the 


At  the  McKay:     S.  C.  Scott.  Hlbblng: 
P     7eiee    Winona:    C.    J.   Byrly.   Minne- 
ftoolis     George    JarvLs.    St.    Paul;    Will- 
pledge    of   the    Republican    party    for    a    revision    of    the    i^^    Brown.    St.  ^Patjl :  Jlertiude  Jud^i. 


extended  study  of  the  bill. 


THE  EVIL  CASE  OF  COUNT  WITTE. 

There  are  few  Russians  of  note,  and  dolefully  few 
Russian  statesmen,  who  arouse  the  slightest  admiration 
in  the  breast  of  an  American,  but  of  these  few  Count 
Witte  stands  foremost. 

\ni<.rioa  is  interested  in  Witte.    He  played  a  bad  hand    i^itug^    -    .  ,  t       c      ^„ 

so  -131:1;  wetl  a.  Portsmouth.     A,.d  since  he  re  '  tariff  downward,  it  .^U  be  pos.ble  to  say  only  after  an 

turned   to    Russia   he   has   been   playing  the   man   under 
most  adverse  conditions. 

Where  is  the  man  thdt  could  have  gained  so  much 
for  Russia  in  the  Treaty  at  Portsmouth  as  Witte.  The 
world  was  agape  with  wonder  that  he  did  so  well.  Any 
other  would  have  returned  to  Russia  with  nothing  saved 
and  with  his  country's  honor  draging  in  the  dust.  Witte 
returned  with  honor  and  with  substantial  concessions 
from  the  victorious  Japanese.  The  world  honors  him  as 
a  man  who  accomplished  the  impossible. 

Instead  of  honoring  him  as  her  greatest  statesman, 
as  he  is,  Russia  bears  him  an  undying  grudge— heaping 
on  his  head  all  its  hatred  toward  its  victorious  country. 


Brown.  Minneapolis:  R.  ^^.l^^"l^X^^■ 
Paul;  Robert  Swanson.  Two  Harbors. 
TTiipn  lohnson.  St.  Paul:  A.  G.  -'olin- 
Ellen    Jonnauu,    ^  Johnson.    Two 

Hafbors-  BR.  Burk^  Minneapolis:  C 
H  Smith  St.  Paul;  J.  D.  Harthy  and 
wife  Hlbblng;  S.  T.  Packard  and  wite, 
tV  hhimr     John   Richards.  Sandstone;   A. 

P3  r^^r^x^rI?^!i^"-A^^M^^!>: 

iij:4^i:' siiiL^se:^!^/^^ 

Lynch  and  wife.  Chicago;  C.  R.  Adams. 
St.   Paul. 

At  the  St  Louis:  L.  E.  Joseph.  Chl- 
c-xgo  B  Shecket.  New  York:  A.  L. 
Stlinbag  New  York:  W.  C  Gerberlch. 
5r  Paul •   P    G.   Reynard.   Columbus:   J. 

risev    St    Paul;   W.  A.   Young.  Aurora; 
B    A    Laine    Aurora:   T.   J.   Miller    Ml  - 
waukee*     C       S.      McCurdy.    St.      Paul; 
Jacob    Saarl     Eveleth ;    C.    A.    Kleineck. 
C^dar    Kapids:    A.    D.    Hai^llng.    M»nnj-- 
aoolls     D.    W.   Berry.   St.    Paul;    Mrs.    D. 
D^Sias.  Deer  River;  O.  Brush,  St.  Paul; 
R     I      Scott.    Jamestown;    D.    fe.    Irwin. 
Minneapolis;  C.  E.  Leach.  St.  Paul;  Ag- 
ne.s    Tohnson.    Des   Moines;    A.    E.   Baw- 
ilpn    Eveleth;  Mrs.  M.  A.  Bowman.  Grand 
urnids      N.     B.    Shank.    Bemidjl;    C.    J. 
Hi?  min.      Mar.iuette:      N    A.    Torinus. 
U'lndom;  E.  M.  Tredway.  Virginia. 
«      •      • 
At    the    Spalding:      Charles    Riddell. 
Chicago:    Louis    J     riber.    Chicago;    W. 
H     Merrick.    St.    Paul;    C.    E.    Fralley, 
Minneaoolis     W.    T.    Rawkins,    Mlnnea- 
noHs     C     A    Spaulding.   Chicago:   David 
'Hoffman.   New'^York:    J.   A.    Clark.   Chi- 
caKo-    J     B.    Patterson,    New    \ork.    G. 
B     nVisou.    Milwaukee;    Arnold    Allen, 
Ciilcago:  G.   M.   Leser.   Los   Angeles:   H. 
Mlsh    Chicago:   F.   W.   Nichols.   Hough- 
?in    W    E    Lyon.  Chicago:  D.  W.  Davis. 
Chicago;  D.  E.  Rust.  Kansas  City;  J.  B. 
Vovak     Chicago;    Edward    Jones.    Mln- 
Lauolis     George    Jarvis.    Minneapolis; 
neapoiKs  Ne,v  York:  E.  R.  Baxter 

and  wife  Portland:  G.  D.  Carr.  Chlca- 
%o:  D  McDonald,  Tiffin  Ohio;  W.  H^ 
Towe  Minneapolis:  F  W.  Baker  and 
w^^e  New  YoVk:  Alfred  Groove,  Chi- 
cago; H.  W.  Hill.  Minneapolis;  J.  A. 
Noyce,  New    York. 


Dr.  Osier  is  the  only  man  who  has  yet  proposed  an 
effective  means  of  getting  rid  of  Joe  Cannon. 

Is  it  too  much  to  hope  that  some  day  we  shall  con- 
stitute our  courts  so  that  they  shall  give  us  justice  and 
not  technicalities? 


W^hile  some  people  are  blaming  Roosevelt  for  execu- 
tive  ursurpation   others  are   finding  fault  that  he  didn't 
compel   the   courts   to   find  the   Standard   Oil   company 
'  guilty. 


MiVcago:  P.  L.  Dahl.  Bloomer;  y^ .  M 
Dver  Sandstone;  John  Perry.  Sand- 
stone- Fred  Smith.  Sandstone;  E.  C. 
Gran  Jordan:  J.  Humphrey.  Winne- 
bago' R.  C.  Olson.  Two  Harbors:  F.  R. 
Miller  Chicago;  F.  A.  Maizof,  St.  Paul; 
P  W  Peoplts.  Chicago:  Mrs.  Mary 
Koenie  St  Cloud,  Edward  CalUck. 
nonwood  C.  L.  Dodge.  Eau  Claire:  i^. 
J  PatrTck.  Eau  Claire;  F.  A.  BartleTt. 
Minneanol  s  F.  W.  Holbrook.  Proctor: 
A  J.  GalvlA.  St.  Paul;  Joseph  Gibson. 
Milwaukee. 

• 

Dri%lne    Him    Out. 
Philadelphia   Press:     The   Indian   has 
be^n  so  rapidly  disappearing  that  whexi 
he    Is    driven    off    the    1-cent    coins    that 
will   be  about   the  last  of  him. 

Tnxntlun.  . 

Chicago  Record -Herald:  Nearly  every 
man  Is  In  favor  of  a  tax  ou  incomes 
that  are  larger  than  his  own. 


RooNevelt  ait   Private  CItlxen. 

Washington     Star:         Mr.     Roosevelt 
will    soon    see.    If    he    has    not    already 
spied   the   fact,   that  he   cannot  become 
a  private  citizen  again.     When  Mr.  Lin- 
coln  breathed   his  last.   Secretary  Stan- 
ton  said    to   those    at    the   bedside.      He 
belongs    now    to    the    ages.        home    of 
Mr    Roosevelt's   friends   believe   that  he 
belongs    now    to    the    ages         ^»L«^y    ^ee 
for    him    a    fame    everlasting.      1  hat    lt> 
open    to    question,    but   this    is   not:    He 
belongs     to     the     age-this       age— and 
while    he    lives— and    may    his    da>s    be 
long    in    the    land    which    the    lathers 
have  given  him— he  will  remain  a  man 
of    activity    and     public    interest.       He 
could     not    drop     out     of    notice     if    he 
would    and  would  not  It  he  could   There 
Is    a    bit    of    coquetry    In    his    ta,lk    to 
newspaper   reporters   on    the   subject. 

Observe  how  matters  are  moving. 
In  about  a  fortnight  Mr.  Roosevelt  will 
start  on  his  African  trip.  W 11  his 
departure  be  that  of  a  private  citizen? 
Nav  nav.  Persons  are  coming  trom  a 
distance  to  see  him  off.  These  added 
to  neighbors  and  New  1  ork  friends 
will  make  a  crowd.  It  will  be  Roose- 
velt day  In  town,  and  the  wires  will 
carry  a  long  story  about  it.  Nothing 
short  of  an  earthquake  could  dispute 
the  way  with  it.  .„,,,.   , 

He  will  land  at  Naples.  Will  he  es- 
r&pe  attention  there?  Nothing  but  a 
fresh  eruption  of  Vesuvius  could  crowd 
him  out  of  the  story  that  day.  \N  e 
.shall  all  be  reading  the  full  particu- 
lars next  day.  and  unless  something  of 
extraordinary  moment  here  at  home  Is 
monopolizing  space  the  newspapers 
will  display  the  narrative  on  the  front 

^*Then  the  arrival  on  the  coast  of 
\frlca,  where  preparations  to  receive 
iilm  with  honors  as  a  great  hunter  are 
already  on  foot.  No  privacy  possible 
or   desirable   there. 

But  then,  we  are  told,  privacy  will 
beeln  Mr.  Roosevelt  when  he  hits 
the  road"  for  the  Jungle  Is  going  into 
executive  session.  Newspaper  report- 
ers are  to  be  shut  out.  Is  that  a  scheme 
for  getting  the  best  reports  ot  that 
feature  of  the  trip  before  the  public? 
Is  he  taking  a  leaf  out  of  the  book 
of  the  United  States  senate?  If  so. 
the  senate,  which  has  never  loved  him. 
should  make  him  a  bow.  Imitation  Is 
the    sincerest     of    tributes. 

FmerKing  from  his  long  stay  in  the 
liinilp  Mr  Roosevelt  will  visit  several 
of  the' leading  capitals  of  Europe,  and 
there  be  received  with  extraordinary 
demonstrations  of  Interest.  Privacy? 
It  Is  nonsense  to  suggest  it.  And  then 
home  again,  from  the  foreign  shore, 
and  his  heart  full  of  joy  at  meeting  his 
friends  once  more.  And  then  his  own 
stories  of  his  travels,  and  public  re- 
ceptions, and  all  the   rest  of  It. 

Never  again  privacy  tor  Mr.  Roose- 
velt He  and  hullabaloo  are  wedded, 
and  no  dl-vorce  Is  possible.  Their  vows 
will  be  kept.  Death  alone  can  part 
them.  


DILITH  AND  THE  HERALD. 


•••Hioro  B.  Herr.  a  well  known  Chi- 
cago puijUc  works  contractor,  is  m  Du- 
luth visiting  his  old  West  Point  class- 
mate.  MaJ.  J.   B.  Qulnn. 

•♦•Landlord  Cluff  of  the  Clarendon 
hotel  arrived  this  morning  from  Braln- 
erd  with  his  wife  and  baby. 

•••Carl  Nye.  a  brother  of  "Bill"  Nye, 
the  humorist.  Is  In  the  city  visiting 
Waller  W  Mee.  He  hails  from  Bratn- 
erd.  Minn.  ^^^^ 

•  •*J  W  Lynson,  late  of  the  Opera 
grocery,  has  returned  to  the  city  after 
f  short  visit  m  St.  Paul,  and  is  with 
A.   W.   Eller   on   Lake   avenue. 

♦••Wallace  Warner  has  rented  the 
second  and  third  rto".r«.«fthe  new  Last 
SuTJerior  street  building  to  Charles 
George  who  will  start  a  hotel  on  the 
European  plan.    ^^^___ 

•  ••Wells  Loimsberry  has  returned  to 
Duluth  after  a  year's  ramble  over  the 
Pacltlc  coast. 

•  ••Manager  Flsky  Barnett  of  the 
People's  hL  left  for  Chicago  to  book 
new  attractions  for  his  theater. 

•  ••Mrs  D.  E.  Little  and  Miss  Little 
leave  tomorrow  for  a  three  months 
visit  in  Grand  Rapids.  Mich. 

•  ••John  P  Clow  and  Bat  Masterson 
win  arrive  here  from  Denver  on 
April   10. 


MEANT  TO  BE  FINNY. 


Princeton  Union:  Will  am  H  Den- 
ham,  who  has  just  returned  to  Duluth 
fi^m  California.  In  a  Her  .Id  Interview 
blames  the  agitation  against  the  Jap 
anese  on  the  coast  to  the  ^abor  unions^ 
But  why  does  the  blame  attach?  Are 
not  the  members  of  the  labor  unions 
the  persons  who  suffer  from  the  cheap 

?^^?^l^'jSst^fl^^tn?^oi;Sg^in^ 
the  interlopers,' 

mmmm 

\\^-^.TsU.  nA  ?lalV;i?et  c^^osl  with 
him  sfnie  time  and   Injuie   him. 

Walker    Pilot:      The    E  uluth    Herald 
reS^>?{f  nin^e^aivorc.    case    proce^ 

r  ,tT\XUich  g^eL  U.^how  that  Cupid 

IS"  ir always  'w^oU  that  «ay. 
that  are  doing  their  wor^.t  in  Uiat  city. 

EH  €rSi;arr-!".e' ii"afr. 

paragraphers    otherwise 


Four  Agen  of  Letter  Writing. 

First  age.  his  childish  Innoconce 

Is  very  plainly  shown. 
He  writes  direct  to  Santa  Claus 

To  let  his  wants  be  known. 

Next   like   a   furnace   does   he   sigh 

And  writes  his  turtle  dove 
Some  thirty  pages  every  day 

To  tell  her  of  his  love. 

Third  ago,  though  bearded  like  a  pard 

His   Innocence  still   haunts. 
He  writes  on  business,  this  and  that. 

And  tells  just  what  he  wants. 


'in  lean  and  slippered  pantaloon 

He  last  escapes  the  thrall: 
He  has  acquired  some  wisdom  then 

And  doesn't   write   at  all. 
— McLANDBURGH    WILSON    In  Phila- 
delphia Times. 


T-iv  Miner:  Gambling  got  somewhat 
.f  ^  hlAck  eve  in  Duluth  Monday  when 
•^^  ,  ,^  i.^,,si£rn  sentenced  two  self-con- 
•^s^sld  pioprletor.s  of  gambling  rooms 
t^  f^n  davs  In  Jail  and  i.  fine  of  l-I'JO. 
The  ?udge  in  passing  s.^ntence  made 
iome  teUlng  remarks  and  said  he  tail 
■^1  to  understand  how  Ihe  terms  used 
fn  the  tHal.  "gambling  on  the  square 
L^i  "honest  gambler"  could  apply,  as 
Surlnghf«^»o^nT  career  on  the  bench 
he  had  failed  to  see  such  cases. 

Chicagon"e*wt*"i"^.nSe;^-an     is 
-^elnr^l^rTI^lng^v^KeriU    for 

^•^^!.VTorn'can?ake  a  hint-if  dis- 
^^rn^^be^grX^r^en-^rator;  grouches 

^Tn  "uiXel^r  a-r.J-    says    there    are 
lots  of  hold-ups  on  rail  >    days  ^^^^    ^^ 

taJ?n^  w\?riVoU^3.^.  t?[f' ?he't^Srh 

^'^-  nX  lust  t.f  ke'p  in  practice. 
«^«^f>ris  blind,  but  alter  marriage 
man    is  apt^  to   'take   an    occasional   eye 

"•^i^har^helor  says  that  a  wise  man  has 
no'^secretl,    from    his    wife-because    he 

''*^t"m  ^"i'  increases     the     anger  of  an 
ango    wf,man''lt^e%he    refusal    of    the 

„  ,   in   the  case  to  talk  back, 
'"we     are     told     that     actions     speak 
,      \t,.    than    words,    but    It    depends    a 
l"»^.d"  de^  on   who  is  d.ing  the  talking. 

Refleetionit   of   a    Bat-kelor 

New  York  Press:  Optimism  Is  the 
wf/ you  can  feel  abou  .  a  thing  that  is 
going  to  happen  until  It  happens 

The  relatives  a  mat.  can  stand  are 
those  who  hate  him  so  much  they 
won't  come  near  him. 

An  easv  way  for  a  woman  to  get 
money  out  of  her  husband  Is  to  tell 
mm  how  everybody  adm  res  how  he  can 
afford  to  dress  hl«  fan.ily  so  well. 


Philadelphia  Record:  First  American 
Fina  cier—1  have  no  patience  with 
ule  people  who  go  to  Monte  Carlo  and 
drop  all  their  money.  -ni-j,,. 

Second  Ditto— Neither  have  L  \^  hy 
can^t  they  patronize  home  industry  and 
drop  It  In  Wall  street? 

PMcaco  Daily  News:  Heiress— Tho 
coukl'stTte?tn  'his  mad  love  let cer  that 
he  will  call,  and  ends  up  »'>  ,^,^>*"jfi,,i^t 
beg    to    remain    forever,    Count    hick 

"'^rate  Father— Remain  forever?  What 
does  he  think  this  is-a  chanty 
hotel? 

Punch:  Farmer  (to  lad  put  to  plow- 
ing the  first  time)-What  on  earth  be 
atrmtssin-  about  all  over  tlie  place  like 

'•'Farm  Lad-Wull.  you  told  I  to  look 
at  summat  an'  go  stralglit  to  It  an  I 
bin  tryin'  to  foUer  thlc  ther  cow  till  I 
be  tired,  an-  now  I  be  wailing  for  er  to 
lie    down! 

Judge:  "How  dare  y^'^-^V'^'lfi^^ 
thp  anerv  compo-xer  to  his  ciiiic 
••How    dire    youf^  sir,    characterize    my 

"'^•fdon't'^unde^^Und  you."  demurs  the 

'"^-Vou  said  that  my  rhapsody  im- 
nromptu   was  a   bum  tune'.'  , 

-Hum  tune:  Oh.  my  good  friend.  I 
said  no  such  thing!  I  said  it  was  a 
vagrant    melody. 

Cleveland   Lead^r^     Admiring   Friend 
— \nd  do  you  write  those  lovely  verses 
whenever  tbe   spirit    moves   you. 
"^Poet—Nope;       when       the       landlord 
threatens  to! 

Louisville  Courier-Journal:  '.  Why 
does  a  romance  always  end  with  the 
marriage   of  the   happy   pair? 

•'Because  realities  confront  them 
henceforth.  The  next  question  is 
whether  to  boar.l   or  ke-p  house. 


No  Ksaggeration. 

St  Louis  Globe-Democrat:  Wilbur 
Wright  says  an  aeroplane  Is  as  safe 
as  an  automobile.  Pedestrians  can  as- 
sure  Mr.  Wright  that  they  think  he  has 
understated   the  case. 


AMUSEMENTS 


LYCEUM 


TOMORROW  AND  SATURDAY 
MAT1M:E  SATl  RDAY. 

THE    PEERLESS    SINGING    COMEDIENNE. 

CORINNE 

—IN    THE    MUSICAL    PLAY— 

"The  Girls  From  Berlin' 


Seat   S»le  CommencM   Today  at   10   a.    ■. 

March    22.    23.    24-Three     Nl.ht.    at    8    O'loek. 

MaUnee  Wednesday  at  2. 

—KUVW  &  tKl-\N«^K«  -^  .STUPENDOUS- 

BEN-HUR 

*N   \WE-INSPnUNG  LENTEN  im.VMA. 
•        Prlci  Me,  $1,  $1.5«  and  $2.00. 


m 


1; 


! 


! 


>id« 


I 

I . 
)- 
1  > 


I 

I 
■     I  II      ■    — 


h 

1 

1 

4 

i 

1 

1 
i 

1 

. 

•.    ^^^^^^^^ 

i 
1 

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i 

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1; 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


This  Week's  Basement  Specials 


Palls 


12-q\iari  <;<ilvanUed 
Wat»»r  Pail.  well 
niaiie.  worth  30o — 
this    week.  ^Ao 

only *^*' 


Galvanized  Tubs 

.No.    1    sue 45c 

No.    2    sue •♦Se 

No.    3    Sl»« 53c 


Curtain  Stretcher 

With  adjustable  pins,  nickel 
plated,  measuring  rule,  ad- 
justable center  bar;  can  be 
set  up  like  an  ea.sel  and  folds 
into  very  sniaU  space  when 
not  in  use;  regular  •1.37 
%>.^x^  value;  this  week.^**"" 


Tin  Steamer 

•  lUaUty 


Extra  .[UaUty  Tin 
Steamer,  heavy  tin 
perforated  bottom. 
No.  8  or  9  size;  reg- 
ular 30o  and  35c 
value — this 
week . 


and      35c 

23c 


Bread  Box 

Japanned  In  various 
colors,  with  gold 
bronze  triniming.s  — 
regular  value  9Qa 
75c;  this  week    .Wi'V 


BIG  CONTEST 
IS^OSED 

Last  Day  Brought  Flood 

of  "Ben   Hur" 

Essays. 

The  Winners  Will  be  An- 
nounced In  Saturday's 
Herald. 


SUNBEAM 
THEATER. 

Thursday  nights,  beautiful 
souvenirs  for  ladiei. 

Admission  1  Oc 


HOUSE  TAKES  HARD  BLOW  AT 
NORTHEASTERN   MINNESOTA 
BY  FAVORING  TONNAGE  TAX 

(Continued  from  page  1.)        


Dusters 

Turkey  Feather  Dus- 
ter, good  quality; 
r^^gular  value  9^^ 
35c;   tb.ls   week.  .*'«»*' 


Alarm  Cloclcs 

Full  Nickel  Alarm  Clock, 
large  dial,  nicely  finished:  rcs;- 
ular  value  90c —  55C 

this    week wk. 


Perserving 
Ketttes 

Best  gray  enamel  10- 
quart  Pre  serving 
Kettle;  regular  60c 
value — this  ^Q^ 

week *''*- 


Four  Sitter 

Oood.  strong  Flour 
Sifter,  one  that  will 
last,  regular  value 
15c— thla  tdC 

week *w^» 

Collanders 

Tin  Coi:ar..le:s.  extra 
well  made,  double 
seamed  t!i  rough  out— 
reerular  value  Om 
Ijc,  this  week.  .  .  ^^» 

Knives  and 
Forlcs 

Iron  handle  Knives 
and  Forks.  strong 
and  durable:  regular 
value  T5c  set  of  six: 
this  week —  ^Ho 

set  of  six «»<yv 


Roger's  Tea  Spoons 

Gf'nulne  William  A.  Rogers 
Teaspoons,  plain  or  shell  fin- 
ish, guaranteed;  regular  val- 
ue f  1  "5  per  dozen—  ftl  9Q 
this  week,  per  dozen ..  V***'"' 


Gas  Burner 

Oas  Burner,  exactly  like  Illus- 
tration, has  oven  11x13  Inches, 
with  large  burner  underneath 
— top  has  two  large  burners 
— east  Irun  legs  and  top:  ree^- 
ular    value   $7.75—  $4.98 

th  Is    week v^» vv* 


Tea  and 
Cottee  Pots 

Best  gray  enamel  Tea 
or  Coffee  Pots,  4-pint 
size;      regular      value 

^e^e"^":'^. 33c 

Scrub  Brusli 

fc>crub  Brush,  with  ex- 
tra heavy  back  and 
Teko  fiber  bri.stle.s — 
regular  value  l^/* 
20o;  this  week.  .'■^^ 

Bread  Raiser 

Made  of  best  gray 
enamel,  with  heavy 
tin  cover.  14-quart 
size;  regular  value 
$1.25— this  Ofip 

week OO*, 


The  "Ben  Hur"  contest  Is  closed.  As 
was  expecrted,  yesterday  was  the  big 
day.  Several  hundred  came  In  during 
the  day,  and  the  "Ben  Hur"  editor's 
desk   looks   like  a    branch    postoffice. 

Even  the  "Ben  Hur"  editor  is  sur- 
prised at  the  popularity  of  the  contest. 

In  the  beginning  It  was  believed  the 
contest  would  be  the  biggest  affair  of 
Its  kind  ever  attempted  In  the  city, 
but  yesterday  the  e.ssays  poured  into 
the  office  from  every  direction.  The 
malls  were  heavy;  messengers  from 
the  schools  brought  many,  and  after 
school  hours  the  children  themselves 
brought  In  the  precious  stories.  The 
exact  number  received  la  not  known, 
but  tliere  seems  to  be  room  for  Utile 
else  around  the  Herald  office. 

This  morning  they  were  all  gathered 
together  and  sent  to  the  Central  hlgn 
school,  where  they  will  tonight  go  into 
tlie  hands  of  the  teachers,  who  are  to 
judge  tliem  and  decide  on  those  that 
are  entitled  to  seats.  Twenty  teachers 
are  to  do  the  judging.  Their  names 
were  published  in  The  Herald  some 
time  ago. 

Saturday  evening  The  Herald  will 
publish  a  list  of  tliose  who  are  to  re- 
ceive tickets.  The  tickets  will  be 
placed  In  the  hands  of  Supt.  Denfeld  of 
the  city  schools  and  they  will  be  given 
.jut  Mondav  from  his  oftice  In  the  Cen- 
tral   high    school    building. 

In  point  of  the  number  of  essays  re- 
ceived, the  contest  has  been  an  over- 
whelming success,  and  The  Herald 
wl.-^hes  to  thank  those  who  took  part. 
The  paper  wishes  there  might  have 
been  tickets  for  every  child  who  sent 
in  an  essay,  but  even  though  some  did 
not  win.  It  was  well  worth  the  time  ot 
any   child   to   try.  ,     ,, 

Because  It  might  cause  some  feeling 
such  as  "my  essay  was  just  as  g'^>d. 
if  not  better  than,  that  one,'  The 
Herald  will  not  undertake  to  publish 
any  of  the  essays.  At  first  It  was 
planned  to  publish  a  f'='W  of  the  best, 
but  uj>on  careful  consideration  It  was 
thought  best  to  publish  none 
decision   of   the   teaohiMS 


so    the 
will   be   final. 


Kelly's  March  Sale  Now  On 


EXPLANATION 
BY  C.  B.  MILLER 

Tells  Why  He  Voted  With 

Cannon  Forces  In 

House. 


Petrosini's  body  to  America.  Today  the 
agent  went  to  Bishop  and  threw  up  his 
engagement.  He  said  he  liad  secret 
warning  that  liis  life  would  be  In 
danger  if  he  in  any  way  became  con- 
ne.-'ted  with  the  case  and  he  was  fear- 
ful  of  the  Mafia's  revenge. 

Among  the  men  taken  into  custody 
bv  the  Italian  authoritie.s  are  two 
w"hose  connection  with  the  case  is 
thought  to  be  very  close.  The  police 
maintain  absolute  secrecy  with  regard 
to    their    identity. 


THOMAS  F.  (OLE  RESIGNS 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


Washington.  March  rs. — Representa- 
tive Clarence  B.  Miller  of  Duluth.  who 
was  elected  on  a  pledge  that  he  would 
oppose  Cannon  for  speaker  and  the  old 
house  rules,  has  offered  an  e.xplana- 
tlon  why  he  did  not  vote  with  the  in- 
surgents in  tlie  houses.     He  says: 

•'I  dont  think  tiiere  has  been  any- 
thing inconsistent  wltli  tlie  position  1 
liave  taken.  I  came  here  opposed  to 
Speaker  Cannon  and  in  favor  of  some 
needed  change  in  the  rules  to  insure 
freedom  ot  action  to  Individual  mem- 
bers. I  toi^k  my  personal  views  into 
the  party  caucus  and  voted  against 
Mr.  Cannon.  As  a  re<iult  of  the  cau- 
cus, Kepublicans  were  in  honor  bound 
to  vote  for  Cannon  for  speaker,  and 
to  cast  tlielr  vote  on  the  rules  with  the 
party  majority.  ^      ^,      . 

"The  plan  adopted  b/  the  house  ex- 
actly me.  ts  my  ideas.  I  wanted  all 
that  th.is  re.-'olution  provid^'s,  but  I  did 
not  and  do  not  want  a  rule  which  will 
Kive  a  committee  the  power  of  naming 
other  committees.  The  rules  adopted 
by  the  house  insure  us  a  regular  cal- 
endar dav  anl  the  certainty  that  we 
can  get  lip  worthy  bills  for  considera- 
tion In   th--  iiouse. 

"The  so-called  insurgents  nave  re- 
fused all  along  to  m.ake  a  fight  on 
Cannon.  I  came  here  opposed  to  Can- 
non. But  the  leaders  of  the  move- 
ment for  ilianee  In  the  rules  would 
not  vote  against  him.  I  don't  think 
anyone  can  arrive  at  the  proper  ends 
In  this  tlcrht  by  making  an  unholy  al- 
liance with  the  Democrats.  The  rule 
finally  adopted  is  the  best  that  could 
have    been    s^'lerted." 

CONSUL  IS  UNDER  GUARD 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


future  except  as  -ibove  noted." 

It  is  generallv  believed  that  W.  J. 
Qlcott,  vine  president  of  the  Oliver  Iron 
Mining  company  and  president  of  tlie 
DuIu'lI..  MIssabe  &  Northern  Railway 
company,  will  be  Mr.  Cole's  successor, 
but  Mr.  Olcott  is  in  New  York  and  no 
confirmation  of  tlic  report  could  be 
had.  Mr.  Cfle  declines  to  discuss  the 
subject  of  his  successor. 

Though  Mr.  Cole  declines  to  make 
any  definite  announcement  as  to  his 
plans  for  the  future,  it  Is  believed  he 
will  give  himself  over  to  the  active 
management  of  his  extensive  copper 
Interests.  It  Is  expected  he  will  con- 
tinue to  live  in  Duluth,  as  hi.s  Interests 
center  here.  H*-  is  an  extensive  owner 
of  real  estate  in  the  city  and  the  head- 
quarters of  most  of  the  copper  com- 
panif>s.  In  which  he  is  interested,  are 
in  Duluth. 

Mr.  Cole  is  a  director  and  one  of  the 
heaviest  stockholders  in  the  American 
Exchange  bank  and  his  numerous  min- 
ing interests  include  the  North  Butte, 
Qreene-Cananea.  Calumet  &  Arizona, 
Glroux  Consolidated  Mines  company, 
Butte  Coalition  Mining  company  and 
many  others. 

It  was  rumored  that  Joseph  B.  Cot- 
ton, head  of  the  legal  department  of 
the  Oliver  Iron  Mining  company,  would 
resign  at  the  same  time  Mr.  Cole  re- 
signs. 

Mr.  Cotton  was  seen  this  morning 
and  said  that  he  was  not  prepared  to 
make  any  statement  regarding  his 
plans  for  a  day  or  two. 

CROOKSTON  ASSOCIATION 

HAS  ANNUAL  ELECTION. 


Goad  Couish  Medlfine  for  Children. 

The  season  for  coughs  and  colds  is 
now  at  hand  and  too  much  care  cannot 
be  used  to  protect  the  children.  A 
child  is  much  more  likely  to  contract 
diphtheria  or  scarlet  fever  when  he 
has  a  cold.  The  quicker  you  cure  his 
cold  the  less  the  risk.  Chamberlain's 
Cough  Remedy  is  the  sole  reliance  of 
many  mothers,  and  few  of  those  who 
have  tried  it  are  willing  t.>  use  any 
other.  Mrs.  F.  F.  Starciier  of  Ripley, 
W.  Va.,  say.q:  "^I  have  never  used  any- 
thing other  than  Chamberlain's  Cough 
Remedy  for  my  children,  and  it  has 
always  given  good  satisfaction."  This 
remedy  contains  no  opium  or  other 
narcotic  and  may  be  given  as  confi- 
dently to  a  child  as  to  an  adult.  For 
sale    by    all    druggist.^. 

PRESENT  SYSTEM 
IS  A  FAILURE 

Bert  N.    Wheeler  Sug- 
gests Some   Mottoes 
for  City  Officials. 

Municipal  government  in  the  United 
States  is  a  failure,  according  to  Bert 
N.  Wheeler,  president  of  the  Civic 
hague  who  last  night  delivered  an  ad- 
dress before  the  Park  Point  In^prove- 
ment  club  at  Mission  hall.  He  men- 
tioned five  causes  for  the  failure  of 
such  government — tlie  rapid  growth  of 
the  cities,  the  lax  spirit  of  patriotism 
which  keeps  a  large  percentage  of  the 
voting  population  from  the  polls  the 
extremely  cosmopolitan  character  of 
the  people  and  the  interference  of  na- 
tional political  parties  in  city  affairs, 
which  everywhere  tends  to  pervert  city 
government. 

The  speaker  said  a  way  to  turn  fail- 
ure Into  success  would  be  for  all  cities 
to  adopt  .svstems  of  city  government 
like  those  used  in  Brookline,  Mass.,  or 
in  Dalla.=<  Tex. — the  referendum  sys- 
tem, or  tile  system  of  government  by 
commission.  Mr.  Wheeler  asserted  that 
public  discussion  and  the  attention  of 
organized  clubs  and  citizens  generally, 
will  do  much  towards  the  ultimate 
adoption  of  a  more  satisfactory  system 
of  city  government.  Mr.  Wheeler  sug- 
gested the  following  as  some  mottoes 
for  decorating  the  walls  of  the  coun- 
cil chamber: 

"I  would  rather  be  right  than  be 
president,"  to  be  placed  In  front  of  the 
president  of  the  body;  "The  law-breaker 
is  the  foe  of  American  civilization  and 
of  republican  government,  and  the 
worst  of  all  servants  Is  the  official 
who  connives  at  law  breaking."  to  be 
placed  before  the  mayor;  "I  will  fight 
it  out  on  this  line  all  summer."  for 
Aldermen  Moore  and  McKnlght;  "What 
13  morally  wrong  can  never  be  po- 
litically right,"  for  certain  other  alder- 
men. 


raous  letter  in  which  the  writer  says 
he  heard  a  certain  man,  whom  he  in- 
dicates, but  does  not  identify,  utter 
the  threat  that  if  Mr.  Bishop  continues 
his  activities  In  the  Petrosinl  case  he 
will    return    to    America    dead. 

The  iiitluence  of  the  Mafia  in  Paler- 
mo Is  strikingly  indicated  by  the  fol- 
lowing occurrence: 

Mr.  Bishop  a  few  days  ago  concluded 
a  contract  with  the  agent  of  a  ship- 
ping company  for  the  transportation  of 


Crookston.  Minn.,  March  18. — (Special 

to  The  Herald.) — The  Crookston  Build- 
ing &  Loan  association  has  elected  the 
following  at  its  annual  meeting;  Pi*esl- 
dent.  M.  E.  Kirsch;  vice  president. 
James  E.  O'Brien;  sfcretary,  Virgil  Mc- 
Gregor; treasurer,  H.  L.  Falk;  attorney, 
James  H.  Maybury;  auditing  commit- 
tee, Ed  Peterson,  Martin  Mosseftn.  J.  S. 
Newberry.  The  appraisal  committee, 
appointed  by  the  president,  is  A.  D. 
Stephens,  M.  E.  Kirsch  and  J.  S.  New- 
berry. 


Becoming 

ANOTHER 


Is  an  ordeal  which  all  women 
approach  with  dread,  for 
nothing  compares  to  the  pain 
of  child-birth.  The  thought 
of  the  suffering  in  store  for 
her  robs  the  expectant  mother 
of  pleasant  anticipations. 
Thousands  of  women  have  found  the  use  of  Mother's  Friend  robs 
confinement  of  much-  pain  and  insures  safety  to  Ufe  of  mother  and 
child.  This  liniment  is  a  God-send  to  women  at  the  critical  time.  Not 
only  does  Mother's  Fritnd  carry  women  safely  through  the  perils  of 
child-birth,   but  it  prepares  "  ^ 

the  system  for  the  coming 
event,  relieves  "morning 
sickness,"    and    other    dis- 

rrimfnrts     Sold  ijy  druggists  at  $i  ,oo. 
tUIIUUllb.     Book  of  valuable  inform*- 
tlon  tnnil'-d  free. 
XB£  SRADFIELD  REGULATOR  CO. 
AtUnta.  Oa. 


PLEADS  GUILTY 
TO  MINOR  CHARGE 

Nester  Salonen  Given  a 

Sentence  of  Sixty 

Days  In  Jail 

Nestor  Salonen,  charged  with  assault 
in  the  second  degree,  was  allowed  to 
plead  guilty  to  third  degree  assault. 
In  the  district  court  this  morning,  and 
the  more  serious  charge  was  dismissed. 

Salonen  was  charged  with  entering 
a  boarding  iiouse  at  Sixth  avenue  west 
and  assaulting  Eva  Jarvinen  with  a 
chair  and  a  knife. 

He  was  sentenced  to  three  months  In 
the  county  jail. 


mistaken.  The  passage  of  the  ton- 
nage tax  bill  was  made  possible  by 
such   men   as   these. 

That  Northern  Minnesota  can  never 
hope  to  hold  Its  own  without  concerted 
action  was  evident  long  ago.  Tliat 
there  is  no  concerted  action  is  evident 
from  the  fact  that  St.  Louis  county, 
in  Its  hour  of  need,  did  not  get  a  sirurle 
vote  in  the  Ninth  congressional  dis- 
trict. Every  one  of  the  members  from 
that  district  voted  for  the  tonnage  tax 
bill.  That  there  Is  a  ground  on  which 
the  rights  of  Northern  Minnesota  can 
take  a  stand  together  Is  also  made 
evident  by  the  fact  that  there  was  not 
a  vote  In  the  Eighth  congressional  dis- 
trict for  the  tonnage  tax,  and  that  the 
upper  part  of  the  Sixth  congressional 
district,  with  scattering  votes  farther 
down  in  the  district,  stood  firmly  for 
justice   and    fair   play. 

It  Is  worth  noting,  too,  that  the 
advocates  of  plundering  a  minority  for 
the  benefit  of  a  powerful  majority  did 
not  Include  a  single  vote  in  Ramsey 
county,  nor  In  the  Fourth  congression- 
al district,  of  which  it  Is  a  part,  and 
that  only  two  votes  In  Hennepin  county 
were   cast  in   favor  of   the   bill. 

Tlie  battle  was  not  lost  because  of 
weakness  In  the  St  Louis  county  dele- 
gation. Neither  that  county  nor  any 
other  ever  sent  a  stronger.  Every  man 
in  the  house  delegation  has  played  his 
part  nobly  and  that  Is  amply  proven  by 
the  fact  that  against  such  a  powerful 
array  of  prejudice,  greed  and  political 
guile  the  six  from  St.  Louis  county, 
with  their  good  friends  in  other  parts 
of  the  state,  were  able  to  roll  up  a 
minority  only  four  votes  less  than  the 
majorltv    which    adopted   the   bill. 

The  arguments  of  Chester  A.  Cong- 
don,  chairman  of  the  delegation,  and 
those  of  other  members  of  the  delega- 
tion, have  utterly  annihilated  all  pre- 
tense of  argument  upon  the  other  side. 
Battle  cries  of  .section  against  section 
and  of  hatred  for  large  and  wealthy 
interests  and  political  cunning,  have 
taken  the  place  of  argument.  While 
the  author  of  the  bill  and  some  ol  his 
•supporters  are  no  doubt  honest  In  their 
views  even  if  mentally  Incapable  of 
grasping  both  sides  of  a  question  and 
of  accepting  reason  Instead  of  preju- 
dice, their  power  has  been  made  pos- 
sible by  others  far  less  guileless  and 
far  more  sordid  in  their  cn.ls. 

Before  the  debate  began,  the  report 
of  the  committee  that  visited  Duluth  to 
see  about  the  prospects  for  the  con- 
struction of  a  steel  plant  wtfs  read,  and 
two  amendments  to  the  bill  proposed 
by  its  author  were  adopted.  One  puts 
mines  shipping  less  than  20,000  tons  a 
vear  into  the  non-shipping  class,  to  be 
taxed  upon  an  ad  valorem  basis.  The 
other  provides  for  dividing  the  tonnage 
tax  between  the  several  state  funds  In- 
stead of  putting  it  all  Into  the  general 
revenue  fund,  as  proposed  originally. 
BJorgc'a  Talk. 
Mr.  BJorge  then  made  his  talk  for 
the  bill,  consuming  an  hour  and  a  half. 
He  spoke  at  length  in  support  of  the 
constitutionality  of  his  measure.  a 
point  not  touched  upon  by  the  speak- 
ers for  St.  Louis  county.  His  argu- 
ments and  those  of  the  opposition  to 
the  bill  were  practically  those  made 
before  the  tax  committee,  and  already 
reported  In   The  Herald. 

Mr.  Bjorge  made  the  point  that  be- 
cause transportation  rates  for  Iron  ore 
on  land  and  lake  are  high.  It  Is  impos- 
sible to  fix  a  fair  valuation  upon  iron 
mines  for  purposes  of  taxation.  To 
show  that  the  mines  are  worth  very 
much  more  than  they  are  assessed  for, 
he  quoted  from  the  prospectus  of  the 
United  States  Steel  corporation,  put  out 
when  the  stock  was  being  fioated,  and 
it  was  desirable  to  show  that  It  was 
not  watered.  In  which  It  a.3  claime<i 
that  the  Iron  mines  owned  by  the  cor- 
poration were  worth  $700,000,000.  The 
speaker  also  asserted  that  the  Iron 
mines  do  not  pay  taxes  enough,  because 
the  local  tax  ratf.s  in  some  of  the  min- 
ing locations  are  low.  He  also  asserted 
that  tlie  mines  will  be  exhausted  In 
fiftv  vf*ars,  at  the  present  rate  of  pro- 
duction, and  that  under  the  ad  valorem 
sv.stem  the  taxes  will  decrease  as  the 
supplv  nears  exhaustion. 

He  "thought  the  best  mf'asure  of  the 
abilitv  of  property  to  pay  taxes  Is  Its 
output.  Instead  of  its  value.  Most  of 
the  mines  are  owned  by  non-residents, 
he  said,  so  the  burden  would  not  fail 
upon  the  people  of  St.  Louis  county. 
Besides,  those  who  manufacture  this 
ore  outside  the  state  ought  to  be  made 
to  pay  well  toward  the  support  of  the 
state. 

Rffeot  on  Sterl  Plant. 
Asked    bv    Representative   Sawyer    of 
Minneapolis    what    effect    the    tonnage 
tax    would    have    upon    the       proposed 
steel   plant   at   Duluth,  Mr.    Bjorge   said 
those    were    two    different    propositions, 
and  should  not  be  considered  together. 
Representative    Washburn    of    Minne- 
apolis wanted  to  know  why  a  barrel  of 
flour    should    not    pay    an    output    tax 
just   as   well   as  a   ton    of   ore  and   Mr. 
Bjorge    thought    It    was    easier    to    fix 
the    assessed    value    of    the    barrel     of 
flour.     Then   Mr!   Washburn   wanted   to 
know   why   the   granite,   sandstone    and 
clay     deposits     of     the     state     shouldn't 
be    treated    the    same    way    as    iron    ore, 
and   Mr.    Bjorge  said   that   if   they  were 
owned    by    rich    outside       corporations 
they  ought  to  be  treated  the  same  way. 
Mr.    Grant    Tnlkn. 
Richard   F.   Grant   of    Duluth    made   a 
strong  and  convincing  plea  for  justice. 
He  showed  that  because  railroad  taxes 
go    to    the   state.   St.    Louis    county    and 
Duluth   rre  burdened  already,  and  that 
thev  are  burdened   further  because  the 
go%ernment,    the    state    and    the    rail- 
roads   own    large    amounts    of    land    in 
the   county   that   is    exempt   from   taxa- 
tion.     Duluth   cannot    pave   some    of    its 
streets    because   of   this    condition,    and 
in  one  St.  Louis  county     community   It 
has  produced  a  tax   rate  of  130  mills. 
'Mr.    Bjorge    says    the    mines   can't    be 


sssessed  properly  upon  the  ad  valorem 
basis,"  said  Mr.  Grant,  "yet  he  pro- 
vides In  his  bill  for  taxing  them  upon 
an  ad  valorem  basis  for  local  purposes. 
If  it  Isn  t  fair  fcr  the  state,  why  tlirust 
it  upon  us  for  our  local  purposes?  The 
work  of  tlie  tax  commission  shows  that 
the  mines  can  be  adequately  assessed 
and  taxed  upon  the  ad  valorem  basis, 
so  there  is  no  necessity  for  the  tonnage 
tax  plan.  It  Is  not  only  unfair  to  a 
section,  but  it  is  unfair  between  dif- 
ferent mine  owners,  because  it  taxes  at 
the  same  rate,  if  their  outputs  are  the 
same,  mines  containing  10,000,000  tons 
and  50,000,000  tons,  though  tlie  latter 
is  plainly  worth  five  times  the  former. 
The  tax,  too,  is  based  upon  the  per- 
centage of  iron,  and  that  is  merely  a 
matter  of  weight,  not  of  worth.  Mr. 
Bjorge  says  freight  rates  are  exces- 
sive. If  they  are.  the  state  gets  the 
taxes  through  the  gross  earnings  tax 
upon  the  railroads,  and  under  that 
system  It  gets  all  the  taxes  Instead  of 
only  a  part  of  them.  The  argument 
tiiat  the  ad  valorem  system  of  taxation 
encourages  exhaustion  of  the  deposits 
is  not  correct,  because  production  is 
regulated  by  supply  and  demand.  He 
says  that  when  the  Iron  is  gone  there 
ivill  be  nothing  but  holes  In  the  ground 
left.  But  those  holes  will  be  In  St. 
Louis  county,  not  in  Becker  county, 
and  when  they  are  all  that  is  left,  five- 
sixths  of  the  taxable  property  of  St. 
Louis  county  will  be  gone.  We  need 
to  have  something  in  its  place,  and 
now  we  have  a  chance  to  establish  a 
large    steel     manufacturing    center     In 


D.  E.  H.,  March  iS,  '09 


TOMORROW 

AT  9  A.  M. 

Another  one  of  those  famous  Columbia 
Tie  Sales. 

QUANTITY:   About  2500  ties. 
QUALITY:  As  usual  up  to  75c. 
PRICE: 


To  Bed,  to  Sleep, 
Perchance 
to  Dream? 


arry  women  safely  through  the  penis  ot 

t^IEND 


AN  UNKNOWN  STRANGER 

DIES  IN  FARCiO  JAIL. 

Fargo,  N.  D.  March  18. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— ^Dying,  unattended  and 
alone,  a  stranger  expired  while  an  In- 
mate ot  the  city  jail.  The  man  was 
found  In  an  unconscious  condition  on 
the  street  car  tracks  and  appeared  In 
a  deep  state  of  Intoxication,  He  was 
placed  In  the  cell  to  sober  up  and  was 
later  discovered  by  a  cellmate,  to  be 
dead.  There  was  nothing  to  identify 
the  dead  man  and  his  demise  appeared 
to  be  due  to  heart  dUeaae  and  alco- 
holism. 


Duluth.  The  market  for  steel  is  de- 
veloping rapidly  in  the  West,  the  South 
and  the  Northwest.  If  we  can  make 
this  steel  in  Minnesota,  It  means  mil- 
lions of  new  capital,  millions  spent  In 
v.ages,  better  markets  for  Minnesota 
products  and  cheaper  freight  rates.  A 
double  system  of  taxation  will  alarm 
capital  and  drive  these  new  Industries 
out  of  the  state.  They  can  easily  slip 
over  to  Wisconsin,  but  if  they  are 
taxed  here  as  other  property  is  taxed, 
tliey  will  know  what  to  expect,  and  will 
come  here. 

"We  are  asking  the  state  to  help  us 
get  these  industries,  to  build  up  our 
city  and  the  stale  at  the  same  time. 
We  don't  ask  you  to  tax  the  mines 
less  than  other  property  Is  taxed,  but 
to  tax  them  the  same,  and  in  the  same 
manner.  We  are  a  hopeless  minority, 
and  we  appeal  for  justice  and  fair 
play." 

Prartleally  a  Contract. 
Lawrence  H.  Johnson  of  Minneapo- 
lis, who  was  speaker  of  the  house -two 
years  ago,  told  the  history  of  the 
promise  of  the  Steel  corporation  to  es- 
tablish a  plant  in  Minnesota,  showing 
that  there  is  practically  a  contract  be- 
tween the  state  and  the  Steel  corpora- 
tion whereby  In  consideration  of  the 
acquisition  of  the  plant,  the  state  de- 
feated the  tonnage  tax  plan.  He  said 
that  two  years  ago,  when  representa- 
tives of  the  Steel  corporation  asked 
him  why  that  interest  did  not  have  the 
confidence  of  the  state,  he  told  them 
that  It  was  because  the  mines  did  not 
pay  taxes  enough  and  because  none 
of  the  ore  was  being  manufactured  in 
the  state.  He  Insisted  upon  a  higher 
valuation  and  the  construction  of  a 
substantial  steel  plant,  and  both  were 
brought  about.  The  committee  that 
lie  recently  headed  on  a  trin  to  Duluth 
was  unanimous  in  its  belief  that  the 
steel  plant  is  coming,  and  that  it  will 
be  bigger  than  was  promised  at  first. 
It  was  agreed  that  It  siiould  cost  $5,- 
000,000  to  $6,000,000.  and  now  It  Is 
planned  to  cost   $25,000,000. 

"I  believe."  said  Mr.  Johnson,  "that 
within  twenty-four  months  there  will 
be  establlslied  at  Duluth  the  greatest 
Industry  that  ever  came  to  Minnesota, 
and  that  within  five  years  there  will 
be  at  Duluth  a  steel  manufacturing 
center  second  only  to  that  at  Gary. 
But  these  new  plants  can  easily  be 
driven  away.  Wisconsin  is  near,  and 
Is    anxious    to    get    them. 

WrlU  Changed  Front. 
R.  J.  Wells  of  Breckenridge,  an  old 
and  crafty  member  of  tlie  house,  with 
the  sharp  tactics  of  the  fioor  at  his 
fingers'  ends,  made  a  talk  In  favor  of 
the  bill,  though  two  years  ago  he 
voted  against  It  and  was  one  of  those 
who  signed  a  report  condemning  it  up- 
on every  conceivable  ground.  Mr. 
Wells  may  be  given  the  credit  for  hav- 
ing been  particularly  active  In  the 
preliminary  fight  for  the  bill,  though 
In  the  early  part  of  the  session  he  held 
aloof  and  took  no  hand  In  the  con- 
test. 

J.  F.  Rosenwald  of  Madison,  the 
home  town  of  J.  F.  Jacobson,  made  a 
fihrill  and  excited  talk  against  the  bill 
on  tlie  ground  that  it  is  a  blow  at  the 
Steel   trust. 

John  G.  Lennon  of  Minneapolis 
talked  against  the  bill,  saying  that  It 
proposed  an  outrageous  injustice,  and 
that  If  It  were  not  for  the  political  ef- 
fect some  folks  hoped  to  make  out  of 
it  in  the  next  campaign  little  would  be 
heard  of  it.  He  believed  that  the  con- 
struction of  steel  plants  In  Minne- 
sota meant  more  to  the  slate  than  any 
tonnage  lax. 

W.  A.  Nolan  of  Grand  Meadow  also 
spoke   in    favor   of   the    bill. 

CoHgdun'M  Last  Plea. 
When  Mr.  Congdon  began  his  last 
plea  for  justice  for  St.  Louis  county, 
the  hour  was  late,  and  he  was  there- 
fore forcid  to  limit  the  length  of  his 
talk.  He  said  that  he  believed  that  the 
future  i)roHperlty  of  his  part  of  the 
state  would  be  forever  affected  by  the 
action  of  the  house.  He  made  it  clear 
again,  .is  he  had  many  times  before  in 
his  brief  and  in  his  talks  to  the  lax 
committee,  that  the  St.  Louis  delega- 
tion is  not  trying  to  protect  the  iron 
mines   from   proper  taxation. 

"If  they  are  taxed  loo  little,  they 
should  be  taxed  more,"  he  said.  "If 
they  are  ta.ved  too  high,  the  owners 
can  appeal  to  the  courts.  But  the 
mines  constitute  five-sixths  of  our 
property,  and  we  ask  you  to  tax  u.s  as 
you  would  lax  yourselves;  to  distrib- 
ute our  taxes  as  you  would  distribute 
vour  own  taxes.  We  are  a  part  of 
Minnesota.  We  are  not  vas.sals.  Treat 
us  and  lax  us  as  you  treat  and  tax  your- 
selves. This  tax  you  propose  Is  levied 
by  a  powerful  majority  against  a  help- 
less minority.  We  are  six  out  of  119 
votes  in  this  house.  If  you  lower 
your  own  taxes  at  our  expense,  It  will 
be  easy  to  do  it  again,  and  the  tempta- 
tion to  do  so  will  be  strong. 

"You  warn  us  that  five-sixths  of  our 
wealth  is  going  to  leave  us  soon,  but 
we  are  aware  of  It.  We  are  trying 
to  get  something  in  its  place.  We  are 
trying  to  make  that  part  of  the  state 
a  manufacturing  center.  We  have  as 
a  start  a  steel  plant  being  built  by  the 
United  Slates  Steel  corporation,  and 
this  Is  only  a  beginning  if  the  iron  in- 
dustry Is  taxed  as  other  properly  Is 
taxed,  and  if  Iron  manufacturers  cah 
know  what  to  depend  upon.  Otherwise. 
Wisconsin  Is  close  by,  and  It  It  Just  as 
well  situated  as  we  are.  There  are  to 
be  two  great  steel  manufacturing  cen- 
ters in  the  West,  one  at  the  head  of 
Lake  Michigan  and  one  at  the  head  of 
Lake  Superior.  The  question  now  Is 
whether  this  manufacturing  center  is 
to  be  In  Minnesota  or  In  Wisconsin. 

"The  slate  can  lose  nothing  by 
waiting  two  years.  Hardly  any  of  the 
mines  can  disappear  In  that  time.  The 
loss  of  valuation  by  shipment  will  be 
about  $2,800,000,  and  In  that  time  tax- 
able properly  worth  $12,500,000  will  be 
added,  and  it  will  be  of  a  character 
that  will  continue  producing  and  pay- 
ing wagts  for  many  years  to  come." 
Thougli  brief,  Mr.  Congdon's  argu- 
ment was  masterly  and  aggressive.  He 
practically  asked  the  legislature  If  it 
would  rather  enrich  Southern  Minne- 
sota by  a  special  tax  against  St.  Louis 
countv's  Industry,  or  have  steel  manu- 
facturing on  a  large  scale  established 
In   this  slate. 

The  reply  was  the  roll  call,  giving 
61  votes  for  a  tonnage  tax  and  a  death 
blow  at  Northeastern  Minnesota,  and 
57  votes  for  fair  play  and  state  de- 
velopment. 

Representative  Bjorge,  the  author  of 
the  bill,  then  moved  that  the  vote  be 
reconsidered,  and  asked  that  his 
motion  be  voted  down  In  order  that 
the  action  of  the  house  might  be 
clnclied.     He  had  his  wish,   51   to   67. 

•      *      « 

The  Peterson  senate  bill,  designed 
to  force  Governor  Johnson  to  reappoint 
S.  W.  Leavetl  to  the  state  board  of 
control,  came  into  the  house  yester- 
day and  was  referred  to  the  committee 
on  military  affairs,  of  which  J.  H. 
Dorsey  a  Democrat,  is  chairman.  Later 
it  was' referred  to  the  Judiciary  com- 
mlttee.  ,      .  .„ 

The  bill  win  not  pass,  the  house  Re- 
publican steering  committee  having  de- 
cided not  to  let  it  go  through,  though 
It  Is  understood  to  be  a  measure  of  the 
senate  steering  committee. 
«      •      * 

The  senate  In  committee  of  the  whole 
yesterday    afternoon    advanced    to    the 


1 5c 


A 
TIE 


'■■•?■  ~'       ~    '  13^ 


■*»fl  • 


LIMIT:  Five  ties  to  one  customer. 

Sale  starts  ai:  9  o'clock  sharp  tomorrow 
morning. 

Have  your  change  ready  to  facilitate 
the  dispatch  ot  the  ties  from  counter  to 
customer. 


Stein-Bloch 
Clothei 


Hanan 
Shoes 


county  examiner  for  St.  Lot  Is  county 
as  well  as  the  house  bill  creating  a 
commission  to  have  charge  jf  the  St. 
Louis  county  courthouse.  Representa- 
tive Congdon's  bill,  providing  that 
county  depositories  furnishing  surety 
bonds  need  give  bonds  only'  for  the 
actual  amount  of  deposits,  nslead  oi 
for  twice  the  amount  of  deposits 
also  advanced  to  the  calendar 
STILLMAN  H    "'  ^ 


was 


BIN'GHAM. 


Simple  Itemed  J-  for  La  iJrippe. 

La  grippe  coughs  are  dangerous,  as 
they  frequently  develop  into  pneu- 
monia. Foley's  Honey  anc  Tar  not 
only  stops  the  cough  but  heals  and 
strengthens  the  lungs  so  thKt  no  seri- 
ous results  need  be  feared.  The  gen- 
uine Foley's  Honey  and  Tar  contains 
no  harmful  drugs  and  Is  ir  a  ye  low 
package.  Refuse  substitutes.  Sold  by 
all  druggists. 

ICE  BACKED  DP 
TO  WESTERN  END 

Lake  Superior  Fields  Arc 

Mostly  at  This  End 

of  Lake. 

The  reports  from  the  regular  and 
display  stations  of  the  weather  bureau 
indicate  that  there  has  been  an  increase 
in  the  area  of  ice  fields  ovjr  Western 
Superior,  and  a  decided  decrease  over 
the  central  portion. 

From  Grand  Marals  eastward  to 
Whiteflsh  bay  the  fields  extend  keyond 
vision,  but  are  not  solid.  The  ice  in 
Whitefish  bay  Is  solid.  The -e  has  been 
no  change  in  the  ice  condition  in  tlie 
St.  Mary's  river.  In  Green  oay  the  ice 
ranges  from  12  to  22  inches  In  thick- 
ness, and  Is  covered  with  snow.  In 
Michigan  there  Is  a  small  field  of  ice 
over  the  extreme  southeast  portion, 
otherwise  l)Ut  few  fiields  have  been  re- 
ported south  of  the  Islands.  At  tlie 
inches  thick,  and  unchanged.  In 
Huron  the  fields  over  the  nrrthern  por- 
tion have  decreased  decidedly,  and  no 
ice  fields  were  reported  south  of  Middle 
island.  In  the  extreme  so  Jthern  por- 
tion the  ice  fields  have  moved  to  the 
mouth  of  the  lake,  and  extend  beyond 
vision.  The  St.  Clair  river  is  open  to 
Marine  City.  The  ice  In  Lake  St.  Clair 
has  been  running  out  slowly  during  the 
week.  Some  of  thi.s  Ice  has  lodged  at 
the  head  of  Fighting  islaid.  Practi- 
cally no  Ice  Is  reported  o>  er  Western 
Erie  except  around  the  IsLmds,  where 
It  extends  beyond  vision.  Over  the 
eastern  portion  the  fields  a'e  light  and 
drifting  with  the  winds;  tie  extent  of 
the  fields  Is  about  the  same  as  last 
week.  No  fields  have  been  reported  In 
Ontario  and  the  harbors  aro  opening. 

In  comparison  with  the  lame  period 
last  season  there  Is  less  ice  In  Superior. 
Michigan  and  Huron,  anc.  somewhat 
more  in  Erie,  and  about  the  same  in 
Ontario.  In  Green  bay  the  Ice  is 
heavier.  At  the  straits  tl  e  Ice  aver- 
ages about  8  Inches  heavhjr  than  last 
season. 


• 


-  -♦ 


Beautiful  Oddities  in 

JEWELRY 

to  be  found  at 

Qruesen's. 

•WATCH     EXPERT" 

12S  West   Superior  Street,  UpstairB. 


By  the  Way 

When  buying  a  cigar  call  for 

Elcora  or 
Mataafa 

All  Dealers  Sell  Them. 

DULUTH  CIGAR  CO..  .Makers 


CAMPANINl  PARTS  WITH 

OSCAR  HAMMERSTEIN. 

New  York,  March  18. — The  recent 
troubles  between  Oscar  Hammersteln. 
the  impresario  of  the  Manhattan  opera 
house,  and  Signor  Cleofonte  Campaninl, 
the  noted  conductor,  culminated  yester- 
day in  the  separation  of  the  two  an* 
the  signing  by  Campaninl  of  a  con- 
tract wiiereby  he  becomes  conductor  or 
the  San  Carlos   opera   house   In   Naple*. 

• 

Alleged  Tblef  Captured. 
Chicago,  March  18. — George  T^ans, 
arrested  here  today  on  complaint  of 
the  authorities  of  Buffalo,  had  $1,50» 
In  cash,  and  jewelry  valued  at  $2^00» 
in  his  poB.qossion. 
he  left  a  train. 


He  was  captured 


Every  one  dreams,  for  there  is  prac- 
tically no  such  thing  as  dreamless 
sleep.  When  dreams  are  repulsive  or 
end  in  a  cat.istrophe,  and  the  dreamer 
awakens  frjghtened  and  trembling, 
there  is  a  grave  danger  that  should  be 
guarded  against.  Dreams  of  this 
character  sometimes  cause  disaster. 

Violent  dreams  and  nightmares  are 
usually  caused  by  undigested  food  that 
remains  in  the  stomach  and  irritates 
the  whole  nervous  system.  Beecham's 
Pills  are  the  best  remedy  in  the  world 
to  overcome  retarded  digestion  and  to 
strengthen  the  stomach  nerves. 

Restlessness,  insomnia  and  terrify- 
ing dreams  are  banished  when  the 
stomach  promptly  disposes  of  its  food, 
and   Beecham's  Pills  will  brin^  quick 

relief  from  all  these  nerve-racking  ex- I  calendar'thehouse  bin  by  the  St.  Louis 
perience*.  •  county     flelegation,     providing     tor  a 


J^O 


The  Great 
Spread  for  "Bread    ^    _ 

Use   it   instead   of   other   sweets;    you'll   enjo3r 
the  flavor  and  ])e  benefited  by  its  purity. 
JQgpO  is  a  sweet  with  a  food  value. 

In  alMlfht  Mn*,  lOe,  tSo.  ■(>•. 
A  book  of  cooking  and  fa  idy-making  rec/p«j  seal  fret  oa  ttqmul. 


- 


Con  Products  KeOiiui{  Company 
New  York 


«s-»-.^ 


[SYPlPl 


'Jmi^^i'i'-^^J.)! 


m 


^v  -^> 


m 


in 


*^ .  ■ .. ». . .»..»~ «i...  ■  I  >■■■■■     * 


THINGS  FOR  THE 
KITCHEN— NOTE  THE 

SAVING  By  Buying  Here 

You  not  onlv  find  lower  prices  here,  but  the  quality  is 
better  A  cheap  'thing  at  a  cheap  price  is  no  bargain.  Every 
piece  vou  buv  here  has  the  French  &  Bassett  stamp  of  good 
quality  on  it.'  This  is  the  largest  department  of  its  kind  in 
the  city,  filled  with  thousands  of  useful  things  for  your  home, 
at  low  prices. 


THE  ANDROCK  BREAD 

Tn ACTED  'Maii«  ^^*  blued  fm- 
lUAdlCn  ished  coUl  ruUed 
shfet  stetl.  with  bright  tinned 
finish  wire  nush.  tray  for  toast- 
ing bread  or  crackers,  melting 
chttse  on  crackers,  etc.  Usual- 
ly sold  everywhere  for  25  cents. 
A  big  value  at  our 
price,  only 


POT  COVER  HOLDER 

(With  six  pot  covers  ) 
A    most   convenient    kitchen    neces- 


sity— SIX    different    siz«'d 


covers   — 
complete    with    holder— easHy    fast 
enod    to    closet 


door    or    wall. 


A 


regular  60c  value^  Wej»ell    QQq 


the  complete  set  for  only.  . 

POT  COVER  HOLDER 


U'lre  Banket*  fur  Bolllaie 
EkK!*<  frying  fritters,  fried 
cakes,  potatoes,  eto.  A 
most  useful,  handy  kitchen 
necessity ,  strongly  made, 
and  heavily  tinned.  Hardly 
a  day  passes  l>ut  what  you 
need' one  of  these.  Ifldk 

©ur     rr!'-»-      ""Iv  lUw 


8c 


A  con  V  e  n  - 
lent  rack  for 
holding  dif- 
ferent slxed 
tin  covers — 
keeps  them 
from  getting 
bent  —  they 
are  always 
handy  to  get 
at.  and  cov- 
ers can  be 
easily  fast- 
ened to  wall. 


Cast  Irc.n  skillet — highly  polished- 
smooth     Inside.       A  splen-QC|% 
did    bargain   at.    only    WVW 


Steel   Frving   Pan — good   size,    with 
cold  tin  covered  handles.     This  is  a^^S: 
big  bargain — our   price  IfjC 


WILLOW  CLOTHES  BASKETS 

These  are  strongly  woven,  are  not 
loose  and  wobbly — have  handles 
well  fastened  and  plaited  rim 
around  top.  A  good  big  value  at 
our  prices: 

Small  size    *^ 

Medium    size     ^*^ 

Large    size    *8o 


J  A  good,  strong, 
well  braced.  Iron- 
ing Stand.  Some 
stores  ask  |1.25 
for  similar  ones. 
Our  price  for  the 
best  kind  OOm 
—only OOC 


eie&ve  Boards  with  wikhI  top— 
stronglv  made  and  well  braced—- 
made  of  good,  clean,  well -seasoned 
stock — with  no  gummy  wood.  |||A 
Our  price,    only IWW 

Cloth  Covered  Sleeve  Boardir 

made  lip  s;ime  as  above 


I5e 


A  set  oCi  these  Three  Irons 
with  handle — smooth,  well 
finished,  and  a  bargain.  .  .  . 


Mrs. 

Potts 

Sad  Irons 

78c 


il  l^M^Wli 


PATENT  LOCK  SAD  IRONS 

,y  Xi« 
ndle- 

98c 


A  set  of  finely  finished,  higiily  Nick- 
led    Irons    with    a    patent    handle — it 
fastens  with   a  simple  twist 
of   the   wrist — fastens   solid, 
so  It  cant  come  off.     The  set. 


ELECTRIC 
EGO  BEATER,  5e- 


The  rounded  wire   edges  fit   the  dish,   it 
does  not  spatter,  it  beats  eggs  or  cream 
verv    quickly — hence    the    name    "Elec 
trie" — generally    sold   every- 
where for  10  cents — 
our   price 


5c 


Patent  Hood  Sad 
Irons  that  hold 
the  heat— lock  firmly 
to  the  lrc>n 
— are  hand- 
somely fin- 
ished in  best 
nickel.  These 
are  splendid 
high  grade 
irons  —  our 
price^ 

SI.29 

FULL  SIZE 
HOUSE 
BROOM 

T  he  h  e  s  t 
value  at  22c 
that  you  can 
find  in  the 
city;  good 
weight,  well 
made  —  our 
price — 


22c 


Fine    Woven 
like    cut.    at 
larger  size 
Strainer,     at 


Handled  Strainers 

iinfr — 

10c 


Wire     .St  I 
5e.      A 


64  PIECE  DINNER  SET 

A  splendid  combination  for  a  family 
of  four  or  five.  Very  quairft  old  Eng- 
lish shape,  with  quaint  blue  decora- 
tions under  the  glazing.  A  hand- 
some set  to  use  where  you  don't  want 
to  use  your  best  dishes  all  0Q  HC 
the   time.      Our   price wOm  I  V 

37  PIECE  LUNCH  SET 

A  dainty  decorated  lunch  set  of  3  7 
pieces — fine  for  luncheor^s  or  small  in- 
formal parties.  The  ware  is  of  good 
quality  and  it  is  certainly  a  big  bar- 
gain at  our  price.  tf  |  QQ 
Complete,    only    ip  1  a^FO 

FINE  DINNER  WARE 

If  you  appreciate  handsome  table 
ware,  real  hand  decorated,  imported 
china — you  will  find  a  splendid  assort- 
ment here.  The  largest,  most  com- 
plete showing  in  the  city.  Prices 
always  jhe  lowest. 


CUP  STRAINER 

Enameled  cup  strainer,  with 
fine  tinned  wire  screen.  Will 
not  rust,  A  handy,  conveni- 
ent strainer  for  lOf^ 
table,    for   only    IWW 

EXTRA  SPECIAL 

Here  are  some  splendid 
values  in  a  fine  quality  of 
white  semi-porcelain  china — 

Bread   and   Butter  Plates.  .4c 

Pie    Plates    5c 

Tea  Plates    6c 

Breakfast    Plates    7c 

Dinner   Plates    8c 

Cups  and   Saucers,    pair.  .  .5c 

Butter  Pads   2c 

Sauce    Dishes     8c 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:        THURSDAY,     MARCH     18,    1909. 


PASSAGE  OF  TONNAGE  TAX 
KEENLY  FELT  IN  DllLUTH 


Is  Chief  Topic  of  Con- 
versation in  City 
Today. 

That  Bill  Is  Rank  in- 
justice Is  Opinion 
of  AIL 


The  people  of  Duluth  were  somewhat 
surprised,  and  very  keenly  disappoint- 
ed by  the  passage  of  the  Bjorge  ton- 
nage tax  bill  by  the  house  at  St.  Paul 
yesterday.  There  isn't  any  difference 
of  opinion  In  Duluth  or  in  the  whole 
of  St.  Louis  county  for  that  matter, 
as  to  the  Injustice  of  the  tonnage  tax 
bill.  Every  man,  woman  and  child  In 
the  county  was  opposed  to  it.  In  their 
brave  fight  against  the  bill,  the  St. 
Louis  county  delegates  had  the  united 
suj:ipurt  of  their  constituents,  and  the 
failure  of  their  efforts  to  head  off  the 
program  of  the  supporters  of  the  bill, 
i.s  keenly  felt   by  the  people  here. 

The  action  of  the  house  in  passing 
the  bill  is  the  subject  for  conversation 
everywhere  in  Duluth  today  and  the 
condemnation  is  unanimous.  Of  thous- 
ands of  interviews  that  could  be  secur- 
ed from  men  in  all  walks  of  life  and 
all  pursuits  of  trade,  The  Herald  gives 
a  few  as  a  reflection  of  the  manner,  in 
which  the  house  action  is  viewed  by 
different   people. 

Att<.>rney  John  Jenswold,  Jr.:  "I  une- 
quivocally condemn  lliat  method  of 
taxation.  The  taxing  of  special  in- 
terests is  a  step  in  the  wrong  direc- 
tion. It  is  but  a  short  step  from  the 
levying  of  a  special  tax  on  the  product 
of  the  iron  mines  to  the  special  taxa- 
tion of  farm  and  dairy  products  and 
even  the  products  of  man's  efforts  In 
the  professions.  The  tax  amendment 
is  vicious  in  itself,  for  It  opens  the  way 
to  dangerous  legislation.  The  array- 
ing of  class  against  class  Is  some- 
thing to  be  avoided  in  every  com- 
munity and  commonwealth,  and  the  tax 
amendment  and  the  tonnage  tax  bill 
open  the  way  for  Just  such  a  condition 
to  be  brought  about.  The  whole  pro- 
ceeding is  radically  wrong. 
«      •      • 

Judge  "W.  L.  Windom  of  the  municip- 
al court:  "If  the  bill  is  finally  passed 
by  the  senate  it  will  be  a  very  great 
wrong  perpetrated  upon  one  of  the 
most  promising  parts  of  the  slate  of 
Minnesota.  I  sincerely  hope  that  Gov- 
ernor Johnson  will  have  the  courage 
to  veto  a  bill  which  even  its  sponsors 
admit  is  morally  wrong,  and  not  Justi- 
tled  upon  any  possible  basis,  except 
through  a  spirit  of  greed  which  has 
been  growing  In  this  country  for  the 
last    ten    or    fifteen    years. 

•'I  have  confidence  enough  in  the 
people  to  believe  that  if  this  bill  is 
Inflicted  upon  us  It  will  be  repealed 
at  the  next  session  of  the  legislature, 
because  the  people  are  Inherently  hon- 
est, and  when  Ihey  realize  that  this  is 
onlv  n  cold-blooded  proposition  to  rob 
one  district  for  the  support  of  another, 
they  will  insist  that  justice  be  accord- 
ed  us. 

"If  the  hill  becomes  a  law  the  result, 
in  my  opinion,  will  be  about  this  way: 
The  owners  of  property  Immediately 
affected  by  the  measure  will  undoubt- 
edly go  into  the  courts  as  soon  as  pos- 
sible, and  if  I  am  not  mistaken,  the 
people  of  St.  Louis  county  will  stand 
back  of  them  in  their  fight.  The  fight 
in  the  courts  will  take  four  or  five 
years,  at  least,  and  the  county  and 
state  will  be  without  taxes  from  the 
mining  properties  affected  during   that 

"In  the  interim  the  people  who  have 
furnished  the  political  strength  un- 
wittingly, will  become  ac<iuainted  with 
the  real  facts  of  the  wrong  committed, 
taxes  will  in  ju.stlce  be  rebated,  and 
the  law  will  be  repealed,  the  general 
result  being  both  robber  and  robbed 
getting  the  worst  of  it." 
*       *       « 

Mayor  Roland  D.  Haven:  "This  bill 
is  a  damnable  impo.<-tion.  It  is  abso- 
lutely unfair  and  imjust.  I  cannot  see 
how  any  man  with  any  reason  or  fair- 
ness in  his  makeup  could  find  any  pos- 


sible excuse  to  vote  for  the  measure. 
It  Is  purely  a  matter  of  prejudice 
aKaln.■^t  this  section  of  the  state.  It  is 
the  biggest  linpo.sitlon  ever  foisted 
upon   the  people  of  this  state." 

•  •       • 

John      G.    Koss.    clerk    of      municipal 

court:  "It  IS  a  question  in  my  mind 
whether  the  legislature  didn't  play  Into 
the  Stoel  corpoiatlon's  hands  by  passing 
tliis  bill.  Th<  ^rlfe  of  steel  has  drop- 
ped; the  natural  'thing  for  the  Steel 
corporation  to  do  would  be  curtail  pro- 
tiuction. 

"The  corporation  has  iron  mines  in 
Michigan.  They  could  run  the  Michigan 
rjiines  to  their  full  capacity,  and  shut 
down  their  mines  In  Minnesota,  thert-by 
having  to  pav  no  taxes  at  all  in  this 
state.  Result:  Removing  practically 
the  only  source  of  revenue  of  all  tlie 
range  towns,  and  depriving  the  state 
at  largo  of  the  enormous  tax  now  paid 
by  the  iron  companies." 

•  •      • 
Thomas     Olafpon:       "I     believe     that 

evervone  is  entitled  to  a  square  deal. 
bu%  to  my  mind  the  tonnage  tax  is  most 
unjust,  and  if  the  bill  is  passed,  which 
I  cannot  believe  it  will  be.  it  will  do  a 
gr«;al  harm  tt  Duluth  and  St.  Louis 
county." 

•  «  • 
J.  Allyn  Scott:  "It  seems  to  me  in- 
credible that  the  people  in  the  south- 
ern part  of  the  state  should  be  so 
shortsighted  that  they  cannot  see  that 
this  tonnage  tax  bill  will  hold  Minne- 
sota back  from  becoming  one  of  the 
greatest  manufacturing  states  in  the 
Union.  It  hardly  seems  possible  that 
som».  people  have  so  little  pride  In  the 
growth  of  our  state  as  to  desire  a 
moHsure  which  will  discourage  fac- 
tories from  locating  here.  They  ought 
earily  to  see  that  such  factories  would 
create  a  market  for  the  products  of 
t.he   whole   state." 

•  •      • 
Capt.    T.   H.    Pressnell:      "The    United 

State;  ?teel  company  would  Indeed  be 
crazv  to  build  their  great  steel  plant 
in  Duluth  if  this  tonnage  tax  passes 
the  senate  and  becomes  a  law.  They 
would  be  foolish  to  mine  any  more  ore 
.  on  the  range  than  they  are  absolutely 
required  to.  There  are  plenty  of  other 
places  Mhere  they  already  own  fnines, 
and  Just  as  good  as  the  mines  on  the 
range,  too.  I  think  this  so-called  ton- 
nage tax  is  an  outrage  and  a  direct 
slap  at  the  progress  and  advancement 
of  Duluth  and  tlie  rest  of  this  part  of 
the  state." 

•  •  # 
Jay  M.  Smith:  "1  can't  quite  ex- 
press my  opinion  of  the  tonnage  tax 
passed  yesterday  by  the  house.  I  havt. 
never  been  able  to  figure  out  just  why 
the  majority  of  the  representatives 
have  always  been  opposed  to  anything 
that  would  aid  or  benefit  Duluth.  It 
was  the  same  when  I  was  there,  and 
we  always  had  a  great  deal  of  trouble 
in  getting  any  kind  of  a  bill  passed 
that  would  help  this  part  of  the  state 
in  any  way.  The  tax,  should  it  pass 
the  senate  and  become  a  law,  would 
cripple  greatly  the  growth  of  North- 
ern Minnesota,  and  I  am  hoping  that 
the  senate  will  show  better  judgment." 


tainmint  was  given,  under  the  auspices 
of  the  St.  I'atrlck'ti,  <lay  enttirtalnm«-nt. 
Tho  crowd  was  far  greater  than  the 
hall  could  take  care  of,  and  many  were 
dlsiippohitid   by    beInK   turn«.d   away. 

Assl.stanl  County  Attorney  Jamen  i*. 
Boyle's  address  was  the  feature  of 
the  excellent  program.  He  outlined 
the  great  part  the  Irish  race  has 
played  in  the  history  of  Kurope  and 
especially    this    countiy. 

The  little  one-act  comedy.  "That 
Rascal  Pat  '  scored  a  hit  and  whs  re- 
ceived with  much  applause.  It  Is  a 
humorous  little  sketch  and  gave  occa- 
sion  for  many  good  laugh.«. 

The  program  did  not  have  a  dull 
number  from  start  to  finish.  The  lol-' 
lowing  took  part:  Overture.  Prof.  1'. 
\V.  Rieie;  "Tipperary,"  Miss  Emeline 
Brett;  "Erin's  Flag,"  Miss  Effie  Broth- 
erton;  address,  James  P.Boyle;  "Kath- 
leen Mavourneen,'  Miss  Clara  Kenny; 
recitation.  Miss  Mary  Shesgreen; 
"Goodbv,  Sweetheart,  Goodby,  Neil 
Lauermann;  "The  Ould  Land,'  Ollic 
Dignus;  "Top  o'  the  Mornin  Bridget 
McCue,"  Miss  Edith  Cashin;  "tar 
Away,"  Messrs.  Doyle,  Carey  and 
Lauermann. 


Ing  on  the  subject,  the  days  of  the  sa- 
loon   are    numbered    In    Superior. 

It  was  an  open  mening,  and  there 
was  no  lack  of  speakeis.  most  of  whom 
had  few  good  words  lor  the  saloon. 
A  woodsman  who  gave  his  name  as 
H.  Oliver,  suggested  that  If  the  s.i- 
loons  are  to  be  done  Jiway  with,  there 
should  be  some  place  of  amusement 
furnished  for  the  lum  ;>erjack  when  he 
this   town. 

At  the  next  meeting  next  Wednesday 
eveniuK,  the  subject  <jf  discussion  will 
be:  'How  Can  the  Lahorlngman  Build" 
a  Worklngman's  HonK." 


DYNAMITKKS'  FEAST.    . 

Big  Annual  "ExpIo^'O""  Is  Held  by 
the  Famous  Club. 

Another  annual  banquet  of  the  Dy- 
namite club  has  been  held  and  West 
Duluth  today  appears  to  be  none  the 
worse  for  the  convulsions  which  ac- 
companied  it. 

Wade's  hall  was  the  storm  center 
last  evening.  Building  Inspector  Klel- 
ey  looked  the  building  over  this  nriorn- 
ing  and  denies  the  report  that  he  is 
about  to  condemn  it.  He  says  the 
building  will  stand  many  more  Dyna- 
mite   blowouts    without    serious   effects 

The  affair  was  a  most  exclusi-ve  and 
brilliant  one.  It  was  held  behind 
locked  doors,  so  really  very  little  of 
what  took  place  is  known.  However 
all  the  members  assert  it  w-as  a  most 
successful  event.  It  also  leaked  out 
that  High  Chief  Dynamiter  Charles  bil- 
ger  let  loose  a  bunch  of  verbal  fire- 
works that  were  well  worth  the  pow- 
der. All  in  all  It  was  a  glorious  dis- 
play and  one  of  the  largest  evenings 
that  West  Duluth  has  experienced  in 
the  past  twelve  months. 

The  officers  elected  follow:  Cliarles 
SllKer,  chief  dynamiter;  Joseph  Ches- 
tock  vice  chief  dynamiter;  George 
Crulkshank.  secretary;  W  Lovelace, 
treasurer;  James  Sullivan,  C.  B.  F  B.. 
J.  E.  Foublster.  C.  O.  D.;  M.  J.  Filia- 
trault.  E.  D.;  Nels  Willner  J.  D  D; 
E.  D.  Nlckerson,  D.  D.  D.;  H.  Viou 
F  O  D.;  committee  for  next  years 
celebration,  L.  A.  Barnes,  Thomas  foor- 
enson,   W.   B.   Getchell. 


Board  Is  Investigating. 

The  Superior  school  Vioard  has  taken 
up  the  disturbance  wl  Ich  followed  the 
Blaine-Nelson  Dewey  basket  ball  game, 
Monday  night,  and  I.s  investigating  It 
A  normal  school  studtnt  named  O  Nelll 
was  suspended  yesterday,  and  a  Blaine 
student  was  expelled  the  day  before. 
More  suspensions  will  soon  take  place, 
it    is   said. 

4()0  at  Banquet. 

The  Irish-American  banquet  held  last 
evening  in  the  Sacred  Heart  auditori- 
um. Superior,  was  attended  by  40<i 
Irishmen.  W.  D.  Dwyer  of  St.  Paul 
a'ted  as  toastmaster  and  speeches 
were  made  by  a  number  of  Irish-Amer- 
icfiTis    prominent    in    >  orthwest. 

The  following  officers  were  elected r 
IVesident.  W.  P.  Cravrford;  vice  pr-^st- 
dont.  Capt.  John  Monahan;  secreetivy. 
D  J.  Fynn;  treasurer.  J.  J.  Murphy. 
All  are  of  Superior,  ejcept  Capt.  Mona- 
han   ©f    Duluth. 

Charged  Wi'th  Robbery. 

Albert  Brooks  and  Frank  Torr  were 
arreigned  In  the  Si  perior  municipal 
court  yesterday  aftsnioon,  charged 
with  robbing  Mike  Hokovitch  of  ^i' 
while  he  slept  In  a  saloon.  They  are 
held  in  jail  for  trial,  as  neither  could 
raise   the   $300   hail    required. 

•    — 

IIIeKnl  FiMherii  an  CauKht. 
Fergus  F'alls,  Minn.,  March  18. — Dep- 
uty Game  Warden  J.  H.  Jones  swore 
out  complaints  against  Johannes  Haw- 
kinson  and  Fred  McOlure,  who  reside 
in  the  northern  pait  of  the  county, 
charging  them  with  illegal  fishing. 
Hawkinson  failed  to  j»ay  a  fine  and  was 
sent  to  jail  for  thirty  days.  McClure 
had  erected  a  fish  liouse  without  a 
license  and  paid  a  fine  of  $10  and 
costs. 

•— 

Tolwtol    In    .'.gain    III. 
St.  Petersburg,  Maich  18. — Count  Leo 
Tolstoi   is  again   suffering  from   inflam- 
mation of  the  veins  :n  his  leg,  but  his 
condition  is  not   serious. 


HEALTH  INSPECTOR  BUSY. 


Fred  J.  "Voss,  city  treasurer:  "It 
seems  hardly  conceivable  that  the  bill 
will  get  even  as  far  as  Governor  John- 
son, despite  the  fact  that  it  has  passed 
the  house.  It  is  unbelievable  that  so 
grossly  unjust  a  measure  will  pass  both 
branches  of  the  legislature." 

•  •       « 

W.  S.  McCormick.  city  comptroller: 
"The  way  things  are  now,  St.  Louis 
county  is  paying  over  26  per  cent  of 
the  total  state  taxes.  Our  property 
valuations  In  Duluth  are  placed  at  30 
to  55  per  cent  for  taxation  purposes, 
and  In  Southern  Minnesota  they  are  15 
to  2.^  per  cent  for  the  same  purpose.  It 
is  ridiculous  that  men  who  profess  to 
have  any  Intelligence  at  all  should  vote 
for  the  tonnage  bill.  It  is  rankly  un- 
just." 

•  •       • 

Citv  Clerk  H.  W.  Cheadle:  "The  pas. 
sage  of  this  bill  Is  in  line  with  the 
policy  of  the  remainder  of  the  state  to 
at  all  times  give  St.  Louis  county  the 
worst  of  It." 

•  *      * 

C  L.  Rakowsky.  city  assessor:  "I 
hope  to  see  the  bill  killed  in  the  sen- 
ate. In  the  southern  part  of  the  state 
the  people  have  a  feeling  that  Duluth 
Is  owned,  body  and  soul,  by  the  Steel 
corporation,  and  that  our  every  move  Is 
governed  by  the  corporation.  Preju. 

dice  against  this  section  is  so  strong 
that  the  legislators  from  other  parts 
of  the  state  are  willing,  apparently,  to 
stand  for  anything  directed  against  St. 
Louis  county,  no  matter  how  unjust 
or  unfair   it   may   be." 


City  Official  Sets  Out  to  Make  W  est 
Duluth  "Spotless  Town." 

If  the  health  Inspector  has  anything 
to  say  about  it.  West  Duluth  Is  des- 
tined to  become  a  spotless  town. 

A  vigorous  icampaign  Jias  been 
started  against  unsigiitly  alleys,  back- 
yards and  vacant  lots.  It  is  nearing 
spring  house  cleaning  time,  and  the 
health  department  Is  taking  a  whirl 
at  seeing  that  the  city  is  clean. 

In  West  Duluth  the  inspector  started 
to  make  the  rounds  this  week.  He 
goes  from  house  to  house,  and  li  he 
finds  any  rubbish  in  an  alley  or  vacant 
lot,  he  tries  to  locate  the  offender.  At 
cahc  house  he  Instructs  the  resident 
concerning  the  city  ordinance,  requir- 
ing some  sort  of  a  receptacle  for  waste 
and    garbage. y 

EACH  EARNED  ONE  DOLLAR. 

Ladies     of    Baptist     Churth     Tell 
Strange  Experiences  at  Social. 

Irish  wit  ran  rife  last  evening  at  the 
gathering  of  the  West  Dulutli  Baptist 
church  ladies,  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
George  Little,  624  North  Fifty-sixth 
avenue  west.  The  occasion 
Patrick's      day    experience 


CERTIFICATEOF  IliCORl'ORATION 

— OF- 

DILITH.  WINNIPEG  AND  PACIFIC 

RAILROAD  COMPANY. 


J.  J.   Mornn,  405   Central   Ave. 


BRANCH    OFFICES! 


A.    Jennen,    .330    North    B7tb    Ave.    \%'eHt. 


Scbafer*ii    Second    Trial. 

Devils  Lake,  N.  D.,  March  18. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  second  trial 
of  Hartley  A.  M.  Schafer,  recently  con- 
victed of  horse  stealing,  began  here 
today  before  Judge  W.  J.  Kneeshaw. 
Schate-  had  about  ♦^^C00  before  his 
trials  began,  but  the  cost  has  exhaust- 
ed that  amount  and  beggared  some  of 
>is  relatives. 


KJIIed  DlgRlng  a  "WeU. 

Reeder.  N.  D..  March   18.— L.  R.  Hays, 
a   young   man    living   ntar   Wolf    Butte, 

well  known  in  Reeder,  was  killed  in  a 
well  on  the  farm  of  Lewis  Fuhr.  He 
and  his  brother  were  digging  the  well; 
while  at  work  the  top  curbing  col- 
lapsed, falling  to  the  bottom,  striking 
him  on  the  head,  causing  death  in- 
atantly. 


SMALL  FIRE 
IN  FACTORY 

Flames   In   C.  J.  Pet- 

ruschke's  Plant  Quickly 

Checked  by  Firemen. 

Fire  Department  and  Am- 
bulance Are  Called 
at  Same  Time. 


There  was  quite  a  stir  on  Central 
avenue  this  morning  at  a  little  after 
10  o'clock  when  the  fire  teams  went 
racing  down  the  street,  closely  follow- 
ed  by   the   ambulance. 

The  fire  was  at  Charles  Petruschke's 
box  factory,  and  the  ambulance  was 
called  on  account  of  an  accident  at  the 
Zenith  Furnace,  where  an  employe  fell 
and  slightly  Injured  his  back.     He  was 

taken   to  the  hospital. 

The  fire  at  the  box  factory  is 
thought  to  have  started  under  the 
floor  in  the  boiler  room.  The  floor 
was  partially  destroyed  and  the  flames 
worked  from  there  into  the  main  build- 
ing and  Into  the  roof.  No  great  dam- 
age was  done,  excepting  to  the  electri- 
cal apparatus,  which  was  put  out  of 
commission.  Th.ls  will  suspend  opera- 
tions  at  the  plant   for  a   short   time. 

The  fire  department  arrived  in  good 
season  and  checked  the  flames  before 
they  had  gained  much  headway.  After 
the"  fire  had  been  extinguishtd  in  the 
building,  it  was  noticed  that  a  small 
blaze  had  sprung  up  in  the  siwdust  on 
the  roof.  One  soaking  from  the  hose 
put  this  out.  The  roof,  which  Is  of  the 
double  layer  tin,  became  heated  to  a 
high  temperature  from  the  fire  Inside 
the  building,  and  the  sawdust  on  the 
roof    became    Ignited. 

But  a  short  time  before  its  run  to 
the  box  factory,  the  department  was 
called  to  the  home  of  Charles  Hagens, 
434  North  Sixty-first  avenue  west, 
where  sparks  from  the  chimney  had 
set  fire  to  the  roof.  ^The  flames  ate  a 


jood-slzed    hole    through    \he    shingles 
jefore    they    were    put    out. 


MARBLE"  CLOCK 
WAS  CONSUMED 


was  a  St. 
social,  at 
which  each  member,  whether  her  an- 
tecedents were  from  the  Emerald  Isle, 
or  from  Dcutschland,  told  in  Irish 
rhyme  how  she  had  earned  a  dollar  to 
help  pav  for  the  church's  new  furnace. 

The  color,  green,  as  well  as  brogue, 
of  course,  prevailed.  "R's"  were  rolled, 
and  "bulls"  were  made  in  plenty. 
Everv  lady  spoke  her  piece  and  handed 
over  "her  money  in  her  best  Irish  fash- 
ion. 

In  every  respect  the  entertainment 
was  a  complete  success.  Every  one 
had  at  least  |1.  and  some  more,  and  the 
party  was  well  attended.  Over  f50  was 
raised  for  the  new  heater. 

Some  of  the  rhymes  were  most  amus- 
ing. They  told  of  rug  beatings,  but- 
ton sewing,  and  shoe  shines.  In  order 
to  raise  money  for  the  church  furnace 
one  woman  tended  her  home  furnace, 
so  it  is  said,  until  her  husband  was 
forced  to  wear  his  overcoat  constantly 
while  indoors. 


John  Cashin  Saw  Un- 
canny Sight  tn  St. 
Patrick's  Night 

John  Cashin  of  629  North  Fifty- 
eighth  avenue  west,  at  an  early  hour 
this  morning  saw  his  dining  room 
mantel  clock  suddenly  burst  into 
flames.      Mr.    Cashin   says   It    gave   him 

an  uncanny  feeling  in  the  region  of 
tlie    spine. 

How  a  Are  could  have  started  in  a 
clock,  apparently  made  of  massive 
marble,  placed  on  a  high  mantel,  and 
without  a  spark  of  fire  nearer  than 
the  kitchen  stove,  Is  a  mystery,  and 
doubly  so  when  It  is  considered  that  it 
occurred  after  midnight,  when  Mr. 
Cashin  had  Just  returned  from  attend- 
ing the  St.  Patrick's  day  entertainment 
In  the  Great  Eastern  hall.  Mr.  Cashin 
claims  not  to  be  over-superstitious, 
but  he  is  seriously  inclined  to  believe 
that  there  was  something  supernatural 
about    the   burning   of   that   clock. 

He  had  come  into  the  house  and 
passed  through  the  dining  room,  where 
the  clock  stood  peacefully  ticking 
away,  to  get  a  bucket  of  coal.  On  his 
returh  the  dining  room  was  suddenly 
Hooded  with  a  burst  of  light,  which 
was  dazzling,  and  before  his  eyes  his 
clock,  all  but  the  metal  parts,  went 
up  in  smoke.  Even  though  It  is  ad- 
mitted that  the  supposed  marble  was 
only  celluloid,  there  still  Is  something 
mighty  strange  about  the  Incident. 
Mr.  Cashin  played  the  fireman  as  soon 
as  he  regained  his  wits,  and  when  he 
had  the  blaze  out  he  put  on  his  coat 
and  raced  to  the  fire  hall  as  If  he  were 
chased  by  evil  spirits.  Capt.  Mahan 
went  back  to  the  house  with  him  and 
arrived  just  In  time  to  hear  the  old 
clock  tick  Its  last  trembling  tick.  It 
died   at   12:40   O'clock. 


Birthday  Party. 

The  members  of  the  Second  Nor- 
wegian-Danish M.  E.  church  will  have 
an  opportunity  to  tell  their  correct 
ages  Saturday  evening  at  a  birthday 
social  to  be  held  at  the  church.  Each 
person  attendhlng  the  social  will  be 
expected  to  donate  a  penny  for  each 
year    of   his   life. 

Mayor  ^^  ill  Speak. 

Mayor  Haven  has  accepted  an  in- 
vitation to  speak  Saturday  evening  at 
a  social  to  be  given  by  the  congrega- 
tion of  Our  Savior's  Norwegian  Luth- 
eran church  of  West  Duluth.  It  is 
believed  that  he  will  take  the  oppor- 
tunity then  afforded  to  prove  that  he  is 

holding   the    "lid"   down   to   the    best   of  .    - 

his    ability.      The    different    societies    of    rights. franchises    and 
the  church  recently  have  been   criticis- 
ing the  way  the  liquor  law  has  been  en- 
forced  in   Duluth. 


West  Duluth  Briefs. 

Miss  Sarah  Bright,  daughter  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  C.  E.  Bright,  Sixty-first  ave- 
nue west  and  Raleigh  street,  has  re- 
turned to  her  home  in  West  Duluth, 
after  an  eight  months'  trip  in  the  West. 
While  she  was  away  she  visited  Hono- 
lulu. 

Gibson's  fruit  tablets  and  bitter 
sweets  at  Olander's  drug  store,  Fifty- 
seventh   and   Grand. 

The  funeral  of  Selma  Hill,  the  16- 
year-old  daughter  of  Charles  Hill,  who 
died  in  Finland  of  tuberculosis,  will 
take  place  Sunday  afternoon  from  the 
Pine  Hill  church,  at  Midway,  with  in- 
terment  at  Pine  Hill  cemetery. 

For  Rent — Furnished  room:  modern, 
with  gas.  620  North  Fifty-eighth 
avenue    west. 

The  funeral  of  Pearl  L.  Borgetrom. 
who  died  Tuesday  evening  will  take 
place  Saturday  afternoon  a\  3  o'clock, 
rfom  the  Third  Swedish  Baptist  church, 
with    Interment    at    Oneota    cemetery. 

Only  practice  games  were  played 
last  evenipg  at  the  Western  Curling 
rink. 

The  trustees  of  the  West  Duluth 
Baptist  church  have  given  the  contract 
for  a  new  hot  air  furnace  '  for  the 
church. 

Watch    repairing.    Hurst.    "W.    Duluth 


ERIN'S  SONS  CELEBRATE. 


Big  Crowd  Attends  the  St.  Patrick's 
Day  Entertainment. 

Even  standing  room  could  not  be 
had  last  evening  at  the  Great  Eastern 
hall,  where  the  St.  Patrick's  day  enter- 


"EXPERIENCE  SOCIAL.  * 


Laboringnien  (Jive  Views  on  Saloon 
Question  at  Mission. 

A    laboringmens    "experience    social" 
held    last    evening    at    the    Supe- 


was 

rior  Mission,  In  order  to  get  expres- 
sion of  the  men's  Idea  of  the  movement 
In  Superior  to  do  away  with  the  sa- 
loons. 

It  was  a  big  meeting,  fully  325  men 
being  present.  If  the  sentiments  ex 
pressed  last  evening  can  be  consid- 
ered a  fair  sample  of  the  general  feel- 


KNOW  ALL  MEN  BY  THESE  PRES- 
ENTS, That  we,  whose  names  are  here- 
unto subscribed,  ha-e  agreed  to  and 
do  hereby  associate  ourselves  together 
under  the  Constitution  and  General 
Laws  of  the  State  of  Minnesota,  and 
more  particularly  under  Chapter  58  ot 
the  Revised  Laws  of  iy05,  of  said  State, 
and  the  laws  amendatory  thereol  and 
supplementary  thereto,  as  a  railw-ay 
corporation,  under  the  name  and  for 
the  purposes  hereinafter  set  forth,  and 
to  that  end  do  hereby  adopk  this  Cer- 
tificate and  the  following  Articles  of 
Incorporation: 

ARTICLE  I. 
The  name  of  this  corporation  shall 
be,  and  is  hereby  declared  to  be. 
"DULl'TH.  WINNIPICG  AND  PACIFIC 
BAILUOAD  COMPANY.  '  and  the  gen- 
eral nature  of  its  business  shall  be  that 
of  a  railroad  compaiy  In  the  State  of 
Minnesota,  including  the  locaiion,  con- 
struction, acciuisilion,  maintenance, 
equipment  and  operation,  for  hire  or 
reward,  of  a  line  o-  lines  of  railway 
within  the  State  ol  Minnesota  for 
freight  and  passengers,  commencing  at 
or  near  the  City  o:'  Virginia,  in  the 
County  of  St.  Louis,  in  said  State,  and 
extending  in  a  gf-nerally  southerly  or 
southeasterly  direct!  jn  to  and  into  the 
head  waters  of  Lake  Superior,  and  1  or 
to  and  Into  the  St.  Ljuis  River,  and  |  or 
to  into  and  or  through  the  City  of  Du- 
luth, Minnesota,  tog<ther  with  any  and 
all  such  branches  and  connecting  lines, 
spurs  and  spur  tracUs.  side  tracks  and 
.ewltches  anywhere  in  the  State  of 
Minnesota  as  the  E:oard  of  Directors 
of  said  corporation  may  from  time  to 
time  deem  needful,  advantageous  or 
advisable,  and  toge  her  with  and  in- 
cluding the  construe. ion,  acquisition  by 
purchase,  lease  or  otherwise,  main- 
tenance, operation  for  hire  or  reward. 
and  equipment  of  £.11  such  terminals, 
freight  yards,  coal  yards,  warehouses, 
wharves,  docks,  dtpots,  car  houses, 
machine  shops,  plant,  machinery  and 
appliances,  telegrapri  and  telephone 
lines  and  plants,  and  such  buildings 
and  terminals  and  facilities  as  may 
from  time  to  time  be  deemed  needful, 
advantageous  or  advisable  In  connec- 
tion with  the  business  of  said  corpora, 
tlon.  And  it  is  furl  her  declared  to  be 
appurtenant  to  and  part  of  the  powers 
and  business  of  this  corporation  to 
consolidate  with  or  take  by  lease,  pur- 
chase, or  in  any  wa>  become  the  owner 
of,  or  control  or  hold.  In  whole  or  any 
part,  from  time  to  lime,  and  to  com- 
plete, maintain,  equ  p  and  operate,  for 
hire  or  reward,  the  property,  under-- 
taking.  ritrhts,  franchise!?  and  powers 
of  any  railroad  company  whenever  the 
road  of  this  company  and  the  road  of 
such  other  compan  /  can  be  lawfully 
connected  and  operf.ted  together,  with 
or  without  branches,  and  wherever  the 
line  of  such  other  railroad  company 
or  part  thereof  may  extend  within  the 
State  of  Minnesota,  and  to  acquire  by 
purchase,  or  in  an;-  way  become  the 
owner  of,  or  contro:  or  hold.  In  whole 
or  part,  from  time  to  time,  the  capital 
stock,  bonds,  debentures,  or  other  se- 
curities of  any  such  railroad  company, 
and  this  corporaticn  may  make  any 
lawful  consolidation  with,  or  lease, 
sale,  conveyance  oi  ether  disposition 
of  the  whole  or  any  part,  from  time  to 
time,     of       its       property,     undertaking. 

powers  to  any 
such  railroad  comp.my.  The  definite 
location  and  selection  of  said  line  or 
lines  of  railway  and  such  branches  and 
connecting  lines,  spirs  and  spur  tracks, 
sidetracks  and  switches,  freight  yards, 
coal  vards.  warehoufies.  docks,  wharves, 
depots,  car  housec.  machine  shops, 
plants,  machinery,  appliances-,  tele- 
graph and  telephone  lines  and  plants, 
buildings.  termina  s  and  facilities, 
shall  hereafter  be  made,  determined 
and  established  by  the  board  of  direc- 
tors of  this  corporal  Ion.  and  it  shall  be 
legal  and  witliin  the  authority  of  these 
articles  for  such  board  of  directors  to 
cause  any  work  of  construction  under 
the  authority  of  these  articles  to  be 
commenced  at.  and'<;arried  on  from  any 
point  or  points,  aid  If  thought  ex- 
pedient, to  obtain,  on  such  terms  as 
may  be  agreed  on,  the  right,  from  time 
to  time,  10  run  locomotives  and  cars 
of  this  corporation  over  any  other  lines 
of  railway,  and  to  give  to  any  rail- 
way company,  from  time  to  time,  on 
such  terms  as  may  be  agreed  on,  the 
right  to  run  locomc  lives  and  cars  over 
the  lines  of  this  corporation. 

The  principal  pi  ice  of  transacting 
the  business  of  this  corporation  shall 
be,  and  is  hereby  declared  to  be.  In  the 
Citv  of  Duluth,  C'juniy  of  St.  Louis 
and  State  of  Minnesota,  wherein  the 
head  office  of  this  corporation  shall  be 
kept,  but  the  operations  of  the  com- 
pany mav-  be  dlre<ted  from  Virginia. 
Minnesota,  or  elseA'here.  and  it  may 
have  such  branch  offices,  either  within 
or  without  the  State  of  Minnesota,  as 
the  Board  of  Direc  ors  may  from  time 
to  time  determine.  ,  _  „ 
ARTICLE  II. 
The  period  of  duration  of  this  cor- 
poration sliall  be  one   thousand   (1,000) 

^"^•■'-  ARTICLE    in. 

The  names  and  places  of  residence 
of  the  persons  foiming  this  associa- 
tion for  the  purpose  of  incorporation 
are   as   follows: 

Wirt  H.  Cook,  J.  L.  Washburn.  J.  F. 
Walsh.  L.  I.  Feetham  and  W.  D.  Bailey, 
ail  residing  in  Duluth,  St.  Louis  County, 
Minnesota. 

ARTICLE  IV. 

The  government  of  this  corporation 
and  the  conduct  and  management  of  its 
affairs  is  hereby  vested  in  a  board  of 
directors,  who  shi.ll  be  stockholders, 
and.  except  as  he -eln  provided,  shall 
be  elected  by  the  stockholders  at  their 
annual  meeting,  to  be  held  on  the  sec- 
ond Tuesdav  In  January  in  each  year, 
and  who  shall  thereafter  elect  from 
their  own  number  a  President,  and  one 
or  more  Vice  Presidents;  they  shall 
al&o  elect  a  eecretury  and  a  treasurer. 


who  may  or  may  not  be  directors,  and 
they  may  create  such  other  offices 
and  elect  or  appoint  such  other  officers 
as  they  may  think  necessary.  The 
Board  of  Directors  may  from  time  to 
time  appoint  from  their  number  an 
executive  committee,  who  shall  have 
.'-uch  powers  and  duties  as  the  said 
board  of  directors  may  from  time  to 
lime  confer  upon  them.  The  number 
of  the  board  of  directors  shall  in  the 
llrst  place  be  five,  but  such  number 
may  be  increased  from  time  to  time  to 
any  number  not  contrary  to  law,  at 
any  annual  meeting  or  special  meeting 
called  for  the  purpose  by  vote  of  stock- 
holders holding  not  less  than  two- 
thirds  (2-3)  of  the  outsianding  stock 
of  this  corporation,  and  the  number 
may,  in  .similar  manner,  be  decreased 
from  time  to  time  to  any  number  not 
contrarv  to  law.  The  directors  to  fill 
tin.'  number  as  increased  may  be  elected 
at  thf  meeting  at  which  the  increase 
Is  made,  or  may  be  appointed  by  the 
board  to  hold  office  until  the  next  an- 
nual meeting,  or  until  their  successors 
are   elected. 

The  first  annual  meeting  of  this 
corporation  shall  be  held  at  Duluth, 
.Minnesota,  on  the  second  Tuesday  In 
January.  19U»,  and  until  such  time, 
and  until  directors  shall  have  been 
elected  ai  said  meting,  and  shall  have 
(luallfled.  the  following  persons  shall 
constitute  t*e  iKJard  of  directors  of 
this  corporation,  to-wit: 

Wirt    H.   Cook,   J.   L.    Washburn.   J.   F. 
Walsh,  L.  1    Feetham  and  W.  D.  Bailey. 
And     untn     such     annual     meeting     is 
held    and    ihf    directors    thereat    chosen 
shall    elect    the    President.    Vice    Presi- 
dent,      Secretary       or      other      officers, 
as     hereinbefore     provided,     and     until 
such    officers    shall       have       >)*>en     duly 
elected     and     qualified,     tlie     officers    of 
this  cf>rporation  shall  be  as  follows: 
Wirt   H.  Cook.   President. 
J.   L.    Washburn.  Vice   President. 
W.    D.    Bailey,    Secretary. 
L.  I.   Feetham,  Treasurer. 
The     President,     Vice     President     and 
directors    of    this    corporation,     except 
those   above  designated    to  act   as   such, 
shall    hold    office    for    a    period    of    one 
year,    or    until      their      successors    are 
elected    and    qualified,    and    In     case    a 
vacancy    occurs    In    any    of    the    <ifflces 
or   in    the   membership   of   the    board   of 
directors   of    this  corporation,  the   same 
shall  be  filled  by  the  board  of  directors 
until    the    next      annual      meeting,    and 
until    such    vacancies    have    been    filled 
by    election     held     In     accordance    with 
these     articles     and     such     by-laws     as 
shall    be    adopted.      Provided,    however, 
that    any    President.    Vice    President    or 
director  may  be  removed  from  office  by 
resolution    passed  at   a  special   meeting 
of     shareholders     called     for     the     pur- 
pose,   and     a    successor    or    successors 
mav  be  appointed  by  such  resolutions. 

Stockholders,  either  in  person  or  by 
proxy,  representing  a  majority  of  the 
slock  of  the  corporation  which  has 
been  issued  shall,  until  otherwise, 
from  time  to  time,  provided  by  by-law, 
constitute  a  quorum  In  the  meetings  of 
the  stockholders,  and  each  share  of 
stock  shall  entitle  the  holder  to  one 
vote,  and  a  majority  of  all  votes  cast 
shall  be  necessary  and  sufficient  to  the 
determination  of  any  question  before 
such  meeting,  except  as  herein  other- 
wise provided.  Provided  always,  tliat 
if  a  majority  of  the  issued  stock  be 
not  present  or  represented  at  a  meet- 
ing, such  meeting  may  be  adjourned 
from  time  to  time  and  from  place  to 
place  by  vote  of  the  majority  of  the 
stock  which  Is  present  or  represented 
thereat. 

The  board  of  directors  of  this  cor- 
poration shall  adopt  such  rules,  regu- 
lations and  by-laws  not  Inconsistent 
with  these  articles  or  with  the  con- 
stitution and  laws  of  the  State  of  Min- 
nesota, as  it  may  deem  needful  for  tlie 
government  of  the  officers  and,cwndu<t 
of  the  affairs  of  this  corporation,  in- 
cluding its  own  proceedings  and  meet- 
ings and  the  quorum  thereat,  and  may 
create  and  fill  such  offices,  in  addition 
to  those  herein  provided,  as  may  from 
time  to  time  be  deemed  necessary  and 
advantageous  for  the  conduct  of  the 
business  of  this  corporation,  and  shall 
fill  any  vacancies  at  any  time  It  may 
deem  necessary,  and  may  abolish  and 
discontinue  offices  so  created  at  will. 

The  board  of  directors  is  hereby 
authorized  from  time  to  tim*-.  and  Is 
herebv  charged  with  tlie  duty  of  taking 
all  such  steps,  and  Instituting  all  such 
proceedings,  passing  all  such  rules  and 
resolutions  as  the>-  may  think  exped- 
ient for  the  proper  and  effectual  ex- 
ecution of  the  purposes  of  this  cor- 
poration. Including  the  borrowing  of 
money  and  the  Issuance  of  promissory 
notes!  bills,  acceptances.  debentures, 
debenture  stock,  bonds  and  obligations 
of  this  corporation,  and  securing  I'le 
same  or  any  of  them  upon  the  whole 
or  parts,  from  time  to  lime,  of  lis  prop- 
erty, rights,  powers  and  franchises  ac- 
(lulVed  or  thereafter  to  be  acquired  by 
mortgage,  trust  deed,  debentures  or 
otherwise. 

ARTICLE  V. 
The  amount  of  the  capital  stock  of 
this  corporation  shall  be  One  Hundred 
Thousand  Dollars  ($100,000.00).  and  the 
same  shall  be  paid  In  as  called  for  by 
the  board  of  directors.  The  capital 
stock  of  this  corporation  Is  divided  into 
<me  thousand  (1.000)  shares  of  the  par 
value  of  One  Hundred  Dollars  <|100) 
each. 

ARTICLE  VI. 
Thp  highest  amount  of  indebtedness 
or  liability  to  which  this  corporation 
shall  at  any  time  be  subject  Is  the  sum 
of  Ten  Millions  of  Dollars  ($10,000,- 
000.00  V 

IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF.  We  have 
hereunto  set  our  hands  and  seals  this 
ICth  day  of   March.  A.  D.   1909. 

WIRT  H.  COOK.  (Seal) 

J.    L.    WASHBURN.      (Seal) 
.1.    F.   WALSH. 
I.   I.   FEETHAM. 
W.    D.    BAILEY. 
Signed.  Sealed  and  delivered 
in  presence  of: 
C.   M    VAN   NORMAN. 
F.   M.    lOMANUELSON. 


(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 


Stale  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 

On  this  ir.th  day  of  March.  A.  D.  1909, 
before  me,  a  Notary  Public  within  and 
for  said  county,  jiersonally  appeared 
Wirt  II.  Cook.  J.  1..  Washburn.  J.  P. 
Walsh,  L.  I.  FeetJ'am  and  W.  D. 
Ballev.  to  me  known  to  be  the  persons 
described  In,  and  who  executed  the 
foregoing  Certificate  of  Incorporation, 
and  they  acknowledged  that  they  ex- 
ecuted the  same  as  their  free  act  and 
deed. 

F.  M.  EMANUELSON, 

Notary   Public, 
St.  Louis  County,  Minn. 
(Notarial  Seal,  St.  Louis  County.  Minn.) 

Mv  commission  explreu  March  11, 
1912" 


State     of     Minnesota.     Department     of 

State. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument was  filed  for  rcord  In  this 
office  on  the  I7th  day  of  Msrcb.  A.  D. 
1909.  at  9  o'clock  A.  M.,  and  was  duly 
recorded  in  Book  R-3  of  Incorporations, 
on  page  — . 

JULIUS  A.  SCHMAHL. 

Secretary   of  State. 


OFFICE  OF  REGISTER   OF  DEEDS. 
State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 
— ss. 

1    hereby    certify    that    the    within    In- 
strument   was    filed    In    this    office    for 
record    March    IS.    1909.    at    9:30    A.    M. 
and    was    duly    recorded    in    Book    9    of 
Misc..    page    438. 

M.  C.  PALMER,  t 

Register  of  DeeQs. 
By  THOS.  CLARK. 

Deputy. 


CHICHESTER'S  PILLS 

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SOLD  BY  DRUGGISTS  EVERYMlEa 


OLD  SORES  CURED 


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COMPUTE  MOSmdOSIBRS 


A& 


SccndAvtEniMSt 


IVc  Trusf  Vou 

Don't  he»ltatt>  to  ask  us 
for  crodit — It's  a  pleasure  to 
grant,  it. 

Our  diKnifiod  rr»^dit  torms 
are  so  fa.-:y  and  satisfactory 
that  no  ouf  not^d  j?o  without 
a  well  furnished  home.  Come 
in  and  let's  talk  it  over. 


Your  Spring  Needs 

Why    not    take    advantage 
of    our    HlK      Sprlnj?      Sale    to 

supply  yourself  with  the 
spring?  needs  in  hou.sefi/f'nish- 
ings  whieh  you  know  you 
must  have  soon.  Dt-liveries 
made  later.  If  desired. 


Look  at  This  Stove 

For  Only  $2^.75 


/>^^^S^i 


The  Greatest  Stove  Value  Ever 
Offered  Anywliere 

Compare  it  with  anything  else  !n  town  under  $40.  We 
want  you  to  investigate  this  proposition  and  make  your  own 
decision. 

This  stove  is  made  of  polished  steel  of  good  weight — (not 
sheet  iron) — has  a  key-plate  top;  six  holes;  hot  blast  fire  box 
with  removable  duplex  grates  for  coal  or  wood;  pouch  feed; 
fr«>nt  draft;  removable  ash  pan;  oven  thernmmeter  buUt  right 
In  the  oven  door;  oven  bottom  Is  braced  making  it  impossible 
to  buckle;    and    the   stove    is   a.^tbestos   lined   throughout. 

Tliis  stove  has  a  high  back  and  enclosed  warming  closet 
as  shown  in  cut;  is  beautifully  trimmed  with  white  silver 
nickel    plating;   and   is  thoroughly   well   made   and    tinished. 

We  want  vou  to  .see  this  range  before  you  buy;  if  you  can 
beat    it   for    $24.75.    we've   nothing    more   to   say. 

Dining  Room  Furniture  Bargains 

Just  now  our  big  spring  sale  is  offering  you  many  attrac- 
tive propositions  in  furniture  and  housefurnij#»ings;  but  W3 
especially  want  to  call  y  >ur  attention  to  our  dining  room 
furniture — it  will  do  your  soul  good  to  see  our  spl-ndid  line 
and  it  will  do  your  i>ocketbi»oks  good  to  partake  of  some  of 
the  bargains;  we  mention  a  few  items: 

$34  Table  $23.75 

This  is  a  genuine  Hast- 
ings dining  table,  almost  ex- 
actly like  cut  except  that  the 
pede.-tal  is  perfectly  plain 
save  for  the  roll  design  at 
the  bottom.  It  is  made  of 
.selected  quarter  .sawed  oak, 
In  the  beautiful  dark  hued 
Early  English  finish;  it  has 
the  ma.^sive  claw  feet  aa 
shown:  large  8-lnch  dividing 
pedestal  with  the  celebrated  Ha.'^tlngs  clamp  which  holds  it 
snugly  together  wht-n  closed;  six-foot  extension — wide  44-in.-h 
top.        A  good  $34.00  value —  C9^    7*5 

for  only 4'^*/.  I  «/ 

Special  Sale  of  Dining  Chairs 

$4.00   DIXIXC;   CHAIK — Genuine   quarter  sawed   oak:    hand- 
some  golden  tinish;    wide   panel   back;    box  seat   covered   with 
genuine  No.    1   leather:   curved   French   leg.s;   a 
very   desirable   chair,   going   at    


.$2.25 


$2.50   DIXIXG  C'H.MR — .«?olid    oak;    golden   finish;   cane   .seat: 
high  and  prettily  clesigned  back;   extra  strong  C^    hQ 

and   well   made:    sale   price    ."r * •  ^*^ 

Sideboards,  China  Closets  and  Buffets 

We  are  offering  so  many  bargains  in  these  pieces  that  we 

can  only  quote  a  few   prices  here: 

$27.50  Cwoldf-n  Oak  Sideboard, 
with    plate   rail:    for    .  .  .  .$1«.50 

$22  Solid  CJolden  Oak  Sideboard, 
with  l-Yench  plate  mirror; 
for     $13.88 

$:»,0  .Sf>lid  fiohlen  Oak  Sideboard, 
with  Fi-eiieh  plate  mirror^ 
for     $18.95 

.S2H  Haiulsonie  Anierietin  Oak 
.sidi'board.  with  lYencli  p^ate 
mirror;    for    $17.73 


;,.'//////yi''^''' 


•VW^WWj 


'-^IW^WW'i 


VT 


h 


II 


J'O 


i^/Srp, 


,.^i 


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$27.50  Buffet — genuine  qiiar- 
terejf  golden  oak.  with  Fren<-h 
plate  mirror,  for $18.50 

$::5  lUiflet — quartered  oak  — 
tlarly  Kn<;Iish  tinish,  with 
French  plale  mirror,  for  $19.00 
$I2..>0  Buffet — quartered  oak — 
F^arly  English  fini.sh,  with 
l-"^vneh  plate   mirri>r.   for   $25.00 

931>.00  China  C\tm*i,  quartered  onk|  early  Knglinh  flninh  .S::il.75 
9'J5.m>  China  (luHet.  (|unrterf<l  onk.  early  KnKlI.<«h  AnUh .  .915..'>0 
•  IS.IW  ChioN   C'luMCt,  quartered  unk;  koIiIpu  flninh %\"XtQ 


The  Big 

^tore 

Gives  Vou 

1  'red  it 


The  Big 

iStore 

Sives  You 

Mtnie  V 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


INDEPENDENT  STEEl ) 
MERGER  REPORTED  TO 
BE  COMING-PAY  GUT 

Gates  Mentioned  as  Backer  of  Project  to 
Amalgamate  Rivals  of  Steel  Corporation. 

Cambria  Company  Announced  a  Ten  Per 
Cent  Reduction  in  Salaries  of  Employes. 

Iron  and  Steel  Employes  Protest  Against 
Tariff  Bill-Review  Notes  Improvement. 


Cleveland,  March  18. — The  Iron  Trade 
Il-iview  says  today:  A  very  coinfort- 
abl..'  amount  of  new  business  is  being 
received  by  the  steel  inill.s,  and  prices 
are  for  the  most  part  being  well  maln- 
tairud  At  Chicago,  the  leading  in- 
terest received  well  distributed  onlers 
amounting  to  32.000  t.>ns.  the  largest 
amount  lor  any  week  in  the  last 
eighteen  months.  Buyers  of  all  kinds 
>)i  machinery  are  urging  reductions  in 
prices  ,and  some  manufacturers  are 
yielding  to  the  pressure.  Some  very 
low  prices  are  being  made  on  fabricat- 
ed steel,  but  the  price  of  the  plain 
material  seems  to  b.*  maintained.  The 
closing  of  nine  plants  having  high 
production  costs  seems  inevitable.  The 
Eastern  district  of  the  Amalgamated 
association  has  declined  to  accept  re- 
ductions in  wage  sch-.-dules  and  strikes 
may  result.  Allliotigli  no  additional 
orders  fur  iron  ore  have  been  placed, 
s  mie  of  the  imT)ortant  consumers  have 
made  reSfrvaiions  with  the  under- 
standing that  orders  will  be  placed 
as  soon  as  prices  are  announced,  and 
It  is  estimated  that  the  shipments  this 
year  will  exceed  bv  about  4,000, uo  ■ 
tons  those  of  last  year.  I^adlnf(.  or-* 
interests  are  strongly  opposed,  to  any 
ti-flijction    of    ore    prions. 

'i'he  pig  iron  market  is  extremely 
dull,  the  only  activity  being  sliov.'n 
ill  New  England,  where  about  •_'.'>  ooo 
tons  iiave  been  purchased.  Price."?  ar-i 
•  Inclining  and  sale.s  are  beintj  made  at 
$H.r.",  Birmingham,  tor  Xo.  2.  wli'.' ; 
lepoits  of  even  lower  prices  for  the 
SouUiern  product  are  current.  No'th- 
ern    prices    also    show    distre.ss. 

There  is  considerable  activity  In 
stru"tural    iron. 

The  dentand  for  sheets  has  improved 
in  tln»  West,  but  there  Is  some  sliailing, 
especially  on  the  corrugated  pr<»duct. 
The  i'arnegle  .Steel  company  has  ma<Ie 
a  second  contract  for  steel  wheels  for 
a  Chicago  traction  Interest,  which.  In- 
cluding a  previ.)us  contract,  calls  for 
about  .lO.OJO  wheels.  The  same  com- 
pany bus  also  contracted  with  the 
I'eiiusylvaiiia  railroad  for  10,000  steol 
win-els. 

Specifications  on  steel  bar  contracts 
are  improving  and  th«.*  price  of  |1.2i> 
Pittsburg  is  being  adiiered  to.  Bar  iron 
is  (1'jU  and  prices  are  very  irr*>gular. 
.As  low  as  $1.3;">  IS  being  quoted  at  New 
York  and  Chicago.  No  change  has  been 
made  in  prices  of  wire  products  and 
sales   are   not   large. 

A  furnace  lnter»»st  has  contracted  for 
70,000  tons  of  coke  for  six  months'  re- 
quirements, beginning  with  April  and 
a  Noith'^rn  Ohio  furnace  Is  in  the  mar- 
ket   for   its   reiiuirenients. 


Mnrr   WaKo    Iteiliietion. 

Johnstown,  I'x..  Marcli  is — The  Cam- 
bria .Steel  conspany.  which,  when  in  full 
activity,  employs  H.OOO  men.  yesterday 
announced    a    10    per   cent    reduction    in 


wages,  to  take  effect  April  1.  Tlie  fol- 
lowing notice  is  posted  in  the  plant: 

"On  account  of  the  recent  sharp  de- 
cline In  the  market  prices  of  the  com- 
pany's products  following  the  long 
continued  business  dcprt-ssion.  it  be- 
comes necessary  to  annotmce  a  reduc- 
tion in  salaries  and  wages  averaging 
10  per  cent  to  take  effect  on  and  after 
April    1.   1009. 

"The  reduction  will  affect  all  em- 
ployes, from  tlie  liigliest  to  the  lowest. 
There  is  a  general  expectation  tiiat  this 
reduction  will  enable  the  concern  to 
take  business  it  could  not  accept  witii 
a  profit  under  the  old  rates,  and  that 
increasoti  activity  will   be  the  result." 


Ind<*pen<leu(.H   In  .Mergr. 

Pittsburg.  I'a.,  March  1«.-  That  an 
effort  is  l>eing  made  to  consolidate  most 
of  tlie  larger  indeix-ndcnt  steel  com- 
patiics  of  the  country  into  one  l>ig  con- 
cern which  would  rival  the  I'nited 
States  Steel  cori)oration  In' si/.»'  and  in 
inlUnoice,  is  confirmed  li«re  through  a 
stiHl  manufacturer,  appioai'hed  in  re- 
gard to  his  connection  With  the  new 
ciouern.  The  name  of  .Jobn-  W.  dates 
is  used  In  connection  with  tlie  project 
as  a  backer.  Tlu?  plan  of  consolidation 
li.id  been  broached  to  J.  Pi  Morgan, 
who  declined.  Concerns  which,  it  Is 
said,  are  to  form  the  nuclelis  for  the 
new  consolidation,  are  the  Jones  & 
L.iughlin  Steel  company,  the  l«acka- 
wanna  .Steel  company,  the  Bethlehem 
Steel  ci>mpany.  the  PeniiHylvania  Sled 
company,  the  AVIaryland  Steel  company, 
the  l-aoelle  Steel  company  and  the  In- 
ternational Steel   coiiiriany.      ' 


IIONtilr  4u    I'Mrlir  Hill. 

Washington.  March  18. — The  work- 
ingmen  ot  the  country  employed  In  the 
iron  and  steel  trades  view  with  alarm 
the  Paj  Tie  tariff  bill,  according  to  a 
statement  Issued  here  by  Vice  Pri'Sl- 
dent  Lewis  and  John  Williams  of  Pitts- 
burg, secretary-treasurer  of  the  Amal- 
gamated Assoi^iation  of  Iron,  Steel  and 
Tin  Workers  of  North  America.  The 
statement   follows; 

"The  tariff  1)111  presents  so  many 
and  drastic  reductions  in  the  Iron  and 
steel  schedules,  as  to  be  viewed  witli 
alarm  by  the  workingmep  employed 
in  those  lnd\i.stries  included  in  the  iron 
an<I  .steol  schedule,  and  other  Indnslrie.s 
dependent  thereon,  especially  at  this 
time,  f-^ilowing  a  long  period  <>f  depres- 
sion, with  hundreds  of  thousands  ot 
American  workmen  Idlft  a^id  actually 
asking  tor  bread.  The  bill  as  present- 
ed literally  liatids  them  a  stone.  Km- 
I>loye.s  of  American  tin  plate  mills  will 
strenuously  oppose  tlie  recomnu'iiila- 
ti<jn  in  the  bill  on  the  drawback  fea- 
ture, as  applied  to  the  tin  plate,  as 
they  believe  they  should  s»-ciire  the 
work  now  done  In  Wales  and  Imported 
luider  the  provisions  of  the  drawback 
feiture. 

"We  are  satisfled  that  there  will  be  a 
universal  protest  against  tiie  sweeping 
reductions  included  in  this  Ijill,  hence 
we  rerjaest  the  consideration  of  each 
and  every  item,  to  the  end  that  Ameri- 
lan  workmen  shall  be  protected  in  tlieir 
labor.  " 


MOVING  PICTURES  OF 
"BEN  HUR"  ENJOINED 


he  fell  while  hurrying  across  the  track 
to  catch  a  train.  Although  In  great 
pain,   he  made  the  train  and  came  home. 


OHE  DAY  AFTER 
THE  WILD  IRISH 

ROSES  BLOOMED 


New  York,  Marcli  1». — .^t.  Patrick's 
memory  was  honored  by  a  parade 
which  surjjassed  any  similar  effort  In 
the     past.       More     than     40.000     persons 

were  in  line,  including  members  of 
about  200  organisations.  The  line  of 
paiade.  more  tlian  six  miles  long,  was 
lined   with  entliusiastlc  spectators. 


Brooklyn.  N.  V. — March  18. — Brook- 
lyn had  a  St.  Patrick's  day  celebration 
all  its  own  which  came  near  eclipsing 
ilie  .Manliattan  event.  Thirty  thousand 
men  were  in  the  long  line  of  twenty 
divisions. 


Washington.  March  IS.— "Ke.solved. 
That  vv»'  symi>atliize  with  those  lovers 
of  freedom  who  are  struggling  for 
home  rule  and  the  great  cause  of  local 
self-government  In  Ireland."  This  is 
the  St.  Patrick's  resolution  whicli  Uep- 
resentative  Edwards  of  Oeorgia  intro- 
duced in  the  house  yeslei'day. 


REUNION  OF 
WAR  VETERANS 

Fifteenth  Minnesota  Will 

Meet  in  Minneapolis 

March  27. 

The  tenth  annual  reunion  of  the 
Fifteenth  Minnesota  regiment,  .Span- 
ish-American war  veterans,  will  be 
held  at  Mlnneai»olls,  March  27.  It  was 
ten  years  ago  this  month  that  the 
men  were  mustered  out  of  service  at 
Augusta,    CJa. 

A  number  of  members  of  the  regi- 
ment are  residents  of  Duluth,  and  sev- 
eral of  them  will  go  dowti  to  Minne- 
apolis to  be  on  hand  at  the  reunion, 
wliMh  will  be  held  in  assembly  hall  of 
the  courthouse.  Former  members  of 
the  regiment  from  all  parts  of  the 
country  will  be  In  attendance  to  see 
their  old   friends. 


FAILS  TO  SAW 
OUT  FROM  JAIL 

Lion  Tamer  Who  Once 

Tlius  Escaped  Cannot 

Duplicate. 

New  York,  March  18. — After  sixteen 
hours  spent  in  sawing  two  of  the 
seven-eighths  inch  bars  of  his  cell 
with  improvised  saws  made  of  kiiicked 
table  knives,  Francis  l.ouis  Boissanade, 
a  lion  tamer,  who  was  set  to  the  task 
of  making  an  official  attempt  to  es- 
cape from  the  detention  ]>rison  at 
l-:ili.s  Island,  gave  uj)  the  attcmi>t. 

Boissanade  last  AuKUst  eflected  a 
real  escape  from  the  same  <-ell  witli 
tlie  connivance.  Immigration  Commis- 
sioner Walchorn  thinks,  of  some  of  the 
keepers.  I'pon  beln.g  api)reheudcd  a 
few  days  ago,  however,  he  maintained 
that  no  one  bad  assist<'i1  him  and  th.it 
it  was  by  sawing  the  bars  of  bis  <'ell 
for  thirteen  and  a  halt  hours  with 
table  knlv<s  that  he  lia<l  succeeded  in 
gaining  his  freedom.  It  was  to  prove 
if  pos.sil.le  the  truth  of  this  assertion 
that  Boissanade  was  m^ide  to  undergo 
the  test  which  has  just  failed.  Hail  he 
succeeded.  Commissioner  Watchorn 
had  promised  to  lnter<'ede  for  him  at 
Washington.  As  it  Is  he  will  be  de- 
ported, and  several  F.llls  island  em- 
ployes now  under  suspicion  will  be 
discharged. 

HAURIS  NON-fd.MMnTAL 

ASTOLNIVKKSmMOR. 


New  Y'ork.  March  IS — The  United 
•States  cipult  court  of  appeals  iias 
ruled  that  a  moving  picture  is  a  "stage 
representation,"  within  the  meaning  of 
that  term  in  the  copyright  law.  The 
question  arose  in  a  suit  brought  by 
Harper  &  Bros.,  and  Klaw  &  Krianger 
against  the  Kalm  company,  manufac- 
turers of  moving  picture  films,  to  en- 
join them  from  producing  exhibitions 
of    "Ben  Hur."     The  film  manufacturers. 


POCKETBOOK 
WAS  RETURNED 


David  Davidson  Is  $13 

Richer  as  Result  of 

Publicity. 

Owing  to  the  publicity  given  the  los.s 

of   his    pocketbook,    David    Davidson    of 

2004      Piedmont      avenue    is    $13    richer 

than    would   otherwise    be   the   case.      It 

came  to  Idm  quite  unexpectedly  today, 

the   woman   who  picked   It   up  with   the 

intention,    he    believes,    of    keeping    it, 

having  become  afflicted  wltli  "cold  ex- 
tremities." 

The  Incident  of  the  loss  and  recovery 
is  rather  an  unusual  one.  Mr.  David- 
son was  riding  on  a  West  Third  street 
car  last  Sunday,  when  he  dropped  his 
pocketbook.  He  did  not  miss  it  until 
after  he  had  left  the  car.  Meantime  a 
woman   passenger   had   picked   it  up. 

The  conductor  noticed  her  action, 
and,  noticing  that  he  had  noticed  it, 
she  told  him  that  she  would  turn  It 
over  to  the  car  starter  as  soon  as  she 
arrived  up  town.  The  conductor  did 
not  feel  exactly  right  In  his  mind 
about  not  insisting  on  taking  the 
pocketbook,  but  allowed  his  passenger 
to  retain   possession   of  It. 

The  woman  failed  to  keep  her  prom- 
ise, and  throe  days  passed  by  without 
any  word  being  received  from  her, 
Y'esterday  an  account  of  the  Incident 
was  published.  Evidently  publicity  was 
too  much  for  the  mysterious  unknown, 
for  today  the  missing  pocketbook,  with 
$13  intact,  was  returned.  A  little  girl 
ran  up  to  the  car  starter's  box  at  the 
corner  of  Third  avenue  west  and  Su- 
perior street,  guickly  shoved  her  hand 
through  the  window  and  dropped  the 
pocketbook,  speeding  away  again  be- 
fore the  man  inside  had  a  chance  to 
ask  any  ouestlons.  The  loss  had  been 
reported,  so  it  wasn't  long  before  Mr. 
Davidson   came    into   his   own    again. 


while  admitting  that  the  scenes  pic- 
tured were  taken  from  Oen.  I..ew  Wal- 
lace's book,  urged  that  the  representa- 
tion was  only  an  'exiilbltlon  of  pic- 
tures" ur.d  not  a  dramatic  performance 
within  the  meaning  of  thel  copyright 
law.  The  court's  decision  fiolds  that 
in  order  to  produce  a  rriovihg  picture 
it  Is  necessary  to  prepare  et  synopsis 
or  story  which  is  in  effect  »  dranuiti- 
zation  and  that  the  author  Jalone  has 
the  right  to  make  or  authorize  a  dram- 
atization 


ARE  WAITING  ' 
ON  THE  TARIFF 

Business  Is   Sound   at 

Bottom,  Says  Charles 

E.  Streeter. 

"If  congress  will  start  right  In  on 
the  tariff  question,  and  get  that  prob- 
lem out  of  the  way,  we  may  expect  a 
pickup  in  the  business  situation  over 
the  country."  was  the  statement  of 
Charles  C.  .Streeter,  a  manufacturer  of 
MoUne,  111.,  who  Is  at  tne  Spalding  to- 
day. 

"I  don't  expect  a  very  decided  in- 
crease in  busine.ss  before  June  or 
July.  But  if  congress  will  only  get  at 
work  on  the  tariff  tiuestlon,  there 
would  be  a  great  deal  of  uncertainty 
removed.  The  business  of  the  country 
is  really  holding  back  until  this  ques- 
tion is  settled  one  way  or  another.  If 
congress  revises  the  tariff  schedule,  I 
am  of  the  opinion  that  the  business 
of  the  country  will  adopt  Itself  to  It;  if 
it  doesn't  revise  it  business  will  in- 
crease, as  it  Is  waiting  at  the  present 
time,  to  ascertain  what  conditions  it 
will   have   to   face. 

"At  bottom  the  t4|.slness  of  the  coun- 
try is  good.  There  Aj4  n»  fe*r,  but  the 
question  is  being  asked>  wi«y  doesn't 
business  increase?  Tlie  .  ranswer  is, 
that  the  big  business  mei^  of  the 
country,  the  manufacturers,  the  rail- 
road men,  are  waiting  tq  see.  just  what 
congress  is  going  to  do  yith  the  tariff 
question.  Therefore  I  »ay  Lthat  the 
sooner  that  congress  getlf.  atithls  prob- 
lem, the  better  It  will  be  for  the  busi- 
ness  of   the    country." 

• i U 

BrrHkM    Hlbi*   CatrlilnK  Train. 

HIncklev,  Minn.,  Mafch  'S18.  —  fSpe- 
f^lal  to  The  Herald.) — Willard  Owons  Is 
nursing  three  broken  ribs  he  sustained 
durtng  a  recent  trip  to  ijantlstone,.  wiien 


t'hicago,  Marcli  IS. — President  A.  W. 
Harris-  of  Northwestern  university  re- 
fu.sed  to  aflirm  or  deny  the  i)ossibilily 
of  his  becoming  piesident  of  tlie  Uni- 
versity of  -Minnesota  uion  his  return  to 
Chicago  from  Minneapolis. 

"Do  not  <|uole  me  as  citlier  saying 
that  I  will  or  will  not  accept  an  offer 
Ml  case  it  is  made  to  me."  said  he.  "f 
have  not  been  approached  by  an.v  one 
oflicially  on  the  subject.  My  visit  at 
Minneai>olis  has  notliing  to  do  with  the 
matter,  being  merely  incident  to  a  trip 
in    the   NoiLlnvist." 

VICTIM  OF  DOWIK  KM)S 

HIS  LIFE  BV  HANCJINTi. 


New  York.  March  IX. — r>espondent  be- 
cause he  had  lost  all  his  life  savings  in 
an  investment  in  Zion  City,  111.,  Indus- 
tries, the  city  started  by  John  Alexan- 
der Dowie,  Ltulwig  Auguszt,  71  years 
old,  committed  suicide  by  hanging  him- 
self in  his  room  on  Second  avenue. 
Auguszt  became  a  follower  of  I>owie 
when  the  self-styled  ap«»stle  of  Zion 
visited  here  and  held  his  famous  meet- 
ings in  Madison  Square  Garden  several 
years  ago.  The  suicide  Invested  about 
$3,000  In  the  lace  industry  in  Zion  City 
and  was  unable  to  get  any  return  on 
his  money  after  Zion  City  went  into  the 
hands  of  a  receiver. 


PENNSVLVAMA  LECISLAirRE 
ELECTS  OLIVER  AS  SENATOR 


RESULTS  THAT  REMAIN 

Are   Appreciated  By   Du- 
luth People. 


Thousands  who  suffer  from  back- 
ache and  kidney  complaint  have  tried 
one  remedy  after  another,  finding  only 
temporary  benefit.  This  is  discourag- 
ing, but  there  is  one  special  kidney 
medicine  that  cures  permanently  and 
there  is  plenty  of  proof  rigfht  here  in 
Duluth. 

Here  is  the  testimony  of  one  who 
used  Doan's  Kidney  Pills  years  ago, 
and  now  states  that  the  cure  was  last- 
ing: 

Capt.  M.  McLean,  4324  Gilliat  street, 
Duluth,  Minn.,  says:  "Time  has  only 
strengthened  my  appreciation  of 
Doan's  Kidney  Pills.  I  publicly  en- 
dorsed this  remedy  in  1898,  after  it 
had  freed  me  from  a  dull,  heavy  ache 
across  the  small  of  my  back  and  other 
symptoms  of  kidney  complaint.  There 
has  been  no  return  of  the  trouble,  con- 
vincing me  that  Doan's  Kidney  Pills 
:ure  permanently.  I  will  endorse  this 
remedy  at  every  opportunity." 

For  sale  by  all  dealers.  Price  50 
cents.  Foster-Milburn  Co..  Buffalo, 
New  York,  sole  agents  for  the  United 
States. 

Remember  the  name — Doan's — and 
take  ao  other* 


Harrlsburg.  Pa.,  March  18, — Th«  two 
houses  of  the  I'ennsylvaiila  legislature 
in  joint  session  declared  tJeorge  Tener 
Oliver  of  Pittsburg  electel  to  the  Cnlt- 
ed  .States  senate  to  fill  the  unexpired 
term  of  Philander  (^.  Knox.  Mr.  Oliver 
will  be  sworn  In  Monday  and  will 
.serve  until   March  4.    IIMI. 


Board  Organizes. 


The  board  of  fire  commissioners  held 
a  special  r.ieeting  yesterday  afternoon 
and  organized  for  the  coming  year. 
The  next  tegular  meeting  will  be  held 
Fridav,    April    2. 

I?.  W.  How  was  yesterday  elected 
presldetit;  C.  K.  Tweed,  vice  president; 
Hariy  I.emont.  secretjjry.  Nothing  but 
routine  business  came  up  for  consider- 
ation, aside  from  the  election  of  of- 
ficers. 


Danderine 


Gro^vs  Hair 

and  we  can 

PROVE  IT! 

DANDERINE  is  to  the  hair  what  fresh  showera 
of  rain  and  sunshine  are  to  veijetalion.  It 
goes  right  (o  the  roots,  invigorates  and 
strengthens  them.  Its  exhilarating,  stimulating  and 
life-producing  properties  cause  lh«  hair  to  grow 
abundantly  long,  strong  and  beautiful.  It  at 
once  imparts  a  sparlcling  brilliancy  and  vel- 
vety softness  to  the  hair,  and  a  (ew  weeks' 
use  will  cause  new  hair  to  sprout  all  over  the 
scalp.  Use  it  every  day  (or  a  short  time, 
after  which  two  or  three  times  a  week  will 
be  sufhcient  to  complete  whatever  growth 
you  desire. 


A  lady  (rum  St.  Paul  writea  in  aubstaace, 
aa  lollowfc: 

•'When  I  beKan  usins:  r»ander1ne  my  hair 
woulil  not  come  to  iny  iilioiildersaud  now 
U  U  away  below  my  tilps." 

Another  (rom  Newark,  N.  J. 

"  I  have  iieeti  iinint);  Daiidertne  reirularljr. 
Wlieiil  first  started  lo  UHe  III  bad  very  lit- 
tle hair, now  I  have  the  most  heautlfuflung 
aud  thick  bair  anyone  would  want  to  havo." 


NOW  at  all  druggists  in  three 

sizes  2Sc.  50c  and  $1.00 

per  bottle 

Danderine  enjoys  a  greater  sale  than 
anyotlit-r  one  preparation  r<-gardless  of  kind 
or  brand,  and  it  has  a  much  greater  sale  thtm 
all  of  the  other  hair  preparations  in  tiio 
world  combined. 


FREE 


To  show  how  quicLly  Oindtflni 
acts,  we  will  seud  a  large  sain- 
Cut  /    I>le  free  by  return  mail  lo  anyone  who 
ThiS(     ^*"*^s  ^his  free  coupon  to  the 

Out  1  KNOWLTON  DANDERINE  CO..  CHICAGO,  ILL. 

with  their  n.ime  ati<t  a.ldrcss  and  lOc 
iu  silver  or  stamps  to  pay  postage. 


AMERICAN  EXCH  ANGE  BANK 

OF  DULUTH,  MINN. 

GAPITAl  AND  SURPLUS,  Sl,350,000 

CHICKING  ACCOUNTS  INVITED. 

Savings  and  Time  Deposits  Draw  3%  Interest. 


YOU    WILL    REALIZE    THAT    "THEY    LIVE 
WELL  WHO  LIVE  CLEANLY."  IF  YOU  USB 

SAPOLIO 


WHOLESALE 

JOBBERS  AND 
MANUFACTURERS 

OF  DULUTH,  MINNESOTA.    , 
Reliable  and  U|»-to-Date  Concerns  Who  Do  a  Strictyl 
Jobbings  and  Manufacturing  Business. 


ASBESTOS. 

A.  H.  Kriege  •  Co. 


BAKERS     AND     ICE     CREAM 

MANUFACTURERS. 

Crescent   Balcery. 


BLAST  FURNACE. 
Zemth  Furnac  e  Co. 


BREWEFS. 

Duluth  Brewing  &   Malting  Co. 
Fitger   Brewing  Co. 


GLASS.   PAINTS   AND   BUILD- 
ING   MATERIALS. 

Paine  &  Nixon  Co. 


GROCERS. 

Gjwan-Peyton-Twohy   Co. 

Stone-Ordean-WclU  Co. 

Wright-Clarkson    Mercantile   Ca 


HARDWARE. 

Kellcy-How-Thofn3on   Co. 
Marshall-Wells   Hdw.   Ca 


BUTTER     AND     ICE     CREAM 
MANUFACTURERS. 

Bridgeman-Rusiell  Co. 


CEMENT  AND  1>LASTER. 
D.  G.  Cutler  Co. 


COMMISSION  ANE  PRODUCE. 

Fitzsimmons-Paliiier  Co. 

Knudsen  Fruit  Cotnpany. 

Thomas  Thompson  Co. 


CONFECTIONERY. 

Duluth  Candy  Co. 

National    Candy    Co. 

(Duluth  Faciory.) 


CORNICE    MANUFACTURERS. 

Duluth  Corrugating  U  Roofing  Co. 


DRUGS, 
L.  W.  Leithhcad  Drug  Co. 


DRY  GOODS. 
F.  A.  Patrick  &  Co. 


FOUNDERS  and  MACHINISTS. 
Clyde  Iron  Works. 
National  Iroa  Co. 


FURNITURE. 

DeWitt-Seitz  Company. 


LUMBER.  SASH  &  DOOR  MAN- 
UFACTURERS. 

Scott-Graff  Lumber  Co. 


MEN'S      FURNISHINGS     AND 
MAN'F'RS  CLOTHING. 

Christensen-Mendenhall- 
Graham  Co. 


PAPER. 

Bcmis  Bag  &  Paper  Co. 

Duluth  Paper  &  Stationery  Ca 

McClellan   Paper  Co. 

Peyton  Paper  Ca 


PICTURE  FRAMES  &  MOULD- 
ING. 

Decker  Manufacturing  Co. 


PLUMBING  SUPPLIES. 

Crane   &  Ordway   Co. 


SADDLERY.     LEATHER     AND 
FINDINGS. 

Schulze   Brothers   Co. 


SHOE  MANUFACTURERS. 
Northern  Shoe  Co. 


For  space  under  this  heading  apply  to  F.  H.  Green,  Secretary  Jobbers 
and  Manufacturers'  Association,  Duluth,  Minn. 


1 


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■!*■■•■ 

THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


PORT 


GAME  WAS 
VERYCLOSE 

Duniop  Defeated  Dinham 

in  Finals  for  Bagiey 

Trophy. 

Curlers  Wlil  Hold  Annual 

Banquet  at  St.  Louis, 

March  30. 


By  dffeatmg  Dinham  m  tt.f  A^alf 
plavfd  at  tie  Curling:  club  last  ms.i.. 
Bert  Dunlup  won  the  Bagley  trophy. 
The  contest  was  a  clo^e  one  all  the 
way  tlu.Ufh.  The  final  score  v.-nB  11 
tc  9.   Di:ili:.ms  m«n  pultli.g  up  a  gam. 

In  the  Manley-McLennun  event.  Hall 
deft.-.ter.  Kon  gniith  by  a  ^^ ore  of  11  to 
7  a>.d  in  the  *=ame  event,  the  ^ame 
rink.  lUfeatta  John  Tresise  IS  to  b. 
"i'^r  the  board  ot  trade  V'Uttons  tee- 
fha^.  deteated  l^eetz  by  a  '^'•^'\%o*  .^:: 
to  iv,  and^K.  K.  Jacobi  defeated  btocR 

'''^Mu'    curVers     are     now     P^f ""\^^^.,i.^" 

ending    UP    tj-'    ^"/Aen"ea"  by    huidlnl 
season      evei     expe.  leuitru       '■•'^,     ,  ,,,,*„ 

Their    annual    banquet    at    tl^^^.^^^gy^^'"'" 

hotel   on   the  evening   ^'^   Mf'^^  is  busy 

Tb.e  entertainment  c.'mniittee  ^  DUfcy 
with  the  arrangement*^  and  the  curhng 
reason  win  olose  in  a  burs=t  ot  gU.iy. 
^^tI;  annual  meeting  ot  the  club  wU 
be  held  at  the  club  rooms  on  the  ^."^  *  "" 
inc  ot  AriU  t  and  the  business  ol  the 
seui^cii   finally   wound   up. 

l>;.^t    ligiif^    j.corts    lol  ow 

Baisiey    KIumU — »    o*t  look. 
I-'      -Man    t  l-'i     WuiKfl. 

K     ^clu  ler  A.  J     \Va*<gatt. 

i   i'h   uclTrsky.  H.    H.   Dinham. 

^■-  ^'^""'^•^^.ip-9.  ""'"  """"sllip-n. 

Manlev-Mel-ei.nnn— «  «•<  lock  Dr«Tr. 

J      K.    Mac-tJregc.r       J.   K.  CiiUni 


»»)!(»»»»)|cH(»»»»»»)tc» 


DEETZ'S  "DUBIOUS  DUBS"  AS 

SEEN  BY  HERALD  CARTOONIST 


WELL-  f/toW 
TH/NK  'T  - 

0t;6WT  TO  HAV£ 
BSEN    PLAYED 
LIKE  TW«i  — 


TE1.LINC5  J>e£T2L    HOUv/TO 


K.    VV    I'eetz, 

C.   F.   Macdonald. 

Walter  G.   Hall. 

skii»— n. 


C      Tweed, 
P.  Heimkk. 
Kon    Smith. 

skip — * 


n 
a 

it 
it 

it 
it 
it 
^t 
it 
it 
it 
it 
it 


NOTE  THE  E^P/?E5S<0H   ON 
ANPy^  FACE.  WHEN  HE  MAKES 

Bvi^t  Shot: 


/The  \NC\yt^y 
\  Men  PL/\y 

I  WOULD   l^KE. 


arrivc'8  for  his  permanent  discharpe, 
when  the  maximum  time  of  thirty 
years,   less  good   time,   expires. 

BIG  DILIJTHS  WIN 
THREE  STRAIGHT 

Lindfors  Gets  the  High 

Average  and  Stiegler 

Takes  High  Sc«re. 

The  Big  Duluth  bowling  team  took 
three  straight  games  from  tlie  General 
Kkrtrics  last  night  on  the  Central 
alleys. 

H.  Lindfors  got  the  high  average, 
200,  and  Stiegler  of  the  Big  Duluths 
rolled    higli    score.    225. 

Tile  second  game  was  a  very  excit- 
ing one  The  scores  wa.s  very  close 
all  the  wav  tlirough  and  in  the  end  the 
Mig  Dulutiis  had  the  better  of  the  ar- 
gument by  only  oue  point,  the  final 
score    being  hll   to   810. 

The   detailed  scores    follow: 
Genernl    KlectrlcH. 

Hale    (16)    17t>  123 

Lindfors    (22)     161  181 

Dummv     150  150 

J.    Burguson    (25)    ..    140  125 

C.  Burguson   (25)    ...    147 

Handicap     S8 


"THE 

SCENIC  HIGHWAY' 
THROUGH  THE 
LAND  OF  FORTUNE" 


Sprinil  Colonist 
Fares 


Effective  daily  March  1  to  April 
30,  1909.  One-way,  second  class; 
honored  in  Tourist  Sleeping  Cars 
which  the  Northern  Pacific  runs 
daily  from  St.  Paul-Minneapolis 


Has  BtEN  kwoWa/  To  cf^e-r 
HtS    SrOl^e    0^e.f^  THE.  HOCr 


tSS  EDDie  •  I^z,  SK  IP  OF '"ji peri's 


8  o'clock. 

J    E    MacGregor,        O.  K.  Seliar 

E.    \\     Deetz, 

C   F.   Macdonald, 

W.  G    Hall, 

^klp— 18 


){.  Meads, 
Charles  Haig. 
J.   C.   Tresise. 

skip — 6. 


METZ  S/\yS   TK/4-r   t4f5    MLH 


Bcnrd   of  Trade    BiitfonK— 4;30   Draw 


A     W     Kcden 
C     Getty. 
Jack  rutnlcky 
Walter  Harris, 
ski 


10. 


<;     Myers, 
C.    N.iughton. 
E.    A.    Vivian. 
G.  H.  Feeti-.am. 

skip— 13. 


J"Ac/<  PLormcKy, 

No.S^  FOR  T«t'j)oeS/ 

£Ays 

TO 


143 

88 


156 
ml 
150 
169 
113 
88 


TO  THE  PACIFIC 
NOFtTHWEST 


Totals     ^64 

BiK    DiiluthM. 

Nobis    (7)    161 

Ferguson   (7)    184 

I'ickelman   (25) 161 

Campbell     224 

Stiegler    225 

Handicap     39 

Totals     9i*4 


810 

181 
115 
164 
165 
147 
39 

811 


867 

191 

176 
147 
174 
160 
39 

887 


Vila 


Western  Montana,  Idaho. 
Washington,  Oregon  and 
British  Columbia.  $25  from 

Duluth,  Superior,  St.  Paul  or 
Minneapolis,    Liberal  Stop-overs. 


-n 


HE    'S  Too  T(/?eD 


|^)H)^*^MM(^»^NH»^MHMHM^^NH<<***»* 


/ANOERSO/vi   CAN" 
TALK.     J"OirAS 

INC,  AS    ne  c/SM 

S  ^p  *^  'T^  'P  ^*  •J*  T*  T'  ' 


C    Myers. 
Frank    IMerce, 
A    \V.  Withrow. 
t>     W.    Stocking 

skir»- 


8  o'clock  Draw. 

lU'V  Hoimes, 
J.   A.   McAuley, 
Jav  Finkelson, 
E.R.    Jacobi, 

skip — 1  '• 


BARRY  DEFEATED 
BY  SAM  LANGFORD 

The  Former    Was   Not 

in  the  Best  of 

Condition. 

Philadelphia.  March  IS— Sam  Lang- 
ford,  colored  middleweight  champion, 
defeated  Jim  Barry  of  Chicago  last 
night  in  a  six-round  bout  before  the 
Washington  Sporting  club.  Langford 
was  in  perfect  condition  while  Barry 
claimed  to  be  suffering  from  malaria 
fever  Langlords  most  effective  blow 
was  a  left  hook  to  the  head  wh'ch  he  , 
used  on  the  Chicagoan  repeatedly.  The 
colored  man  had  the  belter  rf  the  first 
four  rounds,  but  Barry  came  back 
strong  in  the  closing  rounds  and  had 
lingford  do;ns  his  utmost  at  the  fi.^ish. 

MAY  HAVE  BOXING 
BOIJTSJN  DULITH 

Bill  Providing  for  Six- 
Round  Matches  Passes 
the  House. 

A  bill,  allowing  the  city  councils  to 
permit  exhibition  boxing  matches  in 
the  three  large  cities  of  the  state 
passed  the  house  yesterday. 

It  is  not  known  at  this  time  what 
sort  of  a  chance  the  bill  stands  in  the 
Kenate.  but  if  it  passes,  it  will  surely 
bring  jov  to  the  hearts  of  the  admir- 
ers of  the  fight  game  In  Duluth. 

Tiie  six-round  bout,  the  fans  claim, 
furnishes  amusement  leaving  out  t lie 
objectionable  part  of  the  sport  and  its 
brutality.  ,  ,        , 

The    sporting    public    will    anxiously 


await    the    progress   of    the   bill    in      the] 
senate.       Tlie    bouts    will    be    under    tlie 
super%'ision    of    the    police    department. 
making  them   purely   exhibition  affairs. 

CORBETT  WANTS 
TO  GET  KILLED 

Issues  Challenges  to  Both 

Champion  Johnson  and 

Jim  Jeffries. 


DULUTH  BREWING 
&  MALTING  CO. 


Cor.  29th  Ave.  SV.    &    Helm    St. 
The   Monarch  of  All  Pure 
Malt  Beers. 


Wheeling.  W.  Va.,  March  18. — James 
J.  Corbett  last  nigiit  issued  a  second 
challenge  for  a  fight  with  either  Jef- 
fries or  Johnson.     In  it  he  says: 

■•1  am  tired  of  seeing  this  fellow 
Johnson  going  around  with  his  chest 
out  and  nooocv  seems  inclined  to  fight 
him  So  1  take  the  right  that  any  man 
has  and  heieby  challenge  James  J. 
Jeffries  and  Jack  Johnson  to  box  me 
anv  number  of  rounds  or  to  a  finish 
in  any  club  in  the  world. 

"I  will  forward  from  Indianapolis 
today  a  check  for  $1,000  to  Al  Smith, 
the  "well  known  stakeholder,  at  the 
Gilsey  house  in  New  York,  as  a  guar- 
antee ol  my  good  faitli." 

ST.  LOUIS  TEAM 
GETS  HIGH  SCORE 

Championship  Games  Are 

on  at  Big  Pittsburg 

Congress. 

Pittsburg.  Pa,  March  18. — The  first 
games  of  the  international  events  be- 
tween the  1908  champions  of  the  Amer- 
ican    Bowling    congress,     the     National 

Bowling  association,  t'^e  ,,  <-^a"f,^V,t''i'2 
Bowlers'  association  and  tlie  Middle 
'  West  Bowling  association,  drew  a 
large  attendance  to  Duquesne  Oardens 
la«t  night,  where  the  international 
tournament  of  the  International  Bc.vyl- 
ing  congress  is  being  held.  Four  five- 
men  teams,  the  champions  of  1908  of 
the  various  associations  named,  were 
scheduled  to  roll  the  first  three  of  a 
series  of  nine  games  for  the  interna- 
tional chompionship  and  a  prize  ol 
$'•50  but  only  three  teams  bowled  the 
Hamiltons  of  Hamilton,  Ont.,  the.Can- 
ndi  in  champions,  failing  to  put  in  an 
anfearance  The  Bonds  of  Columbus, 
OhVo  the  A.  B.  C.  Champions  rolled 
^515'  the  Brunswicks  of  New  York,  the 
,\'  H  A.  champions  made  a  score  ot 
2  604,'  and  the  Desoto  Mars  of  ht 
Louis.   M.   W.    B.    A.   champions,   totaled 

"'The  highest  ten  scores  In  all  events 
since    the    opening    of    the    tournament, 

"^Individuals— F.  Brtieggemarin,  Sioux 
ritv  691  L.  Sutton,  Itochester,  691,  L. 
Peterson  Chicago,  672:  Henry  Hoycr, 
Shjux  CU y  663;  F.  F.  Bert.  Milwaukee. 
660  J  Bouin  Chicago,  651;  J.  Hirsch, 
Fittvburg  651;  M.  Tyser,  Rochester, 
648    F    Fox,  Indianapolis,  646;  G.  Steele. 

*-''J^wo^"-  men  teams-Tony  and  Al 
Schwoegler.  Madison,  Wis.,  1.304;  Dean 
and  Turne-.  St.  Louis,  1,259;  Jarrctt 
an  Pi"mjer.  New  York  1,294;  Stem- 
mueller  and  Lippert.  Chicago,  1.209; 
^iok  and  Novak.  Toledo,  1.201;  Moh- 
Hng  and  Koehl,  Col.untbus,  1198;  Bid- 
den and  Watt,  New  YorK  l,19o:  Sel- 
bach  and  Collins.  Columbus  1,192; 
Zeimer  and  Garden  Cincinnati.  1,190, 
King  and  Murphy,   Akron,  1,181. 

High  Kick  Record  Broken. 

Southboro.  Mass..  March  18. — A  new 
worlds  record  in  the  runni.ig  higli 
kick  was  made  at  St.  Mark's  school 
here  vesterday  by  Harold  Beebe  of 
Maiden.  Beebe  did  9  feet.  10 14  lnche;s. 
Beebe  exceeded  his  mark  of  last  year 
by  two  inchiP  which  at  the  time  took 
the  honor  away  from  C.  C.  Lee  of  New 
Haven,  Conn.,  who  had  held  the  rec- 
ord since  1887  with  a  mark  of  9  feet 
8   inches. 


BUSY  SEASON  ON 
GREAT  RED  LAKES 

Navigation    Will    Soon 

Commence  With  Some 

More  Boats. 

Thief  River  Fulls.  Minn.,  March  18. 
—  (Special  to  The  Herald. '—What 
promises  to  be  the  most  active  season 
ever  known  for  navigation  on  the  Red 
Lake  river  will  open  this  month. 

This  river  is  the  only  outlet  for  the 
great  Red  lakes  and  their  surrounding 
reservoir  in  Northern  Minnesota,  and, 
conse(iuently,  is  a  stream  of  no  small 
proportions.  It  is  navigable  from 
the  outlet  of  the  lakes  to  this  city,  a 
distance  of  some  100  miles  by  water, 
and  at  this  city  it  is  joined  by  the 
Thief  river.  Below  here  there  are 
rapids  and  falls  that  render  naviga-  j 
tion  impossible. 

The  rivers  and  harbors  bill  passed 
at  the  late  session  of  congress  carried 
an  appropriation  of  150,000  for  the 
improvem.ent  of  this  stream  from 
Thief  River  Falls  to  the  Red  lakes. 
These  improvements  will  permit  of  a 
regular  schedule  for  the  steamboats, 
several  of  which  have  for  years  main- 
[tained  an  intermittent  passenger  and 
freight  traffic  between  the  points  men- 
tioned. 

The   recent   settlement   of  the   great 
reaches    of   rich    lands    of   the    former 
Indian    reservation    along    both    sides 
of  the  river,   as  well  as  the  e.^tablish- 
ment      of     many      woods      settlements 
dbout    the    Red    lakes,    create    a    busi- 
nt-ss  which  is  rapidly  increasing  as  the 
seas(jns    come    and    go.         The    boat- 
buildin:.-  firm  of  Eberhardt  &  Son,  and 
who    own    one    of    the    largest    steam- 
boats on  the  lakes,  is  now  constructing 
two       more      boats.         The      Farmers' 
Transportation   company  of  Highland- 
ing,  a  point  some  forty-nine  miles  up 
river    from    Thief      River      Falls,    has 
their  large  boat  ready  for  the  opening 
of  navigation  and  expect  to  do  a  large 
business  this  season. 

Congressman  Steenerson  has  assur- 
ance that  the  present  congress  will 
i  appropriate  $247,000,  the  amount  the 
\  engineers  estimate  necessary  for  the 
I  construction  of  a  darn  with  gates  at 
i  the  outlet  of  Red  lake,  and  thu«,  aid 
j  in  preventing  the  annual  floods  on 
1  the  Red  river  toward  the  Manitoba 
line. 


JURY  SELECTED 
IN  MURDER  CASE 

Barney  Nelson  Faces  Be- 

midji  Jury  For  Killing 

Morris  Fuller. 

Bemidji,  Minn.,  March  18.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Barney  Nelson,  in- 
dicted by  the  grand  jury  on  the  charge 
of  killing  Morris  Fuller  at  Fowldes,  in 
the  northern  part  of  the  county,  Jan. 
3  last,  is  today  facing  a  jury  of  his 
peers  in  the  district  court,  twelve  ac- 
ceptable men  l;aving  been  selected  yes- 
terday afternoon  and  evening,  aftep 
fillv  talesmen   had   been  examined. 

The  charge  against  Nelson  is  murder 
in  tlie  first  degree,  it  being  claimed  he 
fired  the  shot  that  caused  Fuller's 
death.  Fuller  and  Archie  Brown  were 
walking  along  the  railroad  tracK  at 
the  time  of  the  killing,  when  they  met 
another,  who  proved  to  be  Nelson,  the 
accused.  All  had  been  drinking  more 
or  less  and  were  walking  to  Fowldes, 
when  Fuller  is  said  to  have  tapped 
Nehson,  who  was  aiiead.  on  the  shoulder 
in  a  plavful  mood.  This  aroused  Nel- 
son, so  "the  evidence  goes.  and.  draw- 
ing a  pistol,  he  fired,  killing  the  other. 
The  apparent  lack  of  motive  for  the 
killing  and  the  fact  that  all  had  been 
drinking  promises  to  make  the  case  a 
bitterlv  fought  affair,  and  may  prove  a 
stickler     for     tlie     jury. 

Dominick  Boyer.  who  was  convicted 
at  this  term  of  court  of  the  crime  of 
robberv  in  the  first  degree,  was  sen- 
tenced to  serve  a  term  of  ten  years  at 
hard  labor  in  the  state's  prison  at 
Stillwater.  Boyer.  w-hen  arraigned, 
told  the  court  that  he  was  38  years 
of  age;  divorced  from  his  wife;  had 
no  children,  and  has  a  mother  and  sis- 
ter  residin.g   at    Piiitic,    Wis. 

In  pas.sing  sentence.  Judge  Stanton 
stated  that  the  crime  for  which  Boyer 
had  been  convicted  was  a  very  serious 
one  and  that  he  would  give  him  a  se- 
vere lesson,  and  thereupon  sentenced 
iiim  to  ten  years'  Imprisonment  at 
Stillwater. 

John  Bovce.  who  pleaded  guilty  to 
robbery  in  the  first  degree,  was  sen- 
tenced to  the  jienitentiary  for  one 
vear.  the  judge  taking  into  considera- 
tion "  liis    plea    of   guilty. 

The  jury  in  the  case  of  the  State  vs. 
Cook,  charged  with  grand  larceny,  re- 
turned   a    verdict    of    not    guilty. 


WILL  WIND  UP 
HOCKEY  AFFAIRS 

Amateur  League  Directors 

to  Hold  Final  Business 

Meeting. 

The  directors  ol  the  Amateur  Hockey 
league  will  meet  this  evening  at  the 
store  of  the  Norihern  Hardware  com- 
pany   for    their    final    meeting    of    the 

'  Tlie  reports  of  the  officers  will  be 
read  and  the  business  connected  with 
the  past  season's  hockey  finally  wound 

"The  league  as  it  was  managed  this 
vear  was  very  successful  from  every 
boint  of  view.  While  the  league  made 
no  monev,  it  did  not  run  in  the  hOie. 
TIh'  expenses  ran  about  even  all  sea- 
son, and  the  attendance  was  very  fair. 
The  hockev  furnished  was  of  a  fair 
article,  and  the  contests  were  always 
close    and    exciting. 

Already  plans  are  being  made  for 
next  vear.  It  is  expected  that  Duluth 
will  have  a  real  hockey  rink  by  the 
time  snow  files  another  year,  and  the 
league  will  then  endeavor  to  have  at 
least   t\\o   mure   teams  enteitd. 


North(&rn  Pacific 
Blailway 

Thousands  of  acres  of  Agricultural 
and  Irrigable  lands  in  the  won- 
drously  fertile  valleys  of  the 
Great  Northwest  offer  ideal  homes. 
Business  opportunities  unparal- 
leled in  the  rapidly  growing  cities. 

For  descriptive  literatu'^  address  C  W  MOTT,  Gen.  Emig.  Agt.,  St.  Paul,  Mint. 

For  fares  and  details  call  ot,     J-  «•  Thomas,    q.  A..  J   T.  McKENNEY,  C.  P.  A., 

334  W.  Superloi  St.,  Duluth,  Minn 
W.  H.  Mitchell,  A  G  A  ,   817  Tower  Ave.,  Supeicr,  Wis. 

A.  M.  CLELANI ,  General  Passenger  Agent,  ST.  PAUL.  MIKN. 


Alaska-Yukon-Pacific  Exposition.  Seattle:  June  ^  to  Oct.  16. 
Annual  Rose  Feetipal,  Portland:    June  7  to  12. 

National  Irrigatior  Congress,  Spokane:  August  9  to  14.  

Kainier  Natl  Park  and  Paradise  Valley,  by  Auto  or  Rail,  ficm  Taccm*. 
■yellowstone  Natioial  Park;    Season  June  5  to  Sept.  25,  1908. 


Jute  1  tt  Oct.  1 
02-09 


-^p 


STATE   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTS    Oi- 

.^T.    LOUIS — SS. 
District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
E    P.  Alexander.  Plalntirt, 

vs. 
L     B.    Arnold,    C.    M.    Hill    Lum- 
ber Company,     a     corporation, 
and      Duluth    &    Iron      Range 
Railroad    Company,   a   corpor- 
ation,      and      also       all     per- 
sons    or       parties       unknown 
claiming    any    right,    title,    es- 
tate,   lien    or    interest    in    the 
real    estate    described    in    the 
complaint    herein, 

Defendants. 
The    State    of   Minnesota,    to   the    above 
named    defendants: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  complaint  of  the 
plaintiff  in  the  above  entitled  action, 
which  complaint  has  been  filed  in  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  said  District 
Court  at  the  city  of  Duluth.  County 
of  St'  Louis  and  State  of  Minnesota, 
and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your  answer 
to  said  complaint  on  the  subscriber, 
at  his  office,  in  the  city  of  Duluth.  in 
the  said  countv  of  St.  Louis,  within 
twenty  CiO)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you.  exclusive  of 
the  dav  of  such  service;  and  if  you  fail 
to  answer  the  said  complaint  within 
the  time  aforesaid,  tlie  plaintiff  will 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded  therein. 

Dated  March   12,  ^1909.  ^^^^^^^^ 

Attornev    for    Plaintiff. 
709    Lonsdale    Bldg.,    Duluth,    Minn. 


Read    the    want    ads    tonight.      Your 
neighbor  does.     It  pays  too. 


li  you  arc  troubled  Tvttli 
DANDRUFF  and  an  ITCHING, 
BURNING  SCALP, 


®mlth 


will  positively  remove  all  traces 
ci  It.  and  stop  the  Itching  and 
burning,  keep  the  scalp  healthy 
and  clean  and  encourage  the 
gro'M'th  of  new  hair. 

Do  not  delay  as  the  dandruli 
germ  kills  the  hair  roots  and 
stops  the  growth  ol  hair. 

IS  NOT  A  DYE. 
$1  AND  50c.  PftTTLFS.  AT  DRUGGISTS. 
Hay's  Harfiaa  Su&p  sU'^S  Eczema,  r-i. 
rough  and  cbappoil  hands,  and  rl^j^tu  aiSia^e.s 
Kftps  skin  fine  ar.d  toft,  2Sc.  druggists.  Send 
2c  tor  free  books,  "The  Care  ol  the  Skin,"  "The 
Care  of  the  Hair." 

Fhllo  Day  Sp«c.  Co^  Newsr|(,  N.  JL 

VV.  A.  ABBETT. 


PAROLE  PRISON  KDITOR. 

Louis  Sommers  to  Leave  Peniten- 
tiary After  Nineteen  Ve.irs. 

Stillwater.  Minn..  March  18. — Louis 
Sommers,  who  for  years  has  been  the 
editor  of  the  state  prison  Mirror  and 
who  filled  the  position  with  marked 
credit,  will  be  discharged  from  the 
state  prison  on  parole.  As  soon  as 
a  suitable  place  of  employment  has 
been  secured  for  him  he  will  be  re- 
leased. 

His  crime  wag  shooting  to  death 
w-ith  a  revolver  Mary  Dietzen,  his 
sweetheart  in  Hastings,  on  Feb.  12, 
1890.  He  pleaded  guilty  to  murder 
in  the  first  degree.  Judge  H.  It. 
Murdock  of  Stillwater  was  holding  the 
term  of  the  district  court  in  Hastings 
at  that  time.  He  found  that  there 
were  extenuating  circumstances  for 
the  killing  and  imposed  a  life  sen- 
tence, instead  of  the  death  penalty. 
Somrners  was  then  19  years  old  and  a 
clerk  in  a  hardware  store.  Sentence 
was   imposed   Dec.    27,    1890. 

On  April  28,  1903.  the  state  board 
of  pardons  commuted  the  life  sen- 
tence to  thirty  years.  That  made  the 
man  eligible  to  parole  three  years 
and  a  half  ago.  But  the  state  board 
of  control  did  not  grant  the  parole 
until  March  9  of  this  year.  Since 
;hen  his  friends  have  been  hunting 
for  a  position  for  him.  according  to 
the  regulations  in  casts  of  paro'e. 
Almost  any  day  now  such  place  may 
be  provided  and  he  will  be  released 
under  the  usual  regulations  to  report 
monthly  to  the  prison  until  the  time 


NOTICE  lispendf:ns. 
State     of     Minnesota,     County     of     St. 

Louis. — ss.  ,     ,,    .    ,    .r^- 

District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
E.    p.    Alexander, 

Plaintiff, 

L.  B.  Arnold.  C.'ii.  Hill  Lumber 
Company.  a  corporation,  and 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Rail- 
road Company,  a  corporation, 
and  also  all  persons  or 
parties  unknown,  claiming 
anv  right,  title,  estate,  lien  or 
interest  in  the  real  estate  de- 
scribed      in       the       complaint 

herein. 

Defendants. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given,  that  an  action 

has    been    commenced    in    this    court    by 

the   above   named   plaintiff   against    the 

above  named  defendants,   the  ob.iect  of 

which    is    to    obtain     a    judgment    that 

said    plaintiff    is    the    owner    in    fee    of 

the    following    described   real    property 

ard    that    said   defendants   and   each    of 

them  have  no  estate  or  interest  therein 

or  lien    thereon:      The  Northwest   qiiar- 

ter    of    the    Northwest    (luarter    (NAV  k 

of   NW'At    of   Section   Twenty-one    (21). 

Township     Fifty-nine     (&9)     North     of 

Range    Fourteen    <14i    West    of    the    4th 

p    M     St     Louis  County,   Minnesota. 

Attornev  for  inaintiff. 
709   Lonsdale   Bldg..   Duluth.   Minn. 
Duluth    F:vening    Heraid — March    18-24- 
31,  April  7-14-21.   1909. 


(Torrens   No.    890.) 

SUMMONS       IN       APPLICATION       FOR 

REG1.--TRATION    OF    LAND, 
fctate     of     Minnesota,     County     of       St. 

District     Court,       El?vei;th       Judicial 

Di.'^trict  .       ^, 

In  the  matter  of  the  ap- 
plication of  Empir.;  Realty 
(^ompanv,  to  register  the 
title  to  the  follou'ing  de- 
scribed real  estate  situated 
In  St  Louis  County.  M\n- 
nesota.     namely:  Lot       One 

Hundred        and  Forty- four 

(144)     in    Block    Eleven      (11  >. 
Duluth      Proper,      Third      Divi- 
sion,   according    to      the      plat 
thereof  of  record  in  the  office 
of    the    Register    of      Deeds      of 
said  St.   Louis  County.   Minne- 
sota. Ai>plicant, 
vs. 
The    Shogomoc    Company,     Wis- 
consin   Central    Rail  vay    Com- 
pany     and    all    other     persons 
or   parties    unknown     claiming 
anv  right,  title,  estate,  lien  or 
Interest   in   the   real   estate  de- 
scribed     in      the      application 
herein                        Defendants. 
The    State   of   Minnesota   to   the     above 
named  defendants. 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the^  application  of 
the  applicant  in  the  a  lOve  entitled  pro- 
ceeding and  to  file  your  answer  to  the 
said  application  in  tlie  office  of  tlie 
Clerk  of  said  court,  in  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the  serv- 
ice of  this  summon.'!  upon  you,  ex- 
clusive of  tlie  day  of  such  service,  and. 
if  vou  fail  to  answer  tlie  said  applica- 
tion within  the  time  ^foresaid,  the  ap- 
plicant in  this  proceeding  will  apply  to 
tlie  court  for  the  relief  demanded 
therein.  ,     ,       ^        .  , 

W^itness  J.  P.  Johnson,  clerk  of  said 
court  and  the  setil  tliereof.  at  Duluth. 
in  said  county,  this  4th  day  of  March, 
A.  D.   1909. 

J     P    JOHNSON,   Clerk. 
Bv    V    A.    DASH     Deputy. 
(Seal    District   Court.    St.   Louis   County. 

CRASSWELLER  &  CRASSWELLER, 

Attorneys    for    Ajill  cant. 

Duluth  Evening  H<  raid,  March  4,   11, 

18.    HtOlt. 


(Trrrens  Nc.  891.)  __^ 

SUMMONS       L\       APPLICATION  FOR 

RECISTRATION     OF      LAND- 

State  ol  Minnesota,  County  ct  St.  Louis 

District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  application  ! 
of  Empire  Realty  Com- 
pany to  register  the  title  to 
the  following  described  real 
estate  situated  in  St.  Lcuis 
Count  v.  MJnne.sota.  namely: 
Lots  One  Hund;ed  and  Twen- 
ty-nine (12}<>  and  One  Hundred 
{."nd  Thirtv-ono  (13!.),  in  Block 
Fourteen  (14).  Duluth  I'n.per. 
Third  Division,  according  to 
ihe  recorded  plat  thereof  of 
record  in  the  office  ol  tlife 
Register  of  Deeds  of  said  St. 
Louis  County, 

Applicant, 

A'S. 

All  persons  or  parties  un- 
known, claiming  any  right, 
title,  estate,  lien  or  interest 
in  the  real  estate  dest  jibed 
in   the   application    herein. 

Defendants. 
The   State   of  Minnesota   to   the   above- 
named    defendants: 

You  ere  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  cl  the 
applicant  in  tlie  above  entitled  pro- 
ceeding and  to  file  your  answer  to  the 
^aid  api)lication  in  the  office  of  the 
Clerk  of  said  court.  In  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the  serv- 
ice of  this  summons  upon  you,  txclu- 
«;ive  cf  the  dav  of  such  service,  and  if 
"you  fall  to  answer  tlie  said  application 
within  the  time  aforesaid,  the  appli- 
cant in  this  proceeding  wiil  apply  to 
the  court  for  the  relief  demanded 
therein. 

Witness,  J.  P.  Johnson,  clerk  of  said 
court,  and  the  seal  thereof,  at  Duluth. 
in   said   county,   this  4th  day   of  March, 


1 

1 
1 

^     ' 

i 

i 

. 

1 

_^ :f  ^ 

. 

Read    the    want    a<ls    tonight 
neighbor  does.     It  pa  ,'s  too. 


Your 


A.    D.    I£t09. 


J.  P. 


JOHNSON. 

Cierk. 
By  V.  A.  DASH. 

Dtputy. 
(Seal.  District  Court,  St.  Louis  (.ounty. 

Minn. ) 
CRASSWELLER    &    CRASSWELLER. 

Attorneys    for   Applicant. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald— March    4-11-18, 
1909. 


ORDER   FOR  HEARING  ON  CLA IMS- 
mate  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis. 

In  I'robate  Court. 
In    the    Matter    of    the    Estate   of   Isaac 

Abrahamson,    Decedent. 

I  ETTERS  testamentary  this  day 
having  been  granted  to  Hannah  Abra- 
hamson and  William  M.  Abrahamson, 

IT  IS  ORDERED,  That  the  time 
within  which  all  creditors  of  the  above 
named  decedent  may  present  claims 
against  his  estate  In  this  Court  be,  and 
the  same  hereby  is.  limited  to  six 
months  from  and  after  tlie  date  hereof; 
and  that  Monday,  the  6th  day  of  Sep- 
tember 1909,  at  ten  o  clock  A,  M.,  in  the 
I'robate  Court  Rooms,  at  the  Court 
House  at  Duluth  in  said  County,  be 
and  the  same  hereby  is  fixed  and  ap- 
pointed as  the  time  and  place  for 
hearing  upon  the  examination,  ad- 
iu«tment  and  allowance  of  such  claims 
as"' shall    be    presented   within    the    time 

aforesaid.  ,    ..  ,  x.       *i,^ 

Let  notice  hereof  be  giv^n  ^i'  the 
Dublication  of  this  order  in  The  Duluth 
Evening   Herald,   as   provided   by  law. 

Dated    at    Duluth,    Minn.,    March   3rd, 
iq09 
1  J.  B.  MlI»DLECOFF, 

Judge   of  Probate. 
(Seal.  Probate  Court,  St.  Louis  County. 

dJ\'is'&  HOLLISTER, 

UA>  10  «  Attorneys. 

Duluth    Evening    Herald-March    4-11-18. 

1909. 

I 


GOING  TO  ^, 

ST.  PAUL  AND       rrn 
MINNEAPOLIS? 

The  most  comfortable  train  and  at  the  most  convenient 
hour  is  the  ^ 

TWILIGHT  LIMITED 

Leaves    DULUTH 4:35  P.M. 

Leaves    SUPERIOR    4:55  P.M. 

Arrives  ST.  PAUL 9:55  P.M. 

Arrives  MINNEAPOLIS 10:25  P.M. 

Makes  connections  in  St.  Paul  Union  Depot  with  trains  for 
Mankato,  Sioux  Falls,  Mitchell,  Sioux  City,  Council  Bluffs, 
Omaha  an(d  3eyon<d. 

All  ihe  club  comforts  and  conveniences  of 
trav<;l — Parlor  Cars,  Observation  Cafe  Cars 
and  modern  day  coaches  on  the  TWI- 
LIGHT LIMITED. 

Also  convenient  hours  on  Return  Trip  from  Minneapo- 
lis and  St.  I:  aul  to  Superior  and  Duluth. 

For  Tickets  and  Information  Call  at 

302  West  Superior  Street,  Duluth. 

815  Tower  Avenue,  Superior. 

A,  1^1.  FENTON,  District  Passenger  Agent. 


i<e>»--  ■ 


I 


wmm 


T 


'jhrrk^; 


^ 


I      ,     umirn 


ii 


AxH  tJi'  r» "^  III  i~n   t  11  ■■ill 


! 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY.    MARCH 


1909. 


llT-119    W.    Superior    St..    DuIutU. 

A  Big  Drop  in 

BAGS 


-1 


CONCERNING 


Throughout  America  the  people  most 
Interested  in  the  education  of  the  chil- 
dren of  the  generation  have  seen  the 
necessity   of  vacation  schools   and   sys- 


\% 


i«iJi 


i 


•._  -V-;.  '1 


Friday  we  place  on  sale  a 
lot  of  full  stock,  cowhide  leather 
Bass  in  ail  sizes;  they  have  French 
ediies.  leather 
brass  trimmings 
ings. 

Here  Are  the  Prices  for  Friday: 

16.30  for   14- 


covered     frames, 
fine  Holland  lin- 


Instead  of 
Inoli   Baes. 

Instead  of   $6.50  for  15- 
Inch  Bags. 

Instead   of   fT.OO   for  16- 
Inch    liags. 

Instead  of   >7.50  for  17- 
inch  Bags. 


$4.50 
$4.75 
$5.00 
$5.25 

We  have  a  few  of  these 
same  bags  with  finest  leather  lin- 
ing, which  will  go  at  correspond- 
ing low  prices — 

14-ln..  $5.25      15-in..  $5.75 
1 6-in. .  $6.25      1  7-in.,  $6.75 

If  you  intead  to  travel  any 
this  season,  do  not  be  too  late  to 
get  one  of  these. 

Leather  name  tags  free. 


I 


TAKE  CARE  OF  YOU 

t^,et  on  mir  list  of  regular  monthly 
patrons.  We  take  care  of  you  right. 
Call  up  1S04  Duluth,  and  have  our 
job  printing  manager  see  you.  New 
idoa.H. 

MILLAR  PR  NTIMG  COWPAMY, 
Diiliitli    'IMione    nJ04. 


tematlc  training  during  the  summer 
months  for  the  boys  and  girls  who 
would  otherwise  be  running  wild  with 
Utile  supervision  and  no  one  directing 
their  energies  into  helpful  channels. 
For  several  years  the  V\  omen  s  Coun- 
cil of  L>ululh  lias  maintained  vacation 
schools,  the  longest  established  beinfe, 
a  domestic  science  school  for  the 
young  girls  of  the  West  end.  Last 
sunwner  cla.sses  in  sewing  and  cooking 
were  Included  and  two  manual  train- 
ing school.s   were  also   established. 

The    Council    members     however,    did 
not     intend     to     permanently     maintain 
summer  schools   by   public   subscription, 
but    greatly    desire    that    the    work    be 
taken    over    by    the    school    board    as    a 
part    of    its    legitimate    work.       At    the 
lasi  meeting  ot   the   board  a  committee 
from    the   Council    appeared    before    the 
members   and   requested    that    the    work 
be    now    undertaken    by    the    board    ana 
that     the     schools       be     continued,     the 
tuuipment     bought     by     the    Council     to 
be    given    for    the    work.       There    is    a 
willingness  lo  comply  with  the  request 
if    lunds   are   available  and    the   Council 
members    and    the    club    women    of    the 
city,    generally,    are    wailing    anxiously 
to  "learn    if    the    vacation    school    are    to 
be   a    part   of    the   Ouluth    public   school 
system.       It     Is     probable     that     If     the 
board    undertakes    the    work    this    sum- 
mer,  that   It   win    continue    the    sessions 
in     those     schools     already     started     by 
the    Council    and    extend    the    work    as 
rapidly    as   is   practlrable.      The   domes- 
tic   science    school    was    last    year    con- 
ducted   at    the    Irving    school    at    ^Vest 
Duluth,    and   a    manual    training    school 
was  also  held  there.     The  other  classes 
In    manual    training    were    held    at    the 
high     school     building.        There     is     so 
strong  a  sentiment   in   favor   of   the   use 
of    the    public    school    buildings    during 
the   summer  months   that   it    is  possible 
tliat    the    work     will     never    ag;ain    die 
out   of   Duluth. 

ANNUAL  RECEPTION. 

Men's    League    is    Host  at 
Yearly  Party. 

The  members  of  the  Men  s  League  of 
the  First  Methodist  church  entertained 
at  the  annual  ladies'  night  last  even- 
ing at  the  church  parlors.  The  aftair 
was  a  banquet  followed  by  a  musical 
program.  Decorations  of  green  were 
used  on  the  tables  and  the  menu  cards 
were  also  suggestive  of  the  fe^y^**'  L'A 
St  Patrick.  Covers  were  laid  for  JoO 
of  the  members  and  their  friends. 
There  were  Informal  speeches  by  Al- 
fred Merrltt,  N.  M.  Young  and  Rev. 
Alexander  Milne  and  vocal  solos  by  L. 
Dworschak  and  A  E.  Bolter.  Mrs  W. 
C  Culmer  played  some  piano  numbers 
and  Mrs.  Fannie  Zimmerman  sang 
Arion  quartet  also  sang  witli 
Hancock  as  accompanist.  W.  L. 
les  was  the  toast-majster. 


the     company 
captain;    W.  G. 
F.    G.    Jianson. 
the    committee 
was    composed 
bers:   Lieut.   F. 
K.    Carpenter. 
Private 
Bellis. 


are:  F.  D.  Knowlton, 
Flodli),  first  lieutenant; 
second  lieutenant,  and 
in  charge  of  the  party 
of  the  following  mem- 
G.   Hanson,  Corporal   U. 

........    Corporal    C.     U.    Ffister. 

C.    Bchnlng   and    Private    F.    K. 


A  CLOSE,  SHAVE 

By  J.  \r  "^if faiiy. 


Personail  Mention. 

Mi.sses  Elsa  and  Lucille  Bieberman 
Ifft  today  for  Cliicag<J.  where  they  will 
spend  their  .spring  vacations. 

•  •       * 

Mr  and  Mrs.  K.  Woolway  left  last 
evening  for  a  visit  at  Mr.  Woolway  s 
former  home  at  London.  Can. 

•  «       • 

Mrs.    A.    S.     Reed    and    Miss    DeBrule 
have  gone  to  Cliicago  for  a  short  visit. 
m       *       • 

Mrs.  J,   D.   W;>tt.   who  has  been  HI  at 
her    home.    e7    West    Fourth    street, 
improving. 

•  •      * 

Miss  Hazel  McKay  of 
Fourth  street  is  visiting 
and  Keewatin. 

«       *      * 

Miss  Carev  and  Miss  Josephine  Carey 
■will  leave  tomorrow  for  a  few  days 
visit   at   Minnoanolis. 

•  «       4> 

Mrs.    J.    W.    Comstock    of    1020    ?:asl 
Second   street    lias  returned  from  a   ten 
days"  visit  at  Chicagi>. 
m      •      • 

Miss  Ethel  McC'uen  of  the  high 
faculty    will    leave    tomorrow    to 
the    spring    vacation    at    her 
1<  ^va. 


you    as    you 
comes  back? 

I  nodded  In  answer  to 
tlon  and  shook  my  head 
whereupon    the    man    set 

Soon   as    I    was    free   I 
the    place    and    called    up 
quarters,    telling   them   of 


are      until      your    mother 


Is 


1121      East 
at    Hibbing 


school 

spend 

home      In* 


EASTER 
GIFT 


An  artisdc  photograph 
is  aht'nytt  ufaxhionahle 
and  appropriate 

Pose  for  them  now. 

DWORSHAK 


1 

pay 

It's 

leave    and 

picking  up 

examining   them 


carriage     with 

You    can     go 

and    bring    the 

doubtful, 
customer 
was  .MrJf.   Hunt- 
needed  was  a  dozen 
smile,  and  his  consent 


to 
at 


replied, 
business. 


her 
her 

Mr. 


Mr. 


Tho 
\V.     H. 

Smith- 


Surprise  Party. 

Mrs.     A.     J.     Milllgan    of     28o 
street    was    surprised     by 
more    of    her    friends,    in 
birthday  on  St.  Patricks 
presented    with    several 
ents.    Refreshments 


DIAiMOIIIDS 


n 


We    have    a    large    stork    of    unre- 
deemed    Diamonds,      wlilch      we     will 
sell  at   grt-atly  le-liiced  prices. 
KBYSTONS  LOAN  CO 

Irt   \\>at    Sup«frlor   Street 


11 


D9  PRICE'S^  ^ 


0  Helm 
a  dozen  or 
honor  of  her 
day.  She  was 
beautiful  pres- 
were  served.  Those 
who  assisted  were:  Mrs.  Dan  Buchan- 
an, Mrs.  P.  H.  Ryan  and  Mrs.  F.  A. 
Wilson. 


Evening  Party. 

The  Misse.s  Whulen  oi  1-4  Tenth 
avenue  east  entertained  at  an  informal 
party  Wednesday  evening  at  their 
home  In  honor  of  their  guests.  Miss 
Zella  Gardner  and  Miss  Anna  Rooney. 
The  decorations  and  amtisements  for 
the  evening  were  suggestive  of  St. 
Patricks'  day.  and  the  following  guests 
enjoyed    the    affair: 


I       I        I 


CELERIED 
WHEAT  FLAKE 

Persons   with   rebellious   stomachs 
it  with  a  sense  of  genuine  relish. 


can 


eat 


Misses- 

Germond, 

Florence  Moran, 

Ida  Nelson, 
Messrs. 

George  D.  Neg- 
ley. 

Royal  G.  Wilson, 

J.  W.  .\nder8on, 

Ray  Coson, 

Gul  risen. 


Lilly  Macasklll. 
Agnes  Johnson. 
Coson. 

Gardner. 
A.  Klnely. 
Spencer  J.  Seals. 
E.    Harris. 
John  Steinback. 


WARRKX  VOTES  WET. 

Warren  Minn..  March  18. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.! — The  vote  on  salottns 
Tue.sdav  carried  "wet"  by  a  majority 
of  46  with  a  total- vote  of  290  cast.  The 
figlit  was  one  of  the  most  spirited  In 
year.s  and  was  expected  to  be  close,  but 
th^  "wets"  carried  by  a  big  majority 
for   the   total    vote   enst. 

. •— 

I.lvrly  Mclleii  t  anipalgn. 
Mell^-n  Wis..  Marcii  IS: — (Special  to 
Thf-  Herald.  I — The  municipal  campaign 
here  promises  to  be  a  lively  one.  There 
are  four  candidates  in  the  field  for 
mayor,  or  at  least  four  names  are 
"prominently  mentioned."  They  are 
John  Carlson,  Mlkf=  Coinn.«!.  A.  J.  Sul- 
livan and  John  Quantius.  Mr.  Sullivan 
had  th.'  distinction  of  being  the  first 
iiiayor  of  -Mellen.  and  he  has  support 
for  ri--electlon.  but  there  are  others. 
Th"  pro.'^pects  are  good  for  a  lively 
scrap  altliough  "harmony"  may  pull  off 
some  of  the  candidates. 


Now  at  Spokane. 

Karl  Reidelsberger,  formerly  of  this 
cltv.  Is  now  settled  at  Spokane.  Wash., 
anil  in  addition  to  his  violin  solo  work 
Is  director  of  the  Spokane  Choral  so- 
ciety. Mr.  Reidelsberger  w-ill  be  re- 
membered to  many  Duluth  people  as 
during  his  residence  In  this  city  sev- 
eral years  ag*©  he  was  prominent  In 
the  musical  life  of  the  city.  At  Spo- 
kane he  Is  sharing  the  studio  of  Fran- 
ces E.  Woodward,  also  formerly  of 
this  city. 


Name  Delegates. 

delegates      from      the      Duluth 
Women's    Christian    a.'^sociation 
second    biennial    convention    of 
the   American  associations 


The 

Young 

to    the 

all  of 

will    be  held  April   22 

will  be  the  president 

elation,    Mrs.     W.     C. 

W.    A.    McGonagle    of 


COLLEGE  WOMEN 

Are    Demanding    Concerned 
Attention  From  America. 

How    has    she    made    herself    so    great 
and  strong,  that  siirlnklng  little  figure 
which    entered    Oberlln    on     tiptoes    In 
1833.    her    pretty    frock    spread    over    a 
hoop   skirt,   her    hair  done   in   a   water- 
fall  stuffed   with   Jute,  a  reticule   upon 
her    wrist,    huddled    there    alone    in    the 
great   world,   fluttering   and   trembling- 
lipped,  but   standing  her  ground?  asks 
the   April    Delineator!      She    used    to    be 
the    "misjudged   and    neglected    sex"    In 
those  days,  and  now  she  is    'the  wom- 
en   of   the    university"    and    appears    In 
convocation  with  a  cap  and  gown,  and 
sometimes  a  purple  hood.     The  learned 
gentlemen   who   discussed   co-education 
in     the    early     half    of      the       century 
thought  that  men  and  women  were  too 
unlike    to    pursue    the   same    courses    of 
studv;   thev  argued    that  women   would 
lower   the  standard  of  collegiate  work; 
they    shuddered    In    their   skins    for    the 
moral  code;  and,  finally,  with  the  right- 
hand  -  thrust  -  into  -  the  -  breast-of-the- 
frock-coat   manner   which   was   used   by 
learned   gentlemen    in   those   days,   they 
delivered  themselves  of  the  dictum  that 
co-education    was    against    nature,    and 
that  was  supposed  to  be  the  end  of  that 
matter.  ,  ^.  . 

They  thought  of  nearly  everything 
except  the  things  that  have  really  hap- 
pened. I  know  not  Into  what  attacks 
of  vertigo  thev  would  have  been 
thrown  if  thev  had  foreseen  that  wom- 
en were  to  take  over  the  universities 
for  their  own.  and  drive  men  out  by 
sheer  pressure  of  numbers;  and.  yet 
more  revolutionary,  that  they  were  to 
be  much  in  Importance,  as  well  as 
many  In  numbers,  and  sit  high  In  the 
places  of  honor  wherever  they  chanced 

to    go. 

Everv    university    in    the    country    Is 
watching    the    university    girl     darkly. 
"Let    there    be    no    more    men    in    col- 
leges." she  seems  to  be  saying.      Presi- 
dents in  their  annual   reports  note  with 
dignified    trepidation    the    fact    that    60 
per    cent     of    their    students    are    now 
1  women,  a  proportion  yearly  increasing. 
I  .\   liet   of  thirteen    Western   universities 
i  shows    the    women     outnumbering    the 
i  men    In    seven     ca.ses.      Minnesota.    Ne- 
1  braska    and    California      have      nearly 
twice  as  manv  women  as  men  enrolled. 
Stanford   has  planted     its     hack     flatly 
against   the  wall,    like  a  pursued   crea- 
ture facing  a  pck.  and  arbitrarily  limit- 
ed    the    number    of    women    who    may 
enter    each    vear    to    500.         And    Tufts 
la    asking    for    a    gift    of    $250,000    that 
she   may   segregate   her   women    and   so 
save  herself  from   becoming  a  woman's 
college. 


called  me  by  name, 
flattered   to  think   this 
had     deigned     to     re- 


over  the 
mv  heart 
like    lead 

necessary 
opportunities     for 


•I    should 
lawver.  and 
— .      What   is 

ised  she  had 


shall 
I     am 


see 
old 


Mrs. 


almost 


won't. 
If  you 


Hunling- 
In     a 


as 


to    show 


an 


which 

to   26   at  St.   Paul 

of  the  local  asso- 

Agnew    and    Mrs. 

the    board    of    dl- 


ABOUT  OYSTERS. 


*— ' 


,  t 


The  Selection  of 

PIANO 


Is  hartl  fur  some  people  because 
they  make  it  so.  The  man  of 
la;K^*  affairs,  the  business  maii^ 
always  .seeks  the  best,  because 
he  knows  that  be.st  is  cheapest. 
For  a  picture  he  applies  to  a 
first  class  artist,  to  a  famous 
writer  for  a  good  book,  and  to  a 
first  class  piano  house  for  a 
ijood  piano. 

Steinway  &  Sons  and  Ivcrs  & 
Pond  have  a  reputation  for 
building  the  best,  and  we  are 
their  sole  agents.  By  .ill  means, 
see  OUT  I  vers  &  Pond  Grands. 
It  costs  nothing  to  shov»-  them. 

beautiful     oak 


rectors  and  the  general  secretary, 
Wesley   Feet  ham. 


Mrs. 


St.  Patrick's  Party. 

Miss  Helen  Little  and  Miss  Myrtle 
Perrv  entertained  at  a  St.  Patricks 
day  "pariy  In  honor  of  the  sixteenth 
birthday  anniversary  of  Miss  Dell 
Perry.  An     evening    of     games    and 

music    was    enjoyed    by    the    following 
guests: 


Misses — 

Clara  Bergman. 

Julia  Putman. 

Erna  Rakowsky, 

Austria  Larsen. 

Luclle  Hoar. 
Messrs. — 

James  Dunn, 

E.  Stevens. 

Walter  Moore. 

Percy  Sweetman 
of  Superior, 


Margaret  Melick. 
Dor«)thy  Schaltz. 
Ida  Bergman. 
May  Laveseer. 


Arthur  Le  Moigne, 
Allan  McDonald. 
George  Frink, 
Benjamin  Frink. 
.\rthur  Cameron. 


Card  Party. 

The  members  of  the  Star  of  Peace 
Temple  No.  29.  Pythian  Sisters,  enter- 
tained at  cards  last'evenlng  at  the  old 
Masonic  Temple.  A  large  number  of 
guests  was  present  and  the  decorations 
were  suggestive  of  St.  Patrick's  day. 
Cinch  was  played  at  twelve   tables. 


A  large  size, 
cased  piano,  fine 
continuous  hinges, 
musical  tone,  for 


iron 
ivory 


plate, 
keys, 


$190 


JjilO  di.wn  and  $1.50  per  week. 

Duluth  Music  Co., 

222  West  First  St. 

EDMUND  G.  CHAPMAN, 

Manager. 


Infonnal  Musicale. 

Mrs.  Stella  Prince  Stottker  and  Miss 
Stocker  entertained  at  an  Informal 
musicale  last  evening  at  their  home, 
1020  East  Second  street.  Twenty 
guests  were  entertained. 

Surprise  Party. 

Miss  Lucille  Grimes  was  the  guest  of 
honor  at  a  pleasant  surprise  party  last 
evening  at  her  home.  1721  Piedmont 
avenue.  The  rooms  were  prettily  dec- 
orated In  green  and  white  in  honor  of 
St.  Patrick,  and  the  appointments 
the  luncheon  further  carried  out 
scheme.  Games  and  music  were 
amusements   of  the  evening. 


Ways  and  Methods  of  Serv- 
ing the  Animal. 

The  epicure,  even  thougli  a  germ 
crank,  would  never  stand  for  raw  oys- 
ters whose  shells  have  been  smashed 
open  with  dire  effect  on  the  juices. 
She  would  also  have  a  few  service 
don'ts   that   are   too   often   forgotten. 

Don't  serve  raw  oysters  out  of  their 
shell,  even  though  you  have  wonderful 
ovster   plates    that   you    hate    to    hide. 

Don't  serve  them  lukewarm.  There 
are  guests  who  can  only  bolt  an  oys- 
ter from  good  manners,  and  should  It 
happen  to  be  of  sickening  warmth  a 
social  tragedy  may  result. 

Don't  over-ice.  A  cold  oyster  does 
pot  mean  one  given  a  bath  in  melted 
Ice  nor  should  one  be  compelled  to  dig 
through  Icebergs  to  find  their  half- 
frozen  bivalves.  To  rest  the  shells  on 
a  bed  of  cracked  ice  for  half  an  hour 
before  the  course  will  usually  give  Just 
the    right    temperature. 

Don't  make  the  mistake  of  serving 
big  ovsters  at  a  woman's  luncheon. 
Men  inay  know  that  a  Lynnhaven  Is 
jucier  and  more  delicious  than  the 
boasted  blue  point,  but  the  few  women 
who  know  it  will  not  acknowledge 
that  their  mouths  are  equal  to  the 
swallowing  feat. 

Don't  over-condiment  or  over-sauce. 
The  true  epicure  uses  Just  a  bit  of 
lemon  knowing  that  more  destroys  the 
oyster  flavor;  the  man  or  woman  who 
does  not  share  the  taste  of  England's 
George  In  ovsters  will  go  slow  on  ta- 
basco, horseradish  and  catsup  lest 
that  dreaded  bad  oyster  slip  down  un- 
3.  w ft  res 

Don't  overcook.  Many  things  may 
go  wrong  when  one  forsakes  the  oys- 
ter raw.  but  most  faults  are  conquer- 
able as  long  a.s  the  stove  has  not  had 
too  long  an  Inning.  However  cfioked 
the  epicure  knows  that  a  slightly 
curling  beard  Is  a  sign  that  the  oys- 
ter Is  done. 


of 
the 
the 


A  Skin  of  Beauty  to  •  Joy  Forever. 


Hostess  at  Cards. 

Mrs.  Charles  Bexter  entertained  at 
cards  vesterday  afternoon  at  her  home. 
2617  West  Fourth  street.  The  guests 
were  the  members  of  the  Zenith  chap- 
ter of  the  Order  of  the  Eastern  Star. 
The  card  favors  were  won  by  Mrs. 
Charles  Bronson,  Mrs.  W.  A.  Gearhart. 
Mrs.  Peter  Hibbard  and  Mrs.  McLeod. 
The  decorations  about  the  rooms  were 
green. 

Dance  at  Armory. 

The  members  of  Company  C  of  the 
Third  infantry,  entertained  at  a  de- 
lightful dancing  party  last  evening  at 
the  armory.  A  large  number  of  guest.-< 
enjoyed    the    affair.        The    officers    of 


D 


R.  T.  FELIX  eOURAUD't 
Oriental  Cream  or 
Magioal  Beautlflert 

RemoTes  Tan,  Pimpl**,  Preck' 
!••,   Moth   Patches.   Rash  and 

3k!B  DU«ue*.  ani  arwy 
bl«ni.h  09  beautv,  kad  4«> 
fl«i  detection.  It  hM  ttood 
the  te«t  of  fe  vetr*.  and  <•  M 
htirelcsn  we  tMt«  it  to  IM 
tura  It  It  proporly  im«d«.  Ac- 
captno  cour.ten'el'  of  utoiilu 
aam«.  Dr.  I_  A.  Styr*  %»\i, 
to  a  Udjr    of  th«    hkuttoB   (• 

ratient^i  •'Ai»«a  •<'•'*  "'U 
uaa  lh*m.  I  recoicin«a4 
•COURaOd'S  CREAM'  M 
Oi«  .Mwt  harmful  cX  >ll  Iha 
iWIn  ^ra><4rat|oai.°'  F^r  a*!* 
by  all  droffgitti  aod  Fanc| 
Cooda  Dailara  lo  the  Unltrl 
Statat.  Canada  and    i'i.Tcp% 

IcN.  T.  BopUM.  Pr«»..  17  Srcat  Joacs  St.  K«w  \0(| 


(('..pyrigtit*<1.      All    right*    rearrrcd.) 

"What  is  the  amount?"  in  that  mu- 
sical voice,  with  that  luminous  smile 
which,  for  the  last  hour,  had  made  me 
forget  the  disparity  In  our  years  and 
the  great  gulf  between  her  social  po- 
sition and  mine.  ,,„..c- ••  i 
•'Three  thousand,  and  fifty  dollars,  i 
replied,  totaling  uy  tiie  few  but  cost- 
ly Items  of  her  purchase — chiefly  pearls 
and  diamonds.                                 ,  ... 

•Dear    me:"     sh«    e.\clalmed.    with    a 
Utile    sigh.    "I    had    not    intended    being 
so     extravagant.       1     haven't    so    ni"ch 
money    with    mo — not    more    than    halt 
that-   and  1   cant   wait  at  the  hotel   for 
you    to    send    the    jewels    C.    O.    D..   as    I 
am   going   away    on    an   early   train 
shall    have     lo    take    what    I    can 
for  now.  and  do  wiiliout  the  rest. 
BO    hard    to    decide    what    to 
what  to  take,"  she  went  on, 
some  of  the  gems  and 

lovingly   one   by  olje. 

M    really   cant  decide,"  the  lady  said 

at   length.      "I   don't   want   to   leave   any 

of    them.       Would    it    be    asking    any- 
thing    unusual,     or     giving     too     much 

trouble,    if    1    should    suggest    that    you 

accompany    me    In.    the 

these     pretty     trinkets? 

with    me    to    the    hotel 

money    back."      ,      ,      , 

Mr.    Bronson    looked    rathei 

tut    I    introduced    him    to    my 

(whose  name,  I  found, 

Ingi'ord).  and  all  it 

words,    a    single 

wa.s   gained.  .,      *     j 

r    assisted    Mrs.^Huntlngford 

carriage     and     took     the    seat 

side.  ^  ... 

•How    long    have   you    been   with 

Bronson?"      Mrs.      Huntingford      asked 

after    a    moment's    silence. 
"Five  years,   ma'am,"  1 
'•.\nd    do    you    like    the 

.Morlev?"   she   inquired 
Mr.    Bronson   had 

and  I   was  mucli 

quctnly     woman 

member    it.  '  x,.  ..    t    or> 

••I  have  sometimes  thought.  i  an- 
swered, confessing  to  an  ambition  cher- 
ished long  in  secret.  >'i  hat  I  would  Ike 
to  be  a  lawyer ;.t.-buj^  that  Is  Impossi- 
ble." -I 

-Why.  my  dear."     lingering 
word     in    a    way    that    made 
leap    and    bound — th*n     sink 
as  she  added,  "sir"?"  .' 

"Because     1     haven't    the 
education,     nor     tlie, 
study."   I   answered. 

"But    there   are     always     the   means 
of    education      and   the    opportunity    of 
advancement    for?  those    who    have    the 
win.     tho     ambltton,  ,to     grasp     them 
:Mrs.    HuntlngfortJ  J-pplied 
be  very  glad  to  ^e^  you  a 
some   day   a   judjjP. 'Mr.  — ■ 
%  our  name?"  .  •" 

".Morley."  I  repliefl.-'surpr 
forgotten    it   so   seon.  „ 

"Xo — I   mean    your  Christian  name. 

"Fred,"     I     answeied.     more  surprised 

than  before.  ,,       ,.      , 

"Ah'    that's    better    than   Air.    Morley. 
You   won't  mind   my  calling  you  'Fred 
for    the    little    while    that    I 
vou?       Really,     you     know- 
enough    to    be    your   mother." 

"Oh:   don't   say    that!"    I    blurted    out. 
egreglously. 

"No?"      she      said.      "Then      I 
Fied,    If   you   don't    like    It.      But 
want  to  l)ecome  a   lawyer  you  must  do 
so.     I  wish   I  could  help  you  " 

"You   have  hoH>^d  me, 
f«»rd."   I  assured   hfr. 

"How?"      she      asked, 
whisper. 

••By    being    so    kind 
interest   in   me."' 4     ,.  _.  .^   .. 

"\    am.  glad    t*    l>^4t    you    say    that. 
Fred.       I    know    that       you    will       make 
a     great     lawyer,     and       a       good       one. 
And    yet — so    fiiucji    depends 
outside  a  man  hfrii.-<f^f. 
A\'ere  you  ever  in  love?" 

"Never        until — ,"      I      began:      then 
stopped    shorL      I   dared    not    utter    the 
presnmptious   speech    that   trembled   on 
mv  lips. 

"Never      until. — "     Mrs.      Huntingford 
eclioed.   encouragingly. 

"Never  until — "  1  hegan — and  stopped 
again. 

"Never    until— this    afternoon?"      she 
asked      in      tones      that      scarce      were 
audible.  ..    , 

"Never    until    this    afternoon."    I    re- 
peated    firmly. 

"And    are    you    ashamed    of 
tlie    question    she    asked    me. 
had  expected  a  rebuke. 

"No.  I  am  not."  I  answered,  boldly. 
".\re  you  afraid?" 

"Oh:    why    will    you    torture    me    by 
talking    of    this    thing,    that    I    hardly 
dare     think     of,     even     in     my     Inmost 
soul?" 

"My  poor  Fred,"  she  said.  "No  honest 
man  "need   be  afraid   to   love   the  great- 
est woman  In  the  world — unless  she  be 
his    neighbor's   wife.        And   though    we 
may     not    always     gain     the     object     of 
our    love,    the    loving    of    Itself    Is    good, 
for    every    man    and    woman.        Do    you 
reallv  love  me.  Fred?" 

"l-^I    do    not    know    your    name,"    I 
faltered. 

♦'You    may   call   be    Rachel,      she    re- 
plied. 

1     took    her    hand,    and    she    pressed 
mine    for    a    moment    to    her    heart.        I 
felt     Its     strong.     ev«n     throb     beating 
out   the  rich,  pure  blood  that  gave   her 
all    that    glorious    glow    of    health    and 
regal  beauty.  .....  ,.    , 

"I  know  not,  Rachel.  I  replied, 
•'whether  you  would  call  this  feeling 
love.  I  know  I  worship  you,  and 
would  account  It  i»y  to  die  for  you — 
or   yours." 

She  lay  back  l"rt  tfie  cushions  there, 
pensive  and  beautiful,  and  my  arm 
stole  around  her  waist.  I  was  Just 
about  to  kiss  her.  when  the  carriage 
stopped,  and  Rachel  disengaged  her- 
self, laughing  gently. 

••I  have  to  call  here  for  a  pack- 
age," she  said,  stepping  out  Into  the 
street.  "You  careless  boy!  You  are 
not  fit  to  be  trusted  with  my  trinkets. 
I  will  carry  them  myself."  she 
tinned,  picking  up  the  jewel-case 
the   seal   where    I    Ivad   laid   It. 

"You  may  come  in  with  me  and 
carry  back  a  parcel  that  is  not  so 
precious." 

Rachel  led  the  way  into  the  hair- 
dresser's establishment  In  front  of 
which  we  had  stopped,  and  we  went 
Into  a  small  room  across  a  hall  from 
the  main   room. 

"Is  everything  ready?"  Rachel  asked, 
as  the  proprietor  came  in  and  greet- 
ed   her   with    a    low    bow. 

Then,  suddenly,  he  and  four  other 
men  sprang  upon  me.  and  for  a  nnin- 
ute  I  thought  myself  the  victim  of  a 
nlglitmare.  But  soon  the  tones  of 
Rachel's  voice  convinced  me  I  was  not 

asleep.  „      ,  ..       .  , 

"Good-by,  Fred.'  she  was  saying. 
"Don't  be  frightened,  dear.  These 
men  won't  hurt  you  If  you're  good. 
There's  no  help  for  It.  The  doctor 
savs  It  must  be  done.  I'll  call  for 
you    In    half   an    hour." 

She  went  out  and  I  remained  passive 
in  my  bewilderment  while  the  men 
strapped  me  tightly  into  a  barber's 
chair. 

Suddenly  my  muddled  brain  was  il- 
lumined with  the  conviction  of  treach- 
ery, and  I  writhed  and  struggled  to 
free  myself,  shouting: 


his  first  ques- 
at  the  second, 
me  at   liberty, 
dashed   out   of 
police    head- 
my   loss    and 
describing  the  lady  who  had  got  away 
with  Mr.  Bronson's  jewels.     Suspecting 
the    barber    of    complicity    In    the    rob- 
bery.   I    spoke    to    a    policeman    on    the 
street   and    took    him    back   with   me    to 
the   place    where   I   had   been   so    vilely 
misused.       The     barber,     however,     pro- 
fessed   the    utmost   surprise    and    regret 
when  he  heard  my  story.     He  said  that 
Mrs.     Huntingford    had     called     a.t     his 
store  earlier  in   the  afternoon  and  said 
to  him: 

"1  have  a  son.  a  young  man.  who  has 
been    suffering    from    brain    fever,    ana 
the  doctor   ha.s  ordered  me   to  have   his 
head  shaved.      I  will  bring  him   here  in 
my  carriage  in  an  hour  or  two  and  call 
for   him   again    when   it's   all   over.      He 
may   object   and    talk   strange,    but   you 
have  enough  men   here  to  manage 
Gag  him  und  strap  him  down 
sary.  but  don't  hurt  the  poor 
It  was  beautifully  simple 


him. 
if  neces- 
boy." 
We  never 
got  any  trace  of  Mrs.  Huntingford.    Mr. 
Bronson  offered  inducements  to  the  po- 
lice, but  in  the  end  they  had  to 
themselves  beaten. 

•  

StllV  ."Veek. 
Stiff  neck  is  caused  by  rheumatism 
of  the  muscles  of  the  neck.  It  is 
usually  confined  lo  one  side  or  to  the 
back  of  the  neck  and  one  side.  While 
it  is  often  quite  painful,  quick  re  ief 
may  be  had  by  applying  Chamberla  ns 
Liniment.  Not  one  case  o.  rheumatism 
in  ten  requires  internal  treatment. 
When  there  Is  no  fever  and  no  swell- 
ing as  In  muscular  and  chronic  rheu- 
matism. Chamberlain's  Liniment  will 
accomplish  more  than  any  interr.a., 
treatment.   For  sale  by  all   druggists. 


ST.  PATRICK'S 
ENTERTAINMENT 

Young  Men  of  St  Clem- 
ent's Parish  Give  a 
Playlet 


set  the  date  for  their  minstrel  show.  It 
will  be  given  Marcli  2tt.  Rehearsals 
are    being   held  nearly  every   evening. 

Miss  Hazel  Welch  of  the  Christian 
block  Is  entertaining  her  friend.  Miss 
Cora  Davis  of  Bralnerd. 

The  Queen  Esther  Circle  of  Grace 
M.  E.  church  will  glvi;  the  playlet. 
"Marcia's  Loves."'  at  the  church  Tues- 
day evening,  March  30.  A  matinc-  lor 
the  children  will  be  given  on  the  pre- 
ceding  Saturday  afternoon. 


and 


on    things 
Tell  me,  Fred: 


St.  Clement's  parish  hall  was  crowded 
last  evening,  the  occasion  being  the 
St.  Patrick's  day  entertainment  by  the 
Young   Mens  sodality.  To»,^t 

Piano  solos  were  given  by  Miss  Janet 
Haley  and  Miss  Louise  Peekes^  vocal 
solos  by  Mrs.  Leo  Ball  and  Miss  E. 
Rvan,  and  recitations  by  Miss  Mary 
Slic^gren   and   Rev.   T.   L    Killeen. 

The  principal  part  of  the  entertain- 
ment was  the  playlet  given  by  tjie  so- 
dality. The  title  ot  the  skit  was  The 
Old  Captain's  Idea."  The  boys  who  ap- 
peared were  George  Arimond,  Walter 
Emerson.  Earl  Droham.  J.  ^\aoe.  •'• 
Miller.  R.  La  Valle  J.  Garvey,  Mnjhael 
O'Hearn.  S.  Evans  Michael  Ryan 
L.  LaLonde. 

WOMAN  BADLY  BURNED. 

Mrs.  C.   R.  Glover  Spills  Gasoline 
and  It  Ignites. 

After  spilling  gasoline  on  her  dress. 
Mrs.  C.  R.  Glover  of  1330  West  bupe 
rlor  street,  went  too  near  the  cook 
stove  and  her  clothes  caught  fire.  Her 
screams  attracted  a  friend  who  was 
visiting  her,  and  she  succeeded  in  ex- 
tinguishing   thv    flames. 

When  Mr.s.  Glover's  clothes  caught 
fire,  she  ran  into  the  next  room,  where 
her  caller  was  .sitting.  She  threw  her- 
self on  the  floor  and  the  caller  smoth- 
ered  the  flames  with   a   rug. 

Mrs.    Glover    was    using    the    gasoline 
to    clean    a    dress.       Her    wounds 
dressed    by    a    physician    and 
taken   to  the   ho.spital.     She 
In    a    few    days. 


it?"    was 
where    1 


were 
she    was 
will   be  out 


Foley's  Honev  and  Tai-  cures  coughs 
quickly,  strengthens  the  lungs  and  ex- 
pels colds.  Get  the  genuine  In  a  yel- 
low   package.    Sold    by    all    druggists. 

ST.  PATRlCKiOAY 
IS  CELEBRATED 

Irish  Play  "Arrah-Na- 
Pogue"  Presented  at 
Cathedral  Auditorium. 

St.  Patrick's  day  waj  appropriately 
celebrated  at  the  catheilral  auditorium 
last  ev<;nlng.  Father  J.  J.  O'Mahoney 
made  an  addre-ss.  in  which  he  briefly 
outlined  some  of  the  b-neflts  that  had 
aowued  to  America,  and  the  world  as 
a  whole,  through  tlie  Ir  sli  race. 

Father  O'Mahoney  stited  that  early 
Irish  civilization  kindled  Hie  flame  of 
civillzalion  in  Europe,  t.nd  through  the 
literature  and  art  of  the  ages  could 
be  traced  the  influence  <if  the  Irish  peo- 

Coming  down  to  the  preesnt  day. 
Father  O'Malioney  stated  that  the  Irish 
had  alAvays  been  an  Important  factor 
in  the  history  of  Aineri 
slated  tlial  Irish 
great  majority  In 
tlon;      that 


We.st  End  Shortrails. 

Sarah 


Goss    has    been 
by   the   serious 


called 
Illness 


to 
of 


First 
a 


is    In 


Mrs 
Racine,    Wis., 
her    father. 

The  attendance  at  the  revival  serv- 
ices in  Central  Baptist  church  was 
very  gratifying.  The  meeting's  will  be 
held  tonight  and  tomorrow  night. 
There   will    be   no   service    Sunday. 

At  the  meeting  of  tlie  cadets  of  St. 
Luke's  church  last  evening  plan.s  were 
made  for  taking  a  number  of  pictures 
of  the  corps.  ,    ^, 

The     Epworth    League     of    the 
Norwegian-Danish  M.  E.  church  gave 
pie  social  in  the  church  last  evening. 

Charles    Haas    of    Grand    Forks 
the  W.  St  end  for  a  few  days. 

The  CitV  Democratic  club  will  hold  a 
meeting  Friday  evening  in  Sloiin'.s  liall. 
This  club  is  the  reorganized  West  h.n<l 
Democratic  club.  .      «  „. 

Miss  Grace  Anderson  of  Twenty- first 
avenue  west  has  gone  to  Bralnerd. 
Minn.,   to   visit  friends. 

The  Young  People's  society  of  /aqx\ 
Norwegian  Lutheran  church  will  meet 
tomorrow  evening  in  the  church  par- 
lors 

Herbert  Lowe  of  the  West  end  will 
leave  the  last  of  the  week  for  Omaha, 
where  he  has  taken  a  position  with  an 
automobile  firm. 

H  C.  Pierce  has  taken  a  position 
with  the  Wisconsin  Central  engineer- 
ing   crew.  ,        ,  .     , 

e     Emerson     school     alumni     have 


an  liberty.  He 
soldiers  were  in  a 
the  American  revolu- 
Edmund  Burke,  in  the 
English  parliament,  had  always  been  a 
champion  of  the  rights  of  America.  In 
the  davs  when  this  country  was  a 
struggfing  nation.  Fa:her  O'.Mahoiiey 
stated  that  the  immigration  of  the 
Irish  gave   it  great  ass  stance. 

"Arrah-Na-Pogue,"  a  little  Irish  play, 
was  presented  at  tlie  close  of  the  even- 
ing's   celebration.       The    action 
play  deals  with  Ireland. 's  penal 

Among  those  who 
play  were:  William 
Stringer.     .lames 


selections  during  the  evening,  and  the 
Cathedral  quartet  and  sextet  gave  sev- 
eral excellent  numbers. 

DR.  ( ARL  EWALD  DEAD. 

Former  Swedish  Lntheran  Divine  of 
Minnesota  Called  in  Chicago. 

Minneapolis.  Minn..  March  18. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald. — Dr.  Carl  A.  Ewald. 
one  of  the  leading  clergymen  of  the 
Augustana  Swedish  Lutheran  synod 
and  a  former  resident  of  Minneapolis, 
Is  dead  at  his  home  In  Chicago,  and 
his  funeral  tomorrow  will  be  attended 
by  the     chief  men   of  the  synod. 

Dr  Ewald  came  to  America  from 
Sweden  in  1870,  and  almost  immediate- 
Iv  enlerod  tlic  theological  seminary  at 
Paxton.  111.  Two  years  later  he  re- 
ceived a  call  to  Minneapolis  and  was 
ordained  on  Sept.  29.  187:2.  during  the 
synodical    meeting    In    Galesburg.    ill. 

After  spending  theree  years  In  Min- 
neapolis Dr.  Ewald  went  to  Chicago 
to  take  charge  of  the  Emanuel  church, 
which,  had  been  organized  by  his 
father-in-law.  Dr.  Erland  Carlsson.  a 
pioneer  Swedish  Lutheran  ciergynian. 
This  congregation,  one  of  the  oldest 
and  largost  in  the  synod,  he  served  for 
thirty-four    years,   until    his   death. 

NEW  RAINY  RIVER  LAUNCH. 

International  Falls,  Minn.,  March  18. 
—  (Special  to  The  Herald.)-^Thc  new 
gasoline  launch  which  Charles  Mather 
and  Al  Bernard  are  having  built.  Is 
nearlv  compjeted.  It  will  be  launched 
earlv'  next  week.  The  own^«  have 
decided  to  call  the  new  boat  thff*tooch- 
iching  a  name  aptly  expressing  the  lo- 
c 'A  and  historic  development  of  the 
northern  section  of  Minnesota.  The 
launch  Is  sixty  feet  long,  with  a 
twelve-foot  beam.  The  twin  engines 
are  placed  In  the  center  of  the  boat 
and  enclosed  In  an  engine  room  11x18 
feet.  The  fore  cabin  is  11x16  feet, 
with  the  entrance  from  the  front  end 
of  the  boat  and  a  passageway  through 
the  engine  room  to  the  aft  cabin.  This 
room    is    11x14    feet. 

The  launch  is  to  be  fitted  up  with 
two  24-horsepower  engines,  each  driv- 
ing   a    33-lnch    screw    propeller. 

"The  vessel  Is  being  built  by  Frank 
Sayner  of    Rhlm-lander.    Wis. 


of  the 
days, 
t  )ok"  part  In  the 
C'aaev,  Miss  Ella 
Lydoi,.  Charles  Kelly, 
.Miss  .lennie  Grady.  Vincent  Grady, 
Joseph  Belieparche.  .lo.seph  Holland, 
Thomas  McGraw.  Edw  ird  White,  John 
Mackoy,  Herbert  Paul  and  James 
Walsh.  ,         ^  , 

Flaaten's      orchestra     played   several 


.Appointed    City     .attorney. 

East  Grand  Forks.  N.  D.,  .March  18  — 
(Special  to  The  Herald. )— At  a  special 
meeting  of  the  city  council.  George 
A  E.  Finlai-son  was  by  a  unanimous 
vote  elected  city  attorney,  to  fill  the 
vacancy  caused  by  the  resignation  of 
D  T.  Collins,  who  recently  removed 
to  nibbing.  The  commission  was  made 
to  date  from  March  2,  when  Mr.  Col- 
lins resigned.  Mr.  Flnlayson  having 
been  acting  as  city  attorney  since  that 
date. 


4fj6^ 


con- 
from 


EYES 


The    diamonds!     "Let    me    go!      Stop 

thief!" 

The  proprietor  came  over  and  gagged 
me:  and  then,  while  the  four  other  men 
stood  by.  he  began'  to  cut  my  hair, 
ss.  vi  nfiT '  '1 

•Now.  please  .sit  .  still,  sir;  or  I'm 
afraid  I  may  cut  youi," 

It  seemed  dangerous  as  well  as  use- 
less to  struggle,  and  I  gave  myself  up 
l(.  my  fate,  untdl  Uie  barber  having 
clipped  my  hair  ishort  began  to  shave 
mv  head.  At  tills  I  resumed  my  strug- 
gles, but  found  tjiem'  vain  and  danger- 
ous as  before.        "  .        ,  .,     . 

When  he  had  s^iavied  my  head  so  that 
not     a     hair    remained,    the     proprietor 

"Now.  sir.  will  you  be  quiet  and  reas- 
onable if  I  take  tile  gag  out  of  .your 
mouth  and   untie;  you.  or  shall  I  keep 


an  every  day  pos- 
ses.sion.  They  don't  seem 
very  wonderful  until  you 
lose  them.  It  doesn't 
make  the  affliction  any 
easier  to  bear  to  know  that 
you  are  probably  to  blame 
for  not  consulting  us  in 
time.  The  right  glasses 
at  the  right  time  would 
have  saved  your  eyes. 

Consult  Us  In  Due  Time ! 

Graduate  Optician  in 
charge  of  our  fine  Optical 
department. 


y(|u. 


?^ 


Bagley&Co. 


Jewelers  and  Silversmiths, 
315  West  Sttperior  St. 


Spring  Clothing  is  awaiting 
you— th<i  best  styles  of  the  sea- 
son for  IS^en,  Women  and  Chil- 
dren. If  you  want  to  be  strictly 
up-to-date  in  your  dress,  and  to 
have  good  clothing  whenever 
you  need  it,  a  dollar  a  week  will 
do  it.  This  is  the  store  that 
gives  you  better  styles  and  qual- 
ities, and  charges  nothing  extra 

for  liberal  credit. 

New  TaUored  SuiU  for 

Women  and  Misses 

$10  Up 

New  Millinery, 

(latti«t  models) 

$3  Up 

Men's  Spring  Suits,  all 

the  New  Patterns 

$8  Up 

The  Nobbiest  HaU 
$1.50  Up 


ASkiN  S^mRINt  CO 


A 


»**■ 


J 


2:8-30  E.  Superior  Street 

Store  open  Monday  and  Satiir* 
day  Evenings  till  10  o'clock 


2nd  Floor,  over 
Public  iMarket 


=^1 


■    '  I 


— —————— 

. 

I 

1 

\ 

^^^■^^^ 

[ 

. 

1 

( 

r                                                      ' 

-i 

) 

1 , 

, _ __, 

u                     r    J  1 

K 

■ 

- 

1 

i 

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f 

I 

1 

; 


12 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


WHEAT  HAS 
FimONE 

Bullish    News    Prevails 
and  the  American  Mar- 
kets Show  Gains. 


»»»»**»»»»*»»»»»»»»»»»]«(»  jtiii*******************)!!******^ 


Flax  Is  Very  Quiet,  But 

the    Prices    Are 

Steady. 


Duluth  Board  of  Trade,  March  18. — 
Wlieat  was  active  over  a  range  of 
about  a  point  today  and  closed  with  a 
better  tone  In  all  the  American  mar- 
kets. Cables  were  stronger,  and  tlie 
news  from  Argentina  was  bullish.  The 
shipments  from  that  country  tliis  week 
are  estimated  at  4,tiOl»,00it  bu.,  which  is 
light  as  compared  with  5.096.000  bu. 
last  v.eok  and  «),62S.OOO  bu.  a  year  ago. 
Duluth,  showed  the  least  response  to 
the    bulge. 

Liverpool  closed  unchanged  to  '«d 
higher.  Antwerp  unchanged,  Budapest 
%c  lower  and   Berlin    4c   higlier. 

Tli>^  Mav  option  clased  unchanged  in 
Duluth,  i^c  higlier  in  C'liicago  and  New 
York.  »»(y'»i.  higher  In  Alinneapolls, 
Vi6'=Sc  higner  in  St.  Louis,  >2@"bC 
higher  in  Kansas  Cliy  and  He  higher 
in  Winnipeg.  The  July  option  closed 
^c  hlgiier  In  Iniluth.  *»  fy  Vic  higher 
In  Chicago  anti  Winnipeg,  'xic  higher  in 
Mlnn«apolis  and  St.  i-ouis,  Sc  higher 
In  New  York  and  '8^",4c  niglier  in 
Kansas   City. 

May  corn  closed  H6  H  higher  In  Chl- 
cagi>  and  %d  lower  In  Liverpool.  May 
oat.s   ch  sed    ^^c   higher  in  Cliicago. 

Broonirall   cabled   from    Liverpool: 

■"Wheat — The  effect  of  weaker  Amer- 
ican cables  yesterday  was  offset  by  the 
fact  of  expected  lighter  shipments 
frorr.     .Argentina,     and     the        continued 

food  demand  from  the  continent  and  at 
he  o;>ening  the  undertone  was  firm 
with  values  unchanged  to  Hd  higher. 
Following  the  opening  a  further  ad- 
vance occurreil  at  which  time  shorts 
were  ntrvous  and  values  showed  an 
additional  gain  of  '*  to  %*1  with  the 
princlpa.'     strength     in    July.  London 

wa.<  icpoited  to  be  a  good  buyer  on 
further  fears  regarding  the  Balkan 
outlook.  Notwithstanding  the  con- 
tinued liberal  arrival^.  stocks  show  no 
Increase  and  this  fact  is  keeping  shorts 
nervou«       At    midday. 


the 


and 


's 


to 


'f*^ 


market    was 
higher    than 


etlil    firm 
yesterday. 

"Corn — March  was  uncjuoted.  May 
was  tasv  at  the  start  and  '^d  lower 
and  latei  lost  an  additional  Lgd.  The 
decline  was  in  svmpathy  with  America, 
poor  spot  tr'ide.  and  the  fact  that 
har\esting  in  Argentina  has  com- 
menced." 

Car  receipts  of  wheat  at  Duluth  were 
35  against  CO  last  year,  and  at  Minne- 
apolis 7b  against  --3  last  year,  miming 
a  total  for  the  Nortliwest  of  Ua 
against  ->3  last  year.  Chicago  re 
ceSved    ."*■   against   :5   last   year. 

Primary  receipts  of  wheat  were  368.- 
000  bu.  last  year  40^,000  bu.  Ship- 
ments  172,000   bu,   last   year   284,000   bu. 

Primarv  receipts  of  corn  were  368,- 
OCO  bu,  last  year  4i«0.000  bu.  Shipments 
256,000    bu.    last    year    -iaO.OOO    bu. 

Wheal  was  active  during  the  .•■lesslon 
In  Dulutl..  May  wht^at  opened  He 
higlier  at  $1.15.  advanced  to  $1.15'%, 
declined  to  $1.14 '2.  rallied  to  $1.15«?z) 
1.15 '4.  declined  10  $1.14 "»  and  closeel 
at  that  price,  unchanged  fi  om  yester- 
day. July  wheat  opened  'gc  higher  at 
$1.15S,  advanced  to  $1.15*g.  declined 
to  $1.15^.  rallied  to  $1.15°^  fa  1.15*4, 
eased  off  to  $1.15-'s  and  closed  there, 
a  gain   c>f    He   over  yesterday. 

Durum  wheat  closed  unchanged  and 
cash  6])ring  wheat  was  selling  on  a 
basis  of  Ic  over  May  for  No.  1  north- 
ern. 

May  flax  c>pened  unchanged,  at  $1.63. 
advanced  to  $1.63 '»  and  closed  there,  a 
gain  of  'gc  over  yesterday.  July  flax 
closed  unchanged,  at  $1.6-'i2-  Septem- 
ber flax  sold  at  $1.3yH  and  $1.3'J  and 
closcti  unchanged  from  vesterdav.  at 
tl.ai'H.  October  flax  opened  at  $1.35 H 
declined  to  $1.34  Vi  and  closed  at  $1.34!itr 
a  loss   of    ?4C. 

Oats  closed  9ec  higher,  and  barley 
%c  lower. 

Following  were   the  closing  prices: 

Wheat— No.  1  hard,  on  track,  $1.16^8. 
To  arj-ive:  No.  1  northern,  $1.15 '4.  No. 
2    northern.    $1.13 '6.      On    track:    No.    1 


.15' 


No. 


northern, 

$1.15-\: 

' n    track: 


northern,       $1. 

f  1.13  7b;     May      $^4  7^.;     July, 

September,    $1.01=^4.      Durum. 

No.     1.     $lt'3>4;       No.     2.     $1.01  "4;       May 

durum,    $1.02»4:       July    durum,    $1.02Vi. 

Flax     to   arrive.    $1.64  H;    flax    on   track, 

Jl.b4»fe:     May.     $1.63H;       Julv,     $1.62'-; 

September,    $1.39 'i;      October.      $1.34^4. 

Oat.<!.    to    arrive.    50 ^ic;    oats,    on    track, 

50?6C:    rye,    72-75c:    barley.    61-62i^c. 

Cars  Inspected:  Wheat,  35  last  year, 
60  oats,  4;  barley,  16:  flax,  2;  last 
year.    8. 

Receipts:  Wheat.  126. 86S;  corn,  1,522; 
oats.  2l*,3J>0;  barley,  32  380;  rye,  407; 
flax.    3,755. 

Shipments:    Wheat.   100;   oats,   3,958. 


Caih   •iitleH  Thiiritday. 

No.   1   runhcni   ■■. i.tat     1   >ar 

No.   1   northtm.    1  car  to  airitj-  

No.  1  nprthxni.   1,(K)0  bu  to  arrlre 

No.   1    i.«rth«rn.     1-3    car    nJxed 

No.   2    l.lT^h^nl.     2    lura 

Nr.   3   firlrs     2  cnrs 

Duniin.   1    lit   No.    1 

Durum.   1  330  I'U  No.   1  to  arrive 

Durum,  li   ( o.r«    No.    I 

Dunim    ii    2-3    rars    No.    1 

Iturtim.  1  lar  No.   1 

HviiiUd   wtxat.   1   rcr  No.    1  norUifm 

Barley.    1    i  ar 

bikrley,    1    tar 

Btslty,    1    car 


...$J.16 

...  1.16 

...  1.15H 

...  1.16»« 

...  l.H'4 

...  1.13>4 

...  1.03H 

...  1.03>i 

...  1.03 

, ...  1.0314 

...  l.»l't 

...  l.K'H 

...  .62^ 

...  .61H 

...  .62 


THE  (  Hl(  A(iO  MARKET. 


ShoHs  Moderately  Active  Buyers  of 
Wheat  at  Opening. 

Chi<figo,  March  18. — Shorts  were 
moderrtely  active  bidders  for  wlieat  at 
the  opening  of  the  market  today  which 


n. 


May     up     1 3  c 
closed    at    a 


c.      Early   in   the  day,   however,  all   of 

e  advance  was  lost  and  prices  de- 
clined ^i  to  ^4C  on  selling  by  pit  trad- 
ers and  <  ommission  iiouses.  The 
principal  selling  pressure  was  on  the 
July  delivfry.  The  bulge  at  the  start 
was  due  to  continued  light  receipts  in 
the  Northwest.  May  opened  at  $1.16 '4. 
sold  at  $1.16^.  and  then  declined  to 
S1.15?4-  July  opened  at  $1.04 1^  to 
$104>^.  and  after  touching  $1,041^®%, 
dropped    oack    to    $1.03  3'4. 

The  market  was  nervous  the  last 
half  tf  the  session  and  prices  moved 
over  a  range  of  about  Ic.  There  was 
considerable  covering  by  shorts  late 
In  the  dav  and  the  close  w^as  firm  with 
at  $1.1C'4<&  116*8:  July 
net  gain  of  '%iil^c  at 
$1  04>.s. 

Bearish  sentiment  developed  again 
In  the  corn  pit  following  slight  firm- 
ness at  the  ttpening  wlien  prices  were 
Vi  to  %c  above  the  prev+ous  close.  A 
leading  cash  grain  concern  was  one 
of  the  principal  seller.';.  The  opening 
firmness  was  due  to  the  strength  of 
wheat  and  to  predictions  of  wet 
weather  in  the  corn  belt.  Mav  opened 
>4  to  ^c  higher  at  66>i  to  66%c  and 
sold  off  to   65i.ic. 

An  Improved  export  Intjuiry  brouglit 
out  a  brisk  demand  late  in  the  session. 
and  May  advance.l  to  66%c.  The  mar- 
ket «  U  sed  firm  with  May  up  Mt^%c  at 
66^(S6C'feC. 

Oats  followed  the  trend  of  wheat  and 
corn,  opening  firm  and  weakening 
early  in  the  session.  Trade  was  quiet. 
May  opened  a  shade  to  '8@Uo  higher 
at  54"!  541,8  to  54Mi@54V4c,  and  sold  off 
to    b3%c.  ^ 

Provisions  held  steady 
Ing   a    5c  decline  in    live 


of  a   largfc    line  of 
coninii.'fiSiO.'i   house 
of  the  hog  market, 
were    2^c   higher 
Artji-'Ies. 

Flour,    bbs    

Whfett,  bu 

Corn,    bu     


notwlthstand- 
hogs.      Buying 
July  ribs   by  a  local 
offset   the   weakness 
Prices  at  the  start 
to    7>/<.{f|il0c    lower. 
Receipts.  Shipmnts. 
.  .      30.700  28,800 

...      61,200  36.100 

..    148.600  152,300 


ii 
ii 

a 

ii 
ii 

1 

n  — 

4( 

a 

ii 

if 

ii 

n 

ii 
m 


THE  MARKETS  AT  A  GLANCE. 


Duluth  May  wheat  closed  unchanged. 
Chicago  May  wheat  closed  y2C  higher. 
Minneapolis  May  wheat  closed  %c  to  i/^c  higher. 
Liverpool  wheat  cables,  unchanged  to  y^d  higher. 
Duluth  May  flax  closed  YqC  higher. 
Boston  copper  stocks,  dull  and  weak. 
Duluth  curb  coppers,  quiet. 
Cotton  is  steady. 


««««»«««»«««««««««««»»««**««»»**»*******»**»*«*»***»» 


Oats,    bu    170,000  212,400 

Rye,   bu    5.000  B,500 

Barley,  bu 138.000  66.300 

Car  Lot  Receipts — Wheat,  58  cars, 
with  25  of  contract  grade:  corn,  133 
cars,  with  7  of  contract  grade;  oats.  79 
tars.  Total  receipts  of  wheal  at  Chi- 
cago, Minneapolis  and  Duluth  today 
were  171  cars,  compared  with  329  cars 
last  week  and  308  cars  the  correspond- 
ing dav  a  year  ago. 

Close:  Wheat— Mav,  $1.16%;  July, 
$1.04  Vt:  September,  98©  9814c;  Decem- 
ber, ys'^sc-  Corn — March,  64i,2c;  May, 
66».i<Ji  66»sc;  July,  66<&66  4c  Septem- 
ber, 6o'fec:  December,  58%c.  Oats — 
May.  54  ^sc;  Julv.  48i/2  (g)48%c;  Septem- 
ber. 40%c.  Pork — May.  $17. 62»2  (&  17.65; 
July,  117.67^.  Lard— May,  $10.15;  Julv, 
$10.25;  September,  $10.40.  Ribs — Mav, 
$9. 30 ti  9.32'^;  July.  $9.45;  September, 
$9.60.  Rye — Cash.  80®81c;  Mav.  SOc. 
Barley — Cash,  64»^(&70c.  Timothy — 
March,       $3.85.         Clover — March — $8.75. 

Cash   wheat — No.    2   red,   $1.21  ^Ig- 1.24  ■*8;Urttiige.  chtrij  or  war 
No.    3    red,    $1.15%  fe  1.22 1^ ;    No.    2    hard,  I  WP   CORN. 

$1.15ral.lS;    No.     3     hard.    $1.10 (&  1.15 'S  ;  1  C'lo''^-    p"   '«> 

No.    1    northern,    $1.16%  ®  L19:h. ;    No.     2  J '""  '^"'"-  "^'^^^--^j-   ■•  •:■-•_ 
northern.     $1.14  %  fe  I.IS;     No.     3     spring,  l„i^„     .„      DRESSED   POULTHT. 

65  ' 

3 

62^4c;    standard,    54'/2C. 


Cucuml«r».  bothouic.  doi S  00 

Faiic)  UolkltQ  Hunt  celeiy '^6 

KndlTta.    pti    bus IM 

Lettuce.    h<  tliuuse,   per  tus 1  25 

Kadl«bc8.    p«r    uo- 76 

txins   r.idUlie:.    ;>«r  doa 70 

Spiiiacb.  r«r  iraie 73 

Tomatoea,    ux    baskcU 4  SO 

VliXiETABLES. 

Pumpklni,     per    aox ISO 

Hublard   saaasli,    per  doa I  30 

CalilMKfs.    \nr    crute 3  00 

Onii.ii«.   Spaiilsti,   per  c<mte i  00 

Hoiicrudlnh.    iper    btu 8  50 

lied  UlolM  ciUoDS.   new.   oer  100   lb*  1  80 

Potatoes,    per   bushcia 95 

Sweet   pctatoec   per   Inia 1  TB 

BrvMD    beaiu     S  00 

Beeta,  per  ttu TS 

New    carrots,    per    bui ft 

Turijlps.    per   bui TO 

Bosua,    per    bus ^ 7S 

Parsley,    per   doj 40 

Oyster  plant,  per  ilos TO 

NEW    CIDER. 

New  apple  cider,  per  kes 8  SO 

Black    raspberry    julre 6  00 

8  00 


43 


1  00 


1  00 


o.    3    white,   66»2^66«'4c;    No.   3    yellow.    Turkeys    per  lb 12 

)®65>/ic;    No.    4.    62V2®64c.      Oats — No.  '  i,uvlt<,   per  lb..!!!!!".!!!!!!".^!!!!!I        17 
white,   52?4(&,53c;   No.   4   white,   ol^(^    Ge«»*.    per   lb 14 


THE  MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET. 


Wheat  Receipts  Light  and  the  Con- 
ditions in  Pit  Nervous. 

Minneapolis,  March  18. — Local  ele- 
vator stocks  of  wheat  decreased  150.- 
000  bushels  for  Ave  dais.  The  mar- 
ket was  again  nervous.  Receipts  were 
light  and  made  the  opening  strong. 
There  was  only  Ic  difference  between 
the  high  and  low  point.  May  closed 
$1.14*i,  \%<iiliC  higher  than  the  open- 
ing. Minneapolis  today  received  78 
cars  against  223  cars;  Duluth'  35 
against  60;  Winnipeg  122  against  146. 
May  opened  $1.14^/2  t' 11-1%  ;  high. 
$1.15  M,;  low.  $1.14  1^8 ''o  1.14  >4  ;  close. 
$1.1454-  July  opened  $l.lo'»8;  high. 
$1.15%:  low,  $1.14^8;  close.  $1.15-'». 
Cash  wheat  was  In  strong  demand. 
Country  and  local  millers  readily 
bought  all  offerings.  Receipts  were 
light  and  stimulated  the  active  de- 
mand. No.  1  northern  sold  for  1*4(620 
over  May.  and  No.  2  for  '4o  under  to 
the  even  May  price.  Close:  No.  1 
northern.  $1.16»2  (&  116»4  ;  to  arrive. 
$1.16»o([«  1.1634  :  No.  2  northern.  $1.14H 
(§1.14^4:  to  arrive,  $1.14'..  (fi  I.1434  ;  No. 
3  wheat,  $1.10i.i.  @  1.12  ^4  :  No.  3  vellow 
corn.  61^4c;  No.  3  white  oats,  50»i(g: 
51V2c:    No.    2    rye,    7334f!76*;c. 

Millstuffs — Shipments,  1.663  tons. 
Demand  was  strong  and  far  In  excess  of 
the  supply.  Business  gratifying  to 
(he  millers.  Shipments  increased  slight- 
ly and  prices  held  firm.  Bran  In  bulk, 
$2 3  ft  2 J. 50. 

The  Minneapolis  flour  output  last 
week     increased     3.120     barrels.  The 

quantity  turned  out  (week  ending 
March  13)  was  281.495  barrels  against 
304.000  in  1908  and  263.655  in  1907.  This 
week  three  less  mills  are  in  operation, 
and  the  output  may  drop  to\  260.000 
barrels.  E.xport  market  is  (|ulet'.  Coun- 
try millers  reported  better  business 
than  local  millers.  Prices  were  the 
same.  Shipments.  50,681  barrels.  First 
patents.  $5.65fj5.75;  second  patents, 
f '.55  (h  5.65:  first  clears.  $4.40®  4.50;  sec- 
ond   clears.    $3.10!f7  3.15. 

Plax — i;eceipts,  h  cars,  against  47: 
shipments.  12.  Light  offerings  made 
the  market  inactive.  Demand  was 
strong  and  prices  were  the  same  as 
Duluth   May.     Close.   $1.62"^. 

Barley — Receipts.  26  cars  todav. 
against  19:  shipments.  34.  Today's 
market  was  easletr.  Prices  were  i^^c 
lower.  Demand  was  only  fair,  with 
little  incjuiry  for  malting  barley. 
Close,   62®  63c. 


riaa. 

Pike,  per  lb 

Peroli,    per    lb 

Fresh  sulmon.   per  lb 

Plcktrd.    per    lb 

Wlilte,    per   ID 

t^esh    lake   trout    

UtrrltiK.   per  lt>.    

HAT. 

Timothy,     per    ton 

Upland.   No.    1,   per  ton 

VEEO. 

Shorts,    per    ton 27  00 

Bmn.    per   ton 26  00 


IS 

• 

IT 

16 

at 

16 

22 

% 

33 

17 

18 

14 

• 

10 

8 

T 

• 

8 

11 

«f 

10 

7 

8 

10 

8 

11  00 

800 

Oats,    per    Du. 


Beef    

.Mutton    . . . 

btrd     

Pork  loins 

Veal    

Lambs    


UEATS. 


57 

T     @       lOVi 

8 

IIH 
11 

7 
12 


13 


New    York. 

New  York.  .Manli  18.  — Uuttcr— Market  of  fanr.v 
gradnt  in  sht  rt  supply  nnd  flmi;  receipt!".  a.!»3C;  (Team- 
iry  'Itclals.  3(i(g;H()>4o;  otTidal.  ;iOl»i-;  extra,  aS'^c: 
third  lo  fir<<t.  ;:i^:!8^r;  held,  couimon  to  special, 
lU(.<?:28i'.  C'htese — .Market  tlnn  and  unchanged;  re- 
ceipt*. S38.  Eggs— Market  finuer;  iitate  PennsyUania 
and  nearliy  brown  and  nilxed  fancy.  "JU ;  do.  fair  10 
choice.   It'l-ns^c;  western  flr»ti>,    Ut'.ic;  seconds,   Jl'c. 


I'hiongo. 

t'hlcago.  >tan-h  18.— IJiiiur— .Market  steady;  rrcam- 
eries.  22(12  28 '4c;  dairies.  20(ni;5c.  Eggs— .Matkel  firm; 
fliTts.  18c:  prime  firsts.  l!)c.  Cheese — Market 
firm;  daisies,  15'i(glOc;  twins.  14'iOal5c;  young 
Americas.  ll'^4c;  long  honis.  lt)3-4((i  ]7c.  Polati  e« — 
.Market  steady;  choice  to  fniicy.  88(nf*Cc;  fair  ti 
good.  8">("S7c.  Poulic — Miirket  strong:  turke.vs.  17c: 
ddckeiis.  15'jc:  springs.  l."'i!c.  Veal— Market  steady: 
50  to  eO-p<.UT'.d  weights.  7's(«i8c:  «'i  to  K.'>-pouiid 
weights.   8'*l«'.''ic;   8".   tu    1  Ki-iKiiiid   weights.    JOfllc. 


HIDES,  SKINS  AND  FURS. 


PatM    and    C'allii. 

Minneapolis  puts  were  $1.14^  (©  >4 
and  calls  $1.15*fe. 

Chicago  May  iips  were  $1.17'^  and 
downs  $1.15 »/•.  July  ups  -were  $1.05 >«® 
U>1«  '-^   and  $1.05^   and  downs  $1.04r«  ig. 


Liverpool   tirnlnn. 

liverpctil,  March  IS. — Cloflng.  Wheat— Spot  strong: 
No.  2  red  western  winter.  8«  eVjd;  futures  <iulet: 
May.  8s  2'*d:  July,  8s  •»'4d;  Sipt<mli«r.  7«  lid. 
t'oni — Spc't  firm;  new  American  mixed.  5s  lid;  fu- 
liius  >:idet;  March  nondiial:  -May,  .'is  9',id. 
■ 
Diilath  Car     loKpeotton. 

Wheat— No.  1  iiortlKm.  15;  .Nc.  2  northern.  8: 
No.  3  5prli'g.  2;  No.  1  durum.  5;  .\o.  2  durum.  1; 
No.  3  dunm.  1.  Total  cT  d;ram.  7;  mixed.  1; 
velTtt    chaff.    2.      Total    of    wlieat.    ,35:    last    year.    60. 

Flax— .Xi.    1.    2.      Tot.a  of   flax,    2;   ia»t    year,    8, 

Oats,    -i;    barley.    Ifl. 

Total   of  all   cars.    I".?.      tV.rs   on    tr.ick   today.    130. 


May- 
Open 
lUgh      . 

Close 
Close     1 

July— 
Oien 
High     . 
Low 
Close 
Close 

St. 
May    . . . 
July     . . . 

K.insaa 

.May    

July     

Winnipeg — 

May     

July     


Anierlonn    Wheat    MarketM. 

l>iilutli.  .Minneapolis.  Cliicago.     .New  Y<»rk. 


$1.15B        «1.14'4-%  $1.16>4 


1.15>4-',4    1.15S 


17. 
Louis — 


Clty- 


1.14»a 
l.H-iB 

l.loHB 

l.l.'5*«s-\ 
1.15H 
1.15%U 
1.15V4 


l.l4'i-»4 

1.14% 

1.14'i-*(. 


1.16H 
1.15H 
1.16>4 
1.15% 


1.1.%HB 

l.l.-S 
1.14'i 
1.15H 
I.IDH 


1.04>4-»i 
I.I)4H 
l.f'5% 
l.M^B 
1.04-Vk 
Close  18tli. 
...$1.13% 
...   1.01% 

...   1.07'i 

S*li-% 


13 
U% 


tl.20<4B 
1.2014 
].1'J% 
1.20'4B 
1.14%-% 

1.12% 

1.12% 

1.11% 

1.12% 

1.15% 
Close  17th. 
$1.13% 

1.01% 

1.06%-% 
-  9«% 

1.12% 
1.13%-14 


Chicago  Com,  (tatM  and  Pnrk. 


Open 
lUgh 
Low 
Close 


Oat)'. 
May. 

54% 

54 '.i 

.14 

54%B 

• 


i  I'm. 
-May. 

t:6% 
Ii6% 
«5% 
»;6%-%A 


PirK. 
.May. 

$17.70 
17.75 
17.62 
17.62 


New 
-May. 


Neiv  York  Grain. 

York,   March    18.— Close: 
$1.20«^  ;    July.    $1.12%. 


Wheat 
Corn — 


May.  73Vfec;  July.  73c. 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 


Price?     sre    steady     and     unchanged. 

Tlie    following    quotations    w»re    fumlsbed     lij    tbt 
jecret^iry   if   the    produce   exthange. 

BL'TTKIl. 
Creamery    prints 
Tubs 


Uenovated    . . . 

Ladles    

Packing  stcck 

Fresh   eggs    . . 


EGGS. 
CHEKSB. 


30 
28 
20 
U 

1« 


@ 


32 
30 


17 


20     @       21 


Full  cream,   twins   

Wlsixns^ln  flats   

Block   and    wheel   cheese 

Umburger.   full  cream    

Prlmost    

UONKTf. 
New   fancy   wlilte   clover,    per   lb 

do    per    case    

MAPLE    SYRUP. 

Vermont,   rer  lb 

Maple    syrup.    10-lb.    cans 

NVTS. 

rUbtrts.    per   It 

French    walnuts,    fet   lb 

lalllcrnli    ieft-£l>elied    walnuts,    pel 

lb     

Cocanuta,    per  doz 

Mrazlis.  per  doz 

.Mixed   nuts,    per    lb 

Peanuts,    per    10 

t".be*<nuts,  per  lb 

FRUITS. 

Itenanas.   r«r  lb 

Miilaga    grapes,    per    keg    

pates,    hard.    12-Ib,    oox 

Dates,   sugar  walnuts,   10-lb.   box.... 

Figs,   Smyrna,   !o-lb,   box 

Kigs.     CVUfomia    = . . 

Oranges    

Lemciis,     Cairrtyflila     .,....•••*•.... 

Limes,  per  tox 

tJrapt  fruit,  ptr  box. 


IS 
13 
17 
19 
10 

17 

00 

19 

SO 

14 

10 

18 

80 
SO 

12H 
8    i 
13 


9 


1« 

16 
18 
20 


8  00 
1  19 
1  10 

1  23 
83 

2  73 
4  00 
1  dO 
4  GO 


(» 


t% 


4% 


2S 
23 


Apples    5  00 

Crariberrles.    per    bbl 12  50 

Florida  pineapples,   per  crate    4  SO 

OKEKN    VEGETABLES. 

Wax  beans,   ptr  lasket   2  50 

I*ta  plant,  ttr  bcx i  20 


@  4  50 
(*  5.50 


IlIDKS. 
Green  salted  heavy  steer  hides,   over 

60       Il;S 

Creen  salted    co'vs.    25   U«.    and    up, 

and  steels   niidfr  60   lbs 

Green  salted    bulls,    stags    and   oxen, 

40  lbs.  and  up 

Creen  salted   long   haired   Ups,    8   to 

25  lbs 

i:reen  salted  veal  kips.  15  to  25  lbs. 
Green  salted  veal  calf,   8   to  15  lb«, . 

Grtcr.  salted  hog  skins,  each 

Gr'.en  sulKd  horse    and    mule    hide*, 

iarg.    each    

Green  and   frozen   heavy   steers,    over 

60  lbs 

Dry    flint    Indian      trimmed      Uldca. 

heavy,  over   16  Ibe 

Dry    salted    hides,    all    •ecUons,    over 

12   lbs 

Green    and   green   salted   deer   skina. 

all     secUoi.s 


No.  1.       No.  2. 


12H 

11% 

OH 

31% 

12% 
i5% 
23 

20 

11% 

17  )i 

as 

11 


TALLOW. 

Tallow.  No.   1.   In  cakes 

Tallow,  No.  1.   in   bareli 

Tallcw,   No.   2    

Grease,  white,    choice 

Grease,  ydlcw 

Grease,  brcwn    or    dark 

Grtase.  including  skunk  and  soon  oil 

Old   butter   

Kougb   tallow 


«   a 


11% 

10% 

8% 

10 
11 

14% 
16 

20 

10% 

n% 
u 


0% 

0% 

4% 

0% 

4% 
8% 
3% 

e 

i% 


ruRa. 


Prime 
Large. 


Bear- 
Black  .Vlnnrsota.  Wisconsin  and  Da 

kcta    15  00 

Black  yearlir.g,   Minnesota  WisctTisIn 

and  Dakctk  10  00 

Black   cubs,      Minnesota,      Wisconsin 

and    DakoU 4  00 

Badger— 

Northern    2  30 

Cat- 
Wild,   Northern 3  50 

House,  bIhcK.  winterkilled SO 

House,   .Maltese,  winter  killed 18 

House.  <iundry  colors,  winter  killed,.         10 

Civet,  all  sections 63 

Hlnitailed     «0 

Dog- 
Black  long  halre<1,  winter  killed 00 

Long    haired,    sundry    colon,    winter 

killed    I    30 

Short  lialred,   all  colors |    20 

Fisher — 

Northern,    dark 12  00 

Northern,   brown  or  pale 8  50 

Fax- 
Black — Prices     vary     as     to     color, 

beauty  and  fineness 350  00 

SUver  Grey — PiKcs  T.",ry  at  to  color, 

beauty  and  fineness — dark 200  00 

Silver  Grey — Prices  vary  as   to  ccleir, 

beauty  and  fireness— pale 80  00 

cross — Prices  vary  as  to  color,  twauty 

and  fineness — dark 15  00 

Cross — Prices  vary  as  to  color,  beauty 

and    fineness — pale 7  00 

Red.  Northern    6  00 

Red,  Nebraska  and  Wisconsin 0  23 

fJrey.    Northern 1  23 

Kltt    or    Swift 1  00 

Ljnx^ 

Dark   18  00 

Dark    brovrn 6  00 

Light  bn  wn  or  [ale 6  uO 

Mink- 
Minnesota,    Wisconsin,    Upper   Michi- 
gan   anel    North    Dakota— dark    or 

dark  trc  wn 6  0} 

Mlune-sota.    Wisconsin,    Upper   Michi- 
gan and  North  DakotA — light  brown 

or   pale    4  50 

Cotton  ejf  wrute  Grounds,  all  lectloot     1  20 

Otter— 
Minnesota.   Wisconsin,  Iowa  and  Da- 
kota—dark    13  00 

MJiinesijtr..   Wisconsin,  Iowa  and  Da- 
kola — brown   or  pale 14  00 

R.iccccn — 

Black    4  00 

Minnesota.  Wlscxinsln.  Northern  Iowa 

and    DakoU 2  PO 

Skunk- 

Black,     cased 2  85 

.Short   striped,    cased 3  25 

lAing.  narrow  striped,  cased 1  60 

Broad  striped  and  white,  cased 60 

Weasel — 

White,  winter  caught,  with  tails 33 

Winter   caught,    badly  stained,    with- 
out tails,  or  damaged 30 

Wolf— 
.Mountain    Timber,     Northern,     cased 

and     open 4  50 

BufTalo  and  Brush,  Northern,  cased.  3  00 
UufTulo  and  Brush.  Northern,  open..  2  50 
Prairie  and  Coyote.  Northern,  cased  2  60 
Fralric  and  Coyote.  Northern,  open.  2  00 
Timber,  Southwestern,  eased  and  open     2  50 

Beawr.   per  skin 8  00 

Muskrat     36 


i  r.'jn: 
Small. 

10  00 

6  75 

3  00 

73 

1  50 
18 
10 
6 
85 
SS 


3D 

12% 

10 

75 
23 


100  00 
T3  00 
SO  00 

7  50 

8  75 
8  23 

S  03 
73 
63 

fi  PO 

4  50 
3  00 


8  00 


33 
70 


9  00 
7  00 

a  00 

1  00 

2  15 


75 
10 
33 

SO 

10 


1  00 

1  60 
1  35 
1  35 
1  15 
1  33 
3  50 
20 


IROWVOOD  ELECTRIC  LINE. 


Ironwood,  Mich..  March  18. —  (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.) — The  project  talked  of 
for  year.s.  an  electric  railway  connect- 
ing Ironwood  and  Bessemer,  is  assured, 

Riplit-of-way  privileges  across  the 
lands  of  the  United  States  Steel  cor- 
poration and  Corrigan,  McKinney  & 
Co.  have  been  granted  to  the  Twin  City 
Electric  company,  and  the  traction 
concern  has  given  bond  that  the  road 
will  be  completed  within  the  year.  Ties 
are  on  the  ground,  and  construction 
work  will  be  started  .shortly.  The  com- 
pany already  operates  a  trolley  line 
between  the  cities  of  Ironwood  and 
Hurley.  The  new  extension  will  tra- 
verse a  well-settled  mining  region,  and 
is  expected  to  be  productive  of  heavy 
traffic. 


DULLNESS 
INJTOCKS 

Market  Was  Lifeless  and 

the  Close  Was  Almost 

Lifeless. 

Reading  Bid  Up,  But  De- 
clined Again  Under 
Heavy  Selling. 


New  York.  March  18. — Small  declines 
were  the  rule  today  In  tlie  opening 
quotations  for  stocks,  but  there  was 
a  sprinkling  of  gains  ol  which  the 
most  prominent  was  Union  Pacific, 
a  rise  of  14.  Atchison  and  Mis- 
Pacific  declined  large  fractions, 
dealings     were     only     moderately 


with 
souri 
The 
active 

stocks  were  sold  freely,  and  this 
caused  sharp  Inroads  on  prices,  but 
the  supporting  orders  were  put  In  and 
a  sharp  upturn  followed.  The  decline 
cost  Hocking  Coal  :;>*,  and  St.  Paul, 
Atchison,  Southern  Pacific.  Great 
Northern  preferred,  Kansas  &  Texas, 
Amalgamated  Copper.  United  States 
Steel  and  International  Paper  preferred 
1.  The  rebound  put  prices  above  last 
night    again. 

Reading  was  bid  up  aggressively, 
but  met  such  heavy  selling  that  its 
price  wa.c  driven  back.  The  general 
list  moved  in  sympathy  and  became 
dull  at  the  reaction.  Central  Leather 
rose  1%,  the  preferred  2>/fe,  American 
Hide  &  Leather  1  and  the  preferred 
11/4.  Canadian  Pacific  gained  1  and 
preferred  1%.  Chicago 
declined   1.     Bonds   were 


Pittsburg  Coal 
Great  Western 
heavy. 

Fluctuations 
ford   profitable 


were  too  narrow  to  af- 
trading  operations  and 
the  market  accordingly  became  very 
dull  and  uninteresting.  Chicago  Great 
Western    -A"    yielded    1^, 

The  market  closed  about  steady  and 
almost  lifeless.  A  rise  of  %  in  Chesa- 
peake &  Ohio  was  without  effect  on 
the  geiveral  list,  and  prices  then  ran  off. 
Reading  lost  its  rise  and  low  prices 
for  the  day  were  established. 


New    York    stock    au<  Uitienis    furnished    The    Herald 
by   Piper.    Johnton   &   Cass. 

I  Open.;  High. I  U)W.  I  Close. 


Allls   Chalmers 

do  i)fd    

Anialgnniated 


Anierle-an 
.American 
.Ann  rican 
.\Mierii-iin 
.-Vnnrlcan 
Anaconda 
-Mehison 
eio  pfd 
Raitlniore 
Ilrookb  n 


Sugar    

Car  Koundry. 
Lccoiiioiiie  ' .  . 
CclKi.  Oil  . 
}<melters    


&   Olilo   

Hapid    Trunslt 

Central  Leiitlier  

Chesafie-ahe    fc    Ohio 
Cldc:<go-t;t.     Western    com 
Chle-ugo- Great   We>leni   A. 
t  hlcago-elreat   Wcslerii   B. 

C..    M.    ic    St.    P;uil 

Colt  ratio   Kikel  &   Iron 

Coit  raeli)    St  utlicrn     

Ct  nsolltlated   Ga?    

Canatiian   Pdcitic    

Deliiware   &    Hutlfon    .... 
lUiaer  &    Klo  Grande.... 

KlsUllcn    

I)..    S.    S.    &    A 

Krie 

elo     Ist    pfd 

ilo    linel    pfd 

Great     Northern     

Great    Nt  rtliem    Ore    .... 

IlUr.tis  Central    

Inter  Met      

lowu     (  entr.il     

Kjiiis,-is   City    Southern    ... 
Lt  ulsvllie  &    Nashville    .  .  . 

.Mtxiiaii    Central     

.Missouri  Kansas  &  Texas. 

.Missouri  P.iclflc   

National    Lead     

New  YtTk  C.?ntral 

Norfolk    ft    Western    

.North    .\nierlcan     

.Northern     I  .idfic     

Ontario  &  Western    

Pennsylvania 

I'eoples    Gas    

Presseel   Steel    Car    

Uetiibli.-    Steel   &.   Ircn... 

el.    pfd    

Ut'Ck    Island    

tlo  pfd    

Reading     

Sloss-Sheffleld     

.Soo  Line   

Southern     Railway     

do     pfd  

St)uthern     Pacific     

T.'nneitie'e  Cciper    

Texus     Pacific     

Tliiitl     Avenue     

r«ln    City     

Cniin    Patlflc     

rtah   Copper    

C.    ».    SUel    

do  pfd    

W,ilpnth    

tlo     pfd      

\Vc?t!nghou«e   

VVeste  rn    t'nlon    

Wis connln    Central    

do  pfd    


68^ 

68>4 

13»H 

13(1 ',2 

4y>4 

4»>4 

Jl^ 

51% 

ri2'4 

52>4 

81 H 

85 

41% 

41% 

103^ 

103  is 

137H 

Tl', 

28^ 

68 

5 

27^4 
7 

144 
33 
63% 

120% 

167 

174% 
♦4% 
^i% 
17 
24  H 
38% 

66  li 
)42H 

15% 

2J>% 

45  H 
131 

20% 

41% 

60 

76 
125 

88 

79 
138H 

45% 
130% 

mii 

36 
20 '.4 

23 

63% 
129H 

72% 
145 

23% 

«1% 
1184 

40% 

3iH 

38% 


178% 
41% 
45% 

111 
17% 
44% 
79 

'48%  I 
87%  I 


108 
72% 

6!»% 

f.% 
27% 

144 

33% 

63% 

130 

167% 

174% 

44% 

34% 

17% 

24% 

38% 

i4i% 

66% 

142% 
15% 
20% 
45% 

131 
20% 
11% 
6!'% 
76% 

125% 
8«% 
79 

138% 
46 

130% 

113 
36% 
20% 

23% 
«3% 

130% 
72% 

U6% 
24% 
62 

118% 
41% 
32% 
38% 


67% 
130% 
48% 
51 

51% 
83  ?g 
41% 
103 


107% 
71% 

67% 
4% 

26 
6% 
143 

32% 

63% 
129% 
167 
174% 

44% 

34% 

17 

24 

38% 

140% 

66 
142% 

15 

29 

44% 
130  ■,! 

20% 

40% 

68% 

75  % 
124% 

87% 

79 
137% 

45% 
1^9% 
112% 

36 

2U% 

'23" 

6a% 

128% 
72% 

145 
23% 
61% 

117% 
40% 
32% 
37 


179 
41% 

45% 
111 

17% 
44% 
79 

48% 

87% 


177% 
41% 
44% 

110% 
17% 
44% 
79 

'48% 
87% 


13L 
42%b 
68% 
130% 
48% 
51 

.11% 

84% 

41% 

103% 

103%b 

1077^ 

72 

29% 

69% 

5 

26 

7 

144 

32% 

6.^% 

129% 

167% 

174% 

44% 

34% 

17% 

24% 

38% 

140% 

6C 
142% 

1:.% 

29 

45 
K-tO% 

20% 

40% 

tl!<% 

75% 
124% 

87% 

79 
138 

45% 
130 
112% 

36% 

20% 
70  %b 

23% 

63% 
129% 

72% 
146 

L'4 

62 
118% 

40% 

32% 

37 

104%h 

178% 

41% 

44% 
110% 

17  H 

44% 

79 
65  %b 

48% 

87% 


Tital    shares.    612,7«0. 
Money,    2   per   cent. 


Midway    Horwe    Market. 

Minr.tfOta  TrMisfer  St.  Paul.  .Vlii.n..  March  18.— 
Barrett  &  Ziinniennan  repe.ri:  MiirUa  active  In  tone 
ami  a  good  moveniei.t  ol  hcises  In  the  general  pur- 
ptise  classes  is  rept.rtetl.  Buyers  from  the  Dakotas 
anel  Canada  were  filling  orders  liT  tiieir  htime  tratle. 
(ioed  fiirm  mares  had  the  call  and  good  pairs  caui^ed 
tome  keen  Hdtllng  among  buyers.  More  deUiils  of  the 
sak-  w!'!  appear  tomorrovi.  Jt.coli  Motz  KuUn.  N.  I). 
K.  .M.  WlUlams.  BeiUn  Wis.,  and  C. 
idpeg.    Can.,     were    among    the    he.tvy 

liraflers.    extra    

Iirafters.    clieiice    

l»raft«ra.    conimtm    to   80e^-< 

Kami   mares   and   hi  rses.    e«tm 

Farm  mares   and  ht  rsee.   clioice 

Farm   mans,   commt.n   to  good 

Delivery 

Drivers     and     radellers 

Mules,     acctrdlng    te.    sire  


H.    Hull,   Wln- 

bu.vers. 

»16.".&24."p 

120(^l«u 

6.-)(plI.J 

145(A160 

110(al.^-| 

63(!tll0 

120(0  185 

12.'.(ei'22o 

140S235 


C'bioaKO   Livewtork. 

Chicago.  Match  1».--Cattlt  — Heiceli'U  estimated  at 
3.500;  market  s.eady:  beeves.  $4.e;o«a 'IC;  Texas  steers. 
$4.40(0  5.30;  western  steera,  J4. 00^  5.40;  stockers  and 
fct'deri,  t3.4yfe5.35;  cows  and  heifers,  |1.9(t(«5.50: 
calves.  $6.00^8.00.  Hogs— Receipt*  esUmalcd  at  2b. 
;)O0;  market  5c  lovvei ;  light.  jH.30fe6.70;  mixed.  $6.40 
(tt6.80;  heavy.  $6.">0^6.8;;  rough.  Tf..5f(ae.«0:  goed 
to  choice,  hoary.  $6.606' 6  bS :  pig?.  $6.1lift  6.2(i ;  bulk 
of  sales.  $6  60$<6.80.  Sheep — Receipt*  «»Uniat«l  ut 
14.000;  mi.iket  steaeiy;  naUve.  $3.25^5.75;  we*tem, 
$S  .iOtfl  5.9(';  yearling!-.  $6.00(o'T.25;  lambs,  native, 
$5.50^8.01);    western.     $.").5a*i7.9('. 


The    Cotton    Market. 

New  York,  March  18. — The  cotton 
market  opened  barely  steaely  at  a  de- 
cline of  4^6  points  and  quickly  sold 
off  to  a  net  loss  of  9 (a  11  points.  Tht 
market  remained  very  nervous  and  un- 
settled  during  the  morning. 

Cotton  spot  closed  ejuiet;  middling 
uplands.  9.65:  middling  gulf.  9.90:  sales, 
liOO  bales.  Futures  closed  steady;  clos- 
ing bids:  March.  9.34;  April.  9.28;  May. 
9.29;  June,  9.19;  July.  9.20;  August. 
9.16;  September.  9.13;  October.  9.13;  No- 
vember, 9.08;  December.  9.08;  January, 
9,06. 


St.    Paul    L.lveN«ook. 

St.  Paul.  Minn.,  March  18. — Cattle — 
Receipts,  700;  weak  to  steady;  un- 
changed. Hogs — Receipts.  300;  10c 
lower;  range.  $6.45(&'6..to;  bulk  $6.40^ 
6.50.  Sheep — Receipts.  300;  steady, 
quotations  unchanged;  lambs,  un- 
changed. 


New   Vork  Money. 

New  York.  March  18. — Close:  Prime 
mercantile  paper.  3*4  to  4  per  cent; 
sterling  exchangp.  steady  with  actual 
business  in  bankJer.s.'  bills  at  $■1.86.20^) 
4.86.30  for  sixtv-eray  fills  and  at  $4.88.30 
for  demand;  coiAmtit'cial  bills,  $4.86(S 
4.8C'4:  bar  silver.  hOl^c:  Mexican  dol- 
lars. 4  4c:  government  bonds,  firm:  rail- 
road bonds  irregular.  Money  on  call 
easv.  \%(ii2  per' cent:  ruling  rate,  2: 
closing  bid.  1  %i  :  offered  at  2.  Time 
loans,  quiet  and  easy;  sixty  days.2l4  to 
2^  per  cent  and  ninety  days.  2»^  per 
cent;   six  months.   2%    to  3   per  cent. 

TreoMiH-y   §Blnneeii. 

Washington  ■  Mai  t  h  18. — .Today's 
statement  of  th*,  Irvas'iry  balances  in 
the  general  fund,  exclusive  of  the 
1150,000,000  gold 'reserve,  shows:  Avail- 


[ 


ZBMTH.  1404.  DVLUTH,  18T1. 

RBFBREiNCBSi 

City   National   Dank. 

First    National    Bank. 

MARTIN 

ROSENDAHL 

&  CO.,  Inc 

Capital  950.000.00. 

Copper  stock  Brokers. 

414  WEST   SUPERIOR   STREET. 
1<K:-103       MANHATTAN        DLOO. 


My  oym  Trirea  to  (be  Copper  eoun- 
try.  Also  eonnectlona  to  Ea«(ern 
Market*. 


THl'RSDAY,   .MARCH    18,   1000. 

The  follovtiuK  in  an  extract  from 
■    letter    from    Forbex    MoRae,    dated 

March   11,  to  Calumet   A.    ^ouora At 

t^venty-four  feet  In  tlie  eroNMCut  we 
have  Ntrurk  the  banging  wall.  The 
eroMMOut  waM  driven  in  Nolid  ore,  no 
WBKte  in  it  at  all.  Tomorrovvr  we 
will  coninienoe  work  in  the  bottom 
of  the  Hbnft  again.  We  can  eanlly 
drnw  fifty  touH  of  ore  a  day  from 
the  150  foot  level,  and  from  ap- 
pcarnnccM  can  keep  It  up  indefl- 
uitely. 

Butte  A  Alex-Scott  «2  paid  Mtoek 
firm  at  f^.i2U^  bid.  BidM  of  98.2.% 
did  uot  looMCu  any  Mtoek  on  the  full 
paid. 

Rnwhide  Royal  a  little  firmer,  the 
market  cIoMlug  15  ceutM  bid  and  no 
Mtoek   oflTered   until   18  centN. 

Butte>Baliaklava  trading  nt  910.25 

Sbattuck  quiet  and  uot  much 
trading,    cloning    nt    915.25    to    C15.75. 

Ucun-Arlzoua  offered  at  $4.00  and 
no   bidM. 


able  cash  balance,  $185,547,713;  gold 
coin  and  bullion,  $41,163,526;  gold  cer- 
tificates.   $45,613,180. 


THE  COPPKU  STOCKS. 

The  following  aie  the  closing  quota- 
tions of  copper  stocks  at  Boston  today, 
reported  by  Paine,  Webber  &  Co.,  Room 
A,   Torrey   building: 


STOCK  .S — 


Bid     I  Asked 


Amalgamated    

Anaconda    

Adventure 

Ahmeek    

Allouez    

American    Telephone    . . 

American    Zinc    

Atlantic 

Arcadian 

Arizona  Commercial   . . . 

Begole    

Boston  Cons 

Boston  Corbin   

Black    Mountain     

Butte    Coalition    

Butte    it    London    

Calumet  &  Arizona 

Calumet  At  Hecla 

Centennial    

Consolidated  Mercur   .. 

Copper   Range 

Cumberland  Ely   

Daly-West    

Davis-Daly     

East   Butte    

Franklin    

First   National    

Giioux    

Gi  anby    

Greene   Cananea    , 

Hancock   Cons 

Helvetia     

Ise    l:oyale    

Keweenavk'     

Lake   Copper    

La    Salle    

Mass.    Consolidateei    .  .  .  . 

Mass.  Gas    

Mexico    Mining    

Miami  Copper    

Mie  liigan    

Mohawk 

Nevada    Cons 

Nevada   Utah    

New  house    

Nippising    

North  Butte    

Ojibway 

Old    Dominion    

Osceola    

Parrott    

Pneu.    Scr.    

Quincy    

Haven     

Santa    Fe    

Shannon     

Shoe    Michigan     

Superior    Copper     

Superior    &    Pittsburg.  . 

Tamarack     

Trinity     

United    Copper    

United    Fruit    

U.     S.     Mining     

U.    S.    Mining,    pfd 

U.    S.    Oil    

Utah    Apex     

Utah    Consolidated     . . .  . 

Utah    Copper     

Victoria     

Winona    

Wolverine    

Wyandot    

Yukon   Gold    

Arizema  &   Michigan    . .  . 

Amej-ican  F.aginaw 

Boston  &    Ely    

Butte-Ba.lalava     

Butte    &    Superior    

Chief   Consolidated    

Cactus    

Calumet   &  Corbin    

Calumet   &   ."^onora    

Calumet  &  Montana    .  . . 

Carman     

Chemung    

Cliff    

Copper  Queen    

Cordova    

Denn-Arizona    

Duluth  &  Moctezuma.  .  . 

Ely   Cons 

Globe    Cons 

Goldfield   Cons 

Lion  Gulch    

Live    Oak     

Lake  Superior  &  Sonora 

Mowitza     

National  Expl 

Ohio    Copper     

Rawhide  Royal    

Red    Warrior    

San   Antonio    

Savanna    

Shattuck    

Superior  &   Boston    

.•Superior  &  Globe 

Torre   Roca. 1  .  .  .. 

Warren    

Wolverine  &  Arizona... 
Zenith    Lead    


68*8 

146 

38 
129% 
2334 
14 

4% 
34  V4 
17 

llVi 
17% 

1% 
22% 
25c 
9974 
615 
29 
K.  30c 
74 

7% 

10V4 

4   7-16 

14% 

14 

6% 

8V4 
90 

9% 
11% 

3 '4 
25% 

3% 
16% 
14% 

41* 
63  Vi 

3% 
13% 
10 
61 
171^ 

2% 
lOVi 
67% 
1314 
48% 

125 
31% 
8% 
85 
40c 

2% 
14 
65 
42 
13 
77 

13% 
12% 

132% 

40% 
44% 
30% 

39% 

41 
4 

6% 
138 
2% 
4% 
1% 
3  a; 
1% 

16% 
1 

"    1% 
1 

isc 

1% 

1% 
1% 

3% 


4% 
7% 

3% 

1% 
54  c 

8% 
13c 

2% 
13% 

2 

14% 
96c 

3 
3% 


C8% 

41% 
8 
175 

39 
129% 

24 

14% 
5% 

35 

19 

11% 

18 

1% 
22% 
27c 

100 

620 
29% 
34c 
74% 

"16% 

"14% 
14% 

"    8%' 
92 
9% 


3% 
26 

4 
16% 
15 

4% 
64 

4% 
13% 
10% 
62 
17% 

2% 

3 
10% 
67% 
14 

49% 
130 
31% 

9 
86 
42c 

2% 
14% 
55% 
42% 
13% 
80 

13% 
12% 
133 
41 
45 
31V4 

6 
40% 
41% 

4% 

6 
140 

3 

4% 

1% 

3»4 

1% 
16% 
1-16 
1-16 


1% 

1% 

13% 

20c 

1% 

19 

1% 

1% 

2% 

4 

3% 

18 

5 

8 

11 

6 

■  ■  ■  i  %  ■ 

58c 

8% 

15c 

2% 

1 1.'. 

15% 

14% 

99c 

■■■3%" 

1% 

2% 

SteamMhIp    MovementR. 

Liverpool.  March  18. — Arrived:  Steam- 
er Ivernla.  Boston. 

Southampton.      March      18. — Arrived: 

Steamer   Majestic,    New    York. 

Boston.  March  18. — Arrived:  Steamer 
Saxonla,  Liverpool. 

Nothing  Is  so  much  in  the  way  in  a 
house  as  a  musical  instrument  which 
no  present  member  of  the  family  plays. 
And  nothing  is  easier  to  sell  or  ex- 
change, through  a  want  ad.  than  a 
musical    instrument. 


Character  of  a  Store. 

People  identify  the 
character  of  a  store 
with  the  character  of 
the  paper  in  which 
they  see  the  store's 
advertisement. 


Duluth  Copper  Curb  Market. 

N.  S.  MITCHELL  &  CO., 

202-204    MANHATTAN     BLILDINO. 
RefcrencrKi 
Private   Wire*.  CITY    NATIO.\AI<  BANK.        Private  L,ong  DlNtaneci. 

City   'Fbonea,    1800.  Oalntb.  Minn.  'Phones,  1967-180S. 

MARCH   18,   1900. 


American  Ra^lnaw  . . . 

Arlz.-.Mjclilgaii     .  . .  , . 

Black  Mountain   

Kutte  Montana   

Hutto    &    Superior.  .  .  . 
Butte   Ballaklava    .  .  ■ 
Calumet  &  Arizorfa. . . 
Cal.  &   Montana    .  .    ,  . 
Calumet    &    Sonora.  .  . 

Carman    Cons 

rilff   

C<)|)per    Qaeen     

Cordova    

Cactus     

Denn-Arizona    •.  ■ 

East    Butte     

Globe    Cons 

Greene    Cananea 


I     BId.l    Ask. 


I     BM.I    Artt. 


3..%0 

3.75 

1.37 

i..->o 

1.12 

1.25 

.41 

.43 

1.06 

1.06 

in. 12 

16.37 

99.50 

100.00 

.18 

.20 

14.00 

14.25 

1.25 

1.37 

1.50 

1.75 

1.37 

1.50 

1.87 

2.12 

L.^O 

1.C2 

3.02 

3.87 

14.00 

14.25 

4.75 

5.00 

9.25 

9.50 

Keweenaw    > 

Live   Oak    

I>ake  Sup.  A  Sonom. 

MoMitza    

Niplsslnic    ^ 

National    

Nonli    BuUe    

Rod   Warrior    

Ilawhide  Royal    .... 

San    Antonio    

Savanna    

Sup.  &  Pittsburg.... 

Sup.    &    Boston 

Sliattuck-.\rizona    .. 
Superior  &  Globe.  . . 

Tuolumne     

Warren 

Zenitli  I>ead  &  Zinc. 


4.00 

4.25 

6.75 

6.00 

3.75 

, 

1.25 

1.37 

10.75 

10.87 

.52 

.55 

67.00 

67.25 

2.25 

2.37 

.15 

.17 

13.,50 

2.00 

2.25 

13.37 

13.62 

14.25 

14.50 

14.75 

15.25 

.96 

.99 

1.75 

1.87 

3.50 

3.62 

1.87 

2.12 

Ulbblnff. 


-BRANCH   OFFICES — 


Superior. 


PAID  UP  CAPITAL  $50,000.00 

W.  LEE  &  GO.^ 

BANKERS  AND  BROKERS. 


Inc. 


Private   Wlren  to    Copper   Country,  Ilangc  and  all   P.«Htern  Market*. 
Both   'pboneM,  2093.  410  Went   Superior  Street. 

DILITH  CURB   STOCKS. 


the:  orca^tcst  excitcment 

Prfvalls  no'»  In  Douglas.  Arl7X)na.  c>v*r  the  dl»oo»en-  if  a  IkhIj  cf  rl<h  rtippcr  ore  at  a  depth  cf 
only  100  feet  on  Uie  Grud  Arizona  Copper  Company',  i.mptrty.  WUli  a  &tcaiu  Imlst  In  full  i>p*r- 
aUon  .ind  rfgrular  on  shipments  to  tlie  nearby  snielttrs  to  rdmineiice  in  the  nesr  future,  there  can 
be  no  possible  doubt  us  t)  the  future  ol  this  i-oinimnj.  Tri-asuo'  stock  Is  now  seilinB  at  only 
50  cent*  per  sliiire.  ThU  Is  positively  the  BKST  Iriamiry  ftoclt  on  tb«  market,  regardless  of 
price      Do   not   mJss   this   opptrtunity.    but   invest     NOW.      Aiiply   to  -"* 

0.  E.Pctterson  &  CO.,  Fiscal  Aflts.  "^^,1.1^' \;r*n:'"ll?u""l>l?,rn"e\^e/^-: 


Both   'I'boues,    1485. 
ROOM  "B,"  PH01:NIX  BLOCK. 

J.  a  ROEiBERS, 

Copper  Stocks  and  Bonds 

Curb    Stneks    n    Speelnlty. 
Li«teil    Secnrltlea. 


N.  E.  LUGOFF 

STOCKS  AND  BONDS. 


All    Orders    Promptly    and    Conflden- 
tially    Executed. 

B00-501-S02     LO.NSDAKE    Bl'll-TUXO. 
Old    phone    lOUB;        Zenith   phone   »77. 


With    our   own 

connections     with 

Boston  and  the  coj 

of   Michigan,    Mont 

Utah,  Arizona  and 
are  the  best  equii 
you  quick  executlo; 
leading  local  stocks 
erage  house  in  the 


private     wire 

New      York. 

per  countries 

ana,    Nevada, 

Mexico,    we 

jped    to    give 

IS  on  all   the 

of  any  brok- 

city. 


PAINE,  WEBBlilR  &  CO., 

3 IS  WEST  ST^PEIRIOR  ST. 
Torrey  kiuilding. 


%  MONEY 


6 
6 


Money  to  loan  on 

Real  Estate  Security. 

Building  Loans. 


W.  M.  Priiiilla  &  Co. 

I^ONSDALE  BHILDINO. 


SWINGS  FROM  ROPE  AND 

ARRESTM  GAMBLERS. 


San  Francisco,  Cal.,  .March  18. — Whllc- 
lie  swung  at  the  end  of  a  rope,  by 
which  lie  had  let  lilm«elf  tlirougli  a 
skylight.  Policeman  2.1artin  Fogarty 
(if  this  city  fiucceedtd  in  arresting 
foiarteen  men  who  we  -e  violating  tlie 
gambling  ordinance. 

Witii  a  number  of  f«  How  patrolmen. 
Fogarty  had  gone  to  a  hou.se  on  Oeary 
street,  where  a  number  of  Greeks  were 
reported    engaged    in    p  iker. 

Wliile  his  companiois  guarded  the 
door.»  he  let  himself  tlrough  the  sky- 
light and  arrested  the  men  witliout 
any   trouble. 

OHICKE.N  KILLING  DO(iS 
TERRORIZE  IRON  MOUNTAIN' 


PIPER,, 
JOHNSON 

en  case: 

BROKERS 

MEMBERS: 

Boston  Stock  Exchange 
New  York  Stock  Excliange 
Kew  York  Produce  Exchange 
Chicago  Slock  Exchange 
Chicago  Board  of  Trade 
Mpls.  Chamber  ol  Commerce 
Duluth  Board  ol  Trade 
Winnipeg  Grain  Exchange 

406-411  Chamber  ol  Commerce  and 

Kew  York  Life  Arcade. 

Minneapolis 

102  Pioneer  Press  BIdg.,  SI.  Paul 
Crain  Exchange  Winnipeg 

DULUTH: 

Temporary  Ollice  — 

18  3rd  Avenue  West, 

R.  G.  Hubbell,  Manager. 


BEU  PHONE  73>. 


ZENITH  PHO.^IE  7i9. 


Iron      Mountain.    .Miel 

(.Special  to  The  Heral 
department  here  is  ou 
three  St.  Bernard  dog 
have  been  killing  poul' 
nale  .scale.  The  dogs 
poultry  house  of  Will 
few  nights  ago.  and  ki 
prize  leghorns,  valued 
viously  they  had  raid 
and  had  levied  toll  on 
and  some  geese,  the  s 
one  instance  being  a 
had  repulsed  the  attaol 
put  the  marauders  to  fl 
was  reached  when  th( 
of  Etnll  Kjrogen  was  e 
after  the  dogs  had  succ 
from  the  window  a  sect 
heavy  wire  screen.  Nc 
enty  chickens  were  ma! 


1..      March    18.— 

d.) — The    police 

t    gunning      for 

s.    which    lately 

ry   on  a   whole- 

jroke      into    the 

lam    Godfrey,    a 

led  thirtv-eiglit 

at    JlOO.      Pre- 

?d    other    coops. 

nimierou^  hens 

ole    survivor    in 

gander,    whioli 

c.   and  evidently 

ght.  The  climax 

poultry  house 
itered,  and  this 
?eded  in  tearing 
irely  nailed  and 

less  than  sev- 
;sacred. 


FRED  H.  MERRITT 


BROKER. 


Stocks,  bonds,  Grain. 

328    A\\EST    SUPERIOR    STREET. 
Tf-Iepkuiieo:   Duluth  1408;  Zenllh  871. 

»LVRCI1    18,    1909. 


iBid.  I 


B.-.\Iex  Scott  full  pd. 
Butte-.'V.  Scott  $2  pd. 
Huitc-Rallnklava  ... 
Butte  &  Superior.  .  . 

Cactus    

C'aliiinct  &  Sonora.. 

C  arniaii   

t  lik'f  Con« 

Copper  Queen    

C<irdova  $2  imI  ..... .  . 

I)<>nit-Arizona   ....!!  . 

fiiroux    

Globe    Cons 

Cire<'ne  Cananea 
liakc-  S.  &  S.  $2., 50  pd  . 

Lion  Gulch 

Live  Ooak  $2  ptI.  .  !  !  . 

.Mowitza 

Itawliicic   Koyal 

Red  Warrior    ......  . 

San  .\ntonio  $1  pd.  . 

Savanna   $2   pd 

Shattuck-.^rizona 
Sup.   &   Pitt.sburg.  . 
Zenith    


French  Club  E 

Calumet.  Mich..  March 

T!ie  Herald.^  —  French  C 
ization.  No.  3.  of  Calur 
officers  as  follows:  1 
Clouthier;  vice  pre! 
Chatel:  secretary  an 
LIbourel:  assistant  sec 
peau:  treasurer.  Homei 
spondlng  secretary.  J. 
rectors.  William  Chapu 
rliene.  C.  Boyer,  Josepl 
JaaForest,  J.  B.  Chayei 
chesting. 


led  Ion. 

18. —  (f=^ecial  to 

'lub  of  Natural- 
let,  has  elected 
•resident,  J.  B. 
;ident.  .Toseph 
:1  archivist.  J. 
retary,  J.  Gall- 
Forest  :  corre- 
E.  Trudell:  di- 
t.  Homer  Beau- 
1  Oulette.  r^'hrls 
and    W.    Van- 


MII>vMukee    (InMn 

Hought(.n.  Mich..  Mar 
to  The  Herald.* — The  ( 
the  Michigan  College  o 
officers  as  follows:  F 
Kiehow  of  Milwaukee; 
surer.  H.  L.  Psscoe.  Tra 
tcastmaster,  J.  W.  Fail 
111. 

This  year's  class  wil 
sixty  members.  Durin 
weeks  the  necessary  ai 
the  class  exercise.^  will 


PreHidenf. 

ch  18. —  (Special 
lass  of  1909  of 
f  Mines  elected 
resident.  F.  A. 
secretary-trea- 
.ers  City.  Mich., 
bairn.   .S'lreator. 

I  number  about 
?  the  next  few 
rangement."  for 
be  concluded. 


Krnr  Admiral   Stronic  Dead. 

Andover.   Mass..   Man-  i   IX. — iuar  Ad- 
miral   Trask    Strong,    U     S.    N.,    retired, 


$8 
4 

16 
1 
1 

13 
1 

1 
2 
3 
8. 
5. 
9 
3. 
10. 
5, 
1. 

2 
13 

2 
15 
13. 

2. 


.001 
.12! 
00 
43 
.00 
.25 
,95 
.25 
.00. 
.75 
25 
00 
37 
75 
50 
87 
25 
.15 
25 
75 
00 
25 
.50 
00 


$8.50 


1.06 
1.50 

1 .25 

.96 

1.37 

3.87 


11.00 
1.37 


2.37 


I.ATKST  XEWS— The  feehiiIrR] 
condition  of  Itn  market  and  the 
newK  from  the  property  warraniN  a 
material  advance  lu  the  niurket 
prlee  of  Lake  Superior  A  Sonora. 
It  Im  In  Kood  tceneral  demand  and 
the  Niipply  In  limited  except  at  mn- 
terially  hiicber  priccH.  I  believe 
that  thlH  Htoek  will  be  the  leader 
on  thin  niivtard  movement  and 
Htronsly  advlKe  ilN  Immedfnte  pur- 
ehiiMe.  It  iiMH  nil  extremely  low  eap- 
itnlizntlon,  property  oil  paid  for, 
Kood  mnnnKcment  and  what  in  more 
It  linN  the  ore  iu  paylnie  quantltieM 
of  biKb  quality.  .\ll  of  the  otberM 
will  participate  to  n  Krenter  or  Icmn 
doKree.  but  Lake  Superior  &  Sonora 
Khould  by  all  meauM  double  more 
(luiclily  than  any  of  the  otherM.  Lion 
t^ulch  remains  Mteady,  but  will  ad- 
vance very  fihantly  on  receipt  of 
BvwH  from  tbf>  lower  levelH.  Butte- 
Alex  Scott  »2  paid  certificntcM  will 
be  iHNued  promptly  after  the  2(Hh 
an<I  will  be  a  favorite  ov^r  a  larice 
territory.  Live  flak  U  in  slronie  de- 
mand and  will  not  mcII  lower.  Zen- 
ith In  piline  np  a  nurpluN  and  will 
Nonn  pay  dIvldendM.  Hed  ^^  arrlor  In 
entitled  to  blicher  prlccM.  Mowitsa 
newN  In  expected  momentarily. 
Rawhide  Royal  Im  aetinK  better  (ban 
for  a  lonR  time  and  I  belieie  proUt 
taklue  by  purcbaMem  at  low  prices 
In  over  with.  It  will  Mell  biielier. 
(;lobe  In  Mteady  and  ntroniE  at  9.% 
bid.  lu  fact,  the  whole  Nitualion  In 
favorable  to  htirher  prIceM.  but  Lake 
Superior  A  Sonora  In  the  leader 
witliout    a    doubt. 


1 


died    suddenly    of    heart    trouble    today. 

He  was  born  at  Ipswich.  Mass..   in  1840 

and  entered  the  navy  during  the  Civil; 
war.  at  the  oomlusion  of  which  he  was 
appointed  ensign.  During  the  Sp.nniKh- 
Ameriean  war  he  was  commandant  at 
the  Portsmouth  navy  yard  and  hftd 
<liarge  of  the  pri.^oners  captured  in  the 
tight  off  .Santiago. 

Read    the    want    ads    toniglifc      Your 
neighbor  does.     It  pays  too. 


u 

1^^^^ 

r 

' 

' 

. 

■ 

1 

— 

1 

: 

t 

.    I.- 

C 

- 

-f 

■ 

. 

1 

. 

■^1 

1 

\ 

I 

J 


II 


~ 


^dM^  ,X"  rat  i<«j 


,-•    tT» 


■ 

1 

THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1909. 


f  Dulufli  Real  Estate 


Ik 


la  known   aa   the   beat   Inveatmcnt.      The 
dty  la  KTowlns,  and  Inveatora  will  find 
It    to    their   adTantase    to   patronlae 
tollowlns    ooncerna,    who    advertlae 
year  around  in  The   Hrrald. 


OCEAN  STEAMSHIPS. 


Iforth  (JermanJ^oyd. 

FA«T    EXPRESS  SERVICjE. 

Pt-VMOUTH-CHERBOURC— BREMEN— 10    A.     M. 


Cp,-III<<  M.ir  h   J!  :  li^'-»-r    Wm.    II April  « 

K     Wrii     I>    <:!    M  ir 'li  ;i"  '   Kruiprli  .'.    Wm  April    13 

TWIN-SCREW  PASSEIieER  SERVICE 

BREMEN    DIRECT— 10    A.     M. 

Roon       Mirrli  18  ;  'P.    Fretlerlch   Win.  April  1 

Schsmhirst         Man-li  W   \   ♦YiTi-k    April  8 

•»,ilU    Jt    Plymjuth    auil    Ch»rl>ouni. 

MEDITERRANEAN  f ERVIOE. 

GIBRALTAR— ALGIERS— NAPLES— GENOA. 
Saiilnij    ,it    It    3      111. 

•N.-tkar     Marh  20  i  t K.     Lulse April  10 

IBirlvrMM      .Miiri-h  27   |   tP.   Irene April   li 

•Oiiili^    .Mgier*    ;Ui.l    (;tniiii.       ti^.iill.H    Alulcrs. 

N'Kth     German     Lloyd    Travellers'     Cheeks 

Oelrlehs  &   Co.,   Agents.   5   Broadway.   N.   Y. 

H.  Clausienlu*  &  Co..  95  Dearborn   St..  Chicago,   III.. 

or  th«    local  agent   in   your  city. 


To  EUROPE  In  COMFORT 

■V  TH  SVmi  STCAHIBS  Or  TIE 

American  line 

Atlantic  Transport  Line 
Red   Star   Line 
Wtiite  Star  Une 

Wbite  Star-Derainion  Line 

BZOgLAm  tAILINoS  TO 

Great    Britain,    France,     Belgium, 
and  the   Mediterranean   Countries. 

fVi-t  PAiTlCULABa  OITAHJIBL*  rROM 

131  30Uth  3rd  St.,  Minneapolis.  Uian..  B 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

DLLllH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 

Uffioe:     420  Weat  Superior  St. 
'I'hone.    90i). 

For  HIbblng.  Virginia.  K\  eleth. 
Coleraine,  **Moiincciln  iron. 
••Sparta.    •*Bi\vabik •Ti40  AM 

For      Hlbiilng.       Virginia. 

••EveletJi.    Coleraine 'SiSO  I'M 

For  Virginia.  Cook,  Ranler, 
Fort  Frances,  Port  Arliiur, 
Bea'.iilette,  Warroad  and 
Winnipeg    •7x\0  P3I 

•Daily.      ••Except  Sunday. 

Cafe.  Oloervatlon  Car.  Mesaba  Range 
Polnt.-L  Solid  Vestibuled  Train,  Mod- 
ern   Sleeper   tbrough   to   Winnipeg 


1HE  DULUTH  &  IRON  RAM8E  RAIL 
ROAD  COMPANY. 

I'TIIK  V K K.M H .  1  OX   itOUTE 

'     uri.uTH. 


IjitLIV. 


J_ 


Arrlt*. 


Knlfo    !U\er.    Two    Far-      1 

•  7  30  8111,     txiri.     Tower.     Ely,     Aurt.ra.  |    *»2.00  m 

•  3.15  pmi  1  Uiwublh.    McKirilcy.    itparta.  M   •7.45  pm 
•7.45  ami  i  K»rletii  and  1)  t'*»  P™ 

I  I.  VlririnU.  J 


•  IMily   ijiept   Sunday.      tSunUaj   only. 


Dulalb  &  ^orihera  ^linnesota  Railway 

Office!*.  510  Louadale  UldgT.,  Uulutb. 

Train.s  leave  Knife  River  20  miles  out 
on  tlie  D.  Ji  I.  R.  R.  every  day  except 
Sundays,  on  arrival  of  the  train  leaving 
Union  station.  Duluth,  at  7:30  a.  m.  Re- 
turning connections  are  made  at  Knife 
River  tvllh  trains  due   In   Dulutb   Union 

sJatl.iii  A\.  T:l',  p.  111.  (■■•iiiieitlijna  nrc  iimle  dilly,  es- 
cepi  Sui..1j>  .It  lt«l>tlstn  \Vk\n  wltli  ^tage  Hue  for 
t;raiiil   M.ir.u*    ind  hU  north  Shore  points. 


NORTHERN  PACIFIC  RAILROAD 


i.<r.tVi;         j 

•4  00»«f. 

■8  00  an' . 
•7  30  pm 
•8   15  am, 


A^bland  and  EUut 

. .    ..AiMlaml   and   Eiist 

..Minn,  and  Dak^.t.-i  tjtprtss. 
. . .  Nortli  Coa-c  Uinltnl 


Arrive. 

•11.13  am 

•6.40  pai 

•8  15  am 

•6.25  pm 


L«inf?.     i 

19  00  am! 

•  I.3S  »m 

•  1 1 .  10  pm, 

•Uiib. 

IHipot  an  I 


"Uulutb   SItort   Une.' 

ST      PAUL 
MINNEAPOLIS. 


Arrive. 
•6.30  am 
t2  05  pm  ; 
^7  00  pm  ! 


ilMiiy  «xiept  Siiiulay.     'Phone, 
J4  West  »up»?rlor  street 


214.   Union 


NO!tTH-WESTERN  llNE 


I  V  sujwri  r       i  55i|xn 

Ar  Ea.-  'Jl.»!re  6  Jjpui 

ArMadi^n        >.  ijam 

Ar  Milwaukee    ^-^—       74t>ajn 

Afjan^^iillo     ^ijam       4  soam 

ArChitajjj         7  ooaiu       730^111 

al'ail)       i.h»cep» -uii'lay. 


bgi'i'inlLr  1 'uiuth 

S35P™ 
IV  30pm 
3  4oara  _    _^ 

Purniau  sleepers  and 


be  35aTTi    114  331  »in 

Lv  Superior       yojam      4  3Spi° 

Ar  St.  Paul      4  jopm      9  SSfiJ 

.*r  M 'polls       5 -Spm     10  asi-m 

'  chiir 


cars  to  Chicago.  Parlor  ao'.l 
c  it'^  cars  to  1  win  Cities.  Office 
— jo»  W.  superior  tt..  Uulutb- 


DULUTH,  SOUTH  SHORE  A  ATLANTIC 


No.  i> 

.N>-  i 

No.  r 

No.  5 

A.M.  ;  P.M. 

A.M.  1  P.M. 

t7.45     •5.00  Lv Dulutb    

.Ar 

•10.301   17.55 

t».05     'S   15 
P.M       A.M. 

Buperior   

•10.15 

16.40 

P.M. 

t7.45 
tS.35 

•5  -W 

Ar....    Houghton    ... 

.Lv 

•10.30 

«6.30 

Calumet    

•9  40 

P.M. 

A.M. 

t6  55'   'i  50 

lAiipcmliig    . . 

•12.25 

77-55 
li.4i 

+7.45 

•4  30 

Marquette    . . 

•11.30 

♦10.15 

Sault  »lt.   Maile 

•s.sa 

*8.00 

.    Montreal   . .    . 

•0.50 

•  K  ;.^ 

.      .   Boston   .    .  . 

•10.00 

"          ' 

A..M.  ;  P.M 

A.M. 

P.M. 

tB.50     *7.I0 
P.M.      A..M. 

!.»....     Montreal     ... 

Af 

•7.30 

tl»-l» 

F.M. 

A.M. 

ta.oo 

•7.  18 

\T New   York 

.Lv 

•7.00 

t8.49 

•D.illy 
Trains    N. 


flMlIy 
7    and 


exci-pt 
S. 


Sunday.       Ulnli^    tar    un 


TNE  QREAT  NORTHERN 


I.*avi'. 


STATION.S. 


I     Arrive. 


is. 00  am 
3.25  PIT 
•  tl.lO  pm; 
•  8  45  am 
•8.55  pm 
t2  20  pm 
16.00  am 


ST.    PAUL 
and 
MINNEAPOLIS. 

i     ('rni)k.«ou.     iirand     forki, 

Mi'tilana   and  Coa,sl.  J 

>'v:iii    Huer.    Hlbbing.    Virginia. 
.St.  t'loud.  WUiaar,  Siiiiix  Liiy. 


..{ 


tlO.I5  pm 
•I. 55  pra 
•6.30  am 
•6.35  pm 
•7.15  am 
tl2.3U  pm 
tlO.15  pm 


•l»ally.      ti>ally  mctpt  Sunday.      Twin  City  ileepers 
reatb    at   3  p.    m.      Ottice,   Spalding  hotel. 


afost    thoroughly    equipped    in    the  i 

Norll.  .vest.      Sanitation    perfect.  i 

ElUOfEAM,    fl.OO    AND    W.  \ 

AMh^lXli: A'Sf    l^S.OO    A.\D    UP.  | 


ORMONDE  HOTEL 

Z'Zt-'i'i'A  Lake  Avenue   South. 

The   Ouiy    Flrat-Claaa    91.00   Per    Day 

Hotel   la   the  City. 

Erery      room     heated     and     modern 
tlnuugliout. 

Aiueriean  aad  European  Plan. 

MIKK    GLEKSO.X,    Prop. 


The  Miller 

22'>i->24  W.  Superior  St. 

Amor  lean  and  Europaan  Plan 

Flftv    Home-tike    Rooma. 

JOHX  W.  MILLBH,  Prop. 


L^y*       >5^  T....Y 


Automobile  Owners 


^ 


We  Mako  a  Specialty  of  In- 
uring Automobiles  AsaioAt 

FIRE,  BURGLARY, 
CGLUSION,  LIABILITY. 

Sample  policies  sent  on  request. 
BLOC.  riRBT   ri.OO« 


YOU  WANT  THE  BESTWE  FURNISH  IT. 


ADnPFIONAL  WANTS 

3  FROM  PACE  14, 


FARM  LANDS 


NS 


on    We.st  Fir.st  street,  six  rooms,  bath,  hard- 
gas   ami  electric  lights.  ga.s  range.      Month- 


$3,000 — Buys  house  and  lot 
wood  floors,  city  wator, 
ly  payments. 

$100 — Buys  two  lots  50x150  each.     Cpntral,  and  two  blocks  from  car  line, 
$e30 — Buys  two  lots   50x150  each.     Eighth  street  and  Third  avonue  east 


FOR  SALE— FORTY  ACRES-FINK, 
beautiful  honte  oa  lake  stocked  with 
tlsh;  log  house,  ^ft  story,  four  rooms; 
log  barn  ana  cnicktn  house;  five 
acres  under  ^auUivation,  about  ten 
acres  into  clli'eM,  and  timothy;  one 
mile  from  scnoowhnuse;  one  and  a 
half  miles  from  ^rand  L.ake  railway 
station  and  tWicr  Inlles  from  Burnett 
station,  on  tnb^  £4,  M.  &  N.  railway. 
Price  jl.OOO,  including  buildings  and 
tarin  tools  arwl  nraclilnery.  Including 
$200  worth  of  pine  timber.  Terms,  half 
cash,  balance  Ouefyear  at  6  per  cent. 
640  acres,  best  section  of  farm  land 
In  Douglas  county.  Wis.,  one  mile 
cast  of  Poplar  on  N.  P.  railway;  no 
improvement;  Dice  creek,  plenty  of 
timber;  a  flne 'stock  and  dairy  and 
truck  farm.  Price  $12.50  per  acre;  half 
cash,  balance  five  equal  annual  pay- 
nicnts.  t»  per  cent.  This  will  be  on  the 
market  U)r  a  few  days  only  at  tliis 
price.  Call  or  write  for  information. 
Isaiah  Henry  Bradford.  213-214  Torrey 
building. 


MONEY  TO  LOAX. 


Real  Hslate— Loaii.s — In.snrance. 


Julius  D.  Howard  ^  Co. 


216  WKsr  StPKRIOR  STRKET. 


SECOND  STREET  CORNER 


I00-\I50  feet  on  the  Southeast  corner  of  Second  street  and  Eighth 
avenue  west.     Sewer,  gas  and  water.     Two  blocks  and  a  half  from 
new  Court  House.     Easy  of  improvement  and  no 
better  site  in  Duluth  for  immediate  improvement-. 


$4500 


R.  P.  oowse;  wl  CO., 

GENERAL  INSURANCE. 
106     Providence     Building. 


FOR  SALE — 40  ACRES  IN  TIMBER. 
also  40  acres  cultivated;  railroad  and 
depot  in  center  of  same;  two  wells; 
furnished  house,  cost  $2.5o0;  good 
stable,  three  ihllch  cows,  granary  and 
complete  farm  machinery;  twenty-six 
miles  from  Duluth.  Part,  cash,  bal- 
ance easy  terms.  Inquire  J  79,  Her- 
ald office.    

TTm  SALE— THB  LAND  DEPART- 
nient  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
Railroad  company  is  preparing  to 
put  on  the  market  a  number  of  ten 
and  twenty-aet-e  tracts  for  poultry 
farming  and  truck  gardening  at 
.Meadowlands.  Tl*ese  lands  will  be 
well  ditched  and  drained  and  sold 
on  easy  terms  and  long  tnnie.  For 
further  information,  address  Land 
Commissioner,  iJuluth  &  Iron  Range 
Railroad  company,  512  Wolvin  build- 
ing.   Duluth.    Minn. 


WANTS 

BRING    ^ 


»«»««»)l[»»»«»»»ll(ll(«»»««*)lt»««*»«********»«»*««»»******l 


DULUTH'S 

PROGRESSIVE 


I 

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it 
1( 

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It 


FIRMS! 


Something  iis  Always  Wanted.  Just 
what  it  is,  who  makes  it,  sells  it,  or 
does  it,  and  where  it  may  be  obtained 


n 

it 
it 

it 
it 
it 
it 

it 
it 

it 
it 
it 
U 


it 
it 
it 

n 

it 

it 


Corner 


yhis  is  a  bargain. 
I^xclusive  Sale  by 


100  Feet  on  Superior  St. 

IN  HARRISON  DIVISION. 

E.  Wa  M ARKELL,  aoe  Lonsdaie  Bidg. 


FOR  SALE— MINL'TES  OF  HOME- 
stead  of  120  acres,  small  house  and 
clearing;  one  and  one-fourth  mile 
fiotn  town  and  station;  a  bargain. 
Address   L   45,   Herald. 

FARM  LANDS— 128  ACRES.  HUBBARD 
county;  iron  lands;  on  lake  shore; 
$1  200.  A  snap.  Islah  Henry  Brad- 
ford. 213-214  Torrey  building. 

FOR  S.\LE— WHITE  EARTH  RESKR- 
vation  in  Minnesota.  An  agricultural 
paradi.-e  of  '  ■unllmlte<l  resources; 
thousands  of  acres  of  prairie,  brush 
and  timber  lands  at  $fS  to  $15  per 
acre,  Beaulleu  &  Dahl,  317-19  Palace 
Building,   Minneapolis.  ^^_ 


FOR  SALE— HORSES. 

FOR    SALE — 

HORSES  HORSES  HORSES  HORfcES. 
We  art  leaders  in  our  line  and  can- 
not be  undersold.  Our  motto,  "quick 
sales  and  small  profit."  We  have  from 
40)  to  600  head  of  horses  on  hand, 
consisting  of  draft  horses,  farm 
maies,  delivery  horses  and  mules. 
We  can  sell  you  one  horse  or  a  car- 
load Auction  every  Wednesday  at 
1:30  p  m.  Private  sales  daily.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Take  interur- 
ban  cars  from  eitlier  city.  Barrett  & 
Zimmerman.  Midway  Horse  Market. 
St.   Paul. 

FOR  SALE— 6- YEAR-OLD  HORSE, 
weight  1,250  pounds;  cheap  if  taken 
at  once.  Inquire  Northern  Scrap  Iron 
Co.,  foot  of  Sixth  avenue  west.  Ze- 
nith   'phone    1041. 


automobile;s. 

Thomas  Flyers.  40-hp.  6-cyUnder. $3,000 
Thomas  Fivers.  60-hp.  6-cyllnder.  4.500 
Thomas  Fivers,  70-hp.  6-c>  Under.    6.000 

Chalmers  Detroit.  30-hp.  6-cyl 1,500 

Most  perfect  cars  In  America.  Mutual 
Auto  Co.  Garage   rear  B.   of  T.,  Duluth. 


ATTORNEY 

William    Marx,      Attorney    at    Law,    510 
Burrows    bldg.      Zenith   'phone   384-A. 


BLACKSMITHS   AND   WAGON 
MAKERS. 


HARDWARE  AND  TOOLS. 

OpXpGelsePTo    W.     1st    St.    with    first 
class  tin  shop  in  connection.  'Fhonea. 


IMPROVED     SHOE    REPAIRING. 

ooi^l^R^sHOE^woiucs^^ 

avenue  west  and  12  4th  avenue  west. 


For  Sale — Draft,  delivery,  farm  mares 
and  drivers  always  on  hand  at  our 
nv'W  stables.  308  East  First  St.  Also 
of  all    kinds    L.   Hammel   Co. 


wagons 


For  Sale — Horses,  mill  wood.  Also  ashes 
removed.   2119  w.  Ist.  Old    phone  193':-.M. 


FOB  SALE— T%VJ-1NTY- ACRE  FARM, 
two  miles  frujiuj;ar  line;  splendid 
elx-room  cottage;  large  barn  atid  hen 
liouse;  will  s«lL  in  five -acre  lots 
if  so  desired.     Address    H  65,   Herald. 


_>_ 


ON  DULUTH   RCAl  ESTATE- 
CORPORATION  f  PRIVATE  FUNDS 

tSo\uv5t 


WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 
BUSINESS    PROPERTY 

COfkAA  '=''"*■*  '^  property  facing  on 
VvV\fV  both  Superior  and  Mlrhin.in 
sfr.fts.  H«s  two  liulldliigs  on  Supfrlor 
wliirli  make  tlie  iincstmcnt  profitable. 
C.ioil  fai-tiirj-  site  on  .Mirlilgun  street. 
And  the  Value  Will  Increate  Yearly. 
Call    at    office. 

DUXMNC.  &   1)1  NMNG. 

506    PALLAOIO    BLDG. 

Ztiilth    61)6;    OUl    i-li-n. 

.TEAL     ESTATE— BONDS— INSURANCE. 


FOR  SALE— 40^  ACRES  IN  TIMBER; 
also  40  acres  cultivated;  railroad  and 
depot  in  center  of  same;  two  wells; 
furnished  house,  cost  $2,600;  good 
stable;  three  mljch  cows;  granary 
and  compi^te  farm  machinery:  tweri- 
ty-six  miles  from  Duluth.  Part  cAsh, 
balance  easy  terms.  Inquire  J  79, 
Herald  office. 

WHOLESALE  BARGAINS  —   12,800 

acres  In  -Montana  at  $5.75  |>er  acre; 
40  OOO  acres  In  Texas,  at  $1.75  per 
acre.  Jay  P.  Morrill,  Palace  building. 
Minneapolis.  ,.„,, 

FOR  SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE  FAR.M 
twelve  miles  from  town,  on  Rice 
Lake  road.  Will  sell  cheap  for  cash. 
J  64,  Herald. 


WANTED    TO    BUY. 

We  buy  furniture  and  stoves.  Joe  Pop- 
kin,    22    W.    1st   St.   Zenith    1857-X. 

Highest  prices  paid  for  2d-hand  furni- 
ture and  clothes.  619-D,  Zenith.  1 
West    Superior    street.  ^ 


Horseshoeing 
&    Jordan,    ! 


and    repairing — Devaney 
0-22    First    avenue    west. 


BOATS  AND  LAUIMCHES. 

All  kinds  built  to  order  ;ind  for  sale; 
also  gas  engines.  H.  S.  Patterson, 
Railroad  street  and  Slxih   .A.ve.   west. 


KODAKS  AND  CAMERAS. 

Eclipse    View    Co..    Inc..    30    4th    Ave.    W. 
Develops    and    linishes    for    amateurs. 


LAND  FOR  SALE. 

We  always  have  bargains  In  wild  and 
improved  land.  List  with  us.  E.  H. 
Hobe  Land  &   L'ber  Co.  10   5th  av.  W. 


LOAN  OFFICE. 

Money   loaned    on   all    articles   of  value. 
City   Loan   Office,  524    W.  Superior  St. 


COAL  AND  WC'OD. 

City    Wood     Yard.       Prompt    deliveries. 
J.  D.   O'Connell.   Prop.      3oth   'phones. 


WANTED    TO 
horse.      C.    R. 
Box  43. 


BUY— A    GOOD     FARM 
Olson,    R.    F.    D.    No.    1. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— IF  YOU  WANT 
to  sell  or  buy  property,  any  kind, 
anvwliore  write  the  Northwestern 
Business   Agency.    Minneapolis     Minn. 


Highest  price  paid  for  cast-off  clothing. 
M.   Stone.    213    W.    1st   St.   Bell    1834-L. 


PATENTS. 


Let  Us  Show  You  ! 

$3000 

Seven  room  house  at  Lakeside — 
modern  plumbing,  electric  light;  lot 
56.K140.      Rents  $30  per  month. 

$5500 

Six  room  house  in  East  end,  strict- 
ly modern,  splendid  location. 

We  also    have   a   large   number  of 
houses   up   to   $10,000. 

G.  H.  Braves  &  Go. 

Suite  200,  ist  National  Bank  Hldg. 


A  Few  Snaps  in  Lands 

.".20  acres  of  niLxiJ  timbet  l«ii't<  .ilxmt  2 
miles  soutbwest  of  Pine  Station,  and  almut,  H 
miles  from  Uuluth.  partially  Imiiroieil  by  hoiis" 
ami  bam  and  about  l.">  acres  rkari'tl.  Tlmlnr 
enough  on  land  lo  pay  for  It.  Price.  $10.00  pet 
acre,     easy    tcmi*. 

All  of  Sec.  7,  'If.  50.  B.  19.  about  3  miles 
soiUh  of  Poiipore  in  O.  N.  Ry..  an  pxctllenl 
opportiiidty  for  a  dairy  farm,  small  lake  on  sec- 
tion, bright  pn>si'tcts  for  Iron  ore.  Price.  $7.50 
l>er    a-re.    easy    U  rtnu. 

10  iicres.  one  mile  from  Rice  l>ake;  host  forty 
in  whole  townihlp.  only  $10.10  per  acre.  Timber 
ciioogh  un  land  to  pay  for  It.  No  trouble  t4> 
show     lands. 


Money  to  Loan 

5,    5V^    and   6  per  cent. 

Insurance 

Old  Reliable  Companies. 

Estate 

Monthly     Payment     Plan. 

Cooley  &  Underhill 

20»-10-ll     Bxchanse     Balldlns. 


PATENTS— ALL 
See  Stevens,  610 


ABOUT 
Sellwood 


PATE.NTS. 
building'. 


DANCING  ACADEMY. 

«."(H''KI.NS.      18   Lake.  !>v<nue  north.     .Neu    'phone   1242. 
Old    'phune   lilifi-U-    ()ik;ii    afternoons    aiiil    ovoulngi. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— A  LARGE  OR 
small  tract  of  land  for  Investment. 
I    69,    Herald. 


CIVIL   ENGINEERING. 

Duluth  Engineering  Co.,  ""V.  B.  Patton, 
Mgr.,  613  Palladlo  Bldg.  Specifications 
prepared  and  construe  ion  superin- 
tended  for  waterworks,  sewerage,  etc. 


LYCEUM  SCENIC  STUDIO. 

Photographic     background     painted     to 
order,  decorating  all   kinds.     I>yceum. 


LAUNDRY. 

Model   Laundry,   126    E.   Ist^tP^We  do 
the   work."      Old,    2749-L.      New,    1302. 


DENTIST. 

Dr.   W.   H.   Olson.  222  New  Jersey  Bldg. 
All   work   guaranteed.      Both   'phones. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICE. 

NatT^EnTpr^Jo^r^rTtirA V.    W.      Esfb. 
1882.   "We   get   the   men.'   Phones   376. 


DYE  WORKS. 

ZENITH  CITY  DYE  WOIllvS— LARG- 
est  and  most  reliable.  All  work  done 
in  Duluth.  Work  called  for  and  de- 
livered. 'Phones:  Old,  1154-R;  new. 
1888.      282  East  Superior  street. 


Duluth  Dye  Works — French  dry  clean- 
ing; fancy  dyeing.  Old  'phone 
120:i-R;   new     1191-A.      330   E.  Sup.   &t. 


Northwestern  Dyeing  &  Cleaning  Co.. 
oldest  reliable  dyers  and  French  dry 
cleaners  in  Northwest.  15  Lake  Ave. 
north.   'Phones:   New.    1516..  old.    133t. 

dry 

city. 
257. 


BURKE  BROS. — Most  up-to-date 
cleaning  establishment  In  the 
22    East    Sup.    St.      Both    'phones 


ENGRAVING. 


Jewelry   and   Silverware. 
Dul.    Eng.    Co.,    4th    av. 


lowest   prices. 
W.    &    1st    St. 


MATTRESS  MANUFACTURER. 

Duluth    Bedding   Co.,    308    Lake    Ave.    S. 
Mall    orders    a    specialty.      Zen.    1732. 


MUSICAL  MERCHANDISE. 


Boston  Music  Co. 
ty.   121   W.    1st. 


Mail  orders  a  special- 
Old   2787-M.   New   673. 


FINANCIAL. 

Buy    Germanla-Tungsten    stock,    $100.00 
share.  Hoffman.  605  Man.  Zen.  1731-D. 


FLORIST. 

W.    W.    Seoklns,    302    E.    Sup.    St.      Cut 
flowers  and  floral  einbh  ins,  all  kinds. 


MEDICAL. 

LAl>IES — $1,000  reward!  1  positively 
guarantee  my  great  successful 
"Monthly"  remedy.  Safely  relieves 
some  of  tlie  longest,  most  obstinate, 
abnormal  ca^jes  in  three  to  five  days. 
No  harm,  pain  or  Interference  with 
work  Mail,  $1.50.  Double  strength. 
$2.  Dr.  L.  M.  Southington  R  Co.. 
Kansas   City.    Mo.  ^^ 


LADIES— DR.  LA  FRANCO'S  COM- 
pound;  safe  speedy  regulator;  2oc. 
Druggist  or  mail.  Booklet  free.  Dr. 
La    Franco,   Philadelphia.    Pa. 


FOR  SALE— COWS. 

FOR  bALE— L  L.  LEViSjB^'wTlL  AR- 
rive  with  a  carload  of  fresh  milch 
cows,  Sunday,  March  14.  821  Fourtii 
avenue    east.      Zenith    'phone    1708-D. 

FOR  SALE— FINE  JERSEY  (^OW  6 
vears  oM;  giving  milk,  but  not  fresh. 
Old  'phone  5031-L.  Call  evenings, 
after   7. 


FOR  SALE— S.  M.  KANER  WILL  AR- 
rtve  with  a  carload  of  fresh  milch 
cows,  Sunday.  March  14.  1219  East 
Seventh    street.      Both    'phones. 


Old    'phone    100 


AL.  KUEHNOW 

Torrey 


715 


Bldg. 


for  corner  9-room  house, 
East    Sixth    street.      very 


HOUSES  AND  LOTS  FOR  SALE 

#COnn  for  a  beautiful  9-room 
VUOUU  house  on  East  Third  St.. 
near  Portland  Square,  all  modern; 
nearly  new;  $1,500  rash,  balance  as 
you    pav   rent. 

$3000 

,  eiitral;  lot  50x140;  for  two  families; 
.asi,    $1,000. 

CTfIA  'o""  'ot  50x140  feet,  on  lOast 
vlUU  Seventh  St..  near  Twelfth 
avenue;  water  and  gas.  This  Is  of- 
fered $200  under  price  for  quick  sale. 
eQCfl  f'^r  lot  40x100  on  Park 
WVvW  Point:  very  central.  Short 
time  offer. 

THE  HARRIS  REALTY  CO., 

.533    ManhattHn   Building. 


T      ilii/' 


N»w   BalldlBK.  W«w  B«aipm«««. 

RATKS,  ,2.00  AND  92-BO. 

Hotel  McKay 

Cor.    First    Street   and    Fifth    Avanue 
Weat,    Dulutli. 


DESIRABLE  PROPERTY 

9.^,750— six  rooms,  hardwood  finish 
throughout.  Bath,  gas,  electric 
light,  cellar.  Back  plastered.  Ce- 
ment sidewalk.  New  house,  1907. 
Lot  50x150.  London  road,  near 
Fifteenth  avenue. 

$2,500 — Seven -room  house,  hardwood 
floors  tl-.roughout.  Electric  light. 
Barn  In  rear.  Fine  corner  lot. 
Fifth   avenue  east. 

We     vrrite     inanrnnce     In     Al     com- 
panleH   only. 

CHAS.  P.  GRAia  &  GO. 


CHEAP  ACRES 


so  acres  on  Swan  Lake  road:  a  gi'od 

supply   of  timber   left,   only  $I,4M)0. 

Rt-f.    2. 
40    acres    three-quarters    of    a 

from  Pike  I.jike.   part  cleared 

road,  only  «44>0.     Ref.  3. 
26    acres    In    section    26-50-16, 

cleared;    some    timber,    only 

Ref. 
WK  Write  InMiirnnce  on   Farm 
Property. 

Harrisoa  &  Jamar 

31U  Providence  Bldg. 


mile 
near 

half 
«400. 


FOR  RENT— HOUSES. 

FOR  RENT— MODERN  FURNISHED 
house;  centrally  located.  Call  G«t«y- 
Smlth  company.  201  Manhattan  bulld- 
1  ng. _^-_ 

FOR  RENT— NEW  6- ROOM  HOUSE  'TO 
couple  without  children;  rent  $25.  809 
East  Third  street.  'Phone  1388-K,  old. 


FOR  RFJNT- EIGHT-ROOM  DWELL- 
Ing-  water,  etc.;  Forty-fifth  avenue 
west,  one  block  from  street  car  line; 
rent  reasonable.  Dickerman  Invest- 
ment   company.    Lonsdale    building. 


FOR  RENT— 407  TWENTY -FOURTH 
avenue  west,  fSO;  water,  sewer  por- 
celain bath;  ftve  rooms;  hardwood 
floors  on  first  floor;  flrst-class  condi- 
tion    Little  &.  Nolte.  agents. 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES. 

FOR  SALE— 8-ROOM  MODERN  HOUSE 
except  heat;  lot  50x140;  easy  terms. 
626    East   Seventh    street.      . 


FURS  STORED  AND  REPAIRED. 

Fur  garments  made  to  oider  a  special- 
tv.      Dulutli   Fur   Co.   327   W.   First   St. 


PROFESSIONAL. 

DR.  MITCHELL,  electro-magnetic  spe- 
cialist, has  positive  cure  for  kidney, 
stomach,  liver,  heart,  dt'afness,  blind- 
ness, piles,  sexual  weakness,  all  fe- 
male troubles.     325  West  First  street. 


PHOTOGRAPHER. 

Snap    shots,    25c    a    dozen    at    McKen- 
zie's.    30    East    Superior   St.,    upstairs. 


PLUMBING  AND  HEATING. 

GeopMcGuriin   Co.,    329    E.   Superior  St. 
Old.   815.  JOBBING.  New,   983. 


PAINTS,  OILS  AND  GLASS. 


FAMILY    THEATER. 

SAVOY — Vaudeville     and     feature     pic- 
lures,    afternoon    and    evening.      10c, 


FURNACE  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work    done    on    short   notice.    Burrcll    & 
Harmon,  308   E.  Hupericr  St.     'Phones. 


FOR  SALE— 7-ROOM  HOUSE.  WITH 
water,  gas  and  sewer.  Bargain  if 
taken  at  once.  H.  S.  Merry.  129  East 
Sixth    street.  


FOR      SALE    —   FOUR-ROOM 
small    barn    and    sixty-five 


HOUSE, 
chickens, 


Price  $300.     Inquire  at  224  Forty-fifth 
avenue    west.  


FOR  SALE— ELEVEN-ROOM  HOUSE, 
50-foot  lot,  in  Minneapolis;  easy 
terms,  or  will  exchange  for  prop- 
erty In  Duluth.  A  bargain  for  some 
one.  R.  C.  Black.  314  West  First 
street.  . 


BVYSRS  WA.ITINO 

OXK — Wants  6   or   7-room   modern 

house. 
Two  customers  want  farming  lands. 
List  your  property     with   me  for 
quick    sale. 

-W.  H.    LOCKET?. 
310  To-rey   Building. 


East  Superior  St. 

25-foot  lot  on  Superior  street,  near 
Sixth  avenue  east.  Adjoining  lots 
held  for  $6,000.  Our  lot  Is  lots  bet- 
ter— for   only 

$4500 

CSTATi:  1  1    INSURANCE 

.Main    Fluor,    Pallatlio    Bldg. 


$1650 

iiieiit    v.'il 


New      7-room      cottage, 
hardwood   floors;    lot   35 
xloO;    small    cash    pay- 
liandle  this. 


2104  Went   Superior  Street. 
Over    >loe'M    Department    Store. 
Xpw     Phone   1079-.*. 


FOR  SALE! 

f.'iOO  CA.SH — Seven-room  house  on 
West  Fourth  street,  near  Twenty- 
third  avenue;  hot  water  heat;  hard- 
wood floors;  porcelain  bath;  house 
and  lot  in  flne  condition,  $4.500 — 
Balance  on  Kaay  Teriua. 


PULFORD.  HOW  &  CO. 

309  Exchange  Bldg. 


FOR,  SALE— EIGHT- ROOM  HOUSE. 
With  all  modern  conveniences.  To 
deal  with  owner.  Zenith  phone 
2005-X.      1016   East   Sixth  street.   


FOR  SALE— SEVEN-ROOM  HOUSE, 
water,  electric  light,  sewer,  bath; 
doable  lot.  concrete  foundation  and 
walks;  reasonable.  Reason  for  sell- 
ing, owner  leaving  city.  115  Vernon 
street _^^__— — — ^— 


FURNITURE  RECOVERED. 

334  E.  Superior  St.  or  'jihone  Zen.  949. 

FURNITURE  AND  PIANOS. 

Polished    and    repaired.       Thompson    & 
Hill,  336  E.  Sup.  St.  Old  'phone  1202-L. 


FURNITURE  AND  STOVES. 

All   kinds  at    lowest  prices.      Shapiro,   12 
First   avenue  west.     Zen.  'phone   1032. 


k 


The  Little    Paint   Man    says: 

Sherwin-Williams    is    the   best. 

NORTH WICSTERN  PAINT  CO. 

323    West    First    Street. 


PAINTERS    AND    DECORATORS. 

John^'lIoga^rX^Cor^2"ErTst    St.      Let 
us   figure  on   your   work.      Zenith   741. 


PRINTERS  AND  BOOKBINDERS. 

Merrltt  &  Hector.   Railway  and  commer- 
cial printing.  30-32   W.  1st  St.  Phones. 


PLASTERING  AND  BRICKWORK. 

Estimates   furnished.   W.  J.    Darby.   New 
•phone,     1224-A;     old     "phone.     424-M. 


FRENCH  CLEANER  AND  DYER. 

Zenith  Valet,  213   W.   1st  St.  Expert  re- 
pairing    and     tailoring.      Old     1834-L. 


HOME  BAKERY. 

The  Zenith  will   furnish  you   bread  and 
pastry.       Zen.    1879-D.        127     E.    4th    St. 


HAT  MFR.  AND  CLEANER. 

Geo.    G.    Moosbrugger,    successor    to    C. 
Volland.  24  First  aven  le  E.     'Phones. 


HAY,  SEED  AND   FARM  MCH'Y. 

TTX^mrlott,    127    W.    iiit  St.      'I'hones. 
Make  Lakeside  Tuesda  .s  and  Fridays. 


RELIABLE  SHOE  STORE. 

Shoes  that  wear  and  fit  for  all.     Lowest 
prices.  Joe   Williams.   123   1st  Ave.  W. 

ROOFING  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work     executed    promptly.       Burrell    & 
Harmon,   308   E.  Superior  St.   'Phonea. 


SHIRTS  AND  UNDERWEAR. 

Made     strictly     to     order,     fit     guaran- 
teed.    C.   C.   Smith,    409   Torrey   Bldg. 


TYPEWRITING. 

Public  stenographer  and  notary  public. 
Miss  Oi  ton.  433  Man.  Bldg.  Zen.   1598. 


TURKISH  BATH  PARLORS. 

Guaranteed     cure,     all     rheumatic     ail- 
ments.   S.  Kasmlr,  under  Hotel  McKay. 

UMBRELLAS  RECOVERED 

And  repaired.     It  pays  to  do  them  now. 
Glngold,   Mfr.,    125    E.    Superior   St 


BUSINESS  CHANCES. 

5{^5^^^£J^^  CIIANCE^OVING  Pic- 
ture exhibitors  and  operators  should 
see  some  of  the  high  class  outfits 
we  have  on  sale  at  half  price.  Edison, 
Lubln.  Powers  and  the  optlgrapli.. 
Films  al  »15  per  1,000  feet.  New 
song  sets.  We  can  fit  you  out  com- 
plete for  road  or  house  shows.  Oper- 
ators and  partners  wanted.  Outfits 
bought,  sold  and  exchanged.  Nation 
al  Employment  company,  i 
Fifth    avenue    west. 


South 


WEST  END  REALTY  CO.,     ;  .  o  GRrENFIELD 

2t04  W'PMt   Sup<^rlor  Street.  ,>  Wa    Da    VUlbhilvl    lbkl#a 


East  Superior  Street 

DOUBLE  HOUSE 


Bringing  In  a  ^ookI  rental,  on  large 
lot  reaching  from  Superior  street  to 
Dingwall  street,  giving  a  splendid 
opportunity  for  flats.  This  property 
will  be  sold  at  a,  bargain,  and  is 
a  high-class  Investment.  Call  at  the 
office  for  partlcular.s. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— WANTED  A  JOB 
of  sawing  lumber;  have  new  and 
complete  sawmill  plant  of  good 
capacity  and  practical  men  to  oper- 
ate It.     Address  F.  M.  Blare,  Herald. 

BTSl  NESS  CHANCE— FOR  VALUABLE 
timber  land.  Improved  and  unimproved 
farms  In  the  Cow  Creek  Valley,  ad- 
dress the  Glendale  Real  Estate 
Agency,   Glendale,  Or.    


BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— UP- 
to-date  restaurant  in  the  West  end. 
Complete  outfit.  Doing  goojj  business. 
Other  business  to  alfehd  to.  In- 
quire  614  West    First   street.        


Bi:SINESS  CHANCE— HAIR  DRE.SS- 
ing  parlors,  doing  good  business; 
best  In  citv;  will  sell  reasonable  price 
to  responsible  party.  Address  J.  80, 
Herald. 


BUSINE.SS  CHANCES  —  FOR  SALE, 
large  twenty-room  modern,  steam- 
heated  hotel,  including  large  sample 
room,  parlor,  etc.;  flne  lawn,  good 
town,  big  business:  will  sell  on  easy 
terms.  George  McDonald,  Sr.,  City 
Hotel.   Hawley.  Minn. 


DO  YOU  WANT 
TO  SELL ? 

We  have  a  purclascr  for  an 
eight-room  house ;  •  must  be 
modern,  of  reasonable  price, 
and  well  located  in   East  end. 

Call  or  write 

GETTY-SMITH  GO. 

201  Manhattan  Bldg. 


St. 


Dls- 


BUSINESS  CHANCE- 
for  driving   horse. 


-Will   trade   piano 
123    W.    First    St. 


BUSINE.'^S  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— A 
restaurant  and  confectionery  outfit. 
Including  dishes,  lunch  counter, 
stools,  showcases,  shelving  and  re- 
frigerator. Will  sell  separate.  231 
Central    avenue    west,    upstairs. 


300  Burrowa   Bldg. 


CLAIRVOYANTS. 

MADAM "rOSWeOTeGYPTIAN  PALM 
1st.  118  Third  avenue  west,  tells  past, 
present  and  future  on  all  affairs  of 
life;    satisfaction    guaranteed. 

MADAM  STERLING,  PALM  READI NG 
25c.  Card  reading  50c,  114  East  Su- 
perior  street 


SfOOOO 


Good  improved  resi- 
dence ccrner.  50x140 
feet  good  location:  netting  10  per 
cent.:  $3,000  cash,  balarce  easy  terms. 
»OAAn  l''lai-  building,  lot  50x140 
VUUUU  f'^et.  in  good  condition 
and  well  located,  nettlag  9  per  cent; 
$2,500  cash. 

y^C|>  Lot  50x140  fi>et.  East  end, 
A  lOU  good  location 
A^nn  T'Ot  50x140  f'jet.  East  end, 
VlUU  good  location 
III/  .\C"UKS  on  Hermantown 
I  1/2  road,  near  c  ty,  under  cul- 
tivation: good  for  dairy  and  garden- 
ing  purposes. 

A.  H.  W.  ECKSTEIN, 

301   Burrowa  Bldg.  Zenith  Phone  338, 


LOANS 


oa 


mi  ESTATE 

No  Ddaj 


(Torrens  No.  889.) 
SUMMONS       IN       APPLICATION       FOR 
REGISTRATION    OF    LAND.— 

State       of       Minnesota.    County     of 
Louis. — ss. 

District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  application 
ol  Empire  Realty  Company  to 
regi.'iter  the  title  to  the  fol- 
lowing described  real  estate 
situated  in  St.  Louis  County. 
Minnesota,  namely:  Lot  One 
Hundred  Seventy-four  (174), 
in  Block  Twenty-five  (25), 
Duluth  I'roper,  Second  Divi- 
sion; and  Lot  One  Hundred 
and  Seventy-four  (174),  In 
Block  Nine  (9),  Duluth  Prop- 
er. Third  Division,  according 
to  the  respective  plats  of  said 
Divisions,  of  record  in  the  of- 
fice of  the  Register  of  Deeds 
of  said  St.  Louis  County. 
Applicant, 
vs. 

Wisconsin        Central         Railway 

'  Company,  and  all  other  per- 
sons or  parties  unknown, 
claiming  any  right,  title,  es- 
tate, lien  or  Inlerost  In  the 
real  estate  described  In  the 
application   herein. 

Defendants. 

Tlie  State  of  Minnesota  to  the 
named  defendants: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  of 
the  applicant  in  the  above  entitled 
proceeding  and  to  file  your  answer  to 
the  said  application  in  the  office  of 
the  Clerk  of  said  court,  in  said  county, 
within  twenty  (20)  days  after  the 
service  of  this  summons  upon  you. 
exclusive  of  the  day  of  such  service, 
and,  if  you  fail  to  answer  the  said 
application  within  the  time  alort  said, 
the  applicant  In  this  proceeding  will 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded   therein. 

Witr.ess.  J.  P.  Johnson,  clerk  of  said 
court,  and  the  seal  thereof,  at  Du- 
luth, In  said,  county,  this  4th  day  of 
March,    A.    D.     19o9. 

J.       P.       JOHNSON. 

Clerk. 
By    V.    A.    DASH. 

Deputy. 
(Soal.   lUstrlct  Court,  St.   Louis  County. 

(^RASSWELLER    &    CRA.SSWELLER. 

Attorneys   foi»   Applicant. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald.    March    4,    11, 

18,   1909.  , 


abo« 


-^^ 

[j       '     1 

1 

I 

UB^  ^ 


■*S  • 


-!' 


J 


> 


DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD.     Thursday    march  is   im 


Yes,  You  May  Get  a  Job  Witl]oulAdvei1ising--Sometimes,  Perhaps 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  Less  ITian  15  Cents. 

^^  SHOPPING^ 

BY  TELEPHONE. 

Old 
'Phone. 
MEAT   MARKTS— 

B.   J.   Toben    22 

Murk   Bros 15»0 

LAI  :«fi>niKS — 

Yale  Lfturitlry 479 

Lutes  Laundry 447 


257 


Truv    Laundry 
DBIGGISTS — 

Eddif   Jeronlmus 

Bcvce    

BAKRRIRS — 

The   non   Ton    .  .  . 
BEATING    AXD   PLIMBIXG — 

ArcJife    .\KDougal    ...1723 
^'OOU — 

W.   S.   El'in^sen    


.  .  .1243 
.  .  .    163 

,1720-L 


New 
Thone. 

22 
ISO 

479 
447 
257 

1027 
163 


REAL  ESTATE,  FIRE 

INSURANXE  AXD 
RENTAL  AGENCIES. 

John  A.  Stephenson.  Wolvln  building. 
;.  D.  Flfld  Co..  203  E.xchange  building. 
I.  A  Larsen  Co..  Providence  building. 
Pulford.  How  &  Co..  309  E.xchange  Bldg. 


MUSIC. 


PHONOGHAPHS     AND     MUSICAL     IN 

etjumtnts.  Send  your  orders  for 
popular  soiisrs  and  records  to  Zenith 
Music  company.  No.  6  East  Superior 
st.--eet,    Duluth     Minn. 

BvsiC~ANl> "Ml  >TUXirTNsrrtrin;NTS  OV  EVEUY 
—  -  —  (!<^cTil>lion      EOlicn  phono- 

jraph*.  band  »nd  or- 
h  e  •  t  r  a  Instruments 
piarct  anil  trgans.  Ii.z- 
««U1  WESTOAART,  7 
ind   r   nm   .ivciiac   W«st 


FOR    RENT— FLATS. 

St.  Regis  apartment.*::  conveniently 
arranged;  lieat.  water  and  Janitor 
service.  M.  H.  Alworth,  100  Alworth 
building^. 

FOR      R£NT— FOVR-ROOM  FLAT— 

modern    except    heat.      1324  Jefferson 

street.     Inquire  J.  V.  Wilde,  basement 

flat. 

POK  RENT— MODERN  6-ROOM  BRICK 
flat;  heat,  hardwood  flni.«h.  607  East 
Sixth  street.     Zenith    phone  1705-Y. 

FOR  RENT — F'lVE-ROOM  FLAT  AT 
123^     East    Fourth    street. 

i'OR  RENT— NEW  FIVE  ROOM  FLAT 
all  modern  conveniences,  except  heat, 
lit  Twenty-seventh  avenue  west  and 
Third    street.      Zenith     phone    2208-X. 


FOR  RENT— FIVE  ROOM  FLAT,  UN- 
f ;irni*--!ied.  steam  heat  electric  light 
and  gas.   315  West   Fourth  street. 

FOR  RENT— FIVE  ROOM  NEW  FLAT: 
hot  water  heat;  hot  and  cold  water; 
Janitor  service.  230S  West  Third 
street.      Zenith     phone,    752. 

FOR  RENT— ^^IX-KOOM  STEAM  HEAT- 
ed  flat,  hot  and  cold  water;  single  or 
suitable  for  tAvo  families;  also  two 
furnished  rooms  for  light  house- 
keeping.     1030   West  First   street. 


FOR  RENT— NICE  FLATS.  FOUR  AND 
five  rooms,  opposite  new  courthouse. 
Call    508   West   Third   street. 


FOR  RENT— 6-ROOM  LOWER  FLAT. 
bath,  electric  light.  1325  London 
road.  Inquire  1&13  London  road. 
Zenith     'phone,     1535. 

FOR  RENT— 6-ROOM  BRICK  FLAT; 
all  conveniences.  Corner  of  Twentieth 
avenue  west  and  Second  street  ?20 
per  month.  Inquire  127  East  First 
street.  


PERSONAL. 

DL^SlOND^UEE^N 
A  Monthly  Regulator.  The 
very  best  remedy  we  know 
of  to  protect  women  from 
trouble,  diseases,  sickness 
and  serious  operatioTis. 
highly  rectpmmended  as  a 
cure  for  Inflammation.  Ul- 
cerations, Leucorrhoea  and  all  diseases 
cf  the  pelvic  organs.  Price,  $1.50  per 
box  at  drugt^tores  or  by  mail  securely 
■wrapped.  Duluth  Medicine  Co.,  P.  O. 
Box   326,    Duluth,   Minn. 

PER.SONAl^-IF  INTER  EST  E  D  IN 
Hvpnotism,  Mind-reading,  Clairvoy- 
ance, etc..  take  my  private,  practical 
course  on  Mental  Science  and  learn 
to  apply  them.  Scientific  Demon- 
strators, Box586^_Cit>\ 

PERSONAL— PLAIN  SEWING  WANT- 
ed  at  once,  by  good  dres.smaker. 
Call   Zenitii  'phone,    1352-Y. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
Xo  Advertisement  Less  Tliau  15  Cents. 

POR     SALE^^MISCELLANEOUS. 

T^                   CHICKEKINQ,  # 

#  FISCHER,  •* 
i^  FRANKLIN  * 
7t  PIANOS.  * 
^  EASY  PAYMENTS.  * 
V^  HOWARD.   FARWELL  &  CO.,        * 

*  120  East  Superior  Street.  # 
•s^  I'hones:  Zenith,  14:»-X;  Old.  * 
H'  1"p2-K.  W.  J.  Allen,  manager;  * 
■/(■  Fred  H.  Mann,  expert  piano  and  ^ 
if.  pipe  organ   tuning.  if^ 

FOR  SALE — SAFES,  OFFICE  FURNI- 
ture,  architects'  and  engineers'  sup- 
plies, typewriters  and  supplies.  J.  .S. 
Ray  Co.,  406  W.  Sup.  St.   Both  phones. 

FOR  SALE— SEND  US  YOUR  NAME. 
W'e  will  mail  you  the  new  Victor  and 
Edison  record  lists  each  month.  Free 
of  charge.     French  &  Bassett. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  In.sertlon. 
Xo  Advertisement  Le.ss  Tluin  15  Cents. 

HELP  WANTED— FEMALE. 

WANTED— A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  Must  be  good 
cook;  good  wages.  24  Butte  avenue, 
Hunter's   Park.      Old    phone    1011. 


FOR  SALE— THE  NEW  STYLE  Vic- 
tor "O."  A  genuine  brand  new  Victor 
machine  with  horn,  needles  and  len 
10-inch  new,  perfect  records.  L)irect 
from  the  Victor  factory.  All  com- 
plete for  J23.50.  Easy  terms.  Frencii 
&  Bassett. 


FOR  SALE— BABY  GO-CARTS— THE 
new  Princess  one-motion  collapsible 
is  tile  ttnest  folding  go-cart  in  the 
world;  prices  $6.60  up,  call  and  look 
'cm  over,  or  send  for  free  booklet. 
Bavha  &  Co.,  Duluth. 


FOR  SALE— ONE  MAHOGANY  PIANO, 
nearly  new  and  in  good  condition;  a 
splendid  bargain;  JIO  cash  and  |5  a 
month.     French   &   Bassett. 

FOR     SALE  —   PHONOGRAPHS     AND 

records:  don  t  buy  till  you  get  our 
prices.  We  carry  by  far  the  largest 
lines  of  Vicior  and  Edison  machines 
and  records  in  Duluth:  only  new  and 
perfect  goods.  Outfits  $10  up;  cash 
or  easy  payments;  catalogues  and 
record   liste   on   request.   Bayha  &  Co. 


FOR    SALE— 25-FOOT    LAUNCH,    FULL 

cabin,  drop  windows,  leather  cush- 
ions, lull  brass  fittings,  etc.;  6-h.-p. 
engine,  used  but  few  weeks.  Zenith 
'plione.    6U40. 


FOR  SALE  —  36-FOOT  CRUISING 
launch:  good  reliable  engine;  toilet, 
cooking  galley,  ice  boxes,  sleeping 
capacity  for  six  persons;  storage  de- 
partment on  top:  electric  lights, 
nickel  p:ated  trimmings  and  complete 
in  every  respect.  inquire  28  East 
First    street. 


FOR  SALE— $75  TAKES  ELEGANT 
upright  piano.  Can  be  seen  room  16, 
Piioenlx    block. 


FOR  SALE  CHEAP— NEW  EDISON 
yraphophone  with  twenty-seven  late 
records.     Address  K  90,  Herald. 

ALL   SIZES, 
Olson,    2012 


FOR    SALE— IRON    BEDS, 
at    half    i>rjce.      Engtr    & 
West   Supeiior   street. 


FOR  SALE— NICE  FAMILY  HORSE, 
two  carriages,  cutter  wagon;  an 
opportunity  to  get  a  good  outfit  at 
a  low  cost.  Call  y  '  East  Superior 
street,     between  12  and  1  o'clock. 


FOR  SALl^— COMPLETELY  FURNISH- 
ed  five-room  ccttage;  cheerful,  com- 
fortable and  convenient,  on  leased 
lot.    Park    Point.      B    49,    Herald. 

FOR  SALE— NE \V  VICTOR  AND  EDI- 
son  records,  direct  from  the  factory. 
Full-toned,  perfect  records.  They 
last  longer  and  sound  better.  Buy 
tliem   of   French  &.  Bassett. 


FOR  SALE — 28  BOOKS.  MISCELLANE- 
OUS titles,  good,  instructive,  enter- 
taining reading,  to  exchange  for 
second-liand  typewriter.  Books  worth 
twice  what  they  cost.  H.  C.  Snellrud, 
Norwich,    N.    D. 


FOR  SALE— 24 -FOOT  LAUNCH  4% 
horsepower  engine;  also  tent  and 
camping  outfit.  Call  531  East_  Supe- 
rior   street,    or    <.)ld    'phone,    2778-1* 


FOR      SALE  —  MAHOGANY      PARIOR 

cabinet  and  oak  china  closet  at  118 
East  Fourth  street,  flat  D.  Call  be- 
tween  9   and    12   o'clock. 


PERSON.AI^A     LADY     IN    THE    CITY 

wiJ^hes  the  companionship  of  a  gen- 
tleman. For  further  particulars,  ad- 
dress J    89,  Herald. 


PERSUNA1^-WH\-  DON'T  YOU  I'IND 
out  how  to  take  care  of  your  hard- 
wood floors?  It  costs  nothing  to 
have  the  floor  exp>ert  tall  on  you.  M. 
J.    Roos,   313   West  Third   street. 


FOR  SALE— STlilCTLY    FRESH  EGGS. 
2215    West   Fifth    street. 


FOR  SALE— SEND  YOUR  .SUBSCRIP- 
iic>ns  and  renewals  for  the  Ladies' 
Home  Journal  and  Saturday  Evening 
Pose  to  Miss  .L  Kluge,  agent,  care  ol 
Herald. 


WANTED — LADIES  TO  CALL  AT  THE 
daylight  trunlt  store.  Our  goods 
stand  tlie  sunshine.  A  square  deal. 
Try  us.  Repairing  reasonable.  North- 
ern Trunk  company,  228  W.  First 
street,   opposite    Wolvin   building. 

WANTED — FIRST-CLA.SS  GIRL,  AT 
1510  East  Second  street,  three  in 
family. 


WANTED — A  THOROUGHLY  COMPE- 
tent  working  housekeeper,  three  in 
family;  small  modern  liome;  wages 
$20.  Sail  after  6:30  p.  m.  Old  phone 
1689-L. 


WANTED— DINING    ROOM    GIRL. 
Roosevelt    street. 


6310 


WANTED— THE  LADIES  TO  KNOW 
that  Mrs.  C.  F.  Morgan  has  removed 
her  dressmaking  parlor  from  23 
Columbus  block  to  214-216  West 
First  street. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  .\dvertisenient  I..ef4s  Than  15  Cents. 


WANTED  —  AN  APPRENTICE  TO 
learn  dressmaking;  can  work  if  you 
like  for  room  and  board.  24  West 
First   street. 


SITUATIONS  WANTED— 
^ FEMALE. 

SITUATION  WANTED— YOUNG  LADY 
desires  office  position,  doctor's  office 
preferred.     Address  H.   87,   Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED — PLAIN  SEW- 
ing  by   day,  at  once.     J  76,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —  CITY  Posi- 
tion by  flrst-olass  accountant  and  ex- 
pert stenograplier:  best  of  references. 
Now  employed.  Address  K  100,  cure 
of  Herald. 


WANTED— GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework.  Mrs.  A.  L.  Miles,  1520 
East    Fotirth    street. 


WANTED — TWO    DISHWASHERS  AND 

scrub  girl.      Boyles'   restaurant. 


WANTED    —     EXPERIENCED  DRY 

gof)ds  saleslady,  one  who  speaks 
Norwegian  or  Swedish  preferred.  Do 
not  apply  unless  experienced.  Bos- 
ton store,   West  Duluth. 


WANTED  AT  ONCE— CHAMBERMAID, 
at  the  West  Hotel.  2803  West  Supe- 
rior street. 


WANTED— COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  711  East  First 
street. 


WANTED— LADY  OR  GIRL  IN  EACH 
town;  good  pay  spare  time;  copy 
names  for  advertisers;  casli  weekly. 
Stamp  for  particulars.  Am.  Adv. 
Bureau,    Sanbornvillc,   N.   H. 


WANTED— CHAMBERMAID. 
McKay. 


HOTEL 


WANTED — COMPETENT  GIRL  FOIt 
general  housework.  431  East  Second 
street. 


WANTED— A  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework;  good  wages.  Call  fore- 
noons,    1109    East    Third    street. 


WANTED— EXPERIENCED     DI  N  I  N  G 
room    girl.      l>elmonico    Restaur.'int. 


WANTED— C0MPF:TENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework:  good  wages  to 
right  party,  .^pply  2207  West  Third 
street. 


WANTED — COMI'ETENT 
general       houstwoik, 
ISIO    East    Fifth    street. 


GIKL      FOR 

no     washiiig. 


WANTED— NORWEGIAN  GIRL  FOR 
kitchen  work  iri  boarding  house.  Ad- 
dre.«s  M.  Edwardson,  Two  Harboi.«, 
Minn. 


WANTED — A     GIRL     FOR     GENERAL 
housework.      1210  East   Second  street. 

WANTED  —  GlFiL       FOR      GENERAL 

housework,   small   family.      109   Soutli 
Fifty-seventh  avcr.ue  west. 


SITUATION  WANTED — PLACES  TO 
Wbsli  and  iron  and  house  cleaning. 
119  Third  avenue  east. 


SITUATION 
keeper,    in 
Herald. 


WANTED— AS     HOUSE- 
or       out    of    city.      J    93, 


SITUATION  ^^^■^NTED— A  COLORED 
Avouian  wants  cooking  in  our  out  of 
city,  or  work  out  by  the  day.  1020 
West  Superior  street;  new  phone 
21l)l-Y.     Mrs.   L.  Carroll. 


SITUATION  WANTED— DAY  WORK 
by  middle  aged  woman.  Call  or  ad- 
dress,   415    Second    avenue    west. 

SITUATION  WANTED— WASHING  OR 
ironing  or  plain  sewing  by  the  day. 
321    West   Fifth   street. 


SITUATION  WANTED  AS  STENOG- 
rapher  or  general  office  work.  Old 
■phone    1643-K. 


SITUATION  WANTED— AS  HOl»SE- 
keeper,  bv  reliable  woman.  Address 
B    44.    Herald. 


SITUATION  WA.NTED— YOUNG  LADY 
flesires  a  position  at  office  work.  Ad- 
dress   H    y-1.    Herald. 


SITUATIONS   WANTED  —  MALE. 

window  trimmer  or  would  go  as  as- 
sistant; can  give  Ei«od  references. 
Address  Martin  Holli.ster,  311  South 
l\  street,  Marion,  Ind. 


SITl'ATION  WANTED — C0MPETF:NT 
bookeeper  and  stenographer,  engaged 
only  part  of  day,  desires  position  to 
fill  iu  balance  of  time;  thoroughly 
proficient  and  a  willing  worker.  H  88, 
Herald. 


WANTED  —  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework.  Mrs.  J.  A.  Hanks,  808 
East   Third   street. 


WANTF:D — DISHWASHER.  AT  1919 
West  Superior  street. 

WANTED— LADIES  TO  SEND  THEIR 
sul>scriptlons  and  renewals  for  the 
Ladies  Home  Journal  to  Miss  L. 
Kluge,    agent,    care    of    Herald. 

WANTED  —  GIRL  FOR  '  GENERAL 
housewoik.  Apply  104  South  Six- 
teenth avenue  east. 


EMPLOYMENT   OFFICES. 

MRS.     SOMERS'      EMPLOYMENT      OF- 
fice,     17    2nd    Av.     E.       Botth    'phones. 


PEi<i?<-»^'AL — Foot  specialist:  corns  ex- 
tracted. 25c:  inverted  nails  and  bun- 
ions  eured.      Scott.    17    E.   Sup.    street. 

PERSONAL — Electric  cabinet  Turkish 
b a t h B.     Knauf  Sisters.   24  W.   Sup.  St. 

Personal — .Manicuring,  massage,  scalp 
treatment.   813   Torrey:   'phone   946-X. 

PERSONAL  —  LEAitN  HYPNOTISM. 
Free  lessons  and  particulars.  Box 
152   Estherville,    Iowa. 

Wanted  old  clothes,  furniture,  etc.  Sal- 
vation Army.  Old  1003-K:  new  2134-X. 


PERSO.\'AL-PAlNTIN<;  AND  PAPER- 
hanging.      Zenith.   1518-X.     C.   GIH. 

PE  RSO.N  A  L— OLD  .MIRRORS  RESIL- 
vered.  .St.  Germain  Bros.,  121  First 
avenvio   west. 


CARPET  CLEANING. 

INTER.STATE  CARPET  CLEANING 
Co..  Sinotte  &  Van  Norman,  com- 
pressed air  cleaners  and  rug  weavers. 
Both    'phones.      1701-03    W.    Mich.    St. 


FOR  SALE— $375  UPRIGHT  GRAND 
piano,  good  as  new,  $150.  319  West 
Filth   street^ 

FOR  SALE  CHEAP— NEW  ROLL  TOI' 
desk.  A.  Berglin,  116  West  Superior 
street,    upstairs. 

FOR  SALE— 

CAJ-xl    REGISTERS. 
We   manufacture   a   cash   register 
every  two  minutes.     Liberal  allow- 
ance for  exchange  of  registers. 
Call  and  see  our  1909  models. 

THE  NATIONAL  CASH  REGISTER 

COMPANY. 

E.   W.    Russell,   Sales  Agent, 

426  West  Superior  Street, 

Zenith.   817. Bell,   2585. 

FOlt  SALE— BIG  BUNCH  OF  $2,000, 
also  sample  to  malte  one  quart  of  rye 
whisky  by  mail  for  50  cents.  Ernest 
G.  Carlson,  Maiulan,  N.  D. 


FOR  SALE  —  FURNITURE,  STOVES, 
carpets,  draperies  and  house  furnish- 
ings of  every  description  at  money- 
saving  prices;  casli  or  easy  payments. 
Bayha  &  Co..  Duluth's  largest  house- 
fumishing   concern. 


FOR  SALE— KIMBALL  PIANOS  NOW 
sold  direct  from  factory  to  your 
home.  No  canvassers',  no  agents',  no 
dealers'  profits  for  you  to  pay.  Come 
in  on  your  own  accord  and  buy. 
Korby  P'lano  Co.,  the  Kimball  factory 
store."  201    East  Superior  street. 

FOR  SALE  —  ADDRESSOGRAPHING 
machine,  cheap,  it  can  be  seen  at 
Bayha  &   Co.  s. 

FOR  SALE— SAFES  AND  VAULTS 
opened,  combinations  changed;  fire 
and  burglar-proof  safes,  vault  doors, 
saieiv  df-posit  boxes  and  bank  vaults. 
Christie  Lithograph  &  Printing  Co., 
Northwestern  agents.  Herring.  Hall, 
Marvin  Safe  company,  manufacturers 
of  the  original  Hall  safes. 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE. 

FOR  SALE — TWO  GOOD  LOTS  FOR 
$300,  on  Woodland  avenue,  one  block 
from  street  car  line.  S.  L.  Smith, 
118   Manhattan  building. 


FOR  SALE  —  WANTED,  VACANT 
property  In  exchange  for  Jackson, 
Mich.,  lots;  will  pay  cash  difference. 
W.  H.  Locker.  310  Torry  Building. 


FOR  SALE— NEW  0-ROOM  HOUSE  IN 
perfect  condition.  East  end;  50-foot 
lot,  most  desirable  location.  B.  48, 
Herald. 


STENOGRAPHERS. 

copying.     Lt  nox   liotel   notary. 

GRACE  BAft.NETT.  FIRST  NAT.  BLDG. 
E.  J    F'ARRELL.   yceum   Bldg.  Old  2380. 


SHEET    METAL    WORKS. 

Roofing,  guttering,  eave  troughs,  con- 
ductor pipes  a  specialty.  H.  Popkin, 
29   I-'iffh   avenue  west.   Zenltli   2062-D. 


PIANO  TUNING. 

C    A.   tiFtEGOHYT^ENirir^lONE   606. 


DRESSMAKING. 

DR  ESSM  A  K ING —  R  ELI  A  BLE""  DRESS- 
maker  and  ladies'  tailor,  with  ten 
years'  experience  in  Twin  Cities,  will 
make  suits,  skirts  and  waists  at  rea- 
sonable prices.  All  work  guaran- 
teed. 331  West  Third  street.  Zenith, 
1602  A. 

MISS  VICTORIA  GAJEWSKI,  DRESS- 
maklng,   817  First   avenue  east. 


Mrs.      J.    R.   SLOAN,   119    WEST      FIRST 
street.  Old    phone  2137-L;  Zen.  2083-D 


FANCY    DFtE.SSMAKINO      AND      TAIL- 
oring.      515    F^ast   Fourth   street. 


PRBSSMAKING — GOOD  DRESSMAKER 
can  be  secured  by  1717-L. 


FOR  SALF:  —  ONE  OAK  PIANO, 
splendid  tone,  fine  action.  This  in- 
strument is  a  big  snap  for  the  lucky 
buyer.  Price  only  $175:  $10  cash  and 
$5   a   month.     French  &   Bassett. 


F^or  Sale — Typewriters,  safes,  cash  reg- 
isters,  cabinets.   Edmont,   116   W.  .Sup. 


FOR  SALE  —  WOOD  AND  IRON- 
worklng  machinery:  sawmills,  edgers, 
lathmllls,  saw  tables.  surfacers, 
sharpers.  Northern  Machinery  com- 
pany,   Minneapolhs. 


OPTICIANS. 

C.  C.  STAACKET^'n?  NEW  JERSEY 
building,  106  West  :r^uperior  street. 
Wednesday  and  Saturday  evenings. 


BOARD  OFFERED. 

Two  deslraVde  rooms  with  board  at  the 
Colonial.    16  "West   Second  street. 

BOARD  OFFERED  —  FURNISHED 
rooms,  steam  heated,  with  or  with- 
out   board.    122   East   First   street. 

FOR  RENT— BOARI)  AND  LARGE 
front  room  with  alcove  for  two  peo- 
ple, private  family  in  East  end.  Call 
old  'phone,    2S06-R. 

BOARD  OFFERED — A  CHANCE  FOR 

two  gentlemen  to  secure  board  and 
rot«m  in  private  family;  East  end: 
walking  distance.  Zenith  'phone 
213S-D. 

BOARD  AND  NICELY  FURNISHED 
room  in  private  family  in  East  end. 
Address    B.    53,    Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— A  FIRST- 
class  w  indow  trimmer  and  card  writer 
wantb  position,  also  able  to  sell 
goods;  best  of  references.  Reply  to 
S.  H.  723,  Fifty-fourth  avenue.  West 
Duluth.       Zenith     'phone    3222-D. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —   PAINTF:R 

end  grainer  wants  work;  would  like 
to  t.'ikt  a  job;  reasonable  prices;  flrst- 
cla.'=s  work.  Let  me  figure  on  your 
Jol'.      H    84.    Heiald.    :. 

SITL^xTlON  WANTED— POSITION  BY 
salesman,  acquainted  with  grocery 
and  meat  trade,  in  Duluth,  Superior 
and  Woithern  Minnesota:  can  lurnish 
best    of    references.      H    90,    Heruld. 

WANT1:D— BY  GOOD  CARPENTER, 
work  at  once;  stranger.  Address  H 
83.  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —  PRUDENCE 
Robert,  public  Janitor  and  porter, 
windows  wasiied,  floors  mapped,  etc. 
Branch    Bethel,  508  W.  Sup.  Zen.   391. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN. 


DO  YOU  NF:eD  MONEY? 
Money  loaned  in  Duluth  or  Superior  to 
salaried  people  without  security;  also 
on  pianos,  furniture,  horses,  wagons, 
etc.  Business  absolutely  confidential. 
Call  and  get  our  rates  and  terms. 
Monthly  or  weekly  payments  as  de- 
bireti.     No    good    applicant    refused. 

westi:rn  loan  co., 

521    Manhattan    Building. 
New  'phone    930.  Old    phone,  1036. 


DON  T  BORROW  MONEY 
at  exorbitant  rates.  Give  us  a  trial. 
'rhou.saTids  of  satisfied  customers  our 
best  references.  We  are  an  old  and 
established  firm,  with  unlimited 
capital.  Therefore  we  can  loan  at  the 
LOWEST    RATES. 


—SALARY     AND     CH.\TTEL   LOANS— 


Room    and    board — 301    East    Third    St. 
Room    and    Borfrd — 318    W.    Second    St. 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED — 426 

East    Third    street.  


ARCHITECTS. 

Olsen  &  Magney,  613-14  Sellwood  Bldg. 


FRANK  L.   YOUNG  &  CO  .  201  Pal.  Bldg 


DULUTH    FINANCE    CO. 
302  Palladio  Bldg.  Both  'phones. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  PIANOS.  FUR- 
niture.  horses,  wagons  and  fixtures 
at  low  rates  and  on  small  payments. 
A  liberal  discount  if  paid  before  due; 
business   confidential. 

YOU    CAN    GET    IT    TODAY. 

Security   Mortgage   Loan   Company, 

401    FIRST    NATIONAL    BANK    BLDG. 

Zenith   phone.  612. 


MONEY'   TO    LOAN 
On     real     estate     or     household     furni- 
ture.    Business  confldenii.il. 

M17TUAL   LOAN   COMPANY, 
£104    West    Superior    street,    over    Moe's 
department  store.     Side  entrance.     New 
'phone.    1679-A. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  DIAMONDS, 
watches,  furs_  rifles,  etc.,  and  all 
goods  of  value',  $1  to  $1,500.  Keystone 
Loan  &  Mercantile  Co.,  16  W.  Sup.  St. 

Money  supplied  to  salaried  people  and 
others,  upon  their  own  names,  with- 
out security.  Easy  payments.  Offices 
In    66    cities.     Tolman's,    509    Palladio. 

Furniture  and  salaried  loans  by  Union 
Lean  company.  303   Palladio  building. 


TENTS  AND  AWNINGS. 

POIRIER    &    CO..    108    E.    Superior    St. 


WANTED  TO   RENT. 

WANTElT'^^^^'oSjjHmT^A^LE^  FTIR- 
nlshed  room  by  quiet,  single  man. 
near  library  preferred;  give- particu- 
lars and  price.     H  89.  Herald. 


PATENT    ATTORNEYS. 

PAtEl^^S^'Trr^ALLr'cOUNT^^ 

tained,  sold,  manufactured;  estab- 
lished 25  years;  unexcelled  reputa- 
tions; investors'  book  free.  American 
Patent  Market,  St.  Paul,  Minn. 


MONEY  TO  LO.\N— ANY  AMOUNT 
from  $500  to  $5,000^  on  Improved  real 
estate.  No  delay.  J.  B.  Greenfleld, 
306    Burrows    building.  ' 


MONEY  LOANED  ON  PERSONAL 
PROPERTY.  Minnesota  Loan  com- 
pany,  205   Palladio  building. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN— LOANS  MADE  ON 
farms  and  timber  claims.  Guaranty 
Farm  Land   Co.     416  Lyceum. 


ASHES  AND  GARBAGE. 

Xshes!"'7Iarbage     and    manure 

iiauled.     Dick  Barrett.  Zenith  'phone. 
1274-Y. 


REMOVFJD — GUST    HOLMGREN.       1906 
London  road.     Old  'phone,  331 -M. 


One  Cent  a  Word  I'arh  Insertion. 
Xo  Advert isrmeiit  lics.s  'llian  15  CeutH. 

h^i^^anted^^^^^male! 

W^ANTED^^TWtri<^^  A  N  t  J 

salesmen.       Howard.     F'arwell     &    Co., 
120    East    Superior   St.,    Duluth,    Minn. 


WANTED— 100   MEN  TO   BUY   Watches 
at     Esterly's    Spalding  Hotel  Jeweler. 


WANTED— LEARN  BAItBER  TRADF3. 
big  drma'.d  tor  barbers;  big  wages, 
easy  work  short  time  to  learn;  tool.s 
given;  ca;iilogue  free.  Moler  Burbor 
College,  27  E.  Nicollet  avenue.  Min- 
ne-ipolis.  


wantf:d — YOUNG     mf:n    to    send 

their  subscriptions  and  renewals  for 
the  Saturday  Evening  Post  to  Miss 
L.   Kluge,  agent    care  of  Herald. 


WANTED— rtAILVVAY    .MAIL  CLERKS. 

Salary  $800  to  $1,400.  Examinations 
in  Duluth  May  15.  Common  educa- 
tion sufficient."  Candidates  prepared 
free.  Write  immediately,  Franklin 
Institute,    Rochester,   N.    Y. 


WANTED— YOUNG  MEN  WHO  "WISH 
to  become  moving  picture  operators. 
Answer  immediately.  Address  L.  45, 
Herald. 


WANTED  —  STE.NOGRAPHERS  AND 
bookkeepers  wanting  positions  should 
register  at  the  National  Accountants 
and  Stenographers'  Bureau.  Minne- 
sota office  at  the  Duluth  Business 
University.  600  Christie  Building. 


WANTED— PANTS  AND  VE.ST  MAK- 
er.  $2.25  apiece;  steady  work,  in  a 
good  lighted  shop.  Call  or  address 
Wm.    Baldowskv.   Elk    River.   Minn. 


WANTED  —  EXPERIENCED  CLOTH- 
Ing  salesman.  Harry  Mitcliell,  18 
East   Superior   street. 


WANTED — BUSS    BOY 
Louis    hotel. 


AT    THE       ST. 


WANTED— MEN      AND 
know     that     I    do    first 
hanging     and     painting 
'phone,    2003-D. 


WOMEN      TO 
class    paper- 
Call       new 


WANTF:D— GOOD     DELIVERY 
1829    East    Superior    street. 


MAN. 


WANTED — MEN  TO  INSPECT  OUR 
$4.25  cowhide  suit  cases.  Don't  get 
fooled  on  sheepskin  cases.  We  man- 
ufacture. Trunk  and  case  repairing 
very  reasonable.  Northern  Trunk  Co., 
228  West  First  street,  opposite  Wol- 
vln building. 


WANTED  —  MALE  STENOGRAPHER. 
Out  of  city  position.  Must  be  good 
penman  and  willing  to  assist  upon 
books,  payroll,  etc.  Address  J  77, 
Herlad. 

WANTED  —  INSURANCE  MEN  TO 
handle  best  line  of  health  and  acci- 
dent policies,  costing  $1  per  month 
and  up.  Include  latest  and  most  at- 
tractive features.  Big  money  to  be 
made  under  good  contracts.  Call  or 
write  National  Casualty  company,  506 
Palladio     building     Duluth. 


FOR  RENT. 


One  Ont  a  Word  Esuli  Insertion. 
Xo  Adverrlsement  l><"ss  Than  16  Cents. 

^FORHRENT^^^OMSy 

*  A     Carpenter     Shop;     irood     stone  -Sr- 
1^  building,    rear    of    27     ISast    Supe- 
•it  rlor    street.      Call    Vienna    bakery, 
S.  207   West  Stipcrior  street. 

w 

*Mf^;3f*******  ******  ********* 

FOR  RENT  —  M0DF:RN  FURNISHED 
room  in  private  family;  reasonable. 
Zenith   2138-D.  

FOlt  RENT  -^~FU RNIS^ED  RCK »M ; 
electric  light;  cooking  illowed.  lllVi 
East  Fifth  street. 

FOR "  RENT— TH UK E  ROO-MS  FOR 
light  housekeeping,  o-  two  rooms 
furnished  for  gentlemtn,  1718  West 
Second  street. 

FOR  RENT— F'URNISHED  ROOMS,  229 
East    Superior   street. 

FOR  ~~RENT  —  THREF:  ROOMS  IN^ 
quire  at  628  West  First    street. 

FOR  RENT— 3-ROaM~aA  SEMENT,  AT 
720   East  Third   street. 

FOR  RENT  —  TWO  NICELY  FUR- 
nlshed  front  rooms  for  housekeeping, 
steam  heat,  hardwood  floors,  electric 
light  and  gas;  will  reni  to  party  wiio 
will  buy  furniture.  Reasonable  rent. 
Call  after  7  p.  m.  at  4C9old  Masonic 
Temple. 

FOR  RENT— TWO  OR  TP  REE  PLEAS- 
ant  rooms  for  light  housekeeping; 
one  furnished,  if  desired.  521  West 
Fourtli   street. 


SECRET  SOCIETIES. 

MASONIC. 
PALESTINE  LODGE  NO  79, 
A.  F.  &  A.  M. —  Regular  meet- 
ings first  and  third  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month,  at 
7;SC  o'clock.  Next  meeting 
"'  '••-  "?.  1909.  Work — Sec- 
ond degree  Andrew  C. 
Volk,  "W.  M. ;  H.  Nesbitt,  secretary. 


J 


fm: 


FOR  RENT — NICELY'  FURNISHED 
rooms,  strictly  modern,  in  private 
family.    315    East    First    street. 


FOR  RENT— TWO  ROOMS,  FUR- 
nlshed  for  light  hous<  keeping.  110 
East  First  street. 


FOR  RENT  —  TWO  FURNISHED 
rooms  for  light  housi-keeping:  gas 
and  electric  light  and  Ileal.  16  West 
Fifth   street. 


J'OR  RENT — DESIRABLE 
conveniences.  10  West 
Flat    "B.  " 

FOR         RENT— FURNISI 
suitable    for    two.      Rat 
Board  if  desired.      512 
east.      Zenith    'phone.    : 


:  ROOMS,  ALL 
First    street. 


lED         ROOM, 

es  reasonable, 
j'ourtn  avenue 
:321-X. 

FOR   RF:NT— FURNISHEJ   ROOMS,   331 
West    Third    street. 

ATED  FUR- 
tiiousekeeping 


IONIC  LODGE,  NO.  186,  A.  F. 
&  A.  M. — Regular  meeting 
second  and  fourth  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting. 
March       22,       li)09.  Work — 

Third    degree,      t.'larence    B.    Miller,    W. 

M. ;   Hugo  Burgo,  secretary. 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER,  NO. 
20,  li,  A.  M. — Stated  convoca- 
tions second  and  fourth 
Wednesday  evening.s  of  each 
month  at  7:30  o'clock.  Next 
meeting,  March  24th,  1909. 
M.  and  M.  E.  M.  degrees.  Will- 
Underhill,     H.     P.;     Alfred     Le 


Work— P. 

lam    D. 

Richeux,    secretary 


FOR  RENT  —  TWO  HE 
nished  rooms  for  llgli 
2609  Huron  street. 


FOR  RENT— STORES  &  OFFICES. 

FOR^'rEnT^^^TjT'vvIcSt'  DULUTH.  ON 
Central  avenue,  fine  corner  store, 
with  basement,  and  warehouse  In 
rear;  steel  ceiling;  hardwood  floors 
in  both  store  and  warehouse;  one 
of  the  best  corners  on  Central  ave- 
nue. For  rent  fro-n  May  1.  W.  C. 
Sherwood  &  Co..  118  .Manhattan  block. 


FOR  rf:nt- 


-STOREROOM  SUITABLE 
for  grocery  store  and  meat  market. 
Inquire  on  premises.  1^04  Piedmont 
avenue,  or  Cooley  &  Underhill,  203 
Exchange    building. 


FOR  RENT— NO.  114  WEST  MICHIGAN 
street:  four-story;  25x90;  railroad 
track  at  the  rear;  elevator,  refrig- 
erators and  office  all  in.  P.  Beneteau. 
St.    F'aul,    Minn. 


FOR  RENT— DESK  ROOM:  U&E  OF 
both  'phones:  $7  per  month.  A  snap. 
Inquire    1010    Torrey    building 


PICTURE  FRAMING. 

GUSTANniENNECKEr^rpET^UP.  ST. 


LOST   AND   FOUND. 


rr    YOU     LOSE    ANVTHING-AdTfrtlse    it 

her*.  It  wUl  W  rc'tiinud  t(.  y<'ii  If  an  honest 
jxrecn  finds  it.  Kem.^rkatilc  ri<-OTfrifS  arc 
bioi-ght  about  e\«ry  ilaj   tlirough  tJils  column. 

IF  YOU    FIND   ANYTHING   bring  U  to  Uie 

HERALD  OFFICE. 

Grt  «  cl.ilm  rherk.  Have  It  adverlisPd. 
Rf><lAlm  It  If  the  owner  dctg  not. 

THE  LAW— "Kwry  person  who  shall  find 
lott  prcperty  undir  circumstances  which  gaTe 
lilm  kjuwleelge  or  means  of  inquiry  as  to  the 
true  rwiiiT.  who  shall  aniniiriatc  such  prop- 
erty lo  his  own  use.  cr  to  the  use  of  another 
p<r«on  not  entitled  thento.  wit!iout  having 
first  made  reasonable  eH'  rt  to  find  the  owner 
and  restore  the  property  to  lilm.  ehall  be 
guilty  of  larceny."— SecUon  5i'86.  lltilsed 
Lnvts,    Minntsota,    UC>5. 


FOR  RENT— ONE  F'URN 
all  conveniences.  617  >/ 
street. 


[SHED  ROOM. 
I     West    First 


FOR  BENT— F^URNISF  1:D  FHONr 
room,  suitable  for  two.  Call  evenings. 
409    West   Third   street.      

FOR  RENT  —  VERY  DESIRABLE 
rooms  all  conveniences.  10  West 
F'lrst  street.   Hat   B. 


FOR   .rf:nt— TWO     largf:     rooms 

for  llgiit  housekeeping  ;  all  modern. 
Both  'phones;  old,  1714  K;  new, 
689-A. 


FOR  RENT  —  FURNISHED  ROOM, 
with  board,  if  desired.  813  East 
F'ourth  street. 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  ROOM.  218 
West  F'ourth  street,  first  floor,  side 
entrance. 


FOR  RF:NT— 1  FURNIi-HED  ROOM, 
all  conveniences,  $6  per  month.  316 
West  F"'ourth  street.        

FOR  RENT— TWO  F'fiONT  ROOM.S, 
newly  furnished  for  light  house- 
keeping; modern.  513  East  Fourth 
street,   upstairs. 

FOR  KENT- NICELY  FURNISH  t^D 
room  for  lady.     St.  Regis  flats.  A-1. 


FOR  RENT — 3  FURNISHED  ROOMS; 
complete  for  housekeejiing.  A.  Camp- 
bell, 2805  West  Railroad  street. 

FOR  RENT— IN  BOARD  OF  TRADE 
building,  large  room  on  Third  ave- 
nue west;  also,  several  offices.  Apply 
Secretarv.    Room    209. 


LOSl— GENT'S  GOLD  WATCH  FOB 
and  green  17th  of  Ireland  clieck  at- 
taclied,  on  Superior  street,  near  Fifth 
avenue  west  and  Spalding  hotel.  Re- 
turn   to    this    office    for    reward. 

LoyT  —  WILL  THE  PARTY  THAT 
found  gold  watch  and  green  fob,  with 
check  attached  in  front  of  Spalding, 
return  to   Herald   for  reward. 


l.,OST— BLACK  HAND-BAG  CONTAIN- 
Ing  small  black  purse,  $20  In  bills, 
ronie  loose  change,  calling  cards, 
etc.,  lost  between  No.  6  East  Fifth 
street  and  Forest  Hill.  Return  to 
Herald    for   reward. 


LOST — I^RIDAY  MORNING,  A  LARGE 
black  and  white  dog.  F^inder  please 
return  to  2801  Wellington  street,  or 
call    old    'phone    1739-L. 


BOARD  WANTED. 

BOARD  AND  ROOM  WANTF:D— LADY 
desires  furnished  or  unfurnished 
room,  with  board.  Address  B  300, 
Herald. 


M. 


MILLINERY. 

A.    COX."330'"EAST'^m'RTH    ST. 


MRS.    BRANDT,  114  WE.ST  FOURTH  ST. 


FOR  RENT  —  FIVE  AND  SEVEN 
rooms;  all  modern  con\  eniences.  Ap- 
ply A.  H.  W.  Ecksteir.  301  Burrows 
building. 


FOR  RENT  —  NICELY  FURNISHED 
room.  224  West  Third  street.  St. 
Marco  flats,   flat   F. 


F"OR  RENT  —  LARGE,  DESIRABLE 
furnished  room:  all  conveniences.  316 
F:ast    Second    street. 


FOR  RENT — A  BEAUTIFUL,  LARGE 
furnished  room,  all  modern  conven- 
iences, private  family-;  reasonable. 
320   East   Second  street. 


FOR  RENT — FURNISHED  FRONT 
room  and  alcove,  h«  at,  light  and 
bath.      HOSVi.    West   Sec:>nd   street. 


TIMBER   LANDS. 

SHELDON^^MATHJCr'tI^IBER  CO.      309 
F'ist   National  Bank   bl.Jp.      'Phones. 


TIMBER  AND  CUT-0VF:R  LANDS 
bought:  mortgage  loais  made.  John 
Q.  A.  Crosby.  209  Palladio  building. 


I    buy    standing    timber;    also    cut-over 
lands.    Geo.  Rupley,  32  2  Lyceum  bUlf^:. 


WATCHES  REPAIRED. 

Guaranteed    .Main    Spring-.    $1.00;    watch 
cleaned.   $1.     (Jaron   Brjs..   213  W.   1st. 


UPHOLSTERING  &    REPAIRING. 

F:D  OTT,   112  1st   Ave.   W.   Both    phones. 


CUTTING    &    SEWING    SCHOOL. 

Pupils     enter     any     time — Miss     Gray, 
Third  floor.  Gray-Tailant  Co. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITAL. 

PRIVATE  HOSPITAL — PROSPECTIVE 
mothers  will  find  a  pleasant  home 
during  confinement  at  the  Ashland 
Maternity  Flome,  with  best  of  doc- 
tors; confidential:  may  board  or 
adopt  infants.  Mrs.  K.  Hess.  923 
Second   avenue  east,   jf.shland.    Wis. 


SWEDISH  MASSAGE. 

A.      E.   HANSEnTmASSEUR      400   NEW 
Jersey    building.    Old    'phone    1826-K. 

Mrs.  H.  Wlking,  Swedish  massage.  Flat 
2.    2018    W.    Sup.    St.       Zenith,    1894-D. 


Maria  Grindereng.  graduated  masseuse. 
Dr   Averdson's  Inst. -Sweden.  Zen.  844, 


STOVE  REPAIRS. 

WE  CARRY'  IN  STOCK  REPAIRS 
for  10,000  different  stoves  and  ranges. 
C.  F.  Wiggerts  &  Son,  410  East  Su- 
perior .«treet.       Both  telephones. 


LIQUOR   HABIT   CURED. 

Prof.  J.  B.  Flssette,  Anti-Liquor  Cure; 
guarantees  to  cure  the  worst  habit- 
ual drunkard  in  two  weeks,  or  mon- 
ey refunded.  No  danger  to  health. 
Investigate.  Testimonials,  advice  free. 
Call   or   write   816    West   Superior   St. 


■"m 


F  you  have  anything  for  sale,  if  you  want  to  buy  anything,  if  you  want  bet- 
ter employes,  if  you  want  better  servants,  if  you  want  horses,  cows,  bug- 
gies, etc.,  if  you  have  lost  anything,  place  a  want  ad  in  The  Herald.       Step 

to  the  phone  and  call  No.  324  or  write  or  bring  your  ads  to  The  Herald  office. 

Results  are  certain.     Nearly  everybody  in  Duluth  and  Northern  Minnesota  reads 

The  Herald. 


h.. 


MRS.  HANSON,  GRADUATE  MID- 
wife;  female  complaints,  413  Seventh 
avenue  east.  Old  'phone  1594;  Zen- 
ith  1225. 


Private  home  for  ladi  ?s  before  and 
during  confinement;  expert  care; 
evervthing  confidential;  Infants  cared 
for.  "  Ida  Pearson,  M.  I>.,  284  Harrison 
avenue,  St.  Paul. 


M 


rs.  H.  Olson,  graduate  midwife;  pri- 
vate hospital,  329  N.  5;ith  Av.  W.  Zen. 
3173. 


HOSPITAL  FOR  LAI'lES  DURING 
confinement.  Mrs.  W  K.  Cody,  508 
East  Lake   street,   Minneapolis. 


MRS.    ANNA    RONGE — Graduated    mid- 
wife, 2018  W.  Sup.   St.   'Phone  1S94-D. 

Mrs.     J.     C.     Haglund,     graduated     mid- 
wife, 634   N.   56th   Av.    \V.  Z«n.   3174-D. 


CLOTHES  CLEANEE'  &  PRESSED 

.Suits  pressed,  50c;  pants.  15c.  Ladies' 
skirts  cleaned  and  pressed,  50c.  Zen. 
1852-X.  J.  Oreckovsky     10  4th  Av.   W. 


Fine  ladies'  tailoring  a  specialty.  Bring 
your  alterations  and  relining  coats 
before  the  rush.  Mu?ller.  208  West 
First  street. 


DTLUTH  COUNCIL,  NO    6.  R. 


g. 

Work  —  Royal  and  Select 
Master  degree.  Andalla  W.  Torrance- 
T.    I.    M. ;    Alfred    Le    Richeux,    recorder. 


DULI'TII  COMMANDERY  NO. 
18.  K.  T.— Stated  conclave 
first  Tuesday  of  escii  montli 
at  7:30  o'clock.  Next  conclave 
will  be  held  Tuesda--.  March 
16.  Work— Drill  C.  E.  Peas- 
lee,  acting  E.  C;  Alfred  Le  Richeux, 
recorder. 


SCOTTISH  RITE  —REGULAR 
meetings  every  Thur.s<lay 
evening   at    7:30.    Next    meet- 

ir.fi.  March    18.   1909.      Work — 
T'R'enty-seventh  degree.  J.   E. 
Cooley,   secretary. 


ZENITH    CHAPTF:R.    NO.    25, 
Order   cf    liiastern   .Star.    Reg- 
''^^"K.      ular     meetings     second     and 
"iJRix^    fourth    Friday      evenings    of 
y  each    month.      Next    meeting, 

•  F^nday,  .March  26.   19(-9.  Vv'ork. 

regular  business  and  iniation.  Gertrude 
Bates,  W.  AL;  Ella  F.  Gearhart,  secre- 
tary. 


Third 
M.;    A. 


EUCLID  LODGE.  NO.  19S.  A. 
F.  &  .\.  M. — Regular  meetings 
second  and  f  urth  Wednes- 
day evenings  ot  each  month 
at' 7:30  o'clock.  Next  meet- 
ing, March  24th.  Work 
degree,  Martin  J.  Murray,  W. 
Dunleavy,    secretary. 


W.    B 
secretary. 


DULUTH  CHAPTER.  NO.  59, 
R.  A.  M. — Meets  at  West  Du- 
luth first  .-^nd  third  Vv'ednes- 
davB  of  each  nionth  at  7:30 
p.  "m.  Next  meeting  March  17,. 
Work — Rovai  Arcli  degree. 
Getchell.    H.    P.;    A.    Dunleavey, 


onA'Tii   ix>i.c;e    .vo.   28.  1    o.   o    F  -Ml  trs 

ever-.     Friday     ereuiv.p     at     Odd     he.jows 

hiill"    lb  KiJte  avrni;t  m  nh    N<xt  tuj^Ung 

M;  r.  h    '?t!i.      W<  r.i— I'lrst   i:«i:ree     W.    H 

Kn.k'cr     noble   grand;    \a\'xU'    lurgftrom. 

recording    secrcUjy;    A.    H.    Pud.    financial    se-reLity. 


K.    O     T.    M. 

DVLVTH  -.NT.  NO  1.  NfEF.rH  KVERY 
Wcune«di.y  .  verdng  i;t  .MuiviiUe  luiU  iio4- 
West  First  ftretl.  VlsilliiS  nitiuUre  wei- 
ccujc.  A.  J.  -Miderson.  c!  nim:inder.  6'  3 
ri.»'  Fourih  str<*i;  J.  B.  tJtiineau.  rec- 
rrii  ke«-p*r.  Offi.t  In  hall.  Hours.  10  a. 
m.    tc    1   f.   m.     Zenith    phone   iiilS.. 


luUdii. 
Itans    1 


MdKEltN   S.\MARITANS. 
ALPHA    fOrNril.    NO.     j— .MEt-rS    AT 

Kills'  lia'l  evi  ry  lliursduy  ettnlioj  at  * 
crick.  Beneficent  degree.  flr>t  and  thlrt* 
'Piur-d!iy  S;ira.iritiin  degree.  »e«i.d  •r.d- 
foi.ith  -ihun-Uiis.  A.  Xtlftn.  eJ.  8..  Li.cy 
M.  I'lirdy  L.  G.  S. ;  T.  A.  elal!.  f!n- 
audal    f.cm*,    501    FlrA    NtUtial    Bank- 

g.   Wallace  P.    \Ve;ibM.to.   scribe.      All   Sumar- 

n\ited. 


A.    O.     U.    W. 

FiDF.LiTY    iXiVOK.    NO.    IPS— mf:i;ts- 

at  M««al*e  hail.  224  W<^t  First  ftreel. 
«v<r>  Th>irsda.y  at  8  p  m.  MsiUjjS 
ir.emUr^  welcome.  G  •.!rt  I'sh-n.  J. 
W  A  K.  Pi  ring,  n.irder;  O.  J.  Jlui- 
voiii.    (:n;.niiir.    £17    tiist    Mfth    tlret. 


IHM-nt  LODGE  Nt).  10,  A.  O.  f.  VV. 
—  .V'cet'-  ut  OJd  Fellows'  Uall.  »8  L»k« 
aviiiue  n<r;l.  n«ry  Tuisdey  tvenli^  at. 
8  o'clock.  Visiting  trntl,<T?  wolt<  me. 
Niruiar.  .tohnton.  masttr  «<rl--ro:ii  ,  H.  G. 
Koott.  re<(rder;  T.  J.  Si.  i;erraaln,  6i,w»- 
cl<r.    121   F.i?l  B\ciiue   weet. 


I.  O.  V. 
COl'RT  rOM.MEIK'E.  NO  3283.  INDE- 
p«in  ent  itrder  of  Foristers.  meet*  first 
and  third  Friday  eTei.li  t=  at  b  i  c.otk 
at  ItoAley-s  h.ill.  No.  112  Weft  Flr.-t 
flrtct  Next  regular  meeting.  Friday, 
M:.rt!i  19th.  C.  A.  Carl*<u,  C.  R  W. ;  W. 
Htoie*.    H.    8. 


OF      KORK^TiatS 
.    Dicctt    nery   s^ 


S— 

nd 

tiall. 


Weft    llJril 


TNITET)      OhPKIl 

Ni  rtii    !?ti.r.    No.    4  P. 

r.nd   fourth      M<ndiiy«    at    f.    O.    t. 

.-.  locr     Fourth     avenui      west     and     First 

^'n<:       M.    K.    Biiln.    r.    K.    '■i   Okbome 

block;  K.  M.  Stewart,  seintarj.  22!  Ttlid 

aimue  we>t;  11.  U.  'Voaiig.  trtaturtr.  83i. 

ttr«-t;   l"a'J-K.   old   "pl.ine. 


IMTllD     ORDER     OF     FORKSTERS— 

Court  Kactcr.  .«tar.  No.  86,  mecU 
mr>  first  and  UJnl  Tiiesdhys  at  I".  O. 
F.  hall,  comer  Fourth  atetiue  west  «ntJ. 
lirst  ttnet.  A.  L.  Fi*tir.  C.  H.  1C7 
K:,tt  .Ninth  street;  C.  H  Paul.  f>f»rciiiry. 
i  Wwt  Superior  street:  Hurry  .\liln»«. 
Hooin    23,    Wlnthrop    block;    Z«:Jth     phonr 


^^ 


M. 
IMPKRlAL 
at  .>^teJn^ay 
r;n.t   sir»et. 


W      A. 

CAMP    NO.    22fi«    —    .MEETS 
liall.   Fourth  a'tnue  west  aiuV 

E((-(>nd  and   fourth   Tuwdaji 


month. 

tKreinus.    consul. 

i-MT\.    clerk.    Box 


411. 


Sparks,    K. 


NORTH  STAR  LtiDGE  NO.  5.  K.  of  P. 
—Meets  eviry  Tuecday  night  »t  Elka" 
hail  lis  Weat  Suftriit  street.  Nex» 
nt^-tlnp  Tjivday  evcnlnp.  Maich  IK. 
W-rk— Hank  tf  Page.  Vl^mn8  Knigl;t». 
welc'<>ine.  Louis  Dwofbhak,  C.  C.;  L  L. 
of    It.    and   S. 


'3 

met-Une  March  17. 


STKWART      NO.    .■•0,    O.    ».    C  — 
lirsx    and    tlJrd    Wcdnewiaya    «*cb« 

E  r-  n»  ■  t'ol^  h""-  '1*  ^^'**'  *^''- 
stieel.  Alexander  fi.  .McKnlght. 
Don  .MdA'nnan.  sicretary  ;  Jo!.n 
tlntii.cial  aecwtao'.  413  y.nt 
...  Bank  liuildli.s.  N«it  regular 
lW)t).     Itanclng  from  8  to  12  p.   m. 


ROYAL  LIIAeU'E. 
ZENITH  e-UlNclL,  NO.  161.  ROYAL 
I>eiigu«— Meet*  In  Ukis'  htll  first  and 
third  Monday  evenings  at  »  o  cJ-'ck.  O. 
L  Harcravcs.  scrlL*.  <are  of  .Nortneni. 
siioe  <tmpftny:  W.  W.  BooUi.  arclion. 
care   cf   Mar?hall-Wells.  


WOODMEN  OF  THE  WOR!J>. 
ZLNITH  CITV  CA-MP  -NO.  S. -MEETS 
«ver>  se<'ond  and  fourth  Wedne^dayi  at 
tr.e  Old  M«sonlc  temiiit  fUth  no«ir.  John. 
Haugfn.  C  <'.  :  A.  M.  U<  m«.  »*nk*r^ 
720  Went  Fifth  strett.  flat  K:  Robert- 
loitMh.    clerk,    817    Eatt    Stoond    utreet. 


ZEMTH  <1TV  TENT  .NO.  1041, 
Knights,  of  the  >l'^l«ni  M:.cc.U«B.  meets. 
cvtn  sectnd  ;;!h1  fourth  Krl.iay  ♦veuin*^ 
(.f  tach  mtnth  In  Maciul**  hall,  82*. 
Weft  Flr?t  ftrwt.  R.  M.  Kiktr.  com- 
mai:dei;  C.  H.  Looaiit.  R.  K..  1O30  West 
Zii.ith    'phone   2243- Y. 


tary. 


ROV.^L  ARCANl'M,  Duluth  Coujk-U.  No. 
ngS,  meets  first  «iid  third  F'riday  e»en- 
ing«.  Elka'  hall.  fllnttn  Brcofc*.  aec- 
icti.ry.    4(1    Burrow*    building. 

.Mt--aba    Council.    No.    Ilt4:.i.    meet*    flrat. 
ann    tidrd  Wednctoay   etir.lngs,    Colaaibla. 
hall     We»t    end.      A.    M.    Johuioii.    Mxz*- 
North    T«u>UclL    atuiuv    «e*U 


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DULUTH  F.VENING  HERALD 


(HlSTdRlCAn 

'      ',!» 'grr. — f 


TWENTY-SIXTH  YEAR. 


LAST   EDITION.! 


FRIDAY,  MARCH    19,  1909. 


TWO  CENTS, 


MOST  mm  DISPLAY  OF 
SECTIONALISM  EVER  SEEN 
IN  ANY  LEGISLATIVE  BODY 


Vote  of  House  on  Ore 

Tonnage  Tax  Bill 

Analyzed. 

Members  Voted  In  Favor 

Who  Believed  It  Was 

Unjust. 

WorKingmen's  Compens- 
ation Bill  Not  LiKely 
to  Be  Passed. 


(rroni    n     »«««    <  crr«>i.pond*iit.> 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  March  19.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Post  mortems  on  the 
tonr.age  tax  bill  were  the  order  of  the 
dav  m  the  legislature  yesterday.  Us 
passage  was  a  surprise  all  around,  as 
It  had  not  been  expected  that  the  ad- 
▼ocates  of  the  bill  could  muster  enough 
votes  to  put  it  through.  Even  the 
author  of  tlie  bill,  though  he  stated 
last  night  iliat  he  had  been  confident  of 
the  passage  of  the  bill  all  along,  had 
expressed  doubt  of  his  success,  and  his 
friend.*  say  that  nobody  In  the  house 
ts  m«>re  surprised  than  he  at  the  passage 
of  the  bill. 

IHartilv  leM*  wore  and  hurt  «»'e«"  ^ 
the  i.u«-ee.<«M  of  the  hill  than  the  * 
*  memheroi  of  the  lenUlnture  from  * 
NorlhenAteru  Mluiiewota  lire  thoxe  * 
At  bo  had  deeLared  lor  a  toiinane  * 
tax  In  their  eaiiipnlien".  "U*  •»""  T 
■^  found,  after  lnve«llKn<ion,  that  a  « 
^  tonuiiKe  tax  ivn.n  not  all  that  they  J 
^   had    belie\ed   It    to    be.  * 

One    tneniber    from    Southern    Minne- 
Bota,    who      had    openly    expressed      his 


J.  B.  COTTON  SEVERS  HIS 
CONNECTION  WITH  THE 
I).  S.  STEEL  CORPORATION 


Tenders  His  Resignation 

to  Take  Effect 

May  I. 

Will  Continue  to  Make 

His    Home    in 

Duluth. 


SHARP  IS  ACQUITTED  IN 
CRRMACK  MURDER  CASE; 
COOPERS'  FATE  IN  DOUBT 


L.  D.  BROWN 
Of  Little  Falls,  One  of  House  Mem- 
bers   Who    Voted    Against    Unjust 
Ore  Tonnage  Bill. 


* 


tConiinued   on   v-ape  3.  first  column.) 

iNJiisiW 

OF  THE  TAX 

W.  D.  Washburn,  Jr.,  De- 
plores Passage  of  Ore 
Tonnage  Tax  BiiL 

System  of  Taxation  Im- 
posing a  Special  Bur- 
den on  Industry. 


BUILDING 
ATJilBBING 

For  State  Mines  Officials 

Favored  by  House 

Committee. 

Bill  Giving  LaRe  County 

a  Representative  is 

Passed  by  House. 

<Froni  n   .Staff  forrettpondenl.) 

St.  Paul.  Alinn.,  March  19.— (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.) — The  house  committee 
on  mines  and  minerals,  this  morning, 
Indorsed  a  resolution,  which  will  be 
introduced  later,  to  the  effect  that  it 
would  be  good  business  policy  for  the 
state  to  spend  about  $25,000  on  a  state 
mines  building  at  Ilibbiug.  and  urging 
the  appropriations  committee  to  ap- 
propriate  the   necessary   money. 

The  house  committee  on  commerce 
and  retail  trade  recommended  for  In- 
detinite  po.«tponement  the  baugst^ad  bill 

(Continued    on    pane    2.    fourth   column) 

FIRE  CLOSE  TO 
37-STORY  BLOCK 


(^roin    a    Staff  <orre«|»ondeiit.> 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  March  19.— ^Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Representative  \V. 
r>.  Washburn,  Jr..  of  Minneapolis,  who 
voted  against  the  iron  ore  tonnage  tax 
bill,   said   in   an   Interview   today: 

•I  much  regret  the  passage  of  the 
tonnage  tax  and  deeply  sympathize 
■witli  the  people  of  Northern  Minneso- 
ta against  whom  this  unjust  system 
of'  taxation  im  directed.  I  have  never 
heard  an  argument  in  favor  of  this 
tax  that,  in  mv  mind,  is  based  upon 
nn'v  theorv  of  justice  of  e<iuality  as 
between    citizens    of    this    state. 

"It  is  a  special  tax  laid  upon  a  spe- 
cial   product     in    a    special    locality. 

••^rter  it  is  collected  the  wliole  of 
the*  tax  is  then  taken  by  the  state, 
withoui  any  reference  to  the  city, 
town    or   county. 

••.\ny  one  of  the  above  features  is 
wrong.  Wlien  all  combined,  they  have 
produced  a  bill  which  embodies  almost 
everv  bad  feature  of  taxation.  The 
tonnage  tax  is  a  bald  example  of 
doul)l»'  taxiiiioii.  as  precisely  the  same 
propertv   is   taxed   twice   the  same   year 

once    on    tlie    ad    valorem    basis,    and 

Immediately  thereafter  upon  the  ton- 
nage basis,  when  the  iron  is  taken 
from    the    ground. 

Special    Hnrdeu    on    IndiiMtry. 

"It  is,  moreover,  a  special  and  un- 
usual tax  levied  upon  raw  material 
and  a  special  burden  on  Industry.  It 
strikes  right  at  the  base  of  the  pro- 
duction and  manufacture,  as  it  lays 
unusual  taxes  on  the  raw  material 
from  which  articles  are  produced.  The 
last  Is  one  of  the  most  disastrous 
types    of    taxation,    and    is    so   regarded 


W.  J.  Olcott  Is  LIRcly 

to  Succeed  Thomas 

F.  Cole. 


Joseph  n.  Cotton,  general  solicitor 
for  the  Steel  corporation  at  the  Head 
of  the  Lakes,  has  tendered  his  resig- 
nation, to  take  effect  May  1. 

The  announcement  was  not  a  sur- 
prise, as  It  has  been  quite  widely 
rumored  that  both  Mr.  Cotton  and  ;Mr. 
<'ole  would  leave  the  company,  and  the 
announcement  yesterday  that  Mr.  Cole 
would   resign,  bore   out   this   rumor. 

•Mr.  Cotton  today  confirmed  the  re- 
port, and  made  the  following  state- 
n.fnt   for   publication: 

"It  is  true  that  <iuite  a  while  ago  I 
voluntarily  resigned  all  connection  with 
the  Steel  corporation,  sucli  resignation 
to  take  etfect  May  1.  1  did  not  intend 
to  announce  the  matter  until  about  tiiat 
lime  but  the  rumors  have  been  so  i)er- 
sistent  that  I  think  it  best  to  make  the 
matter  public  at  this  time,  and  espe- 
ciallv  in  view  of  the  fact  that  Mr. 
Cole's  resignation  has  Just  been  an- 
nounced. 

"I  have  been  connected  with  the  Iron 
Interests  in  Minnesota  and,  the  Lake 
Superior  region  for  sixteen  years  the 
first  of  May,  and  as  everybody  knows, 
have  given  my  time  exclusively  to 
such    interests.      While    the    w»»rk    has 

(Continued   on   page   2,   third  column) 

RUSSIA  READY 
TO  INTERVENE 

Troops  Arc  Prepared  to 

Cross  the  Persian 

Frontier. 

St.  Petersburg,  March  19. — All  prep- 
arations are  complete  for  Russian 
military  Intervention  in  Persia  should 
such   a   step    be    found    necessary. 

The  Third  Rifle  battalion,  with  Its 
field  equipment,  arrived  at  Julfa  on 
the  Persian  frontier  today,  coming 
from  Tlflls.  The  men  are  under  can- 
vas in  the  expectation  of  orders  to  pro- 
ceed   to    Tabriz. 

The  Saliansk  regiment  is  also  in 
readiness  to  move  at  a  moment's  no- 
tice. Supplies  and  equipments  are 
now  being  sent  forward  from  Resht 
and  anotlier  regiment  stationed  at 
Yelizavethpol,  has  been  ordered  to  pre- 
pare  for   field   service. 


MASKED  MEN 
DYNAMITE 

Fail  to  Blow  Their  Way 

Into  Arkansas  Bank 

Vault 


THREE  DIE; 
BIG  DAMAGE 

I 

Tanks   Burst.   Rushing 
Water  Carries  All 
Before  It 


Destroy    'Phone   Com- 
munication, But  Over- 
look One  Wire. 


Bald  Knob,  Ark.,  March  19. — While 
some  of  their  numlior  rode  about  the 
streets  discharging  their  weapons  and 
holding  the  populace  in  terror,  others 
of  the  band  of  robbers  worked  for 
more  than  an  hour  this  morning  in  an 
unsuccessful  effort  to  dynamite  their 
way  into  the  vault  of  the  bank  of 
Hlack  Knob,  abandoned  their  task,  aft- 
er firing  nearly  a  score  of  blasts,  whu  h 
demolished  the  outer  door  of  the  safe, 
but  without  forcing  the  inner  doors. 
One  citizen  was  wounded  in  the  part- 
ing fusilade  of  the  band  as  they  rode 
away  a  few  minutes  after  2  o'clock. 

The  lirst  explosion  was  heard  short- 
ly before  1  o'clock.  As  citizens  emerged 
from    their    ho uses_l^h<  y    wnj-e  greeted 

(Continued  on  page   2.  third  column) 


The  Jury  Has  Not  Yet 

Reached  a  Decision 

Affecting  Them. 

Judge  Orders  Defendants 

Brought  In   the 

Courtroom. 


JOHN   D.   SH>>RP. 


Miscreant  Uses  Dynamite 

and  Four  Persons 

Are  Hurt. 


rarkersburg,  W.  Vtu,  March  19. — 
Three  persons  were  killed,  three  others 
prolably  fatally  injured,  ten  or  qiore 
houses  wrecked,  anU  forty  or  more 
were  damaged,  whe;-  two  large  tanks 
surpiyliiK  the  crty  wltli  water  burst 
lariy    this    morning.        The    dead: 

MR.  AND  MRS.  WALTER  W AGGIE 
AND    SMALL    CHILD. 

The  bodies  were  found  in  the  ruins 
of  their  home.  The  seriously  injured 
are:  Mrs.  John  Maloney,  both  legs 
broken,  hurt  internally,  probably  die; 
Mrs.  Kate  Karnees,  invalid,  badly 
biuised  and  shocked,  may  die;  Clara 
.lones.  colored,  hurt  internally,  prob- 
aMy  die. 

Houses  were  swept  into  the  street 
and    the    residents    knocked    from    their 

*^Onp  whole  family,  while  sleeping  In 
an  upstairs  room  was  carried  down  a 
street  seventy-five  yards,  the  house  be- 

(Continued  on  page  2,  fourth  column) 


MINE  SHUTDOWN 
IS  LOOKED  FOR 

Anthracite  Coal  Diggers 

Expect   Period  of 

Idleness. 

Philadelphia.  March  19.— No  word 
hcs  as  yet  come  from  the  anthracite 
mining  <!omr>anies  regarding  the  an- 
nual reduction  of  50  cents  a  ton  In  the 
domestic  sizes  of  coal.  Coal  dealers 
and  consumers  are  anxiously  waiting 
for  an  announcement,  but  none  is  ex- 
pected until  after  the  convent  on  of 
miners  in  .Scranton  next  week  has 
taken  action  on  the  proposition  of 
Ibe  \>peralois  to  renew  the  pre.-^ent 
wciklng    agreement.  Every    colliery 

Tn   the   hard   eoal  fields   is   working   fu 
time   and   will   continue    to   do   so    until 
the    end    of    the    moiuli. 

Ki.mors  that  the  mining  companies 
will  shut  down  for  an  indefinite  pe- 
iioo  pending  a  settlement  of  the  labor 
tioubles.  cannot  bM  officially  con- 
fumed  but  reports  from  several  Im- 
i.oitant  .-sections  of  the  coal  regions 
tend  to  supnort  them.  The  mine 
vvovkers  all  look  for  a  shutdown  dur- 
ing   April. 


COL.  DUNCAN  B.  COOPER. 


»»JiHl^*^^JNHiHN:<iHk*^tHMHiHM^»^*»»*»»*»Jr.*»** 


(Continued  on  page  3,  sixih  column.) 


Dunlap   &  Co.  Burned 

Out   in    New 

York. 

New  York,  Marcli  19.— Fire  started 
at  8:10  a.  m.  today  in  a  six-story  brick 
building  at  181  Broadway,  occupied 
on  the  ground  floor  by  the  hat  store 
of  Dunlap  &  Co..  and  on  the  upper 
floors  bv  an  optician  and  tailor.  The 
blaze  fi\i"ickly  spread  through  the  build- 
ing  and    burst   through   the   roof. 

The  burning  building  stood  in  the 
mi<;dle  of  a  short  block  of  five-story 
bv.ildings  between  Courtland  and  Dey 
ctieets  on  the  west  side  of  BrOad- 
vav.  only  a  few  hundred  feet  from  the 
tliftv-seven-story  City  Investing  build- 
ins  and  the  Singer  building,  whicli, 
however,    were    not    threatened    by    the 

'"Tlfe^  injured:  Mrs.  Francis  Hillhouse. 
burned  about  the  head^  arms  and  body; 
Bertha  Hulzweth,  governess  for  Mrs. 
Hillhouse,  burned  about  the  body;  Mr.s. 
J  W  Simpson,  burned  about  the  face, 
bodv'and  legs:  Mi.«s  Minerva  Simpson 
anred  '>o  burned  about  the  feet  and 
1("ks  Mrs.  Margaret  Merrill,  slightly 
burned  Capt.  Leland  Potter,  fireman, 
foot  crushed,  internal  injuries,  caught 
between   two   fire   trucks. 

Five   firemen  were  injured. 

Firemen  raised  extension  ladders  to 
the  fourth  floor  and  went  by  scaling 
ladders  to  the  sixth,  whence  they  car- 
ried down  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  W.  Mc- 
Donald and  their  son,  John,  and  a 
servant   girl. 


THE  INNOCENT  VICTIM. 


I  The  Steel  Corporation  is  Aimed  at.  But  the  Business  Man  is  Hit. 


TO  START  WORK 
ON  STEEL  PLANT 

Construction  Crews  From  Gary  Have 
Been  Ordered  to  Duluth. 


Boston.  Mass,  March  19.— The  Boston 
News  Bureau  says:  The  United  States 
Kteel  corporation  now  plans  immediate 
■work  upon  the  erection  of  its  mam- 
moth steel  plant  at  Dululh.  Minn.  This 
plant  will  cost  about  one-half  as  much 
as  the  new  Gary  plant,  as  plans  now 
call  for  an  expenditure  of  about  $30,- 
©00,000.  The  same  construction  crews 
which  worked  on  the  new  steel  plant 
at   Gary   have   been  ordered   to   Duluth 


to  begin  active  work  on  this  construc- 
tion when  spring  opens. 

This  plant  will  have  the  benefit  of 
cheap  electric  power  from  the  St.  Louis 
river,  obtainable  from  the  Great  North- 
ern Power  company,^,  for  which  cheap 
power  Boston  capital  has  been  largely 
responsible.  ,^  , 

The  building  of  the  new  city,  pat- 
terned after  the  new  city  of  Gary,  ind., 
will  grow  out  of  the  present  plans. 
The  first  installment  of  $14,500,000  has 
been  set  aside  by  tlie  Steel  corporation 
for   this  work. 


ROBIN   COC'PER. 


BISHOP  fJEORCilK  I).  (ULLKSFIE 
IS  DKAD  I\  MKHKUN 


C.rand  llapids.  Mich.  March  19.— 
Bi.^hop  C.eorge  I  >.  C.illesple  of  tlie 
p-.otf  slant  Fpiscopal  diocese  of  West- 
ern Michigan,  died  early  today  after 
a    long    illness. 


Also  Sends  for  Jurors 

Mho  Debated  Since 

Wednesday. 

Nashville,  Tenn.,  March  19. — John  D. 
Sharp,  former  sheriff,  was  today  de- 
clared not  guilty  of  the  murder  of 
Former  United  States  Senator  E.  W. 
Carniack.  The  jury  lias  reached  no 
decision  In  the  cases  of  Col.  Duncan  B. 
Cooper  and  his  son,  Robin  Cooper,  also 
tried  on  the  charge  of  killing  Carmack. 
The  jury  iias  been  out  since  Wednes- 
day. 

At  12:12  this  afternoon  Judge  Hart 
sent  word  to  tlie  jury  to  come  into  the 
courtroom,  but  eight  minutes  later 
the  jury  sent  back  word  ttiat  it  had 
not  reached  an  agreement,  and  that 
there  was  no  occasion  for  It  to  come 
into    court. 

At  12:22  the  judge  ordered  the  de- 
fendants brought  Into  court  and  In- 
structed the  sheriff  to  bring  In  the 
jury. 

At  12:2.'»  the  defendants  were  brought 
in,    <iuicklv    followed    by    the    jurymen. 

The  judge  tlien  asked:  •Have  you 
reached   a   verdict,   gentlemen?" 

'We    are    hopelessly    tied    as    to    the 

(Continued  on  page  10,  fourth  column.>. 

KIDNAPERS 
NOTFODND 

Father  of   Stolen   Boy 

Will  Pay  $10,000 

Ransom. 


Inserts   Ad  in  Papers, 

as  Directed  by 

Note. 


Sharon,  Pa.,  March  19.— Notwlth- 
withstanding  a  rigid  search,  la.'-ting  all 
night,  by  officers  in  Western  I'ennsyl- 
vania,  Kastern  Ohio  and  West  Vir- 
ginia no  trace  has  yet  been  found  of 
the  man  or  men  who  yesterday  kld- 
natied  William  Whitla,  8  years  old.  son 
of   James    I'.    Whitla,   a   wealthy    attor- 

The  lads  relatives,  some  f>f  whom 
are  millionair*  s.  are  making  every 
possible  effort  to  locate  the  child  and 
liis  abductors.  No  decision  has  yet 
been  made  reg.-irding  the  ransom  of 
$10,000,  demanded  by  the  kidnapers  for 
the  safe  return  of  the  child.  Mr. 
Whitla  immediately  compiled  wit" 
terms  contained  In  a  letter  received 
yesterday  from  the  men  in  so  far  as  the 
insertion  of  an  advertisement  In  va- 
rious papers  about  the  country   is  con- 

(Continued  on  page  2.  first  column) 


PATTON  FOUND 
IN  PORTLAND,  OR. 

Missing  Buyer  Meefs  His  Brother 
Face  to  face  on  Street. 

Now  III  With  Complete  Nervous 
Breakdown  at  Brother's  Home, 


Norman  Patton,  the  missing  Panton 
&    White    buyer,    has    been    found. 

He  was  met  face  tJ  face  on  the 
streets  of  Portland,  Or.,  by  his  brother, 
who  lives  in  that  city  and  is  now  ill 
at  his  brother's  home,  suffering  from 
a    complete    nervous    breakdown. 

How  he  got  from  Piltsburg  to  Port- 
land is  a  mystery,  lie  had  only  $30 
In  his  pocket,  it  Is  said,  when  he  left 
New    Yolk.  ■,  „^, 

The    case    is    a    mysterious    one,    and 

the  only  way  that  Pat  :on"s  actions  can 
be  accounted  for,  are  that  he  was  not 
in  his  right  mind.  Other  buyers  from 
the  store,  state  that  he  was  not  him- 
self in  New  York.  On  one  occasion  he 
was  out  driving  with  one  of  the  other 
buyers,  and  suddenly  grasping  his  com- 
panion by  the  arm  he  said:  "My  God. 
man.  I  must  get  back  to  the  office- 
There  was  no  reason  to  return  to  the 
office,  as  it  was  Sunday,  and  Patton's 
business  had  all  been  attended  to.  He 
was    evidently    under    a    great    ment-*i 


strain,  ond  his  companions  on  the  trip- 
all  feared  that  he  would  suffer  a  com- 
plete nervous  colhtpse.  When  he  toolc 
the  train  for  home,  however,  he  ap- 
peared to  be  all   riabt. 

He  was  traced  to  Pittsburg  and  then 
to  Minneapolis,  and  last  night  his  wife 
received  a  telegram  from  his  brother 
in  Portland  stating  that  Mr.  Patton 
was  safe  there.  He  was  found  wan- 
dering about  the  streets  of  Portland, 
apparently  in  a  trance.  His  brother 
met  him  face  to  face  on  the  street,  an* 
was  astounded  to  see  him.  He  at  once 
took  him  home,  and  physicians  wer*^ 
summoned. 

Mr,  Patton  visited  Portland  about 
six  years  ago.  and  frequently  referred 
to  the  pleasant  time  he  had  there.  It 
is  thought  that  when  he  temporarily 
lost  his  reason  that  he  headed  straight 
for  the  West  and  finally  landed  in  Port- 
land, although  it  is  a  mystery  how  he 
reached  there  on  the  small  amount  ol 
money   he   had  with  him. 


lii 


■  Ta-»a  k.^ 


■»-  «- 


r*'^fii"' 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


A 


Jb 


WKATHER— Fair  tonight  and  Saturday:   mo.lerale  T»ri»l)l.'  wlr.U*. 


Having  What  a  Man  Wants 

and  ought  to  have  is  an  important  feature  of  this  store's  service. 
You  will  realize  how  careful  w^e  are  about  this  service  when  you 
see  the  definitely  different  clothes  shown  here  this  spring.  These 
are  better  than  the  kind  you've  always  thought  was  best.  When 
you    see    them    you'll  wonder  why  the  prices  are  not  higher. 


t^ 


^ 


The  $2S,  $30. 
$35  and  $40  Suits 

are  hand-tailored  and  arc  made 
of  the  finest  imported  woolens. 
The  best  western  tailors  can't 
make  these  finest  g^rades  of 
ours.  They  are  worth  a  g^reat 
deal  more  than  we  are  asking-. 


^, 


The  $15,  $18,  $20 
and  $22.50  Suits 

are  in  many  instances  vastly  bet- 
ter than  the  very  best  clothes  in 
other  stores.  Our  $20  and  $22.50 
suits  for  instance,  are  greater 
values  than  the  best  you'll  find 
elsewhere  priced  at  $25  and  more. 


tlon  out  of  Bald  Knob,  but  ovorlooked 
a  railroad  telegraph  wire.  A  message 
to  Augusta  oVer  tftis  ^\  ire  brought  a 
posse  of  citizens  fri^ru  that  place,  who 
Joined  several,  otli^r  posses  hastily 
formed  here  and  immediately  started 
in   pursuit  ofnthe  band. 


THREE  WE;  BIG  DAMAGES 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


Ing  split  almost  Into  ribbons,  yet  all 
escaped  serious  injury  except  one  girl, 
wliose    collar    bone    was    broken. 

The  tanks  contained  the  entire  city 
water  supply  and  a  famine  is  immi- 
nent. Tlie  damage  will  amount  to 
J  2  50.000. 

St.  John's  Lutheran  church  was  de- 
molished, but  thiough  Its  .sacilfice 
many  lives  w«;}-a  89«red  and  much  more 
damagj  prev»^\ted,  as  it  was  directly 
in  the  path  or  the  water.  The  break- 
ing ot  the  tdVilts  is  believed  to  have 
been  caused  by  some  miscreant  who 
dynamited  them,  as  two  e.vplosions 
were    liear<l. 


The  School  Girl  is  Free  From  Study 

for  Ten  DaysJ 

'Tis  the  time  to  plan  her  Easter  Wardrobe! 


BLILDlNCi  AT  HIBBISU 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


/^  The  $10  and  $12.50  Suits  at  the  Oak  Hall 

are  not  to  be  judg^cd  by  the  prices.  Others  would  ask  $5  more  for  such 

suits  as  these.     They  are  really  worth  S5  more  than  we  ask. 


Come  In  Tomorrow  and  Pick  Out  Your 
Easter  Suit.  We'll  Lay  It  Aside  For  You. 


S 


Knox 
Hats 


\1, 


Roswelle 
Hats 


SVPSRIOR     ST.     AT    rOVRTH     AVE.     WEST. 


^ 


KIDNAPERS  NOT  FOLND 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


cerned.  The  advertisement  is  to  the 
eflfect  that  he  is  willing  to  pay  the 
ransom  of  SlO.f^OO.  but  no  word  has 
been  received  from  the  kidnapers  as  to 
when  and  where  this  money  's  to  be 
paid.  Early  today  a  .<^auad  of  Pennsyl- 
vania state  constabulary  readied  here 
from  Punxsutawney.  Pa.,  for  the  pur- 
pose  of   assisting    in    the  search. 

The  father,  dry-eyed  and  full  of 
anxiety,  .«lts  in  his  ofttce,  directing 
the  extensive  search.  He  is  in  constant 
communication  with  nearby  towns  and 
orders  every  clue,  no  matter  how 
slight,  run  down.  Mr.  Whitla  refuses 
to  divulge  the  letter  he  received  from 
the  extortionists  in  its  entirety.  He  is 
greatly  depressed  and  said  that  he 
would  surrender  everything  he  owns  if 


it   would  effect   the   Immediate  restora- 
tion to  him  of  his  boy.     He  adde<i: 

•I  will  endeavor  to  get  In  communi- 
cation witli  my  boys  abductors.  It 
looks  as  though  they  would  put  a 
terrible    threat    Into    execution. 

"Advice  is  good,  but  perhaps  time 
is  too  short  in  this  case  to  disregard 
threats.  If  money  will  bring  back  the 
boy  tlien  I  will  readily  pay  the  |10,- 
OOiJ." 

Mother   i«    Pronlrated. 

The  mother  Is  prostrated.  She  did 
not  sleep  last  night  and  today  clings 
pathetically  to  her  daughter.  Salina. 
10  years  old.  She  refu.^ed  to  allow 
the  "girl  to  go  to  school  today,  the 
same  .-school  from  which  her  boy  was 
kidnaped  yesterday,  and  sits  with  her 
arms  about  the  child.  Anna  Lewis, 
the  boy's  teacher,  who  yesterday  pre- 
par»»d  William  for  the  Journey  with 
the  abductors,  feels  her  part  In  the 
case  deeply,  although   no   blame   is   at- 


■■ 


Wk 


Time  to  Think  of  New 
SPRINa  CLOTHES 


And  when  your  thoughts  turn  to 
clothes,  don't  forget  that  we  sell  the 
best,  and  sell  them  on  the  easiest 
terms.  That's  something  worth  re- 
membering. 


Spring  Styles 

Women's  &  Men's  Clothes 

Hats,  Shoes,  and  other  dress  needs, 
are  now  shown  in  most  satisfying 
array. 

OUR  SPRING  OPENING 

Saturday, 
March  27th 

Don't  forget  that  date.  Be  sure  and 
come.    Your  credit  is  good. 

OPEN  A  CHARGE  ACCOUNT  $1.00  A  WEEK 


MENTER  ftLoOM 
ROSEMBl-^CO. 

201  West  Superior  St. 

Over  Abbett's  Drug  Store. 
Store  Open  Saturday  and  Monday  Evenings. 


tached  to  her.  Yesterday  a  strange 
man  drove  up  to  the  East  Ward  school- 
house,  wht^-re  young  W.iitia  was  a  pu- 
pil In  room  No.  2  and  told  the  janitor, 
Wesley  riloss,  the  lad  was  wanted  at 
once  at  his  father's  otTice.  Sloss  con- 
veved  the  mes.<age  to  Mrs.  Lewis,  who 
di.-<mis3ed  the  child.  -Vs  .she  was  help- 
ing liim  put  on  ids  overcoiit  siie  re- 
marked half  jokingly: 

"I  hope  that  man  does  not  kidnap 
Willie." 

When  Sloss  appeared  with  the  boy 
the  stranger  smiled  and  helped  him 
up  to  the  seat  beside  him.  He  tJien 
drove  off  in  tlie  direction  of  Mr. 
Wl'.itla's  office.  Several  persons  la.st 
night  said  a  confederate  joined  the  kid- 
napper   before    he    had    left    the    town. 

Later  a  letter  directed  to  t!ie  mother 
was  delivered  at  the  house  by  a  mail 
carrier.  Mrs.  Whitla  at  once  recog- 
nized the  handwriting  on  the  envelope 
as  that  of  her  son.  Opening  it,  she 
found  the  following  communication 
written   in  a   strange  hand: 

"We  have  vour  boy  and  will  return 
him  for  |10,0()i>.  Will  see  your  ad- 
vertisement in  the  papers.  Insert  in 
Indianapolis  News.  Cleveland  Press. 
Pittsburg  Dispatch,  Youngstown  Vin- 
dicator. iX.  A.  Will  do  as  reuuired. 
J.  P.  W. )  Dead  boys  ar.*  not  desirable." 
No    Hevrnrd    Uflfered. 

As  vet  no  reward  has  been  offered 
for  the  capture  of  the  kidnapers,  but 
the  advisabilltv  of  doing  so  is  being 
ccrsidered.  The  rie:  in  wiiich  tlie  boy 
W33  carried  away  was  hired  in  South 
.'?raron.  Pa.,  at  S  yesterday  morning 
by  a  short,  heavy-set  man  with  a 
black  mustache.  He  said  he  wanted 
to  do  some  collecting  and  would  return 
it  about  noon.  At  Howland  Hill, 
twelve  miles  west  of  Sharon  and  four 
miles  east  of  Warren.  Ohio.  Mrs. 
Thomas  Walker,  shortly  before  noon 
yesterday,  saw  two  men  driving  along 
the  road.  At  first  glance  she  thought 
one  of  the  men  was  carrying  a  large 
bundle  on  his  lap.  but.  looking  again, 
she   saw   it    was   a   small    boy. 

At  noon  the  rig  was  found  deserted 
at  Warren,  Ohio.  Several  persons 
there  claim  to  have  seen  the  men  and 
bov  at  the  Erie  railroad  station,  and 
It  is  believed  the  kidnapers  went  to 
Cleveland. 


regulating  boards  of  trade  and  cham- 
bers of  c-ommerce,  and  the  hou.se  adop- 
ted the  report,  thUs  killing  the  bill.  It 
provided  that  grain  exchanges  must 
admit  to  membership  everybod.v  apply- 
ing, unless  there  is  good  cause  for  re- 
jection, that  memberships  should  not 
cost  more  than  $.'>,000  and  that  the 
railroad  and  warehouse  commission 
must  attend  all  meetings  of  boards  of 
directors  of  sueh,  institutions. 
«  •  * 
The  house  coninuttee  on  public  ac- 
counts and  expenditures  submitted  a 
majority  and  a  aiir.ority  report  on  the 
row  between  thejniblic  examiner's  of- 
fice and  the  boar«f  of  control  over  cer- 
tain coal  purchases.  The  examiner 
found  that  rebates  had  been  paid  by 
tlie  coal  companies  to  S.  W.  LeavUt 
of  the  board,  and  in  his  report  to  the 
governor  he  denounced  this  method 
of  doing  business.  Later  It  was  found 
that  the  rebates  went  to  tiie  state,  and 
the  public  examiner  was  going  tp 
modify  that  part  of  his  report  when 
the  liouse  committee  demanded  the 
whole  report  and  got  it.  Both  reports 
exonerate  the  board  of  control,  but  the 
majority  (Republican)  report  criticises 
the  public  examiner's  office  for  over- 
offlciousness  and  the  minority  (Demo- 
cratic) report  criticises  as  dangerous 
the  methods  of  doing  business  by  a 
system  of  rebatifs.  The  house  will 
decide  between  the  reports  after  read- 
ing both. 

*  •      * 

The    house    committee    on    municipal 
legislation     recon^mended     for    passage 
the      bill      allowiii}?      orderly      baseball 
camcs    on    Sunday    afternoon. 
*•  *■•    •       • 

On  motion  of ?.lttM>resentative  White 
of  K!k  Kiver, .  chairman  of  the  reap- 
poicionment  '  ^Jouimittee.  the  house 
passed  the  CotiVdon-Buck  bill  giving 
Lake  counlv  one  of  the  two  represen- 
tatives from  th<^  Fifty-first  district. 
.Mr.  McNeill  of  Minneapolis,  who  has 
a  similar  bill,  obj'ected  to  suspension  of 
the  rules,  and' Flank  White  said  that 
alter  the  rap  the  liouse  save  Duluth 
the  other  day.  It  Ought  to  be  willing  to 
extent!  a  small  favor  lik^  this,  McNeill 
said  that  aftetf-i  tbe  .rap  those  who  sup- 
l)orted  the  (<,)nnagp  tax  bill  had  re- 
ceived this  morning,  referring  to  The 
Hera  hi,  it  ougiit  to  he  the  other  way. 
The  bill  was  passed  with  only  one  or 
two   votes   against    it. 

*  .       « 
Representative    Ware    called     up    his 

resolution  for  investigation  of  the 
Amour  packing  plant  matter,  and  on 
motion  of  .lohn  Lennon  the  house 
promptly   laid   it   on   tlie  table. 

*  •      * 

The  house  passed  under  suspension 
of  rules  the  houi»e  bill  by  the  road  and 
bridge  committee  appropriating  $300,- 
t)0<)  fur  roads  In  each  of  the  next  two 
vears.  This  is  the  "pork  barrel"  bill 
and  the  committees  are  now  engaged 
In    dividing    up-   the    "pork," 

■    «  '    •      * 

Senator  NeI*»on  Introduced  a  bill 
amending  the  ;;r,*>t*'H  fare  so  as  to  let 
conductors  vollect  10  cents  extra  from 
folks   without,  jlickets. 

The  -senate'.  Will  adjourn  until  next 
Tuesday,  but  the  house  will  sit  to- 
morrow. 

*  ♦■  ■  ■» 

Senator  Vail  had  a  narrow  escape 
last  night  and  .today  he  is  in  a  hos- 
pital with  the  artery  in  his  right  hand 
cut.  Getting  out  of  a  bath  tub  in  his 
room  at  the  Ityan  he  slipped  and 
thrust  his  hand  through  a  window,  the 
glass  cutting  it  seriously.  It  was  itn- 
possible  to  get  a  doctor  immediately 
and  Mr.  Vail  lost  much  blood  before 
the  police  surgeon  arrived.  He  ia 
weak,    but  in  no   danger. 

*  •      *  J     .^ 
The   following   new   bills   reached   the 

house:  Nolan,  amending  reciprocal 
demurrage  law  to  let  shippers  appeal 
to  the  railroad  commission  against  vio- 
lations; Kneeland.  allowing  expenses 
in  traveling  of  di-strlct  judges  and 
countv  attorneys:  Pfaender.  prohibit- 
ing "the  board  of  control  from 
accepting  rebates;  Adams,  amend- 
ing the  inebriate  farm  law  to 
allow  the  purchase  of  state  land 
on  which  Inebriates  can  be  put  to  work 
grubbing  stumps;  Sawyer.  Spooner  and 
Kosenwald.  providing  for  the  appoint- 
ment of  all  subordinate  legislative  em- 
ploves  by  a  board  of  state  officers  in- 
stead of  bv  the  legislature;  Washburn, 
placing  ali  suburban  electric  lines  un- 
der the  railroad  and  warehouse  com- 
mission to  compel  city  lines  to  give 
connections  to  them.  ^,..^„.., 

STILLMAN    H     RINGHAM. 


is  the  first  essen- 
tial for  the  teenly 


A  Swagger  Suit: 

girl.  It  is  the  garment  that  is  always  ready,  suit- 
able for  hot  or  cold,  wet  and  dry  weather,  and 
always  appropriate  and  stylish.  These  youthful 
suits' form  an  important  branch  of  the  Gidding 
Specialt)  Business.  They  are  not  women's  suits 
cut  down,  nor  shapeless  child-like  garments. 
They  are  carefully  graded  from  sizes  that  con- 
form to  the  immature  lines  of  the  twelve-year-old 
to  the  shapely,  almost  woman-like  garments  for 
the  girl  of  twenty.  Designed  by  specialists  that 
make  youthful  garments  a  study  and  a  business. 
These  suits  come  in  new  spring  styles,  colors  and 
textures  that  rival  the  grown-up  styles;  also 
white  serges.  Every  garment  is  tailored  to  the 
top  notch  of  perfection.  Prices  $17.50, 
$21.50,,  $25.00  and  $32.50.  Two  and  three- 
piece  st)  les. 

Girls'  and  Children  *s  Spring  Coats  Q'^r^) 

Box,  three-quarter  and  full  lengths,  in  fine  worsteds  and  serges.  Plain 
colors,  shepherd  checks,  uneven  or  broken  plaids  and  pretty  coverts.  Semi- 
fitting  and  loose  styles,  strictly  well  tailored.  Many  strictly  plain,  others 
trimmed  with  braid,  fancy  buttons,  contrasting  collars  or  odd  shaped  pockets. 
Prices  $4.50  to  $15.00. 

Complete  lines  of  Spring  Headwear — 75^  to  $3.50. 

New  Assortments  of  Girls*  Peter  Thompsons 


.1  B-  rOTON  SEVERS 
THE  CONNEITIOX  WITH  THE 
I.  S.  STEEL  ( ORPORATION 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


Pleased  to  Announce  the 


Showing  of  Spring  Styles 

Greatest  variety  and  quality  of  fine  woolens 
for  men^s  wear  ever  displayed. 

May  we  have  the  pleasure  of  serving  youf 


WoMn 
Building. 


W.  F.  Mies, 


110-112-114 
Third  Avenue  W. 


been  very  congenial,  and  the  as.socia- 
tions  most  pleasant,  the  duties  hav:» 
been  arduous  and  confining.  There  has 
heen  practically  no  time  for  rest,  or 
vacation,  or  for  outside  business.  I 
find  I  cannot  afford  to  give  my  entire 
time  to  the  Steel  corporation  interests 
for  the  compensation  it  pays.  Some 
time  smce  I  made  other  business  en- 
KaKetnents  which  are  most  flattering 
and  more  remunerative,  and  I  am  leav- 
ing the  company  solely  in  justice  to 
my  own  personal  interests,  and  to  be 
rf-lieved  from  the  responsibility,  drud- 
tfery  and  confining  detail  work,  which 
have  been   my  lot   for  many  >-ears. 

"[  shail  remain  permanently  in  Du- 
lutli.  Upon  leaving  the  service,  I  ex- 
ited to  lake  a  short  vacation,  and  upon 
my  return  shall  open  an  office  in  the 
Sellwood  building.  With  headquarters 
here.  I  sliall  practice  my  profession 
rdonBT  the  special  lines  of  railroad,  min- 
ing: and  corporation   law." 

The  successors  to  Mr.  Cole  and  Mr. 
(I^otton  are  not  yet  definitely  known, 
although  it  Is  generallv  understoo«i 
that  W.  .1.  Olcott  will  succeed  Mr.  Cole. 
.Judge  K.  H.  Gary  Is  quoted  in  an  inter- 
view at  Boston  as  saving  that  Mr. 
Olcott  would  succeed  Mr.  Cole.  Mr. 
Olcott  has  not  yet  arrived  from  the 
Kast.  He  has  been  in  New  York  and 
was  expected  to  arrive  home  this 
morning,  but  was  delayed  until  tomor- 
row, lie  Is  expected  to  arrive  In  the 
I  itv    tomorrow    morning. 

Mr.  Olcott  has  been  vice  president 
of  the  Oliver  Mining;  company  and 
president  of  the  Duluth.  Missabe  & 
Northern  railroad,  and  is  first  In  line 
for    the    appointment. 

The  resignations  of  Mr.  Cole  and  Mr. 
Cotton  are  expected  to  result  In  several 
rlianges.  and  those  In  line  will  prob- 
ably move  up  a  step.  Just  what  these 
ahanges  will  be  cannot  be  learned  un- 
til the  return  of  Mr.  Olcott,  as  both 
Mr.  Cole  and  Mr.  Cotton  declined  to 
discuss    theii-    successors. 


"My  child  was  bu'netl  terribly  about 
the  face,  neck  and  chest.  I  applied  l>r. 
Thomas's  Kclectric  Oil.  The  pain  ceased 
an,l  the  child  sank  into  a  restful  sleep." 

Mrs      Nancv     M.     Hanson,     Hamburg, 

N.    Y.  ■  - 


CHINAMAN  HERE 
TO  INSPECT  MINES 


embl 


Panama  and  Serge  Suits,  in  the  practical  colors,  trimmed     with     braid  and 
[ems,  in  contrasting  color.     Sizes  3  to  16.     Prices  $13.50  to  $15.00. 


A  Full  Line  of  Children^&  Misses '  Sweaters 

Verv  pretty  styles,  plain  or  fancy — $2.00  to  $4.00.  i 

White  or  Colored  Tub  Frocks  for  Big  andLittle  Girls 

Linens,  Ginghams,  Chambrays,  Percales,  Swisses,  Dimities  and  Lawns. 
\>ry  pretty  styles  for  all  ages  from  2  t3  16.  Models  cleverly  designed,  and 
made  to  stand  the  wear  and  tear  of  school  and  play-time.  ]\Iany  are  quite 
plain.  Others  are  more  fancy.  ]..aces  or  embroidery  are  usually  intro- 
duced into  their  make-up,  as  trimmin:?  touches. 

Girls'  White  Guimpes— sizes  4  to  14— at  from  $1.00  up. 

9.  M,  (gilSrm0  tc  (Sir. 

In  tht  Annex. 


CASTRO  IS  OOIXG  TO 

ISLAND  OF  TRINIDAD. 


Dresden,  March  19. — CIprlano  Castro, 


former  president  of  Venezuela,  has 
given  up  the  idea  of  i'oing  direct  to 
La  Guaira.  He  will  le»ve  the  steam- 
er Gaudeloupe,  on  which  he  will  sail 
March    26    from    Bordea'ix,    at    Port    of 


Spain.  Trinidad,  wliere  he  will  take 
up  his  residence  temporarily,  at  least, 
there  to  await  news  from  his  frienda 
In  Venezuela,  and  will  then  determine 
what   his   course  shall  be 


MASKED  MEN  DYNAMITE 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


by  the  bullets  of  the  outpo.sts  and 
quickly  ran  to  .shelter  while  the  rob- 
bers held  undisputed  sway,  keeping 
up  an  almost  continuous  fire  and  tak- 
ing chance  shots  at  any  who  came 
within  range.  In  the  meanwhile  those 
at  work  in  the  bank  building  con- 
tniuod  t'>  explode  dynamite  but,  as  it 
proved,  with  little  success  other  than 
to  partially  wreck  the  building,  as 
well  as  an  adjoining-  structure. 

Before  beginning  operations  the  rob- 
bers destroyed  telephone  communica- 


1. 


Clui  Oar  Wong,  imperial  magistrate 
of  Kwang  SI  province,  China,  is  in  Du- 
luth en  route  to'  Virginia,  where  he 
Is  going  to  make  a  thorough  inspec- 
tion of  the  mines,  the  machinery  used 
in  the  mines  and^tWe  American  meth- 
ods of  mining. 

The  young  Chinaman  is  making  a 
tour  of  Inspection  of  the  United  States 
for  the  purpose  of  becoming  acquaint- 
ed with  American  methods  of  operating 
and  Installing  machinery.  Before  he 
returns  to  his  native  country  he  will 
order  mining  machinery  for  use  in 
some   of   the   mines   of   his   province. 

Chu  Dar  Wong  says  there  are  great 
deposits  of  ore  and  copper  In  China 
that  have  not  been  developed.  He 
says  these  are  just  beginning  to  be 
worked,  and  that  It  is  the  purpose  of 
securing  the  best  and  most  modern  ma- 
chinery for  this  purpose,  that  he  came 
to  this  country. 

Wong's  father  is  superintendent  of 
education  in  the  province  of  Canton, 
and  the  young  man  says  that  Englisli 
is  being  taught  In  many  of  the  schools 
of  the  province. 

The  young  man  visited  the  country 
in  1904.  when  he  accompanied  I'rince 
Po  Liin,  a  brother  of  the  late  emperor. 

STARVING  INDIANS  Tl  RN 

TO  CATTLE  STEALING. 

Los  Angeles.  Cal..  March  19. — Word 
i.s  received  from  the  Warner  ranch 
that  the  Indians  are  on  the  verge  of 
starvation,  and  are  resorting  to  cattle 
stealing.  The  sheriff  has  received  re- 
ports for  two  wef ks  that  numerous 
cattle  have  disikppe^ed.  and  as  a  result 
of  his  efforts  two  ,Jndlans  have  been 
arrested.  '■* 


l^Glove  News  of  Exceptional  Interest 

Because  we  an  THE  LARGEST  AND  ONLY  EX- 
CLUSIVE GLOVE  ESTABLISHMENT  between  Chi- 
cago and  the  Pacific  Coast,  and  because  we  devote  our 
years  of  e.iyericnce  and  all  our  energy  to  gloves,  and 
NOTHING  BUT  GLOVES,  we  know  we  are  as  ivell 
(lualified  and  as  thoroughly  prepared  to  take  care  of 
yofir  glove  tcant:i  as  any  store  in  America. 

Not  a  singhi  pair  of  gloi'es  enters  our  stock  that  is 
not  absolutely  p>crfect  in  every  way  or  that  is  not  backed 
up  not  only  by  o'lr  personal  guarantee,  but  also  by  the 
guarantee  of  the  very  largest  glove  inakers  of  Europe  and 
America.  Everything  that  is  good  in  gloves  is  here.  We 
show  larger  and  more  complete  lines  and  have  e.rclusive 
control  of  more  novelties  than  all  other  .stores  combined, 
because  we  do  our  busi^iess  with  the  makers  direct,  and 
new  things  are  constantly  coming  to  us  that  arc  never  shown  elsewhere. 

As  a  Special  Feature  Satxirday  We  Introduce 


Constipation  i-Teir  ?« 

more  serious  troubles.  It  shows  that  the  import- 
ant functions  of  the  liver  are  iinperfoctly  per- 
formed. The  best  medicine  to  take  for.it  is  the 
milil.  gentle  and  purely  vegetable  cathartic 

Hood's  PillsSns^ 

Sold  by  all  ilmei:i.sts  and  «ent  by  mail.    Price.  iS5c. 
U  Made  by  Uood  It's  Good. 


And  .never  in  glove  history  has  a.  wore  icorthy  yfove  been  introduced.  They 
are  a  stunning  one-clasp  out-stam  glove,  made  specially  for  us  of  selected 
skins  and  built  on  the  most  perfect  fitting  lines  that  can  be  devised.  They  are 
of fne  medium  iceight  and  these  are  the  colors — note  them  carefully:  White, 
Tan,  Mode,  Castor,  lirotcn,  Navy,  Royal,  Burgundy,  Gold,  Emerald,  Myrtle, 
and  all  the  very  scarce  and  stunning  shades  of  Taupe,  Gravelle,  Apricot,  Etc. 
No  better  glove  value  has  ever  b  'en  2»roduced,  and  we  absolutely  claim  for  it 
the  distinction  of  being  the  smartest  and  ''tnost 
satisfactory  glove  ever  brought  i'o  Duluth.     We 

guarantee  and /it  every  glove  and  2>f€sent  them   to  tie  trade  tSatur- 

day  for,  2>er  pair 


Our  Ladies' 

New 

Cambridge 

Gloves 

at 
$1.50 


I  we  aosoiuieft/    claim    for  it 

$1.50 


And  ire  have  just  rereited  enor- 
mous shipments  of  all  the  beauti- 
ful neir  apring  shades.  The  qual- 
ity (if  possible)  is  eten  of  higher 

grade  than  usual.  They  are  made 
toith  stylish  two-clasp  wrists,  fin- 
ished with  contrasting  welts- 
There  are  blacks.whites  and  all  colors,  including  the  new 
shades  of  greens,  blues,  apricot,  peach  etc.  At  $1.50  it 
is  one  of  the  best  gloves  made,  and  our  ^  1  1  O 
price  tomorrow  will  be,  per  pair ^  -*^  •  -*•   >' 


Our  Regular 
$1.50  Gloves 
for  Saturday 
$1.19 


Children's 
New  Kid 
Gloves 


Two  complete  lines  in  the  very  bext 
qunlitie.i  and  in  all  the  wanted  shades 
of  tan.  brown,  red.  gray,  etc.  Every 
pair  icarranled  and 
fitted,  per  pair 


$1.25 


We  keej)  yoxir  gloves   in  repair 
~     free  of  charge. 


Our  entire  stock  of  Golf  and  Cash- 
mere Gloves  f^r  men,  women  and  children  are 
priced  as  follows: 

All  35c  Gloves  and  Mittens,  Saturday tSo 

All  50c  Cloves  and  Mittens,  Saturday 38o 

25c  Boys'  Heavy  Scotch  (Jlotes IBo 


Mail  orders   satisfactorily  filed 
at  advertised  prices^ 


6  WEST  SUPEftlOR  ST. 


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'-'•~  ~:z.^m^^'~.~  ~  ■,.    "7,1.;.- — .^  F  ■-jTr-r--.ir--r-giTww  ■*■— n    ■■!  ,■!■!■■■    ^-i-i- »i.— ■■■■m  ., ,  ■■  ■■■  ■■»■■■■  ■-■n  ■  ■— ■»w^     -         —  -    -     --  — J.— .^  .      .     ^.r ^  ._-  . . ,— 


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ii. 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


8 


Suits  of  StrictfyHigh 

Standard 

At  Very  Common  Prices 

$25,  $29.50  and  $35 

These  are  splendid  suits,  perfectly  well  tailored 
from  collar  to  hem.  We  weigh  our  words  when  we 
say  they  cannot  be  bettered  in  style,  workmanship  or 
material  at  their  respective  prices.  Plain  serges,  and 
durable  hard-finished  worsteds  or  suitings,  in  the  new 
colors.  Coats  are  peau  de  cygif^  lined  throughout. 
The  cut  gives  a  good  idea  of  the  general  style.  Some 
are  slightly  more  fancy,  buttoning  aslant  with  three 
buttons  and  cut  in  collarless  style,  with  touches  of 


the  Hlurdy  Btaiid  for  honesty  and  Jur- 
t!ce  uf  a  ncatterInK  few.  greed  and 
'     to    the 


cowardice    led    to    The    perpetration    of 
the   KreatcBt    outrago   over   Imposed    by 


a   powerful   majority   vipon   a  dependent 
and   helpless  minority: 

I<^rat    C'ouKr««Mlonal   Dlalrict. 


blU- 


Againat 
'   Gai^lelde, 
Herfry, 
Virtue — 3. 


It- 


For    the 
Carey. 
Carley, 
Conley, 
Fitzpatrlck, 
MoMartln, 
Murphy, 
O.    B.    Nelson, 
Noble, 
Nolan, 
Ilustad. 
Sikor&ki, 
Thaver, 
Wohlliuler— 13. 

Second    C'ung^nMiHloual    DlMtrict. 


bill— 


Against    it — 
Sluarl — 1. 


For    the 
Baldwin, 
Da  vies, 
Duea, 
Herzberg. 
Jorprenson, 
Kelly, 
Mork, 

Herman  Nelson, 
Sweiidsen — ». 

Third    fonKrenwlonal    nislrlc*. 
For    the    bill—  Against    it — 

Gates. 
Krau.se, 
MacKcnzie. 
\W.   H.    I'utnam, 
Welter. 
A.    J.    r.orkne, 
speaker — 6. 
s. 


DON'T  COUeH 

No  one  should  permit  a  cough  oi 
cold  to  run  unchecked.  Serious  throat 
or  lung  trouble  is  likely  to  follow. 
Use,  and  use  promptly, 

Dr.  Bull's 
Cough  Syrup 

which  quickly  relieves  and  cures  colds, 
coughs,  bronchitis,  whooping-cough, 
measles,  croup,  and  prevents  pneu- 
monia and  consumption 


Trial  Bottle  Free. 

VehaveahsoluteconfldenoeiiiDr.BuH's 
Cough  Hyrup  and  to  convince  fou  that  it 
will  cure,  we  will  send  a  trial  uottle  free 
to  all  who  will  write  us  and  mention  this 
paper.    A.  C.  Meyer  A  Co..  Baltimore,  Mil 


Denzer, 
Dorsey    , 
Peters, 
roterson, 
Pfaon«ler, 

I'll  mips, 

Ware, 
Westcott- 


trimmmg. 


Spring  Coats  in  Full  and 
Medium  Lengths 

Serges,  Worsteds,  Coverts  and   Light  Weight  Broadcloth*— 

513.50.  519.50,  525,  S29.50andS35 

Styles  that  "Take  at  First  Sight"  are  developed  frotu  pretty  invisible 
and  nuiet-tone  stripes  or  plain  colors.  Many  variations  of  the  long,  semi- 
f hted'  hues  are  mtr'oduced'  Some  are  more  fitted,  and  others  -t  so  much 
so.  But  in  each,  it  is  the  indescribable  "Snap  '  and  Stjle  that  proves 
them  more  attractive  than  ordinary  styles. 

Messaline  or  Wool  Dresses  at  $25.00 

Clever  styles,  perfectly  made.  They  have  "style"  and  "lines"  that  the 
home  dressmaker  just  can't  seem  to  get!  New  shades  as  amethyst,  copper, 
eld  rose,  pearl,  mulberry,  lavendar,  myrtle,  reseda  and  navy. 

Waists  at  Special  Prices  for  Tomorrow 

Lingerie  Waists,  worth  $6.75  to  $12.50,  at  $4.00. 

Fine  batistes  and  lawns,  prettily  trimmed  with  very  fine  laces  and  embroi- 

Spring  Styles  in  Tailored  Linen  or  Sheer  Lingerie  Materials— at $2.75 

A  good  selection  of  styles. 

Correct  Dress  for  Women. 


None 


Fourth    t'oii|fi»«»iloi»aI    DUIrlot. 

For    the    bill—  Against     it- 

Anderson, 
Brady. 
Burnquist, 
Chri.stenson, 
Greene, 
llandlan, 
OBrieji, 
Perry, 
Rodenberg, 
Howe, 
Selb, 
Stone, 
Zelch — 13. 
fonereMNlunal     UlKtrirt. 

bill—  Aeainst     it — 

Allen, 


TAKE  NO  SUBSTITUTE. 

Ask  for  Dr.  Bull's  Cough  Syrup.  Insist  on 
having  it.  There  is  uo  remedy  better  or 
"just  as  good":  It  is  the  old  reliable  cure. 
Triee  'isc.  60c.  and  $1.00. 

49~Dr.  Bull's  CouKh  Syrup  can  be  slven  with 
perfect  safety  to  the  youngest  child,  it  is  ab- 
solutely pure.  Guaranteed  under  the  National 
Pure  Food  and  Drugs  Act;  terial  No.  226. 


Stunning  Easter  Suits 
From  $16.50  to  $65.00 


Ash  yours df  the  question:  Where  may  I  look  at 
stylish  (jarments  to  my  hearVs  content  icithout  being 
''pressed"  to  buy,  and  without  being  '\snubbed''  be- 
cause I  am  nor  ready  to  buy?  We  can  almost  hear 
a  thousand  hearty  voices  of  Duluth's  progressive 
women  exclaim:   ''At  Silbersteins  !'' — 


.rgn'         T     I   ■ 


Fifth 

For  the 
Campbell, 
M.  Nell  1—2 


i.'onroy, 
Goodspeed, 
Kneeland, 
T.,.    H.  .Johnson, 
Leniion, 
Nimocks, 
Nye, 
Sahler. 
Sawyer, 
SuUlvan. 
Wallace, 
"Washburn, 
F.  B.   WriRht— 14. 
sixth    Confcrraalonai     Uiatriet. 
For    the    bill —  Against     it — 

Carlson,  Brown, 

Friedman,  Davis. 

Lobeck.  Dower. 

Sampson,  Doyle. 

Nagel — 5.  :  ♦Emmel, 

KlInPT, 
Hinds. 
M<  Carry, 
Wliitf — 9. 
Seventh    C'onisTeaiiiuual    Dlntrlct. 


Against    it — 
Dalzcll— 1. 


b 


MOST  ARRANT  DISPLAY  OF 
SECTIONALISM  EVER  SEEN 
IN  ANY  LEGISLATIVE  BODY 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


disbelief   in   the  bill,  but  who  voted  for 
It      on      its      final    passage,   said   to  The 


Somethinji   New   in 

LIFE  INSURANCE 

ASK 

THE  Prudential 

INSURANCE  COMPANY  OF  AMERICA 

■XTuliw  kT.'  ':Zr'    Eon.OHice.New.rk.N.J. 


D.    }•:.    H..   March   19,   1909. 


t 

U 


lleraUl    last    night,    in    the    presence    of 
ether  members  of  the  legislature: 

"it  is  the  worst  vote  I  have  cast  at 
this  session.  I  am  heartily  ashamed 
of  it.  The  tonnage  tax  is  wrong,  and 
on  its  merits  it  would  not  liave  had 
thirtv  votes  in  the  liouse.  Had  the 
members  been  free  to  vote  their  con- 
\lctions.  it  would  liave  been  defeated 
overwhelmingly." 

This  is  just  a  sample  of  the  remarks 
made  by  many  of  tliose  who  voted  for 
the  bill".  There  is  one  member  who 
voted  for  It  who  has  the  respect  of 
the  opponents  of  the  bill.  He  had 
promised  his  people  to  vote  for  it 
without  realizing  what  it  meant  and 
what  it  involved,  but  alter  he  had 
studied  the  <|uestion  and  had  heard 
botli  sides  of  it,  he  determined  thai  his 
vote  should  not  carry  the  bill.  So  he 
instructed  the  reading  clerk  that  If 
the  Issue  was  so  close  that  one  vote 
was  necessarv  to  carry  the  bill,  that 
vote  should  not  be  his.  In  that  event, 
his  vote  was  to  be  cast  against  the 
bill  It  happened  that  there  were  Just 
enough  votes  to  pass  the  measure 
without  his.  so  he  was  counted  in  its 
favor.  The  pathetic  part  of  this  is 
that  there  were  at  least  half  a  dozen 
others  who  had  gone  that  far  without 
giving  specific  instructions  to  safe- 
guard the  result.  Had  any  two  of 
these  members  voted  against  the  bill— 
which  would  have  meant  voting  thelr 
honest      convictions — the      BJorge      bill 


would  have  been  defeated  in  the  house. 

CT^^'J^^  j(?  7^  ^ "  V*^  "^   *•  ^  " 


For    the    bill — 
Bendixen, 

Bicknell, 

Haugland, 

Holmberg, 

c.     li.    .Johnson, 

.1.   N.   Johnson, 

I..ee. 

Lende, 

Mel  by. 

Uosenwald, 

Si>ooner — 11. 

KiKhth     CoDKrosNlonnl     DlHtrict. 
For    the    bill —  Against    it — 

None.  Austin, 

Borgen, 

Buck, 

Congdon, 

Ferguson, 

Oraliam, 

Grant, 

Horton, 

Bines. 

Webb— 10. 

ConercHMionnl     DiHtrict. 

bill— 


Against    it — ■ 
None. 


*        The   notion  of  the   houne,  beyond 
^  anv     ciueMtion,    wuh    the     most    nr- 

frnut  exhibition  of  neetlonal  tyrnn-  ^ 
uy  over  witnoMHed  lu  the  ,Minne-  * 
Motu    leKlslature.  ▼ 

With  the  exception  of  the  vote  of  ,1. 
J.  t)nsahj  of  Bemidji.  not  a  single  vote 
was  cast  in  favor  of  the  bill  In  tlie 
regions  containing  the  ore,  or  neighbor. 
Ing  those  sections  In  which  iron  de- 
posits have  been  developed. 

The  votes  that  passed  the  bill  oame 
from  Southern  and  Western  Minne- 
sota, from  the  richest  portions  of  the 
«tate,  where  the  least  need  exists  lor 
help  In  paying  the  expenses  of  run- 
ning  the   state. 

Beyond  any  question,  the  great  ma- 
jority of  the  house  membership  was  at 
heart  opposed  to  the  passage  of  the 
bill  because  of  their  belief  tliat  it  is 
unjust,  inequitable  and  oppressive  ^ct 
fear  of  the  sentiment  at  home 
prompted  these  members  to  pass  the 
bill,  so  the  power  of  the  majority  lyas 
used  to  oppress  and  harrass  a  minority 
that  can  only  hope  to  prosper  through 
a  sense  of  fair  play  and  justice  that 
was  painfully  lacking  in  the  vote  of 
the   house   on    this    measure.  _ 

Below  will  be  found  the  vote  in  the 
various  congressional  districts,  from 
which   it   can    be   seen    how,    in   spite   of 


Mnth 

For    the 
Adams, 
Bjorge, 
Holten, 

,1.    T,   Johnson, 
Mattson, 
McGrath, 
Opsahl. 

H.   A.   l*utnam, 
Kobertson, 
Saugstad, 
Sulerud, 
Wells. 
C.   .1.    Wright— 13. 

Starting  In  at  the  southeastern  cor- 
ner of  the  state  with  the  First  district, 
and  swinging  around  west  and  north 
through  the  Second,  Seventh  and  Nintli 
congressional  districts,  the  map  lakes 
on  the  greater  part  of  Southern  Min- 
nesota, and  all  of  the  old-time  I'opu- 
listic  .Seventh  and  Ninth  districts.  In 
all  that  territory  St,  Louis  county  got 
but  five  votes,  and  tliere  were  forty- 
■^ix  voles  cast  in  these  districts  for  the 
bill.  All  Southern  Minnesota,  all  ^^est- 
ern  Minnesota,  and  the  west  half  of 
Northern  Minnesota,  summoned  up  ex- 
actlv  five  votes  for  fair  play,  and  for- 
tv-six  votes  for  the  plunder  of  a  weak- 
er section  by  a  stronger  and  greedier 
section — the  section  being  that  which 
furnished    the    forty-six    votes. 

In  the  Third  district,  thanks  largely 
to  the  spirit  of  fair  play  shown  by 
Speaker  A.  .T.  Rockne  and  by  Judge  M. 
O  Hall  of  the  tax  commission,  who  op- 
posed the  tonnage  tax  after  careful 
study,    there    were   more   votes    against 


the  bill  than  there  were  in  the  entire 
First  Second,  Seventh  and  Ninlli  dis- 
tricts. The  Tiiird  district  cast  eight 
voles  for  the  bill  and  six  votes  against 

it. 

The  Sixth  district  cast  nine  votes 
against  the  bill  and  five  votes  for  it, 
the  affirmalive  votes  coming  from 
Wright,  Stearns,  Douglas,  and  Meeker 
counties,  all  of  wlilch  lie  over  against 
the  Seventh  district  In  the  southeast- 
ern part  of  the  district.  The  upper 
part  of  the  Sixth  district  did  not  cast 
a  vole    tor   the   bill. 

Nothing  more  purely  sectional  was 
ever  perpetrated  in  the  history  of  the 
Minnesota   legislature. 

All  it  amounts  to  is  this:  St.  I..ouis 
county  offere<i  the  stale  a  chance  to 
become  a  great  steel  manutactunng 
center,  a  boon  that  involved  a  great 
increase  in  population,  the  upbuilding 
of  a  great  city  at  the  Head  ot  the 
Lakes,  cheaper  steel  and  iron  producl.s 
for  the  people  of  the  slate,  a  greater 
market  lor  the  products  of  Minnesota 
farms,  and  cheaper  freight  rates  toi 
the  manufactured  products  of  the  com- 
monwealth. .„♦„„, 

But  the  rest  of  ihe  stale,  too  Intent 
upon  a  possibility  of  grabbing  a  spe- 
cial lax  for  its  own  benefit,  relused  lo 
become   interested. 

What  does  Minnesota  care  for  de- 
veloping a  manufacturing  industry,  so 
long  as  tlie  taxes  of  the  farmers  of 
Southern  Minnesota  can   be  reduced. 

Though  it  is  probably  progressed 
l(;o  late  in  tlie  session  to  become  a  aw, 
the  liouse  in  conimittee  of  the  whole 
yesterday  afternoon  advanced  to  the 
calendar  the  bill  by  the  house  com- 
miitcc  on  public  lands,  providing  lor 
a  revolving  fund  for  the  purchase  ol 
dvnamite  lo  be  used  in  clearing  cut- 
over  lands  of  their  pine  stumps.  Ihe 
bill  appropriates  ?l.i,000.  wliich  is  to 
be  uscu  in  l.uving  dynamite  to  be  sold 
at  cost  to  settlers.  The  governor,  slate 
auditor  and  ibe  dean  of  the  agricultural 
college  are  constituted  a  board,  with 
power  to  make  the  purchases  ot  dyna- 
mite and  to  sell  Uie  same  lo  settlers 
Sales  are  to  be  at  cost,  willi  expense  of 
transportation    and    distribution    added. 

•  •       • 

The  house  advanced  to  the  calendar 
in  committee  oi  the  whole  yesterday 
afternoon  the  Spooner  bill  regulating 
llie  charges  of  telegrapli  companies  in 
this  state.  They  are  not  to  be  allowed 
lo  charge  more  than  L'5  cents  lor  ten 
words  or  more  than  i:  cents  per  word 
for  each  additional  word  over  ten. 
Those  provisions  apply,  of  course,  only 
to  messages  beiween  points  In  tins 
vtate.  Telegraph  companies  violating 
these  provisions  are  lial)le  lo  a  fine  ot 
not  less  tiuin  |00  or  imprisonment  not 
to  exceed  ihree  months. 

•  •      • 
The    special    order    on 

men's  compeiisalion  act 
Ueprosentaiives  Stuart 
Wright,  Wells  and  Orant  was  con- 
tinued vesterdav  afternoon,  on  motion 
of  Frank  T.  White  of  Elk  Biver,  until 
next  Tuesday  afternoon.  Mr.  \\  liite 
tiaid  that  it  was  evltlent  that  the  mem- 
bers did  not  understand  the  bill,  and 
he  believed  they  ought  to  liave  time  to 
familiarize  iliemselves  with  Us  pro- 
visions. .  ,  ,,  , 
As  a  matter  of  fact,  though  the  real 
author  of  tlie  bill.  D.  A.  Stuart  of  W  in- 
dom  has  put  much  care  and  thought 
upon  it,  it  is  evident  thai  the  belief  of 
the  house  is  that  it  would  be  politically 
dangerous  to  attempt  a  hasty  solution 
of  this  problem.  Hither  the  commis- 
sion iilan.  proposed  to  the  legislature 
by  the  emplovers  and  workingmen  of 
the  stale  through  Governor  .Johnson, 
will  be  adopted,  or  there  will  be  no 
action  whatever  upon  this  question  at 
this    session. 

*       •      • 


Tke  Suits  Priced  at  $25,  $29.50  anJ  $35 

Nobby  style;;  in  suits  for  women  and  misses  made  from 
smart  novelty  suitings  in  such  desirable  shades  as  new  blues, 
browns,  grays,  ei:c.  Coats  arc  36-inch  semi-fitting,  hiplcss  mod- 
els, lined  thruout  with  silk  and  trimmed  with  buttons;  skirts 
are  new  gored  models. 
•  At  $25.00  an  J  $29.50  we  show  a  large  variety  of  new  mod- 
els coats  from  16  to  40  inches,  materials  novelty  stripe  satni 
finish  suitings,  "V^enetians,  etc.,  full  lined  with  Messaline  satni 
and  trimmed  with  buttons,  skirts  are  the  latest  gored,  high  top 
design.  Complc  c  line  of  colors,  navy,  green,  canard,  smoke, 
cedar,  black,  etc.— $25.00  and  $29.50. 

At  $25.(K3  w<  will  offer  a  special  line  of  strictly  tailored  in 
fine  French  serge,  coats  from  36  to  38  inches  with  large  patch 
pockets,  new  gored  skirts,  coat  and  skirt  button  trimmed. 

At  $35.00  we  offer  many  distinct  groups,  over  a  hundred 
and  fifty  suits  it  all,  upon  which  the  best  efforts  of  two  ol  our 
crack  tailoring  c  rganizalions  have  been  expended.  These  suits 
alone  are  conclusive  evidence  of  how  far  superior  our  lines  are 
to  all  others.  T  le  stvles  vary  from  coats  36  inches  in  length  to 
the  mo^t  extreme  length  in  fashion.  Nor  are  materials  restrict- 
ed; there  are  rich  French  and  English  serges,  Prunellas,  Vene- 
tians and  satin  finisht  weaves  of  many  kinds.  Suits  strictly 
tailored  and  su  ts  elaborately  trimmed— altogether  an  assem- 
blage of  suit  perfection — $35.00. 

New  White  Serge  Suits 

$21.50,  $32.50,  up  to  $42,50 


■<ra  • 


the    working- 
introduced    l>y 
,    Nolan,    F.    B. 


The  advance  models  of  the  season  for  ultra-fashionable 
wear.  Some  ar-.-  all  white  in  ICnglish  tailored  models.  38  to  42- 
inch  coats,  others  arc  trimmed  with  black  satm,  black  jet,  out- 
tons,  etc. 

Exclusive  Tkrec -Piece  Suits 

l-or  more  dressy  wear  we  submit  many  new  arrivals  in 
nifty  tailore<l  semi-dre-s  models  more  or  less  elaborately 
trinimed  with  iilk  embroidery,  Parisian  and  Byzantine  orn.-!- 
mentation,  etc.  Rare  fabrics  of  satiny  finish,  imported  1  runel- 
las  and  crystal  novelties.     Entirely  exclusive  creations. 

New  Top  Coats  for  Wome^^$19.50 

This  particularly  English  model  is  daily  growing  in  popu- 
larity They  .ome  in  fine  covert  cloths  lined  thruout  with 
Messaline  satin,  length  averages  38  inches,  strictly  tailored  lap 
pockets— $19.50. 

New  Waists 

Combinati<m  Slips  of  Messaline,  China  Silk  and  Lawn,  to 
wear  under  open  mesh  and  lingerie  dresses,  giving  the  tight 
fitting,  clingini;  effect  so  much  desired  this  season. 

New  Messaline  Petticoats  at  $6.00 

All  the  new  prevailing  shades,  of  fine  quality  Messaline— $6. 


I 


I 


,  Boys'  Store  of  Duluth 

It's  on  the  second  floor  of  the  Columbia  store  and  replete  now  with 
the  best  clothes  to  be  had  in  America.    


1    liw   Exclusi 


LITTLE  FELLOWS  can  choose  from  hun- 
dreds of  new  Russian  Sailor  and  Junior  Nor- 
folk styles. 

The  Russian  style  for  ages  2%  to  7- 

Sailor  Suits  for  ages  6  to  12. 

The  Junior  Norfolk  Suit  is  a  new  link 
between  these  two  and  is  made  on  the  lines 
of  the  Russian  suit.   Especially  adapted  for 
boys  between  the   Buster    Brown    and    the 
Sailor  Suit  ages— say  5  to  8. 

All  shades  and  materials,  $2.50  to  $10 

FOR  BOYS  who  wear  Knicker- 
bocker Suits  we  have  a  most  pleasing 
line  this  season.  Coats  are  cut 
plain,  medium  long,  with  wide 
lapels,  no  belt.  Pants  are  extra 
full  bloomers.  Olive  green  and  gray  and 
brown  shades  predominate. 

Ages  8  to  18.     Prices  $3  to  $15. 


NEW  ARRIVALS 

Ladies'  Art  Knit  Sweater  Coats, 
Fisk  Waists,  $1  Street  Gloves, 
New  K,  &  E.  Waists  for  Boys, 

Spring  Caps,  Boys'  Jerseys. 


Ckild 


ren  s 


D 


resses 


COLUMBIA 


At  Third  Avenue  West. 


The  senate  ve.'^tcrilay  afcernoon  killed 
tlie  bill  r<«iuning  public  service  cor- 
porations to  pay  their  employes  at 
iea.'^t  twice  oa<h  month.  The  vole  was 
"4  for  and  31  against.  The  bill  had 
i.assed  Ihe  house  without  much  oppo- 
sition, but  it  met  ii.s  Waterloo  in  the 
senate. 

«       «      * 

The  senate  passed  the  Pauly  bill, 
providing  that  cenaln  vegetables  and 
other  articles  of  food  shall  be  sold  by 
weight,    yesterday    afternoon. 

•  •       * 

The  senate  killed  the  bill  by  the 
senate  committee  on  public  health  and 
pure  food,  authorizing  the  state  board 
of  health  to  adopt  rules  and  regula- 
tions for  the  protection  of  the  health 
of  persons  working  for  wages.  The 
vote   was    12    for   and    27    against. 

•  •       • 

The  house  in  committee  of  the  whole 
vesterdav  afternoon  advanced  to  the 
calendar"  the  MacKenzie  bill,  authoriz- 
ing the  killing  of  game  within  national 
forest  reserves  or  lands  set  apart  as 
breeding  grounds  by  the  state  game 
and  fish  commission.  This  i:-*  the  bill 
which  is  to  perform  Minnesota's  part 
in  the  creation  of  a  2.000,000-acre  game 
preserve  along  the  boundary  between 
this  state  and   Ontario. 

•  •      • 

Though  the  senate  committee  on 
public  health  and  pure  food  yesterday 
reported  for  passage  the  anti-cigarette 
bill  which  pas.sed  the  house  at  a  night 
session,  a  short  time  ago,  the  house 
conimittee  of  the  whole  yesterday  aft- 
ernoon advanced  to  the  calendar  the 
Brady  anti-cigarette  bill.  In  spite  of 
all  these  precautions  against  the  cigar- 
ette it  is  still  quite  possible  that  no 
anti-cigarette  bill  will  pass  the  legis- 
lature  at    this    session. 

•  *      • 
The    rashman      distance      tariff    bill. 

which  would  revolutionize  conditions 
in  this  state  practically  destroying 
many  communities.  Is  a  special  order 
in  the  senate  today.  Yesterday  a  num- 
ber of  representatives  of  business 
houses  in  various  parts  of  the  state, 
Including  several  from  Duluth,  were 
on  the  ground  to  protest  against  the 
passage  of  the  bill  and  to  show  the 
mischief  it  would  work. 
«  •  • 
The  house  judiciary  committee  has 
recommended  for  passage  the  bill  by 
Frank  T.  White  of  Klk  River,  allow- 
ing courts  to  adopt  the  probation  sys- 
tem for  liandling  criminals  convicted  of 
a    first     offense,       the       punl.shment     for 


Cute    little     Wash    Dresses    of    Chambray,    GinRliam,    I^awns, 
Batiste  and  I.iacn— as  low  as  $1.50  and  up  to  $12.50. 


which  does  not  exceed  five  years  in  the 
penitentiary. 

•  •  • 
C  E.  Richardson,  ;  ormerly  of  Du- 
lutl'i  but  now  of  Washington.  \X  <-.. 
was  in  St  Paul  vesterday,  on  his  way 
to  the  White  Earth  Irdian  reservulion 
to  straighten  out  the  taxes  levied 
against  some  of  the  I  ndians  for  whom 
he  is  the  attorney.  1.  is  claimed  that 
the  Btate  authorities  liave  exceeded 
their  powers  in  taxin?  the  Indians  of 
the    state.    g^j^^^M.^N    H.    BINGHAM. 


IXJISTK  E  ON  THE  TAX 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


Sickly  Smile 

Wipe  it  off  your  otherwise 
good  looking  face — put  on  that 
good  health  smile  that  CAS- 
CARETS  will  give  you — as 
a  result  from  the  cure  of 
Constipation — or  a  torpid  liver. 
It's  so  cosy — do  it — you'll  see. 

915 
CASCARETS  JOc  a  box  lor  a  week'i 
treatment,  all  drugrslsts.  Blgrest  Beller 
Id  the  world.    MmToo  boxes  a  moath. 


by  all  authorities  on  the  subject.  If 
applied  fairly,  it  sho  ild  be  laid  upon 
all  natural  mineral  products  of  the 
state,  such  as  granite  sandstone,  lime- 
stone Kasota  stone,  clay  and  other 
similar  deposits,  whl-'h  the  advocates 
of  this  bill  call  the  heritage  of  the 
state. 

"While  I  disagree  with  the  objects  of 
the  bill  I  do  not  feel  that  the  legisla- 
ture had  any  intention  of  striking  at 
any  particular  section  ot  the  state. 
The  idea  that  in  sorie  way  the  state 
had  some  sort  of  an  obscure  claim  up- 
on iron  lands  has  be<  ome  so  prevalent 
that  it  was  held  that  mis  gave  some 
sort   of  a   claim   for  a  different   tax. 

"While  I  am  wholly  opposed  to  the 
tonnage  tax,  I  trust  that  it  will  not 
impede  the  great  development  of  the 
iron  industry  now  p  ogresslng  at  the 
Head  of  the  Lakes. 

"Duluth    is    the    one    spot    where    at 
some    time   will    be   located   one   of   the 
greatest  manufacturing  centers  of  this 
country.       1     think    all    the    citizens    of 
this    state    join     in    the    hope    that    the 
Head    of    the    Lakes    svill    not    only    be- 
come a  great   steel   e?nter  for  her  own 
benefit,    but    likewise    a    great    market 
for   the   products   of    the   state. 
A    tireat    I'oniblnaflou. 
"Wnth   the   recent   development   of   the 
iron  ranges,   we  today   have   one  of  the 
richest    and    most    productive    states    in 
the  I'nion.     With  the    resources  of  soil, 
timber    and    mineral    we    have    a    com- 
bination   that    exists    in    few    localities 
With  a  cold  climate  and     such  a   great 
preponderance  of  northern  races  it  will 
be    our    own    fault    if    some    day    we    do 
not    stand    at    the    head    of    the    lis      in 
wealth.   Intelligence    md  all   the   things 
that     go     to     make    \     great     common- 

^^'••wV' should  all  stand  together,  how- 
ever, in  developing  all  the  varied  re- 
sources  of    the   state. 

"What  helps  one  locality  helps  like- 
wise anotlier.  and  we  should  all  ab- 
stain from  jealousi  or  discord  that 
may  affect  the  general  future  of  the 
state.  Personally  I  do  not  think  the 
"tonnage  tax  constitutional,  and  I  do 
not  f?el  that  after  further  investiga- 
tion it  will  ever  be  adopted  or  en- 
forced   m   the  ^state^of   Mi.inesota.^^ 


CRUSHED  BY  LOGS. 

Eaii  Claire  Man  is  Badly  Injured 
arrd  May  Die. 

Eau  Claire,  Wis.,  March  19. — Albert 
Anderson,  aged  50,  married,  of  this 
city  is  at  the  Luther  hospital  In  a 
dying  condition  as  the  result  of  injur- 
ies   he   sustained   Wednesday. 

Mr.  Anderson  works  under  Martin 
Severson  for  the  Daniel  .^haw  Lumber 
company  and  has  charge  of  one  of  the 
landings  on  the  Half  Moon  lake,  where 
the  logs  are  rolled  from  the  train  down 
the  roll  way.  About  noon  Wednesday 
Mr.  Anderson  look  a  risk  in  an  ef- 
fort to  stop  a  car  that  started  mov- 
ing after  he  had  loosened  the  logs.  The 
logs  rolled  and  Mr.  Anderson  wa.<* 
knocked  down.  In  all  he  was  hit  by 
five  logs  and  when  rescued  was  found 
in  a  terrible  condition.  Help  was  ob- 
tained and  he  was  hurried  to  the- hos- 
pital   and    given    medical    aid. 


Genuine  Must  Bear 
Fac-Simile  Signaturt 


REFUSE  SUBSTITUTES* 


SICK  HEADACHE 


reg^Qlate  tbe  Bowels. 


PotitlTelr  cured  Vf 
these  Little  PUU. 

Tbe7  Also  reUert  Dl»; 
tress  froaiDy^)ep«to.llt^ 
dlgmtloa  and  Too  BautSj 
Eatkif  ..  A  pertBoC  r««M 
edr  tor  DlzzlDesB.  Nmmos 
DrowBl&ess.  Bad  TacM 
la  tbe  Kootta.  Ocwtetf 
Tongue,  Pain  tn  tte  Sidib 

TORPID   LTVKH. 
Purely  Vegetable. 


SMALL  PILL  SMALL  DOSL  SMALL  PRICE, 

■ 


ICARTERS 


lURfE 

iTlVER 
1^ 


Gemibw  Mast  Beir 
Fic-Simile  Signaturt 


|*>*^.^'   «;"<»^Ti<»aii 


\ 


REFUSE  SUBSTITUTES* 


1 

\ 

1 
1 

'                                -.*— 

• 

^     A,     M        ■■     ■■    ■       ■!  w    "^  ■  ■ piB        ■  I  T~'  ri'ii   •     ^ •    .       ■    ■    "■ 


■  ■  »'      I 


-  p 


1 



5 

' 

1 

1 

THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


CONCERNlNe 


The  members  of  the  boani  of  niiiii- 
agers  of  the  Children's  homo  will 
agrali)  be  the  storekeepers  at  a  ruin- 
n-.agrt^  sale  for  the  benetit  of  the  charity 
In  which  they  are  so  much  interested. 
The  second  annual  sale  will  be  held 
the  latter  part  of  May.  The  rum- 
mage isale  last  year  was  a  great  finan- 
citil  success,  several  hundred  dollars 
being  realized  for  the  home  at  a  time 
when  the  help  was  greatly  needed.  The 
sale  was  not  a  blessing  simply  for  the 
home,  but  the  elotliing.  house  furnish- 
ings, books  an,i  dishes  found  ready 
purciiasers  who  gladly  paid  I  lie  sum 
asked  for  the  article  whiih  they  need- 
ed. The  prices  were  low  enough  to  al- 
low anvone  who  sincerely  wanted  to 
get  an  article  to  do  so.  The  committee 
worked  arduously  and  the  sale  did  a 
great  amount  of  good. 

There  was  much  demand  for  the 
books  which  were  sent  in.  The  oppor- 
tunity of  clearing  i>ut  libraries  of 
the  books  which  accumulate  ana  which 
are  not  particularly  desired  as  a  per- 
manent acquisition  was  welcomed  by 
many,  and  every  book  found  a  de- 
lighted   purchaser. 

The  sale  will  be  held  this  year  the 
latter  part  of  May.  and  the  women  ot 
the  board  especiail.v  request  that  dur- 
ing house  cleaning  time  Ouluthians 
■will  ren»ember  tlie  home  and  save  every 
possible  article  for  tlie  rummage  sale. 

At  a  rei<ent  meeting  of  the  board  it 
was  decided  that  no  ciiild  would  be  ad- 
mltl'Ml  to  the  home  without  a  doctors 
certituate.  This  rule  was  made  neces- 
sarv  in  order  to  protect  tiie  little  ones 
already  tl'.ere  from  the  possibility  of 
being  '  e.Kposed     to     a     contagious     dis-. 

ease.  „  „  ,  , 

Beginning  with  the  first  Friday  of 
April,  the  home  will  be  open  (o  visitors 
twice  ea-Mi  montii.  Two  of  the  board 
members  will  act  as  hostesses  on 
these  visiting  days,  and  visitors  to  the 
institution    will    be    welcomed. 

The  donations  to  the  home  last  month 
were;  Eight  gallons  milk.  Mrs.  Hart- 
ley; clothing,  dishes,  pop  corn,  ribbons. 
Mrs.  Hubbell;  mictens  from  Needle- 
work guild;  mittens  from  Mrs.  K.  L. 
McGiegor;  repapering.  new  bed  linen. 
dUhes.  hot  water  bag  for  the  Agnew 
room,  from  Mrs.  V\ .  C.  Agnew;  one 
bushel  apples,  one  dozen  barrels.  Mrs. 
J.  T.  Davis;  Zl  pounds  mutton  stew. 
Geor»fe  L.  Munst>y;  clothing.  Mrs. 
Cramer;  IS  pounds  ground  malt.  Fitger 
Brewing  company;  one  dozen  brooms. 
Zanlih  Broom  company;  half  dozen 
quart  Jugs  from  Standard  Salt  &  Ce- 
ment company;  toys  and  cards.  Gray- 
Tallant  company;  75  valentines.  Lake- 
side Presbvterian  church;  babies'  cloth- 
ing. Mr;;.  A.  C.  Park;  flreless  cooker, 
mixing  bowl,  chopping  bowl,  roasting 
pan,  two  metal  cans,  live  screens,  two 
yards  felt,  from  Jlrs.  Edward  Lee  and 
ifuests. 

Lecture  on  Darwin. 

"CharU.s  L'lirwiu'  will  be  the  sub- 
ject ot  the  sermon  lecture  this  even- 
ing by  Rev.  J.  W.  Powell  at  the  Endlon 
Methodist  church.  Thi.<  lecture  will  be 
the  last  in  the  first  series  of  six  which 
have  been  given  Friday  evening's  at 
the  churcli-  Anyone  interested  is  in- 
vited to  attend. 


Saturday  Club. 

The  regular  meeting  of  the  Satur- 
dav  club  will  be  held  tomorrow  after- 
noon at  tilt  club  room  of  the  library. 
Dur:ng  the  half  hour  devoted  to  cur- 
rent events,  news  from  the  countries 
will  be  discussed  by  Mrs.  H.  L.  Pad- 
dack.  French  literature  from  1515  to 
ir.4'J»  will  be  the  regular  study  with 
Mrs.  O.  A.  Oredson  as  leader.  The  out- 
line  is   a**   follows: 

I.  L'^ading  influences  dominating  the 
literature    ol    tiie    ISth    Century. 

a.  Renaissance. 

b.  Reformation. 
Poetry. 

Miss    Ethlyn    Abbott 
Clement  Marot. 
Prose. 

Mrs.    Ored--<oni 
Francois   Rabelais. 
Life  and  Works. 

Mrs.  J.  M.   Barnes. 


II 


III. 


swift  maid,  who  can  do  her  work  quick- 
ly and  well,  they  soon  teach  her  to 
«iawdie  by  inventing  duties  for  a  well- 
earned    resting    time. 

If  work  be  well  done,  the  clever  mis- 
tress asks  not  how  nor  when  It  is 
done.  E.\plain  your  ways  to  a  girl. 
I  ut  also  be  willing  to  listen  to  her 
v-ays  of  doing  things.  if  both  seem 
of  equal  merit  household  peace  is  pro- 
moted by  not  being  over  insistent  as 
to  vour  own  methods. 

Tho  long-hea(led  mistress  knows  the 
flifTerence  between  a  friendly  interest 
in  her  maid's  life  and  prying  Into  it. 
The  girl  who  works  in  your  househohl 
I  as  as  much  right  to  lead  her  In- 
iMvidual  life,  provided  that  it  is  well 
within  decent  rules,  as  has  any  other 
woman.  The  mistress  who  infringes 
on  that  right  is  often  doing  her  own 
chore-s. 


LINENS    FOR   SUMMER. 


Popular    Material    in    This 
Season's  Styles. 

I..inens  will  appear  earlier  th.jj^n  usual 
this  year,  and.  unless  I  am  very  much 
misled  by  what  I  saw  on  the  Klvlera 
a  short  time  ago,  they  will  be  the 
summer  fabric  par 
Mrs.    Simco.x    In    the 


excellence.       says 
April    Delineator. 


There  are  many  new  weaves  that  range 
all  the  way  from  a  heavy,  shantung- 
like texture  to  the  slieerer,  ligliter 
<iuallties.  Their  colors  are  no  longer 
harsh  and  crude,  but  take  on  the  same 
odd,  striking  shades  that  are  found  in 
silks  and  cashmeres.  White  linen  will 
be  less  worn  than  formerly,  but  gray, 
tan,  khaki  and  even  the  darker  shades 
— peacock,  berrl  and  the  rest — are  the 
desirable  colors.  They  will  be  used 
distinctly  as  utility  frocks,  supplanting 
almost  entirely  the  separate  shirt  waist 
and    skirt. 

Th»se  morning  dresses — for.  under- 
stand me.  they  are  quite  apart  from 
the  lingerie  frocks  of  handkerchief 
linen  and  lace  of  a  season  or  two  ago 
— will  be,  for  the  most  part,  of  the 
close-Htting  princess  or  semi-princess 
order,  made  with  short,  scant  skirts 
and  trimmed  heavily  with  soutache 
and  buttons.  The  will  be  worn  at  first 
with  dashing  little  coats  of  light- 
colored  serge,  later  with  suit  coats  of 
the  linen,  and  later  still,  when  warm 
weather  Is  really  with  us,  with  sleeve- 
less coats  of  coarse  all-over  lace  dyed 
to  match  the  dress,  and  which  add  a 
delightful  finish   to  a  summer  frock. 

There  will  be  some  attempt  made.  I 
fancy,  to  Introduce  the  sleeveless  coat 
in  the  first  spring  suits  of  serge  and 
the  like.  But  the  idea  is  absurd  and 
fantastic  on  the  face  of  it,  since  serge 
is  meant  strictly  for  utilitarian  pur- 
poses and   is  much   too   heavy. 

One  change  that  will  certainly  appear 
In  the  spring  dresses,  whether  of  cloth 
or  linen,  is  in  the  character  and  quan. 
tity  of  the  lace  combined  with  thent. 
The  new  net  lace  closely  resembles  a 
cluny,  Irish  or  hand-crocheted  mesh, 
with  fine,  small  figures.  Nets  of  this 
will  be  dyed  to  match  the  dress  and  in- 
corporated In  it  as  a  l>odlce  or  part  of 
the  ftkirt.  In  many  cases  almost  half 
of  the   gown   will    be   of  lace. 


MODIFIED  REST. 


Silver  Anniversary. 

Mr  and  Mrs.  John  \V.  Christie  en- 
tert  iiii<='d  last  evening  at  a  large  card 
reception  at  their  home.  ISll  East  Sec- 
ond street  In  honor  Mf  their  silver  wed- 
ding anniver-sary.  The  early  hours 
were  devoted  to  a  reception.  The  rooms 
■wer  decorated  In  yellow  roses  and  nar- 
cissi with  smilax.  Later  In  the  even- 
ing bridge  was  played  at  ten  tables. 
The  favois  we:  e  won  by  Mrs.  H.  \V. 
Cheadle.  Mrs.  Webster  and  the  men's 
prizes  went  to  William  Yale  and  IL 
W     Cheadle. 

To  See  the  Play. 

The  member.-?  of  the  DyWyk  club 
win  entertain  at  a  theater  party  this 
evening  at  the  senior  play  at  the  high 
school  a.ssembly  hall.  Their  guests 
•will  be  entertained  at  supper  nfter  the 
play  at  the  club  rooms  in  the  Winthrop 
building. 

Devotional     Service. 

The  speaker  at  tiie  Sunday  afternoon 
devoti'.nal  service  at  the  rooms  of  the 
Young  Women's  Christian  a.ssociation 
will  be  Rev.  J.  S.  Kirlley.  pastor  of 
th»  First  Baptist  churfch.  Miss  Maud 
Maltson  will  be  the  soloist. 
■ 

Announce     Wedding. 

The  wedding  at  Minneapolis  a  year 
ago  of  Mrs.  Fannie  Cusick  and  Ferdi- 
nand Krieger.  both  of  this  city  was  an- 
nounced Wednesday  at  a  dinner  at 
which.  Mrs.  Krlegers  sister.  Mr.-..  Ce- 
cilia Barn^.^.  entertained  at  her  home. 
1'3  West  Second  street.  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Krieger  will  be  at  home  at  4S1  Me- 
saba  avenue. 

Personal  Mention. 

Mrs  \rUnn-  K.  vlilbert  lias  returned 
from  a  few  days'  visit  with  her  parents 

at  St.  Paul. 

*  •       • 

Mr  and  Mrs.  A.  W.  Hartman  have 
gone    to    the    Twin    Cities    for    a    short 

visit. 

«       *       • 

Miss  Dora  Adron.  a  deaconess  of  the 
Methodi.-it  church  and  connected  with 
the  deaconess  home  at  Cincinnati,  is 
spending  her  vacation  In  this  city,  the 
guest  of  her  si.ster.  Mrs.  J.  C.  Swan,  of 
20-':i  East  Superior  street. 
«       •       • 

Miss  McGregor,  assistant  state  agent 
of  tlie  Uwatonna  school  for  dependent 
children,  is  in  the  city  the  guest  of 
Mrs.  D.  S.  Forgy. 

*  *       * 

Mrs.  A.  Ecker  has  returned  from  a 
two  weeks'  visit  at  Charles  City,  Iowa. 
Stillwater  and   Minneapolis. 

*  *      * 

Mrs.  W.  M.  Chance  of  Little  Falls  Is 
the  guest  of  her  niece.   Mrs.  L.  N.  Mer- 

ritt. 

*  «      • 

Mrs.  Francis  Dykes  and  children  of 
New  York  are  visiting  Mrs.  Dykes' 
mother.   .Mrs.   L.  Iluot. 


The  Modern  Cure  for  Tired 
Nerves. 

Now.  what  is  true  for  normal,  healthy 
life  Is  equally  true  for  abnormal,  mor- 
bid life.  "Tiie  popular  doctrine  for  a  long 
lime  has  been  that  for  nervous  persons 
rest  Is  a  i.ecerslty,  says  Rev.  Samuel 
McComo  In  Harper's  Bazar.  Tlils  doc- 
trine has  been  embodied  in  the  famous 
Weir  Mitchell  cure.  And  doubtless  lor 
certain  cases  rest  should  bt*  commended 
— as.  for  e.Kample,  in  certain  acute  ex- 
haustive states  of  the  nervous  system, 
where  there  Is  a  genuine  or  ph.vsical 
fatigue,  as  dlstlngulslied  from  psychical 
fatigue.  But  modern  students  are  more 
and  more  coming  to  realize  tliat  not 
ab-s-olute  rest,  but  modified  rest — that 
is  to  say,  rest  and  work  combined — is 
the  sovereign  remedy  for  nervous  dis- 
orders. The  great  majority  of  persons 
who  suffer  from  neurasthenia  complain 
of  a  sense  of  fatigue,  and  they  natural- 
ly Infer  that  what  they  need  above  all 
tilings  Is  rest,  or  cessation  from  ac- 
tivity; but  they  forget  that,  in  a  vast 
majoritv  of  Instances  the  fatigue  does 
not  spring  out  of  any  real  muscular 
v.eakness,  but  rather  from  psychical  or 
mental    causes. 


Roger's  Silver  Knives  $'^,75 
and  Forks,  Per  Set.*.**    ^ 

William  Rogers'  extra  silver 
plated  Knives  and  Forks,  ni;(!e 
from  best  flexible  steel;  regular 
price  $3.50  per  set,  special  to- 
morrow at  $2  75. 


89c 

A  54t 


For  Rogers'  $f.25 
Tea  Spoons. 

Extra 
silver  plat 
give    e  X  <f  e  1 1  l(nt 
sex  vice. 


h  c  ay  y 
it4i.  tHat 


Silk  Headquarters  Head  of  Lakes. 
Lake  ATenue,  Mlclii«;tui  and  Superior  Stre«u.  Dnliitli.  Minn. 


25c 

For  fOc  Hair 
Barrettes. 

X  c  w  Cliipnon 
Shell  i'  extreme- 
ly h  a  n  d  s  o  in  e 
carved  effects; 
very    special    25c. 


Stunning  New  Tailored  Suits  Zt^  at  $24.95 


Worth 
.00 

In  Which  Individuality  of  Style  is  Strongly  Featured. 


Perhaps  no  better  illustration  or  more  convincing  demonstration  can  be^ given  of  the  attrac- 
tive values  that  prevail  in  popular  priced  suits  than  this  offering  at  $24.95. 

The  Suits  are  featured  by  the  strictly  tailored  coats,  in  the  new  hipless  effects, 
with  long,  graceful  lines,  which  hold  undisputed  possession  in  first  place  among  leaders 
of  fashion.  The  materials  are  serges,  satin,  soliel  and  satin  prunellas,  in  black  and  all 
C^l/l  or"  *^^  "^^  spring  colors.  Worth  up  to  $85.00.  Specially  ^'JAQT 
kP^4*7^  priced  for  tomorrow  at ^Z^^^/O 


Smart  Suits  at  $  J  8.95 

Smart  Tailored  Suits  of  fine  all-wool  serge,  severe  tail- 
ored models;  coat  in  the  new  hipless  effect  with  long  grace- 
ful lines,  becoming  to  most  any  figure.  New  gored  skirt, 
in  black  and  all  wanted  Spring  colors. 


Attractive  Tailored  Suits  $29.50 

High  grade  strictly  tailored  Coat  Suits  ')f  fine  satin 
finished  French  serge,  in  black  and  colors,  kng  sweeping 
lines  to  coat.  The  little  touch  of  button  and  braid  trimming 
adds  to  both  coat  and  skirt. 


Distinguished  Tailored  Suit  Models  at  $33.75 

Suits  that  take  their  styles  from  imported  models,  and  there  is  a  great  variety  of  styles  to  choose  from.  The  ma- 
terial, are  satin  soliel.  satin  Prunellas,  serges  and  Bedford  cords;  long  coats  with  long  sweeping  lines,  ^ored  skirts, 
some  with  high  girdle  in  black  and  the  new  shades,  such  as  faded  rose,  gosl.n  green,  stone  green,  taupe,  new  blues, 
wild  duck,  catawba.  wistaria,  bisquet  shades  etc.     Regular  $45  value,  special  at  ?33./5. 


Stylish  New  Skirts,  Special  Tomorrow,  at  $5.00 

For  tomorrow,  we  feature  a  special  lot  of  stylish  new  Spring  Skirls,  at  the  special  price  of  $5.00,  made 
in  the  newest  gored  models  of  plain  Panama  and  fancy  striped  serge,  in  black  and  all  the  stylish  new 
sprinu  colors,  beautifully  man-tailored,  fit  and  hano-  perfectly. 

Skirts  that  cannot  be  duplicated  for     less     than     $7.50    anywhere— 
choose  from  these  tomorrow  at $5.00 


GET  YOUR  SHARE  of  these  HANDKERCHIEF  BARGAINS 

You  save  half.^  Tomorrow  is  the  last  day  of  the  sale.     Better  share  in  this  .tomorrow. 
Women's  Linen  Handkerchiefs— Plain   .  Women's  Linen  Handkerchiefs— Plain      Women's  Linen  Initial  Ffandkerchiefs. 
cro-^s  barred      hemstitched     hem;    |  or  cross-barred,  hemstitched,  embroid-    i    Hand    embr.Mderod    initials,    encircled 
20c      value,      special      \f\^    !  ered  borders;  regular  35c  val-      J  J       ;   with   fancy  design.  35c    .alue,      jy 

ON  SALE  ON  BARGAIN  SQUARE. 


or 
regular 
at 


JOc 


Duluth's  Finest  Display  of 

Beautiful  Spring 
Millinery 

New  and  beautiful  styles  in 
Spring  Millinery  awaits  you. 
Hats  that  will  delight  the  heart 
of  every  woman  who  sees  them. 
Most  of  them  made  up  from 
urigiiial  Paris  models  and  can- 
not be  duplicated  anywhere 
else. 

We  again  wish  to  call  your 
special  attention  to  our  popular 
priced  millinery,  made  by  the 
same  staff  that  make  all  our 
hats.  The  artistic  touch  and 
carefulness  mark  all  the  work. 
Hundreds  of  new  styles  are 
shown.  Xo  two  alike.  A  hat 
for  every  face;  a  hat  to  match 
any   gown — $5,   $10  ami   $15. 

Children's  and  Misses'  Hats 

All  the  dashing,  youthful 
misses'  and  children's  Hats  are 
on  view  also.  A  showing  full  of 
delight 


Dainty  Neckwear  for  Women 


PLAIN  SHIRTWAISTS. 


Tailored     Models     Most    in 
Favor  This  Season. 

The  pUiln  tailored  sliii-twaist.  -vvh.oth- 
er  of  linen  or  some  of  the  plain  %vhite 
cotton  material,  is  mo.st  favored  this 
sea.son.  Tlie  vogue  of  the  Gib.son  plait 
at  the  .'ihoulders  is  quite  evident,  but 
other  wai.st.s  will  have  the  simple  tucks, 
either  in  >?roups  or  equi-dlstant,  both  In 
front  and   back. 

When  tliese  tucks  are  made  in 
groups  the  plain  space  between  the 
tucking  is  filled  in  with  hand  work,  the 
solid  embroidery — satin  stitch — being  a 
favorite.  The  same  idea  is  carried  out 
on  the  collar  if  it  is  made  attaciied  to 
the  waist. 

These  waists  open  In  front,  the  regu- 
lation plait  being  two  inches  wide. 
Here  there  is  opportunity  for  display- 
ing handsome  pearl  buttons.  Three 
rows  and  sometimes  four  are  favored. 
Of  course,  there  are  buttonholes  for 
but  one  set.  Sometimes  the  waists  are 
fastened  lieneath  the  opening  with 
smaller  buttons. 

With  the  tailored  suits  coarse  mesh 
net  waists  will  be  much  worn.  The 
lace  will  match  the  color  of  the  suit, 
and  to  make  it  harmonize  more  fitting- 
ly it  will  be  made  up  \vith  bands  or 
straps  of  the  cloth.  The  point  is  to 
have  some  of  the  material  of  the  coat 
and  skirt  appear  on  the  waist  in  some 
form  or  other.  Tlie  sleeves  should 
have  a  little  of  the  heavier  material 
as  a  finish. 

Speaking  of  sleeves,  the  strictly 
tailored  waist  has  the  regulation  sliirt- 
walst  sleeve,  which  is  exceedingly 
scant  with  the  plain  cuff  fastened  with 
link   button.-'. 

For  the  waist  a  little  dressier,  the 
tucked  sleeve  is  generally  chosen.  One 
mav  suit  the  fancy  as  to  the  depth  of 
the  tucks.  Half  an  Inch  is  perhaps  the 
width  generally  preferred.  The.se  tucks 
are  In  groups  of  equ-distant  and  ex- 
tend from  shoulder  to  wrist.  If  the 
sleeve  is  not  finished  with  a  cuff  it  is 
cut  in  a  point,  which  hangs  down  well 
over  the  hand. 

The  turnover  linen  collar,  with  thr 
tie.  bow  or  jabot,  will  be  worn  as  of 
yore.  The  attached  collars,  however, 
will  not  be  discarded.  In  accordance 
with  present  fashion,  these  collars  are 
a  trifle  higher  at  either  side  than  In 
front  or  back. 


A  hint   of  many  attractive  ityles  that  are   the 
vogue  for  this  season. 

New  Peter  Pan  and  Dutch  Collars — Lace  and  em- 
broidery finished;  regular  25c  value,  spe-  "17^ 
cial  at • 

25c  Neck  Tabs  at  J  7c 

Dainty  patterns  in  embroidery  and  lace,      -f  n 
prettily  made;  regular  25c  values.,  at '' 

25c  Ascot  Stocks  1 5c 

Large  assortment  of  pretty  *tyle*r  regu-  t  ^- 
lar  25c  values,  special  for  Satnrda^  at *  ^^ 


Toilet  Articles  and 
Drug  Sundries 


25c 


25c  Pound  Package  Paper  1 5c 

Zenith  linen  cloth  fini>hed  paper,  Mnooth  writing  surlace,  pure      -f  ^ 

white,  letter  size;  regular  price  25c,  special,  per  pound.  . #- ^^ 

25  Envelopes  to  match,  regular  price  2  for  25c;  special  at..  ..8c. 


Magnificient  Display  of 

New  Spring  Footwear 

If  you  want  to  see  the  new  snappy  styles  in  Spring 
Shoes,  come  here.  We  are  now  showing  the  most 
complete  stock  to  be  found  anywhere.  All  the  new- 
est creations  can  be  found  here;  only  the  most  up- 
to-date  styles  are  shown.  Come  in  and  let  us  show 
them  to  you. 

See  Our  Novelties  in  Suedes 

Priced  From  $2.00  Up  to  $6.00 

We  wish  to  direct  your  special  attention 
to  our  famous  Volga  Dress  Shoes  and  Ox- 
fords, made  specially  for  Fretmulh's,  ot 
finest  leather,  shoes  of  distinguished  appear- 
ance. We  know  you'll  admire  them  if  you 
try  on  a  pair.  Priced  from  $3.50  to  .$4.00. 

WeVe  Reduced  Prices  on  All  Men's  Shoes 

We  are  going  to  reduce  our  stock  of  men's  shoes  to  about  half. 
Prices  have  been  made  with  that  end  in  view.  It  will  be  a  grand  oppor- 
tunity for  men  to  save  on  reliable  footwear. 
Men's  $6.00  Stetson  Shoes — In  all  I    Men's 


Lustr-ite   Nail  Bleach..  19r 
35c   Lustr-ite  Cuticle  Soft- 
ener at    525<* 

25c   Lustr-iie   Nail   Enamel.  19e 
35c     Lustr-ite     Stain     Re- 
mover  at 1.9^ 

75c    Buffers    with    powder 

tray,   all   colors ..50(^ 

65c  fine  needle  point  Cuti- 
cle   Scissors    50c 

25c  Flexible  Nail  Files 170 

ItV  box,  1   dozen  lung  Em- 
ery Boards  7e 

10c  hand  Pumice  Stone 7^ 

25c   Nail   Brush 19«^ 

6  Orange  Wood  Sticks 5e 

•    15c  box  Cold  Cream lie     ■ 

Book  Special 

"The  Return  of  Sherlock  Holmes"  by 
A.  Conan  Doyle,  12  mo.,  decorated 
cover,  cloth  bound,  "illustrated."  pub- 
lished at  $1.50;  our  special  C5Q  — 
price 'J  X  C 

Extra  Special! 

Ask  for  1  hese. 

Odds  and  ends  in  ladies'      &><     AH 

Shoes,  $3.50  values 4)  >  ♦^O 

Ladies'  House  and  Dress  Slippers,  in 
patent  and  vici  kid,  $3.(X)  •    (T -f    Q^ 

and  $3.50  values '^  >  ♦73 

Misses'  $2.00  patent  tip  vici  kid  lace 
School    Shoes,    all    sizes,      d^-f    OQ 

per  pair ^  r  ♦w  Z 

Odd  lot  of  ladies',  misses'  and  chil- 
dren's Shoes,  your  choice,  per     AQf, 

pair iOC 

300  pairs  of  children's  Shoes  in  patent 
colt  and  patent  tip,  $1.00  QQr 

values,  Saturday,  per  pair J7C 

Boys'  calfskin  School  Shoes,  in  lace 
style,  solid  throughout;  regular  $2.00 
values,  Saturday  extra  special,  in  all 
sizes  up  to  6.  per  <t  i    OQ 


'''''''  $445 

Crossett 

d  leathers, 

$3.45 


leathers      and 

special  at 

Men's    $4.00     and    $5.00     Crossett 
Shoes — In  all   shapes  and  leathers, 
all    sizes,    special 
at 


Crossett  Shoes — Perfect 
model,  gun  metal  and  patent 
calf,  Blucher  style,  d*-^  QT 

Men's  Dress  Well  Shoes — Vici  kid 
and  calf,  Blucher  >lyle.  ff'^  i  Q 
$3.00   vales,   at *pZ^*  >  7 


38c  Satin  Taffeta 
Ribbon—       90^ 

the  yard jLf  X  w 

Extra  heavy  all  silk  quality,  fully  i'A 
inches  wide,  in  all  new  spring  colors 


Saturday  Sale  of  New  Tailored 
and  Lingerie  ^  t   QR 

Waists  at 4>K70 

Here  is  the  first  pick  of  the  new  Waists  and  a 
sharp  saving  at  the  same  time.  Even  at  the  regular 
prices  such  pretty  waists  as  these  would  interest  al- 
most everybody,  but  some  way  or  another  we  have 
made  savings  in  buying — and  we  are  ready  to  share 
up  with  you. 

Those  practical  tailored  are  made  of 
linen,  madras  and  percale  in  all  white 
and  colored  stripes,  stiff  collars  and  cuffs. 
Dainty  Lingerie  Waists  of  sheer  white 
lawn,  daintily  t  "immed  with  lace  and  em- 
broidery are  very  fetching  styles.  Choose 
tomorrow  frorr  a  large  va-  <I^  1  QO 
riety,  at  each >4^  >  #70 

Handsome  Net  Waists  at  $5.00 

And  what  beauties  they  are!  Ju->t  such  styles  as  particular  dressers 
will  admire,  made  of  excellent  quality  net  in  cream  and  white,  very  ef- 
fectively lace  trimmed,  long  sleeves  and  button  in  back  style,  very  dressy 
and  practical;  choose  from  a  large  assortment  at  $5.00. 

Clearance  Sale  of  All  Small  Lots 
Fall  Underwear  or  Hosiery 


Many  are  in  just  such  weights,  suitable  for  pres- 
ent and  early  Spring  wear.  The  savings  are  from 
Cjuarter  to  nearly  half. 

Women's  $1.75   Union   Suit— Half  wool 
?nd  cotton,  Harvard  Mills  brand,  at 

Women's    $2.50    Union    Suit — Silk    and 
\;'ool  miiced.  Harvard  Mills  brand,  at 

Women's    $1.25    Vests    and    Pants — 14 

\vool,  Harvard  MilL  brand,  at,  each 

^Vomen's    $1.50    Vests    and    Pants — .Ml 

v.'ool,  Harvard  Mills  brand.  ])er  garment. 

Women's   $1.75   Equestrian   Tights — All 
\»-ool,  in  black,  special  at 

(Children's    35c     Vests    and     Pants — Fleece 
lined,  Swiss  ribbed,  special,  per  garment 


$L35 
$1.89 

98c 
$LI9 
$L35 

25c 


Save  on  Wanted  Stockings 


Women's  50c  Fleeced  Stockings — 
Fast  black,  split  soles,  per     C3^*» 

pair -JJC 

Women's    60c    Wool     Hose — Nat- 
ural heel  and  toe,  A-^r 

Women's  50c  Wool   Hose 
Natural  heel  and  toe,  at. .  . 


39c 


Children's  35c  Wool  Hose.      4  Q 
Slight  imperfection,  special..   >  x  C 

Children's    19c   Fleece-lined   Stock- 
ings— Special,     two     pairs     ^CZ 

Women's   19c  Fleece-lined  Host 

Special,  two  pairs 
for 


25c 


To  Retain  Servants. 

A  re.siKt  I  for  lei.sure  is  a  telling  force 
in  niaiit-keepinpr.  Some  women  put  a 
premium     on     slowne.«.s.     If  they  get  a 


Gold  in  Trimmings. 

GoUl,  botli  in  lace  and  corrl.s.  is  mucii 
use<l  as  a  trimming  for  new  ruffs  for 
.spring.  A  narrow  strip  of  gold  is  effec- 
tive used  as  a  band  on  a  white  or  a. 
black  befrilled  ruff. 

Another  way  of  usini?  the  gold  is 
for  an  edging  on  a  black  net  ruff  of 
•  lie      Pierrot      order,      made      e.Ktremely 


Wkat  Retail   Markets    Offer. 


Parsnips.    40   cents   a   peck. 

Wliite  turnips,  40  cents  a  peck. 

Kiital)agas,    20    cents   a   peek. 

<5rape    fruit.    10    to    15    cents    each. 

Mushrooms,    80   cents    a    pound. 

Bru.ssel    sprouts,    35   cent.s    a   box. 

Fresli  asparagus,  35  cent.s  a  bunch. 

Itoa.st    l)eef,    20    cents   a   pound. 

Spare    ribs     lilVfe    cents    a    pound. 

Kggs  are  down  to  a  I^enten  price, 
rhean.  so  that  there  seems  no  possi- 
ble excuse  not  to  have  them  several 
times    a    day.      Speaking    of    eggs,    why 


is  It  that  Easter  is  a  festival  of  eggs. 
Everybody  has  liad  tliem  times  witli- 
out  number  during  the  preceding  forty 
day.s.  and  why  .siiould  on  the  dawning 
of  a  beautiful  Easter  day,  a  feast  of 
eggs  be  regarded  as  a  treat?  It's  very 
foolisli. 

The  new  vegetables  looking  much 
more  desirable  tlian  they  aie,  are  in 
the  market,  suggestive  of  spring  and 
home  gardens  and  green  salads  and 
other    pleasant    tilings. 


full.      A    narrow    cord    sewed    to    every 
frill  would  be  most  effective. 

Long  black  streamers  and  loops  of 
black  ribbon  weiglited  with  gold 
fringe  could  be  the  finish.  Of  course, 
a  neck  dressing  so  elaborate  as  this 
is   only   for     evening     or     formal     day 

It  would  brighten  a  black  toilet  if 
wanted  for  a  day  wedding  or  after- 
noon reception,  etc..  especially  if  a 
gold  rose  were  added  to  the  black  hat. 

A  pr-'tty  ruff  for  house  wear,  made 
from  a  strip  of  white  frilling  facing 
downward,  and  another  narrower, 
pointing  upward,  would  be  effoctiv-^ 
]f  til »  edges  were  concealed  by  a  band 
of  velvet  ribbon  edged  with  gold  cord 
ond  large  gold  dots  worked  on  the 
velvet  band. 


The  Ideal  Kitchen. 

It  has  two  windows,  and  three  if 
possible. 

Also.  It  has  a  southern  exposure,  so 
as  CO  be  cool  in  summer.  The  fact 
of  its  being  warm  in  winter  Is  not 
important,   unless   only   a   gas   stove   Is 

used.  .      X        .,  * 

There  should  be  plenty  of  room  to 
move  things  about,  and  for  every- 
thing to  be  stored  properly  in  Its 
place.  A  kitchen,  more  than  any 
other  place  in  the  house,  should  be 
kept  reallv  clean,  and  this  is  very  hard 
to    do    in  "a    crowded,    badly    arranged 

room.  ,  ,       J  J     « 

It      should       have     hardwood     floors. 

They     are     so     much     easier     to     keep 

clean. 

Neither  wall   papers   nor   burlaps   are 

good.   The  sceam  and   heat  are  said  to 


soften  them  and  make  chem  absorbent 
of   germs  and  dirt. 

I'ainted  walls  and  ceilings  are  most 
hygienic.  They  can  be  scrubbed  down 
frequently. 

Tlie  sink  is  built  several  inches  high- 
er than  is  mo.-^t  sinks.  This  does  away 
with  chat  back-breaking  stoop  that  Is 
enforced  upon  housekeepers  who  have 
to   wash   dishes. 

There  should  be  ample  room  for  two 
tables.      One    is    never    enough. 

Finally,  the  Ideal  kitchen  has  noth- 
ing in  It  which  warm  water  could 
hurt.  It  Is  treated  co  frequent  scrub- 
blngs  with  hot  soapsuds  and  an  abun- 
dance of  water.  No  food  particles  are 
allowed  to  remain  about  to  decom- 
pose and  endanger  the  health  of  die 
Tamily. 


WAR 


VETERAN 
PASSES  AWAY 


E.  K.  Corbctt  Was  Mem- 
ber of  Gorman  Post, 
G.  A.R. 


E.    K. 
veteran 
si.ddeiily 
who  has 


Corbett,    65    years    of    age,    a 

of    the    Civil    war,    died    very 

last   evenii^g.      The   deceased. 

been  emt»loyed  as  chief  engin- 


eer of  the  Jasper  Mining  company, 
wa.s  a  member  of  the  Willis  A.  Gor- 
man post.  G.  A.  R.,  and  the  post  will 
hold  the  regulation  G.  A.  R.  funeral 
services  over  the  remains  at  Forward  s 
undertaking  rooms,  Nineteenth  avenue 
west  and  Superior  street,  at  2  o  clock 
tomorrow   afternoon. 


CENSURED  BY 

CLASSMATES 

Blaine    Pupils    Regret 

Action  of  Their  Rowdy 

Associates. 

Resolutions  have  been  passed  by  the 
students  of  the  Blaine  high  school,  ex- 
pressing their  regret  at  the  outcome  of 
their  basketball  game  with  the  Nelson- 
Dewey  higli  school.  Monday  evening. 
They  also  wish  to  renew  good  rela- 
tions with  their  rival  school  in  ath- 
letics.     The    resolutions    also    severely 


censure   those   who   took  active  part  In 
the  riot. 


Police  Raid  an  Opium  Den. 


The  Superior  i)Oiire  ii 
evening,  about  0:30  o'c 
raided  an  alleged  opiu 
at  17 10^  Third  street, 
rests  and  confiscating 
nalia. 

One  of  the  pri.sonera 
who  gave  her  name  as 
and  the  other  was  Erne 
two  alleged  dope  liend: 
waiting   for   trial. 


lade  a  haul  List 
ock.  when  they 
m  den,  upstairs 
making  two  ar- 
the     parapher- 

was   a    woman. 

Belle  BeLuern. 
St  Coughlin.  The 
I  are  being  held 


In  State  Tournament. 


The  Nelson  Dewey  1 
be  represented  by  its  li 
at  the  Appleton  tourr 
April  1.  There  will 
teams  at  the  meet.  1 
lected  from  Eau  Clai 
Sparta.  Mondovi,  Apple 
Bay.  Oconto.  Two  E 
Point.  Antigo.  Grand 
kesha,  Weyauwega,  Su 
horn  and  Jefferson.  ' 
the  tournament  will  r 
cup. 


igh  school  will 
asket  ball  team 
ament  starting 
be  seven  other 
hey  will  be  se- 
re, Menomonle, 
;on.  West  Green 
ivers,  Stevens 
Rapids.  Wau- 
n  Prairie.  Elk- 
rhe  winners  in 
jceive   a   trophy 


An  All-Star  liaine. 


It  is  expected  tliat 
basket  ball  games  evi 
Superior  will  be  pulle< 
perior  normal  school  I 
two  of  the  crack  tean 
and  Minnesota,  Compai 


3ne  of  the  best 
;r  witnessed  in 
I  off  In  tlie  Su- 
Diiight.  between 
IS  of  Wisconsin 
ly   I  of  Superior 


and  Company  B  of  Minneapolis, 
teams    are    composed    of    stars. 


Both 


His  Wealth  Too  Sudden. 

Mike  Kapston.  after  hanging  around 
a  Superior  saloon  for  nearly  a  week, 
without  money,  yesterday  blossomed 
out  and  started  buying  drinks  for  the 
crowd.  This  fave  Steve  Zatko  a 
'•hunch"  'that  Kapston  had  found  a 
$10  bill  that  he  lost,  and  he  had  him 
arrested  yesterday,  charged  with  lar- 
ceny. The  case  was  continued  until 
tomorrow. 


Goes  to  Texas. 

T.  V.  Badgley  of  Central  Park,  who 
has  lived  in  Superior  for  the  past 
twenty-two  years,  left  last  evening  for 
Texas,  where  he  will  locate  and  later 
be  joined  by  his  family.  He  will 
probably  establish  himself  at  Hous- 
ton, as  the  climate  there  is  said  to 
be  good  for  the  throat  trouble  from 
which   he   l.s   snffcrinpr. 


The    IToyer    DrmH. 

The  bridegroom  and  liis  attendants 
at  a  5  o'clock  chureli  wedding,  should 
wear  frock  coats,  gray  striped  trou- 
sers, wliite  waistcoats,  white  shirts, 
poke  collars,  wliite  or  gray  ascots.  with 
gloves  in  a  sliade  to  match,  patent 
leather  shoes,  and  should  carry  a  silk 
1  at.  Also,  golden  grain  belt  beer 
should  be  served  at  the  table,  to  in- 
sure health.  Keen  appetite  comes  from 
its  use.  Order  of  your  nearest  dealer, 
or  be  supplied  by  Duluth  branch,  MiaJ 
ceapolis    Brewing    company.  jf 


1 


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-♦— ■■ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909 


BLACKMAIL 
IS  ALLEGED 

M.  W.  McDonald's  At- 
torney Goes  to  SeeGov- 
erncr  of  Missouri. 

Mineral  Lease  Worth$llO,- 
000  Deeded  to  Kan- 
sas City  V/oman. 


Minneapolis,  Minn..  March  19. — With 
Governor  Hadley  of  Missouri  as  lead- 
ing man.  Jefferson  City  is  the  scene 
of  developments  In  the  tangle  which 
has  Involved  Mitchell  A.  McDonald. 
Minneapolis  millloiiaire  lumberman. 
McDonald  is  a  prisoner  in  the  Hen- 
nepin county  Jail  on  a  bipamy  charge, 
while  H.  B.  Frybeiger  ot  Duluth.  his 
attorney,  is  In  Jefferson  City  endeav- 
oring to  secure  Governor  Hadley's 
permission  to  the  withdrawal  of  re- 
quisition papers  which  have  been  hon- 
ored bv  Governor  Johnson  of  Minne- 
aota.  "  Harvey  Grimmer,  executive 
clerk  for  Governor  Johnson,  accom- 
panied Mr.  Fryberger.  at  the  govern- 
or's request,  and  will  investigate  the 
charges  that  McIionaUl  ha.«  been  made 
the  victim  of  a  blackmailing  scheme. 
Mrs.  Belle  Hamilton  of  Kansas  City, 
Mo.,  who  save  that  she  married  Mc- 
Donald in  Windsor.  Ont..  in  May  last. 
and  lived  wilh  him  in  Kansas  City  for 
two  months  last  fall  is  the  secretary 
of  the  Oziirk  Mining  company,  a  Mi*- 
■ouri  corporation,  willi  offices  in  Kan- 
sas City.  Pispatctus  from  Kansas 
City  say  that  she  financed  the  com- 
pany and  that  she  is  well  connected 
in    the   Missouri    city. 

Sued  For  yi'r>O.lMI0. 
That  BelU  Hamlleon  began  a  $250,000 
damage  suit  against  Mitchell  A.  W. 
McL'onald.  in  which  she  charged  that 
he  had  inveiglfd  her  into  marriage  by 
the  representation  that  he  was  a  single 
irnn.  de%  eloped  at  the  hearing  before 
Governor  Johnson,  on  Mr.  Fryberger's 
request,  that  the  governor  rescind  his 
action  in  honoring  the  requisitii'rt 
papers.  The  suit  was  begun  for  Mrs. 
Ham/iton  by  ttie  legal  firm  of  Benton. 
Molineaux  &  Morley  of  Minneapolis, 
and  papers  in  the  case  were  served  on 
McDonald. 

At  tlie  hearing  both  Mr.  Fryberger 
and  Mr.  Molineaux  testified  that  tlie 
suit  had  bten  dropped,  as  tlie  result  of 
a  written  agreement  entered  into  by 
McDonald  and  Mrs.  Hamilton.  By  the 
terms  of  this  agieement.  which  was 
•hown  Governor  Joiinsi.n  by  Mr'  Fry- 
berger. McDonald  denied  a  mineral 
lease,  valued  at  $1(h..i'Ki.  to  Mr.  Moli- 
neaux, in  trust  for  Mrs.  Hamilton's 
benefit.  Mr.  McDonald  reserved  tlie 
privilege  of  purchasii.g  the  lease  for 
1110.000.  The  contiart  is  said  to  have 
contained  stipulations  that  Mrs.  Hamil- 
ton should  djop  her  civil  suit,  and  that 
no  furiher  payments  should  be  made 
by  McDonald. 

Mr  .Fryberger  asserts  that  McDon- 
ald had  lived  up  to  his  contract  and 
that  any  fvtttmpt  to  prosecute  Mcl>on- 
ald  in  a  criminal  at  tion  ctiild  only  be 
an  attempt  on  tlie  part  of  the  Kansas 
City  people  to  exact  blackmail.  Mr. 
Molineaux.  the  attorney  for  Mrs.  Ham- 
ilton. tOid  the  governor  that  the  con- 
tract had  not  been  violated  and  that 
he  knew  of  no  reason  wiiy  criminal 
action  should  be  begun,  but  E.  S.  Btn- 
nett.  a  Kansas  City  attorney,  called 
the  attention  of  the  governor  to  the 
fact  that  the  warrant  for  McDonalds 
arrest  was  sworn  t.ut  by  Henry  B. 
Swingley.  not  Mrs.  Belle  Hamilton,  and 
that  the  gevernor  decided  to  postptme 
action  until  he  had  investigated  the 
situation     in     Missouri. 

Two  Theories  Atlvaneed. 
As  a  result  of  the  hearing  before 
Governor  Johnson,  two  theories  are 
advanced  in  regard  to  the  bigamy 
charge  which  has  been  brought 
against  McI)onald.  One  of  the  theo- 
ries is  that  Belle  McDonald,  shadowed 
by  detectives  In  the  employ  of  Mc- 
Donald, and  believing  that  McDonald 
had  violated  his  contract  with  her. 
vised  her  influence  to  have  a  warrant 
Issued  for  McDonald's  arrest.  Ac- 
cording to  attorneys  in  the  case  there 
Is  nothing  In  the  contract  betv/een 
Mrs.  Hamilton  and  Mr  McI>onald  that 
wouid  prevent  the  institution  of  crim- 
inal action  at  any  time,  and  the  fact 
that  Mr.  frfwlngley.  who  swore  out  the 
warrant,  was  named  as  a  trustee  un- 
der the  will  of  Mrs.  Hamilton's  former 
father-in-law.  In  which  Mrs.  Hamilton 
came  in  for  large  betiuests.  and  that 
he  WES  a  friend  of  Mrs.  Ha!nilton's 
former  husband,  adds  strengtJi  to  this 
theory. 

On  the  other  hand.  Mrs.  Hamilton's 
Minneapolis  attorneys  say  that  they 
have  heard  nodiing  from  Mis.  Hamil- 
ton conceining  the  prosecution  of  big- 
amy charges,  and  they  are  of  tlie  opin- 
ion that  the  warrant  was  sworn  t.ut  ly 
Mr.  Swing. ey  without  consulting  Mrs. 
Hamilton. 

E. '.S.  Bennett  of  Kansas  City  said 
thai  he  was  acting  for  Mr.  !>wingley. 
He  admitted  that  he  knew  Mrs,  Hamil- 
ton and  that  he  had  traVisarten  legal 
business  with  her  ''I  did  legal  business 
for  her  when  she  was  living  at  2528 
Be.'iton  avenue.  Kan.<-as  City."  said 
Bennett:  "but  I  am  acting  for  Mr. 
Hwingley  and  not  for  Mrs.  Hamilton  In 
tliis  case.  Mrs.  Hamilton  was  living 
on  Benton  avenue  with  Mr.  McDonald. 
and  she  was  known  as  Mrs.  McDonald. 
The  charge  that  this  is  a  case  of  black- 
mail is  ridiculous.  Mr.  Swingiey  is  a 
retired  real  estate  man  of  Kansas  City 
and  Is  well  known.  He  was  a  friend 
of  Mrs.  Hamilton,  and  he  resents  her 
treatment  by  Mr.  McDonald.  It  is  a 
case  wliere  Kansas  City  friends  of  Mrs. 
Hami:t<n  don't  propose  to  see  lier  mis- 
treated bv  this  man.  Mrs.  Hamilton  is 
a  business  womfin  fine;  bears-  an  excel- 
lent   rtputatiC'n    in    Kansas-  City." 

IS  MOTHER 

OF  FIFTEEN 


Men's  Furnishings- 
New  Things  for  Spring 

The  increasing  popu- 
larity of  our  Men's 
l)enartnT.£iit  Is  at- 
tributable t<5  two 
things:  The  high 
quality  of  merchan- 
dise we  handle  and 
the  extreme  lowness 
of  pricing.  New 
things  are  arriving 
daily  and  they  are 
being  priced — as  al- 
ways— to    sell. 

The  New  Shirts 

A  large  and  varied 
assortment  of  the 
new  stripes  has  just 
been  unpacked. 
Bhirts  made  In  all 
styles,  closed  or  open,  with  cuffs  attached  or  de- 
tached; materials  are  Fine  Madras  and  Percales; 
colors  are  the  best  of  the  wanted  ones  ^1     O^^ 

for  this  season.  Prices,  $2.00,  $1.50  and..«pl«UU 

Also  a  big  stock  of  Men's  Shirts  made  expressly  for 
us.  They  arc  full  in  cut,  well  made  and  of  good 
color  tested  materials;  cuffs  attached;  ex-  C/\^, 
ceptlonal    values    at,    each OvfC 

Railroad  Men's  Shirts 

Good   substantial,   dark,   indigo  blue   shirts,   wilh    two 
detachable   collars,    either   plain    blue   or   with    small 
dots  and   figures   of   white.      You   will   con- 
sider  them  particularly  good  values  at,  each.  . 


mwm 

*  GLASS  DLOCKi 


UAUTYIS 

EARAMOUN' 


Woman  With  Many  Chil- 
dren Thought  to  be 
Insane.     • 

Mrs.  Mary  Zygoskl,  4  4  years  old  and 
the  mother  of  fifteen  children,  is 
charged  with  Insanity,  Information 
filed  against  her  In  probate  court  yes- 
terday afternoon.  She  livts  on  a  home- 
stead in  the  northern  part  of  the 
county.  .She  believes  she  should  sell 
her  household  furniture  and  several 
times    made      arrangements      for      dis- 

f losing  of  it.  yhe  has  been  in  the  state 
nsane  asyluni  twice  and  for  the  last 
two  months,  she  has  been  In  a  Du- 
luth    hospital. 

ROOSEVELT  ReI'EIVES 

'NEK.HBOR-  I)ELE(;ATI0\, 


Oyster  Bay,  N.  Y.,  March  19.— Theo- 
aore  Roosevelt  yesterday  received 
"Koosevelt's  neighbors"  of  Nassau 
county,  a  delegation  of  250  prominent 
men.  Republicans  and  Democrats, 
whom  he  had  planned  to  receive  at  the 
"White  House  March  3.  but  who  failed, 
owing  to  the  storm,  to  reach  Washing- 
ton   on    time. 

Wearing    silk    hats    and    dark    rain- 


Boys*  Clothing — New 
Spring  Styles 


ExquisitelVew  Spring  Suits 


75c 

Men  s  Colored  Border  Hdkfs. 

Large  sized   White  Handkerchiefs,  with  colored   bor- 
der— only    a    few    c^ozen    in    the    lot — and    they    arc 
worth  all  of  10c  each.     Saturday's  price, 
each 


White  Goods  Department 

A  Saturday  Special. 

A  beautiful  assortment  of  White  Waistings,  In  sheer 
and  medium  weights — dots,  stripes,  checks,  broken 
checks   and    fancy    figures — under   value,  OR/* 

Saturday,   per  yard    £t%Jv,f 

Silk  Department — 

A  Saturday  Special. 

Another  lot  of  those  White  Wash  China  Silk.s — all 
pure   silk — Saturday's  sale   price —  I  Q^ 

pfcr   yard    "  %^\^ 


DOXT  FAIL  Tt)   SEK  ()VH  M.\<;NinCi:\T 
DISPIJVY  OF  NFAV  F.\LL  DHKSS  FABItlCS. 


Shoes  of  Merit 


Special  values  in  Tailored  Suits  await  Saturday  shoppers  here. 
A  large  assortment  of  finely   tailored  suits   in  the   smart   new   spring  mod 
made  of   fine    French    Serges,    Prunellas.    Fancy    Worsteds    an'd   satin    fiiusl 


els. 
hed 


5c 


cloths,  a  dozen  styles  to  select  from;  suits  in  which  beauty  d^#)^  Cti\ 
and  utility  are  combined,  in  all  the  wanted  shades  of  this  M^^^%j\J 
new    season,    at "^ 

For  style,  workmanship  and  material  our  $25.00  Suits  are  unequalled;  special 

effort  was  made  in  the  selection  of  this  line,  and  we  are  ju!=tly  proud  of  the 

result.     At  this  price  we  are  showing  a  wide  variety  of  styles,  all  arc   of  the 

long  hipless  variety,  some  are  plain  tailored;     d^O[^    i\f\ 

others   have  button  and  other  trimmings— all    ^n^^^\J\J 

are   excellent   values   at   this   price t^ 

A  A  ^   r»    ^  /\  ^^'^  ^^^  showing  Tailored  Suits,  which 

Af  S^  1  n  *SII  positively  cannot  be  duplicated  in  the 
/A. I  ^f  X  \J»%J\J  city  under  $20  00  Suits  of  Fine  Pana- 
mas wtih  long  36-inch  hipless  coats,  satin  lined;  skirts  are  of  the 
new  gored  m<idel,  carefully  tailored  and  right  in  hang  and  lit. 
There  are  plain  tailored  styles,  also  those  trimmed  with  Benga- 
line  at  collar  and  cuffs  and  pockets;  they  come  in  navy,  brown, 
rose  and  black;. exceptionally  good  values  at  $16.50. 

The  New  Long  Coats 

Our  assortment  is  widely  diversified,  beginning  as  it  does 
at  the  inexpensive  ones  at  $10.00  and  rising  in  easy  stages  to  the 
elaborate  coats  at  $50.00  and  more. 

For  Saturday  we  specialize  Long  Coats  of  good  quality  Serges, 
Coverts   or   Fancy   Checked   or   Striped   Coatings,   in   hipless  or 
semi-fitted  models,  all  are  well  tailored,  trim-     -*-  —      -     ^  -**^ 
nicd  with  fancy  buttons,  large  patch  pockets, 
etc;  specially  priced  for  Saturday  at 

Panama  and  Serge  Skirts 

Ladies'  fine  Panama  and  Serge  Skirts,  in  the  new  gored  models,  soine 
are   perfectly   plain   tailored,  others  are   trimmed  with   strappings,  braids 
or  silks;  skirts  in  which  perfect  tailoring,  perfect  fit  and 
hang  arc  assured,  in  ladies'  regular  and  small  sizes,  blacks 
or  colors.     Specially  priced  for  Saturday,  each 


Th''re  is  not  an  idea 
or  a  piece  of  material 
in  snart  clothes  for 
boys,  that  we  cannot 
8ho^' 

W<;  have  selected  our 
models  for  their  orig- 
inal and  youthful  de- 
signs,      together       with 

their  good  wearing 
qualities,  and  there  is 
no  piace  where  you  can 
get  better  clothes — at 
the  same  prices  for 
your  boys. 

Ncjw  Spring 
Reefers 

Per  the  boys  of  2^^ 
to  S  vears  of  age.  smart 
little  Reefers  for  spring 
wear.  There  are  navy 
blue  serges,  red 

vicunas,  tan  covertn, 
etc  prettilv  trimmed 
with  gilt  buttons  and 
emblem  on  sleeve — all 
are  ^tw  goods — in  this 
spring's  styles  _—  very 
spec  al  "" 

valU'iS   at 


les    —    veiy 

$3.75 


,'et    cellar — 

$4.95 


igs.    in    nipiebb   oi 

$14.50 


$7.50 


Also    a    fine   assortment 
of        Fancy  English 

Wor?tt  ds,  finely  tailored 
— w  th    velvet    cellar — 
special  at 
each     .... 

And  an  assortment  of  guaranteed  all-wool  shepherds' 
X,k_Scotch    tweeds-with       velvet      collar- fa.,  cy 
cuff!'    and     pockets,     and     silk    embroi- 
dered emblem  on  sleeve,  at    


tuiar — lancy 

$5,75 

Russian  and  Sailor  Blouse  Suits 


rut  and  tailored  as  perfectly  as  "'*  •V%^v;YTa;'boy'H 
witl  the  little  trimmings  so  dear  to  the  n. at  boys 
heart  Suits  of  naw  blue  serge,  fancy  brown,  gray 
and  blue,  striped  wors'teds.  etc.  With  fancy  _en.br.£- 
dertd  collar  and  shield— for  boys  of  2\^ 
to  10  years.       Great  value  at   


ncy  emoroi- 

$3.75 

Oouble  Breasted  Norfolk  Suits 


New  Lingerie  Waists 


Another   big   shipment   of  the   new   Lingerie   Waists   has   ju^t   been  un- 
packed     There   are  plain  tailored,   lace  or  embroidery  trimmed,  buttrn 
front    or   back    models,   all    with   1<  ng    sleeves,   some    with    -^  ^      -^  — * 
detachable     laundered     collors.     Rare     values     at     Satur- 
day's price,  each 


immeci,    nmu  ii 

$1.25 


For  th<  bevs  of  !^  to  10  years  c  f  age— wear-i  e.-isting, 
dusi -defying  suits  of  fine  all  wool  materials.  Shades 
of  tan.  grav.  etc..  with  knlcker  pants,  and  fancy  tail- 
ored pockets  and  cuff.*^  right  in  style,  ^  ^  ^^i^ 
rlgV  t   in   materia],   and   right   in   price.  . 

AlK«t Suits  for  rarer  occasions — for  dress  <  r  Sunday 

v.(.y,— -strictly  man-tailored  and  with   fancy  pockets, 
cuffs,    lapels,    etc.,    of   line    new    fancy    weaves.    In    all 
the    dtsirable    colors    and    styles    of   the 
seanon  of  1909.      Priced  at   


i  lancy  uwi- 

$4.95 

s  <  r  Sunday 
Ky   pockets, 

aves.    In   all 

$8.00 


Our  shoes  arc 
honest,  reliable, 
stylish  and  com- 
fortable always, 
and  at  all  times 
you  may  select 
frf'm  our  stock 
with  a  surety  of 
satisfaction! 


EXTRA  SPECIAL  NO.  1 
IMPORTANT 
SALE  OF 


PICTURES! 

On  Bargain  Counter  No.  2. 

One  lot  of  large  sized  pictures— copies  of  the  ^'^^'''^'' ^^^■'^J7^ 
lithographed  in  beautiful  natural  colors.  There  are  >Jeopol,tan 
scenes.  Shakespearian  scenes.  Landscapes— reproducUons  of  J^f'^^Ji^.f 
portraits,  etc.  Sizes  13x17— 11 '/J>x8— and  panels  i*'^x  18.  ''^n*>  "^ 
niemb«>r  there  arc  only  1.000  in  all— they  ought  ty^  l^gt  abmit  an  hour— 
the   price —  ^-Tl-"* 


pJ^me^  10  cents  each  | 


EXTRA  SPECIAL  No.  2 


New  Boots  for  Ladies 

With  spring  and  its  nn're  or  less 
sloppy  weather  right  at  our  doors, 
every  woman  should  have  a  pair  of 
our  stout  street  boot.s — made  of  good, 
durable  leathers  on  stylish  and  com- 
fortable lasts,  lace,  hlucher  or  button 
styles — both  tan  and  black — every 
pair  guaranteed — $4.00  ^Q    ^f\ 

and    npO,iJ\J 

Mechanics*  Shoes 

Mr.  Worklngman!  If  you  are  look- 
ing for  shoes  suited  exactly  to  your 
needs.  Shoes  built  for  hard  usage 
— but  withal,  comfortable,  and  neat  in 
appearance — heavy  oak  tanned  solos 
— with  uppers  of  calfskin  and  kanga- 
roo— then,  we  direct  your  attention  to 
our  "Meclmnics'  Shoes."  There  is 
nothiiig  omitted  that  could  in  any 
way  add  to  their  appearance,  com- 
fort and  durability — 
Prices  $4.00  ami 


^3.50 

"Nettleton  Shoes"  for  Men  ! 


The  best  of  all  the  good  ones — new 
spring   lasts  are  here — high  or  low 
cut — black  or  tan — at 
$7,  $6.  $3.50  aiul 


$5.00 


Shoe  Repairing 

We  call  for  and  »ieiiver,  also  we 
guarantee  all  rei)air  v.ork.  There's 
a  price  difference,  too.       Ours  is  less! 


"P.  &  W."  Men*s  Shoes 


j  Made  of  the  best   of  materials — in 
neat   snappy      styles — hoots     or  ox- 

!  fords — lace  or  button  .styles — blacks 

i   or  tans — $4.00 
and    


$3.50 


— ! 

"'%  S:f i,^'  NECKWEiVR 

Ten  gross  of  men's,  women's  and  boys'  ties.  There  are  four^ 
in-hands  and  shield  bows.  The  shield  ties  ^7- f  ^^"^^j^t^l.-J^'a^ 
silk  covered  shield.  The  f<>"^-'"-h''^"^^,^,'^", '^.f'"^  ea?h^  -Th- y 
Is  used  ordinarily  in  ties  retailing  from  line  to  $1_00  ^^^^^^  ^"  ;^, 
cone  in  black  and  colors.  As  a  trade  bnnger  for  Saturday,  w. 
offer  you  your  choice  of  the  lot  at 

10  cents  each 

These  are  new  goods!  Just  unpacked  laf-t  Wednesday--aijd  there 
is  no  limit  as  to  quality.  First  come,  best  served.  Buj  1.11  they 
are   gone! 


Advance  Showing 
of  Millinery. 


^ofTheWASIiFA^ 

"The  Wash  Fabric  that  is  Washable" 


AMEK1G/\N  PRINTING 
WASH  FABRICS 


Shoe  Shining 


Comfortable  shining  parlors — Ex- 
pert.s  in  attendance.  Special  seats 
for    ladies         SHINE— FIVE    CENTS. 


HANDKERCHIEFS 

Spe<-ial    Vahii's    for    .Saturday. 
Sheer  pure  linen  handkerchiefs — hem- 
stitched, real  value  1.5c  each —       »T 

on  Saturday,  each    •  V» 

Pure  linen  hemstitched  handkerchiefs 
—fine  *iheer  linen,  really  worth      Q 

20c — on  Saturday,   each    Z/K^ 

Extra    fine,    very    sheer,      pure    linen 
handkerchiefs,  real  value  25c     -l  C 

— on    Saturday,    each    ^  *J^ 

These  Handkerchiefs  are  all  Pure 
Linen  and  are  the  best  values  that 
you,  or  we,  have  ever  known.  Dont 
miss  this  sale! 


We  warned  you  that  this  sale  was  for  a  week  only,  and  we  warn  you 
again,  that  tomorrow.  Saturday,  is  the  last  day !  If  you  have  already  bought, 
then  you  KNOW  the  values  we  are  offering,  and  will  undoubtedly  want  to 
make  some  further  purchases  tomorrow.  If  you  have  not  already  partici- 
pated in  this,  the  biggest  value-giving  Wash  Fabric  Sale  ever  held  m  Du- 
luth-Don't  Delay-be  here  tomorrow!  Buy  what  you  will  then-quan- 
tity is  unlimited,  BUT  THE  SALE  ENDS  AT  10  P.  M. 

A  Few  of  The  Fabrics. 


Our  advance 
showing  of  the 
newest  and 
most  beautiful 
conceptions  o  f 
t  h  e  authorita- 
tive    modes    in 

Spring  Millinery,  has  again  dem- 
onstrated our  sui»eriority  in  style 
matters. 

Our  display  includes  many  of 
the  very  latest  imported  models — 
mcidifitd  and  Americanized,  and 
many  clever  copies  and  original 
designs,  by  our  own  talented  mil- 
liners. 

We  have  been  exceedingly 
careful  in  our  buying,  and  offer 
yon  the  very  maximtmi  of  style 
and  quality— a  Hat  becoming, 
even  if  inexpensive — at  the  mini- 
miun  of  cost. 


ON  THE  BARGAIN 
COUNTERS. 

Shirting  Prints 

Several  thousand  yards  of 
American  Printing  Co 's 
choice  Shirting  Prints — white 
with  black  and  colored  fig- 
ures, dots,  and  stripes,  suit- 
able for  home  dresses,  chil- 
dren's wear,  boys'  waists, 
shirts,  etc., 

During  This  Sale, 
per  Yard 


6c 


C^ai-dinal   Rods.   Stripes  and   Checks. 
Fancy  t'hecketl  and  FlRured  Grays. 
Oxfords   and    lA^Ut    Gray    Fancies. 
Claret      Kt-ds — Checks,      Plaids      and 

Stripes. 
Claret  Keds — Fancy  Flffured  Effects. 
Itlack   and   White    Plaids, 
lihwk   and   White  Checks  with  White 

Dot.s.  ' 

White    Grounds,    Black    and      Colored 

Mgures.  ' 

Wlilto    Grounds      with      Checks      and  j 

Plaids. 


MercerlMd    Dret-s    Giiishams. 

Indigo  Foulards. 

Calcutta  Fancie**. 

Mcrcerixcil  Plald«  and  Cl.eck*;. 

HIack   and    White    Plain   <^^l»<',^,»^''-,,   v^t 
Black   and    White    Broken    Check   Ef- 

Bluc  Grounds— Striped,  Doited  and 
F'l^ured.  . 

liiffht  Fau<y  Che<ks  and  Plaids. 

Foulard  Silk  Fabrics. 

Dress    <;inKham   .Styles. 

.\inorifan   Shirtinn  Styles. 

Cardinal  Beds— uith  Pink  and  Polka 
Dots. 

And    Innumerable   Others. 


Made  Up  Mcdels 
on  Display 


7c 


per  yard  for  your 
choice  of  any  of 
these  fabrics. 


Your  Choice  of 
Any  of  these  Fa- 
brics, per  yd 


7c 


Figures,  dressed  in  made- 
up  models. will  be  shown  both 
ir.  our  windows  and  in  the  de- 
j.artnitnt.  These  models  will 
give  a  good  Idea  of  the  pos- 
slDilitloK  of  make  up. 

Fashion  Sheets    for 
1909 

The  New  Fashion  Sheets — 
printed  in  colors  and  por- 
traying these  fabrics  made  up 
in  fashionable  drejises  and 
suits  of  the  comlnij  season, 
will  be  given  free  with  eve 
purchase. 


•n, 


Saturday  Glove  Specials 

Kid  and  F"abric 
Gloves  of  our  own 
importation;  line  In 
(juiility,  correct  in 
style,  and  properly 
priced. 

"Fownes"    New    Silk 

Ciloves — "FowiuV 

3-clas|i  Cikives. 

"Fownes"  two-clasp, 
new  Silk  Gloves^ 
with  reinforced  lin- 
ger tips,  in  black  and 
colors^   at — 

$1,  75c,  50c  pr. 

NKW   KID  CiLOVKS. 

The  new  "Debutante"  Kid  Gloves — in 
black,  white  and  all  the  new  shades 
lor  spring — per 

pair    

"FOWNES".       "DAGM.^R"    GLOVF,S. 
V^'ith   a   world-wide   reputation;    \ve've 
just   unpacked   our     new 
spring  stock — per   pair.. 

THE    NEW       "CVRZON"      GLOVES. 

In  navy,  tan,  brown,  black,  white  and 

cream,  at,   per 

pHir 


IM*\v      ?»ii<i»i»  ;t» 

$1.00 

•  glovf:s. 

ition;    we've 

$1.50 

GLOVES. 

:,  white  and 

$2.00 


H    P= 


coats,  with  a  red  carnation  in  the  but- 
tonhole and  carrving  umbrellas  rolled 
tightly,  the  delegation  arrived  on  a 
•■■pecial  tr?in  from  Mineola  and  other 
tov.-ns  nearby.  They  appeared  as  they 
did  In  the  inaugural  parade  in  Wash- 
ington. Headed  by  a  band,  the  colors 
and  a  banner  with  the  delegation  s 
name  and  an  escutcheon  bearing  a  lion, 
the  party   marched   by  fours   up  Saga- 


more Hill.       They  presented  a  striking 
appearance     as     they     approached     the 

house. 

•- 

PINE  CITY  MAN  L0SE8 

HIS  LIFE  NEAR  MORA. 


den  of  Pince  City^  in  •  the  employ  of 
the  J.  S.  McGratli  LifBber  company, 
was  fatally  Injured  while  at  work  re- 
pairing the  Knife  Lake  dam,  above 
this  place.  A  heavy  timber  fell,  strik- 
ing his  head.  He  was  brought  to  this 
place,  but  lived  but  a  few  hours.  Mad- 
den   was      about    40    years    of    age.     He 


Mora,  Minn..  March  19— Edward  Mad-  I  leaves  a  wife,  residipg  at  Pin©  City 


(iOOD  LOliGlNC;  WINTER. 

Upper  Michigan   Firm    Cut    Many 
Million  Feet  of  logs. 

Ashland,  Wis..  March  19.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)  — Harry  Park,  of  the  firm 
of    Moore.    Park    &    Sharp    loggers,    is 


home     for    a    few 
Michigan   having   comp 
ter  operations. 

The  company  have  ei 
during  the  past  seaso 
suit  of  their  labors  ha' 
000  feet  ot  logs.  It  » 
uyu.illv  Kcod  winter 
cordir.g  to  Mr.  Park. 
Sharp   log   the   year  ar 


wetks    from    Upiier 
leted   their   wln- 


nployed  oOO  men 
n  and  as  a  re- 
re  put  in  12,000.- 
;as  been  an  un- 
for  logging  ac- 
Moore,  Park  & 
ound  as  a   usual 


thing,  but  this  spring  they  will  not 
begin  on  their  summer  contracts  until 
the  latter  rart  of  April.  The  average 
output  lor  summer  and  winter  totals 
up  to  ncnfly  30.000.000  feet.  Most  of 
this   is    used    in    mine    construction. 

Phone  your  want  adb  to  The  Herald. 
Both  phones,  324. 


' 


-9-   f 


^31^— «Ti--  JS^tm  lajiW   K^ 


/v 


1  _ 


6 


You  Can't  Better 
the  Breed  b>  Polishing 
I  the  Brass  on  the  Harness— 


MJdUi^MoJt^ 


CI  RRAN  TAKES  PLEDCJE. 

Fi'.ie  Has  KefoimHtory  Effect  on  So- 
eialist  M.  P. 

Loiulon,  March  19. — Pete  Curran.  the 
Socialist  M.  P..  who  was  lincHl  at  the 
Mansion  House  last  week  for  undue 
Bpirimous  exhilaration,  has  signed  the 
pled«r>. 

Mr  Cutran's  position  was  discussed 
•t  the  weekly  meeting  of  tho  Labor 
partv.  over  whiih  Mr  Henderson,  M.  P. 
presided.       at    the    house    of    commons. 

A  letter  to  the  chairman  fropi  Mr. 
Curran  was  read,  in  which  the  member 
for  .liirro\\  said  that  he  recognized  his 
dutv  In  this  important  matter  to  the 
moveiuent  with  which  he  had  been  so 
long  connected,  and  felt  that  it  was 
due  to  th.o  Labor  party  that  he  should 
ftive  a  definite  assurance  as  to  ills  per- 
sonal conduct  in  the  future.  He  re- 
quested the  chairnum  to  convey  to  the 
party  the  fact  that  it  was  his  strict 
rntt-ution  to  abstrtlu  from  alcohol  in 
th«  future. 


Nuiice  to  the  Public 

We  wlsli  to  announce  to  the  public 
that  we  have  bought  out  all  the  In- 
terest of  Mr.  John  F'.  Urander.  who  has 
handled  our  family  trade  business  for 
the  last  six  veara.  From  now  on  we 
win  handle  tiiis  business  ourselves. 
TV'e  have  secured  the  services  of  Mr. 
Harrv  P.  Hall,  who  will  be  pleased  to 
see  all  of  tno  old  friends  and  custom- 
ers of  Mr.  Brander.  The  office  ana 
warehouse  .still  remain  at  the  same 
plaie.  117  West  First  street.  We  will 
endeavor  to  give  the  public  and  cus- 
tomers t  he   best   posjsible  service. 

The  tokphoiie  numbers  are  the 
same,   484    new    and    1430-K    old   'phone. 

^^'e  sball  be  pleased  to  receive  or- 
ders for  family  trade,  either  by  'plione 
or  personal  call  at  117  West  First 
street,  and  sucii  orders  will  be  given 
the  very  best  attention. 

We  invite  all  customers  and  friends 
to  tall  at  oui-  brf'uery.  Tv/enty-nlntli 
avenue  west  and  Hilm.  did  inspect  our 
splendid  new  bottle  house,  and  see 
wifi:  what  caie  and  cleanliness  we 
prepare  our  famous  brands,  the  Kex 
and   Moose. 

Thanking     all  friends     for     past     pa- 
tronage,   and      soliciting      your      future 
business  and  orders,  we  remain. 
!►»   LITH    BRKWIXG    &    MALTING    CQ 

Brewery.   Twenty-ninth   avenue   west. 

l'imil>  tradt)  ofltice  and  warehouse. 
117    W.  St   Ffvst    street. 

HARRV    P.    HALL.   City   Agent. 

MARY  (URDKN.'fRIMA  DONNA, 
MAV  WEI)  RUSSIAN  PRINCE. 

Phllad.lphia.   Pa..   March   19. — Mary 

Garden,  the  prima  donna  in  speaking 
to  friend."  in  the  Philadelphia  opera 
lioiise.  said; 

•I  shall  sail  for  Europe  April  13 
and  when  I  reach  Paris  about  a  week 
later.  I  will  give  my  an.swer  to  Prince 
Mavcordato.  who  is  In  love  with  me." 

Prince  Mavcordato  Is  a  well-known 
figure  on  the  continent  and  comes 
from  an  old  llussian  family.  He  has 
been  a  persl.stent  wooer  of  the  singer 
for  three   years. 


iHySIEIiEIMTS 


WHERE  TO  GO  TONKiHT. 


LYCEUM — "The    r.irl.-J    From    Berlin." 

MINSTREL  SHOW. 


GAINED  FLESH, 
COLOR  AND  A 

GOOD  APPETITE 

A  Minnesota  Woman  Tells  What 

the  Tonic  Treatment  Did  for 

Her    When    She    Was 

Weak  and  Nervous. 

Neglect  or  imi)roper  treatment  of 
womau'd  ills  almost  inevitably  leads  to 
a  train  uf  unfortunate  results  and  fre- 
quently to  a  lifetime  of  miHery.  In  time 
almost  every  organ  of  the  body  becomes 
affected,  tlie  uervous  system  is  broken 
down,  the  digestion  is  weakeued  and 
Bympioms  of  kidney  trouble  develop. 

Women  who  become  pale  and  lose 
weight  and  ambition  and  are  subject  to 
Iieadaches  and  fainting  c^pells,  need  such 
a  toaio  as  Dr.  Williams'  Pink  Pills. 
They  are  especially  adapted  for  girls 
and  women  of  all  ages  and  give  just  the 
aid  required  to  bring  back  health  and 
strength  to  the  nervous  and  ex'nausted. 

Weak,  nerrous  women  owe  it  to 
themselves  to  trv  this  tonic  treatment 
with  Dr.  Williaiais'  Pink  Pills.  The 
Talne  of  the  pills  is  well  shown  in  the 
case  of  Mrs.  Richard  Ahrens,  of  Colum- 
bian Block,  Brainerd.  Miim. 

"I  have  fotmd  Dr.  Williams'  Pink 
Pills,"  she  says,  'to  be  tlie  best  medi- 
cine for  weakness  common  to  my  sex. 
Owing  to  a  run-down  condition  of  my 
blo<Kl.  I  suffered  for  over  two  years  with 
weakutss  anil  nervousness.  My  nervous 
Bvstem  wad  in  a  terrible  state.  I  lost 
flesh  and  suffered  everything  a  woman 
could.  I  had  severe  pains  through  the 
toi)  of  my  head  and  arrt)8.s  my  temples. 
When  these  spells  came  on  me  I  would 
liave  to  give  up  and  was  often  confined 
to  bed  for  a  dav  or  so.  After  these 
headaches  I  would  feel  weak  for  days. 
I  had  no  apjietite  whatever. 

•'The  doctor  did  not  help  me  much. 
For  a  time  I  would  feel  better  under  liis 
treatment  and  then  be  wori»e  again. 
Through  reading  about  Dr.  Williams' 
Pink  fills  I  was  led  to  give  them  a  trial. 
I  soon  felt  better  and  gained  rapidly.  I 
gained  in  flesh,  had  a  good  color  and 
oould  eat  a  hearty  meal.  I  take  the  pills 
now  once  in  a  while  for  a  tonic  and 
always  receive  benefit  from  them." 

Dr"  Williams'  Pink  Pills  are  sold  by 
all  druggists,  or  sent  by  mail,  postpaid, 
on  receipt  ofprice,  60  cents  per  box ;  six 
boxes  for  |:6.50,  by  the  Dr.  Williams 
Medicine  Co. .  Schenectady,  N.  Y.     The 

f tills  are  gtiaranteed  to  be  saf»and  abso- 
ately  liarmless  to  the  most  delicate  con- 
stitution. They  contain  lio  morphine, 
opiate,  narcotic  nor  Mgrthiag  to  oaoM  • 
drug  iiabife. 


Many  Diiliithians  Attend  Production 
Staged  by  Superior  Ellis. 

Quite  a  number  of  Duluth  people, 
not  all  of  them  Elka,  attended  the 
Elks'  minstrel  .«how  at  the  Grand  Op- 
era house  in  Superior  last  night,  and 
three  Duluthlans,  Miss  Clara  Collier, 
Fred  Hall  and  Don  Cole,  contributed  a 
generous  share  towards  the  succe.s.s  of 
the  affair.  Duluthlan.s  were  pretty 
much  in  evidence,  boili  on  and  otT  the 
.stage,  in  fact,  for  all  the  lower  boxes 
had  been  .secured  beforehand  by  six- 
teen members  of  the  Dy-Wyk  club, 
who  attended  the  performance  in  a 
b.idy. 

The  show  Itself  is  one  of  the  best 
amateur  producilons  ever  stased  at 
I  he  Head  of  the  Lakes.  The  steps  and 
drills  of  the  end  men  are  remarkabl*, 
con.sideriiit?  the  fact  that  it  Is  an 
amateur  performance,  and  there  is  a 
Ihst-class  line  of  sonjfs,  well  sung, 
although  not  so  numerous  as  Is  usual 
in    an    attraction    of    this    kind. 

TheVe  are  several  original  special- 
ties, and  some  of  them  are  novelties 
in  tlieir  way.  All  of  them  are  good. 
Mi.«s  Clara  Collier  of  I>tiiuth  and  Harry 
Howell  of  Superior,  appeared  in  one  of 
these,  "A  Few  Minutes  in  Musical 
Comedv."  The  stunt  is  original  with 
these  two.  It  is  clever,  and  met  with 
great  favor  last  nlg'ht.  Miss  Collier, 
pretty,  graceful  and  winsome,  sang  her 
fines 'delightfully,  and  it  wa.s  a  pleas- 
ure to  witness  her  dancing.  Mr.  How- 
ell   gave   her    capable    suppovL 

Fred  Hall  was  a  big  success  as  end 
man.  Hia  song.  "Who?  Me?"  was  a 
laugh  producer,  and  the  manner  In 
which  it  was  rendered  l)rought  w^hoops 
of  delight  from  the  audience.  Hi.« 
makeup  as  an  elongated,  loose-jointed 
negro  was  most  elt<eciive,  and  seemed 
just  a  little  bit  better  than  that  of  any 
of  the  other  nine  end  men.  He  also 
appeared  to  good  advantage  in  several 
other  songs,  and  he  was  easy  and 
graceful   in   the  dances. 

Do  nCole,  the  other  Duluthian.  sang 
"Take  Me  With  Vou  In  Vour  Dreams,  ' 
and  he  was  a  favorite  erf  the  evenitig. 
His  voice  is  sweet  and  clear,  and  could 
easily  be  heard  in  all  parts  of  the 
theater.  Mr.  Cole  was  the  hit  of  the 
Hrsl  half  of  the  performance,  and  was 
recalled    three    times. 

The  performance  will  be  repeated 
tonight,  and  will  be  put  on  at  Hibbing 
Sunday    night.  •,..,.      ^^ 

Following  are  the  names  of  the  Dy- 
Wyk  club  members  who  attended  the 
show:  Ed  Borgen.  James  Jones,  Rich- 
ard Jones,  V.  H.  Hawkins,  Grant  Gra- 
ham, George  C.  Cowing,  George  D. 
McCarthv.  Robert  H.  Bulloch,  Al  Mies, 
Bert  Montgomerv.  Ben  I'etz.  Charles 
Dardis.  M.  F.  Murray,  C.  Roland  West. 
S.  A.  Paddock,  H.  L.  Dudley  and  Bethel 
Robinson. 

"The  Gills  From  Berlin." 

The  Lvceum  will  have  Corinne  to- 
niglit  in  the  new  musical  comedy,  en- 
titled "The  Girls  f'rom  Berlin."  which 
had  its  initial  presentation  in  the  Llb- 
trtv  -th-ater.  Xew  York  city,  by  Klaw 
&  krlanger.  where  it  remained  to  ca- 
pacity audiences  for  four  months.  The 
b..ok  is  by  John  J.  ilcNallv.  while  the 
orchestration  and  vocal  ensemble  num- 
bers are  by  William  Jerome  and  Jean 
Schwartz.  Tlie  new  play  marks  the 
realization  of  one  of  Miss  Corlnue's  am- 
bitions— that  of  playing  a  .serio-comic 
role.  Tlie  play  is  a  well-built  comedy, 
not  of  the  type  of  so-called  musical 
comedy,  but  having  a  well-rounded  plot 
with  its  characters  of  the  flesh  and 
blood  variety.  In  the  tlrst  act,  Miss 
Corinne  will  sing  lier  latest  song  suc- 
cess, entitled  "Brisht  Eyes."  and  a 
'lerman  song,  with  the  chorus,  entitled 
"I'nter  den  Linden."  There  are  a  num- 
ber of  song  liits  of  the  lighter  variety, 
including.  "I  Think  of  You  the  Whole 
r«-ar  Round."  "I'd  Sooner  b^  a  Has 
LSecn,"  "Beneath  the  Moon,"  "Signs, 
"Just  Hume  From  College,"  'Poor  TJttle 
Foolish  Man,"  and  "There's  Not  Another 
Girlie  m  the  World  For  Me."  The 
comedy  is  presented  in  three  acts,  with 
scenes"  which  represent  the  library  of 
the  home  of  a  wealthy  New  Yorker, 
overlooking  the  Hudson.  The  founda- 
tion of  the  complications  of  the  new- 
play  are  based  on  two  advertisements, 
one  Inserted  in  a  Berlin  paper  and  the 
other  in  a  New  York  paper.  In  the  for- 
mer, a  lawyer  advertises  for  the  heir 
of  a  wealthy  German,  recently  deceaseu* 
in  America.' In  the  latter,  Mrs.  Wester- 
velt  adverti.ses  for  a  hou.se  servant. 
The  advertisement  In  the  Berlin  paper 
reaches  the  eyes  of  the  girl,  who  is 
really  the  heir  of  the  deceased  Ger- 
man, and  she  immediately  comes  to 
America  and  calls  at  t!ie  home  of  the 
lawyer  on  the  morning  of  the  In.sertion 
of  the  advertisement  for  a  servant.  The 
complications  which  are  begun  in  these 
two  advertisements  are  cleverly 
wrouglit  out  by  the  author,  and  they 
will  keep  .in  audience  convulsod  witli 
laughter  from  start  to  finish.  Some  of 
the  principals  supporting  Corinne  In- 
clude: H.  Sullivan,  H.  Carlton,  Frank- 
lin Vail.  Henr\  T'arl  Lewis.  Lillie,  May 
White.  Osborn  Clemson.  Lillian  Wilson, 
Steplicn  iSlott,  Pearl  Revare,  Neil  Mc- 
Kinloy  and  Adele  Irish,  together  with  a 
beauty   choru.«. 

tnent  Stxxdie4: 


Handsome  Assortment 

of  Lawn  and  Linserie 

Waists  at  Only— 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


^€0/if//fSTj4ki:£4Sr^''Sl/P£Jf/WFSrjff££r 

SPLENDID 
ARRAY  of 


Sateen  Petticoats  at 

98c 

Children*  s  Coats  from 

$3.98  Up 


NEW 


FOR  SPRING  and 
SUMMER,  1909. 


Tile  1^'autlful  now  shatter  of  Wistaria,  Catawba.  Old  Rose  and  Ro*'da,  intermingled  with  tlie  ever  popular  navies.  browTis  and  blacks. 
Tlie  handsome  new  cloths  .sueh  a.s  Prunellas  and  Sittin  Tlnlsh  ro  to  nmke  up  some  of  the  prettiest  garments  shown  Uiis  season— and  .vet  U»e 
prices  are  moderate.        Yes,  even  low,  eonsiderin*?  Uial  our  suits  are  perfect  in  \vorkmanshl|j  antl  style. 

Hill    select   a   two    or   three-piec*   suit    for   you 


$25.00 

high-price  shops. 

$16.60 
$15.00 


Is  the  price  of  some  of  the  flncRt  suits,  such  as 
you  would  expect  to  pay  $40  or  more  for  at  the 
Two  or  three-piece. 

Will  purchase  a  handsome  suit  in  finest  Panama 
— In    all    the    newest    shades. 

Biggest  assortment  w©  ever  carried  at  this  pop- 
ular price. 


$18.00 

y<ju  like,  our  prlc 

$12.50 


Ltook  wh(*re 


I 


that  really  ought  to  bring  $25.00. 
y(ju  like,  our  prices  ire  the  lowest. 

!5ults  are  really   $18.00   values.        "We  specialize 
on   this   price  suit,   and   forced  more  value   into 

these  garments  than    you  can  hnd  in  most  $18  suits  shown  where- 

ever  suits  are  sold. 


MISSi:s  SHOI  LD  KNOW  TH.AT  \\^  HAVE  THE  SUITS  TO  V\T  THEM  in  either  two  or  thtee-pleees— without  or  wlUi         $1  2a60 
very  little  alteration — at  tlie  price  Uiey  want  to  iiay — $16.50,  $15.00  and 


Silk  Taffeta  Petticoats  $3.50 


A    special    lot    of    heavy    quality    Taffeta    Petticoats,    in    black    and 
colors,  auch  a.s  navy,  old  rose,   reseda,   brown,   Alice,   etf\.   fine   tail- 
ored   style^-4hey're    worth    $5.00    and    $6.00.        See 
them   in  our  window — special    


$3.50 
Large  Black  Shopping  Bags  50c 

Bags   that   are  actually   worth    $1.00   and    more — a  special   lot   that 
our  New.  York  buyer  "cinched"  for  spot  cash.       Ten  dozen      ^Q^ 


The  New  Skirts  Are  Here! 


The  plain  button  tiimmed.  tailored  styles  predominate.  A  vast 
assortment  of  black,  navy  and  brown  skirts,  made  of  d^T^  ^O 
fine    quality    panama — at     ^^c^^w 

Some  better  Panama-s — Either   taffeta  trimmed  or 
plain  tailored— at  $11.50,  $10.  $8.50,  $6.75  and 


$5.00 


of   them   In   all — Price   only 


Bla4>k  Voile  Skirts,  made  up  of  heavy  quality  hard-twLsl.-d  voile — 
beautifully  trimmed  with  straps  of  satin — amply  ^^  Q^ 
wide.        Price   only    ^*V«7^ 

Choose  your  »klrt  liere  and  save  from  $1.00  to  $5.00. 


MILLINERY 

Ih  malciOK  its  formal  appearance.  Our  millinery 
room  1^ as  been  remodeled  and  we  arc  In  better  shape 
to  tate^are  of  your  valued  patronage  in  this  de- 
part rrieiii  We  sell  only  trimmed  hats,  as  they  are. 
N^o  ^lierdttiona  or  changes.  This  plan  enables  us  to 
undersell  any  millinery  shopkeeper  who  has  to  keep 
expenjBi^e  millinery  trimmers. 

OV«:  Ii\KGE  ASSOIITWCENT  OF  READY- 
TROiOifeD  HATS  will  guide  you  In  selecting  your 
spring  l*adgear.  Come  and  look  to  your  heart's 
contpnt.J  You  are  welcome  here  as  buyer  or  as 
prosp«ct|^'e. 

TRIMMED  HATS 

$3.00  to  $12.00 


A  SHOE  SALE  St^S 

It  is  not  our  policy  to  spring  some  "sale"  on  you  every 
day  in  the  week,  but  this  one  is  an  e.xception. 

Six  cases  (216  pairs)  of  Luddy  &  Currier's  $2.5U 
Shoes  at 

You   never   saved   $1.00   any   easier   or   quicker   than   at 
this   shoe   sale. 

THREE  STYLES; 

Patent  calf,  button,  cloth  top,  Cuban  heel. 
Velour  calf,  Blucher,  Cuban  heels. 
Gun  metal  calf,  button,  Cuban  heel. 

AU  Sizes- 2  V2  to  7 

This  is  a  factory  clean-up,  hence  the  price. 
When  they  are  sold  they'll  be  gone  and  no 
more  of  them  can  you  buy  for  less  than 
$2.50.  Come  and  see  them  in  our  window, 
walk  in  and  try  them  on.  Do  d»  1  ^Q 
you  want  a  pair?  The  price  is. .  *P  1  •'T^ 


^^•nru,-  . 


Patent  calf  .cloth 
lar  price  $2.5U  per 
pair,  at '. . 


t'jp,     regu- 

$1.49 


I 


■juaajiai— 'a       n^  ■ 


StXDAY  SCHOOL  LESSOXs  M.\llCiI  21, 
dl  AUTKKLY    UIOVIEW. 

By   Rev.  J.   S.    Kirtlry     D.    D. 

FOREWORD. 

The  lessons  of  tids  quarter  cover  a 
period  of  nine  or  ten  vears.  probably 
from  \.  D.  30  to  A.  D.  39  or  40.  \Ve  have 
seen  extraordinary  afrowch  from  a 
group  of  120,  unorganized,  savi^  with 
leaders  to  many  thousands,  compris- 
ing priests  and  plain  people,  won  to 
.lesus  by  the  active  and  intrepid  dis- 
ciples, finely  organized  for  evangelistic 
•ind  benevolent  work.  We  have  seen 
Christianity  grow  so  mighty  in  Jeru- 
salem as  to  bring  on  a  bloody  perse- 
cution, that  drove  the  Christians  out 
on  tlieir  task  ot  going  into  all  the 
world  preacliing  the  gospel  to  every 
creature,  according  to  the  pai'ting  In- 
structions of  Christ.  Our  review  will 
consider  the  process  of  expansion 
within  Jerusalem  and  then  outside,  but 
from  Jerusalem   as  a  center. 


GROWTH     I.\     JERIS.VLEM. 

1.  The  Hrsl  disciples  reinforced  by 
a  promise  from  their  ascended  Lord. 
i.,-  1-H. 

That  promise  was  a  distinct  gain  to 
them,  the  promise  of  the  Holy  Spirit. 
It  meant  tliat  they  would  still  have 
Christ  with  them  In  the  person  of  His 
successor;  that  they  had  a  glorious 
career  to  run;  that  they  had  each 
other  In  a  new  bond  of  brotherhood. 

It  gave  them  a  new  hops  and  a  new 
.loy.  It  led  out  in  the  exercise  of  tlie 
new  power  of  prayer.  It  made  them 
p.itlent  to  abide  Ood's  own  time.  It 
gave  them  the  con.'^ciousness  that  .lesus 
liad  a  plan  of  campaign  for  them,  which 
made  life  both  a  warfare  and  a  vic- 
tory. It  gave  them  the  sense  of  part- 
nership with-the  Holy  Spirit  in  testify- 
ing  of   Christ. 

Question— Why  can  Jesus  do  His 
work  from  heaven  better  than  if  he 
had   stayed    on   earth? 

2.  Reinforced  by  the  Holy  Spirit 
Himself.     11.,  1-21. 

They  were  not  disappointed;  the 
promise  was  fulfilled.  The  Spirit  had 
been  with  them  for  salvation;  but  now, 
on  the  basis  of  the  finished  work  of 
Christ,  He  could  do  more  for  chem 
and  In  them  and  with  them,  so  much 
so  that  It  was  a  new  enduement  of 
power  for  service.  His  external  sym- 
bols were  fire  and  wind;  His  internal 
work  was  In  their  Joy  and  strength; 
His  outer  manifestation  was  in  clear, 
convincing  speech  and  in  other  tongues. 
The  results  were  a  ct)nvlctlon  of  sin  on 
the  part  of  many  and  their  subsequent 
conversion  and  confession  In  the  or- 
dinance of  baptism;  the  enraging  of 
the  enemies  of  Christ.  In  Peter's  speech 
we  see  the  fulfilment  of  Christ's  words, 
that   the  Spirit   would  guide   them   into 


all  truth,  for  he  spoke  with  the  mar- 
velous grasp  on  the  meaning  of  Chrisf.s 
life  and  the  Messianic  charcter  of  the 
Old   Testament. 

Question— Have  we  reason  to  expect 
such  mai^-elons  effects  of  the  Spirit's 
presence    again? 

3.  Heinforce^  by  3.t)00  converts  in 
one  d.tj'.  That  is  called  "Bfginnihgs 
of  thp  Chrl.stian  church,"  ii..  22-^7. 
That  was  the  da.>-  of  Pentacost,  the 
dav  the  Holv  Sjjlrit  took  pos.«tession  of 
them.  That  day  the  Hfiy  Spiiti  and  the 
disciples  gave  thei;-  Joint  testimony. 
"The  SiJirlt  and  the  Bride"  said  ••Come." 
and  as  the  Apostle  Peter  spoke  the 
word,  the  Spirit  converted  those  words 
Into  barbed  arrows  that  pierced  them 
to  the  quick  with  conviction.  The 
grai-e  of  God  was  equally  exhibited, 
and  they  souglit  It  with  eagerness.  The 
number  of  conversions  is  given.  Tliey 
lost  no  time  in  avowing  their  allegi- 
ance to  Christ  in  the  ordinance  which 
He  had  commanded.  The  forgiveness 
of  their  sins  is  one  of  the  facta  over 
whicli  we  like  to  linger.  Two  facts 
about  the  new  converts  are  mentioned. 
Thev   got   together,  and    they    contijiued 

steadfast.  Their  inner  impulse.'^  would 
^rlng  them  together;  a  common  life 
and  mission  and  hope  and  destiny  made 
them  flock  together.  Christ's  coin- 
niand  v.as  that  they  do  so,  and  He  had 
arranged  an  ordinance,  a  rite  we  may 
say,   a   form   of   confession. 

Question — Why  ought  •  every  con- 
vert to  line  up  with  tlie  other  dis^ 
ciplos? 

4.  Reinforced  by  healing  power, 
as  we  learn  in  tife  story  of  "Tlie  lame 
man  healed,"  ill.  1-26.  Clirist  liealed. 
and  He  promised  that  they  should  do 
so.  No,  He  promised  that  He  would 
continue  to  do  so,  but  through  them. 
He  was  still  the  liealer.  This  first  case 
was   very   fortunate. 

Peter  and  John  emphasize  several 
things.  One  is.  that  health  is  better 
tiian  wealth:  another,  that  Jesus  Him- 
self was  doing  the  healing.  The  most 
important  thing  was  tlie  spiritual 
iiealing,  and  the  case  was  one  in  which 
that  could  be  conspicuous.  Miracles 
Were  usually  called  "signs."  and  this 
sign  was  read  by  many  in  the  temple. 
It  attracted  widespread  attention  to 
.lesus.  It  gave  Peter  a  chance  to  point 
out  their  sin  in  killing  their  Messiah, 
point  to  His  glorious  resurrection,  and 
siiow  that  Me  was  the  real  autlior  of 
this  merciful  deed.  It  was  a  greai. 
opportunity,  as  everything  Christ  does 
for  us  brings  an  opportunity  to  do 
something  for    Him. 

Question — Is  Christ  still  ready  to 
empower   His   people    to    heal? 

5.  Reinforced  by  a  prison  experi- 
ence, as  "The  Trial  of  Peter  and  John" 
shows. 

IV.  1-31.  Tlie  Jewish  ruler.'*  had 
them  arrested.  Tliey  were  the  priests 
who  were  ceasing  to  attract  attention 
and  liave  any  Inlluence;  the  temple 
police,  who  had  not  been  able  to  i-on- 
trol  the  crowd,  when  the  man  who  was 
healed  began  to  express  himself;  the 
.Sad<Uices.  who  were  maddened  at  the 
thought  of  losing  hold  of  a  certain 
class.  They  seemed  to  b©  ready  with 
the  charge  of  sorcery,  on  which  the 
Old  Testament  would  allow  stoning 
to  death.  The  reply  of  Peter  was  not 
<.n  the  defensive.  He  preached  Jesus 
as  the  sole  Savior  of  men.  The  presence 
of  the  man  who  had  been  healed,  ano 
resemblance  of  Peter  to  Jesus  ilefeated 
tliein.  and  all  they  could  do  was  to  re- 
lease then  with  the  Injunction  to  stop 
preaching.  That  gave  Peter  a  chance 
to  reaffirm  his  purpose.  Clirlstianity 
tiad  made  a  distinct  advance  in  pub- 
licity, and  its  appeal  to  the  Imagina- 
tion of  the  people.  The  cost  of  a  night 
in    prison,    and      all      the      abuse,    was 


trivial    in   comparison   with    the    gain. 

Qf»e«tion — What  is  persecution,  awd 
v.hat  is  its  value? 

6.  Reinforced  by  rigid  d^ct)?line.  as 
we  sec  in  tlio  lesson  >ot»?^**True  and 
I'alse  Brotherhood,"  iv,  12-5:11.  They 
liad  all  things  In  common.  That  was  a 
local,  and  temp%>r*ry  and  voluntary  ar- 
laugcnient.  It  wa?  never  known  in 
any  other  place;  and  ^^  one  was  com- 
pelled to  go  Into  it.  But  it  was  con- 
tagious, till  pron-rhient:  and  wealthy 
men,  like  Barnabas,  sold  their  posses- 
sions and  ijut  the  mottey  In  the  com- 
mon purse.  Trouble  was  sure  to  come. 
Somebody  was  almost  bound  to  cheat. 
A  man  and  his  wife  agreed  to  sell 
their  property,  and  hold  back  part  of 
it,  but  claim  that  tliey  had  given  all. 
Their  object  was  to  get  appreciation 
and  reputation,  possibly  attention,  for 
iiotliing.  They  were  smitten  dead  for 
it.  a  good  thing,  as  It  prevented  further 
siich  at.^empts,  and  profoundly  im- 
pressed the  community  with  the  sanc- 
tity of  the  Christian  brotherhood  and 
the  necessity  of  honesty.  But  Peter 
made  It  clear  that  they  did  not  have  to 
give  up  their  uioney.  but  that  thoy 
would   not  be  allowed  to   lie  about  it. 

Question — Is  It  not  to  the  credit  of 
the  church  that  it  offers  a  field  to  the 
hypocrite,  and  ought  it  not  to  be  more 
rigid    with    them? 

7.  Reinforced  by  angels.  "The 
Apostles  Imprisoned."  v,  17-42.  Tills 
was  the  second  imprisonment.  The  oc- 
casion of  this  was  the  stir  that  fol- 
lowed the  death  of  the  two  great 
iiypocritee.  Respect  for  the  disciples, 
and  desire  for  healing  were  wide- 
spread. The  sect  of  the  Jews  most  bit- 
terly enraged  was  the  sect  of  the  Sad- 
ducees.  Tliey  were  tilled  to  the  boil- 
ing point  with  rage,  for  the  double 
reason  that  their,  .favorite  teachings 
about  the  resurrection  were  put  to 
contempt,  and  tliey  were  losing  their 
control  over  the  pecjple.  Something 
radical  must  be  done.  But  God  Is 
keeping  watch  above  His  own.  and  w'lll 
give  them  still  stronger  proof  of  His 
protection,  while  lie  will  give  His 
enemies  still  gi'^ater  amazement  and 
feai".  It  seems  that  not  even  the 
keepers  knew  of  their  dcli%-erance,  till 
the  council  sent  to  liHve  tliem  brought, 
It  was  like  a  panic  when  the  officials 
were  informed  tliat  at  that  minute  the 
apostles  were  preaching  in  the  temple. 
Tne  weakness  of  those  officials  con- 
trasts against  the  strength  of  the 
preachers    In    their   trial    and    release. 

Question — Do  angels   help   us  now? 

8.  Reinforced  by  martyrdom.  "Ste- 
phen, the  first  martyr. "vl,  1-8:3.  The 
apostles  liad  to  be  relieved  of  the  daily 
distrii)utioii  of  supt>lies.  and  deacons 
came  into  existence.  One  of  them,  who 
was  probably  a  Grecian  born  Jew,  be- 
came so  original  and  effective  a 
preacher,  he  was  the  object  of  bitter 
attack,  and  finally  of  murder.  It  was 
his  new  type  of  preaching  and  aggres- 
sive way  that  brought  the  blow  on 
him.  His  swan  song  was  a  battle  cry. 
They  brought  charges  against  him 
similar  to  those  on  which  they  con- 
demned Christ.  He  showed  the  spirit 
of  J«*sus  in  a  striking  way.  In  his 
radiant  face  and  his  prayer  for  theii 
forglventss.  Two  things  did  Stephen: 
By  his  spirt  and  utterances,  he  brought 
on  himself  Iheir  mjirderous  hatred;  by 
Ills  spirit  and  utterances,  he  sowed 
some  seeds  tliat  brought  forth  fruit. 
He  made  a  new  epoch.  Saul's  first 
( <  nvictlons  must  have  come  from  that 
sight. 

Question — Is  it  ever  right  to  cherish 
a   feeling    of   revenge? 


this  prepared  man  together,  and  sends 
the  man  on  to  his  own  country  to  help 
spread  the  gospel  further.  In  this 
case  the  work  Is  cut  out  for  the  worker 
and  the  hand  of  God  moves  all  the 
characters  in  tlie  intricate^  and  far- 
reaching  action.  Thus  without  any 
wounding  of  prejudices  the  Jewish 
Christians  are  being'  broadened  out. 

Question — To  what  extent  does  God 
plan   out   every  man's  work? 

3.  Reinforced  by  the  miracle  of  a 
resurrection  in  tlie  case  of  Dorcas.  Jx., 
31-34. 

We  have  seen  the  gospel  taken  to  the 
Samaritans,  who  were  partly  ,Tews. 
•lesus  had  done  much  to  break  down 
their  prejudice,  by  what  he  had  done 
for  the  Samaritans.  Then  we  saw  the 
gospel  taken  to  one  who  had  been  a 
Gentile,  but  was  a  Jew  by  choice. 
Now  Peter  Is  being  moved  by  the  hand 
of  God  toward  a  Roman  officer  at  the 
nilHtary  headquarters  at  Caesarea,  who 
will  accejit  Christ  and  be  taken  in 
without  first  becoming  a  Jew.  Peter 
is  the  one  to  do  it.  for  if  his  preju- 
dices are  overcome  anybody's  cnn  be. 
On  his  way  he  cures  Aeneas  and  raises 
Dorcas  from  the  tlead.  'Tliat  exhibits 
the  power  of  the  gospel  and  prepares 
him  for  the  next  step. 

Question — Which    Is    the    greater   and 


more    fascinating   miracle,    the   physical 
or  the  spiritual? 

SHEVLIN  OPTOlisilC. 


Minnesota   Lnmberniari  Back   From 
East  Predicting  Good  Times. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  Mt  rch  19. — (Spe- 
cial to  Tlie  Herald.) — Thomas  H.  Shev- 
lin  of  the  Shevlin-Carpenter  Lumber 
company,  who  has  just  returned  from 
the  East,  said  that  the  r  ext  four  years 
are  to  be  years  of  the  greatest  pros- 
peritv  the  country  has  ever  seen. 

"There  are  two  problems  confronting 
the  American  people  to;lay,"  said  Mr. 
Shevlln,  "the  revision  of  the  tariff  and 
the  paramount  issue  of  crops.  What 
we  need  is  a  big  crop  of  cereals  that 
will  make  foodstuffs  cheaper  to  the 
masses  and  give  a  bigs  er  tonnage  to 
the  railroads,  which  give  employment 
to  people  engaged  In  the  transportation 
of  lumber.  Iron  and  other  commodities 
and  give  a  market  to  lumber  and  iron 
manufacturers. 

"The  price  of  lumber  has  shrunk 
appreciably  since  the  recent  panic. 
There    has    been    a    depreciation    of    $6 


to  \%  per  thousand  in  price,  and  this 
depreciation  has  resulted  in  no  profit 
to  the  manufacturer.  In  many  cases  it 
has   meant  loss. 

"Taft's  message  speaks  for  itself. 
Brief  and  to  the  point.  We  have  never 
been  so  prosperous  In  the  Northwest 
as  today.  Manufacturers  In  the  East 
have  been  unable  to  employ  many,  and 
those  who  have  had  to  buy  from  other 
sections  of  the  country  have  suffered 
greatly.  We  need  more  general  pios- 
perlt\.       Personally     1     am     optimistic." 

OaO(JKNARI,\N  WKDS. 


James  Mills  of  Todd  County  is  Mar- 
ried at  Stillwater. 

Stillwater.  Minn..  Marcli  19. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — James  Lundy  Mills, 
an  aged  man  of  80  years,  and  living 
at  Burtrum,  Todd  county,  and  Mary 
Ann  Dernelly,  who  kept  a  boarding 
house  at  Afton,  secured  a  marriage 
license  here  Wednesday  afternoon  and 
were  united  In  wedlock  by  Judge  A.  B. 
Doe. 


I 
i 

1 

4 

1 

1 

1 
\ 
1 

1 

■■\ 


\ 


Ton.     • 


prams 
Bruises 
Wounds 

Oil 


USE 


meea 


Sprains,  bruises  and  wounds  heal 

2uicklv  when  treated  with  Omeffa 
>il.  It  is  antiseptic,  preventing  tn* 
growth  of  RiicroDes.  It  is  a  stim- 
ulant and  promotes  free  circulation 
around  the  wound,  thu.s  quickening 
the  healing  process.     10c.,  25c.,  50c. 


OlTSII>K    OP    JKKI'S.^I.RM. 

1.  "In  Samaria."  viii.  A-'^it.  Ii  is  singu- 
lar that  in  these  years  they  had  never 
started  out  "unto  all  the  earth."  though 
it  was  only  a  few  miles  to  the  first  point. 
Bui  It  was  not  a  matter  of  distance; 
11  was  a  feeling.  They  were  busy  in 
Jerusalem.  Much  of  the  world  was 
coming  there.  to  the  feasts.  The 
Christians  kept  the  .lewisli  law.  and 
were  almost  forgetting  that  the  gospel 
was  for  (ientiles.  It  took  a  peisecu- 
tion  to  drive  them  out.  It  would  ha^•e 
been  hard  to  go  to  full  Gentiles  at  once. 
But  God  had  Samaria  ready  with  her 
I  alf  heathen  race,  as  a  half-way 
house  to  the  GentlleJ-'.  Fortunately,  It 
gave  a  demonstration  of  Its  purity  and 
usefulness.  In  the  sammary  death  of 
the  Sorcerer. 

Question — Has  anybody  a  right  to 
have  an   easy  time? 

2.  On  toward  "the  uttermost  parts," 
in  the  case  of  (U^e  j  Ethioulan.  viii., 
L'6-40. 

The  points  to  ^t  noted  are  that  the 
Jewish  race  and  V*ellp:f*m  were  designed 
to  be  missionary;  tliat  God  used  their 
dispersion  as  a  means  of  gaining  Gen- 
tiles to  their  faith;  that  these  prose- 
lytes were  another  link  between  the 
original  Jewish  Chrtetians  and  the 
Gentiles;    that    Hd.t brings     Philip    and 


IT  is  so  easy  to  be  well  dressed,  at  so  small  a 
cost,    nowadays,   that  we  wonder  so  many 
men  are  not  better  dressed. 

When  you  find  it  convenient 
to  come  into  this  store  and  buy 

Hart  Schaffner  &  Marx 

suits  and  overcoats,  ready  to 
wear;  with  a  style  and  all  wool 
quality,  and  tailoring,  such  as 
in  no  other  clothes;  it's  strange 
that  anybody  can  be  persuaded 
to  do  any  other  way.  Here  are 
the  best  suits  in  the  world,  $i8 
to  $40;  Overcoats,  $15  to  $50. 


This  store  if  the  home  of 
Hart  Schaffner  &  Marx  clothes. 

Manhattan  Shirts 
Wilson  Bros.  Shirts 


m^tm-mtr^al^ 

,,. 

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1 

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^km- 


•«»i 


Copyright  1909  bv  H»rt  Schaffner  Sc  Mir« 

New  Neckwear 
New  Shoes 


I 


KENNEY  &  ANKER 

40Q-411  West  Superior  Street, 


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--— — — ^  *■ 


i^iii  ■111,   -mtm  bX 


il 


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— ^    ^ ~  ' b: 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


^(^S^^* 


404  West  Superior  St. 


FIFTY  FAMILIES 
NEED  CLOTHING 

Bethel  Issues  a  Request 

for  Second  Hand 

Clothes. 

The    Bethel    wants    some    clothes. 

That  does  not  mean  that  tlie  Bethel 
officers  are  In  need  of  new  spring  suits, 
but  they  have  on  their  list  about  fifty 
families  which  are  in  need  of  warm 
clothing.  In  spite  of  the  fact  that  the 
cold  weather  is  about  over,  there  are 
many  people  who  are  suffering  for  lack 
of  proper  raiment.  There  are  many 
children  who  have  no  shoes  and  can- 
not  attend  school   for  this   reason. 

The  Bethel  officers  asked  The  Herald 
this  afternoon  to  bring  this  need  to  the 
attention  of  the  citizens.  Any  Duiuth 
women  who  find  in  their  homes  cloth- 
ing wliich  ihev  can  spare  are  asked  to 
let   the  Bethel   people  know  of  it. 

Cliecks  for  %2o  or  $50  to  buy  new 
clothing  won't  be  returned. 


T 


lOFY 


TRYING  TO 
SCARE_Al]NT 

Raymond  Glenn  Says  He 
Did  Not  Mean  to  Com- 
mit Suicide. 

But  the  Jury  in  District 

Court  Finds  Him 

Guilty. 


Denying  tliat  he  attempted  to  com- 
mit suicide,  and  asserting  tliat  he  took 
carbolic  acid  only  to  scare  his  aunt  so 
that  she  would  treat  him  better,  Ray- 
mond Glenn,  who  was  on  trial  for  an 
attempt  to  commit  suicide,  went  on  the 
stand  this  morning  and  told  his  story. 
But  the  jury  evidently  did  not  take 
much  stock  in  his  tale,  as  a  verdict  of 
guilty  was  returned  this  afternoon. 

Just  wliat  abuse  young  Glenn  was 
sul>Jectcd  to  he  didn't  make  clear.  He 
said  <luring  the  absence  of  his  father 
and  stepmother  he  was  compelled  to 
keep  the  lu'use  clean,  and  ills  aunt 
sometimes  called  his  attention  to  liis 
failure  to  attend  to  his  duties  in  tliat 
respect.  Then,  he  went  with  company 
that  his  aunt  didn't  like,  and  she  told 
him  about  it,  so  he  regarded  that  as 
abuse   also.  ,    ,    .      ^    , 

Glenn  said  that  he  intended  to  take 
just  enough  carbolic  acid  to  make  him 
sick  und  scare  his  aunt.  He  said  he 
didn  t  know  that  he  had  taken  so  much 
that  it  would  have  caused  death  it  he 
had  not  been  given  Immediate  assist- 
ance He  said  he  didn't  remember 
tiring  a  revolver,  and  if  he  did  shoot 
at  himself,  it  must  have  been  while  he 
was  under  the  influence  of  the  acid. 

Glenn,  who  is  lU  years  old.  was  dis- 
covered writhing  in  agony  on  Feb,  23 
in  a  room  of  his  home  on  Si.xth  avenue 
east  A  physician  was  called  and  an 
emetic  saved  his  life.  He  had  taken  a 
dose  of  carbolic  acid  anci  had  shot  at 
himself  witli  a  revolver.  It  was  said 
tliat  he  had  previously  attempted  sui- 
cide. After  a  few  days  in  rft.  Mary  s 
hospital  he  was  able  to  be  around 
again,  and  was  indicted  by  the  grand 
jury  on  a  charge  of  attempting  sui- 
eide.  ,     „ 

Glenn  was  born  in  Grand  Rapids, 
Mich.,  and  was  reared  by  his  grantl- 
parents  on  a  farm  near  Cleveland.  He 
never  saw  his  father  so  as  to  know 
him  until  last  May,  when  he  met  him 
in  Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  and  accom- 
panied him  to  imluth.  His  father  is  a 
porter  on  John  Millen  s  car.  and  is 
now  In  Florida  witii  Mr.  Millen.  Dur- 
ing his  fathers  absence  the  boy  has 
been   living  with   his  aunt. 

The  case  went  to  the  jury  shortly 
before   notm. 


Oue    Cent    a    Word    Each    taaertlon — Xa 
Advertiaeaieut  I.caa  Than   15  Cents. 


MISS  HOKKIGA.NS  HAIK  SHUP  NOW 
in  the  Christie  building,  a  little 
further  out  than  formerly,  but  the 
modern  facilities  and  pleasant  sur- 
roundings will  more  than  repay  you 
for    the    extra    walk. 

FOR    SALE— HOME     MADE    JELLIES. 

jams  and  canned  fruits.  All  in  first- 
class  condition  and  prices  reasonable. 
Mrs.  J.  K.  Richier.  319  South  Nine- 
teenth   avenue   east. 

WANTED— A  HOUSEKEEPER  FOR 
family  of  four.  Call  after  6  o'clock 
p.  m..  or  address  2807  West  Helm  St. 


FOR  SALE— HORSE.       CHEAP,       IF 

taken   at   once.      107   West    Fourth   St. 


(      IPE 


iPEIRSOilL 


FOR  SALE— EIGHT  ROOM  MODERN 
house  in  East  end.  very  reasonable. 
For    particulars,   call    874,   old     phone. 

WANTED— MAN  WITH  A  FAIR  EDU- 
calion,  married,  to  canvass  and  col- 
lect for  the  Prudential  Insurance 
company,  salary  and  commission; 
good  opportunity  for  advancement. 
Only  men  with  business  ability  need 
apply.  N.  Nissen,  Supt..  Sell  wood 
Bldg. 

GO~TO  MISS  HORRIGANS  TOMOR- 
row  for  a  Harper  shampoo.  You  will 
be  delighted  with  the  effect  it  has 
on  the  hair  and  how  it  restores  life 
to    the    scalp.  


FACE  AND  SCALP  TREATMENT, 
shampooing,  manicuring,  large  stock 
of  first  quality  hair  goods  made  to 
order  at  Miss  M.   Kelly's,  over  Suffefs. 


E.  Clarke,  manager  of  the  Golden 
Rule  store  has  returned  from  a  busi- 
ness   trip    in    the    East. 

Dr  and  Mrs.  L.  M.  Brunei  have  as 
their  guest,  Mifs.  Hiunetfs  brother. 
Chief  Justice  Dubus  or  Winnipeg,  who 
has  Just  returned  from  a  two  months 
visit   at   New   Orleans   and    Havana. 

Romeo  J.  Hlldeman  of  Portland,  Or., 
is  visiting  L.  H.  Brunet  of  Lakeside. 
Mr.  Hlldeman  is  a  traveling  saleman 
for  the  Marshall-W"ells  company  of  this 
city. 


GOTY  il^BEFS 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 


Victor    Wicklund    and    Annie    Landin, 
both    of   St.   Louis   county. 


BIRTHS. 


NUNSTATT — A  daughter  was  born  to 
Mr  and  Mrs.  E.  Nunstatt  of  6J5 
South  Si.\ty-sixth  avenue  west, 
March   16, 

RICHARDSON — A  son  was  born  to  Mr. 
and  Mrs,  W.  J.  Richardson  of  14L'4 
West   Michigan    street,    March    17. 

LOBIK — A  daughter  was  born  to  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Anton  Lobik  of  108  Thirty- 
ninth    avenue    west,   March    14. 

McCOMBE— •■!  daughter  was  born  to 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  B.  McCombe  of  l-'ll 
West  First  stret.  March   16. 


DEATHS. 


FINDLAY— Jams  Findlay  of  401  Lavis 
street  S3  years  of  age,  died  March 
17.        ■  


CARD  OFJTHANKS^ 

WE  DESIRE  TO  THANK  KIND 
friends  and  neighbors  for  sympa- 
thy and  flowers  sent  us  during  the 
bereavement    of    our    little    daughter, 

^'""mR^'^AND    MRS.    A.    E.    LOVE. 


BUItDING  PERMITS. 


To  Claus  Jeronimus.  addition  to 
dwelling  on  r^ast  J^'^^rth 
street,  between  Lake  and  First 
avenues •• ' 

To  Duiuth  Street  Railway  com- 
pany, fire  wall  in  car  barn  on 
west  Superior  street,  between 
Twenty-first  and  Twenty-sev- 
enth   avenues    west     

To  Thomas  Thorburn.  temporary 
garage  on  East  Second  street, 
between  Fifth  and  Sixth  ave- 
nues      


200 


3,500 


100 


LADIES' 

SPRING 

SUITS 


1 9  BUYING  DAYS  TILL  EASTER !   ^  TOMORROW 


TOOTH  BRUSH  SECONDS  10c 

Many  of  you  know  that  these  seconds  are  often  only 
the  maker's  surplus  lots — sometimes  there  s  a  nick  in 
the  handle— never  any  serious  hurt— this  Is  the  best 
lot  the  factory  ever  sent  us — values  up  to  25c  and  29i 
— choice  10*. 


HInd'M  Honry  andflff  _  50o    <^  o*"-'"     pandruH 

lond    Cream— Npe-^/C*"*"*  ■?.-   »»"'«'<-«■•«• 
37p  *^  •   ^^  er  for  37e. 

2hc  COLGATE' 8  TALLUM  POWDER  15c 


50c 

Aim 

clal 


Alvraya  Send  Y'oar  Mall  Orders  to 


117-119    Went    Superior    Street.    Ilulutb,    Minn. 
FOR      QL'ICK,      SATISFACTOllY       SERVICE. 


THE  NEW  "PSYCHE"  BRUSH  9dc 


Tills  n  ^w  idea  in  a  brush  is  fine  for  the  hair — and 
especially-  needed  for  the  new  style  hair  dressing — 
made  of'  purest  bristles,  set  In  solid  back  ebony  or 
rosewood — a  new  shipment  just  in,  and  placed  on 
sale  at  9Sc  each! 

Mammoth  ROc  i«Ib«>  ^  #%^  fU  p  k  ■  »■  c  k  e  r  '  «  50c 
GravcM'  Tooth  Pow-  ^^C  Edjfew  ood  Violet 
der — Miieclal,  S9c.  ^^^  ^ -^  ToUet      Water,      3»c. 

4  UoUs  of  Jitxt  lOr  Toiltt  Paper  for  30>-. 


Smartly  Plain  Suits  at  $25.00  to  $35 


THE  VALUES  ARE  THE  BEST  ANYVmERX! 


The  sKelch  sti^^ejfj 
tuay  yoti  can  get  a 

Tonight's  News 

is  of  the  $25  to  $35  Suits 


N 


RVER  have  wc,  never  has  any 
house  hereabouts  offered 
any  such  classy  suits  as 
these  at  such  low  prices. 

Here  are  suits  that  simply 
surpass  all  expectations 
in  style  and  value  at 
these  very  popular  prices! 
Come    and   be   convinced. 

The  styles  are  out-of-the-ordinary— 
it  proves  our  wisdom  in  holding  oft 
buying  until  the  last  moment— there 
is  a  splendid  assortment  of  the  modes 
of  the  moment! 

Every   style   new,   correct 

and  well  chosen,  and  the 

range  of  colorings  is  such 

that    you    may    find    here 

the  shade  you  most  prefer. 

Some  of  them  are   simply  trmimed. 

The  fine  tailoring  is  what  appeals  to 

you  at  a  glance!     Others  are  touched 

up    with    smart    trimmings    in    a    way 

that    gives    them    decided    styU    and 

character. 

At  $15.00  to  $75.00 

We  offer  many  other  new  models 
at  $15  to  $75.  and  at  each  price  the 
value  offered  is  as  unusual  as  the 
stvles  are  uncommon. 


f/?e  ''tone"  that  typifies  tomorrobu's  offerings  -hut  the  only  good 
fair  idea  oj^  the  x^aiues   is  by  seeing   the  garments   themsel-Ves  I 

'Kj  Coat  You  Want 

is  Ready  for  You 

Madam!  Your  coat  is  ready — you 
may  select  which  you  \\\\\  from  Dame 
Fashion's  newest  and  smartest  models! 

Some  swaeser  full  length  coats 
in  tlie  tulH>  models — rrthers  n<»t  »»o 
Ions:  but  posw'ssed  <)f  Utile  style 
kinks  that  make  them  ctiariuing- 
ly  fusliiunable! 

And  then  there  are  silk  coats  and 
lace  coats  for  formal  and  dress  wear; 
while  for  more  practical  wear,  there 
are  cravenetted  garments  for  motor- 
ing and  for  street  wear! 

The  Coats  on  sale 
at  fl5  to  f25  ha-Ve 
no  equals  in  style  or 
HJaltie  anytufhere I 


■^n- 


•^ 


Newest  1909  Skirts 


Now  models — many  high  bodice  ef- 
fects— all  the  favored  cloths — a  com- 
plete range  of  sizes  1 

IVIees  $5.00  to  $28..'>0. 

Very  popular  lines.   $7.50  to  $18.50. 

Sheath  Bockers 

AVe  pictured  them  in  our  ad.  Wed- 
nesday— you  can  see  them  at  the  Un- 
dermiislin  department — price  98c  and 
J1.2B,  for  popular  styles! 


SOLD  ON 


a  Week 
Payments 


$1 

FREDW.EDWARES 

20  East  Superior  St. 
Upstairs  Next  to  Troy  Laundry. 


.^^>- 


.Monotype    Coinpo<illlon. 

Quick   work    by    Thwing-Stewart  Co. 

■ 

C'nHeH    DrnKKinK     AIoiik. 

The    $:i'i.O(>0    personal    injury    damage 
suit  of  Stephen  Foster  against  the  L)u- 
luth   Street   Railway  company,   and   the 
$25,000     malpractice     suit     of     Hilding 
Grailine    against    Dr.    J.    H.    Jern      are 
dragging    along      slowly      in       district 
court.      The    expert    testimony    is    slow 
in   coming   out    and   the    two   cases   will 
probably    continue    into    next    week. 
■ 
Girl     Ih     Demented. 
Lydia     Bjorvik.     a     chambt-rmaid     at 
the  "Midland    hotel,    was    placed    in    the 
countv    jail    today    and    an    information 
of    insanity    filed    against     her    in    pro- 
bate  court.       She  Is  said   to  be  afflict- 
ed   with    religious    mania,    praying    and 
reading  from   the  Bible  constantly.  She  i 
is   'IZ   years   old   and   single.     The   cause 
of    her  alleged    Insanity    is    not   known. 
■ 
S^rloiiM     CharKe. 
John    Ripple    was    placed    on    trial    in 
district  court  this  morning  on  a  charge 
of  indecent  assault.        He   is  alleged   to 
have    assaulted     Dora    Zini.     a     9-year- 
old   girl,   at    Eveletii    Aug.    15    last. 
» 
Influence    of    Onrwin. 
•The     Life     and     Influence     of     Dar- 
win"   will    be    the   subject    of   Rev.    John 
W.     Powells     lecture    tills    evening,     at 
the     Endion     Methodist       churcli.       This 
will   be  the  last  of  the  series. 

Servicen  at  Temple. 

Rabbi       Lefkovitz       will       preach     on 
"Tragedies  of  Life"  at  the  regular  Sab- 
bath day  services  to  be  held  at  Temple 
Emanuel    this    evening,    at    8    o'clock. 
■ 
Gettlue   Kendy   fur  I'avinK. 
Plans   and    specifications    for   grading 
and    paving    Twenty-fifth    avenue    east 
from    First   street   to   Eighth   street   are 
now   being  prepared  in  the  city  engin- 
eer's  office.      The   property   owners   will 
have    a    choice    between    tar    macadam 
and  concrete  as  a  paving  material. 
■ 
Dr.  KIrtley  Will  Speak. 
r^  Dr.     J.     S.     Kirtley     will     speak     this 

_L—    evening  at   the   Central   Baptist  church. 

MAY  MARCHTnTO 
SERVIA  AT  ONCE 

Austrian  Troops  May 

Have  Early  War  Work 

To  Do. 

Berlin,  March,  19. — A  semi-official 
communication  in  the  Cologne  Gazette 
today  describes  the  situation  between 
Austria-Hungary  and  Servia  as  most 
pessimistic  in  the  matter  of  mainten- 
ance of  peace,  but  it  is  hopeful  that  the 
conflict,  should  one  arise,  may  be  lo- 
calized.    The  communication  says: 

"While  attempts  have  been  made  in 
several  (luarters  to  aid  a  solution  of  the 
crisis  a  contrary  course  is  being  fol- 
lowed in  Servia.  Mild  advice  is  not 
likelv  to  serve  any  purpose  at  Bel- 
grade. Severe  pressure  from  the 
powers  especially  Russia,  is  necessary 
to  bring  the  S^ervians  to  reason.  The 
construction  placed  by  Great  Britain 
on  the  Russian  note  calling  an  inter- 
national conference  on  the  Bosnian- 
Herzegovina  question  serves  only  to 
stiffen  Servia's  backbone  for  resistance. 
The  Russian  proposals  are  not  cal- 
culated to  serve  the  ends  of  peace.  The 
militarv  situation  Is  so  critical  that 
perhaps  only  a  few  days  will  pass  be- 
fore Austrian  troops  march  into  Servia. 
"It  is  questionable  wliether  the  hon- 
est  endeavors    ol    some    of    the   power* 


Our  Hats  are  Hats  of 
Character  and  Charming 

Distinction 

styles  are  as  varied  and  beautiful  as  springtime  flowers-they  range 

from  medium  to  mammoth  in  size— =and 
are  to  be  set  very  low  on  the  head — 
the  ultra  fashionable  shapes  almost  hide 
the  eyes — but  we  believe  the  less  extreme 
models  will  find  most  favor! 

Mueh  gorgeous  fruit  will  be  usee!  as 

of     flowers. 


TOMORROW ! 


trimming}* — and  a  riot 

Jet  and  straw  braid  caboehons  are 
applied    in   various   effeetive   ways — 


but  yoiril     umlerstand     them     best 


after  having  taken  a  look  at  them! 


69c  §±-2f  Gloves 

The  famous  Diana  2-clasp  Gloves 
on  sale  tomorrow  at  «»o  pair — sizes 
6  to  7% — browns,  grays,  tans  and 
navy — not  many  smaller  sizes! 
We'll     be     no     biiwy.  that     we 

won't     have    time    to    fit    them  I 


May   we   show   them   to   you   tomorrow? 


WARNER'S  RUST-PROOF 

Corsets 

STYLE  156  at  $1.00 

Whenever  we  shoM'  a  new  Warner's  Rust- 
Proof  model,  you  may  feel  assured  that  we  have 
selected    a    style    that    shows    fashion    tendencies. 

This  model  is  deslgn'?<1  for  the  average  figure 
and  is  inten<led  to  raise  the  bust  and 
straighten  the  hips  for  this  type  of  form,  that 
Is.  the  "slab-lik>e  '  fijure  Is  bound  to  be  built 
with    this    eorset.      ::::::::: 

There  Is  no  other  corset — excepting  another 
Warner's — that  Is  guaranteed  to  WEAR,  not  to 
rust,    break    or    tear.  PUCE  PER  PAIR- 

$1.00 

SECURITY  RUBBER  BUTTOM 
HOSE  SUPPORTERS 

of   lasting  (luality   attached. 


^ 


^ 


New  1 909  Shoes  for  Women 

Spring  Styles  Ready 

It    is    most    fortunate    that    the    spring    shoes    are    so    dainty— the 
styles   in   dress  skirts   are   bound    to   make   the   feet   more   or   le.«s  con- 
rpic?ou»--and,    of   course,    you'll    want    to    be    carefully   shod! 
spicuous,— a      ,  ,pj^_      tp„,   loathei — fine  kid  and  gtin  me  al 

shoe^the  very  best  of  make.^$3.  $3..'J0  and  $»  the  pair! 


Misses*  and  Chil- 
dren's Sensible 
Shoes-$1.25  to 
$2.50  a  Pair. 

Sensible     foot  -   form 

shoes  for  young  folks — 

new    styles      that      are 

comfortable — give       the 

feet  room  to  grow — and 

yet  do  not  look  clumsy! 

Button  or  laee — 

heavv  or  light  soles 

$1.25    to    $2.50    pr. 


Little  Folks 

Shoes  — 

50c  to  $1.50 

a  Pair 

Patent  kid,  and 
tan  leathers  — 
cloth  or  colored 
tops  —  we  can 
please  you! 


Remnants 

of  Wash  Goods 

At  About  Half  Price 

Here's  a  sale  that  will  interest  every 
housewife  who  likes  to  make  her 
dimes  and  dollars  do  double  Muty!  It 
is  not  a  sale  of  mill  end.s  or  imperfect 
goods — but  consists  of  all  the  short 
pi.^ces  of  every  description  sold  at  the 
wash    goods    department. 


Boys'  and  Youths'  New 
Spring  Shoes 

Velour.  box  and  chrome  oalf, 
blucher  and  lace  shoes  for  boys 
— dressy  enough  for  best  wear — 
strong  enough  for  play  wear  — 
prices  $1.50  to  J2.50  pair! 


Outings, 
Flannel- 
ettes, 
SilkoUnes, 
Poplins, 
Matlras, 


.'Vrt  Tlek-  Dimities. 

lugs.  Satines, 

Silk  and  Caliioes, 

Cotton  Mix-  (iinsliams, 

lures.  Percales, 

Linen    Suit-  Lawns. 

Ings, 

■<  There  are  many  good  lengths  suit- 
'  able    for    children's      dresses,      ladies' 

waists,  men's  and      boys'     shirts,     etc. 

Make  your  selections  early.  Prices  are 
I  about   half  the   regular   prices! 


$2.75  and  $2.95  Carriage  Bags 
Special  Saturday  $2.25 

Dont  miss  this  if  you  want  a  handsome  bag!     We  offer  our  $2.75 
and  $2  95  Carriage  Bags  tomorrow  at  $2.25  each. 

Choose  from  walrus  and  seal  leather  bags  in  10-inch 
and  12-inch  siizes  lined  with  leather,  fitted  with  com 
purses,   in   black   or    brown;    choice    at,   each   $2.25. 

65c  Elastic  and  Per- 
sian Belts  48c 

Handsome  new  e  astic  and  Persian 
Beltings;  also  leather  Belts  and  silk  Belts 
that  sell  at  all  other  times  at  65c  each. 
On  sale  tomorrow  at  48c  each. 


Real  Irish 

Real  Irish  Lace  Neck- 
wear, new  lot,  chaim- 
ing  styles,  very  season- 
ably priced. 


Newest  \  909  Designs  Stamped 
to  Yow  Order 

The  Art  Department  has  been  moved  to  the  third  floor— a  stamp- 
ing department  has  t)een  added- the  most  improved  methods  are  m 
use.     Newest  designs— promptly  done. 


50-Inch  Nun's  Veil- 
ings or  Batistes  49c 


Call  them  Nuns  Veiling— or  call  them  ba- 
tistes, if  you  prefer  the  French  name— they 
are  five!  Ten  different  shades  to  choose 
fjom— lustrous  finish— splendid  wearing— a 
most  popular  weave  for  house 
wear,  for  waists,  girls'  dresses, 
etc.— note  the  extra  width— its  full  50 
inches,  and  a  great  bargain  for  one  day 
only— you'll  appreciate  it     at  49c     a     yard. 


49c 


8  Pieces  25c  &  39c 

Tricot  Flannels  on 

Sale  at  1 5c  Yard 

Tricot  Flannel — We  only  have  eight 
pieces  of  them,  and  the  shades  run  to 
green,  rose  and  bright  red — we  want  to 
close  them  out  Saturday — you  1  C -^ 
can  use  them  for  house  wear —  •  ^^ 
waists,  linings  for  coats  and  quilts  and 
girls'  dresses — regular  25c  and  39c  kind 
on  sale  as  long  as  they  last  at  15c  a  yd. 


Laces  and  Embroideries  on  tlie  Bargain  Square  Yet  Tomorrow 

Thousand!  and  thousands  of   >ards  .tiU   to  c...^.^  fro^n-the^cUs  hav^^^ 
^or'^^or^'i^^^e.-'^i^  rh^ln^le^g^^e^^-ol,"!^  tl^^IaJiuary  W.ite  Sale! 


Hand  loomed  Em- 
broidery —  (iain- 
tv  narrow  edges — 
flflne  for  chil- 
dren's wear  — 
special    at    5c    yd. 


5 


Splendid  patterrs 
r  Torchon  l.^ce  and 
Insertions  —  to 
match — very  spe- 
cial    at    5«    yard. 


Swiss  Camb  r  1  c 
and  Nal  n  -s  o  o  k 
Flouncings  half 
a  yard  wide — 
very  special  — 
at  25r. 


25 


Corset  Cover 
C  Embroidery  1  n 
^  really  choice 
F  t  y  1  e  8  —  new 
patterns  —  spe- 
cial  at  25c  yard. 


I2V2C 

the  yard  for  6- 
inch  Embroid- 
ery Flouncings. 


Waist  Frontings,  50c  and  69c  Yd. 

Only  =H.  of  a  yard  necessary  for  a  waist — the  pat- 
terns are  choice— women  buy  them  on  night— they 
are  bargains  we  picked  up  in  New  York  from  an 
Importer  who  wanted  money! 


AUOn 

sale  on  t  li  e 
Bargain  Square 
tomorrow. 


»a*'»-*i*ai 


yet  will  succeed  in  preventing  an  out- 
break of  war  but  pour  parlors  between 
various  nations  lead  to  the  hope  that 
the  conflict  may   be  localized." 

Four  hundred  Cossack.s  have  been 
dispatched  from  Baku  to  -\stara.  a 
.small  Caspian  port  ..n  the  Persian 
frontier. 

CLEVELAND  POLICE  ON 

WATCH  FOR  KIDNAPERS. 

Cleveland,  Ohio,  March  19. — Chief  of 
Police  Kohler  has  taken  precautions  to 
capture  the  kidnapers  of  Willie  Whitla, 
should  they  attempt  to  enter  this  city. 
Railroad  stations  for  miles  around  are 
being  watched  by  the  police,  and  Kohler 


has  opened  communications  with 
sheriffs  and  town  marshals  throughout 
the  state,  in  an  effort  to  trace  the 
whereabouts  of  the  boy. 

The  police  do  not  believe  the  kid- 
napers will  be  found  in  any  large  city, 
but  that  they,  will  keep  in  the  open 
districts,  where  the  chance  of  capture 
is  les.s. 

•— 

ACCIDENT  TO  TAFT 

TRALN  BARELY  AVERTED. 

Washington,  March  19.— A  serious 
accident  to  the  train  on  which  Presi- 
dent Taft  and  his  party  journeyed  to 
Nev/  York  probably  was  averted 
through   the   discovery    of   a  defect  in 


on»»  of  the  wheels  of  a  coach,  which 
was  part  of  the  train  as  first  made  up. 
according  to  railroad  officials  here  to- 
day. The  defect  was  a  crack,  fifteen 
inches  long.  A  car  inspector  discovered 
the  break  and  notified  tl-.e  conductor. 
— — • 

DERELICT  SCHOONER 

HAS  FINALLY  LANDED. 

Pensacola.  Fla..  March  19. — After 
drifting  about  the  gulf  since  Jan.  28, 
when  her  captain  and  every  member  of 
her  crew  were  drowned,  the  derelict 
schooner  Cleopatra  has  landed  at  St. 
George's  Island,  according  to  Informa- 
tion brought  here  today  by  sea  captains 
who  sighted  the  dismantled  vessel.  The 
bodies    of    the    captain    and    crew    were 


washed  ashore  on  Hurricane  island  sev- 
eral   weeks  ago.  

C0NGR.4TI  LATE  POPE 

UPONJIIS  RECOVERY. 

Rome.  March  19.— i^t.  .Joseph's  day, 
the  name  day  of  the  pope,  was  cele- 
brated at  the  Vaticaa  today  with  spe- 
cial observations,  the  guests  being  de- 
sirous of  congratulating  the  pontiff.  At 
the  conclusion  of  the  sermon  the  pope 
wa.s  congratulated  bj  iiis  guests  on  his 
recovery  from  his   rei-ent   illness. 

»- 

Taft  at    Vale. 

New  Haven.  Conn..  March  19. — Presi- 
dent Taft  came  to  this  city  today,  and 
as    a    fellow    of    Yale    corporation,    at- 


tended the  firs-t  meeting  of  the  body 
since  he  became  chief  executive  of  the 
nation  Taft  was  greeted  on  his  ar- 
rival by  Secretary  Anson  Phelps  Stokes 
of  the  university.  A  cheer  went  up 
from  the  spectators  as  the  president  ap- 
peared at  the  fiir  dour. 

• 

MaJ.  C'urttM  Iturnam  Dies. 

Richmond,  Ky.,  March  19.— MaJ.  Cur- 
tis F.  Burnam.  assistant  secretary  of 
the  treasury  under  President  Grant 
died  at  his  home  late  last  night.  Hd 
was   89   years  old. 

• 

Drop*  Dead  While   lluntlaK.        _ 

Tyndall.  S.  D..  March  19.— NV.  G- 
Youngworth.  vice  president  of  the  First 
National  bank,  dropped  dead  whll* 
hunting  near  here  today. 


( 

1 

» 

e=t rr s        "~:£^ 

^ 

^ 

_. 

1  "  c 


iv«4i 


5- 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


Styles  You  See  at 
Gatcly's  '^  Correct 


Our  styles  are  the  cream  of  the 
world's  markets  and  our  prices  are  ab- 
solutely right.  It  is  no  trick  to  sell 
goods  cheap,  but  it  is  a  trick  to  sell 
good  goods  cheap.  We  have  gotten 
next  to  this  trick  through  the  enor- 
mous purchasing  power  of  So  Gately 
stores. 

Ladies,  Take  Notice ! 

Your  New  Spring  Suit  is  ready. 
The  "Best"  in  any  event  and  very  like- 
ly the  most  correctly  priced. 

Come  in  and     see     the    beautiful 

models. 

Hand-tailored  throughout  and 
shown  in  the  newest  extreme  and  con- 
servative effects. 

Fellows,  Looli  Here ! 

A  Spring  Suit  with  'Tone"  to  it 
will  put  you  in  harmony  with  yourself 
and  give  you  that  confidence  that 
wins  out  in  any  proposition  you  might 
tackle.  See  one  of  our  Fancy  Tail- 
ored High  Grades  for  $15,  $18,  $20 
or  $25. 


REPAIRS  TO 
THEFLEET 

Not  Dollar  Extra  If  the 

Ships  Remained  at 

Home. 


Ail  This  Despite  the  Cruise 

Made  Around  the 

World. 


B^'lQ^siclc 


THE  GOLDEN  RULE 

IT<S  IQ-eAsT    superior     STRt  £:t 


Be   Quick 


tt  E.  SUPERIOR  ST. 
H.  A.  NELSON,  Manager. 


INSURGENT  SEN/\TORS 
WIN  FIOHT;  WESTERNERS 
SECURE  RECOGNITION 


Washington.  March  19.— The  work  by 
the  committee  on  committees  of  filling 
Republican  vacancies  on  senate  com- 
mittees has  concluded,  resulting  in  giv- 
ing to  Western  senators  much  greater 
representation  on  the  important  com- 
mittees. This  Is  a  result  of  the  cam- 
paign of  the  Insurgents.  It  is  as- 
p.-rtert  that  never  before  in  the  his- 
tory of  the  senate  have  the  Western 
states  been  so  fully  represented  on 
these  Important  committee  as  they  are 
now  to  be.  The  work  of  distributing 
the  Republican  assignments  has  been 
a  concession  to  the  younger  and  West- 
ern senators,  so  that  none  of  the  vet- 
eran.s  has  increased  his  committee 
member.'? hip.'".  In  one  or  two  instance.*! 
tlie  Kepublican  representation  on  im- 
portant committees  has  been  increased 
by  the  addition  of  one  or  two  mem- 
bers without  a  corresponding  addition 
In  the  Democratic  membership.  The 
committee  on  military  affairs  has  re- 
ceived an  additional  Republican  mem- 
ber. In  no  Instance  however,  has  the 
number  of  Democrats  on  a  committee 
been   reduced. 

The  three  vacancies  on  the  committee 


on  approprlacions  will  be  filled  by  the 
appointment  of  Senators  Curtis  of 
Kan.«as.  Burkett  of  Nebraska  and  Kean 
oi  New  .lersey.  S«*nator  Burkett  is 
one  of  the  economists  of  the  senace. 

The  one  Republican  vacancy  on  the 
committee  on  foreign  relations  has 
been  given  to  Senator  Root,  who 
takes  the  place  of  Mr.  Foraker.  Sen- 
ators Sutherland  and  Borah  will  go  on 
the  judiciary,  and  Senators  Dixon  and 
Firown  will  go  on  military  affairs.  Sen- 
ator Crane  will  become  ciiairman  of 
the  committee  on  rules  and  Senator 
Perkins  will  become  chairman  of  naval 

T.  ff  1.  i  I'M 

Senator  Flint  of  California  will  be- 
come chairman  of  the  committee  on 
interoceanic  canals,  and  Senator  La 
Follette  will  go  to  the  head  of  the 
census  committee.  These  are  both  rapid 
promotions  to  the  heads  of  important 
committees.  Senator  Burnham  of  New 
Hamp-sliire  will  become  chairman  of  the 
committee  on  claims,  while  Senator 
Borah  will  go  to  the  head  of  education 
and  labor.  Mr,  Carter  of  Montana  be- 
comes chairman  of  irrigation  and  arid 
Iand.s,  while  Mr.  Root  of  Utah  becomes 
head  of  the  printing  committee.  Mr. 
Daniels  succeeds  Mr.  Teller  as  chair- 
man of  private  land  claims. 


DEBATE  ON  POSTAL 
SAVINGS  BANKS 

Bank  Employes  Decide 

That  They  Are  Not 

Necessary. 

A  debate  between  the  bank  em- 
ployes as  to  the  necessity  and  the 
feasibility  of  postal  savings  banks, 
was  won  by  the  debaters  upholding  the 
negative  side  of  the  question,  last 
evening. 

Jolin  Evans  and  Isadore  Monschlne 
of  the  First  National  bank,  were  on 
the  winning  side  of  the  question.  D. 
H.  Snyder  of  tlie  City  National  bank, 
and  C.  J.  Grogan  of  the  Northern 
National  bank,  were  upon  the  affirma- 
tive  side. 

J.   E.  Horak,   assistant  cashier  of  the 


Northern  National  bank.  W\  W.  Wells, 
as.<*istant  cashier  of  the  First  National 
bank,  and  Colin  Thompson,  assistant 
cashier  of  the  American  Exchang'i 
bank,  were  the  Judges  of  the  Head  ot 
the  Lakes  chapter  of  the  American 
Banking  Institute. 

Eleven  new  members  were  admitted 
at  the  meeting  last  evening.  The 
chapter  now  has  a  membership  of 
forty-five,  including  most  of  the  bank 
employes  in  Duluth  and  Superior. 

Hives,  eczema,  itch,  or  salt  rheum 
sets  you  crazy.  Can't  bear  the  touch 
of  your  clothing.  Doan's  Ointment 
cures  the  most  obstinate  cases.  Why 
suffer.      All   druggists   sell    it. 

NEW  STATION  PLANNED 

AS  THE  OLD  ONE  BURNS. 

Louisville.  Ky.,  March  19.— By  the 
destruction  at  a  loss  of  $400,000  of  the 
union  depot,  the  local  terminal  of  the 
country's  chief  railroads,  Louisville 
will  probably  benefit  by  a  new  union 
station.  This  was  decided  by  tlie 
Commercial  club,  half  an  hour  after  the 
building  at  Seventh  street  and  the 
O.hio  river  was  a  mass  of  smoking  em- 
bers and  debris.  Crossed  wires  are 
believed  to  be  responsible  for  the 
blaze. 


Washington,  March  19. — "You  may 
say  that  the  repairs  to  the  battleship 
fleet  will  not  cost  the  government  a 
dollar  more  than  If  the  ships  had  re- 
mained at  home." 

This  surprlsclng  statement  Is  made 
by  an  official  of  the  navy  department 
whose  business  is  to  know  what  thln/js 
cost;  and  while  he  admits  that  figures 
to  verify  his  prophecy  are  not  avail- 
able, and  cannot  be  for  a  long  time,  he 
says  the  department  Is  sufficiently  in- 
formed as  to  the  character  of  the  re- 
pairs   to    justify    his    prediction.. 

The  reports  which  have  come  to  the 
navy  department  from  the  yards  show 
a  marvelously  small  list  of  repairs 
needed.  Tliey  are  of  such  a  minor  char- 
acter, In  fact,  tiiat  they  are  not  even 
interesting.  They  relate  chlefiy  to  pip- 
ing, including  boiler  tubes;  and  naval 
officers  say  that  repairs  of  this  kind, 
and  to  an  equal  extent,  would  have 
ben  made  anyway,  whether  the  tleet 
circled  the  globe  or  remained  in  these 
waters.  The  department  lias  not  re- 
quested estimates  as  to  the  cost,  but 
has  given  orders  to  commandants  to 
proceed  at  once  to  make  all  necesssary 
repairs,  leaving  the  cost  to  be  ascer- 
tained and  the  items  to  be  classified 
and  reported  later. 

Iteiininted    "War    Color." 

The  bureau  of  construction  and  re- 
pair, under  whose  direction  many  of 
the  repairs  will  be  made,  works  under 
an  appropriation  of  18,000,000  made  by 
made  by  congress  about  a  year  ago; 
and  as  this  was  a  general  appropria- 
tion, no  figures  indicating  for  what  it 
will  be  used  are  obtainable.  Had  the 
ships  remained  at  home,  they  would 
have  been  available  for  repairs  twice 
a  month  and  this  fact  is  to  be  taken 
into  account  In  estimating  the  actual 
outlay  for  repairs  because  of  the  world 
cruise.  Except  for  docking  on  the  I'a- 
ciflc  coast,  they  have  not  ben  repaired 
at  all  in  fifteen  months.  The  engines 
have  shown  no  signs  of  deterioration, 
and  need  only  the  renewal  of  pipes,  re- 
babbiting  and  other  minor  tinkering. 
The  ships  will  be  repainted  "war 
color,"  but  this  expense  is  not  properly 
chargeable  to  the  cruise.  The  Ver- 
mont, New  Jersey.  Ohio  and  Misosurl 
are  at  the  Boston  navy  yard  for  re- 
pairs, which  must  be  completed  by 
June  15.  They  are  Joined  also  by  <the 
Illinois,  which  is  one  of  three  shlp.s 
(the  Kearsarge  and  Kentucky  to  be 
taken  from  the  battleship  fleet  and  re- 
placed by  the  New  Hampshire.  Missis- 
sippi and  Idaho,  thus  leaving  the  unit 
of  sixteen,  as  before.  The  Illinois  will 
be  made  the  subject  of  a  general  sur- 
vey, with  the  object  of  putting  her 
out  of  commission  for  such  alterations 
as  the  board  may  deem  advisable.  This 
action  Is  based  however,  upon  the  rela- 
tively obsolete  situation  in  which  ships 
of  this  class  find'  themselves  at  the 
end  of  six  or  seven  years,  and  has 
nothing   to   do   with   the   cruise.   - 

Seveial  alterations  and  improvement.^ 
In  the  ships  have  iust  been  authorized 
bv  the  department,  and  these  will  be 
niade  simultaneou-sly  with  the  repairs, 
al.so  witliout  cost  estimates:  although 
In  the  final  rendering  of  the  accounts, 
repairs  and  alterations  will  be  segre- 
gated. Reduction  of  "top  hamper" 
(anything  that  makes  a  target  for  the 
enemy)  is  one  of  the  Important  Im- 
provements to  be  made.  This  means 
the  removal  or  rearrangement  of 
bridges,  deck  houses,  boats,  davits  and 
other  resistance  and  thus  cause  explo- 
sion of  shells.  This  work  will  vary 
more    or    less,    of    course,    upon    every 

vessel 

System  of  Fire  Patrol. 

Another  task  ia  to  bring  the  system 
of  fire  control  up  to  date.  Included  in 
tliis  Is  the  Installation  of  fire  control 
towers,  or  woven  masts,  as  they  also 
are  called,  which  are  supported  by  a 
series  of  tubes,  many  of  which  could 
be  shot  away  without  endangering  the 
structure.  One  will  be  Installed  upon 
every  ship,  and  eventually  all  will  be 
equipped  with  two.  The  remainder  of 
the  fire  control  system  will  he  improved 
wherever  necessary.  One  important  re- 
sult of  the  cruise  has  been  to  reveal  the 
necessity  of  greater  variety  and  less 
speed  In  the  "training  gear"  for  re- 
volving the  turrets.  The  fleet  has  been 
at  target  practice  twice,  under  almost 
war  conditions,  and  In  respects  of  this 
kind  the  experience  has  been  very  val- 
uable. The  old  scheme  was  to  throw 
over  the  guns  in  a  hurry,  but  this  was 
accomplished  at  the  expense  of  slow 
and  steady  control.  The  department  is 
now  trvlng  to  decide  between  the  rela- 
tive efficiency  of  an  hydraulic  and  an 
electric  system  of  control  with  which 
it  has  been  experimenting,  and  as  soon 
as  a  conclusion  has  been  reached  the 
work  will  be  pushed.  Ash  injectors 
will  be  Installed  also,  as  experience  has 
demonstrated  that  when  the  buckets 
were  hoisted  and  the  ports  and  hatches 
fipened  to  let  them  through,  the  forced 
draft  was  killed. 

While  the  ships  were  off  California, 
the  3-pound  and  6-pound  guns  used  for 
torpedo  defen.se  were  taken  off  them, 
and  these  must  be  replaced  with  larger 
guns.  These  were  sufficient  wtien  tor- 
pedo fire  carried  only  about  two  thou- 
sand yards,  but  now  that  the  distance 
Is  four  thousand  yards,  a  change  of  ar- 
mament Is  necessary.  In  the  modern 
navy  It  Is  calculated  that  a  torpedo  de- 
fense battery  should  consist  of  nothing 
smaller  tlian  3-inch  guns;  and  guns  are 
being  Installed  of  five  and  even  six  in- 
ches. It  is  the  theory  in  the  navy  that 
torpedo  attacks,  as  a  rule,  will  be  made 
only  at  night  or  after  a  battle,  when  a 
ship  Is  likely  to  be  at  a  disadvantage. 
The  changes  In  the  torpedo  batteries 
will  make  necessary  also  a  rearrange- 
ment of  the  searchlights. 


BB  QUICK 

Only  two  days  left  in  which  to  wipe  out  the  balance  of  the  Golden  Rule  Stock  The  last  chance  to  buy  merchandise  is 
waiting  for  you.       Remember,  only  Tomorrow  and  Monday  are  the  Two  Last  Days.       Our  large  new  stock  of 

I^ADIKS'   READY-TO-WKAR  GARMENTS 

has  arrived  and  we  are  compelled  to  wipe  out  the  balance  of  our  stock  to  make  rooir.  Come  ^^^^^J^^^P^^^^^^^^^^^^J^^.^' 
We  can't  afford  to  wait  a  day  longer;  we  must  have  room  in  which  to  display  our  magmficent  new  stock  of  Ladies  Ready-^^- 
Wear  Garments.  AT  ONCE.       Our  buyer  has  just  returned  from  the  Eastern  mark<:ts.  after  buying  one  of  the  most  com- 

plete  lines  of  natty  m^«««« 

XJtf-'^O''^^^^  Lradles'  Suits,  WitUta,  Lrtn^crU    aiivd  MilHticry 
to  be  procured.       Our  new  stock  will  be  a  surprise  to  the  public  of  Duluth  and  vicinity.       Come  and  ^^J^/f  *°  ^^JP^^  °"* 
the  balance  of  our  stock,  and  save  money  while  doing  so.      Read  the  prices  below  and  see  for  yourself.      We  are  displaying 
some  of  our  new  Ladies'  Wearing  Apparel  in  our  windows.       Come  and  see  the  new   ine.  


r 

r 


worth 

69c 

Over- 

98c 


Men's  French  Balbriggan  Un- 
derwear, worth  50c  per  garment. 
Last  two-day  sale  1Q|% 

price I  WW 

Lumbermen's     Rubbers, 
$1.75.      Last      two-day 
sale  price,  per  pair 

Heavyweight  Flannel 
shirts,  worth-$2.50.  Last 
two-day  sale  price 

Extra  fine  quality  men's  heavy 
weight  Flannelette  Shirts,  worth 
75c  each.  Last  two-day  OO  f^ 
sale  price WW  W 

50  dozen  men's  latest  style  fancy 
Bosom  Shirts,  worth  $1.00  each. 
Last  two-day  sale  S9C 

price..       www 

Good  jQiiflUty  turkey  red  Hand- 
kerchiefs, worth  10c.  Op 
Last  two!-day  sale  price WW 

Extra  fine  quality  lisle  thread 
Half  Hose,  worth  25c  and  50c. 
Last  tvyo-day  sale  price,  Ifio 
per  pair . ,  .- ■WW 


23c 


23c 


Extra  fine  quality  men's  Sus- 
penders, the  kind  you  pay  50c 
per  pair  for  elsewhere.  Last 
two-day  sale  price,  per 
pair 

Extra  heavy  weight,  double 
fleeced  Flannelette  Shirts  a^nd 
Drawers  to  match.  RegularSOc 
value.  Last  two-day 
sale  price 

$12  men's  heavyweight  Over- 
coats. Last  two-  ^Q  fill 
day  sale  price ^ Wb W W 

EXTRA  QUALITY. 

Men's  Spring  and  Summer  Coats 
— in  dark  gray  and  black.  Last 
two-day  sale  price,     CTO   QQ 

Extra  fine  quality  Cravenettes, 
$14  value.  Last  CLA  QH 
two-day  sale  price. .  ^"♦■w" 

Men's  Suits,  fancy  worsteds, 
mixed  goods,  etc.,  worth  $8.00. 
Last  two-day  sale  ^O  QR 
price,  only ^fc«Ww 


i^.tst   iwo- 

$4.95 


All  our  regular  $12  Suits,  in 
worsteds  and  fancy  mixe  J  goods. 
Last  two-day  sale  CT'S  Q^ 
price,  only ^'^bWW 

$16.00    Suits    in    worst«:d3    and 
fancy   mixed   goods      Lust   two- 
day  sale  price, 
only 

Men's  Silver  Brand  Collars.  All 
up-to-date  goods.  If  you  can 
find  your  size  among  the  Ag^ 
lot,  only,  each f  w 

250  Panama  Skirts,  made  up 
in  the  latest  styles,  with  buttons, 
well  tailored.  Every  skirt  worth 
double  the  amount  you  pay  for 
them.  A  small  price  will  take 
them  away. 

$1   and  $1.25   Fascinat- 
ors, Two-day  sale  price 

$4.00     fancy     Ostrich     Plumes. 
Two-day    sale 
price,  only 

25c   men's   Smoking 
Pipes  for,  each 


39c 

1     Plumes. 

$1.75 
5c 


One  lot  fancy  Artificial  Flow- 
ers, worth  up  to  25c  a  bunch. 
Two-day  sale  price  only,  Afk 
per  bunch "tW 

Children's  Dresses,  made  up  in 
fine  quality  woolen  goods  and 
other  materials,  worth  from 
$1.75  to  $3.50.  Two-  gQ|% 
day  sale  price Www 

Very  latest  styles  Ladies'  Shirt- 
waists   in*  lace    and    net.      Sold 
everywhere  for  $7. 
Two-day  sale  price 

Pearl    Buttons,   worth    up 
to  10c  per  dozen,  for 

BOYS'  CLOTHING. 

The  last  two-day  sale  prices 
should  interest  you.  You  don't 
get  this  opportunity  every  day 
We  can  sell  you  boys'  clothing 
at  25c  on  the  dollar.  There  is  no 
reason  why  you  should  not  take 
advantage  of  this  great  oppor- 
tunity, when  the  cost  to  you  is 
so  little. 


$3.98 
1c 


,; 

1 

] 

<   1 

1 

1 

1 

■ 

-\ 

Purses 

Ladies'  Purses  and  Pocket- 
books,  finest  quality  leather. 
We  are  going  out  of  this  line, 
and  in  order  to  sell  them  out 
quick,  we  l^t  you  have  them  at 
your  own  price. 


THE  GOtDEN  RULE 

IZ^A^     EAST.SUPERIOR    STR^EJT  ■ 


Don't  forget  that  we  have  a 
large  line  of  men's  women's 
and  children's  Shoes,  and  also 
that  we  can  save  you  more  than 
50  per  cent  on  each  pair. 

It  will  pay  j'ou  to  come  here 
if  you  have  to  travel  one  hun- 
dred miles  or  more. 


-»— H 


i- 


.'-.^^-^^-^'^-TV-i.i^-,. 


HELP  THE 
RED  CROSS 

» 

Effort  to  NationaHze  tlie 
Society  Through  Sun- 
day Schools. 

Ten  Thousand  Members 

in  America,  a  MilHon 

in  Japan. 


Washington.  March  19.— The  new 
president  of  the  United  States  Is  Just 
new  the  recipient  of  many  kinds  of 
letters,  but  there  Is  one  class  of  mall 
which  he  views  with  pure  pleasure — the 
stream  of  correspondence  which  has 
lately  been  sent  in  to  him  as  president 
of  the  National  Red  Cross  society  from 
Sunday  school  classes.  P'or.  by  a  new 
development  in  both  the  Red  Cross  and 
the  Sunday  school  members  of  the  lat- 
ter can  join  the+fioTuoer,  and  advocates 
of  the  plan  bell*ve  that  the  result  will 
be  marked  in  both  directions. 

The  movement,  which  owes  its  incep- 
tion to  the  Rev.  Charles  A.  Brand  of 
the  CongresationAl  Sunday  school 
board  is  a  notable  ejepression  of  the 
present  tendency  to  broaden  the  scope 
of  rellerious  education  and  activity.  It 
may  grow  to  enormous  magnitude,  for, 
as  is  well  known,  tlie  Sunday  school  is 
the  largest  and  best-organized  phase  of 
strictly  church  work.  There  are  about 
1.3,000  000  members  of  the  S'unday  school 
on  this  continent  alone,  and  25.000,000 
in  all  the  world. 

To   Multiply    the    Red    Cross. 

This  unparalleled  tield  is  viewed  with 
covetous  eyes  by  all  reformers  and  pro- 
tagonists of  special'scauses,  who  would 
utilize  it  for  their  special  ends.  Tlie 
temperance  people,  after  strenuous 
effort,  scored  4  JJJ"«at  triumph  when 
they  secured  tne  adoption  of  a  quar- 
terly teuiperance  l^BSon,  which  has  ad- 
mittedly been  one  of  the  underlying 
torces  responsible  for  the  extraordin- 
ary force  of  present-day  temperance 
sentiment.  The  mission  boards,  too.  are 
making  systematic  attempts  to  tie  up 
their  cause  to  the  Sunday  school.  This 
Red  Cross  propaganda,  however,  has 
originated  within  the  ranks  of  Sunday 
school  workers  themselves,  and  it  is  re- 
garded   as    a    proper      adjunct    of    the 


larger  educational  methods  of  the  Sun- 
day school.  The  Initiative  came  froni 
♦he  latter  and  not  from  the  Red  Cross 
society,  although  the  latter  heartily 
favors   It. 

The  method  agreed  upon  is  simple. 
Entire  classes  of  Sunday  school  schol- 
ars, are  enrolled  as  members  of  the  Na- 
tional Red  Cross,  upon  paying  the  fee 
of  indivldu.al  membership,  which  Is  $1.. 
This  entitles  all  tlie  members  of  the 
tla.ss  to  call  themselves  members  of  the 
organization'.  The  class  receives  the 
Red  Croas  Bulletin  and  one  official 
badge;  a  badge  for  every  boy  or  girl 
mav  be  secured  upon  a  small  additional 
payment.  It  anything  like  the  expected 
proportion  of  Sunday  school  classes 
take  advantage  of  this  arrangement, 
the  membership  of  the  Red  Cross  so- 
cletv  will  increase  manyfold.  and  its 
educational  worth  be  directly  en- 
larged. 

After  the  JaiMincMe   FaHhlon. 

At  present,  tlie  American  National 
Red  Cross  society  numbers  less  than 
10,000  members.  This  membership  la 
largely  perfunctory,  and  Is  merely  an 
accidental  result  of  contributions.  Few 
persons  consider  it  important  to  belong 
to  the  organization,  and  there  Is  little 
esprit  de  corps.  All  this  would  be 
changed  by  the  enlistment  of  myriads 
of  enthusiastic  youngsters,  proud  of 
the  society  and  its  badge;  an  inevita- 
ble result  would  be  an  enlarged  in- 
crease the  adult  membership,  as  well  as 
enhanced  Interest.  In  this  country, 
the  Red  Cross  society  !s  merely  an 
efficient  emergency  organization.  In 
.Japan  it  Is  a  national  society.  Over 
against  America's  less  than  10,000  Red 
Cross  members,  must  be  put  Japan's 
more  than  1.250,000.  This  insures  the 
nation's  constant  interest  and  co-oper- 
ation In  all  the  military  and  civic  en- 
terprises   of    the    society.      The    largest 


hospital    in     Japan    is     the    great    Red 
Cross   hospital   in  Toklo. 

Will    Supplant    BaudM    of    Mercy. 

Sunday  school  workers  have  in  mind 
primarily  the  educational  and  patriotic 
advantage  of  the  nev  movement. 
There  have  long  existed  among  the 
children  of  many  churches  societies 
after  the  Band  of  Mercy  pattern,  de- 
.signed  to  teach  gentlenesij  and  humanl- 
tarianlsm.  Probably  the  new  alliance 
with  the  Red  Cross  \^  ill  supersede 
these.  This  method  puts  the  teaching 
of  humane  conduct  upon  n  broader  ba- 
sis. It  Inculcates  also  a  spirit  of  cos- 
mopolitanism that  is  in  consonnance 
with  the  day's  new  note  of  internation- 
alism. 

Every  great  public  dlss.ster,  like  the 
earthquakes  in  Messina  and  San  Fran- 
cisco, the  Are  at  Chelsea  or  the  famine 
in  China,  will  be  brough':  directly  and 
deflnltelv  before  the  Sunday  schools. 
Apart  altogether  from  the  religious 
and  humanitarian  lessons  thus  Incul- 
cated, the  amount  of  mor  ey  given  will 
be    greatly    increa.sed. 

For  PatrlotlMiu  and  Peace. 
The  Sunday  school  workers  who  are 
behind  tiiis  project  are  primarily  in- 
terested in  its  value  as  i  training  in- 
patriotism  and  Christian  citizenship. 
Everv  boy  Is  a  natural  jlngoist  and 
militarist.  He  loves  war  and  the  glory 
of  arms.  By  enrolling  h  m  in  the  Red 
Cross  society.  It  is  thought  that  this 
instinctive  Interest  in  war  and  patriot- 
ism may  be  given  a  new  avenue  of  ex- 
pression. The  helpful,  ministering  and 
merciful  aspect  of  armed  conflict  will 
l.e  presented  to  him  firs;.  He  will  be 
taught  the  glory  of  savl  ig  life,  rather 
than  of  destroying  it.  The  worth  of 
sacrifice  and  service  will  be  inculcated, 
but  in  a  manner  that  sh  juld  make  for 
peace  rather  for  strife. 

An  appeal  to  the  youthful  imagina- 
tion is  made  by  the  Red  Cross  emblem. 
It  Is  sacred  and  inviolable  t>n  all  battle- 


fields. It  l3  the  one  International  flag. 
The  members  ofjJ:hls  society  belong  to 
a  world-wide  oKler.  It  stands  for  in- 
ternationalism in  service,  a  practical 
world  brotherhood  and  a  real  embodi- 
ment of  the  spirit  of  Christianity. 

Those  persons  who  have  complained 
that  the  Sunday  school  teacliing  is 
wishy-washy  and  impractical,  find  their 
objections  met  by  this  practical  enroll- 
ment and  education  of  the  young  people 
In   tliis  well-organized  national  agency. 


of    which    tlie    ]>resident    of    the 
States  is  the  official  head. 


United 


Can't  look  w*'!!.  eat  woU  or  feel  well 
with  impure  blood  feeding  your  body. 
Keep  the  blood  pure  with  Burdocx 
Blood  Bitters.  Eat  simply,  take  exer- 
cise, keep  clean  and  you  will  have  long 
life. 


DIED  WORTH  NEARLY  MILLION 

Solomon  Andrews  Be«:an  Life  as  a 
Pie  Vendor. 

Cardiff.  Whales.  March  19. — The  will 
has  been  proved  at  $?23,370  of  Solomon 
Andrews,  the  omnibus  proprietor,  who 
started  life  as  an  itinerant  vendor  of 
pies  made  by  himself. 

From  the  profits  made  as  a  peddler 
he  gradually  built  up  a  very  large  busi- 
ness as  a  baker  and  confectioner,  after- 
wards becoming  a  draper,  undertaker, 
restaurant  proprietor,  cab  proprietor, 
colliery  owner  and  omnibus  proprietor. 
At  the  time  of  his  death  he  was  the 
owner  of  omnibus  lines  running  all 
over  the  Cardiff  district,  and  in  Lon- 
don. Manchester.  Plymouth  and  Ports- 
mouth. 

Mr.  Andrews  left  his  estate  to  his 
wife  and  family. 


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1 

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1 

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4 
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-»—  — 


Oor  Ever  Increasing  Business 

Is  the  best  proof  that  the  public  likes 
our  "PITTSTON"  anthracite  coal 
and  the  prompt  way  we  deliver  it.  If 
you  have  never  had  a  ton  of  our  fuel 
in  your  cellar,  now's  the  best  time  to 
find  out  what  we  furnish  and  how 
quickly  we  do  it.  Frankly,  we  are 
looking  for  your  trade.  May  we 
have  it? 


PITTSBURGH  GOAL  GO, 

306  WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 
Telephone  2100. 


FRENCH  HYGIENISTS  MAY 
STARVE  PARIS  TO  DEATH. 

Paris,    March  .  19. — After    prohibiting 

lea.  coffee  and  chocolate  on  the  ground 
that  they  encourage  gout,  French  hy- 
gienists  have  now  placed  the  ban  on 
milk.  What  Is  sold  as  such  Is  said  to 
be  a  concoction  not  to  be  recognized  by 
any  self-respecting  cow. 

In  the  case  of  the  genuine  article — 
which  Is  declared  hardly  to  exist — 
even  if  the  cow  is  not  suffering  from 
tuberculosis.  Its  milk  has  been  con- 
taminated by  the  hands  of  the  milk- 
maid. 

One  specialist  Insists  on  the  neces- 
sity of  tooth  brushes  for  cows,  whose 
mouths  are  "veritable  hotbeds  of  mi- 
crobes." .      ^     « 

Following  the  example  of  Prof. 
Metchnlkoof,  the  eminent  biologist, 
many  Frenchwomen  now  refuse  to  eat 
fruit  unless  it  has  been  cooked  or 
washed  in  sterilized  water.  Toilet 
water  is  only  considered  safe  after 
having  been  boiled  two  or  three  times, 
and  the  bath  should  be  "purified  by 
rtame." 

Servants  who  wait  at  tables  should, 
it  is  urged,  wear  glasses,  which  are 
boiled  after  each  meal  and  dried  by 
hot  air.  In  order  to  avoid  all  risk  of 
contamination  for  the  guests,  and  they 
should,  after  washing  their  hands  with 
soap  and  boiled  water,  cleanse  them  In 
alcohol. 

All  animals  must  be  banished  from 
the  house  If  hygiene  Is  to  be  regard- 
ed. Even  the  canary  is  considered  cap- 
able of  communicating  contagious  dis- 
eases. 


Kbdol 
I  INSURU 

6ood  Digestion 

Digesting  All  Food 

That  is  al  I  there  ia  to  it— nothing  secret 
or  mysterious,  or  marvelous — just  that 
Kodol  contains,  in  liquid  form,  all  of  Nar 
ture's  natural  digestive  ferments  and 
juices— thus  enabling  it  at  once  to  digest 
completely,  every  particle  of  food  with 
which  it  comes  in  contact.  And  where 
there  is  perfect  digestion  in  the  stomach 
there  is,  necessarily^  perfect  stomach 
health.  A  good  and  health  vdlgestlve  pro- 
cess can  always  be  a^ured  to  one's  stom- 
ach,if  one  willmerelylceepabottleof  Ko- 
dol handv,  and  take  a  little,now  and  then. 

Our  Guarantee,  gf  o^  ^'Xl^'u 

vou  are  not  beneftted— the  drutfk-'ist  will  at 
once  return  your  money.  Don't  hesitate:  any 
drugfrist  will  sell  you  Kodol  on  these  terms. 
The  dollar  bottle  coniauj*  2^  times  as  much  ae 
the  600  bottle.  K«oi  ts  prepared  at  the  lal> 
oratories  of  E.  C.  D^Witt  &  Co..  Chioago. 


Men's  Spring 


Suits 


Cxopcoats 


•  The  new  spring:  g^arments  are  arriving:  daily. 
Every  model  will  commend  itself  to  the  stylish 
dresser  on  sig:ht.  We  can  fit  you  better  a  nd  with 
more  style  than  the  majority  of  tailors. 

Men's  Suits  and  Topcoats 

»15,  »20,  »25, 

»30  and  »35 


• 

: 

i      • 

1 
1 

I 

Ma 


I 


FLO  AN.  LEVERQ  OS  &  CO 


If 


~  r~i  -  - 1 


....^^■■Vffi 


■.jmt 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1009. 


r 


( 


\ 


Homey  Home— Sweet  Sweet  Home, 
Be  It  Ever  So  Humble  - 

Is  there  anything  quite  so  dear  to  the  heart — 
that  touches  so  tender  and  so  responsive  a  chord  as 
the  old  sweet  melodies  of  "long  ago?" 

The  Victor  not  only  gives  you  ^11  of  the  "Good 
Old  Songs,"  but  it  gives  you  all  of  the  up-to-date  mu- 
sic as  well — vocal  and  instrumental — popular  and 
classical — vaudeville  and  grand  opera.  The  Victor 
brings  the  musical  artists  of  the  world  to  your  home 
at  a  trifling  cost. 

• 
* 

A  Complete   Victor  Outfit 
and  12  Selections  $22 

This  is  the  new  Victor  "O"  machine 
— the  latest  Victor  triumph — the  very 
best  talking  machine  in  the  world  for 
the  price. 

It  will  do  practically  anything  that 
the  larger  and  more      expensive      ma- 
chines  will   do — the  reproductions  be- 
ing almost  as  perfect,   but 
not    quite    so    voluminous. 
We  offer  you  this  hand- 
some    machine     in  a  ma- 
hogany   finish,      with    a 
large        and        beautiful 
varl-colored  flower  horn 
— just  like  cut,  together 
with    six    of      the      new 
large  double   faced  rec- 
ords, giving  you  twelve 
musical      selections      of 
your    own    choice;    also 
300    extra    needles    and 
all         other       necessary 
equipment,  complete  — 

'"  $22.00 

,  Outfits  from  $10  up. 
Terms,  $5  down,  and  $1 
per   wet^k. 

The  Original  ^'Uncle  Josh''  Records 

And  records  of  all  the  other  popular  and  latest  musical 
"hlt.«<"  and  vaudeville  "skits"  are  here  for  laoth  the  Victor 
and  Edison  machines. 

As  soon  as  a  record  is  out,  it's  here — you  can  get  what  you 
want  in  machines  and  records  at  Bayha's  when  you  can't  else- 
where. Wf  carrj'  the  largest  stocks  of  Victor  and  Edi.son 
machine.si  and  records  In  Duluth.  And  only  new  and  per- 
fect goods,  because  we  do  not  and  never  have  loaned  or 
rented   records  or  machines. 

9iP~  Store  Opt>n  Saturday  Evenings  till  10  o'clock. 


Victor  and 
Edison  f'ata- 

loijues  and 
Record  Lists 

on  Bequest. 


Mail  Orders 

for  Machines 

or  Records 

Earnestly 

Solicited. 


TARIFF  BILL 
ISJIEARD 

Long  Document  Is  Read 

and  Its  Consideration 

Begun. 

Clark   Will    Lead    the 

Fight    for   Free 

Lumber. 


Washington,  March  19. — Formal  con- 
sideration of  the  tariff  bill  was 
launched  in  the  house  today  when  the 
reading  of  the  bulky  measure  was 
begun. 

It  Is  the  expectation  that  when  the 
264  pages,  which  comprise  the  bill, 
have  been  read,  adjournment  will  be 
taken  until  Monday  and  on  that  day 
general  debate  will  commence.  Just 
how   long   this   shall   continue   has   not 

been    determined. 

When  the  senate  met  today,  the  un- 
derstanding was  that  there  shall  be  no 
general  business  and  that  an  adjourn- 
ment be  taken  until  .next  Monday.  A 
number  of  senators  are  absent  from 
the  city. 

The  fi^ht  for  free  lumber  will  be 
headed  by  Charap  Clark.  He  has  fre- 
quently   expressed      himself    in      bitter 


terms  regarding  the  lumber  situation 
In  this  country.  During  the  tariff 
hearings  he  arraigned  the  lumber 
magnates  and  delved  deep  into  the  In- 
trlracies  of  stumpage  and  railroad  land 
grants.  It  Is  not  thought  there  will  be 
any  serious,  opposition  to  the  'tariff 
placed  on  tea. 

Unless  a  gag  rule,  for  the  preven- 
tion of  unlimited  amendment  under  the 
five  minute  rule  Is  brought  In,  the 
minority  members  of  the  ways  and 
means  committee  will  not  report  a 
separate  bill.  Their  report  will  be 
drafted  by  Minority  Leader  Clark,  and 
will  severely  criticise  the  wool  sched- 
ule in  the  new  bill.  It  is  contended 
by  the  Democrats  that  it  has  not  been 
cut  sufficiently  to  place  it  on  a  rev- 
enue basis.  There  probably  will  be 
numerous  amendments  offered  and 
heated  discussions  affecting  them  are 
anticipated. 

The  inheritance  tax,  Philippine  free 
trade,  internal  revenue  and  maximum 
and  minimum  features  of  the  new  bill 
are  endorsed  by  the  minority  leaders, 
and  there  has  been  much  favorable 
comment  upon  the  measure  by  Dem- 
ocratic congres.smen.  Champ  Clark  to- 
day declared  that  he  had  sufficient 
time  to  look  into  its  provisions  to 
enable   him   to  comment   upon   them. 


A  Big  Surprise  Saturday 

Mining  Stock  News  enlarged  and 
with  cover.  On  sale  everywhere, 
10c  a  copy.       13.00  per  year. 


Scope  and  View  Sale 

A  Stereoscopic  Trip  tlirougli  Uie  L'.  S.  from 
Ntw  Ycrk  t«  San  Kraiidsco.  23  famous  stop- 
ping  place*,    in    neat   little    IxiX,    50c. 

Also  our  "Uttle  Jouniey  Through  Klnder- 
Farftii,"  25  Tlews  of  happy  childhood  and 
tfielr  little  pets.  Taken  from  life  and  colored 
■■tnie  to  life."  50c. 

■  The  Ufe  of  Christ"— 25  beauUful  colored 
views.    In    gold    letteretl    box.    'r,c. 

White  Co.   patent  Scopes.   25c  to  $3.50. 

White  Co.    "KdiUon  de  Luxe"  Views,  $2   do7. 

Art    Hooms,    H.    C.    White  ('i>..    New   York 
H.  P.   Penuer,   Kepresentative. 

208  SELLWOOD  BUILDING, 


WILLIAM  AMES 
DIES  FROM  FALL 

Fractured  Skull  Received 

at  the  Courthouse 

Proves  Fatal. 

William  Ames,  who  sustained  a  frac- 
ture of  the  skull  by  a  fall  at  the  new 
courthouse  yesterday  morning,  died  at 
St.  Mary's  "hospital  last  night  at  9 
o'clock.  While  working  near  an  open 
place  on  the  fourth  floor  of  the  court- 
house yesterday,  he  slipped  and  fell 
to   the  third  floor,  landing  on   his   head. 

Mr.  Ames  was  58  years  old  and 
leaves  a  wife  and  five  children,  four 
sons  and  one  daughter.  Two  of  his 
sons.  William  and  Herbert  .are  married 
and  reside  In  Duluth.  The  daughter, 
Mrs.  Ada  Ross,  lives  at  Proctor.  The 
other  twc  sons  also  make  their  home 
In    Duluth. 


I  "STRANGE  BEAST"  KILLED  ON  THE 

BOWERY  WAS  ONLY  "PETE,"  RAT  KILLER 
EXTRAORDINARY  TO  THE  LENOX  HOTEL 


Sh-sh!  A  mystery  has  been  solved. 
The  Identity  of  "the  strange  beast 
killed"  has  been  discovered. 

"Who  can  tell  its  name  and  tribe?" 
mysteriously  queries  the  morning  paper. 
Its  name  was  "Pete,"  and  it  formerly 
belonged  to  the  Ferret  family.  Its 
tribe  can  be  found  somewhere  in  the 
northern  part  of  the  state.  The  animal 
that  puzzled  the  animal  expert  of  the 
morning  paper,  and  also  puzzled  the 
sleuths  of  the  police  department,  was 
simply  a  harmless  ferret  that  belonged 
to  the  HIbenack  brothers  of  the  Hotel 
I.,enox.  The  little  animal  lived  a  quiet 
life,  chasing  rats  into  their  domiciles, 
and  ringing  down  the  curtain  upon 
tlieir    existence. 

The  poor,  simple  little  beast,  even 
in  Its  maddest  flights  of  fancy,  probably 
never  hoped  to  attain  the  great  notor- 
iety that   it  achieved. 

The  faithful  minions  of  the  law — it 
wasn't  a  dark  and  stormy  night,  to  be 
sure — aleuthed  down  the  Bowery.  Alert 
•and  ready  for  any  emergency  that 
might  present  itself,  they  were.  Sud- 
denly athwart  his  path  shot  a  strange 
animal.  L,o  and  behold,  it  was  tailess, 
and,  therefore,  must  belong  to  some  ex- 
tinct race  of  long  forgotten  bipeds. 
The  minions  of  the  law  managed  to 
hang  one  over  on  the  ferret.  They 
snuffed  his  glim  for  him.  Who  killed 
cock  robin  still  continues  to  be  a  burn- 
ing question,  but  there  is  no  doubt  as 
to  who  killed  "Pete,"  the  ferret.  Oflti- 
cers  Gillon  and  Mason  did  it 

The  animal  editor  of  the  morning 
paper  saw  the  cold  form  of  little 
"Pete."  That  person  scowled  deeply; 
a  frown  furrowed  hi.s  dome-like  hrow. 
Then  a  series  of  furrows  cha.sed  them- 
selves over  his  brow. 

"A  mystery!"  he  exclaimed,  and  the 
awe-stricken  offlcers  repeated  his 
words  in   deep,   rumbling   whispers. 

Then    the    animal    editor    did    a    Tom 


Longboat  into  the  engraving  room. 
Soon  a  picture  was  made  of  the  cold 
carcass  of  little  "Pete."  Then  the 
story_  In  all  of  its  mysterious  phases, 
was   given   to   skgi   eayer  public. 

The  Klbcnacl|  br^hers,  Al,  Ed  and 
Henry,  /though  sorrow-stricken  this 
morning  upon  learning  the  fate  of  little 
"Pete,"  who  never  did  more  harm  thatn 

kill  rodents  in  the  hotel  kitchen,  de- 
clined at  first  to  be  Interviewed  upon 
the  subject.  But  persistence  won  the 
day.  Calming  themselves,  for  the 
morning  paper  story  had  Indeed  been 
a  great  shock,  they  unfolded  the  story 
of   little   "Pete." 

It  runs  thusly: 

"Little  "Pete/  now  cold  In  clammy 
death,  lost  his  tall  in  one  of  those 
untoward  accidents  that  sometimes 
happen  to  men  and  beasts — no.  that  is 
not  quite  right,  either,  for  'Pete'  lost 
his  tail.  Anyway,  one  day  he  ven- 
tured from  the  precincts  of  the  kitchen 
and  skipped  blithely,  dullcare  thrown 
to  the  wind.s,  into  the  lobby  of  the 
hotel.  He  wriggled  through  the  bars 
of  the  elevator  cage,  and  wriggled  out 
again,  not  soon  enough,  however,  to 
get  his  tall  out  of  the  way  of  the  de- 
scending  lift.      He   lost    his   tail.  ' 

So  when  Sleuths  Mason  and  Gillon 
picked  up  the  body  of  "the  strange 
beast  that  was  killed  on  the  Bowery, 
they  pondered  in  deep  wonderment.  It 
must  be  some  strange  species;  it  had 
no  tail.  The  animal  editor  of  the  morn- 
ing paper  did  the  rest,  with  the  aid  of 
the  staff  photographer  and  there  you 
have  the  history  of  ifttle  'Pete,'  the 
humble   ferret. 

What  a  shame  that  "Pete"  could  not 
have  lived  to  enjoy  this  transitory 
fame. 


"AND  THEN  I  HIT  HIM." 

"DISMISSED,"  SAYS  JUDGE 


He  had  a  richly  upholstered  eye,  col- 
ored like  a  Corot  landscape.  That  eye 
was  a  work  of  art.  No  common  man 
could  have  done  the  job.  It  was  a 
masterpiece,  and  looked  as  if  some 
person  had  struck  the  victim  with  a 
pile  driver.  From  dark  blue,  almost 
black  near  the  center.  It  gradually 
faded  into  light  blue,  grey,  and  then 
there  came  a  tinge  of  orange  and 
brown  around  the  outer  edges.  It  was 
beautiful. 

•What's  the  charge?"  asked  the 
judge. 

"lighting,"   said   the   officer. 

"That  wasn't  a  flght.  It  was  a  mur- 
der," said  the  court.  '.'Where's  the 
other  fellow?"  . 

A  descendant  of  the  Irish  kings 
stood    up. 

"Did  you  do  that?"  asked  the  court 
pointing  to  the  smoked  lamp  that  dec- 
orated the  other  prisoners  face. 

"I  did,  sor,"  said  the  son  of  Erin, 
with  a  decided  brogue.  "We  were 
drinking  together  on  St.  Patricks  day. 
and  he  said  the  Germans  always  could 
lick    the   liish." 

"And  then  you  hit  him?" 

"No   sor,   I   didn't   hit  him  then.     But 


THE  JOB  WAS 
A  HARD  ONE 

Duluth    Teachers  Read 

Several  Hundred  "Ben 

Hur"  Essays. 


he  i-aid  that  St.  Patrick  must  have  been 
as  drunk  as  I  was  to  have  seen  so 
many    tnakes    In    Ireland." 

"And  you  hit   him  then?" 

"No  SI  ,  I  didn't  hit  him  then.  But 
he  said  he  was  an  Orangeman,  and 
that  he  never  saw  a  good  Orangeman 
yet,  who  couldn't  whip  seven  Irish- 
men." 

"And   that's   when   you   hit  him?" 

"No  sor.  I'm  a  peaceable  man,  and 
I  wasn't  lookiag  for  trouble.  I  let 
that  pass.  But  then  he  started  talking 
about  me  ancestors.  He  went  away 
back  to  me  great  grandfather,  and 
came  right  down  to  me,  telling  me 
what  he  thouglit  of  each.  And  some 
of  his  remarks  weren't  complimentary. 
Finally,  he  came  to  me,  and  he  called 
me  an  Irish  gorilla." 

"And  that's  where  the  trouble  be- 
gan?" 

"No  sor.  I  didn't  hit  him  then.  1 
didn't    care,    so    I   let    it    pa.ss." 

"But   what   started   the    trouble? 

"Well,  he  got  to  discussing  birth- 
places. He  said  he  came  from  Becker 
county  and  his  name  was  Bjorge. 
Then    I   hit    him." 

"Case   dismissed."   said   the   court. 


»»»»»»»»»»»»»».»»»»***»**»$ 

* 
* 


1NDI.%N  CIIOKKS 

AVOLI"  TO  DE.\TH. 


vh  19. —  $ 


Names  of  Winners  WiH 

be  PubHshed  in  Herald 

Saturday. 


The  winners  in  the  "Ben  Hur"  con- 
test will  be  announced  in  The  Herald 
Saturday  night. 

Last  night,  twenty-one  teachers,  se- 
lected by  Supt.  R.  E.  Denfeld  of  the 
city  schools,  met  in  the  board  room 
at  the  Central  high  school  to  judge 
the  papers  and  decide  on  these  who 
are  to  receive  the  150  tickets.  It  Is 
not  an  easy  matter  to  go  through 
many  hundreds  of  essays,  even  though 
a  person  is  accustomed  to  the  work, 
and  it  was  after  midnight  before  the 
task   was   completed. 

The  names  of  the  winners  will  ap- 
pejjr  in  the  paper  tomorrow  night. 
The  tickets  are  to  be  left  Saturday  at 
the  office  of  Supt.  Denfeld  and  he  will 
attend  to  the  distribution,  which  will 
be  made  after  school  hours  on  Mon- 
dav.  when  the  children  who  have 
found  their  names  in  the  list  to  bo 
published  in  The  Herald,  may  call  for 
them. 

The  contest  has  been  very  interest- 
ing from  the  very  start.  The  work 
was  taken  up  In  a  great  many  of  the 
school  buildings  throughout  the  city, 
and  most  of  the  pupils  in  the  Duluth 
public  schools  are  now  familiar  with 
the  story  of  "Ben  Hur."  Teachers 
say  that  the  book  was  a  trifle  ahead 
of  the  work  done  in  the  seventh  and 
eighth  grades,  v.nd  that  while  some 
riadily  understood  the  story  with 
little  explanation,  most  of  the  pupils 
were  unable  to  grasp  it  until  told  in 
simple  words.  "It  was  a  great  thing 
and  The  Herald  is  to  be  congratu- 
lated," said  one  teacher  over  the  tele- 
phone this  morning.  "The  study- 
ing of  the  play  and  the  writing  of  the 
composition  brought  out  many  of  the 
weak  points  of  the  students,  and  I 
for  one,  found  out  more  about  the 
points  my  children  are  weak  in  than 
in  any  work  yet  attempted  this  year. 
It  was  an  educational  contest  in  every 
sense  of  the  word,  and  the  teachers, 
as  well  as  the  pupils,  all  over  the 
city  were  greatly  interested.  It  re- 
lieved the  dull  monotony  of  school 
life  and  brightened  things  up  consid- 
erably." 


Menoininoi"   MIrli..  >Iarc 
(Sp<Hial  to  The  Herald.) — Armed   * 
witli    no    weaiK»u    but    a    pair    of  ^ 
buckskin  glovee,  John   llou.«e.  aii  M^ 
^  Indian  trapper,  and  a  timber  w<)lf  ^ 

*  battle<l  to  u  finish  yesterday,  and  * 

*  the     wolf's     pelt     is     now     being  * 

*  tanneil  to  a<lorn  the  hunter's  hut.  * 
^       House  was  visiting  his  traps  In  * 

*  Holmes  township  early  In  the  * 
^jf  morning;  and  as   he  tosse*!   a*ilde  * 

*  a  covering  of  brush,  a  full  gr«)wn  * 

*  wolf  leapi-il  at  his  face.  The  In-  * 
Utt  dian  grabbed  tlie  animal  by  the  * 
^  neck   and    tlirew   himself   to    the  ^(^ 

ground.  Over  and  over  they  * 
rolled  until  tlie  trapper,  uimiind-  ^ 
ful  of  the  terrific  scratching,  * 
fastened  both  hands  imon  the  •* 
animarij  throat  and  choked  it  to  * 
death. 


• 
* 


%t*t****tttii^***********-*** 


*  "EVERYTHINO  GOING  * 
^                   WRONG;"  KILLS   SELF  * 

^  ^ 

*  Grand  Forks.  N.  D.,  March  19.  0 
^  — (Special  to  The  Herald.) —  * 
^  After  writing  letters  to  his  father,  * 
^  his  sister  and  his  sweetheart  •* 
0  Arnold  Fjelstad  of  Belle  Plalne,  * 
^  Sargent  county.  cmp»ie<l  tJie  con-  •* 
^  tents  of  a  shotgun  into  lUs  body,  * 
*•  Tliurs«lay.  death  being  instan-  •* 
^  taneous.  In  his  letters,  the  sul-  ^ 
Mfr  cide  said  that  "everything  is  ^ 
^  going  wrong,"  that  being  the  ^ 
•jjt  i"eason  given  for  the  act.  He  -sit 
0  was  27  J  ears  old.  # 

*  * 


Try  Our 

Shoes  for 

Children 


You  desire  comfortable,  styl- 
ish and  economical  shoes  ^tm^ 
your  child. 

'  Your   desire   can   be   sati.sfied 
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We  know  how  to  fit  growing 
feet. 

Know  how  they  should  be 
fitted. 

If  you  have  been  disappointed 
in  other  stores,  we  insist  on  fit- 
ting the  next  pair.  Try  us  and 
see  if  we  do  not  make  good. 

Prices  From 

75c  to  $2.50 

But  what  does  the  price  sig- 
nify, unless  you  see  the  shoes? 
May  we  show  them  to  you? 


Gents'  Shirts 

11.00  Gents'  Shirts. 
The  celbrated 
Model  brand,  on 
Saturday — 

59c  Each 


<'WNERK  VALUES  REIQN  tUPREHIE. 


f» 


TIOBC 


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21-23  WEST  SUPIIRIOR  STREET. 


Table  Damask 

66c  Bleached  Table 
Damask — the  Qer- 
m  a  n  merceri  zed 
goods:  special — 

45c  Yd. 


A  MAGNIFICENT 
SHOWING  OF 


New  Spring  Styles  J 


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An  event  of  absorbing  interest  not  onl}'  to  fashion,  but  to  those  who  are  desirous 
of  securing  the  most  value  for  every  dollar  expended  in  spring  merchandise.  The 
matchless  display  of  spring  garments,  and  fabric,  style  and  beauty,  secured  by  special 
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gains. 


A  Grand  Showing  of  New 
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Featured  for  tomorrow's  selling,  expressing  all  the  authentic  new 
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morrow at 

$12.50,  $17.50,  and  $21.50 
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In  fine  hard  twisted  English  Coverts  and  multi-colored  novelty  wor.^tcds, 
in  the  new  hipless  models  with  large  side  pockets,  ^?  ^  O  O  ^ 
serviceable,  stylish  garments  for  Spring.     Special %ljJLJmi»jfKJ 

$12.50  Black  Voile  Skirts  for  $7.95 

Made  up  in  Altman's  hard  twisted  clinging  voile,  satin  €^  'T  O  ^ 
and  button  trimmed,  a  regular  $12.50  skirt  for SP  J  •  ^  %J 

New  Messaline  Waists 

Just  received  in  several  styles  and  colors,  beautifully  C^  O  ^ 
tailored;  an  exceptional  bargain  for %Um7X»  >^0 

^5.50  Taffeta  Silk  Petticoats  for  $3.98 

Made  up  in  Simon's  heavy  taffeta  silk,  made  with  deep  flare  flounce, 
cut  full,  in  colors  and  black;  a  regular  $5.50  Petticoat;  lj>  O  Q  O 
tomorrow  for %Jp\J»Z^%J 


Easter  Dress  Goods 

A  Big  Job  in  New 
Spring  Goods 

The  latest  patterns  of  assorted 
checks  and  stripes,  50c  values  at 
exactly  half  price,  to-  •^  flT^^ 
morrow,  a  yard ^  OC- 

Storm  Serge,  38  inches  wide,  all 
wool  in  black,  cream,  white  and 
all  the  new  Spriog  shades.  To- 
morrow at  special,  per  ^  ^^ 
yard O  OC 

Chiffon  Mohair,  45  inches  wide 
with  a  beautiful  silklike  luster, 
black  only;  regular  $1.00  kind;  a 
leader    for    tomorrow  ^7^/^ 

Chiffon  Panama,  52  inches  wide, 
all  wool,  black  and  gray,  regu- 
lar $1.25  quality,  AJO/* 

New  Spring  novelty  Dress  Goods, 
all  wool,  44  inches  wide;  regular 
$1.25  quality,  Sat-  If  ^  /l/l 
urday.  the  yard \^  A  m\J\J 

New  Silks 

27-inch  Shangtai  Silk,  all  the  latest 
Spring  colors  and  patterns,  regular 
50c    values,    Saturday,  ^Qg^ 

the  yard O  ZfKy 


Knit  Underwear  at  Big  Savings 

Big  clearing  Saturday  of  all  men's  and  women's  Urderwear.  They 
must  go  to  make  room  for  Spring  goods.  Twill  pay  you  to  buy  now, 
and  lay  them  aside  for  next  Winter. 


$4.50  ladies'  fine  wool  Union 

Suits    $3.50 

$3.50  ladies'  ribbed  pure  wool 

Union  Suits    $2.50 

$1.25  ladies'  gray  wool  ribbed 

Union  Suits    89< 

50c  ribbed  Vests,  special 25^ 

50c  ribbed  Union  Suits 29< 

Men's  50c  Shirts  and  Drawers  39^ 


Men's  59c  Shirts  ard  Drawers  45<^ 
Men's  75c  Shirts  ard  Drawers  50< 
Men's  $1.25  ribbed  Shirts  and 

Drawers 89^ 

Men^s      75c      outing     flannel 

Night  Shirts  at 50^ 

Men's     $1.25     flanrel     Over- 
shirts,  special  at 95< 


New  Lace  Curtains 

Well  Worth  Seeing 

Saturday's  Special 

$1.39  Lace  Curtains $1.00 

$1.50  I.ace  Curtains $1.25 

$2.00  Lace  Curtains,  fish  net 

in  green  and  ecru,  at $1.50 

$250  Cable  Nets  and  English 

net,  special  at $1.98 

59c  Ruffled  Curtains 39<^ 

85c  Ruffled  Curtains 59< 

$1.25      Ruffled     Curtains     in 

dots  and  figures,  at 98< 


CENT  LUNCH 
ISJERVED 

Los  Angeles  School  Chil- 
dren   Have    First 
Penny  Meal. 

Soup,  Buns   and  Fruit 

Comprise  Bill  of 

Fare. 


Los  Angeles,  Cal..  March  19. — Under 
the  direction  of  the  women  of  the  Civic 
a.ssociation,  the  Ann  street  school  chil- 
dren enjoyed  their  first  penny  lunch 
yesterday,  which  from  now  on  will  be 
served  to  the  children  at  cost. 

The  hungry  boys  and  girls  were  seat- 
ed at  long  tables  covered  with  plain, 
white  cloth  with  white  enamel  plates 
and  cups  at  each  place.  Each  of  the 
children  were  served  with  hot  soup, 
fresh    buns   and    a    variety   of    fruit. 

The  Ann  street  school  was  selected 
for  the  experiment  on  account  of  the 
urgent  need  of  something  of  the  kind 
in  that  district.  Although  the  food 
served  cost  about  4  cents  for  each 
child,  the  expense  to  each  will  only  be 
1  penny,  and  this  amouiit  will  secure 
as  many  bowls  of  soup  and  as  many 
buns    as    desired. 

The  penny  payment  is  to  instill  a 
spirit  of  Independence  in  each  child. 
Similar  lunch  rooms  will  be  estab- 
llfihed    in    all    other    city    schools. 

THOUGHT  HOUSE 
WAS  A  HOTEL 


while    he     vi-as    post    quartermaster    at 
Camp  McGrath. 


Alleged  Burglar  Proves 

That  tlis   Intentions 

Were  Innocent. 

Berger  Mltby  was  acquitted  by  a 
jury  in  district  court  yesterday  after- 
noon of  the  charge  of  burglary  In  the 
second  degree.  He  was  alleged  to  have 
entered      the    rooming      house    of    Mrs. 

Martha  Todd  at  605  West  First  street 
on  Feb.  11.  with  the  intention  to  com- 
mit the  crime  of  grand  larceny.  Mitby 
declared  he  went  into  the  house  with 
a  companion,  whom  he  had  picked  up 
on  the  street  a  short  time  before.  He 
said  he  thought  the  place  was  a  hotel 
and  he  had  no  intention  of  stealing 
anything. 


s  ^f\  ^^  ^^  ^v-<^  *F*  ^*  *f*  *r  T*  'P  ^ 

SHORTEST  BILL  IN 

CONGRESS  TUrS  FAR 


Washington,  March  19. — Repre- 
sentative Coudro>-  of  MisfHiuri 
has  just  hitroduced  what  Is  prob- 
^  ably  the  shortest  bill  so  far  pre-  ^ 
^  seiito<l  during  the  present  st^ssion  ^ 
^  of  congress,  yet  if  cnaetod  lnu>  * 
*■  law  would  prolmbly  attract  more  * 
"If;  attention  than  the  Sherman  antl-  # 
^  trust   law.  * 

"k  After  the  enaci  Ing  clause  the  * 
'if:  entire  bill  is  as  follows:  * 

■*  "That  from  and  after  the  pass-  * 
*  age  of  tills  act  rll  <'orporations  * 
^  shall  pay  a  license  tax  of  one-  * 
^  tenth  of  1  per  cent  on  tlieir  cap-  * 
^  ital."  f 


tiiro  in  every  ^vay,  has  twelve  rooms, 
anC  is  deemed  sufficiently  large  for  the 
town  for  yeara  to  come. 

The    members    of    the    school    board 

^^  l.o    had    charge    of    the    construction 

are:  Rev.  F.  J.  Barackman.  president; 
Ernest  I...  Oberg  .-secretary;  C.  W.  Con- 
wa>,  treasurer;  D.  H.  Congdon,  R.  Zim- 
merman and  Mr.s.  J.  M.  Freeburg.  Th« 
forps  of  teacliers  are:  Andrew  B.  Jar- 
d.ne.  superintendent;  Flora  M.  Kock. 
luinclpal;  Alma  M.  Swanson,  Mildred 
Grover,  Helen  M.  Boyle,  Ella  Zimmer- 
man and  Minnie  Peterson. 


FREE  COMERT. 

Irish  Music  Will  b<  Featured  at  the 
Masonic  Entertainment. 

The    program    for 
Masonic    free    concert 
p.  m.   will  be  as  folh 
Organ    

(a)  March — "Old    Colonial" 

(b)  "Reverit'    

Vocal    solo — "Killarn 

Mrs.   Leo  J 
Organ    

(a)  Allegro  con  br 

(b)  Largo — "Klavii 


the      twenty-first 
Sunday   at      5:30, 
)ws: 


ley' 


.  .     Hall 

Roberts 

.  .     Balfe 


Ball. 


(c)    Rondo    

Vocal    solo — "The    Hi 

Through    Tara'.s    H; 

Mrs.   Leo   j 

Organ,  overture — "Di 

The  close  proximii 
day  suggested  the 
ter  of  the  vocal  selei 
organ  number,  althc 
announced  that  the  r 
would  be  the  feature 

The  Beethoven  selt 
most  versatile  in  sty 
of  the  great  master: 
ill  stvle  of  mov« 
beautiful  and  tunel 
while  the  last,  the  i 
example  nfthe  rondc 
ing  up  with  a  prest< 
organ  to  its  utmost, 
ability  to  respond  t 
cato   notes. 

Notwithstanding  tl 
ations  that  the  Sui 
free  to  any  person  w 
ble  to  attend,  wheth 
inquiries  being  con 
gardlng  this,  it  is 
the  concerts  are  a 
any   person   who  car* 


o Beethoven 

r    Concert" 

Beethoven 

Beethoven 

rp      That     Once 
ills". . .  .    Stevenson 
V.   Ball. 

earns  of  Erin" 
y  of  St.  Patrick'.s 
ttihernlan  charao- 
•tions  and  the  last 
ugh  it  had  been 
luslc  of  Beethoven 
of  the  program, 
ction  is  one  of  the 
le  of  any  of  those 
brilliant  and  virile 
ment;  delicately 
ul  ^  in  the  largo, 
undo,  is  a  typical 
movement  wind- 
»,  which  taxes  the 
both  in  power  and 
o    the    quick    stac- 

le  frequent  relter- 
iday  concerts  are 
ho  "takes  the  trou- 
er  Mason  or  not, 
stantly  made  re- 
again  stated  that 
bsolutoly  free  to 
■s   to  attend. 


h»*( 


Ul 


115    West   Superior   St 


Coartmartial   to  Try   Him. 

Manila,  March  19. — A  courtmartial 
has  been  appointed  to  try  Capt.  H.  A. 
Slevert  of  the  Ninth  cavalry  for  al- 
leged   irregularities    in      his      accounts 


j  are  strot^  and  pur*. 


»)K*»*»»»***»*^  ********* **f 

*  HIRT  BY  CELLl'LOID  * 

*  COLLAR  EXPLOSION.  * 

*  * 

*  West  Orange.  ?f.  J..  March  19,  * 
if.  — David  Watson,  a  plumber's  ap-  * 
if:  prentice.    Is   recovering   from    the  * 

*  effects  of  burns  ciiuse<l  by  the  * 
4(t  explosion  of  his  ccUulold  collar.  * 
Iff  lie  was  handling  wnnc  gasoline  * 
4f  when  flames  leaped  up  around 
iff  his    neck   and    In   a   moment    the 

*  collar  wa*i  ablaz?.  Fortunately 
^  he  was  next  d<M>r  to  fire  head- 
ife  quarters  and  In  he  rushed.  Fire- 
'ff;  men    stripped    th.-    youth    of    ids 

*  burning  clothing  and  he  was  sent  *  | 

*  to  the  hospital  unconscious.  * 

*  * 

BLACKDICK  DEDICATES 

ITS  NEW  HIGH  SCHOOL. 


Blackduck.  Minn., 
cial  to  The  Herald, 
poriant  day  in  Blac 
liigh  school,  erected 
GOO  by  G.  E.  Kreat 
had  the  contract,  1 
this  afternoon  and  < 
cises  appropriate  to 

The  building  is  ai 


March  19.— (Spe- 
> — This  is  an  im- 
icduck,  as  the  new 

at  a* cost   of   $25,- 

z    of   Bemidji,   who 

s    to    be    dedicated 
'vening  with  exer- 
the  occasion. 
i  up-to-date  Btruc- 


}4 


umi 
mm 

ifflLWEO 

The  new  American 
(jas  Arc  Light  over- 
comes all  your  difficul- 
ties in  the  matter  of 
light. 

The  most  perfect  light 
known. 

Very  brilliant. 

Xo  noise. 

No  carbonizing  of 
mantles. 

Xo  trouble. 

Least  expense  of  op- 
eration. 

Xow  on  exhibition  at 
our  office. 


National  Gas 
Light  Co., 

Ill  Second  Avenue  W. 

New  'Phone  I134-Y. 


■  ■               » 

■ 

■   ■  >■  - 

■ 
> 

I 

3 

1 


T 


FT 


1 


( 


I 
I 


tmm 


9 


10 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


THE  EVENING  HERALD 

AN   IXDEPKXUKAT  XBrWSl'APKH. 


Published  ta  Herald  Bldj?..  First  St.,  Opposite  P.  O.  Square. 

THE  HERALD  COMPANY. 
Telephones:     Counting   lioom.   324;    Editorial   Rooms,   1126. 


SUBSCRIPTION  RATES  PAYABLE  IN  ADVANCE 

I  uitfd  Staten  aad  Canada,  ro«ta«e  Prepaid. 

Dally,  per  year.  In  advance „*22 

Daily,  six  months.  In  advance 

Dally,    three  months.   In   advance 

Dally,    one    month.    In    advance 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postofflce  as  Second-Class  Matter. 


2.00 
.  l.OO 
.      .33 


DULUTH  WEEKLY  HERALD 

Per  year,    in    advance fl.OO 

Six    months.    In    advance *** 

Three   months,   in   advance •^* 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postofflce  as  Second-Class  Matter. 

BY  CARRIER,  IN  TBE  CITY.  TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

KVKKV    KVKMKG — DELIVEHEaJ. 

Single   copy,   daily '  •** 

One    month •** 

Three    months *•** 

Six    months 2.60 

One  year P-^'O 

TO  SUBSCRIBERS: 

It  Is  Important  wlien  desiring  the  address  of  your  paper 
changed,  to  give  both  the  old  and  new  addresses. 


of  that  sum  would  suffice  were  the  yards  meant  for  the 
navy  instead  of  for  congressional  plunder.  There  are 
other  political  methods  in  our  preservation  of  peace  by 
preparedness  for  war,  and  they  are  just  as  costly.  When 
we  get  virility  enough  as  a  nation  to  put  a  ban  on  such 
methods  and  to  lop  off  such  useless  expenditures  wc 
shall  be  able  to  maintain  peace  at  a  reasonable  cost, 
and  not  until  then. 


RIGHT  OR  MIGHT? 

Which  is  to  prevail  in  Minnesota,  right  or  might? 

I>  .1  tonnage  tax  law  to  be  enacted  in  this  state  sim- 
ply because  the  state  has  the  power  to  pass  the  law? 
Is  the  justice  of  si4ch  a  law  not  to  be  considered? 

Upon  the  floor  of  the  house  Wednesday,  the  advo- 
cates of  the  tonnage  tax  spoke  for  the  measure.  They 
argued  its  constitutionality,  they  reasoned  that  it  would 
bring  vast  revenues  to  the  state,  that  a  tonnage  tax 
ought  to  be  imposed  because  "rich  foreign  corporations" 
would  have  to  pay  it.  But  did  they  show  that  it  was 
a  fair  measure  to  the  people  of  the  iron  country?  Not 
by  so  much  as  one  word.  The  justice  or  injustice  of 
the  measure  to  the  people  most  affected  by  it  was  not 
considered  a  matter  worth  mentioning.  Was  any  attempt 
made  to  show  that  the  tonnage  tax  is  right  in  principle, 
that  it  is  a  righteous  tax,  founded  upon  principles  of 
justice  and  equal  rights  for  all?  No!  Not  a  voice  was 
raised,  not  a  word  was  uttered  in  defense  of  the  ton- 
nage tax  as  a  measure  of  right. 

Has  it  come  to  this  pass  in  Minnesota  that  might  is 
to  be  the  only  rule  and  guide  for  the  conduct  of  the 
state's  business? 

This  is  the  matter  which  is  now  up  to  the  state  sen- 
ate to  consider.  The  bill  has  passed  the  house  upon 
the  dictation  of  prejudice,  urged  on  by  a  greedy  lust  for 
plunder.  Not  an  argument  was  advanced  for  the  bill; 
only  excuses.  Those  who  spoke  for  the  bill  on  the  floor 
of  the  house,  and  they  were  so  pitifully  few,  excused 
it  on  the  ground  that  it  taxed  nobody  but  "rich  outside 
corporations;"  many  of  the  rest  of  the  sixty-one  excused 
themselves  in  private  on  the  ground  of  the  unreasoning 
preuilice  of  their  constituents. 

Will  the  senate  adopt  the  course  of  the  house,  or 
will  it  consider  this  thing  on  its  merits?  The  Herald 
confidently  believes  that  it  will  take  the  latter  course; 
h  believes  that  the  senate  is  composed  of  men  who  have 
the  courage  of  their  convictions,  and  that  they  will  speak 
and  vote  as  they  believe,  confident  in  the  ultimate  good 
sense  and  sound  judgment  of  the  people  of  the  state. 

While  the  spirit  of  narrow  sectionalism  dominated 
the  house,  the  vote  shows  that  men  are  breaking  away 
from  this  narrowness  to  view  the  question  in  the  broad 
light  of  its  justice  or  injustice.  With  many  from  all 
parts  of  the  state,  it  was  a  straight,  out-and-out  contest 
between  might  and  right.  The  bulk  of  the  vote  for 
the  bill  came  from  the  Ninth  congressional  district  and 
from  the  rich  agricultural  section  of  Southwestern  Min- 
nesota, but  of  the  fiftj'-seven  who  voted  against  the  bill 
were  men  from  every  quarter  of  the  state,  except 
Northwestern  Minnesota,  and  a  very  considerable  pro- 
portion were  from  Southern  Minnesota.  Men  voted  as 
they  believed  or  as  they  were  moved  by  the  prevailing 
sentiment  of  their  constituency,  and  while  sectionalism 
won  the  day,  an  analysis  of  the  vote  shows  that  the  dis- 
position to  consider  the  question  on  its  merits  has  been 
making  headway  during  the  past  two  years  in  all  parts 
of  the  state. 


LET'S  FIGHT,  PEACE  TOO  EXPENSIVE. 

Sometime  we  almost  think  'twere  better  to  fly  to 
ills  that  we  know  not  of  than  bear  those  we  have,  and 
by  fighting  put  an  end  to  these  peace  expenses.  Ever 
felt  that  way?  Of  course  you  have.  Whenever  you 
raise  your  eyes  from  their  diligent  hunt  for  the  hard- 
earned  dollar  and  take  a  look  at  our  peace  establish- 
ment expenses,  mounting  nimbly  up  the  billion  hill,  you 
have  just  that  feeling  exactly  oozing  out  at  every  pore. 

Why  not  right  and  be  done  witht  it?  You  know  what 
Gen.  Sherman  said  war  is.  Seems  like  peace,  in  point  of 
expense,  is  getting  to  be  very  much  the  same.  Really, 
is  it  war  we  are  havjng.  or  peace?  The  Chicago  Journal 
Is  quite  aroused  by  the  proposal  to  levy  stamp  taxes  on 
telegrams  and  bank  checks  as  we  did  during  the  Spanish- 
American  war.  "This  is  not  war  time,"  declares  the 
Journal.  Isn't  it?  We  fear  the  esteemed  Journal  has 
rot  been  reading  its  Congressional  Record  regularly 
and  that  it  doesn't  know  that  congress  has  just  appro- 
priated SloO.OOl.OOO  for  pensions.  $.130.00,000  for  the  navy, 
better  than  $100.000,0»HJ  for  the  army  and  a  few  more 
millions  just  for  fighting.  Half  a  billion  for  a  war  foot- 
ing and  halt  a  billion  for  peace  measures.  Whis  is  it 
that  we  are  having,  war  or  peace?  Again  the  Journal 
says,  throwing  off  the  suggestion  careless  like:  "We 
need  no  war  measures."  Well,  whether  we  need  'em  or 
not,  we've  got  'em. 

Without  undervaluing  the  virtue  of  preparedness,  for 
which  we  stoutly  stand,  it  ought  to  be  an  occasion  for 
some  thought  when  our  expense  as  a  nation,  a  compara- 
tively isolated  nation  at  that,  is  as  great  each  year  for 
war.  with  never  a  war  in  sight,  as  it  is  for  all  our  con- 
cerns of  peace.  Granted  that  we  must  be  strong  and 
that  we  must  be  ready,  it  surely  ought  not  to  cost  us, 
the  most  peaceful  nation  in  the  world,  as  much  to  be 
prepared  to  fight  as  it  does  for  all  our  multitudinous 
affairs  of  peace.  Of  course  the  picture  is  somewhat  over- 
drawn, as  our  pension  expenses  are  not  strictly  a  part 
of  our  preparations  for  war,  but  the  comparison  is  bad 
enough  even  at  best.  In  all  seriousness,  it  is  perfectly 
true  that  any  price,  save  honor,  is  better  than  war, 
but  ought  it  to  cost  us  such  enormous  sums  to  maintain 
peace  by  being  prepared  for  war?  It  does  not  seem  to 
The  Herald  that  it  ought.  Granting  the  need  of  a 
**greater  navy"  and  of  a  strong  military  establishment  on 
land,  our  expenses  for  army  and  navy  are  too  great. 
We  are  getting  our  preparedness  by  political  methods 
and  there  is  nothing  on  earth  so  expensive,  so  wasteful, 
so  spendthriftful,  as  political  methods.  One  instance 
is  enough — our  useless  navy  yards.  On  these  we  are 
expending  more  than  $60,iXX),000  a  year,  when  a  fraction 


THE  TOUCH  SYSTEM. 

President  Taft  announces  that  he  believes  in  "the 
touch  system"  of  government,  that  system  by  which  the 
officials  of  the  government  shall  get  into  as  close  touch 
as  possible  with  the  people.  President  Roosevelt  was 
also  a  firm  believer  in  the  touch  system;  he  kept  close 
to  the  people  by  keeping  his  ear  to  the  ground  and  listen- 
ing intently  for  the  grouJid  swell  of  public  opinion.  Presi- 
dent Taft,  however,  has  a  different  method;  he  expects 
to  accomplish  the  same  result  by  making  the  government 
an  itinerant  government.  Mr.  Taft  is  a  globe  trotter  of 
repute;  he  is  a  famous  traveler  and  he  has  given  out  that 
members  of  his  official  family  must  travel  some  and  get 
in  touch  with  the  people.  Correspondence  from  Wash- 
ington declares:  "President  Taft  believes  in  travel  for 
the  heads  of  the  various  government  departments,  and 
maintains  that  it  is  well  for  the  members  of  the  cabinet 
to  meet  the  people  in  all  sections  of  the  country,  and 
to  learn  from  them  directly  their  wishes  and  difficulties, 
and  to  hear  their  criticisms  of  the  work  of  all  branches 
of  the  government  service." 

President  Taft  while  a  cabinet  officer  and  during  the 
time  that  he  was  governor  general  of  the  Philippines 
probably  traveled  more  than  ever  did  any  other  cabinet 
officer  or  other  high  official  of  the  government  whose 
work  did  not  primarily  involve  traveling.  He  has  just 
recently  completed  a  trip  to  the  Panama  canal,  a  most 
unusual  thing  for  a  president-elect  to  do;  he  has  an- 
nounced his  intention  of  visiting  Texas  soon;  he  is  plan- 
ning a  trip  to  the  Pacific  coast  and  possibly  even  to 
Alaska,  a  possession  whose  soil  has  never  yet  been  trod 
by  the  foot  of  a  president  of  the  United  States.  It  is 
evident  that  the  president  does  not  intend  to  allow  his 
official  duties  to  confine  him  to  the  city  of  Washington. 
Neither  does  he  propose  that  his  cabinet  officers  shall 
spend  all  their  time  at  their  desks.  Plans  have  been 
made  for  a  visit  by  the  secretary  of  war  to  various  army 
posts  on  the  Atlantic  and  the  Pacific,  and  the  secretary 
will  also  visit  the  Panama  canal  before  the  summer  is 
over.  The  secretary  of  commerce,  it  is  announced,  will 
visit  the  Pacific  coast  and  gather  material  at  first  hand 
concerning  the  race  problems  there.  The  secretary  of 
agriculture  will  attend  a  farmer's  institute  now  and  then, 
will  visit  the  various  forest  reservations  and  get  into 
as  close  touch  as  possible  with  the  farmers  of  the 
country. 

So  the  touch  system  of  government  will  be  continued 
and  the  methods  which  President  Taft  intends  to  employ 
will  doubtless  be  pleasing  and  profitable  to  the  country. 
The  American  people  like  to  see  their  public  servants 
and  the  closer  those  servants  get  to  the  people  the  better 
for  all  concerned.  The  president  and  the  members  of 
the  cabinet  will  be  able  to  find  out  more  accurately  and 
more  quickly  what  the  country  needs,  while  on  the  other 
hand,  the  people  will  gain  a  better  idea  of  the  difficulties 
of  administration  by  seeing  and  talking  with  the  men 
who  do  the  administering.  When  we  have  to  offer 
advice  to  the  government,  therefore,  we  shall  be  in  a 
better  position  to  give  good  advice,  we  shall  know  better 
what  we  are  talking  about  and  shall  be  more  tolerant 
of  the  men  to  whom  we  are  talking,  for  wc  shall  have  a 
better  idea   of   their  limitations. 

An  itinerant  government  ought  to  make  the  touch 
system  of  government  a  pretty  effective  system. 


NOTHING  DOING. 

The  antagonists  of  woman's  suffrage  are  rather  glee- 
fully pointing  to  the  results  in  the  four  states  of  the 
West  in  which  women  have  the  same  privilege  of  voting 
as  have  men,  Colorado,  Utah,  Wyoming  and  Idaho.  They 
declare  that  there  has  been  no  effect  whatever  produced 
upon  the  government  of  these  states  or  upon  the  conduct 
of  elections,  and  the  character  of  the  political  campaigns 
that  have  been  waged.  There  has  never  been  any  spe- 
cial appeal  made  to  women  voters  in  these  states  except 
in  on  instance,  when  in  the  campaign  of  1904  in  Idaho, 
Henry  Heitfeld  sought  to  be  elected  governor  on  a  plat- 
form which  peculiarly  appealed  to  women.  Heitfeld 
was  nominated  by  the  Democrats  for  governor.  The 
sole  issue  was  Mormonism  and  polygamy.  The  Demo- 
cratic platform  held  that  Mormons  must  no  longer  be 
allowed  to  vote  or  participate  in  the  government  unless 
they  first  took  oath  that  they  had  but  one  wife.  The 
Republican  platform  was  silent  upon  the  subject.  Heit- 
feld stumped  the  state,  appealing  for  votes  in  defense  of 
the  home,  but  when  the  ballots  were  counted  it  was 
found  that  he  had  been  overwhelmingly  defeated.  Here, 
declare  the  antagonists  of  woman's  suffrage,  was  a  time 
when  the  theory  that  women  will  range  themselves  with 
practical  solidity  in  support  of  the  moral  end  of  all  politi- 
cal issues  was  put  to  the  test,  and  the  result  shows  that 
the  moral  issue  does  not  prevail  with  women  to  the 
exclusion  of  all  other  issues,  any  more  than  it  does  with 
men. 

Of  course  this  experience  of  Idaho  and  the  further 
fact  that  no  change  in  government  or  politics  has  been 
effected  by  the  voting  of  woinen  in  the  other  woman's 
suffrage  states  of  the  West — this  experience  does  not 
prove  that  woman's  suffrage  is  unwise,  but  it  certainly 
appears  to  refute  the  claim  of  the  advocates  of  woman's 
suffrage  that  political  conditions  will  be  bettered  when 
women   vote. 

Nevertheless,  women  can  probably  have  the  ballot 
whenever  they  want  it.  Thus  far  99  per  cent  of  them 
have  been  indifferent. 


There's  no  place  like  home.     That's  why  Castro  stays 
away  from  it. 


The  Shamrock  would  grow  on  Irish  ground,  no  mat- 
ter how  much  it  was  forbid. 


The  Fargo  Call  has  heard  the  last  call  and  is  dead. 
The  Fargo  News  absorbed  it  St.  Patrick's  day  in  the 
morning. 


They're  swift  in  Cuba.  In  less  time  than  it  takes  to 
write  this  paragraph,  a  new  revolution  has  been  begun 
in  Cuba,  has  run  its  course  and  has  been  crushed  out. 


The  Superior  Telegram  says  the  passage  of  the  iron 
ore  tonnage  tax  bill  in  the  house  of  representatives  was 
"the  work  of  Minneapolis."  This  is  untrue,  as  it  will 
be  seen  by  glancing  at  "the  roll  of  honor"  that  fourteen 
Minneapolis  members  voted  against  the  iniquitous  meas- 
ure and  only  one  in  favor  of  it.  And  the  St.  Paul  mem- 
bers also  stood  for  justice  to  St.  Louis  county. 


HOTEL  GOSSIP. 


to  the  raising 
people  have  an 
and  vegetables 
tiiia  part   of  the 


or  any 
perma- 
wealth. 


"I  was  talking  .wltfc  Mr.  Fltzslm- 
mons,  one  of  your  i)ulutli  produce  men 
the  other  day.  and  be  iijjiormed  me  that 
it  was  only  a  quftstiollE  of  time  until 
Ouiuth  would  rai«o  all  the  produce 
that  would  be  usejji  tn  this  city  and 
upon  the  ranges,  rl(ght^ere  at  its  own 
door,  instead  of  geltingr  practically  all 
of  the  produce  fron^  the  truck  gardens 
of   the  Twin   Cities,   and   the   South." 

Thesn  wert  the  '  remarks  of  R.  T. 
ivane  of  Minneapolis,  who  was  at  the 
McKay  hotel.  Mr.  McKiy  was  talking 
about  the  cortdition  of  |tlie  truck  gar- 
dener in  the  vicini'iy  of  tlie  Twin  Cit- 
ies. There,  he  sqrys,  the  market  is 
overstocked  witli  the  produce  brougiit 
into  tiie  cities  by  Oie  small  gardeners. 
They  are  compelld«i  to  seek  a  market 
away  froni  the  two  cities,  and  as  a  re- 
sult much  ol  the  produ«e  of  the  Twin 
Oily  gardens   is  sent   to  this  city. 

"Mr.  Fitzi.iinmons  Informed  me  that 
it  was  only  a  question  of  time  before 
Duluth  wDuid  havj  enough  truck  gar- 
deners in  the  outlying  suburbs  of  the 
city  to  supply  the  niarket  needs  of  Du- 
luth. It  is  only  a  question  of  time,  he 
said,  before  the  ranges  will  be  sup- 
plied by  the  truck  gUideners  of  tiie 
vicinity    of    Duluth. 

"He  stated  that  tjie  soil  in  the  vi- 
cinity of  Duluth  was  of  a  nature  suited 
of  vegetabltis.  Some 
idea  tliat  small  fruits 
cann«t  be  raised  in 
state.  That  is  an  er- 
roneous impression.  They  can  be  pro- 
duced here  as  well  as  they  can  be 
raised  in  the  Twin  City  territory,  or 
in  tlie  southern  part  of  tlie  state.  When 
this  fact  becomes  generally  known,  I 
agree  with  Mr.  Fitzsimmons.  tliat  there 
will  be  great  quantities  of  small  fruits 
and  vegetables  raised  in  the  territory 
surrounding   Duluth. 

"I  have  been  coming  to  Duluth  for  a 
good  many  years.  It  wasn't  so  many 
years  ago  the  people  had  the  im- 
pression that  you  couldn't  farm  up 
here  in  this  section  of  the  country. 
Some  people  still  have  that  impression. 
It  is  being  gradually  dispelled,  and 
when  people  tlnd  that  you  can  give 
them  good  land  in  tli1s  section  of  the 
state,  cheaper  than  they  they  can  get 
it  in  any  other  part,  you  will  find  that 
the  agricultural  industry  of  Northern 
Minnesota  will  experience  a  decided 
boom. 

"1  have  never  seen  a  state, 
section  of  a  state,  that  derived 
nent  prosperity  frona  mineral 
The  iron  has  made  the  nortliern  part 
of  the  state  a  great  and  glowing  coun- 
try, but  after  the  iron  is  gone,  you  will 
find,  I  am  sure,  that  it  will  be  the  ag- 
ricultural resources  that  will  continue 
to  make  this  part  of  the  slate  a  pros- 
perous  territory. 

"People  used  to  say  that  when  the 
timber  was  exhausted.  Northern  Minne- 
sota would  decline  in  prosperity.  For 
a  long  time  the  stump  lands  have  lain 
idle,  hut  at  the  present  time  they  are 
Ijting  cleared,  and  the  settlers  are  find- 
ing that  some  of  the  most  fertile  land 
in  the  state  is  right  Op  here. 

"It  is  the  same  with  the  small  far- 
mer and  the  man  %vho  i-aises  vegetables 
for  tile  market.  They  will  come  some 
day.  and  when  that  day  comes  you  will 
find  that  it  will  not  Be  necessary  for 
Duluth  to  receive  its  market  supplies 
from  the  produce  farmers  of  the  Twin 
Cities." 

•  •  • 
Automobile  sliows  seem  to  be  grow- 
ing in  popular  favor.  Edward  Ribenack 
came  from  Minneapolis,  where  they  aro 
holding  a  show  this  week,  and  lie  says 
the  hotels  of  the  Mill  City  are  crowded. 
They  are  standing  them  up.  and  then 
turning  those  who  can't  sleep  in  the 
lobby  or  upon  the  pool  and  billiard 
tal)les,  from  the  door,  with  many  apol- 
ogies. 

This  all  leads  up  to  the  fact  that  they 
need  about  two  first-class  hotels  in  the 
Twin  Cities.  Duluth  generally  manages 
to  take  care  of  her  visitors,  simply  be- 
cause, for  Its  size,  there  isn't  a  better 
hotel  town  in  the  country  than  Du- 
lulh,   Minn. 

«       •       • 

One  William  .^mith,  in  a  patriotic 
mood,  yesterday  afternoon,  at  the  Spald- 
ing hotel,  boldly  walked  up  to  the  desk 
and  registered,  "William  Smitli,  Ire- 
land. New  York."  The  signature  was 
in  the  greenest  of  green  ink.  Smith 
is  not  an  Irish  name,  you  know,  and  as 
there  were  several  Irish  gentlemen 
registered  at  the  Spalding  yesterday, 
some  one  suggested  that  Smith  was 
hogging  tlie  spotlight  by  signing  up  In 
exclusive  green   ink. 

•  •       • 

George  Hatfield  was  at  the  St.  Lould 
last  evening.  Mr.  Hatfield  has  been 
sent  around  the  country  by  several  of 
the  Western  railroads.  His  business  is 
to  point  out  the  attractions  of  the 
Western  country,  advertise  the  various 
conventions  that  will  be  held  In  sev- 
eral of  the  Western  cities  this  year, 
and,  of  course,  not  to  overlook  the  at- 
tractions   of    the    Seattle    exposition. 

And.  by  tli^  ^^'^V.  those  Western  roads 
h.ive  got  some  of  the  most  attractive 
advertising  matter  that  has  struck 
Duluth  in  a  long  time.  There  is  one 
card  advertising  the  Elks'  convention 
at  Los  Angeles.  It  is  mounted  upon 
very  handsome  metal,  with  a  great  pic- 
ture of  an  Klk's  head.  Mr.  Hatfield 
says  the  Elks  are  expecting  one  of  tlie 
grtatast  conventions  in  the  history  of 
the  order,  as  many  Bills  will  go  west- 
ward if  for  no  other  reason  than  to  see 
the   Seattle  exposition. 

Besides  these  attractions,  there  are- 
conventions  at  Denver  and  Salt  Lake 
City.  The  railroad  mep  expect  that  the 
greatest  number  of  people  that  have 
cvf-r  moved  westward  across  the  con- 
tinent In  one  season  will  take  the  West- 
ern trip  this  sea.son.  With  that  expec- 
tation In  view,  the  people  of  tlie  West 
are  getting  ready  to  show  to  the  visit- 
ors all  of  the  advantages  they  possess. 
In  the  way  of  cities,  land  and  other 
natural   resources. 

•  •      * 

At  th-j  McKay:  Harry  Levlne,  Min- 
neapolis; O.  T.  Caswell.  Winona;  S.  C. 
Scott.  Hibbing;  A.  F.  McDermott.  Min- 
neapolis; D.  .1.  Galvin.  St.  Paul;  George 
W.  Smith.  St.  Paul;  J.  P.  Scielly.  Hib- 
bing; W.  F.  Stern,  Minneapols;  C.  J. 
Babcock.  St.  Paul;  John  A.  Barton. 
Two  Harbors;  William  Griifln.  Two 
Harbors;  J.  W.  Whittlesey.  Minneapolis, 
L.  H.  Rosenberg.  Spooner;  R.  Meyers. 
Stanbough,  Mich.;  E.  Doran  and  wife, 
Hibbing. 

•  •      • 

At  the  Spalding:  R.  H.  Turner,  Min. 
neapolis;  .1.  W.  French,  New  York;  W. 
T.  Darwin,  New  York;.  J.  Schnier,  New 
York;  A.  P.  Fleck,  Milwaukee;  John  J. 
Dwyer,  St.  Paul;  Herljert  Luxton,  Chi- 
cago; Miss  Corinne  and  maid.  New 
York;  James  R.  McClelland,  New  York; 
J.  F.  Ke'ly,  Minneapolis;  J.  M.  Nolan. 
St.  Paul;  N.  G.  Barker,  Minneapolis;  B. 
H.  Hailley.  San  Francisco;  Roland  H. 
Hartley,  Eveleth;  Theodore  L.  Lyons, 
New  York;  C.  A.  Gardner  and  "wife, 
Minneapolis;  R.  J.  Raley,  Chicago;  J. 
C.  Spencer,  Chicago;  Mrs.  Frank 
Durant.  Hibbing;  Mrs.  T.  A.  Stewart, 
Hibbing;  I).  D.  McEachin,  Hibbing;  L. 
C.  Frederick,  Helena;  W.  F.  Leonard. 
Portland.  Me.;  I>r.  J.  Farmer  and  wife, 
McKlnley;  W.  F.  Adams,  Chicago;  L. 
M.  Heyman,  New  York;  Edward  Jones. 
Minneapolis;  Sidney  G.  Jones,  Moose 
Lake;  P.  Le  Vole.  New  York. 

•  •      • 

At  the  Lenox:  Lena  Yahnson.  Min- 
neapolis; Mrs.  M.  Westing.  Virginia; 
A.  Beck,  Virginia;  Mile  Budewends, 
Milwaukee;  J.  H.  Jones,  Virginia;  J.  W. 
Gil  boy,  St.  Paul;  W.  W.  Dickson,  St. 
Paul;  E.  G.  Ingalls.  St.  Paul;  Pearl 
Revare,  New  York;  Fred  C.  Wille,  Au- 
rora; Peter  Wring.  Hibbing;  Joseph 
Estabrook,  Minneapolis;  J.  E.  Golden, 
Rochester;  G.  L.  Trans,  Chisholm;  T. 
Hattin,  Virginia;  Joseph  W.  Lucas,  Chi- 
cago; H.  C.  Scrlbner,  Minneapolis;  G. 
Mever,  St.  Paul;  S.  W.  Gilpin,  Vir- 
ginia; Charles  H.  Close,  Chicago;  E. 
P.  Elliott.  Minneapolis;  E.  S.  Benday, 
St.  Paul;  F.  J.  Egan.  St.  Paul;  T.  H. 
Wendel,  Minneapolis;  B.  H.  Hubbard. 
Chicago;  C.  P.  Frlck,  Milwaukee;  G. 
H.  Duthle,  Wheeling.  W.  Va. ;  Daniel 
F.  Eeelln,  MinneaDPUs;  H.  L.  Mon- 
tague,  New    York.      '         ^ 

•  ♦'    ^■^ 

At  the  St.  Louis:  C.  Mattson,  Vir- 
ginia; Matt  Martiila,  Virginia;  L.  H. 
Minor.  Chisholm;  Charles  Neahaus,  New 
York;  J.  N.  Dickey.  St.  Paul;  C.  C. 
Wheatfeel.  Chicago;  R.  C.  Haase,  St. 
Paul;  Joseph  Mantel  and  wife,  Ely; 
William  Westermant  St,  Cloud;  J.  A. 
Ferris.  Sidney.  Mont.:  P.  L.  Kennedy', 
St.  Paul;  R.  G.  Hennessy.  Buhl;  A.  W. 
Dawson,  St.  Paul;  M.  Jordon.  St.  Paul; 
J.  E.  Wallis.  St.  Paul;  E.  R.  Waggoner. 
Ashland;  Martin  Hughes.  Hibbing: 
Charles  Peterson.  Bovey;  Miss  M.  Weiss. 
Minneapolis;  A.  Neuberg.  Hibbing;  J.  e! 
Wallis,    St.    Paul;    J.    A.    Benaett.    SL 


Paul;  Thomas  Sullivan,  St.  Paul;  A.  B. 
Clair  and  wife,  Grand  Rapids;  H.  J 
Lawrence,  Grand  Forks;  George  F. 
Shea,  Virginia;  W.  P.  Merrill,  Boston; 
H.  P.  Hammond,  Elroy;  J.  Williams, 
Elroy;  L.  Blair,  Marquette;  R.  S.  Gent, 
Elroy;    A.    J.   Steinberg.    New    York. 

THE  WEATHER. 

Tlta  «nil  or  th« 
mild,  bairn  y  weaXh- 
ec  Cor  DuliiUi  is 
not  yat..  Tlia  pre- 
dictlona  are  th&t 
the  dallghtfxil  oun- 
ditiona  will  con'- 
tinue,  at  least  to- 
night and  tomor'- 
row.  It  was  20 
degs.  above  zero  In 
DulutH  last  night. 
Nearly  every  place 
w  a  a  reasoaabLy 

mild  last  night,  even  chilly  Minnedosa 
only   registering  4   degs.   below  zero. 

A  year  ago  today  it  was  clear  and 
bright.  The  sun  came  up  this  morn- 
ing at  6:1*  and  is  scheduled  to  set  at 
6:ii; 

Mr.  Richardson  says  of  weather  con- 
ditions: ,  .    , 

'Seasonable  weather  now  obtains 
over  all  districts.  During  the  past 
twenty-four  hours,  light  rain  or  snow 
tell  ever  Oregon,  the  Eastern  Rocky 
Mountain  slope  the  upper  Mississippi 
and  Ohio  valleys,  the  Lake  region  and 
th-i  Southcustern  states,  due  to  the 
Influence  of  the  three  barometric  de- 
pressions now  central  over  British 
Columbia.  New  Mexico  and  Ohio.  The 
movement  of  the.se  disturbances  has 
also  been  attended  by  warmer  weather 
over  all  districts  except  over  Califor- 
nia, Manitoba,  the  Dakotas  and  Wyo- 
ming, where  somewhat  lower  temper- 
atures obtain.  The  Oregon  high  pres- 
sure area  Is  now  central  over  the  Da- 
kotas while  that  central  Thursday 
morning  over  the  Ohio  valley  is  rapidly 
disappearing  over  the  South  Atlantic 
coast.  Another  area  of  high  pressure 
is    approaclilng    over   California." 


Following    were 
temperatures: 

Abilene    5S 

AslifTllle      ** 

Atliiiit*    4« 

Bismarck     14 

Boston     M 

Buffalo     M 

(.air) 5U 

Calsarr      *6 

Charleston     50 

t'lilcagu      >6 

CliK-iniiaU     46 

Coiu'urdla   34 

Uavciiport   34 

l>en?er     30 

DcrroU      30 

I><Mrlla  Lain   1 

l>(Klge      42 

DuluUi     20 

luimonton     IS 

Kl  Paso   .W 

I'lsi-atiaUa     2G 

(ialveiiton 64 

(!r.iiKt    H»ven    34 

liroen    B»y    30 

Havre     32 

Helena     S6 

Houghton    1(8 

}iurnn      32 

JacluiunriU*    ..34 

Kainl<Jo;is     32 

Kansas    City    34 

KnoxvlUe    48 

La   i'r<3»e    30 

Lander     24 

Little    nock    60 

Las  .VngHlaa   4S 

Uiirquett«     22 

Medlrhitt   lUt    34 


last    night's    lowest 

Memphis    60 

NUles   (,1ty    26 

Milwaukee    34 

^Unnadosa      — 4 

Modena    26 

Muiitgomenr   52 

M'Xirheail    16 

iXew  Orleant    60 

.New  Yorl£  30 

'Norfolk    38 

iNorthfleld   ti 

North   Platta 28 

Oklahoma    50 

'Omaha   32 

•PhotrUx  44 

Pierre     24 

Pittsburg     40 

Port    Arthur    20 

■PortlanU     Or 42 

Prime   Albert    10 

;^u'Aw)clle      14 

[Upld    City    26 

St.    I..0U1S    3R 

St.    Paul    28 

;san    Antonio     •* 

jsan    Frauelsco    46 

Santa   Fe    28 

.Sault  .St«.    Marie 24 

[Shreveport    60 

iSpokaue     36 

Swift  rurreat    2* 

i  Wasliington    32 

Wichita    42 

jWlUUton     24 

IWIneniuoca     22 

IWhiiiiiMig     4 

lYellowstone    16 


Department  of  Agriculture.  Weather 
Bureau.  Duluth  Minn..  March  19. — Fore- 
cast for  twenty-four  hours  ending  at 
7  p.  m.  (local  time)  Saturday;  Duluth. 
Superior  and  vicinity,  including  the 
Mesaba  and  Vermilion  iron  range.s — 
Fair  tonight  and  Saturday;  moderate 
variable  winds. 

H.   W.  RICHARDSON. 

Local   Forecaster. 


Chicago  March  19. — Forecast:  Upper 
Michigan — Partly  cloudy  tonight  and 
Saturday,  with  snow  near  Lake  Su- 
perior;   colder   tonight. 

Wisconsin — Partly  cloudy  tonight 
and  Saturday;  slightly  colder   tonight. 

Minne.sota — Fair  tonight  and  Satur- 
day; colder  In  southeastern  portion  to- 
night. 

North  Dakota — Fair  tonight  and  Sfat- 
urday;  warmer  in  east  and  central  por- 
tions   tonight. 

Mr.   Rooaevelt    \i*   Editor. 

Portland  Telegram:  Mr.  Roosevelt 
has  taken  his  pen  in  hand,  and  the  re- 
sult is  his  first  signed  article  as  con- 
tributing editor  to  the  Outlook.  In 
ratlier  a  militant  tone,  Mr.  Roosevelt 
declares  for  righteousness  In  Journal- 
ism, and  in  that,  as  a  matter  of  course, 
no  one  Is  surprised.  The  particular 
brand  of  rlgiiteousness  for  wliich  the 
new  editor  of  the  Outlook  contends  is 
that  which  is  founded  on  truth  and 
honest  purpose  to  attain  good.  The 
scholarly  cynicism  of  the  Intellectually 
capable,  and  tlie  lower-grade  abuse  of 
the  pure  sensationalist,  are  necessarily 
wlthln  the  condemnation  af  such  right- 
eousness. Dignity  and  valuable  jour- 
ralistlc  service  to  tlie  community  are 
its  products. 

Mr.  Roosevelt  really  said  no  more  in 
his  first  article  than  what  has  been 
said  scores  of  times  by  scores  of  con- 
scientious newspaper  writers  at  any 
time  during  the  past  ten  years;  never- 
theless, his  utterance  is  clear,  candid, 
forceful  and  carries  weight  from  the 
character  and  reputation  of  the  writer 
as  well  as  from  his  former  exalted 
oKicial    position. 

Notwithstanding  that  Just  at  thi? 
time,  in  certain  quarters,  there  may 
lie  the  criticism  of  personal  feeling  In 
the  ox-presldent's  denunciation  of  the 
newspaper  which  attack.^  the  conscien- 
tious public  servant  from  malignant 
motives,  the  abstract  value  of  his  offer- 
ing Is  not  depreciated  on  that  account. 
The  present  employment  of  Mr.  Roose- 
velt, to  be  continued  after  his  return 
from  Africa  is  earnest  of  his  unques- 
tionable faith  In  the  dignity  and  ser- 
viceable calling  of  the  public  writer, 
when  that  calling  is  pursued  in  ac- 
cordance with  the  right  ideals.  To 
take  up  the  pen  In  the  capacity  he 
has  elected,  upon  retiring  from"  the 
most  exalted  position  In  the  gift  of 
men  is  a  compliment  to  the  craft,  prop- 
erly supplemented  by  this  plea  for 
the  development  and  highest  cultiva- 
tion   of  the  best   there  is  In   It. 


big 


In   the   \%'hlna. 

I  was  makin'  a  dhrop  iv  potheen 
In  the  whins  at  the  fut  iv 

The     hill. 
As  the  gray  Iv  the  evenin'  slid  over  the 
green. 
An'    covered  myself  an' 

The  still, 
I   was  waltin'   for   Patsy  McCann 
That  lives  on  the  edge  Iv 

The  Roe. 
He  always   comes  over  t'  gl'  me  a  lian' 
An'  keep  a  lookout  for — 

Ye   know. 
"It's   time  he  was  here  be  now," 
I    was   thlnkln'    an'   sayin' 

Be  fits. 
When    Into    the    whins    dashed    a 
roaney   cow. 
An'  frightened  me  out  Iv 

Me    wits. 
"Oh.   the   devil    go   wld   ye!"   I   cried, 
As  she  made  an  attack  on 

The  still. 
"Is    It    me    that's    the   devil?"    a   sweet 
voice  replied. 
From   the   whins   at   the    fut   Iv 

The   hill. 
"I  was  brlngln'  her  home   from  below. 
When  the  tether  she  broke  an' 

Made   off; 
But    what    brought    her    here    Is    more 
than  I  know." 
Thin  I  heard  a  sweet  lilt  Iv 

A  laugh. 
'Ooh,   Moira  mavourneen."  said  I, 
"There's  wan  thing  I'll  tell  ye, 

I   will. 
Be    me    sowl,    it    spakes    well    for    the 
haste's  sense  Iv  smell 
For  t'  land  on   the   tap   Iv 

A  still. 
"Afeerd  iv  the  peelers,  asthore? 
Well,  Iv  coorse  they  could  gl'  me 

^ik    s  tftrt ' 
They  might  capture  me  still,   but  yer- 
self  has  done  more. 
For,    mavourneen.    ye've    captured 

Me    heart." 
Then  the  still-flre  smouldhered  away. 
An'   the  cow  roamed  around  at 

Her    will; 
An'  sweet  Moira  said  what  I  axed  her 
to  say 
In  the  whins  at  the  fut  Iv 

The  hill. 
— M.  HURL  In  W^estminster  Gazette. 


I 
I 


wx^a^ 


J>  A 


Thousands  of  millions 
of  cans  of  Royal  Bakins 
Powder  have  been  used 
^         in  making  bread,  biscuit 
B^C-J^^^s^s=^^     and  cake  in  this  country, 
^gm>  and  every  housekeeper 

cv  4Hy  usini^  it  has  rested  m  perfect  confi- 
^2 — ^"  den(«  that  her  food  would  be  light, 
sweet,  and  perfectly  wholesome.  Royal  is  a  safe- 
guard against  the  cheap  alum  powders  which  are 
the  greatest  menacers  to  health  of  the  present  day. 

ROYAL  IS  I'HE  ONLY  BAKING  POWDER 
MADE  FROM  RCiYAL  GRAPE  CREAM  OF  TARTAR 


tweni:t  years  ago 

Taken  From  the  Colimns  of  The  Herald  of  This  Date,  1889. 


♦••President  Harrison  liaj 
Whitelaw  Iteid  of  New  York 
ister  to  France. 


appointed 
to  be  min- 


•♦•The  records  filed  with  tlie  county 
auditor  show  that  typhoid  fever  caused 
seventy-six  deaths  in   Dulutii  last  year. 


•••Robert  Lawrence  and  iVIiss  May 
Fogleberg  will  be  married  tomorrow 
night  at  the  Presbyterian  diurch  at 
Tower  by  Itev.  E.  N.  Raymond.  They 
Intend  to  give  a  banquet  anil  dancing 
party  for  their  many  friends  at  tlie 
Pioneer  hotel  and  have  issued  100  in- 
vitations. 


•••Anton  Bracco,  nephew  of  Mer- 
chant Bracco  of  Tower,  wa.'  lost  for 
nearly  three  days  on  Lake  \'ermillon. 
and  when  he  returned  was  almost  dead 
from  exposure. 


•♦•The    Minstrel    clubs      first 
performance    at    the    Grand    last 


home 
night 
wa.s  a  great  success.  C.  T.  Abbott, 
A.  M.  Miller.  Jr.,  C.  H.  Eldridf:e  and  W. 
II.    Wilson   scored   hits  as   end  men. 


•••Artist  Frank  Beard  del  ghted  an 
audience,  which  filled  the  First  Meth- 
odist cliurch  last  night,  witli  his 
"Chalk  Talk."  - 


♦•♦The  Friends  in  Council  liad  de- 
cided to  use  the  lecture  rooms  and 
parlors  of  the  Congregation  il  churcli 
for  the  lecture  by  Mrs.  Annit  Jenness 
Miller. 


♦♦♦The   old   union   depot  wi!l   soon    be 


MINNESOTA  OPINIONS. 


torn  down,  and  a  magniticent  structure 
will  rl.se  in  its  place.  It  will  be  98 
by  222  feet  and  will  be  built  of  brown 
stone.  The  cost  of  the  entire  improve- 
ment will  be  about  $500,000. 


••♦P.  L.  Chandler,  cousin  of  S.  M. 
Chandler  of  this  city,  arrived  in  l>u- 
luth  yesterday  from  Bridg'elown,  Me., 
for  the  purpose  of  making  some  in- 
vestments   in   real   estate. 


•••Architect  Traphagen  has  complet- 
ed plans  for  a  fine  business  block  to  be 
erected  on  Superior  and  Michigan 
streets  and  Fifth  avenue  west,  by  G. 
M.  Henderson  of  Indianapolis.  The 
Windsor  hotel  and  barn  will  be  moved 
to  some  other  site  to  make  room  for 
the  new  building,  which  will  be  7S 
feet  on  the  two  streets  and  115  feet  on 
the  avenue.  It  will  be  six  stories  in 
height,  with  an  office  basement  and  a 
sub-basement  under  all.  It  will  be 
built  of  stone,  brick,  Iron  and  tiles 
and  the  total  cost  will  be  ?300,00». 
Work  Is    to   start   at   once. 


••♦At  the  city  council  meeting  last 
night.  S.  L.  Smith  was  unanimously  re- 
elected  city   attorney. 


♦♦♦The  minimum  temperature  In  Du- 
luth this  morning  was  31  degs.  above 
zero,  and  the  day  was  bright  and 
warm. 


♦•♦Alexander  McNeil, 

deputy    sheriff,  has    been 

deputy    sheriff,  has    been 
railway. 


formerly  a 
appointed  a 
appointed    & 


Le  Sueur  News:  Sam  Langurn,  writing 
from  Wasliington,  D.  C,  Intin.ates  that 
Jim  Tawney  of  Minnesota  Is  a  ijublic 
utility  god  and  Robert  La  FoUette  of 
Wisconsin  Is  a  windbag.  Everyone 
doe.s  not  see  the  picture  In  the  same 
order. 


Anoka  Union:  One  of  the  s 
Items  of  reckless  extravaga 
the  part  of  the  state  legislate 
appointing  of  a  "sergeant  of 
gallery,"  at  |5  per  day.  Th 
press  gallery,  and  the  fellow  : 
being  paid  by  the  paper  he  i 
to  report  the  doings  of  tlie  la 


Igniflcant 
nee  upon 
ire  is  the 
the  press 
ere  is  no 
s  already 
epresents 
wmakers. 


Walker  Pilot:  Our  new  president 
has  already  done  about  everything  In 
the  strenuous  lines  that  his  predeces- 
sor did,  except  ride  ninety  miles  on 
horseback.  And  we  suspect  that  it's 
simply  out  of  respect  for  he  horse 
that    Taft    doesn't   attempt    this    feat. 


Lake  County  Advocate:  Whim  Roose- 
velt has  conquered  Africa,  will  he  sit 
down  like  vi^lexander  and  A'eep  be- 
cause there  are  no  more  continents  to 
reform? 


Owatonna  Journal-Chroniclp:  Uncle 
Joe  says  the  foundation  pr  ciples  of 
the  house  rules  were  laid  under  Jeffer- 
son and  Madison.  But  thev  never 
dreamed  of  tlie  fantastic  superstructure 
that  would  be  raised  on  thesj  founda- 
tions. 


Albe'-t    Lea   Tribune 

come     '  '^' " "' 

Mr 


Whal    will    be- 


e'^t  Lea  Tribune:  u  ha(  will  be- 
.  of  those  Panama  libel  s  lits  when 
Mr.  Roosevelt  sails  for  Afrira?  Per- 
haps he  figures  that  In  the  ordinary 
course  of  legal  proceedings  they  will 
be  ready  for  trial  about  tht  time  he 
gets    back. 

Martin  County  Sentinel:  The  Second 
district,  thank  God,  has  a  man  In  con- 
gress who  will  truly  represen  ;  the  sen- 
timents of  the  people  on  the  tariff 
question.  And — should  anyon  ;  ask  you 
— he's  about  the  only  representative 
from  Minnesota  of  whom  th  s  can  be 
said. 


Foley  Independent:  With  a  "do- 
nothing"  congress,  legislature  ditto,  it 
Is  beginning  to  look  as  th)ugh  the 
Republican  party  will  have  a  lard  time 
carrying  the   state   the   next   lime. 


Sherburne  County  Star-New 
is  a  bill  before  the  legislatu 
provides  for  instruction  in  aj 
by  correspondence.  Almost  e 
is  taught  by  correspondence  j 
but  this  is  the  first  lnstan< 
our  observation  where  the  i 
undertaken   such   a   job. 


g:  There 
re  which 
rrlculture 
."erything 
low  days, 
e  within 
itate    has 


Pointed     PnragraphM. 

Chicago  News:  The  best  thing  to  do 
when  you  catch  a  cold  Is  to  let  go  of  it. 

One  way  to  remove  paint  is  to  sit 
down    on   It   before   It    Is   dry. 

Samson  was  the  first  actor  on  record 
to   bring  down    the   house. 

From  the  blackmailer's  viewpoint, 
keeping  secrets  Is  a  paying  business. 

If  a  man  knows  enough  noi  to  go  to 
law  he  Is  wiser  tlian  the  average  law- 
yer. 

A  woman  refuses  to  acknowledge  her 
inability  to  accomplish  anything  she 
wants  to. 

It's  difficult  to  get  a  crocked  man 
interested  In  the  scenery  along  the 
straight  and  narrow  path. 

When  a  man  gives  more  than  a 
dollar  to  charity  he  usually  matjages 
to   get   caught   In    the   act. 

The  man  who  separates  people  from 
their  coin  will  be  remembered  a  long 
time  after  the  undertaker  plants  him. 

And  If  every  mother's  son  o:!  us  made 
a  strenuous  effort  to  reach  the  top 
there  wouldn't  be  such  a  crowd  at  the 
bottom. 


Refleotioiui   ot   a   Bachelor. 

New  York  Press:  Nobody  but  a  fool 
thinks  he  can  teach  good  sense. 

The  reason  a  woman  can  leel  char- 
itable to  a  man  is  she  knows  how  lit- 
tle   he    deserves    it. 

No  matter  how  bad  a  temper  a  man 
has.  his  wife  wants  to  make  it  much 
worse  by  telling  him  so. 

The  man  who  knows  erough  to 
make  a  fortune  knows  enc  ugh  not 
to  take  anybody's  advice  on  how  to 
double  It. 


ME.\NT  TO  BE  FINXV. 


Life:  Sunday  School  Teacher — What 
was  Adam's  punishment  for  eating  the 
forbidden    fruit" Johnnie? 

Johnnie  (.confidently) — He  had  to 
marry    Eve. 


Chicago  Daily  News:  The  Profes- 
sor— Of  course,  you  want  your  daugh- 
ter  to  take  private   lessons? 

Mr.s.  Neurich — Of  course,  I  don't  want 
anything  of  the  kind.  I  want  her  to 
go  in  a  class  so  .she  can  learn  classi- 
cal  music. 

Detroit  Free  I'ress:  "Ma,  I  didn't 
know   the   Browns    kept   horses." 

"They  don't,  my  dtar.  What  mad* 
you    think    so?" 

"I  heard  pa  telling  a  man  on  tha 
street  yesterday  that  Mrs.  Brown  has 
the  finest  carriage  of  any  woman  he 
knows." 


Town     Topics:       Tramp — Lady, 
near  perishing  from  exposure! 

Lady — Are    you    a    congressman    or 
senator? 


I'm 


Fllegende      Blatter:        "Now,      then, 
look    pleasant,    please." 

"Not  at  all:  this  is  to  send  to  mjr 
wife  at  the  seashore.  She  would  come 
home   at    once!" 


Outing:  "How  much  do  you  com- 
pute we  shall  need  on  our  motor  trip?" 

"Well,  suppose  we  say  two  gallons 
of  Scotch." 


Chicago  Daily  News:  Her  Mother — 
"Ethel  dear,  do  you  ever  feel  timid 
about   asking   Milton    for   money?" 

Ethel — "No.  indeed,  mamma;  but  he 
seems  to  be  rather  timid  about  givinsr 
it     to  me." 


New  York  Sun:  First  Landlady — If 
you    allow    tipping    it    reduce.s    wages. 

Second  Landlady  —  Yes,  but  the 
boarders    get   too    much    to   eat. 


Harper's      Weekly:      The      Boy- 
hoo'      Bobble's      swallowed      my 
engine! 

The     Caller — Good      Gracious! 
could    that    happen? 

The  Boy — We  was  on  the  floor  play- 
ing  at    trains,   and    he    was   the   tunnel. 


-Boo- 
little 

How 


Pittsburg  Post:  "She  says  she  Is  not 
a    woman    to    marry    anybody." 

"I  think  she  has  fully  demonstrated 
that.  Three  of  her  ex-husbands  pay 
excellent  alimony,  and  even  the  fourth 
pays  something,  I   understand." 


Nu   Woman    Suffrage    iu    Svreden. 

Boston  Globe:  Contrary  to  a  report 
which  was  freely  circulated  in  thia 
country  a  few  weeks  ago,  Sweden  has 
not  granted  the  ballot  to  women.  What 
the  parliament  of  that  country  did  was 
to  grant  universal  suffrage  to  men  24 
years  old.  who  have  committed  no 
crlire.  paid  their  taxes  and  served  the 
prescribed    time    in    the    army. 

This  will  be  disappointing  news  t« 
the  .suffragist.s.  but  they  may  take 
some  consolation  from  the  fact  that  In 
Denmark,  after  a  struggle  lasting  more 
than  twenty-five  years,  the  franchise 
has   be?n    given   to   women. 

We  trust,  however,  that  the  exerolse 
of  political  power  will  not  make  the 
fair  Denmarkers  any  less  attractive 
prey  in  the  fascinating  game  of  Copen- 
hagen. 


Democracy    .\wakene4. 

New  York  Tribune:  We  owe  tn  th* 
Roosevelt  administration  a  rebirth  of 
tlie    true   spirit    of  democracy. 


A    SliKht    Cbaanrc. 

Buffalo  News:     The  milk  pall  super- 
sedes   the    foot   tub   as   a   headgear. 


AMUSEMENTS. 


LltfKUIWI    I  TOMORROW. 

MATIXEE   TOMORROW^. 

THE     PEERLESS    SINGING    COMEDIENNC. 

CORINNE 

—IN    THE    MUSICAL    PLAY— 

^'The  Girls  From  Berlin' 


March    2S,   26,    27— ''BREWSTflR'S    MILLIONS.  " 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


11 


Stofe  Open  Saturday 
Evening  'Till  10:^0 

It  s  Time  for  That 
New  Spring  Suit  and  Topcoat 

_ ;  The  cream  of  the  best  styles  are  here  for  Men  and  Boys. 

The  man  who  gets  the  certain,  full  vahie  of  every  dollar  in  his  clothes  haying  is 
the  man  whose  needs  are  supplied  hy  The  Big  Duluth  store,  with  the  greatest  outlet 
and  the  greatest  buying  advantages,  and  therefore,  which  sell  at  a  smaller  price.  Men 
who  wear  The  Big  Duluth  clothes  rest  safe  in  the  assurance  that  no  one  is  more 
fashionably  attired  than  they,  or  so  well  dressed  for  equal  cost. 

Spring  Topcoats^        Spring  Cravenettes^ 

$J0  to  $35  $10  to  $35 

Spring  ShoeSy 

$2  to  $5 


Spring  Suits^ 

$J0  to  $35 

Spring  HatSy         Spring  Shirts^ 

$2  to  $5  50c  to  $2.50 

Spring  Underwear^ 

50c  to  $3 


Spring  GloveSy 

%\  to  $2.25 

Spring  Neckwear^ 

25c  to  $1.50 


Boys^  and  Children's  Spring  Suits^  Topcoats  and 

Cravenettes  $2*45  to  $15 


other    accounts     assert    that    the    con- 
stable   objected    to    the    presence    of    a 

;  frisky  bull  in  the  crowd  and  struck 
the  animal  and   its  owner. 

I  A  fracas  ensued  ajid  a  mob  of  5,000 
people  attacked  the  temporary  police 
-station   and  stoned   the   police.     The   In- 

I  spector  ordered  the  police  to  fire  and 
two  rioters  were  killed  and  several 
wounded.  The  police  then  dispersed 
before  the  angry  mob,  which  burned 
the  police  station,  one  peon  being 
killed. 

The  superintendent  of  police  was 
stoned  and  seriously  liurt,  thirteen  po- 
lice officers  were  seriously  hurt  and 
six  constables  are  missing.  Reserve 
police  finally  arrived  and  restored  or- 
der. 


KilU    \Vuiild-n«r     Slayer. 

A  merciless  muiJerer  is  Appendicitis 
with  many  victims.  But  Dr.  King's 
New  Life  Pills  kill  it  by  j>revention. 
Tiiey  gently  stimulate  stomach,  liver 
and  bowels,  pri\cntlng  that  clogging 
tlia*  invites  appfiidicltis.  curing  (Jon- 
sl'.pation,  liil  oi;^r.fcfas,  Chills.  Malaria, 
Hoadaehe  and  Indigestion.  Hoc  at  all 
druggl3...r 


ITCH! 


AGE  IS  NOW 
QUESTION 

Irish  Peasants  Dislike  te 

Give  Census  Man 

Information. 


Old-Age 


Bring 


Pension  Sclieme 
s  Out  This  Out 
This  Fact. 


Dublin,  March  19. — Ireland  Is  gen- 
erally the  victim  of  a  campaign  of  cal- 
umny on  one  score  or  another  by  the 
Knglish  press.  At  one  time  It  is  dis- 
loyalty, at  another  drunkenness,  at  one 
tie  thriftlessness,  at  another  refusal  to 
pay  fent,  but  the  English  journalists 
who  have  specially  sent  to  Ireland  to 
slander  it  for  the  benefit  of  their  Eng- 
llsh  readers  have  surpassed  themselves 
this  time,  for  they  have  discovered  a 
slander  which  at  fir.st  sigl-.t  seems  to 
be    supported    by    actual    figures. 

The  working  of  the  old-age  pensions 
act  is  the  theme  of  the  latest  slander, 
which  half  a  dozen  English  papers  are 
industriously  propagating.  This  act, 
provides  that  a  pension  of  J1.25  a  week 
shall  be  paid  to  persons  over  70  years 
of  age  whose  Incomes  are  less  than 
$2.50   'I    week. 

Now.  on  the  basis  of  the  census  of 
1901,  there  ought  to  be  in  the  whole  of 
Ireland  184,000  persons  who  are  70 
years  old  or  over,  but  there  have  been 
20'.I.135  claimants  for  these  pensions  up 
to  January  1.  last.  Only  32,000  of  them 
have  been  disqualified,  and  these  not 
because  they  were  not  of  the  required 
age.  but  because  they  had  received 
poor  law  relief  during  the  preceding 
twelve  months.  On  the  face  of  It,  It 
must  be  admitted  this  looks  like  a 
wholesale  and  bare-faced  fraud,  but  a 
little  Investigation  would  have  shown 
that  probably  every  person  who  has 
received  a  pension  is  entitled  to  it.  and 
that  a  good  many  who  are  entitled  to 
pensions  have  not  received  them  be- 
cause of  the  difficulty  of  proving  their 
ages. 

I)on*t  Like  to  Tell  Ak«. 

The  reticence  of  the  Irish  peasant  on 
the  subject  of  age  has  long  been  noto- 
rious, and  in  addition  to  that,  one  must 
reckon  with  their  Ignorance  of  their 
true   age.      Compulsory   registration   of 


births  was  instituted  in  Ireland  only 
forty  years  ago,  so  that  there  Is  no  of- 
ficial record  to  rely  or.  In  some  cases 
baptismal  records  have  been  available, 
but  in  many  cases  these  have  not  been 
preserved,  or,  if  they  have,  the  old 
people  do  not  remember  where  they 
were  baptized,  and  so  can  not  obtain 
them. 

I  know  personally  an  old  Irish  serv- 
ant woman  who  died  a  couple  of  years 
ago.  and  who  must,  judging  by  the 
events  of  which  she  had  a  clear  recol- 
lection, have  been  well  over  80,  but 
who  to  the  day  of  iier  death  always  told 
the  census  man  that  she  was  ''a  bit 
over  30."  When  asked  wliy  slie  did  so 
she  would  reply,  "And  why  should  I 
tell  the  inquisitive  creature  how  old  I 
am?"  This  woman  has  gone  down  on 
the  census  papers  for  fifty  years  or 
more  as  "just  over  30."  Like  Pecer 
I'an.  she  never  grew  old.  officially,  at 
least. 

Jiaperntttion    lu    Murder   Cane. 

A  remarkable  piece  of  evidence  of 
the  superstition  which  still  survives  In 
some  oi"  the  remote  districts  of  Irf>land 
has  just  come  to  light  in  connection 
with  a  charge  of  murder  against 
Michael  and  Bartley  Coyne,  brothers,  at 
Lattermore,  In  County  Gal  way.  They 
are  accused  of  the  murder  of  James 
Bailey  in  a  fight  after  a  dance  at  a 
neighbor's  house. 

The  district  is  an  Irish-speaking  one 
and  is  in  the  most  remote  part  of  Gal- 
way.  It  is  alleged  that  when  Bailey's 
parents  missed  him  they  called  on  the 
Coynes  and  other  neighbors  to  aid  In 
the  search,  and  they  found  liis  body 
lying  under  a  stone  wall  in  a  field. 
Michael  Coyne,  it  is  alleged,  then  said 
(o   Bailey's  father: 

"Do  not  go  near  him.  That  is  not 
your  son  at  all.  He  was  taken  away  by 
the   fairies   last  night." 

The  old  man  believed  liim  and  the 
body  was  left  lying  in  the  field  for 
some  time.  Finally  some  neighbors 
carried  It  Into  the  liouse.  but  the  father 
still  accepted  the  story  that  his  son 
liad  been  taken  away  by  the  fairies, 
and  the  police  were  not  communicated 
with  until  more  than  a  week  after  the 
murder. 

A  decision  of  an  Irish  high  king  has 
Just  been  quoted  in  the  trial  of  a 
modern  copyright  case.  Involving  the 
right  to  reproduce  translations  of  Celtic 
mantiscrlpcs.  The  original  dispute 
arose  between  St.  Columbkille  and 
Flontan  over  tlie  ownership  of  a  copy 
of  the  Gospels  which  the  saint  had 
made  the  saint  had  made  from  a  book 
owned  by  Flontan.  "To  every  cow  its 
calf  and  to  every  book  its  copy."  said 
the  high  king,  and  Flontan  got  both 
the  original  and  St.  Columbkille's  copy. 

BAVONETED  A  BILL. 

RIOT  WITH  POLICE. 

Calcutta,  March  19. — Official  reports 
give  inadequate  details  of  rioting 
which  occurred  at  Kotappa  Gonda, 
near  Guntur,  in  Madras  Presidency,  re- 
cently. The  Sivaratl  festival  was  In 
progress  and  was  attended  by  many 
thousand  pilgrims.  A  force  of  150  po. 
lice  was  present,  with  Mr.  Kershasp, 
district  superintendent  of  police. 

According  to  the  police  version,  the 
riot  originated  In  a  constable  bayonet- 
ing   a    bull      which    had      kicked      him. 


HUNT'S  PERFECT  Extracts 

for  household  use 

are  as  good  as 

HUNT'S  PERFECT 

Baking  Powder. 

Both  are  perfectly  pure. 

All  Grocers^ 

GET  A  CAN  AND  A  BOTTXB  TODAY. 


If  you  are  a  business  man  I  am 
going  to  tell  you  how  you  can  use 
less  than  one  cent  a  day  and  in- 
crease your  business  one  thousand 
times  that  amount  per  year. 


Mm\ 


SETTLE  CHURCH  CONFLICT. 


Turkish  Conimissiun  Arrives  in  Pal- 
estine to  Investigate. 

Jerusalem,  March  19. — The  special 
commis.sion  appoiiited  by  the  Turkish 
government  to  settle  the  Greek  church 
conflict  in  Palestine  has  arrived  here, 
it  is  hoped  that  the  dispute  caused  by 
th'j  revolt  of  the  Syrians  against  the 
supremacy  of  the  Greek  oligarchy  In 
all    church    matters   will      be      quickly 

ended. 

The  fight  has  been  going  on  for 
months,  and  has  been  most  bitterly 
wagred.  All  the  churche.s  are  closed, 
for  tho  reason  that  the  natives  refuse 
to  attend  them.  All  funeral  services 
are  conducted  in  the  cemeteries  and 
marriages  solemnized  in  the  open  air. 

The  crisis  came  a  few  weeks  ago. 
when  the  natives  seized  the  convent 
and  monasteries,  turning  the  monks 
into  the  streets.  Troops  had  to  be 
requisitioned  from  Jaffa  to  maintain 
order.  Most  of  the  convents,  monas- 
teries and  hospices,  both  here  and  at 
Palestine,  are  in  joint  hands  of  sol- 
diers and  representative  natives. 


animals    for    American    zoological    gar- 
dens. 

Recalling  that  kangaroo  has  figured 
on  Parisian  menus  this,  winter  and 
that  a  guest  exclaimed  at  a  certain 
dinner,  "1  recognize  the  joint.  I  saw 
It  box  at  a  music  hall,"  the  Temps 
liopes  that  Mr.  lioosevelfs  victims  will 
have  a  less   athletic  training. 


ESCAPES  BURIAL  ALIVE. 

French  Woman  Rises  From  Coffin, 
Startling  Mourners. 

Paris,  March  19.< — At  Frejus,  near 
Cannes,  a  couple  of  days  ago  an  octo. 
genarian  named  Mme.  Chrlsiin  was 
thought  to  have  died  in  her  sleep.  The 
doctor  who  was  called  pronounced  the 
wi.iman  to  be  dead  and  arrangements 
were  made  for  the  funeral.  This  was 
to  have  taken  place  the  following  aft- 
ernoon. An  hour  or  ao  before  the  de- 
parture for  the  cemetery  the  dead 
woman  startled  the  mourners  by  sit- 
ting up  in  her  coffin  and  asking  to  be 
supplied  with  something  to  drink  as 
she   was   thirsty. 

The  spectators  of  this  incident,  save 
two,  fled  shrieking  from  the  house. 
The  two,  who  preserved  their  presence 
of  ml!id,  removed  the  "corpse"  from  her 
coffin  and  put  her  to  bed,  where  she 
soon   went   S')undly   to   sleep. 

Mme.  Christln  is  quite  well  again 
and  knows  nothing  of  the  narrow  es- 
cape she  has  had  of  being  buried  alive. 
Very  curiously,  slie  lias  recounted  to 
the  members  of  the  fs^mily  that  she 
dreamed  she  was  diead  and  had  been 
buried. 


It    Saved    HIn    Lvk- 


"All  thought  I'd  lose  my  leg,"  writes 
J.  A.  Swenson,  Wat»rtown,  Wis.  "Ten 
years  of  ezcema,  that  fifteen  doctors 
could  not  cure,  had  at  last  laid  me  up. 
Then  Bucklen's  Arnica  dalve  cured  it 
sound  and  well."  Infallible  for  Skin 
Eruptiuns.  Ezcema.  Salt  Rheum,  Boils, 
Fever  Sores.  Burns,  Scalds,  Cuts  and 
Piles.      iSc    at    all    druggl.sts. 


COUNTESS  DYING  IN  GARRET. 


IN  DIRE  WANT 


Is  Timby,  Who  Claims  He  Invented 
the  Revolving  Turret. 

New  York,  March  19. — Theodore 
Ruggles  Timby.  90  years  old,  who 
claims  to  have  been  the  inventor  of 
the  revolving  turret,  which  saved  the 
day  for  the  Union  in  the  battle  of 
Hampton  Roads  between  the  little 
Monitor  and  the  Merrimac,  Is  in  des- 
titute circumstances  today  in  Brook- 
lyn, where  he  is  living  with  a  life- 
long friend,  Mrs.  Virginia  Chanler 
Pitcomb. 

Timby  has  in  his  possession  pa- 
pers which  purport  to  show  that  his 
claim  to  the  turret  invention  is  well 
founded,  but,  although  his  case  haa 
been  presented  to  congress  a  score  of 
times,  and  even  reached  the  United 
States  court  of  claims  at  Washington, 
it  did  not  receive  due  attention.  Timby 
says,  and  he  never  received  a  dollar 
from   the  government. 

Mrs.  Pitcomb  also  is  said  to  be  in 
dire  want. 


ROOSEVELT'S  A  CULINARY 
EXPEDITION,  SAYS  TEMPS. 

Paris  March  19. — The  Temps,  which 
seems  to  have  been  ruminating  on  the 
true  inwardness  of  Mr.  Roosevelt's  ex- 
pedition to  Africa,  deduces  that  "the 
result  of  this  hunt,  announced  with 
trumpet  sounds,  will  be  purely  culin- 
ary." 

It  proceeds  to  picture  Fifth  avenue's 
.sumptuous  homes  dining  next  winter 
on  elephant's  feet  giraffe  saddle  and 
hippo  steaks,  while  the  historiograph- 
ers whom  the  former  president  will 
take  along  with  him  will  describe  the 
methods  of  cooking.  The  Temps  bases 
its  conclusion  on  the  character  of  Mr. 
Roosevelt's  numerous  suite,  which  Is 
not  composed  of  mathematicians,  scien- 
tists and  archaeologists  so  much  as 
photographers,  reporters  and  possible 
oinematographers,  while  apparently 
the  object  is  not  to  study  the  flora 
and  fauna,  or  to  write  treatises  for  the 
academy  of  sciences,  but  articles  for 
less  austere  publications,  like  maga- 
zines, nor  is  it  proposed  to  entrap  rar« 


Supposed  Daughter  of  Napoleon  III 
Is  Near  Death. 

Paris,  March  19. — The  Countess  de  la 
Pommicro,  who  is  believed  by  many 
people  to  be  the  daughter  of  Napoleon 
III.,  was  found  dying  In  a  miserable 
garret  in  Senlls  this  week. 

She  had  not  been  seen  for  some  days, 
and  when  the  neighbors  forced  their 
way  into  her  room  they  found  lier 
calling  feebly  for  help.  She  was  ly- 
ing on  a  heap  of  straw  in  the  middle 
of  the  room,  fighting  as  well  as  she 
could  with  rats  for  a  crust  of  bread 
and  a  piece  of  cheose  which  slie 
clutciied    to    her    throat. 

Lying  all  about  the  floor  of  the  room 
were  bank  notes,  bonds  and  shares 
worth  more  than  $30,000.  The  rats  had 
eaten  away  portions  of  the  paper.  The 
countess  has  been  taken  to  a  home  at 
Cleremont,  but  there  Is  little  hope  of 
her   recovery. 


The  wife  of  Gerliart  Haiiptmann — 
Margaret  Marshalk — before  her  mar- 
riage to  the  dramatist  was  for  a  long 
time  a  popular  member  of  the  Lobe 
theater  at  Breslau.  She  has  now  gone 
on  the  stage  for  the  second  time,  but 
not  as  an  actresss.  At  a  recent  con- 
cert given  hy  the  Vereln  der  Muslk- 
freunde  at  Hirschberg,  Frau  Haupt- 
mann  played  a  Greig  composition,  and. 
according  to  to  a  report  printed  the 
following  day,  showed  that  she  is  an 
accomplished  violinist. 


ROYALTY'S 
CHARMER 

Mrs.    George    West   Is 

Planning  a  Social 

Coup  in  London. 

Lady   Granard's    Gems 
Create  Furore  at 
Smart  Reception. 


London,  March  19. — It  was  something 
of  a  surprise  to  Mrs.  George  West's 
friends  to  find  that  she  was  going  back 
to  Great  Cumberland  place,  the  scfene 
of  her  first  great  social  success  In 
London.  The  new  house  she  has  taken, 
as  most  people  know  by  now,  was 
Melba's,  from  wliom  she  has  purchased 
some  of  the  exquisite  things  it  con- 
tains, especially  the  Louise  Quinze  fur- 
niture,   which   Is   unique. 

Mrs.  George  West  Is  a  connoisseur  in 
furniture,  and  it  is  her  proud  boast 
that  she  owns  many  things  which  are 
matchless  even  among  the  belongings 
of  millionaires.  Among  these  are  sou- 
venirs presented  to  her  by  almost 
every  crowned  head  in  Europe,  not  to 
speak  of  Indian  princes  and  other  po- 
tentates who  at  one  time  or  another 
have  fallen  under  her  spell,  for  among 
foreigners  especially  Mrs.  West  has  al- 
ways been  a  special  favorite.  It  used 
to  be  a  recognized  thing  when  some 
particularly  "diflflcult"  celebrity  who 
was  a  royal  guest  had  to  be  amused  to 
pass  him  or  her  at  great  social  func- 
tions. However  glum  or  bored  he 
might  look,  before  he  was  ten  min- 
utes talking  to  Mrs.  \»  est  he  was 
smiling. 

Klntertaiued   (or  "Bertie." 

She  has  not  had  a  town  residence  for 
years.  When  in  London  she  used  to 
put  up  at  her  son  Winston's  bachelor 
abode,  a  little  box  of  a  place.  Now 
It  seems  she  is  so  e.\tremely  proud  ol" 
her  two  daughtors-in-law,  Mrs.  Win- 
ston more  especially,  that  she  means 
to  give  them  a  grand  time  doing  a  lot 
of  entertaining  for   them. 

It  was  In  the  old  days  at  Great 
Cumberland  Plafce  that  Mrs.  George 
West,  then  Lady  Randolph  Churchill, 
gave  these  exclusive  little  dinners  for 
"liertke,"  now  King  Edward.  He  used 
to  go  to  the  Churchllls  "to  be  cheered 
up"  when  he  iiad  the  blues,  and  used  to 
deliglit  to  hear  of  the  practical  jokes 
Lady  Churchill  had  perpetrated.  She 
found  out  his  penchant  for  common 
or  garden  dishes,  like  tripe  and  cow- 
heel  and  certain  kinds  of  curry,  and 
had  a  chef  who  was  a  past  master  in 
turning  these  out  to  the  roval  guest's 
satisfaction.  Many  times  he  would 
wire  to  her  to  ask  If  he  might  come 
and    dine. 

The  king  and  Mrs.  George  West  kept 
up  their  close  Platonic  friendship  up 
to  the  time  stie  remarried.  After  that. 
as  all  the  world  knows,  they  cooled  off 
because  of  hi.*  majesty's  downright 
aversion  to  a  disparity  in  age  on  the 
wrong  side.  But  metaphorically  speak- 
ing. Lady  Randolph  snapped  her  An- 
gers in  the  face  of  the  king  and  all 
the  rest  regarding  her  marriage.  She 
said  'she  Intended  to  please  herself  and 
she  meant  to  be  happy — at  last."  And 
happy    she    certainly    has    been. 

Lady  iirnnard   a   NenMation. 

Lady  Granard  was  undoubtedlv  tho 
sf  nsat.lor  of  the  great  reception  which 
the  marchioness  of  Londonderry  gave 
for  the  Opposition  the  other  night.  She 
was  followed  about  the  rooms  by  a 
mob  of  aristocracy,  which  included 
duchesses  and  countesses  and  politi- 
cians, all  pushing  each  other  In  their 
attempt  to  get  a  glimpse  of  her  and 
her  jewels.  Eventually,  she  reached  a 
divan  in  the  center  of  one  of  the 
magnificent  rooms — Londonderry  house 
is  one  of  the  palaces  of  Park  Lane — 
and  there  she  sat  like  a  queen  among 
courtitrs. 

Beside  her  was  Arthur  Balfour,  who, 
on  being  presented  to  her,  bent  low 
£>nd  kissed  her  hand — an  Old  World 
ciiivalrous  act — which  seemed  to  amuse 
considerably  the  trans-Atlantic  belle. 
She  wears  her  jewels  to  the  manner 
born.  She  gives  the  idea  of  having 
an  Innate  fondness  of  them.  By  all 
accounts  she  is  never  happy  without 
them.  But  why  wear  two  necklaces  at 
the  same  time'.'  Surely  her  gorgeous 
one  of  diamonds,  to  match  her  tiara 
with  its  row  of  big  stones  that  flashed 
like  electric  globes,  ought  to  have  been 
sufficient  without  that  other  of  sap- 
phires— a  wondrous  thing  of  its  kind, 
the  gems  having  the  very  wave  of  the 
sea.  It  seemt  d,  in  their  green  depths. 
Cordage  a  MaMN  of  Gemii. 

I  may  remark  parenthetically  that, 
although  sapphires  are  always  sup- 
posed to  be  deepest  blue,  the  really 
valuable  ones  look  green  In  certain 
lights  and  that  was  the  tone  of  the 
countess'.  Her  corsage  was  almost  a 
solid  mass  of  diamonds  and  with  all 
she  managed  not  to  look  vulgar.  For 
sheer  talent,  can  any  woman  beat  that? 

With  her  soft  fluffy  hair  and  her 
pretty  coloring  she  gave  the  idea  of  a 
fairy  princess,  needing  only  the  wand 
to  make  the  Illusion  complete.  There 
were  diamonds  on  her  tiny  white  satin 
shoes  and  her  hands  and  arms  g'listen- 
ed  with  jewels.  She  was  going  down 
to  supper  as  the  duke  of  Norfolk  came 
in  and  he  stood  on  the  stairs  appar- 
ently transfixed  for  the  moment.  Then 
he  l-i-ned  to  Lord  Londonderry,  who 
was  close  by.  and  demanded.  "Who  is 
the  lady?"  and  was  duly   Informed. 

It  13  being  said  that  the  only  state 
Jewel  of  which  Lady  Granard  Is  Jealous 
Is    the   Cullinan   diamond.      It   certainly 


SECIRTTY 


Guaranteeing 
a  Promise 


You  have  the  same 
right  to  be  secured  when 
you  buy  clothing  as  has 
the  banker  when  he  loans 
you    money. 

We  would  not  urge  you 
to  demand  security  unless 
we    could   furnish    it. 

It  Is  because  we  know 
the  real  quality  of  our 
Men's 

SPRING.^*- 

Overcoats 
and  Suits 

Becau.se  >ve  know  their 
style  correctness.  their 
good-fltting,  ser\'ice-glving 
qualities  that  we  are  so 
positive  that  our  position 
is  secure. 

Wo  sell  dlsMnctively 
^ocNl  clothes,  the  kind 
that  you  can  feel  secure  in 
buying,  and  in  variety  of 
new  colorings  and  patterns 
— a  dozen  or  more  new 
shades  of  gray  Included — 
you  have  an  unlimited 
choice  at  $10  to  $3  5.  Gar- 
ments to  equal  the  tailors 
$40  products  are  ft-aturcd 
here  at 


■^ 


Two  Trouser  Bargains  for  Tomorrow 


Small   lots  of  $3,   $3.50  and   $4 
medium      and       heavy    weight 
Trousers,    in    all   sizes,    reduced 
for   a    decided 
clearance    


$2.35 


Small  lots  of  our  finest  $5,  $6 
and  $7  Trousers,  conservative 
and  peg  top,  will  be  closed  out 
at  the  low  price 
of    


CLOTHING  J>ARLOnt 


iia  w.  oui^Bmofs^  «x» 


was  the  only  gem  which  took  the  shine 
out  oi  hers  at  the  opening  of  p:irlia- 
mtnt  where,  in  the  petresses'  gallery. 
Lady  Granard  was  the  cynosure  of  all 
ey-js. 


IN  THROES  OF 
WAVE  OF  CRIME 


Seventeen   Recent  Mur- 
ders Make  Hork  for 
French  Police. 

Paris,  March  19. — Ar  other  extraor- 
dinary wave  of  crime  has  swept  over 
France,  and  within  a  brief  period 
seventeen  murders  have  been  reported. 
In  nearly  every  case  the  murder  was 
one  of  passion.  There  ire  murders  by 
men,  by  boys  and  by  women,  and  their 
savagery  is  only  oqualei  by  the  casual 
way  in  which  they  are  regarded.  For 
there  have  been  so  ma«iy  murders  of 
all  kinds  in  recent  years  in  France 
that  unless  a  murder  be  more  than 
usually  brutal,  or  mysterious,  or  sen- 
sational in  some  way  or  another,  it 
attracts  little  or  no  attention.  Here 
Is    part    of    the    latest    riurder    budget: 

A  young  apprentice  of  16  murdered 
his  employer's  wife  wlt!i  an  awl.  He 
is  believed  to  have  been  In  love  with 
her. 

A  music  hall  singer  was  murdered 
by   her  lover,   a   rich    young  man    of   26. 

.\t  a  ball  In  F'aris  a  young  washer- 
woman, seeing  her  fiance  dancing  with 
another  girl,  stabbed  him  twice  in  the 
back  with  a  knife. 

A  workman  named  Rlies,  whose  wife 


had  left  htm  and  refused  to  return, 
stabbed  her  to  death  and  killed  him- 
self  with    the   same   knife. 

A  cobbler  left  his  wife  some  time  ago 
for  a  pretty  dressmaker.  The  deserted 
wife,  who  is  onlv  26,  went  to  her  rival's 
door,  rang  the  bell,  and  when  the  door 
was  opcped,  threw  pepper  Into  the 
eyes  of  her  rival,  who  opened  It.  killed 
her  with  a  dagger  and  gave  herself  up 
to    the    police. 

At  Vlgan  a  peasant  shot  his  broth- 
er-in-law dead  with  a  rifle  over  a  dis- 
cussion on  a  matter  of  $1.75. 

A  girl  stabbed  her  father  to  death 
with  seven  dagger  thrusts  at  Limoge 
because  he  had  quarreled  with  her 
mother. 

At  Helfort  a  stoker,  after  being  re- 
fused assistance  by  two  sisters,  shot 
them  both  with  a  revolver  and  took 
his   own    life. 

A  soldier  at  Brest,  who  was  called 
by  some  clvlliaQs  a  "wall  crayfish."  be- 
cause he  was  one  of  the  sentries  at  the 
fort,  killed  one  of  them  with  his 
bayonet. 

A  masquer  was  stabbed  to  death  at 
the    Nice    carnival. 

Within  500  yards  of  the  scene  of  the 
celebrated  crime  of  the  Lyons  mall,  a 
wagoner  was  murdered  anfl  robbied, 
and  his  money  and  five  horses  were 
stolen. 

At  Lyons  a  man  killed  his  wife  with 
a  kitchen  knife  because  they  had  a 
d'spute    about    the    dinner. 

Many  other  crimes  of  the  same  kind 
have  been  committed,  but  are  not  on 
the    official    record. 

The  authorities  Intend  In  the  near 
future  to  make  It  more  difficult  than  It 
now  Is  for  persons  to  carry  long  knives 
or  revolvers. 


Invetitors  are  now  confining  their  at- 
tention almost  entirely  to  three  bran- 
ches— airships,  automobiles  and  Im- 
provements ill  "lectrioa!  ajipliances. 


The  forest  coinniissionor  of  New 
York  lias  reported  that  90  per  cent  of 
the  forest  fires  in  that  state  were 
caused  by  siiarks  from  locomotives. 


Signiiicant  Fact 

No  other  medicine  for  woman's  ills  has  any  such  professional  endorsement  as  Dr.  Pierce's  Favorite 
Prescription  has  received,  in  the  unqualified  recommendation  of  each  of  its  several  ingredients  by 
scores  of  leading  medical  men  of  all  the  schools  of  practice.  Is  such  an  endorsement  not  worthy 
of  your  consideration  ?     Is  it  not  a  significant  fact  too  that 

Dr.  Pierce's  Favorite  Prescription 

Js  the  only  medicine  sold  through  dru^^ists,  for  woman's  peculiar  weak* 
nesses  and  ills,  the  makers  of  which  are  not  afraid  to  print  its  every  in* 
^redient  on  its  outside  wrapper  ?  Is  this  not  worthy  of  your  consideration 
if  you  are  a  poor  sick  invalid  woman  ? 

The  formula  of  Dr.  Piercers  Favorite  Prescription  will  bear  the  most  critical  examination  of  medical  ex- 
perts, for  it  contains  no  alcohol,  narcotics,  harmful,  or  habit-forming  drugs,  and  no  agent  enters  into  it 
that  is  not  highly  recommended  by  the  most  advanced  and  leading  medical  teachers  and  authorities  of  their 
several  schools  of  practice.  These  authorities  recommend  the  ingredients  of  Dr.  Pierce's  Favorite  Prescrip- 
tion for  the  cure  of  exactly  the  same  ailments  for  which  this  world-famed  medicine  is  advised. 

A  booklet  of  ingredients,  with  numerous  authorative  professional  endorsements  by  the  leading  medical 
authorities  of  this  country,  will  be  mailed  free  to  any  one  sending  name  and  address  with  request  for  same. 
Address  Dr.  R.  V.  Pierce,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

It's  foolish — often  dangerous  to  accept  a  substitute  of  unknown  composition  in  place  of  this  time-tried 
medicine  of  known  composition.     Don't  do  it.     Insist  on  getting  what  you  ask  for. 


f. 1 f1 

■ 

; 


I. 


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haaaMMMMMBUUh 


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12 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY.    MARCH    19,    1909. 


No 

Question 

as  to  the 

Superiority, 

of 


CALUiVIET 
Baking  Powder 

Received  Higbett  Award 

World's  Pare  Fo«d  EzpoutiOB 

Clucac«,  1907. 


CHATTELS  AND  SALARY 

LOANS 

MONEY  TO  LOAN  In  any  amount  on  houeshoIU 
funilture,  pianos  hfr*«».  wngoiis  niul  p«T>on»l 
prrp«rtv  of  all  kliicls  at  the  L»we«t  Rate*  In  th« 
City. 

Don't     forgrt     to     call     at     430     MANHATTAN' 
BLDG..   Iitfir*  you  make  a  Imin  eWmht-rr  ;iii<l  get 
our  r.itr*   ;\r.tl   become   convinced   that   we  will   saie 


y<)ii    rii.ir.e>. 


Duluth  Mortgage  Loan  Co., 

430     MANHATTAN     BLDG. 


Zd.itli    'phone    IJl-j  l'. 


\V:u.    llirkan,    Mfr 


STEEL  CUT  WILL 
NOT  LAST  LONG 

Schwab  Foresees  Early 

Return  to  the  Old 

Prices. 

Detroit,  Mich..  March  19. — Speaking 
at  the  monthly  luncheon  of  the  De- 
troit board  of  commerce.  Charles  M. 
Schwab  declared  that  the  present  cut- 
ting of  prices  in  the  steel  industry 
would  not  be  of  long  duration  or  of 
^eat   moment.     He  predicted   that  in 

ten  years  the  consumption  of  steel 
in  this  country,  which  in  1907  was 
24,000.000  t'-ns.  would  reach  40,000,- 
000  tons.  The  manufacture  of  steel 
cars  had  only  begun,  he  said,  and 
the  building  of  steel  ships  had  not 
even  made  a  beginning  in  view  of 
what  he  said,  may  be  expected  when 
the  next  congress  has  acted  on  the 
question  of  ship  subsidy.  It  takes 
nearly  1.000  tons  of  steel  rails  per 
day.  "said  Mr.  Schwab,  merely  to  re- 
place  worn   out   rails. 

ALL  READY  FOR 
SENIOR  PLAY 


LARGER  FORCE  IS 
TO  BE  EMPLOYED 

Hanna  and  Sliver  Mines 

to  Ship  More  Ore 

This  Year. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  March  19.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— C.  K.  Hendrlck,  su- 
perintendent of  the  Hanna  and  Sliver 
mines  in  this  district,  reports  that  large 
shipments  of  ore  will  be  made  the 
coming    season    from    these    properties. 

It  is  anticipated  that  about  300,000 
tons  will  be  shipped  from  the  Sliver 
and  about  150.000  from  the  Hanna. 
The  Silver  shipped  nearly  50,000  tons 
last  year  and  the  proposed  large  In- 
crease for  the  coming  season  means  a 
much  larger  force  of  men  and  that 
tliere  will  be  lively  doings  about  this 
property     when     tlie     season     operis. 

Operations  have  already  begun,  in 
a  small  way.  at  this  mine,  but  as  the 
season  advances  the  crews  will  be 
added  to  and  the  work  pushed  rai>ldly 
forward.  Hutler  Bros,  have  charge  of 
the  stripping  and  will  endeavor  to  fill 
their  part  of  the  contract  at  an  early 
date. 


<• 


»* 


Diamonds  and  Hearts 

Title  of  Annual  High 

School  Show. 

"Diamonds  and  Hearts  '  is  the  name 
of  the  annual  senior  play  which  will 
bo  put  on  at  the  high  school  assembly 
hall  this  evening.  A.  F.  B.  Custance, 
who  has  charge  of  staging  the  play.  Is 
authority  for  the  statement  that  it  is 
the  best  one  ever  secured  for  the  local 
school.  ^    .  .  ^, 

The  country  choir,  consisting  of 
thlrtv-five  members,  led  by  Earllng 
ilostue.  who  Impersonates  a  German. 
j«  a  feature  of  the  show  that  will  at- 
tract a  good  deal  of  attention.  Prince 
V.llner,  a  fox  terrier,  has  been  trained 
to   take   part   In    this   act. 

The  Yama  Yama  dance  by  Marjorle 
ghlpherd.  Cieo  Fenton  and  Ruth  Davis 
le  said  to  be  one  of  the  best  things  of 
th'S  performance.  The  play  Itself  is 
fi.n    of   comedy   and  heart   Interest. 


HIBBING  CHIEF 
IS  BEING  SUED 

Man  Arrested  as  Suspi- 
cious Cliaracter  Is  Seek- 
ing Damages. 

Hlbblng  Minn.,  March  19. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Chief  of  Police  Wring, 
Martin     Hughes    and    D.    D.    McEaciiin 

have  left  for  Duluth  to  attend  the  trial 
of  the  damage  case  of  William  vs. 
Wring    and    McEachifi. 

The  case  dates  back  to  a  year  ago 
last  fall  when  some  time  during  the 
night  the  Itasca  Mercantile  company 
store  here  was  broken  into  and  arti- 
cles   of    the    value    of    $o0    stolen. 

Among  tlie  number  of  suspicious 
characters  arrested  was  Williams,  the 
case  w.is  finally  dismi.s.sed  in  the 
municipal  court.  Williams  thinks  his 
character  wa.^  defamed,  hence  this 
action    for    damage. 


VIRCilMA  LIKKD  IT. 


1 


Off  IN  SHREDS 


Splendid  St.  Patrick's  Day  Enter- 
tainment Enjoyed  by  Large  Honse. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  March  19. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  entertainment 
given  Wednesday  evening  In  the  Fay 
opera  house  by  the  choir  of  Our  I>ady 
of  I.ourdes  Catholic  church,  commom- 
oratlng  St.  I'atrlck's  day,  was  largely 
attended.  Every  number  on  the  pro- 
gram was  good  and  especially  well 
rendered. 

Those  who  took  part  were  the  Misses 
Bessie  and  Margaret  Murphy,  Ger- 
tiude  deJCoble.  Josephine  Sterle,  and 
Messrs.  A.  E.  Schneider,  O.  A.  Poirier, 
H.  E.  Devlne,  D.  T.  Murphy.  Louis  Os- 
torii  and  Fatlier  James  Hogan. 

Father  Hogan  delivered  a  brief  ad- 
dress, in  wliich  he  spoke  of  the  many 
virtues  of  St.  Patrick  and  told  of 
v-liat  the  people  of  Irelnd  had  done 
to  make  America  one  of  the  greatest 
i;atlons  of  the  world.  His  remarks 
wert  greatly  appreciated  by  his  audit- 
ors. 

The  Misses  Murphy,  deNoble  and 
Sterle  have  favored  the  public  several 
times  with  their  rare  musical  talen. 
and  they  were  greeted  with  favor  each 
time  they  nppeared. 

The  male  quartette,  composed  of 
Messrs.  Devine,  Schneider.  Murphy  and 
Poirier.  rendered  several  pleasing  num- 
bers. Henry  Devine  did  his  first  sing- 
ing In  public  in  Virginia  on  this  oc- 
casion and  he  made  a  very  good  im- 
pression among  the  music  lovers.  He 
has    a    full,    rich    baritone    voice. 

Louis  Osborn  also  made  his  debut 
In  public  as  a  musician,  and  proved 
himself  a  master  of  the  cornet.  He 
rendered    two    very    pleasing    numbers. 

Tlie  same  program  was  given  In 
Eveleth  the  night  previous  to  a  large 
and    jippreciative    audience. 

SANITARY  DAIRY  FARM. 


JUDGE   J.   W.   OSBORNE. 

Ely.  Minn.,  M.arch  19.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — James  Wilson  Osborne, 
the  present  municipal  judge  of  Ely,  is 
seeking  re-election  at  the  spring  elec- 
tion. The  judge  has  given  eminent 
satisfaction  and  his  friends  predict  his 
re-election. 


in    monotones   and   in   all   colors   of  the 
originals. 

Arrangements  will  be  made  to  have 
each  school  grade  study  the  exhibit  in 
order  to  become  acquainted  with  mas- 
terpieces and  ac(iulre  ability  to  inter- 
pret thouglits  and  feelings  expressed 
through  the  medium  of  art.  It  Is  also 
hoped  that  selections  may  be  made  for 
permanent  decoration.  The  public  will 
have  one  or  two  days  to  view  the  ex- 
hibition. 


death.  She  was  formerly  a  teacher 
here  in  the  public  schools,  and  was 
very  popular  among  her  many  friends. 
She  leaves,  beslrfe  her  husband,  two 
small  children.  H«r  death  is  said  to 
have  been  caused  W^  typhoid  fever,  due 
to   drinking    Impuri^   milk. 

NEW  STEEL  SHAFT 
IS  BEING  ERECTED 

Work  on  A  Shaft  at  Pio- 
neer Mine  Is  Now 
Under  Way. 

Ely,  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Work  has  begun  on  the 
new  A  shaft  at  the  Pioneer  mine.  The 
shaft  will  be  of  steel,  and  is  being 
erected  by  the  American  Bridge  com- 
pany of  Cleveland,  Ohio.  The  old 
wooden  structure,  which  has  been  the 
means  of  hoisting  many  millions  of 
tons  of  the  very  best  Besemer  ore, 
was  dynamited  down  this  week  in  or- 
der that  the  new  work  may  progress 
rapidly,  and  in  order  tliat  there  might 
be  no  danger  In  pulling  down  the  tim- 
bers   of    the    old    shaft    house. 

All  shafts  of  the  Ely  district  of  the 
Vermilion  range  are  now  of  steel,  and 
of  the  latest  model.  It  Is  thought  that 
experiments  may  be  made  here  of  hav- 
ing all  timbers  and  supports  witliln  the 
mines  of  steel.  Instead  of  timber  as 
heretofore.  The  supply  of  mining 
timber  is  growing  scarce  in  this  sec- 
tion and  what  remains  Is  being  held 
for  fancy  prices.  The  contemplated 
Innovation  will  increase  the  demand 
for    steel    and    ores. 

The  fee  owners  of  the  Section  30 
mining  proposition  were  in  this  city 
on  their  way  to  the  mine  recently. 
What  was  the  result  of  their  visit,  or 
purport,  is  not  known.  The  future 
of  t)ie  Section  30  mine  is  of  much  im- 
portance to  the  people  of  this  place. 
In  the  party  were  Messrs.  F.  H.  Mer- 
rill L.  C.  Harris,  li.  H.  Fagan.  W.  T. 
Eaton,  George  I.onstorff  and  Superin- 
tendent   George    H.    St.    Claire. 

INJURED  WHILE  SKATING. 


You  Should  See  Moe's  Splenidid  New  Spring  Suitings 
at  "Even  Money"  $1— a  Yard— Really  Worth  $1.25 

Truly  a  most  notable  display  of  style,  texture  and  value!       It's  an  effort     to     give     your     dollar 
more  buving  power  than  anywhere  else  in  town.     And  you  will  appreciate  it,  we  know. 

Fine'  New  Serges,  Panamas,  Striped  Prunellas,  anc  new  Satin  Finish  Novelties,  in  new  grays, 
blues,  browns,  greens,  smoke,  anemone,  etc.  The  showing  comprises  the  best  productions  of  lead- 
ing mills,  and  the  regular  price  will  be  $1.25  the  yard.  Our  special  offering  enables  you  to  buy 
these  fine  goods  at  "even   money." 

Yd. 


$4U, 


1 


DYNAMITE  STOLEN. 


Andrew  (innibns  Believed  to   Have 
Pni'Iuined  the  Explosive. 

Aurora.  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Andrew  Gumbu^  who 
was  arrested  here  Wednesday  and  tak- 
en to  Duluth  to  be  prosecuted  by  the 
federal  authorities  on  the  charge  of 
shipping  an  explosive  on  a  common 
carrier  has  been  employed  at  the  Mo- 
hawk mine  and.  it  is  said,  he  has  been 
pu.loining  the  dynamite  piece  by  piece 
for    some    time.      The   dynamite    was    to 


dren. 

Gumbus  intended  to  leave  on  the 
morning  train  Wednesday  but  missed 
connections.  His  trunk  in  which  the 
dynamite  was  packed  was  then  checked 
for  the  afternoon  train. 

In  the  meantime  one  of  Gumbus' 
comrades,  knowing  the  danger,  notified 
the  mining  men  who  in  turn  wired  Two 
Harbors  to  watch  out  for  him.  Upon 
receiving  word  here  that  he  i»ad  missed 
the  train  Gumbus  was  arrested  and  his 
trunk  seized. 


Grand  Rapids  Girl  Falls  on  Cement 
Floor,  Breaking  Limb. 

Grand  Rapids,  Minn.,  March  19. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Marie  Aitken 
skated  not  wisely  too  swift  on  the  ce- 
ment basement  floor  of  the  Aitkin 
home  Monday  evening. 

Doctors  Storch  and  Gendron  reduced 
a  fracture  of  the  right  arm  at  the 
wrist,  since  which  time  the  young 
patient  has  been  getting  along  very 
nicely.  In  .company  witli  Hattie  Car- 
rier, Miss  Marie  was  trying  the  rollers 
on  the  smooth  cement  floor  when  she 
fell  backwards  striking  on  her  hand  in 
such  a  manner  as  to  break  one  of  the 
wrist  bones.  The  doctors  deemed  It 
advisable  to  fracture  the  companion 
bone  in  order  to  prevent  an  unshape- 
ly setting,  which   was  done. 

Announcement  cards  of  the  marri- 
age of  B.  L.  Lleberman  of  Grand 
Miss  Fannie  Grace  Ahrani- 


lor  some  ume.  ii.e  uynuni.ie  wus  i"  Kapids  and  Miss  Fannie  Grace  Ahram- 
have  been  used  by  him  to  blow  out^  »'  ^  -^^.^  j  Duluth  on  Tuesday  of  last 
stumps    on      his      farm      in      W  Iscon.sin,  -      -■    - 

where  he  also  has  a  wife  and  five  chil- 


THREE  ACCIDENTS. 


Itching  was  Intense — Humor  Spread 
from  Hands  to  Body— Work  Inter- 
rupted and  Sleep  Often  Impossible 
~  Disease  Resisted  Treatment 


Employes  of  Canisteo  Mine  Injured 
in  Discharge  of  Duties. 

Coleralne.  Minn.,  Marcli  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — This  has  been  an  un- 
lucky week  at  the  Canistee  mine,  three 
emploves  being   hurt. 

Steve  Bruzitch  was  caught  under  a 
mass  that  fell  from  the  bank  In  the 
open  pit,  and  his  lower  limbs  badly 
injured,  while  he  may  have  been  hurt 
internally. 

Dominick  Alio,  a  trammer  in  the  No. 
2  shaft,  had  his  leg  broken  by  a  dump 
car  dumping  unexpectedly,  as  he  was 
riding    In    it. 

J.  Murphy,  a  cranesman  on  a  team 
shovel  in  the  open  pit  had  liis  leg  cut 
oft  Wednesday  night.  A  large  chunk 
of  frozen  dirt  fell,  striking  him  In 
such  a  way  that  the  Impact  against  the 
machinery  cut  the  leg  entirely  off.  He 
was  taken  at  once  to  the  hospital, 
where  his  wound  was  dressed.  A  sad 
feature  of  Murphy's  case  is  the  fact 
that  he  was  engaged  to  be  married 
Friday  of  next  week. 

IT  WAS  APi'REl'l.4TED. 


BUT  CUTICURA  CURED 
HIM  IN  THREE  WEEKS 


"My  trotible  commenced  about  two 
years  ago  and  consisted,  at  first,  of  an 
eruption  of  small 

Eustules  on  my 
ands.  These 
spread  later  to  other 
parts  of  my  body, 
and  the  itching  at 
times  was  intense,  so 
much  so  that  I  liter- 
ally tore  the  skin  off 
in  shreds  in  seeking 
relief.  The  awful 
itching  interfered 
with  my  work  con- 
Eiderably,  and  also 
liept  me  awake 
nights.  I  tried  several  doctors  and 
used  a  number  of  different  ointments 
and  lotions  but  received  practically  no 
benefit.  Finally  I  settled  down  to  the 
use  of  Cuticura  Soap.  Cuticura  Ointment 
and  Cuticura  Resolvent  Pills,  with  the 
result  that  in  a  few  days  all  itching  had 
ceased  and  in  about  three  weeks'  time 
all   traces  of   my  eruption  had  disap- 

f eared.  I  have  had  no  trouble  of  this 
ind  since.  H.  A.  Krutekoff,  5714 
Wabash  Ave.,  Chicago,  111.,  November 
lb  and  28,  1907." 


Virginians  Are  Evincing  Interest  in 
Worthy  Indertaking. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — President  C.  B.  Le- 
nont  of  the  Commercial  club,  who  Is 
chairman  of  the  committee  to  solicit 
subscriptions  for  stock  for  the  pro- 
posed .<-anitary  dairy  farm  to  be  estab- 
lished in  this  city  says  that  thirty- 
five  shares  have  been  taken  by  citizens 
of  Virginia.  It  is  proposed  to  capita- 
lize the  company  at  #10,000,  with 
shares  at  $UiO  each,  but  as  soon  as 
fifty  shares  of  stock  are  disposed  of 
steps  will  be  taken  to  organize  a  com- 
pany and  go  ahead  with  the  work  of 
establishing  the  dairy.  It  is  proposed 
to  build  the  daiiy  strictly  along  sani- 
tary lines  with  a  thorouglily  compe- 
tent man  In  charge.  Land  for  the  pur- 
po.se  has  been  offered  by  the  Steel  cor- 
poration to  the  soutli  of  the  city,  and 
as  soon  as  the  fifty  sliares  are  taken 
up  work  upon  the  construction  of  the 
buildings  will  begin.  Dr.  Lenont  is 
much  encouraged  over  the  result  and 
says  that  Virginia  may  be  assured  of 
having  a  fine  dairy  farm  witiiin  a 
short   time. 


week,  have  been  received.  Mr.  Lleber 
man  and  his  bride  arrived  Monday  and 
are  stopping  at  the  Pokegama,  where 
tliey  will  remain  until  their  residence 
on  Leland  avenue  is  vacated  by  the 
present  occupant.^.  The  cards  announce 
•at    home   aftei    April    15." 

C.  C.  McCarthy  received  the  sad 
news  Tuesday  that  his  aged  mother 
was  dangerously  ill  at  her  home  in 
St.  Louis,  Midi.,  for  which  place  he 
left   on    the   early   morning  train. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Cliarles  Dickenson  and 
Rev.  Davjes  and  wife,  drove  over  to 
Coleralne  Monday  night,  to  hear  Rev. 
Nickershaw,  who  was  filling  a  date 
in  that  town  for  the  Lyceum  course. 

Mrs.  A.  A.  Kremer  will  leave  for 
Saginaw.  Mich.,  Saturday  for  a  few 
months'  visit  with  friends  and  reatives. 
She  will  be  accompanied  by  her  daugh- 
ter, Dorothy.  ^ 

George  W.  Meyers  left  for  Oregon 
last  Saturday  night.  He  will  meet 
his  father.  George  F.  in  Portland. 
They  will  take  a  look  at  the 
Western  fruit  country  together,  with  a 
view  of  investing. 

Miss  Blanch  Dewey  will  assist 
Treasurer  Kremer,  beginning  next 
Monday. 


Splendid  St.  Patrick's  Day  Enter- 
tainment Given  at  Coleralne. 

Coleralne.  Minn.,  March  19. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald,  t — St.  Patricks 
Catholic  church  gave  an  excellent  St. 
Patrick's  day  concert  in  the  auditorium 
of  the  Green wav  high  school  Wednes- 
dav  evening  under  the  direction  of  O. 
Wiggins  of  Duluth,  assisted  by  Miss 
Donna  Loui.se  lUbletto,  a  New  York 
soprano;  C.  Lawrence  Paul,  formerly 
wltli  the  New  York  Opera  company; 
Emil  Bromund,  baritone  from  Duluth; 
Mrs.  Skafti,  pianist,  Duluth,  and  Miss 
Nellie    Brown    of    Duluth.    accompanist. 

Rev.  Father  Killeen,  the  resident 
pastor  delivered  a  short,  yet  spirited 
address  at  the  opening  of  the  program. 
At  the  close  a  beautiful  tableau  was 
staged  under  the  direction  of  Mr. 
Wiggins.  It  was  an  Irish  scene  in  one 
of  the  prettiest  settings  ever  staged 
here.  A  large  appreciative  audience 
was    in    attendance. 


GRAIN  IS  INCONSTANT. 

Marries  Girl  in  Hibbing  and   Then 
He  Deserts  Her. 

Hibbing,  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.  I'.'Tyyni  Minkkinen.  a 
young  I-Mnn  girl.  who.  about  a  week 
ago.  had  John  Grain  arrested  for 
breach  of  promise,  which  was  settled 
bv  Judge  Brady  marrying  the  young 
couple,  is  again  looking  for  her  erring 
husband,  who  lias  disappeared.  It  is 
reported  that  John  disappeared  with 
anotlier  Finn  girl  here,  a  few  days  ago, 
going  to  Duluth.  A  warrant  has  been 
issued  for  liis  arrest,  and  he  will  be 
brought  back  as  soon  as  the  police 
authoritits    are    able    to    locate    liim. 


PILE  DRIVER  MEN 

ARE  NEARLY  KILLED. 


BLAME  IMPURE  MILK 


SKIN  HEALTH 

Effected  by  Cuticura  Soap, 

Ointment  and  Resolvent. 

The  agonizing  itching  and  burning  of 
the  skin,  as  in  eczema;  the  frightful 
scaling,  as  in  psoriasis;  the  loss  of  hair 
and  crusting  of  scalp,  as  in  ecalled  head* 
the  facial  disfigurement,  as  in  acne  ana 
ringworm ;  the  awful  suffering  of  infants, 
and  anxiety  of  worn-out  parents,  as  in 
tetter,  or  salt  rheum  —  all  demand  a 
remedy  of  extraordinary  virtues  to  suo- 
oessfully  cope  with  them.  That  Cuti- 
cura Soap,  Ointment  and  Resolvent 
(liquid  or  pills)  are  such  stands  proven 
by  unquestioned  testimonials. 

Cuticura  S.iap  (26o.)  to  Clo^nf.l'  the  Skin.  TutLnira 
QIal.r.rnt  i.'.Oo.)  to  Ileal  the  S<in  and  Ciit.ci:ra 
R«*olvent  (!»0<-.),  (or  lo  the  (orra  of  ctiocoLite  Coated 
Pllis.  25c.  per  vi.al  of  60)  to  PurUy  the  fllood.  .Sold 
tlirouKhout  tlie  world  Pott«r  Drug  &  Chem.  Corp.. 
Bole  Props,  Boston.  Masa 

aVMaUcd  Free,  CuUcura  Book  on  Skiu  Due&aea. 


BIDS  ARE  LAID  OVER. 

No  Action  on  Tenders  for  Electrical 
Work  in  Eveleth  High. 

Eveletii,  >%nn.,  Maicli  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  bids  for  the 
electrical  work  for  the  new  high  school 
building  were  opened  at  yesterday's 
meeting  of  the  school  board,  but  action 

on  them  was  laid  over  until  next  Mon- 
day, as  there  were  two  sets  of  specifi- 
cations out  on  the  electrical  work,  and 
the  board  was  not  sure  whether  the 
lowest  bidders  were  bidding  on  tlie 
right  specifications.  Architect  Bray  of 
Duluth  will  also  be  here  Monday.  Tlie 
bids  were  as  follows:  Unity  Electric 
company,  St.  Paul,  $1,575;  H.  W.  Irwin  , 
and  Abe  Rauma,  Eveleth,  |1,875;  Elec- 
tric Construction  company,"  St.  Paul.  | 
$1,895;  Hibbing  Electric  company,  Hib- 
bing, fl,497;  Harity  Electric  company, 
Superior,   $1,510; 

The  outside  work  on  the  school 
building  Is  almost  completed  and  the 
men  are   now  working  on   the   roof. 


For  Death  of  Mrs.  H.  K.  Kendall, 
Popular  Matron  of  Hibbing. 

Hibbing.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  body  of  ^Irs.  M. 
K.  Kendall,  aged  30.  who  died  rather 
unexpectedly  here,  yesterday,  has  been 
taken    to    Winona    for    Interment. 

The  manv  friends  of  Mrs.  Kendall 
were  shocked   to  learn   of   her   untimely 


Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald. — Two  men  were  almost 
killed  by  a  huge  pile  driver  that  they 
were  setting  up  at  Ely  Lake,  yester- 
day afternoon.  The  horse  that  they 
were  working  with  had  its  leg  broken 
by  the  falling  pile  driver  and  the  men 
Just  barelv  escaped  being  crushed.  At 
that  they  had  to  run.  when  they  saw 
the  huge  thing  falling  over.  The  horse 
was  so  badly  Injured  that  It  had  to  be 
shot. 

TVPHOID  UNDER  CONTROL. 

Hbbing.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  epidemic  of  ty- 
phoid fever  is  gradually  being  lessened. 
There  are  a  number  of  patients  at  tlie 
Duluth  and  Hibbing  hospitals,  who  are 
slowly  convalescing.  The  disease  was 
caused  by  Impure  water  obtained  from 
a  stream  running  througli  Mitchell. 
Water  is  now  being  supplied  to  Mit- 
chell from  HibbinK^. 

GRAND  RAPIDS  WILL 

HE.\R  THE  COMMONER. 


TREAT  FOR  CHISHOLM. 


Famous  Turner  Art  Exhibit  to  be 
Made  in  ViHage. 

Chisholm.   Minn.,   March   19. —  (Special 

to    The    Herald.) — The    famous    Turner 

art   exhibit,   including   reproductions   of 

-66    of    the    most    famous    paintings    of 

ancient  and  modern  times,  will  be  held 

at  the  high  school  building  during  the 
week  of  March  22  to  27.  The  pictures 
are  photographic  reproductions  of  the 
world's  leading  subjects  in  paintings, 
portraits,  sculpture,  architecture  and 
natural    scenery,    and    are    shown    both 


The  foods  we  eat  furnish  energy 
for  the  body  just  as  burning  coal 
makes  steam  for  an  engine. 

The  experiments  of  Prof. 
Frankland,  Ph.  D.,  of  London, 
show  that  cod  liver  oil  yields  two 
and  one-half  times  more  energy 
than  starches  or  sweets. 

Scott's  Emulsion 

is  pure  cod  liver  oil  combined 
with  hypophosphites  of  lime  and 
soda.  It  forms  fat,  gives  strength, 
enriches  the  blood,  invigorates 
the  nerves,  and  repairs  tissues. 


Grand  Rapids,  Minn.,  March  19. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  people 
of  this  section  will  be  afforded  an  op- 
portunity of  hearing  William  Jennings 
Byran  in  the  near  future  as  arrange- 
ments have  been  closed  for  his  giving 
one  of  his  famous  lectures,  probably 
"Tlie  Prince  of  Peace'  at  the  high 
school,    May    4. 


SIXTY  DAYS  IN  JAIL 

FOR  PETIT  LARCENY. 

Hibbing.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Joe  Reld  charged 
with  petit  larceny  by  Gregory  White 
entered  a  plea  of  guilty  In  municipal 
court  and  was  fined  $50  and  $4.50  costs, 
or  in  default  thereof  to  serve  sixty 
davs  In  the  county  jail.  The  defend- 
ant was  taken  to  the  county  jail  at 
Duluth  today  by  Deputy  Sheriff  Dona- 
hue. 


HIBBINO  PERSONALS. 


fe^ 


(ibrmeHy  Johnson  JiMoe)  ^^^^-^ 

^ lit  Ave  Wi^t  Superior  St,  Duluth\ 


mesifSfor^ 


^1 


New  Printzess  Suits 


Now  Showing  the  Newest 

Spring  Models  ot  the  Original 

Distinction  in  Dress  Line 

It's  a  line  of  garments  that  reveals  the  same  character 
and  worth  that  you  usually  find  in  much  higher  priced  gar- 
ments, say  $35.00  or  $40.00.  We  include  them  in  our  $25.00 
line,  not  because  we  could'nt  get  more,  but  because  we  want 
to  give  the  limit  of  value  and  thereby  gain  your  favor  and 

confidence. 

Fine  new  model  PRINTZESS  SUITS  are  shown  in 
blue  serges,  satin  striped  Prunellas  and  novelty  worsteds,  in 
grays  and  greens,  some  in  fine  black 
Panama— linings  are  plain  and  fancy 
striped  taffetas— all  are  up-to-the-hour  in 
style,  and  are  faultlessly  tailored.  Don't 
fail  to  see  these  if  you  contemplate  get- 
ting a  good  suit.  These  have  all  the  good 
qualities.     The  price 

Beautiful  Suite  J 
lor  a  Little  Less 

You  will  say  these  are  marvelous  values,  too !  We  would 
like  to  see  the  equal  at  the  price— $15.00  or  $20.00.  .Ml  ui  the 
latest  modes. 


/: 


New  Jumper  Suits,  $4.50  to  $6 

Prettily  made  of  linens  and  batistes  in  blue, 
corn  and  "linen  color.«;  trimmed  with  ombroi- 
dery  braids,  bands  and  buttons.  Tiou  will 
want  one,  if  not  now.  then  a  little  later  on. 
Our  values  are  excellent  and  you  should  see 
them. 


New  Covert  Coats  $5  to  $10 

«  — 

Covcrfs  again,  of  course!  Still  the  styles 
are  new.  following  along  the  same  lines  as  the 
st  its — hlpkss  and  mannish — very  nobby  in  ap- 
poarance.  At  $5.00.  J6.50.  $7.50  and  $10.00. 
we  show  splendid  coats.        Money-savers  every 

v^;::^ . ^ 


Semes  New  Wash  Goods 


Very  Best 

staple  Kinds 

there  will  be  more  com- 


The   new   Wash   Goods   stock   is   about   complete  at  tins  time.     Of  cotirse, 
iiig   but  the  assortments  now  shown  are  extensive  and  range  from  the  staple  goods  up  to  the  very  dainty 
materials  that  you  would  say  are  simply  "lovely. ' 


New  SUk  Finish  Poplins,  in  plain  corn, 
tan.  linen,  shades  of  blue  red  and  brmyn 
—as  well  as  black— at  TWENTi-HM. 
CENTS  per  yartl. 

New  Polntelle  Plisse,  in  pink,  blue  and 
tan  with  white  stripes,  very  pretty,  at 
T\M£:XTY-F1VE  CENTS  per  yard. 
Now  Hifthlaiul  Tissues,  in  checks  and 
chambray  colore,  with  pretty  ^"-iP^^o^- 
(^crs — a  fine  sheer  material,  atT\Vfc-i^l»- 
FIVE  CENTS  per  yard. 

New  Tilncttes,  New  Zephyr  Gins?- 
iiunis.  New  Madras  Cloths — splen- 
did materials  for  waists  |  Q^^C 
and  dresses — per  yard  ...'•**' ^^' 
New  Flaxons  at  19o — New  Iin|H^rial 
Chambravs  at  18o — and  Newport 
I.ineiis  at  15c — Add  to  the  variety 
of   medium-priced    washables. 

,\t  8r,  10c  and  12»4c  we  show 
quantities  of  staple  wash  good.s — 
mo.stly  well  known  kinds,  although 
in  n^w  spring  1909  patterns.  '  """ 
them   over. 


New  Reviera  VVaistings,  in  tan,  pink,  new 
blue,  navy,  blondine,  and  .seal  brown,  silk 
and   satin  stripe  effects —  ^'^^ 

very  fine  at    t»W^ 

New  Embroidered  lAwns.  in  wanted 
shades — come  in  patterns  for  costumes, 
with   bands  and  skirt   borders —       4RC 

per   yard    ^OV- 

New  Canton  Creix's — a  "new  wrinkle  ' 
material  that  will  make  up  beautifully 
fOi-    waists — one    of   the    finest  A'^O 

washables  shown — per  yard    vv^i* 


lOc 

Zephyr 

Ginghams 

8c 


Locfk 


Now  White  Goods — India  linone, 
Victoria  lawns,  Pearline  lawns  and 
other  fine  sheer  washables  are 
shovn    in    profusion — at  ^J^tf* 

10c  up  to    .*•  .     ^^^"^ 

New  White  Waislinjts  in  a  big  vari- 
ety )f  txcellent  stripe,  dot  and  fig- 
ure patterns,  mercerized  and  linen 
effects — 10c  up  to  50e. 
New  Shrunk  Cottons  for  suits  and 
waists,  best  qualities  that  can  V>e 
shov.-n  at  similar  prices —  9'%f* 
let  us  show  them  12«4c  to ..  .  **VX^ 


121/20 

Percales, 
Special 

8^C 


Send  this  advertisement,  togettier  with  name  of 
paper  in  which  it  apr>«ars,  your  address  and  fouf 
cents  to  cover  postage,  and  we  will  send  you  i 
"Complete  Handy  Atlas  of  the  World"        ::       :: 

SCOTT  &.  BOWNE.  409  Pearl  Street  New  Yuill 


Hibbing.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mr.  and  Mrs.  Korst 
have  been  in  Duluth  visiting  for  the 
past  week. 

James  Gandsev  left  yesterday  for 
Duluth  to  attend  to  some  business 
matters.  ,    , 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  .1.  D.  Hardy  and  daugh- 
ter,  were   in   Duluth   yesterday. 

•  ' 

Viotfm    u(    CouHumption. 

Two  Harbors.  Minn..  March  19. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — After  a  des- 
perate   battle    with    the     dread      white 


plague,  C.  C.  Martin,  aged  33.  who  has 
been  living  in  the  open  air  at  the  lum- 
ber camp  of  Thomas  Brown,  north  of 
here,  is  dead.  He  has  relatives  living 
in    Illinois. 

• 

Supt.    HendrickM    RetiirnH. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  March  19. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Supt.  C.  E.  Hendricks 
of  the  Hanna  and  Sliver  mines  and 
family  have  returned  from  an  extended 
business  and  pleasure  trip  to  Iowa  and 
Michigan.  They  went  from  here  to 
Defiance,  Iowa,  Mr.  Hendricks  leaving 
the  family  there  while  he  journeyed  to 
Cleveland,  Ohio,  in  the  interests  of  the 
Consumers'  Ore  company,  of  which,  he 
is  the  superintendent  in  this  district. 
After  a  short  stop  at  Defiance  Mr. 
Hendricks  and  family  went  to  Ipsilanti, 
Mich.,  where  they  paid  a  visit  to  his 
mother. 

— • ■ 

L.lke    Duluth    Iletliel    Work. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  March  19.  —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  work  of  the  Du- 
luth Bethel  seems  to  have  found  lavor 
with  local  people,  as  G.  Wilson,  who 
has  been  up  here  in  the  interests  of 
the  Bethel  record,  finds  that  many 
neonle  are  subscribing  to  that  record 
of  the  work  of  the  Bethel.  Mr.  Wil- 
son is  on  the  range  for  a  short  time 
in    the   interest   of   that   work. 

M1XSTOEL8  AT  HIBBING. 

Elks  of  Superior  Will  Repeat  Per- 
fornianee  There  Sunday  Evening. 

Hibbing,  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Elks  of  Hibbing 
and  their  many  friends,  are  planning 
to  make  the  appearance  here  of  the 
Elks  of  Superior  minstrels  Sunday 
evening  next,  at  the  Fay  Opera  House. 

There  Is  general  rejoicing  around 
town  over  the  announcement  that  the 
burnt  cork  artists  of  the  Wisconsin 
cltv    are    coming    here    to    give    their 


splendid  production,  and  t  Is  predicted 
the  Fay  opera  house  will  be  crowded  to 
tlie  doors   Sunday   eveninj?   next. 

BROTHERHOOD  BALL. 


accepted.       No    action      has     yet    been. 
taken    to    secure    a    successor    for    Mr. 
Young,  nor  has  Mr.  Young'  reached  any 
decision    witli    regard    to   what    he    will, 
do  after  the  present  school  year. 


Fatness  Reduced 

An  absolute  and  perfectly  harmless 
remedy  for  excessive  fatness  is  to  be 
found  in  Marmola  Prescription  Tab- 
lets.  One  tablet  after  each  meal  and 
at  bedtime  will  produce  truly  wonder- 
ful results.  Large  case  at  your  drug- 
gists or  from  The  Marmola  Company. 
Detroit.  Mich.,  for  7i  cents. 


Eighteenth  Annual   E>ent  at  Two 
Harbors  to  be  l^ne. 

Two  Harbors,  Minn.,  Marcli  19. —  (Spe- 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Brotherhood  of 
Locomotive  Firemen  &  Engineers  have 
about  completed  arrangements  for  its 
nineteenth  annual  ball  to  be  given 
Easter  Monday.  April  12,  and  an  enjoy- 
able  time   is  promised. 

Following  are  the  committees  which 
have  charge: 

General — E.  W.  Con  1  iff  W.  R.  Cras- 
weli,   Roscoe  Asher,  Herman  Zahm. 

Rereption — William  Tracey.  W.  J. 
Griffin,  William  Piatt,  Ben  Jones,  R.  E. 
Jones.   C.   M.   Dyer.   J.  M.    Brown. 

Floor — Thomas  Polkin  arhorne,  T.  D. 
Feaster,  V.  Shorkey,  A.  3issell.  Anton, 
Pearson,  Aug  Klowosky,  Joseph  Ja.m. 

Decoration — Thomas  Berrigan.  N.  L. 
Olson.  M.  Archdeacon,  S.  KeDar,  ^V.  B. 
AViiils,  Sam  Main.  i:.  C.  Olson,  Albert 
Knutson.    Angus    McDougall. 

Refreshment  —  Louis  Mason.  John 
Gillock.  George  Gulmont  J.  J.  Enfield. 
Thor    Thorson. 

Oucer   guard — Walter   Donnellan. 

Inner  guard — O,  J.  Ten  riant. 

LAKE  COUNTY  lFvY. 

Two  Harbors  Minn.,  March  19. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.  —County  Au- 
ditor I'aulson  has  given  notice  of  the 
following  tax  levy  for  1908:  Town  of 
Crystal  Bav.  total,  31.10  mills:  Beaver 
Bay,  2.^.80:  Silver  Cree  <,  39.10;  Two 
Harbors.  School  District  No.  2.  39.80; 
Two  Harbors  School  Eistrict  No.  4, 
42  80:  Fall  Lake.  16.50;  city  of  Two 
Harbors,    42.90. 

• 

LMHt    BnNkctball    GaineM. 

Eveleth.  Minn..  Marci.  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Iccal  basketball 
season  will  be  closed  tcmorrow  night 
when  the  boys'  and  girls'  basketball 
teams  of  the  iiigh  .sclioo  will  play  the 
Chisholm  girls'  team  and  the  Virginia 
higii    school    boys'    team 


HAD  DYNAMITE 
IN  HIS  TRUNK 


Aurora   Man    Keld  for 

Shipping  Dangerous 

Explosives. 

Andrew  Gomlasc  of  Aurora  was  ar- 
raigned before  United  States  Commis- 
sioner Thomas  H.  Pressnell  yester- 
day afternofin  on  a  charge  of  offering 
explosives  to  a  common  carrier  for 
shipment  without  properly  marking 
the  package.  He  consigned  a  trunk  to 
Clayton,  W:>^.,  over  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Range  railroad  at  Aurora  yesterday. 
Somebody  telephoned  the  agent  at 
Two  Harbors  to  be  careful  of  the 
trunk,  as  it  contained  dynamite,  and  an 
examination  disclosed  eighteen  sticks 
of  the  explosive.  Gombase  was  Im- 
mediately arrested.  Commissioner 
Pressnell  remanded  Gombase  to  Jail 
to  await  the  arrival  of  District  At- 
torney Houpt   of  St.    Paul. 


Acceplw  -^ouub' 

Hibbing.     Minn..    A 


M  RcslKuntlon. 

Marc  1  19. —  (.Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Charlss  E.  Youngs 
resignation  from  the  sjperintendency 
of  the  Hibbing  public  schools  has  been 


DILUTH  \V(LMAN*S  MOTHER 
CELEBRATES  GREAT  AGE, 

Eau  Claire.  Wis.,  Marcli  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.  I — Mrs.  Robert  Ruther- 
ford of  Duluth  is  the  guest  of  her 
mother.  Mrs.  Isabel  Dutinigan.  who 
celebrated  her  eighty-first  birthday 
Wednesday  afternoon. 


Eminent  Physicians* 
Simple  Prescription  for 
Suffering  Women 

■■Alpni  .*^>al.   :.  .i.     !  ii..i'l  Kx'racl  HI;;,  k  Ila.t.    1  ^  , 
Piire   WitUr,    0   oz.      Tiasp<'<jiilul   before    mealB   anj    at 
b«dUme  fiT  a  few  days  btfcrt,   during  and  alter  ea>h 
moutUly    period."      Tl.e    cott    U    IrlfUiif    and    ji'U    (»liJ. 
be   agieeubX}    tuririMii    wlUi   ttie    wmderful   raulL 


^k—mSmtmm^^* 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


18 


JACOBl  WINS 
THE  BUTTONS 


Harry  Fcetham's  "Lads" 

Lose  Out  in  a  Close 

Game. 

Jacohl  last  niKlic  at  the  curling 
rink  won  the  Board  of  Trade  buttons 
by  defeating  Harry  Feelham's  rink  In 
•  close  13 -head  game  by  a  score  of  10 
to    ». 

It  was  one  of  the  best  games  played 
between  C  class  rinks  this  year,  and 
Quite  a  crowd  watched  the  progress  of 
the   game  with   much   Interest. 

Walter  Hall  won  two  games  In  the 
Manley-Mcl>ennan  event.  His  C  class 
rink  defeated  Dlnhams  In  the  finals 
In  the  C  class,  and  his  A  class  rink  de- 
feated MiiKnor's  rink  In  the  finals  In 
the  A  claso.  Oinhams  B  class  rink  won 
from  Alworih's  rink  in  the  same  event. 
A  few  more  games  will  finish  this 
event,  and  then  everything  will  be 
cleaned  uj>  but  The  Herald  event.  Play 
will  be  started  In  this  event  the  first 
of  the  week,  and  the  rest  of  the  games 
run   off  In   a   rush. 

The  scorts  follow: 

Board   of  Trndr   Buttons. 

G.    Myer.s.  K.    Holnu-s, 

C    F."  Nau.»?hton.         McAuley, 
E.    A.    Vivian,  Finkolson, 

Feetham,  Jacol)i, 

skip —  9  skip — 10 

Manley-MoLennan   C   Class. 

R.   C.    Sciiiller.  U.K.  St  liar. 

Gilbert    MaKie.  Frank  Fierce. 

Lh  Chrudin.sky,  A.  W.  Wlthrow, 

Win    Dinham.  W.  Hall. 

skip —  8  skip — 11 

Mauley-McLienuau   A  Clans. 

John  MncGregor.         Will  Spalding, 
E.    W.    Dottz.  .1.  L>.  Park. 

C.  F.  Mac.l..nald.  E.  A.  Forsythe. 

Walter  Hull.  W.  E.  Magnet, 

skip— IC  skip —  5' 

>IaMley-McL.ennaa    B   Class. 

Lachlan  Alaedonald,  Henry  Becker. 
O.  L.  .Mather.  Donald  Stooker. 

Alex  Gtal.am.  Ed   Furnl. 

Will  lUnham.  Royal  Alworth. 

skip — 12  skip —  7 


DINHAM'SB  CLASS  "WONDERS"  '-^ 
I      AS  SEEN  BY  HERALD  CARTOONIST  , 


Jack*  Ciie.'ibro  has  been  granted  an 
extended    leave    of    absence.        He    will 

join  the   Yaiikee  squad  <>n  March  20. 

•  •       * 

Frank  I.,obert.  a  brother  of  Hans  of 
Cincinnati,  will  play  ball  for  Mana- 
ger Ounnery  of  the  Hartford,  Conn., 
league    team    this    year. 

•  •       • 

Covaleskl.  the  Philllies'  pitcher,  who 
demanded  $5,000  for  the  coming  season 
before  he  woke  up.  received  only  Jl.iOO 
last    >£ar. 

•  •       « 

The  Giant  outfield  will  be  Herzo^-, 
Seymour  and  Murray  to  start  with,  and 
It  is  reported.  McCormick  and  O'Hara 
plaj-ing  the  extra  roles. 

•  •      • 

Ossif  8rhreckengosf3  retirement  to 
the  minors  is  regretted  by  Connie 
Mack,  hi.s  old  manager.  Schreck.  wa» 
considered  the  beat  battery  partner  tor 
Waddell  in  the  business,  but  will  pixy 
in  the  New  York  State  league  this 
season. 

•  «       • 

John  T.  Brush  1  Ints  that  the  only 
way  Mike  Donlin  can  get  $8,000  frori 
th>  Giants  this  sea.^on  is  to  go  a*':cr 
It  with  a  jimmy  and  a  bottle  of  nitro- 
glycerin at  4  a.   m. 

•  •      • 

Roy  Thomas,  the  old  I'nlverslty  of 
Pennsylvania  outfielder,  who  went  to 
PltLshurg  via  the  Philadelphia  Na- 
tionals.. I.''  slated  to  join  the  procession 
of -major  league  discards  who  have 
been  chased  to  the  clss  A  circuits  since 
the  clcse  of  last  season. 
«       «      • 

Most  of  the  Brooklyn  positions  nave 
alreadv  been  decided  upon,  but  there 
are  still  a  couple  waiting  to  be  filled. 
Thers  Is  that  hole  at  second  and 
anothei  In  ttie  outfield.  If  Jordan  comes 
to  terms,  Hummell.  who  Is  now  prac- 
ticing at  first,  will  he  shifted  to  left 
field  accounting  for  the  suburbs,  and 
leaving  only  second  to  be  worked. 
«       *       • 

Billy  Hallman.  the  Phillies'  old  sec- 
ond baseman,  is  to  return  to  his  first 
j)o3ition  on  a  professional  diamond.  He 
has  signed  as  utility  man  for  the  Den- 
ver club. 

•  *       • 

The  St.  I.ouis  Nationals  had  an  ex- 
citing time  last  week,  when  the  Capital 
hotel,  where  they  are  stopping  at  Little 
Rock,  caught  fire.  The  men  were  all 
routed  out  of  bed,  hut  the  blaze  An-as 
subdued  with  very  little  damage. 
«       *       • 

Reports  from  Mobile  are  to  the  ef- 
fect that  Terry  Turner's  whip  la  bet- 
ter than  ever  now.  If  this  Is  so,  well. 
Just  let  the  works  go  straight.  With 
Cy  Young  In  sliape  and  Turner  snap- 
ping th>-m  across  to  first  the  Naps  sure 
are  the  ones  that  will  have  to  be  beat- 
en  to   win    the   rag. 

•  •      • 

Seymour  Is  a  man  of  erratic  temper- 
ament, and  has  figured  in  several 
brawls  during  his  baseball  career.  In 
1905  he  led  the  National  league  in  hit- 
ting. He  was  then  a  member  of  the 
Cincinnati  team,  but  In  1901  he  was 
sold  to  New  York  for  the  sum  of  llo.OdO 
because  Owner  Herrmann  of  the  Reds 
accused   him   of  lack    of  ambition. 

•  «       • 

Addle  Joss,  the  elongated  twlrler  of 
the  Naps,  has  a  new  sclieme  which  ho 
thinks  will  not  only  benefit  himself, 
but  also  the  Naps  in  the  1909  race  for 
the  American  league  flag.  .\ddie  has 
always   been   regarded   as  anything  but 


X--/on't  be  misjudg- 
ed by  your  hat. 
Wear  a  Gordon  and 
KNOW  it  can't  pro- 
voke criticism.  The 

Cordon 
//at  $3 

The  Gordon  De  Luxe  $4.00 


a  successful  pitcher  in  warm  weather. 
He  has  asked  Manager  Lajole  to  ex- 
cuse him  from  July  1  to  Aug.  15.  "I'll 
be  willing  to  pitch  oftcner  In  the  early 
months  if  Lajole  will  grant  niy  re- 
quest," quotes  Joss.  "Then  I  will  be 
in  great  shape  for  the  final  run  down 
the   stretcii." 


snow  CONTINUED 
UNTIL  SUNDAY 


Minneapolis  Automobile 

Exhibitisn  Ha$  Been 

Great  Success. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  March  19. — One 
more  day  has  been  added  to  the  Min- 
neapolis Automobile  show  of  1909,  now 
being  held  with  such  success  at  the 
new  armory  on  Kenwood  parkway.  At 
a  meeting  of  the  Minneapolis  Automo. 
bile  Sliow  association  last  night,  it 
was  decided  to  keep  the  show  open 
Sunday. 

There  were  hundred.s  of  expressions 
of  disappointment  made  by  telegram 
and  telephone  from  outlying  points  at 
the  decision  of  the  management  to 
keep  tiie  show  closed  la^st  Sunday,  and 
as  the  auto  show  Is  essentially  an 
automobile  exposition,  and  an  excellent 
means  of  acquainting  the  general  pub- 
lic with  the  possibilities  of  the  motor 
car  travel,  the  management  now  feels 
that  It  Is  only  fitting  and  proper  that 
those  who  iiave  been  disappointed  dur- 
ing the  week  through  not  being  able  to 
get  into  town,  should  be  given  the  op- 
portunity of  seeing  the  show  Sunday. 

A's  there  Is  no  other  big  national 
show  scheduled  for  next  week,  the  as- 
sociation lias  been  able  to  arrange 
with  all  the  big  show  exhibitors  to 
leave  their  exhibits  on  the  floor  In- 
tact   over    Saturday   night    and   Sunday. 

With  the  exception  of  one  or  two 
amusement  features,  the  show  will 
therefore  be  given  on  Sunday  just  as  It 
has  been  given  this  week  to  over 
40,000   people.     Sacred   concerts    will    be 

flven  by  the  First  Field  Artillery 
and  afternoon  and  evening,  under  the 
direction  of  Herbert  T.  Parks,  and  the 
doors  of  the  armory  will  be  opened  at 
noon  Sunday  and  remain  open  until 
10:30  Sunday  night. 

Owing  to  the  unusual  number  of  vis- 
itors In  the  city,  hotel  accommodations 
have  been  taxed  to  the  utmost,  and 
the  management  therefore  .suggests 
that  those  contemplating  a  journey  to 
the  1909  show,  make  reservations  of 
liotel  rooms. 


LOSES  GOOD  COIN 
ON  A  FAKE  MATCH 

Iowa  Man  Bets   en  a 

Sure  Thing  and 

Loses  Out 

Sioux  City,  Iowa,  March  19. — The 
Maybray  gang  of  swindlers  found  a 
victim  In  George  Alberta  of  this  city 
by  working  the  old  game  through  a 
supposed    friend   of   the    victim. 

Alberta  puts  his  money  with  their 
roll  of  $45,000  and  their  wrestler  burst 
a  chlcken_tiladder  full  of  flood  in  his 
mouth    and    lost    the    bout. 

Albert  says  he  was  betrayed  by 
George  Shores,  a  professional  wrestler 
he  had  known  in  his  home  t7)wn,  Man- 
kato,  where  he  was  physical  instructor 
in  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  He  put  up  $2,000 
on  a  fake  wrestling  match  conducted 
by  the  Maybray  gang,  whose  opera- 
tions are  under  Investigation  by  the 
federal  grand  jury  at  Council  Bluffs. 

Alberts  has  sent  his  evidence  to  the 
federal  authorities  ajid  stands  ready 
to  appear  against  Shores  if  he  is 
captured. 


Council  Bluffs,  Iowa,  March  19. — The 


grand  jury  met  yesterday  afternoon 
and  Is  expected  to  consider  the  oper- 
ations of  the  alleged  "swindling  syn- 
dicate" at  once.  Several  victims  of 
fake  horse  races,  foot  races  and  wrest- 
ling matches  are  here  and  many  others 
are  expected  to  come  from  various 
parts  of  the  country  to  testify  against 
th>3  men  charged  with  wholesale  swin- 
dling. 

W.  H.  Tedford.  a  wealthy  farmer  of 
Bocklow,  Mo.,  arrived  yesterday  in  re- 
sponse to  a  request  from  Postofflco 
Inspector  Swenson.  Tedford  says  he 
was  swindled  Aug.  21,  1908,  to  the  ex- 
tent of  $5,000.  which  he  bet  on  a  fake 
tiorse  race. 


BENEFIT  SKI 
TOURNAMENT 


Duluth  and  Superior  Clubs 
Unite  to  Help  Unfor- 
tunate Rider. 

For  the  benefit  of  Chris  Gunhus,  the 
Superior  ski  rider  who  broke  his  leg 
wMle  performing  on  the  Duluth  hill 
some  weeks  ago,  a  benefit  ski  tourna- 
ment will  be  given  Sunday  afternoon 
an   Cheater    hill. 

Mr.  Gunhus'  family  Is  not  in  the  best 
of  circumstances,  and  it  Is  said  that 
they  can  111  atford  to  have  him  away 
from  his  work.  As  a  result  If  the  ac- 
cident he  will  probably  be  laid  up  for 
some  weeks  yet.  and  it  Is  the  wish  of 
both  the  Duluth  and  Superlnor  clubs 
to  help  him  out  with  the  proceeds  of 
a   special    tournament. 

All  the  riders  are  donating  their 
services,  and  as  there  will  be  but  very 
little  expense  connected  with  the  affair 
It  is  expected  the  club  will  be  able  to 
hand  Mr.  Gunhus  a  check  for  several 
hundred    dollars. 


JOHNSON  TO  SPAR 
WITH  KETCHEL 

Fighters  Will  Meet  in  a 

Ten-Round  Boxing 

Match. 

New  York,  March  19. — A  match  be- 
tween Jack  Johnson,  heavyweight 
champion  of  the  world,  and  Stanley 
Ketchel.  for  a  side  bet  of  $5,000.  is  said 

to  have  "been  arranged  by  friends  of 
both    fighters. 

The  fight,  which  will  be  a  ten-round 
bout,  if  fought  in  New  York,  is  to  be 
held   within   tlie   next  twelve  months. 

Tendeis  have  been  invited  from  a 
number  of  clubs,  and  it  Is  understood 
that  the  mill  is  to  go  to  the  highest 
bidder. 


is  in  charity  hospital  suffering  with 
concussion  of  the  brain,  as  tlie  result 
of  a  peculiar  accident.  while  going 
up  the  steps  of  an  excursion  steamer, 
he  struck  his  head  on  a  crbss  bar.  and 
was  knocked  senaeles;*.  His  condition 
is  critical. 


"Kid"  Faniiep  Injured. 

New    Orleans.    La..    March    19. — "Kid" 
Farmer,  a  well-known   Illinois   pugilist, 


r 


Invite  Your  Friends  to 

dine  with  )-ou 

SVNDAY  EVSNING 

at  tlie 


"1 


ST.  LrOVIS 

cafe: 

Elaborato  Mono. 

La  Brosse  Orchestra. 

American.  European. 


I  Am 


an.  I 


BRUNSWICKS 
ARE  INTHE  LEAD 

The   1908    Champions 

Make  Strong  Bid  for 

1909  Honors. 

Pittsburg,  Pa..  March  19. — The 
Brunswick  five-men  team  of  New  York, 
champions  of  1908  of  the  National 
liowling  association,  stepped  into  the 
lead  in  the  international  match  at  Du- 
quesne  Gardens  last  night  by  rolling 
a  score  of  2,751,  their  total  for  the  six 
games  already  being  5,:i55.  The  Bonds 
team  of  Columbus,  Ohio,  the  Ameri- 
can Bowling  congress  champions, 
made  second  higli  score  in  the  three 
games  last  night,  but  are  still  in  third 
place  In  the  match,  the  2,556  rolled  last 
night  only  brijiglng  their  total  to 
5,0S1,  while  tlie  De  tfoto  Stars  of  St. 
Liouls,  the  Middle  West  Bowling  asso- 
ciation cnampions  with  thte  2,531  made 
last  night,  have  a  total  for  the  six 
games  of  5,166.  The  190s  champions  of 
the  Canadian  Bowling  a:^soclation  are 
not  participating   in   the  match. 

Clevelantl  and  Youngslown.  N.  Y. 
day  was  observed  yesterday  and  large 
delegations  of  bowling  enthusiasts 
were  in  attendance  frofii  these  cities. 
However,  the  International  match 
seemed  to  attract  the  mo.st  attention 
because  tlie  five-men  teams  on  the  reg- 
ular schedule  did  not  bowl  above  the 
average.  None  of  tlie  scores  made 
last  night  were  sufficiently  high  to 
place  the  team  in  the  first  ten  places 
of    the    event. 

Tlie  high  point  In  tlie  scores  of  all 
events  of  the  tournament  seem  to  have 
been  reached,  tor  the  results  yesterday 
made  no  changes  In  the  composition  of 
the  honor  roll  or  the  highest  ten  in 
each   event. 

Interest  In  the  afternoon  session  of 
the  tournament  contests  centered  in 
the  Internationa!  championship  doubles, 
which  was  won  by  the  men  represent- 
ing the  American  Bowling  congress, 
the  champions  being  Harry  Klene  and 
W.  N  .Thompson  of  Chicago.  Thomp- 
son took  the  place  of  James  Chal- 
mers, who,  with  Kiene,  won  the  double 
event  championship  at  Cincinnati  last 
year,  but  who  died  since  that  time. 
Kiene  and  Thompson  rolled  a  score  of 
^  629  in  nine  games,  as  against  a  total 
or  3,102  pins  made  by  J.  A.  Donovan 
and  L.  Wilson  of  St.  Louis,  cham- 
pions of  the  Middle  West  Bowling  as- 
sociation. 

The  National  Bowling  association 
and  the  Canadian  Bowling  association 
were  not  represented  in  tlie  games. 
Th«  represtmtatives  of  the  American 
Bowling  congress  took  the  lead  early 
and  the  men  from  the  Middle  West 
Bowling  association  seemed  to  lose 
heart.  Thompson  rolled  a  splendid 
game,   making  an   average   of  219. 

Baseball  Scores. 

Los  Angeles,  Cal.,  March  19.-— Chicago 
Americans,    12,    15,   1;   Vernon,   0.   4,  0. 

San  Francisco,  Cal.,  March  19. — Oak- 
land,   5;   Chicago   Americans,   No.    2    6. 

Mobile,  Ala.,  March  19. — Cleveland,  3; 
Mobile,  0. 

New  Orleans,  La.,  March  19. — Phila- 
delphia Americans,  2;  New  Orleans,  1. 

Atlanta,  Ga.,  March  19. — Cincinnati, 
7;  Atlanta,  6. 


Klein  Easy  for  A'ttell. 

New  York  March  19*— Abe  Attell.  the 
featherweight,  easily  outclassed  Patsy 
Klein  of  Newark,  N.  J.,  In  a  ten-round 
bout  here  last  night.  In  every  one  of 
tiie  len  rounds  Attell  proved  himself 
ihe  maater.  He  had  frequent  oppor- 
tunitien  to  end  the  fight,  but  refrained 
trom  availing  himself  of  them. 

Don't  use  harsh  pnysics.  The  reac- 
tion weakens  the  bowles,  leads  to 
chronic  constipation.  Get  Doan's  Reg- 
ulets.  They  operate  easily,  tone  the 
stomach,   cure   consiipatioo. 


■ 


Your  Money's  Worth  or  Your  Money  Back  at 


clothing 
anosh6e 

405-4O7  WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 


FACTS  ABOUT  OUR 


A 


Qimu 


0 


Ull  clothes  are  built  for  service.      Only  perfect  materials  andperfect 

wor/crnans/iip  enter   into  their  making.     JiJvery   bit   of  fabric  and 

trimtning  is   thiyrouyhly   shrun/c  and  carefully   scrutinized  before  it  is 

tailored.      That  is  trhy  they  hold  their   shape  so  well,   look  good  so  long 

and  are  so  economical  to  buy. 

Wouldn't  it  be  well  to  safe;;uard  yonr  pocketbook  by  looking  at 
our  clothes  before  deciding  to  buy  ?  Our  guarantee  of  low  prices 
and  high  quality  is  working  all  the  time. 


/\  Light  Overcoats 
and  Cravenettes 

We  think  you'll  like  the  prices 
we  put  on  them — we  know  yoi.'ll 
like  the  coats  and  we  feel  prei  ty 
certain  you'll  appreciate  picking  a 
coat  from  a  stock  the  size  of  ours. 

It's  "trj'ing  on"  time  and  you  ere 
welcome. 


?;^/7h?..  Best  Hats  in  Town 

$1.50.  $2.  $2.50.  $3. 

JSd'^^;*"  Packard  Shoest 

$3.50.    $4.03,     $5.03. 

Here  you  find  Ftirnlshings  popular  pr  iced 
Easter  Neckwear  25c,  35c,  50c. 

Bm^^M^COUPONS    FREE  with 

MBH^ft  Every  Purchase  Made 
■ay^^i^  Here- Game  Sets,  l^ish 
Sets,  Lamps,  Clocks,  etc..  Free  to  our 
Patrons. 


Young  Men's  Suits 

We  invite  every  young  fellow  in 
town  to  come  in  and  .see  the  "nifty" 
thlng-s  we've  had  tailored  for 
them.  Come  in  before  or  after 
looking  elsewhere — no  dilTerence 
to  us — it's  likely  the  clothes  you 
.see  outside  of  our  .store  will  ap- 
pear   quite    commonplace. 

$5  »pd  up. 

Men's  Suits 

Every  .store  hag  the  l>est  suits, 
according  to  their  "ads".  This 
store  has  tiie  best  according  to 
the  opinion  of  evoi-y  one  who  sees 
them.  You've  never  had  such  an 
opportunity  to  get  a  quality  suit  at 
.such    a    moderate    price. 

$7.50  to  $25 

I..ots  of  things  here  to  jusify  your 
coming    In. 


LONG  HAULS 
FOR  PRODUCE 

Duluth  importing  Most 

of  Her  Pood  From 

the  South. 


Even  Poultry    Is    Now 

Being  Brought  From 

Iowa. 


At  the  present  writing,  the  produce 
market  Is  a  proposition  of  longf  dis- 
tances. 

About  everything  that  is  now  offered 
in  Miclilgan  street  commission  and 
wliole.sale  houses  arrives  here  only 
after    long    iiauls. 

As  far  as  this  section  of  the  country 
is  considered,  it  is  "between  seasons." 
We  grow  not,  now;  neither  do  we 
reai>;  we  merely  receive.  And  receiving 
Is  one  of  the  best  things  we  do,  be- 
cause freight  cars  are  continually 
backing  up  against  the  rear  ends  of 
the  wholesale  fruit  and  produce  houses 
and  unloading  boxes,  crates  and  quarts 
of  eatables,  all  of  which  are  being 
consumed  here  and  hereabouts  at 
prices  which  show  but  slight  fluctua- 
tion  from  a  week  ago. 

•  •       • 

Just  to  show  how  the  things  we 
eat  travel,  the  statement  might  be 
made  that  most  of  the  poultry  Du- 
lutliians  are  eating  comes  clean — some- 
times— from    Iowa. 

At  the  present  time,  the  merchants 
on  commission  row  say  that  Minne- 
sota and  Wisconsin  farmers — are  not 
slilpping  enougli  chickens,  geese  and 
all  that  sort  of  tiling  to  this  market, 
to  keep  the  village  expre.ss  agents' 
fingers    from    becoming   numb. 

T^he  explanation  of  tlils  lack  of 
shipping  propensity  on  the  part  of 
Minnesota  and  Wisconsin  agricultur- 
ists is  not  to  be  had,  further  than  to 
say  that  they  ship  not  because  they 
have  little  or  nothing  to  ship.  The 
statement  practically  covers  the  situa- 
tion, however,  as  the  nearby  markets 
have  been  pretty  thoroughly  plucked 
of  what  they  had,  by  reason  of  tlie  ex- 
travagant prices  which  they  liave  been 
obtaining  and  whicli  have  spurred  on 
rural  housewives  to  shoot  dairy  pro- 
ducts and  such  truck  to  market  at  a 
rapid  pace,  to  permit  of  a  garnering  of 
the  top-notch  prices  and  the  purchase 
of  the  latest  carpets  and  such-like  for 
the  front  room. 

This  Iowa  poultry,  which  Is  mostly 
offered  liere  now.  Is  a  trifle  more  ex- 
pensive than  that  which  has  been  of- 
fered liere  of  late. 

Dressed  sprln.g  chickens  are  selling 
at  17  to  19  cents  a  pound.  Hens  are 
16  to  17  cents.  Turkeys  are  25  cents  a 
pound.  Ducks  and  geese  are  un- 
changed   Irom    last    week. 

•  •       • 

That  other  product  of  the  farm- 
yard, the  egg,  is  cheaper  now  than  it 
has  been  for  some  months,  quotations 
for  the  freshest  of  the  fresh  only  be- 
ing 20  to  22  cents  a  doxen.  Supplies 
are  ample  for  local  demands,  at  that 
price. 

•  *      • 

Harking  back  to  the  slight  advances 
in  poultry  prices  calls  to  the  mind  the 
fact  that  for  the  first  time  since  the 
receiver  for  A.  Booth  &  Co.,  discovered 
he  was  overstocked  and  ordered  a  cut 
in  prices,  has  the  fish  market  taken  on 
a  bullish  tone.  Prices  are  a  little  up 
from    last   week. 

Pike,  which  are  as  popular  and  good- 
tasting  as  any  fish  going,  are  selling 
wholesale  at  9  to  10  cents  a  pound. 
Lake  trout  is  also  selling  at  9  to  10 
cents,  with  the  rest  of  the  fish  market 
unchanged  from   a  week  ago. 

•  *      • 

Creamery    butter   prints    are    hanging 
around  the  30-cent  mark,  with  32  cents 
as  the  top  of  the   range.     Other  grades 
of   butter  are   correspondingly   easy. 
«       *       • 

In  the  meat  market,  everything  is 
unchanged  from  last  week  except  pork 
loins.  For  these  articles,  the  market 
is  rather  stiff,  quotations  being  11  to 
11%  cents.  Receipts  at  the  killing 
centers    have   been    light. 

•  •      « 

Tiie  season  for  California  celery  is 
over  and   Florida  celery  is   about   due. 


LUMAN  C.  MANN,  FREED 
OFMURDER  CHARGE,  SAYS 
HE'LL  BE  GOOD  CITIZEN 


Chicago,    March    19. — Dn 

accompanied   the  acquittal 

Associated    Press    dispatcl 

afternoon    papers   yeslerda 

C    Mann,   charged    with    tl 

Mrs.      Frances    Gilmor    Ti 

June.  The  evidence  agair 
circum.stantial;  his  defen: 
The    jury    took    l)Ut    one    bi 

With   tlie  words  of  "not 
the    lips    of    the    foreman. 
Judge  McSurely's   court   be 
excitement     bordering    on 

"I've  been  a  bad  man,  bu 
now  you'll  hear  of  me  a 
citizen,"  Mann  said  In  t 
jury.  Tears  were  rollii 
cheeks  and  his  sobs  made 
possible    for    him    to    spea 

"We  knew  you  were  Ini 
one  of  the  jurors,  una! 
flowing  freely.  (Jtiier  jur 
applied  handkerchiefs  to  1 
Mann  turned  to  his  motli 
his  arms  about  her  neck 
like  a  child. 


imatlc  scenes 
,  reported  iti 
les  to  the 
y,  of  I.uman 
e  murder  of 
ompson    last 

St  Mann  was 

!e  an  alibi, 
illot. 

guilty"  from 
tlie  scene  In 
came  one  of 
hysteria, 
t  years  from 
s  an  honest 
iianking  the 
g  down  his 
t  almost  im- 
t. 

locent,"  said 
ashed,  te.Trs 
>rs  furtively 
heir  e.ves  as 
iT,  throwing 
and    crying 


Some  of  it  is  on  the  way  and  will  ar- 
rive   in   a    few    days. 

-,^  •      •       * 

Old   potatoes    are   still    the   onlv    kind 
,   ^,  ''d    will    be    for  a  matter 

of  three  weeks  at  least.  Then,  re- 
ceipts are  expected  from  the  winter 
spud  growing  localities  located  farther 
south. 

„,,  •       ♦       • 

The   warmer   climates   ar 
ing    in    a    little    pieplant, 
sallng    at    10    cents    a    pou 
plies    are    rather    light — bu 
demand. 

•  •       • 
Apples  are  firm  at  %r,  to 

rel.      Oranges  are  still    the 

the    fruit    market    and    i>rl 

changed    from    a   week    ago. 

•  •       • 

.Stocks  of  bananas  .are  f.  little  larg- 
er than  they  wert*.  but  prices  are  un- 
changed, remaining  at  4  cents  a  pound. 

•  •       * 

Grape  fruit  and  other  offerings  In 
the  fruit  market  are  still  to  be  had  at 
prices   unchanged   from  a  ^t'eek  ago. 


e  also  send- 
It  is  whole- 
id  and  sup- 
l      so    is    the 


|5.50  a  bar- 
big  noise  In 
ces    are    un- 


■T-  ^  ^n  f^  'n.p.T^T'T*^^^^.^  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^ 

XAKK.AG.WSKTT  BAl 
TUUXKD    INTO   A 
OF  TO.'VIATO 


^  Providonpp,  II.  I.,  Mii 
^  Tlio  waters  of  Narraj^ai 
^  wore  well  seu84»iKMl  wH 
¥^  <-at.sui)    %»hen   B.'iO   ea.s<».s 

*  ln«r  1.5,600  bottles  wen 
^  Into  the  .M'a.  Ju(l;;^( 
^  Brown  of  the  I'nitCMl  S 
■3|t  trit't  court  rii|e«l  lliat  it 

*  conl'i.si'^ited      inasii^ueh 
^  ninnufaeturers  had     not 

*  the  bottles. 


"     J^    *T\    rff\    ffl    JfK   ^     ^ 


L.AKE 
CATSn». 


reh  19. —  * 
sett  Bay  * 
h  tomato  ^ 
contain-  ^ 
5  dumped  •* 
Arthur  * 
tate.s  di8- 
should  ^M> 
as  the 
labelled 


Tempomr.v     County     A 

Madison,    Wis.,  March  19. 


(torney, 

— vS.  H.  Cady 


"Fanny"  Thompson,  bound,  gagged 
and  the  finger  marks  of  a  stranger 
on  her  throat,  was  found  dead  In  a 
rooming  house  at  1241  Michigan  avenue 
July  1  last.  She  had  been  d»>ad  four 
days,  and  this  jierlod  Mann  was  com- 
pelled to  cover  In  minute  detail  to  es- 
tablish an  alibi.  Hesldes  himself,  he 
produced  more  than  a  score  of  wit- 
nesses. The  evidence  against  him  con- 
sisted chiefly  of  his  acquaintance  witli 
Mrs.  Thompson  when  she  was  a  ser- 
vant In  his  lathers  house,  the  fact 
that  he  wore  a  cap  .similar  to  the  one 
of  which  Mrs.  Hanillton.  keppor  of  the 
rooming  house,  said  was  worn  by  the 
man  who  accompanied  Mrs.  Thompson 
to  the  house,  and  a  statement  made 
to  his  sister  prior  to  tlie  tragedv  that 
he  "knew  a  woman  whose  diamonds 
he  would  get   if   he   hart  to  clioko   her." 

This  statement  Mann  explained  on 
the  stand  was  purely  a  thoughtless 
jest  made  In  the  course  of  a  convers.i- 
tion  in  a  light  vein.  Other  evidence  on 
which  reliance  was  placed  at  the  time 
of  the  arrest  of  Mann  broke  down  be- 
fore the  case  came   to  trial. 


of  Green  Bay  has  been  appointed  by 
Uovernor  I>avidson  as  temporary  dis- 
trict attorney  for  Marinette  county  in 
plac;c  of  A.  K.  Schwictav,  who  has  been 
suspended  pending  the  outcome  of 
charges  fll.-.l   against   him. 

•- 

There  Im  Only  One  '•Ilromu  auinlne.** 
That  lb  LAXATIVE  BKOMO  QUININE.  Look 
lor  the  siifnature  of  E  W.  GKOVE.  Used  ttie 
World  over  to  Cure  a  Cold  in  One  Day.     25c. 

• • . 

Knauf  Sisters'  facial  treatments  cure 
blackheads  and   pimples,  24    W.   Sup.   St. 

HEROIC  PKTl  KK  OF 

THE  MODERN  DOCTOR. 

London,  March  19. — How  medical 
men  are  destroying  their  own  profes- 
sion as  a  means  of  livelihood  is  the 
subject  of  an  article  In  the  British 
Medical  Journal,  In  which  a  recent  ad- 
dress by  i'resldent  Kllot  of  Harvard 
university   Is  quoted. 

"It  is  doubtless  true,"  says  the  Brlt- 
ifth  Medical  Journal,  -that  the  medicine 
of  the  future  will  be  to  a  large  extent 
preventive."  President  Fallot  does  not 
point  out  the  remarkable  fact  that  the 
progress  In  science  which  is  to  change 
the  healing  into  preventive  science  haa 
been  the  work  of  the  doctors  them- 
seU'es. 

"The  fact  was  surely  remarkable 
enough  to  deserve  mention,  for  It  is 
the  one  example  of  a  profession  striv- 
ing Jo  abolish  the  reason  for  its  own 
existence  and  to  dry  up  the  sources 
from    which    It   draws    its    livelIhf>od. 

".\ihI  what  Is  Its  reward?  Hatred 
and  nn  uncharltableness  on  the  part  of 
fanatics  who,  if  they  could,  would  stop 
all  progress;  carefully  measured  en- 
courag«ment  from  the  state  and  from 
public  bodies,  and  Indifference  from  the 
people  at  large,  who,  owing  to  the  ex- 
tinction  of  tiie  scourges  from  which 
they  have  been  delivered,  can  not  ap- 
preciate what  has  been  done  for  their 
welfare." 


S.S.S. 


CURES 
BLOOD  POISON 


No  case  of  contagiouji  blood  poison  is  ever  cured  until  the  last  particle 
of  the  virus  has  been  removed  from  the  circulation.  The  least  taint  left  in 
the  blood  will  sooner  or  litter,  cause  a  fresh  outbreak  of  the  trouble,  with  all 
its  hideous  and  destructive  symptoms  of  ulcerated  mouth  and  throat,  copper 
colored  splotches,  falling  hair,  sores  and  ulcers,  etc  No  other  medicine  so 
surely  cures  contagious  Mood  poison  as  S.  S.  S.  It  goes  down  into  the 
blood  and  steadily  and  surely  drives  out  every  particle  of  the  infection.  It 
absolutely  and  perfectly  purifies  the  blood,  and  leaves  this  vital  fluid  as  fresh, 
rich  and  healthy  as  it  was  before  the  destructive  virus  of  contagious  blood 
poison  entered  the  circulation.  S.  S.  S.  quickly  takes  effect  on  the  blood, 
and  gradually  the  symp  ;oms  disappear,  the  health  is  improved,  the  skin 
cleared  of  all  spots,  sores  and  other  blemishes,  the  hair  stops  coming  out, 
the  mouth  and  throat  heal  and  when  S.  S.  S.  has  cleansed  the  system  of  the 
poison  no  trace  of  the  dist^ase  is  left  S.  S.  S.  cures  contagious  blood  poison 
because  it  is  the  greatest  <»f  all  blood  purifiers,  tested  and  proven  for  more 
than  forty  years.  Book  on  this  disease  with  suggestions  for  home  treatment, 
and  any  medical  advice  sent  free  to  all  who  write. 

THE  SWIFT  SPECIFIC  CO.,  ATLANTA,  GA, 


»*rr—  k 


■^ 


^ 


-I  "  r- 


'mtm  I .  \- 


/v 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


liOBTyW 


CAPTOR  OF 
JEFF^DAVIS 

Simeon  Brownell  of  Ait- 
Kin  Helped  to  Take 
Confederate  Leader. 

Although  76  Years  Old, 

He    Recalls  Exciting 

Event  V^ry  Well. 


Aitkin.  Minn..  March  19.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Living  quietly  in  tliis 
city  with  ids  son.  Bert  Brownell.  Is 
Simeon  Brownell.  aged  76,  a  grizzled 
veteran  of  tiie  Oivli  war.  who  partici- 
pated in  one  of  the  historic  events 
growing  out  of  that  strugeie.  the  cap- 
ture of  .Teff  Davis,  ex-pres-ident  of  the 
Confederacy,  at  Irvinsvll'.e,  Wilkinson 
county.   Oa.,  May   10,   1S6d.  ,-     ,, 

Mr.  Brownell.  a  native  ol  New  i  orK. 
moved  to  Cass  county.  Mich.,  when  a 
young  man.  and  early  in  the  war  en- 
listed in  the  Fourth  Micliigan  cavalry, 
Berving     until     the    conclusion     of    the 

great  civil  strife.  He  returned  to 
:ichigan  and  remained  there  until  18S7, 
when  lu  came  to  Aitkin  county,  taking 
up  a  homestead  at  Mud  Lake,  where  he 
resided  until  moving  into  the  city  two 
years  ago,  _ 

VIvldiT   RrcallH    .\flair. 
Mr.    BrowneU    vividly    recalls  the   ex- 
citing  events   dealing   with   the   pursuit 
of  the  fleeing  ex-president  through  the 
South,  ending  in  the  climax  of  May   10, 

Mr.  Brownell  was  a  member  of  Lieut. 
Col.  Priichards  squad,  and  he  remem- 
bers the  morning  of  the  capture  very 
dlstinctlv.  Besides  the  squad  of  the 
Fourth  "Michigan  cavalry,  there  was 
also  a  squad  belonging  to  a  Wiscon- 
Bln  regiment  searching  for  the  fugitive, 
and  Mr.  Brownell  says  that  neither 
knew  of  tho  presence  of  the  other,  and 
In  the  darkness  before  dawn,  both 
squads,  tiiinklng  each  other  enemies, 
engaged  in  a  skirmish,  and  two  Fed- 
erals were  killed  and  several  wounded 
before  the  Identity  of  the  men  was 
established.  Mr.  Davis  came  out  of 
his  tent  covered  with  a  long  cloak, 
and  as  he  was  stepping  over  a  wagon 
tongue,  he  made  a  motion  as  though 
to  draw  a  revolver.  Instantly  a  dozen 
union  rifles  covered  him.  The  boys 
were  excited,  and  It  was  a  wonder 
some  one's  gun  was  not  discharged,  but 
fortunately  there  was  none.  The  noted 
prisoner  was  secured  and  taken  to 
Fortress  Monroe  where  he  remained 
for   two    years. 

CADY  IS  FAMOUS 
AS  PROSECDTOR 


Selected  to  Probe  Mari- 
nette Graft,  He  Should 
Bring  Results. 

Marinette.  Wis..  March  19.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Attorney  Samuel  H. 
Cady  of  Green  Bay,  who  convicted  the 
ring  of  Green  Bay's  grafters  several 
years  ago.  has  been  appointed  by  Gov- 
ernor James  O.  Davidson  to  conduct  a 
eimilar  probe  here. 

District  Attorney  Schwittay,  whose 
term  of  office,  lasting  three  months, 
has  be^n  a  constant  turmoil,  and  whom 
every  member  of  the  Marinette  bar  but 
one  asked  the  governor  to  suspend. 
has  b'.en  suspendtd.  He  was  arrested 
on  charges  of  forgery  and  perjury,  and 
both  hearings  will  take  place  next 
pla-e  next  week,  as  Schwittay  is  de- 
manding   imniedlate      trials. 

Schwittay  was  elected  to  office  on  an 
anti-graft  platform  less  than  a  year 
after  his  disbarment  was  removed. 
Every  attempt  he  has  made  to  prose- 
cute "alleged  grafters  has  been  blocked. 
Last  Tuesday,  wlien  charges  were  sub- 
mitted to  the  governor,  an  overwhei- 
Ing  number  of  members  of  the  Mari- 
nette county  bar  announced  themselves 
In  favoi  of  the  probe,  provided  an  at- 
torney appointed  by  the  governor  con- 
ducted It. 


of  Gon.  King.  Upon  the  conclQslon  of 
the  drill  Gen.  King  complimented  the 
members  of  the  company  upon  the  ex- 
cellent work  done,  which  is  the  highest 
plaisc  for  the  commanding  officers 
v.-ho  made  this  possible  by  constant 
hard  work  and  wiih  the  right  kind  of 
material,  which  certainly  is  present  in 
the  roster  of  Company  D  as  it  now 
standF.  ^       ^      „ 

Gen.  King  and  Capt.  Ernest  Scott  of 
Company  D  saw  service  together  in  the 
Philippines,  and  spent  some  time  in 
exchanging  reminiscences  of  their 
campaign  for  Uncle  Sam  in  that  far- 
away   land.  .         -        c 

Gen.  King  left  Wednesday  for  Su- 
perior, where  he  Inspected  Company  I 
that    evening. 

LOCATED  GREAT 
COPPER  MINES 

Edwin  Huiburt.  Discov- 
er of  Calumet  &  Hecia, 
Is  Still  Living. 

Calumet.  Mich.,  March  19. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Residing  with  his 
daughter  in  Rome.  Edwin  J.  Hulfcert 
has  the  distinction  of  being  not  only 
the  discoverer  of  the  famous  Calumet 
v*t  Hecla  copper  mines,  which  have 
paid  $110,000,000  in  dividends,  a  rec- 
ord that  is  without  a  parallel  in  the 
world's  history  of  mining,  but  of  be- 
ing the  first  white  person  born  on 
Lake  Superior  and  the  oldest  living 
pioneer  of  the  region. 

He  wae  born  at  P'ort  Brady,  Sault 
Ste.  Marie.  April  30.  1829,  and  was 
the  son  of  John  Hulbert,  who  had 
located  there  in  1813  as  sutler  to  the 
garrison.  His  mother  was  a  sister 
of  Henry  R.  Schoolcraft,  the  famous 
geologist,  explorer  and  etymologist.  In 
the  course  of  time  Edwin  Hulbert  re- 
moved from  the  Soo  and  became  min- 
ing engineer  at  the  old  Cliff  copper 
mine  at  aEgle  River,  on  the  Kewee- 
naw peninsula.  In  1853  he  found 
specimens  of  copper  rock  that  had 
become  detached  from  the  now  cele- 
brated Calumet  conglomerate  lode.  He 
recognized  the  wonderful  richness  of 
the  vein  and  set  out  in  eearch  of  the 
formation.  For  years,  however,  the 
lode  kept  its  secrecy  and  defied  all 
known  methods  of  exploration.  Mr. 
Hulbert  expended  a  large  amount  of 
money  in  the  invention  and  manu- 
factui-e  of  specially  designed  exploring 
instruments,  which  he  now  has  in  his 
possession  at   his  homo  in   Italy. 

After  years  of  study,  self-sacrifice 
and  expenditure  of  funds  he  decided 
the  time  for  action  had  come,  and  he 
purchased  from  the  government  at 
$1.25  per  acre  the  land  on  which  the 
Calumet  &  Hecla  mine  now  exists. 
This  was  in  I860.  Mr.  Hulbert  sent 
his  brother,  John,  and  his  trusted  ex- 
plorer, Capt.  Amos  Scott,  to  open  the 
lode.  The  men  located  the  place  named 
in  the  instructions  and  found  It  a 
piece  of  flat  wet  ground,  where  there 
was  no  evidence  of  a  mound  uplift  or 
float  rock.  Capt.  Scott  was  dubious 
regarding  the  outlook.  Nevertheless 
they  beean  work  at  the  spot  directed 
and  within  a  short  time  the  operations 
had  resulted  in  the  opening  of  what 
has  long  since  been  the  No.  4  shaft  of 
the  Calumet  mine.  Capt.  Scott  died 
years  ago.  and  John  Hulbert  passed 
awav  recently  at  Detroit.  Edwin  Hul- 
bert is  an  Invalid.  His  mine  long 
ago  passed  from  his  possession,  but  it 
is  seen  to  by  the  interests  now  in 
control  of  the  property  that  he  shall 
never  want. 

JUMPS  ON  HOC  K  TRAIN. 

Calumet  Drill  Boy  Is  Crushed,  Leg 
Being  Broken. 

Calumet,  Mich.,  March  19.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— A  drill  boy  named 
EngstroiTi,  who  resides  with  his 
widowed  mother   on   the  C.   &   H.   loca- 


lo  proving  that  the  young  man  did  not 
commit   suicide,    but   was   murdered. 

Slie  wants  his  memory  cleared  of  this 
charge  and  the  family  name  protected. 
Miss  Bangle  lives  at  Barnesville,  and 
seems  to  be  a  very  determined  and 
energetic  young  woman.  She  refuses 
to  entertain  the  idea  that  her  brother 
committed  suicide,  and  has  employed 
no  less  than  three  attorneys  to  help 
her  to  Induce  Coroner  Haugen  and 
County  Attornev  Tiiomyson  to  exhume 
tlie    body  and    have    it   examined   again. 

Mr.  Thompson  and  Dr.  Haugen  con- 
ferred with  the  attorney  general.  The 
doctor  went  armed  with  a  skull  and 
explained  to  the  state's  legal  light  the 
exact  nature  of  the  wound  in  Elmer 
Bangle's  head,  and  proved  so  conclus- 
ively that  the  young  man  came  tcr  liis 
death  by  suicide  that  it  was  agreed 
thai  any  further  investigation  would 
be  a  mere  waste  of  time  and  money. 
Senator  I'tterson  and  Attorney  Mar- 
den  of  Barnesville,  counsel  for  Miss 
Bangle,  were  also  convinced,  but  It  Is 
said  the  young  lady  Is  still  dissatis- 
fied.  

TEACHERS  AT  ASHLAND. 


D.    E.   H.,   March   19,   1909. 

Knapp'Felt  Hats, 


Manhattan  Shirts. 


Large  Gathering  E.xpeeted  in  Wis- 
consin City  Next  Week. 

Ashland.  Wis..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  seventeenth  an- 
nual meeting  of  the  North  Wisconsin 
Educational  association,  to  be  held  here 
Friday  and  Saturday  of  next  week. 
March  J6  and  27,  promises  to  be  well 
attended  and  one  of  the  most  success- 
ful  in   the   history  of  the  organization. 

The  program  for  the  two  days  fol- 
lows: 

Friday  morning — Piano  solo.  Miss 
Bertha,  Ask.  Ashland;  address  of  wel- 
come. Hon.  Waiter  Cate.  Asliland;  re- 
sponse. Supt.  J.  E.  Murphy.  Hurley; 
-Studv  Methods  in  the  High  Scliool 
Assembly  Room."  Supt.  S.  A.  Oscar. 
Washburn,  and  Supt.  H.  V.  Stall,  Bay- 
field; "The  Greatest  Need  of  the  Rural 
School,"  W.  E.  Larson,  state  director 
of  rural  schools. 

Friday  afternoon — Vocal  solo.  How- 
ard Welty.  Mellen;  "The  Teacher's 
Duty  Toward  the  Dull  Child."  Mrs. 
Mary  D.  Bradford,  Stout  training 
school;  "Arithmetic,"  W.  X.  Ferris, 
president  Fen  is  institute,  Big  Rapids; 
"Civics  and  Its  Relation  to  Moral  Edu- 
cation," I'rincipal  A.  C.  Shong,  Supe- 
rior. 

Fridav  evening — ^\'ocal  solo,  Allen 
Prav.  Ashland:  lecture,  "The  Building 
of  Man,  '  W.  N.  Ferris. 

Saturday  morning — Piano  solo,  Mrs. 
J.  D.  Paladeaux.  Ashland;  "Historv 
From  the  Ethical  Standpoint."  Prof. 
Arthur  F.  Gillette,  Superior;  "Human 
Nature  in  School  Room."  W.  N.  Ferris; 
"Tlie  Value  of  Ethical  and  Moral 
Training."  Supt.  W."  E.  Maddock,  Su- 
perior; business  session;  reports  of 
committees  and   election   of   officers. 


Han  an  Shoes, 


Fownes  Gloves, 


Columbia  Clothes  for 
Young  Men! 

.A.  large   assortment   of  Spring 
Suits  is  ready  for  your  inspection. 

We  do   not  confine   our  selec- 
tions to  one  maker,  but  show  many  up-to- 
date  patterns  made  up  in  classy  styles 
with  all  the  latest  ideas. 

The  dip  front  coat  with  wide 
peg-top  trousers   will   be  seen 
again  this  spring. 

Chalk  line  stripes  in  soft 
materials  are  extremely  fashion- 
able. 

Blue    serges    are    regaining 
their  old  time  popularity. 

UVv     $10  to  $30. 

^  The  Columbia 

At  Third  Avcnttc  West. 


WILL  MEET  AT  STAPLES. 


Regular  Session   of  Upper  Missis- 
sippi Medical  Society,  April  16. 

staples,  Minn.,  March  19. — (.Special  to 
The  Herald.) — This  city  will  entertain 
the  Upper  Mississippi  Medical  society 
April  6.  In  regular  session.  Tlie  meet, 
ing  will  conclude  with  a  banquet  in  the 
evening.  Dr.  F.  F.  Westbrook.  dean  of 
the  medical  department  of  the  lliiiver-  i 
sity  of  Minnesota,  will  speak  on  "Who 
Is  Responsible  For  the  Health  of  the 
Public?"  while  Dr.  H.  M.  Bracken,  sec- 
retary of  the  state  board  of  health, 
will  take  "Tuberculosis"  as  his  theme. 
Supt.  W.  J.  Marchey  of  the  state  sanl- 
torlum  for  consumptives,  will  also 
speak. 


cover  of  a  gun  until  their  work  had 
been  completed.  The  cracksmen  re- 
leased the  clerk  as  soon  a.s  they  ha<i 
gathered  up  their  booty,  and  w.ilked 
quietly   cut  of  town. 

MUST  DO  MORE  TLME. 


great   subject,    "The   Prince  of  Peace." 

He  has  been  secured  by  the  Lyceum 
pool  of  this  city,  under  whose  aus- 
pices a  number  of  entertainments  have 
been  given  during  the  winter.  An 
additional  charge  of  60  cents  will  be 
mode  to  those  holding  course  tickets, 
wliile  the  single  admission  will  be  75 
cents. 


NORMAN  COUNTY  WINS. 


DEAD  SE\  ERAL  DAYS. 


Body  of  Woman  With  Broken  Back 
Found  in  Shanty. 

Iron  Mfiur.tain.  Mich..  March  19. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald. » — The  authori- 
ties are  Investigating  the  death  of  a 
woman  by  the  name  of  Mrs.  Kinney, 
eaicl  to  have  been  of  doubtful  char- 
acter, whose  body,  with  the  neck 
broken,  was  found  In  the  slianty  of  a 
character  known  as  "Black"  Dessereau. 

The  failure  of  Dessereau  to  notify 
the  police  directed  suspicion  toward 
him.  and  he  is  being  held  until  tlie 
death    can    be    i>robed. 


GEN.  KINO  INSPECTS. 


Well-Known   Army   Officer   Lauds 
Ashland  Military  Company. 

Ashland.     Wis..     March     19. —  (Special 

to    Tiie    Herald.) — Gen,    Charles    King. 

U.   S.   A..   Wisconsin's   popular   military 

officer,  and  one  of  the  best  known  and 

efficient  officers  in  the  United  States, 
was  In  Ashland  Tuesday  evening  and 
Inspected  Company  D,  Tenth  separate 
battalion.  Wisconsin  National  Guard, 
Capt.   Scott,  commander. 

Sl.xty  men  responded  to  roll  call  and 
spent  the  greater  part  of  two  hours  in 
drilling  under  the  direction  of  its 
officers  and   under  the  careful  scrutiny 


tion.  jumped  on  the  rear  car  of  a  rock 
train  coming  out  of  No.  5  shaft 
Wednesday  morning,  and  on  approach- 
ing the  Superior  engine  house,  was 
caught  by  an  obstruction.  badly 
sfiueezed  and   brushed  off  the  car. 

When  picked  up  it  was  found  that  he 
liad  sustained  a  broken  leg  and  other 
injuries.  He  was  removed  to  the  C. 
it  H.  hospital.  Engstrom  Is  17  years 
old  and  has  a  brother  employed  on  the 
Hecla   &  Torch   Lake  road. 

JUNIOR  CO-ED  MISSING. 

Miss  Renning  of  Kasson.  Minn..  Dis- 
appears From  University  Haunts. 

Minneapolis.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Miss  Frances 
Rennlng  of  Kasson,  Minn.,  a  Junior  at  ' 
the  state  university  here,  mysteriously 
disappeared  a  week  ago  and  the  police 
of  the  Twin  Cities  have  been  asked  by 
her   father   to   help   him   to   locate    her. 

Miss  Penning  failed  In  all  of  her  ex- 
aminations at  the  end  of  the  first 
semester  and  was  dropped  from  the  roll 
of  the  university  in  the  middle  of  Feb- 
ruary. She  continued  to  visit  the 
linlversity  campus  for  about  a  month, 
but  did  not  write  her  parents  of  her 
failure.  Her  father  came  to  Minnea- 
polis yesterday  to  learn  if  she  was 
sick  and  learned  at  her  boarding 
house  that  she  was  not  there.  He 
also  learned  at  the  university  that  she 
boarded  a  Chicago-Great  Western  train 
last  Monday,  giving  no  hint  of  her  des- 
Unatlon. 

CLAIMS  HE  WAS  KILLED. 

Sister  of  Otter.Tail  County  Suicide 
Loath  to  Accept  Story. 

Fergus  Falls,  Minn.,  March  19. — A 
sister  of  Elmer  Bangle,  who  committed 
suicide  at  his  farm  In  Hobart  some 
time  ago.  has  been  moving  heaven  and 
earth  to  have  the  Otter  Tail  county  au- 
thorities reopen   the  case,   with  a  view 


Judgment  Given   in  Suit   Involving 
Balance  on  a  Ditch. 

Ada.  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Judge  Grlndeland  has 
filed  an  order  in  the  suit  brought  last 
December  by  Dan  Llnnihan  of  Red 
Lake  Falls,  to  receive  an  amount  over 
$700  claimed  as  balance  due  on  the 
contract  for  Ditch  No.  5.  in  Lee  town- 
ship,   which    was    established    in    1903. 

The  county  set  up  a  counter  claim 
that  Llnnihan  did  not  finish  his  con- 
tract according  to  the  specification, 
staling  that  payments  had  been  made 
in  accordance  with  the  estimates  of 
Engineer  Boyer.  Judge  Grlndeland  de- 
cided in  favor  of  the  county.  The 
case  was  one  of  considerable  Interest. 
County  Attorney  Brattland  represented 
the  county,  and  C  N.  Broughton  of  Red 
Lake  Falls,  appeared   for  Llnnihan. 

employes'  REGISTER. 


New  Device  Installed  at  Northern 
Pacific  Brainerd  Shops. 

Brainerd.  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Northern  Pa- 
cific Railway  company  has  adopted  a 
system  of  checking  machines  to  take 
the  place  of  the  old  system  of  pocket 
checks  In  the  shops  here.  By  the  new 
device  it  shows  automatictlly  the  min- 
ute that  a  man  registers  in  or  out.  The 
machine  is  in  use  in  the  planing  mill, 
and  will  be  placed  in  the  other  de- 
partments as  soon  as  machines  can  be 
adapted  to  register  in  series  instead  of 
the  numbers  beginning  at  one  in  each 
instance. 

STRUCK  BY  SNOW  PLOW. 

Finn  Named    Hill,  Killed    on    the 
South  Shore  Road. 

Houghton,  Mich.,  March  19. — A  Finn 
named  Hill  was  killed  Wednesday 
morning  by  a  South  Shore  snow  plow 
at  a  point  a  little  east  of  Agate,  a 
siding  a  few  miles  from  Trout  Creek. 

Hill  had  boarded  the  Duluth  passen- 
ger train  at  Trout  Creek  and  ridden 
through  to  Agate,  where  he  took  the 
track,  walking  back  In  the  direction 
of  Trout  Creek.  The  man  Is  said  to 
have  been  laying  on  the  track  when 
the  plow  hit  him.  One  leg  was  cut  off 
and  part  of  the  head  was  crushed, 
death    having    been    instantaneous. 

ESCAPED  PRISONER  IS 

RETURNED  TO  THE  PEN. 


Stillwater  Convict  is  Released  and 
Taken  to  Illinois. 

Stillwater,  Minn.,  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Frank  Hassose  was 
released  from  the  state  prison  Wednes- 
day in  accordance  with  a  parole  re- 
cently granted  the  condition  being  that 
he  be  turned  over  on  St.  Patrlk's  day 
to  the  authorities  of  the  reformatory 
at  Poniiac,  111.,  as  a  parole  violator 
there.  ^        ^   ^ 

He  was  sent  to  the  Minnesota  state 
prison  from  Minneapolis  for  grand 
larceny  for  stealing  an  overcoat  from 
a  hotel.  An  officer  from  Illinois  was 
here  to  take  hl^j  In  charge. 

CHARGED  >V1TH  PERJURY. 

North   Dakota  Woman   Alleged  to 
Have  Lied  in  Affidavit. 

Dickinson,  N.  D..  March  19. — Sofia 
Pavlicek,  was  arrested  at  her  home, 
fourteen  miles  north  of  town,  on  the 
charge  of  perjury.  A  warrant  for  her 
arrest  was  sworn  out  at  State's  At- 
torney McBrlde'B  office  and  served  on 
the  woman  by  Deputy  Sheriff  George 
Brown.  She  was  arraigned  before 
Judge  Folsoni  and  upon  pleading  not 
guilty,  her  ball  was  fixed  at  $300.  The 
date  for  the  hearing  has  not   yet   been 

Mrs  Pavlicek  is  accused  of  falsely 
swearing  to  an  affidavit.  The  Racine 
Sattley  Manufacturing  company  had 
obtained  a  default  judgment  against 
the  woman  on  a  promissory  note  and 
on  Feb.  17  the  woman  took  steps  to 
vacate  the  judgment.  In  an  affidavit 
she  swore  that  when  she  signed  the 
note  it  was  on  the  promise  of  the 
plaintiff  that  her  son,  Joseph,  who  was 
mixed  up  in  a  deal,  would  not  be 
criminally  prosecuted.  The  plaintiffs 
deny   that  they   ever  promised   her  this. 

RIBBING  AND  CLOQUET 

WILL  AGAIN  CONTEST. 

Cloquet.  Minn..  March  19.— (Special 
ro  The  Herald.)— Tonight  the  high 
school  basket  ball  team,  which  de- 
feated Hibblng  last  Saturday  evening 
on  the  local  floor,  will  give  Hibbing 
a  chance  to  retrieve  themselves  on 
their  own   floor  at  Hibblng. 

The  local  team  had  hoped  to  arrange 
a  game  for  Saturday  night  with  Eve- 
leth  but  It  was  impossible  for  Eveleth 
to  arrange  to  play  on  such  short  notice. 
Judging  from  the  type  of  the  games 
played  this  year  among  the  many  teams 
outside  of  Duluth  and  Superior,  next 
year  will  see  some  excellent  exhibi- 
tions, and  an  effort  will  probably  be 
made  to  so  arrange  the  games  that  a 
championship      team      can      be      picked 


Old    Aitkin    Renldent    Deatf: 

Aitkin,  Minn.,  March  19.— Jolm  Mit- 
chell, an  old  resident  of  Aitkin,  died  at 
the  hospital  at  Fergus  Falls  Wednes- 
day. The  bodv  will  be  brought  to 
Aitkin  for  interment.  Mr.  Mitchell  was 
a  member  of  the  I.  O.  O.  F.  and  the 
Redmen  lodges. 

• 

Duluth    Blnn   to   Mpeak. 

Cloquet,  Minn.,  March  19. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Oscar  Mitchell  of 
Duluth  will  address  the  men's  meeting 
of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  next  Sunday  after- 
noon. The  subject  on  which  he  will 
speak  has  not  been  announced.  The 
meeting  will  be  held  under  the  auspices 
of  the   "Pleasant   AftM-noon   club." 


of  the  estate  of  the  late  William  H. 
Surles  formerly  general  agent  of  the 
Northwestern  Mutual  Life  Insurance 
company,  showing  real  estate  to  the 
value  of  $9,430  and  personal  property 
of  $74,188.21,  was  filec  with  the  regis- 
ter   of    probate    Wednesday    morning. 

Whitewater — Department  Commander 
Edwin  D.  Coe  sent  o  press  general 
orders  No.  6.  in  which  he  returns 
thanks,  in  the  name  o '  the  department 
to  all  societies  and  in  Jivlduals,  includ- 
ing teachers  of  pub  ic  and  private 
schools,  etc.,  for  their  compliance  with 
his  request  to  aid  in  .-.incoln  memorial 
ceremonies. 

Sparta — That  Sparta  may  vote  on  the 
liquor  question  this  springs  seems  as- 
sured, as  already  nearly  the  required 
number  of  names  has  been  secured  by 
the  "wets"  tq  a  petition  to  bring  the 
question  before  the  voters. 

Manitowoc— Thirty-ive  branch  so- 
cieties in  the  state  aie  represented  at 
tlie  annual  convention  of  the  C.  S.  P, 
S  a  Bohemian  fraternal  society,  in 
session  here.  Antort  Kolman  of  Mil- 
waukee, is  state  president. 


Yeomen    meeting    in    this    city    at    the 
giand   conclave    to    be   held   in    April. 

Mlnot,  N.  D. — Prof.  Rudolph  Foret, 
aged  21.  instructor  of  the  violin  at 
the  Mlnot  Academy  of  Music,  passed 
away  suddenly  early  Tuesday  at  the 
home  of  liis  uncle,  Carl  Herzog  at 
Tasker. 


MINNESOTA  BRIEFS:;  ;      DAKOTA  BRIEFS 


from    the    comparative    scores 
various  teams. 


BRYAN  W  ILL  LE(  TURE 

AT  CLOQUET  MAY  10. 

Cloquet.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.— William  J.  Bryan  will 
lecture  here  the  afternoon  of  May  10 
at     the     Nelson     opera     house     on     his 


WHEREVEf^  THERE'S  PAIN  APPLY  AN 


ALLCO 


TheonlyGenuine 

POROUS  PLASTER  ■ 


Marquette.  Mich..  March  199. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Thomas  Ryan, 
who  escaped  from  the  Marquette  prison 
Oct.  2.  1904.  was  brought  back  from 
New  York  city  to  serve  the  remainder 
of   his   sentence,   by   Deputy   Catlin. 

Ryan  completed  a  sentence  of  one 
vear  at  Blackwell's  island  Monday  for 
larceny,  and  upon  his  release  was  taken 
in  hand  by  the  Marquette  deputy  and 
returned  to  this  prison.  Ryan  was 
sent  up  from  Ionia  county  on  a  10- 
years'  sentence  for  burglary,  and  had 
served  nearly  four  years  when  he  made 
his  escape. 

WISCONSIN  WOMAN 
MYSTERIOUSLY  DISAPPEARS 


ORRINE 

CURES  dOtiOR  HABIT 


Brandreth's  Pills 

The.  Great  Laxative  and  Blood  Tonic 
NONE  BETTER  MADE 


Established  1752 


Brainerd.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Betsy  Olson  of 
Readstown.  Wis,,  who  was  at  CTov? 
Winer  a  sjnall  statlill  south  of  Brain- 
efd  "a'fcc^ut  ten  days  ago.  looking  after 
5ome  landed  interests  she  has  there, 
mvsterlously  disappeared  on  her  way 
ho"me.  She  left  for  Readstown  March 
9  and  has  not  been  heard  of  since.  She 
is  a  widow  and  has  several  small  chil- 
dren   at    her    home. 

• 

\%'uort  Lake  P.  O.  Robbed. 

Wood  Lake.  Minn.,  March  19.— Two 
yeggmen  entered  the  postoffice  at  this 
place  early  and  blew  the  safe  and  es- 
caped with  about   $75. 

The  night  clerk  at  the  hotel  hap- 
pened along,  while  the  robbers  were  in 
the    building,   but  was   held   under    th« 


CL'ItK  EtTECTED  or  MOXEY 
REFL'XDED. 

So  uniformly  succe.ssful  has  OR- 
RINE been  In  restoring  the  victims 
of  the  "Drink  Habit"  into  sober 
and  useful  citizens,  and  so  strong  is 
our  confldence  in  its  curative  pow- 
ers that  we  want  to  emphasize  the 
fact  that  ORRINE  is  sold  under 
this  positive  guarantee — cure  ef- 
fected or  money  refunded.  Re- 
member the  guarantee  is  in  each 
box. 

Read  what  the  Hnn.<iur  Drug  Co., 
the  leadluK  druKictntit  of  S*.  Paul, 
>llnn..  who  have  been  sellinK  OK- 
Rl.Vfe^  over  three  yeaj-»,  have  to  nay 
about   its 

"From   our  experlenee   la   well- 
ing   ORRl.NF,   we    believe    It    the 
moMt    merltoriouN    treatment    (or 
the    Liquor    Habit    o    nthe    mar- 
ket.     By    following    the    Iniitruc- 
tiouia    we    positively    believe    the 
deMired    renal*    will    be   obtained. 
The    buyer   hat*  every   protection 
by  (lie  guarantee." 
ORRINE   Is     prepared     in     two 
forms        No.  1,  a  powder,  tasteless 
and  colorless,  can  be  Riven  secretly 
in    food    or    drink.        ORRINE    No. 
2.    in   pill   form,   is   for   those    who 
wish  t6  cure  thenisflves. 
ORRINE  COSTS  ONLY  $1  A  BOX. 
The  C!ua»*antee  is  in  Each  Box. 
Write    for    Free    ORRiNB    Booklet 
(mailed  in  plain  sealed  envelope)  to 

ORRINE  CO.. ORRINE  Building. 

Washington.   D.  C.     ORRINE  is  sold 
by  leading  druggists  everywhere 


■Special    Agcnta> 
W.  A    A  RETT, 


201  West  Superior  St.,  »32  Eant  Sec- 
ond St.,  and  101  We«t  Fourth  St. 


Brainerd — The  address  of  Rev.  Father 
Gleason.  at  the  Brainerd  opera  house, 
Tuesday  evening,  was  an  eloquent  tri- 
bute to  St.  Patrick,  to  the  Irish  people 
and  the  land  of  Erin.  It  was  followed 
by  the  production  of  the  five-act  melo- 
drama, "A  Daughter  of  Erin."  by  home 
talent.     The  opera  house  was  crowded. 

L,ittle  Falls — The  preliminary  hearing 
of  Jos<>ph  Kennedy,  who  was  arrested 
near  Walker  for  the  murder  of  Annie 
Klntop  in  1905,  was  commenced  before 
Justice  Gaudet  at  the  city  hall  Wednes- 
dav,  and  after  some  evidence  had  been 
offered,  was  continued  until  Satur- 
day. 

St.  Cloud — Frank  Lorinser  died  at 
Phoenix.  Ariz.  Tuesday  evening,  of 
tuberculosis.  The  body  was  shipped 
to  this  city  and  will  arrive  here  on 
Saturday  or  Sunday.  The  funeral  an- 
nouncement will  be  made  later.  Frank 
Lorinser  was  born  in  thos  city  in 
1877. 

New  York  Mills — Arvld  Kerttu.  a 
nephew  of  Peter  Kerttu  of  this  place, 
visited  here  last  week  and  left  for 
Duluth  Sunday.  He,  witli  his  wife  and 
child  will  leave  for  Finland  next  week, 
where  he  wll  assume  charge  of  an  art 
establishment. 

Brainerd — John  Fremling  was  held 
to  the  grand  jury  Tuesday  afternoon 
on  the  charge  of  stealing  a  grip  anJ 
coon  skin  overcoat  belonging  to  Mike 
Collins  of  Sauk  Rapids,  The  two  were 
together  drinking  Monday,  according 
to  the  story  told,  when  Fremling  and 
the  grip  and  coat  disappeared  from  the 
depot. 

International  Falls — The  Koochich- 
ing company  has  purchased  the  Glen- 
dennlng  property,  corner  Second  street 
and  Second  avenue,  for  the  sum  of 
J3,500. 

Crookston — Crookston  has  a  third 
moving  picture  sliow  and  vaudeville 
house,  whicli.  was  opened  to  the  public 
Wednesday  evening,  under  the  man- 
agement of  Mr.  Wilson,  who  has  wide 
experi'Mice  n  that  line. 

Mankato — John  A.  Nelson,  proprietor 
of  the  St.  Paul  house,  and  an  old  and 
respected  resident  of  Mankato,  is  in 
me  hospital  at  Rochester  in  a  critical 
condition.  He  has  been  suffering  from 
stomach  trouble,  and  Saturday  was 
operated  upon,  and  It  was  found  tliat 
he  has  a  large  cancer  of  the  stom- 
ach. 

W'indom  —  Albert  Bowdlsh.  who 
worked  at  the  Park  hotel  most  of  the 
winter,  and  suddenly  disappeared  the 
other  day,  is  now  in  jail  for  stealing  a 
horse  and  some  other  articles. 

Anoka — Mrs.  Charles  Prlbble  died  at 
Champlin  Wednesday,  aged  49.  .She 
had  ben  sick  but  a  few  days  with  pneu- 
monia, and  is  survived  by  her  husband 
and  one  sl.ster.  Mrs.  Chapman,  of  Maple 
Grove.  Mrs.  Prlbble  was  a  member  of 
the  Baptist  church,  and  was  greatly 
loved  bv  all  who  knew  her. 

Moorliead — The  Minneapolis  Brewing 
company  is  about  to  add  a  second  story, 
on  the  east  portion  of  its  local  depot, 
and  will  have  the  office  upstairs,  di- 
rectly above  the  present  office,  when 
the  new  portion  is  completed. 

Stillwater — Building  is  active  at  the 
hamlet  of  Wlthrow.  Roy  Kenyon  is 
pushing  the  construction  of  the  store, 
hall  and  residence,  to  take  the  place  of 
the  one  destroyed  by  fire,  and  will  have 
the  property  ready  for  occupancy  In 
the  early  spring. 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS 


Ashland — The  funeral  of  the  late 
Louis  Sundberg  was  held  at  the  Swed- 
ish Mission  church,  Thursday  after- 
noon at  2  o'clock,  the  Rev.  August  Wll- 
landt,  officiating.  The  deceased  was 
injured  In  McDonald's  camp  last  Sat- 
urday, and  died  in  this  city  Monday 
morning. 

Milwaukee — Rock  Terrace,  the  mag- 
nificent summer  home  on  Pine  Lake 
of  the  late  A.  A.  L.  Smith,  has  been 
sold  through  the  agency  of  Nathaniel 
Greene,  to  Frank  J.  Matchett.  president 
of  the  American  Air  Cleaning  com- 
pany, and  proprietor  of  the  St.  Charles 
hotel. 

Manitowoc — The  common  council  has 
exonerated  Contractor  Pellet  of  charges 
of  defrauding  the  city,  preferred  by 
Social  Democrats,  after  making  a  com- 
plete   Investigation    of    the    affair. 

Milwaukee — Herman  H.  Hackendahl, 
aged  55  years,  secretary  and  treasurer 
of  the  Hackendahl  Drug  company,  and 
president  of  the  Milwaukee  Druggists' 
association,  died  suddenly  of  heart  fail- 
ure late  Tuesday  night  at  his  home, 
717   Summit   avenue. 

Chippewa  Falls— Jacob  Rhelngans.  a 
pioneer  of  this  county,  dropped  dead  In 
his  pew  while  attending  church.  He 
was   68   years  old. 

Milwaukee — Inventory   and  appraisal 


Devils  Lake,  N.  D.— Devils  Lake 
Railway  Employes  club  will  hold  ar 
important  and  interesting  meeting  Sat- 
urday evening'  at  the  Eagle  hall.  All 
railway  men  In  the  city  are  looking 
forward  to  this  met  ting  as  business 
will  be  combined  with  pleasure,  the 
committee  In  charge  have  spared  no 
expense  In  making  the  evening  an  in- 
teresting one.  ,,  , 

Bismarck,  N.  D. — Glenn  Heaton  has 
gone  to  Chevenne,  Wyo.,  where  he  ex- 
pects to  enter  the  forestry  service  of 
Uncle  Sam.  He  ban  been  attending 
school  for  the  last  two  years  in  Bis- 
marck and  left  last  \^  eek  for  the  West. 

Jamestown,  N.  D.— A  telegram  re- 
ceived by  Dr.  R.  G.  De  Puy  announced 
the  death  at  Philadelphia  Sunday  night 
of  Thomas  Lloyd,  Jamestown's  first 
mayor.  Mr.  Lloyd  n'as  86  years  old 
and    has    been    quite    feeble    for    some 

Fargo.  N.  D. — Amund  Johnson,  a  car- 
penter of  Balfour,  McHenry  county. 
Wednesday  filed  with  the  office  oi 
clerk  of  the  Unite  i  States  district 
court  a  petition  that  he  be  adjudged 
bankrupt.  He  places  his  liabilities  at 
$2,077.86  and  his  ai'sets  at  $188,  of 
which  he  claims  $188  to  be  exempt. 

Donnybrook,  N.  D.--Joseph  H.  John- 
son recently  had  a  well  sunK  at  his 
residence  by  Jake  Kauffman,  the  well 
diiller,  and  when  the  drill  reached  a 
depth  of  126  feet,  such  a  strong  flow 
of  water  was  struck  that  it  threw  the 
water  from  a  five- Inch  pipe  about 
twelve   feet   above   the  ground. 

Fargo  N.  D. — P.  H.  Donalnie  was 
awarded    a     judgment    Wednesday 


for 


$1,000  against  John  E.  Stanford  by 
Judge  Pollock  of  the  Third  Judicial 
district  court.  The  suit  was  one  in- 
volving the  settlem<^nt  of  a  partner- 
ship account.  Donahue  and  Stanford 
formerlv  being  proprietors  of  the  Far- 
go Grocerj'   company.       _,    ^,      _ 

Grand  Forks.  N.  t'.— Eighty-five  ap- 
plicants for  admission  to  the  Yeomen 
lodg'e  is  the  record  breaker  of  the 
Grand  Forks  homestead.  There  will 
probably   be    100   admitted   at   the   next 


Calumet — The  Blum  building  on  Pine 
street,  destroyed  by  fire  some  ten 
week.s  ago.  Is  to  be  built  at  the  con- 
tractors  earliest  convenience.  Mr. 
Blum  stated  tliat  he  expects  to  have 
the  building  completed  by  the  latter 
part   of   April. 

Houghton — Tom  Mullin.  who  for  sev- 
eral years  has  bten  liead  bookkeeper 
for  Gav  &  Sturgis  in  their  Houglilon 
office,  has  been  made  manager  of  the 
local  branch,  succeeding  Joseph  H. 
Hodgson.  Western  manager  of  the 
brokerage  concern. 

Hancock — Tlie  life-saving  crew  at 
the  I'ortage  Lake  ship  canal  is  expected 
to  report  about  April  15  for  the  sea- 
sons work,  with  the  same  crew  as  last 
vear.  consisting  of  Capt.  Thomas  Mc- 
Cormack.  C.  A.  Tucker.  John  McDonald, 
.lohn  A.  Alfsen.  Archie  Davidson,  Fred 
Soloman.  I'aul  Liedke,  Colin  Westrope 
and   Ed  Mersy. 

Hougliton — Four  underground  tele- 
phones have  been  installed  in  the 
Quincv  mine  by  Manager  Forbes  and  a 
crew  of  linemen  of  the  Michigan  State 
Telephone  company. 

Hancock — Parties  coming  to  reside 
in  Hancock  liave  tlie  greatest  difficulty 
in  finding  suitable  apartments  or  dwell- 
ings for  rental,  and  in  some  instances 
li  has  been  necessary  to  go  to  other 
towns  of  the  county  in  order  to  find 
available  house.". 

Laurium — John  Daniels  and  Charles 
Chvnoweth  left  Tuesday  for  Globe, 
Ariz.,  to  visit  the  S.  &  G.  Mining  corn- 
pan  v's  property. 

Brimley — Brlmley  Is  to  have  a  school 
building  to  cost  about  $10,000.  A  pub- 
lic meeting  was  held  at  which  the 
board  was  instructed  to  ask  for  bids 
and  award  the  contract  so  that  work 
mav  begin  early  in   tlie  spring. 

Negaunee — George  McEachron  of 
Little  Lake,  who  several  months  ago 
secured  a  patent  on  an  animal  trap, 
has  now  applied  for  a  patent  on  an 
automatic  fiour  sifter.  Negaunee 
merchants  who  have  examined  Mr.  Mc- 
Eachron's  model  say  that  the  sifter  is 
a  big  improvement  over  anything  of 
the  kind  on  the  market. 

Marquette — It  is  reported  that  the 
Pioneer  Iron  company  expects  to  shut 
down  the  North  Marquette  furnace 
April  1.  in  order  to  make  repairs  on 
the  stack.  This  means  that  no  iron 
will  be  turned  out  for  four  or  flye 
weeks,  as  it  will  take  about  two  weeks 
to  cool  down  the  furnace  and  an  equal 
length  of  time  to  make  the  needed  re- 

^^Cai'umet— George  Kelley.  10-year  old 
son  of  John  Kelley  of  Hubbell,  is  suf- 
fering with  serious  injuries  received 
while  playing  about  his  home  one  day 
recently.  With  other  young*sters  he 
was  jumping  off  of  a  shed.  His  leg 
was    fractured    below    the    knee    and    a 

i  small     bone    in    one     of    his     feet    wa« 

I  broken. 


The  Names 
of  the  Win- 
nc^rs  hx  The 
Hera^ld^s 
Betv  Hur 
E^ssay  Con-^ 
test  Will  Be 
it\  the 
Sat\irday 

Herald  ^  ^ 


i 


I 

i' 

r 


*. 


~9tmti 


jt^-^'— >■  fc"*  »•■*■»■  '*  ■■*a» 


II 


-^.-~m 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:       FRIDAY.     MARCH    19,    1909. 


15 


THE    WORLD'S   GREATEST  CREDIT  CLOTHIERS." 


i-^ 


4- 


ASKINS.  MARIN  t€0 


28-30  E.  Superior  Street 


Store  open  Monday  and  Satar* 
day  Evenlnj^s  till  10  o'clock      j 


ENGLAND'S 
BOAVY 

British    Estimates   Ask 

for  Four  Dreadnougtits 

and  Six  Cruisers. 


Want   Power  to   Build 

Four  Armored  Vessels 

in  1910. 


Washlrxgton,  March  19. — The  British 
naval  estimates,  in  themselves,  are  al- 
ways interesting,  but  they  are  doubly 
lnter?-»tlns  wlien  they  are  compared 
V'ith  thoa*  of  the  United  States  for 
the  same  year.  It  id  particularly  worth 
while  to  note  what  we  pay  for  our 
navT.  what  England  pajs  and  what 
v.-rt  g^'t  t"-»r  our  money  and  what  Eng- 
land gets.  The  naval  bill  as  passed 
by  congress  this  year  carries  $136,- 
935. 199. 05.  In  return  for  this  ex- 
penditure we  receive  in  the  way  of 
new  construction  two  Dreadnoughts, 
eight  torpedo  boat  destroyers,  one 
collier    and      four      submarines.      The 


British  estimates  provide  for  an  ap- 
propriation of  $17  5,713,500,  with 
which  will  be  built  four  Dreadnoughts, 
si.K  protected  cruisers.  twenty  de- 
stroj-ers  and  $5,000,000  worth  of  sub- 
marines. 

In  other  words,  England,  at  an 
outlay  of  about  $40,000,000  more,  re- 
ceives in  return  twice  as  many  de- 
stroyers and  submarines  as  America 
and  besides  all  this  will  have  six  pro- 
tected cruisers  to  put  up  against  one 
fleet  collier. 

In  this  connection,  however.  It  must 
he  remembered  that  estimates  include 
other  things  beside  construction  works 
and  it  should  not  be  forgotten  that 
the  prices  of  material  and  labor  are 
much  higher  in  this  country  than 
abroad. 

The  American  bluejackets  are  better 
paid  and  better  fed  than  the  sailors 
of  any  nation  on  earth.  The  British 
estimates  show  an  increase  of  close 
to  $15,000,000  over  ^he  estimates  of 
last  year.  They  fully  prove  that  it  is 
the  government's  determination  to 
keep  pace  with  the  other  naval  powers 
and  that  no  halt  is  likely  to  be  called 
In  the  international  competition  for 
superior   naval    armaments. 

Four  More  VVarshii>s. 

In  addition  to  the  four  new  Dread- 
noughts, which  are  to  be  built  as 
speedily  as  possible,  the  government 
seeks  the  power  to  start  building.  If 
necessary,  in  1910  four  additional  large 
armored  vessels.  The  type  of  these 
latter  ships  is  not  indicated  in  the 
estimate,  though  it  is  generally  es- 
timated that  they  are  to  be  two  battle- 
ships of  the  Dreadnought  type  and 
two  armored  crui-sers.  There  is  little 
doubt.-  however,  that  this  part  of  the 
naval  program  will  be  dependent  upon 
the  progress  made  in  Germany's  battle- 
ship construction. 

The  statement  of  Reginald    McKen- 


na.  first  lord  of  the  admiralty,  natu- 
rally niakes  uo  reference  to  foreign 
powers  and  further  light  on  the  gov- 
ernment's intention  must  •)e  awaited 
until  the  estimates  are  discussed  In 
parliament.  An  interesting  point  in 
the  estimates  is  that  the  admiralty 
has  under  consideration  the  u.se  of 
dirigble  air.chips  for  naval  experiments 
and  construct  an  aerial  vessel. 

Under  Mr.  McKenan's  program 
Great  Britain  should  have  by  the  end 
of  1911  fourteen  vessels  of  the  Dread- 
nought type  against  thirteen  to  then 
be  completed   by  Germanj'. 

Mr.  McKenna's  statement  says  that 
two  of  the  new  Dreadnoughts  will  be 
commenced  in  July  and  the  other  two 
in  November,  1909.  It  also  announces 
the  coming  absorption  of  the  channel 
fleet  into  the  home  fleet,  which  al- 
ready has  been  announced  in  these  dis- 
patches, which  \\i\\  place  twenty-two 
fully  manned  battleships  and  fourteen 
fully  manned  armored  cruisers  in 
home  waters  togethtr. 


KKFT  FROM  THK  BOY 


Is  News  That  He's  Heir  to  Four  Mil- 
lion Dollars. 

Augusta.  Ga..  March  19. — Hunt  Til- 
ford  Dickinson,  the  9-year-old  boy  who 
was  left  $4,000,000  by  his  great  uncle, 
Wesley  Hunt  Tilford,  the  Standard  Oil 
magnate,  does  not  know  of  liis  good 
fortune. 

'•I  siiall  keep  the  news  tliat  he  Is 
heir  to  $4,000  000  from  the  boy  as  long 
as  possible,"  said  the  boy's  lather  to- 
day. "I  am  afraid  It  will  spoil  him. 
I  don't  want  the  child  to  grow  up  with 
the  idea  that  he  Is  rich  and  need  not 
work." 

Dickinson  and  his  son  are  spending 
the    winter    liere. 


A.   L.   AOATIN 
WARD  A.   AMES,  Jr. 
DR.   W.  R.  BAQLEY 
W.   D.  BAILEY 
MILIE  BUNNELL 
L.  N.  CASE 
DR.  HOMER  COLLINS 
C.   A.   DUNCAN 

NEW 
ELKS' 
BUILDING 


THE  FINISHING  HARDWARE 

Is  the  Part  You  Sec  and  Use  Every  Day. 

There's  only  a  SMALL  difference  in  the  first  cost 
of  the  best  over  common  hardware,  but  there's  a 
BIG  difference  in  the  lasting  qualities,  while  the 
satisfaction  alone  of  using:  good  hardware  is  worth 
many  times  the  difference  in  cost. 
Discriminating:  buyers  use 

Corbin  Builders'  Hardware. 

The  following  is  a  list  of  some  of  the  more  recent   build- 
ings using  Corbin  Hardware  that  we  furnished — 

NEW  ADDITION  TO  DULUTM    POSTOPFICB 


MRS.  J.   A.  DUNCAN 
A.  W.  PRICK 
TH05.   A.  GALL 
J.   H.  HARPER 
C.  P.   HALEY 
a  MUNSEY  FLATS 
I.  S.  MOORE 
WHITNEY  WALL 


A  at-  e 


C.  MARKELL 
LANE  HAC  GREUOR 
W.  C.   POEHLER 
W.  PRBSSENTIN 
W.  E.   RICHARDSON 
GEO.  8PENCBR 
DR.L.  A.  SUKEFORTH 


KELLEY  H/^RDWAIIE  GO, 


Z.  D.  SCOTT 
ST.  REGIS  FLATS 
SAN  HARCO  FLATS 
J.  UNO  SEBENIUS 
H.  F.   SALYARDS 
J.  J.    WANGENSTEIN 
Y.  W.  C.  A. 

NEW 

ST.  LOUIS  COUNTY 

COURT  HOUSE 


RADICAL  s ; 
CHANGES 

Proposed  In  New  Char- 
ter Devised  f of  New 
.  YorK  Cit jf.  ? 

Small  Council  Would  Re- 
place the  Big  Board 
ef  Aldermen. 


offices 
tiiruiigli 
and   llie 
charter 
Man\' 


YOU  n 


BA'oK       IK      ISJOT     S  ATlSFiE  D 


Albany,  N.  Y.,  March  19. — The  legis- 
lature has  taken  over  the  problem  of 
providing  New  York  eily  with  tlial  new 
tharler  wliich  is  to  remodel  municipal 
and  governmental  procedure, 
the  presenlaiiun  to  llie  senate 
asseint)ly  of  the  report  of  tlie 
comnii.ssion. 

radical  changes  are  contem- 
plated in  the  proposed  charier.  C'en- 
tt'ull/.atirin  of  power  in  the  mayor  and 
hoard  ol  e.sliiuaie  and  appui'Cionment, 
and  the  abulilion  uf  the  board  of  al- 
dermen are  two  features  uf  the  char- 
ier,   as    drawn. 

The'  coinmi.s.sion  has  endeavored  to 
-separate  tlie  organic  or  striiriural  mat- 
ters of  ciiy  government  from  the  ad- 
jt-i-tive  or  adininl.sti  alive  details^  and 
lor  that  reaj'oii  has  luopu.sed  a  char- 
ter and  an  admiiii.stiative  code.  Kach 
ot  these  will  conlaiti  ahout  75,000  word.s 
and  together  will  be  about  'one-cjuar- 
ter  tlie  volume  of  the  present  charier  of 
half  a  million  word.s.  It  is  proi)osed 
lo  make  the  chartei  of  a  i)erinanent  or 
aliidiiig  nature,  while  the  admini.'^lra- 
tive  code  will  recjuire  fre<iuent  amend- 
iiunts,  either  for  the  adoption  of  lin- 
pi-oved  method.s  or  in  response  to  suc- 
ces.sful     adtniiii.slratlve    i)iactice. 

illayor'M  .H«lary  r-'sWIO  a  Vear. 
It  is  recommended  that  the  mayor's 
.salary  be  Increased  to  $25,000  a  year. 
The  i)re.sent  term  of  four  years  is  con- 
tinued. There  i^  doubt  whether  the 
president  of  the  board  :qC  aldermen, 
ill  the  event  of  vacancy  in  the  mayors 
office,  would,  under  the  existing  char- 
ter, become  mayor  for  tha-  fidl  term. 
Tills  would  be  removed  by  a  provision 
that  an  election  to  till  the -vlicancv  be 
held  at  the  annual  election  following 
its  occurrence— the  president  of  tlie 
council    to   be   mayor   ad   Interim. 

The  mayor  would  continue  to  ap- 
point and  at  pleasure  ren)Ove  all  heads 
of  departments,  certain  commissioners 
and    members   of    board.---. 

In  regard  to  the  board  of  estimate 
and   appuriionment   the   report   .says: 

•'A  majority  Of  the  commission  fav- 
ors the  continuance  of  a  board  of  estl- 
n  ate  and  apportionment  consisting  ot 
llie  mayor,  the  president  of  the  coun> 
ell.  the  controller  and  a  iMjrough  presi- 
dent to  be  elected  from  each  borough. 
A  marked  change  in  tlie  existing  sys- 
tem would  be  made  by  the  withdtawal 
frojTi  borough  presidents  of  all  admin- 
istrative functions.  The  e.xperlmenl  of 
oleoting  borough  representatives  as 
financial  ofClceis  to  vote  appropria- 
tions, and  as  administrative  officers 
to  .sj)end  appropriations  votefl  lo  them- 
sel\es.  was  violative  of  two  funda- 
mental princlijles  inherent  lu  our 
api)ioprlallons.  and  as  administiative 
officer.s  to  spend  apprbpriatlons  voted 
to  themselves,  was  inherent  In  our 
system;  namel.\-,  that  appropriating 
officers  should  never  be  expending  of- 
ficers and  that  administrative  officers 
should  not  be  elective,  but  appointive, 
and  be  at  all  times  clearly  wiihin  the 
sphere  of  linitary  executive  responsi- 
bility. lieUe\ed  of  administrative  du- 
ties which  now  make  their  .oiTices  cen- 
ters of  political  patronage,  the  borough 
|)residents  would  be  required  to  give 
their  undivided  time  and  attention  to 
the  work  of  the  board,  which  Hhouhl 
lecome  and  be  the  gie*it  linaticial  ex- 
ecutive committee  ol  the  city.  To  aid 
ill  insuring  the  election  of  borough 
presidents  of  high  capacit.\-  and  of  con- 
spit  nous  position  in  their  respective 
communities,  it  is  recomtnended  that 
the  salary   he   JlU.OOO   a   year. 

W  uiiltl  l{F|ilace  Aldermen. 
In  place  of  the  board  of  aldermen 
there  would  be  created  a  council  of 
thirty-nine  members,  distributed  as 
follows:  Manhattan.  14:  Brooklyn.  11; 
the  Bronx.  6:  Queens.  5.  and  Richmond, 
3.  The  memliers  would  serve  without 
pay.  and  in  regard  to  this  llie  commis- 
sion   says: 

"The  city's  experience  witli  an  unpaid 
l)oard  of  education  has  been  so  satla- 
factorv  that  we  recommend  the  abo- 
lition of  the  salary  of  councilmen  in 
the  belief  that,  if  the  office  be  removed 
from  the  field  of  .small  pecuniary  po- 
litical prizes  it  will  no  longer  be  uti- 
lized as  an  adjunct  to  the  organized 
political  machinery  of  parties.  It 
should  cease  to  allure  municipally  paid 
agent.s  of  local  political  leaders,  but 
should  attract  those  seriously  Inter- 
ested in  the  solution  of  municipal  prob- 
lems. The  commi.<.--ii.>n  favors  return 
to  the  policy  of  requiring  councilmen 
to  be  residents  of  the  districts  which 
thev  are  elected  to  reprefjent.  Heads 
of  departments  continue  to  have  seats 
in  the  council  and  to  be  entitled  to  a 
hearing,  although   not  to  a  vote." 

The  president  of  the  cimncil  would 
be  the  vice  mayor  and  a  member  of  the 
board  of  estimate  and  apportionment. 
It  Is  recommended  that  Ids  salary  he 
Jiri.oOO  a  year.  The  cotinrll  would 
have  a  large  ordinance  mbklng  powers, 
but  not  control  over  the  administrative 
business  of  the  city  or  over  the 
franchises.  It  would  have  the  right 
to  veto  .specific  appropriations  in  the 
budget  and  make  the  tax  levy.  It 
would  have  co-ordinate  powers  with 
the  legislators  to  amend  those  provis- 
ions ot  tiie  code  which  are  purely 
local. 

With  suljstantial  unantmlty  the  com- 
mission recommends  the  appointment 
of  a  superintendent  of  polid^  from  the 
uniformed  force,  who  wonlfl  he  the 
executive  head  of  the  unlfbrmed  force. 
The  i>olice  commissioner  would  have 
the  power  to  remove  the.  superinten- 
dent. It  is  proposed  to  raise  the  a«e 
limit  for  entering  the  police  depart- 
ment to  twenty-five  years  and  the  re- 
port dc<lares  that  younger  men  can- 
not be  Intrusted  with  tlie  pei  lormance 
of  the  serious  duties  ot  peace  officers, 
and  many  of  the  administrative  diffi- 
culties encountered  in  the  department 
are  due  to  the  increasing  number  of 
inmature  policemen. 

Coudurt  of  TrInlH. 
It  is  also  recommended  that  the  po- 
lice commissioner  appoint  a  deputy  in 
the  Borough  of  Brooklyn,  and  to  a 
deputy  commissioner  who  would  be  a 
lawyer  of  at  least  five  years  standing 
be  confided  the  conduct  of  all  trials. 
The  commissioner  would  frame  rules 
of  practice  for  police  trials,  to  be  ao- 
proved  by  the  appellate  division  of 
the  first  department.  Appeal  from  the 
decision  of  the  trial  commissioner 
would  be  direct  to  the  appellate  divis- 
ion, and  not  by  certiorari,  as  is  tho 
j  present  practice.  The  police  commis- 
sioner would  be  required  to  prescribe 
uniform  penalties  so  as  to  eliminate 
discrimination  and   favoritism. 

In  the  chapter  on  general  provisions 
rtgarding  the  duties  of  ofticera  there 
are  three  provisions  which  will  be  of 
particular  interest  to  politicians.  They 
a  re : 

I'irst — I'nder  the  present  law  no 
member  of  the  uniformed  force  of  tho 
police  or  fire  departments  can  be  nomi- 
nated for  an  elective  office,  and  failure 
lo  decline  such  nomination  at  the  time 
and  in  the  manner  provMed  is  declared 
to  vacate  his  office.  This  principle 
would  be  extended  to  all  persons  hold- 
ing appointive  office  or  employment 
under  the  city  government, 

.Second — The  prohibition  which  for- 
bids employes  of  certain  fiepartments 
of  the  city  government  to  participate 
in  associations  organized  for  the  pur- 
pose of  contributing  fiind.s  to  affect 
legislation  in  their  own  belialf.  or  to 
promote  such  legislation,  would  be  ex- 
tended to  apply  to  all  ^tffc^rs  and  em- 
ploves  of  the  city.  .•        i 

Third — In    aid    of    Ui«    civil    service. 


and  of  its  divorce  from  politics,  an  en- 
tirely new  subdivision  is  submitted, 
which  provides  that,  at  tlie  risk  of  for- 
feiture of  his  office,  "No  person  in  the 
classified  civil  service  of  tlie  city  shall 
be  an  officer  or  member  of  any  po- 
litical committee  or  a  delegate  or  al- 
ternate  to   any   political   convention." 

Other  Important  changes  proposed 
are: 

The  officecf  coriner  to  be  abolished 
and  medical  examinations  and  autop- 
sies to  be  performed  under  the  diret - 
tion  of  the  board  of  health,  and  In- 
quests to  be  conducted  by  city  mag- 
istrates. 

The  department  of  street  cleaning  to 
he  abolished  and  the  entire  control 
of  the  streets  and  sewers,  and  of 
street  cleaning,  to  he  In  a  department 
of  street  control,  for  which  the  mayor 
would   be   responsible. 

In  each  borough  there  is  to  be  a 
board  of  local  improvement,  made  up 
of  the  U'embers  of  the  council  from 
•  hat  borough.  The  limit  of  expendi- 
ture by  these  boards  when  the  cost  is 
to  be  assessed  upon  the  property  ben- 
efited   to  be   Increast^d    to    J.t.OOO. 

The  board  of  sinking  fund  commis- 
sioners and  the  board  of  estimate  and 
appointment  to  be  identical  and  the 
sinking  funds  and  the  bonds  and  obli- 
gations of  ti!e  clly  to  each  to  be  classi- 
fied and  defined.  The  charter  would 
provide  a  method  of  calculating  the 
debt  limit  and  there  w^uld  be  a  uni- 
form  sy.stem   of   accounting. 


iS  TOO  BIG  TO 
GO  TO  PRISON 

None  of  Missouri  Cells 

Will  Hold  Louis 

Decker. 

Jefferson  City.  Mo.,  March  19. — Malt 
W.  Hall,  warden  of  the  penitentiary, 
admits  that  lie  has  a  hard  problem  co 
discover  some  means  of  handling  Louis 
L)ecker  of  St.  Louis,  ex-member  of  the 
house  of  delegates  there,  who  was 
prosecuted  and  convicted  of  boodling 
and  sentenced  to  the  penitentiary  for 
live    years. 

Decker,  who  i.s  5  feet  and  10  Inches 
in  height,  tipped  the  scales  at  320 
pounds,  and  lie  is  by  far  the  heaviest 
l)risoner  ever  received  at  the  peniten- 
tiary. 

.\bout  the  same  time  that  Warden 
Hall  discovered  that  it  would  he  neces- 
sary to  have  a  special  .suit  of  striped 
clothes  made  to  order  if  Decker  was  to 
wear  the  prison  uniform,  Porter  Gllvin. 
deputy  warden,  said  he  illd  not  believe 
ther'i  was  a  bed  in  the  prison  large 
enough  to  accommodate  Decker,  and 
(hat  in  his  opinion  the  latter  would  not 
be  able  to  gel  through  a  good  many  of 
the  cells  tiiat  have  narrow  doors. 

Upon  measurement,  this  prediction 
proved  quite  true,  and  thus  more  trou- 
ble was  loaded  upon  the  warden.  Fin- 
ally the  prison  physician.  Dr.  Chastin, 
was  called  Into  counsel.  He  said  he 
believed  a  place  could  be  fixed  up  in 
the  hospital  building  where  Decker 
could  sleep  comfortably.  The  warden 
at  once  accepted  the  proposition,  and 
thither  Decker  was  taken.  With  the 
aid  of  some  convicts,  a  bed  was  con- 
structed and  Decker  lias  occupied  the 
same  ever  since. 

He  had  to  wear  his  own  clothes  until 
a  pair  of  trousers  were  taken  out  from 
the  prison  tailor  sliop  sutflcienlly 
large  to  accommodate  him.  But  tlie 
coat  was  found  to  be  entirely  too 
small,  and  he  Is  yet  wearing  the  one 
he  brought  here  with  him.  An  order, 
iiowever.  has  been  placed  for  a  coat 
that  will  fit  him.  and  by  next  week  It 
is  expected  that  he  will  be  fitted  out  In 
full    prison    uniform 

"CORPSE"  ASKKD  FOR  DRINK. 


French    Woman's    Narrow    Escape 
From  Burial. 

•    Paris,    March    19. — At    Fr^jus,    near 
Cannes,     a     couplo    of    days    ago,     an 


How  many  dishes  in  your 

home?     It's  a  painful  count  if  you 
wash  them  in  the  old-fashioned  way 


Washing  dishes  with  soap  is  not  only  inefifect- 
ive,  but  tiresome  and  needlessly  old-fashioned. 

Soap  does  not  cleanse  as  thoroughly  as  it 
should;  it  overlooks  lurking  germs  and  leaves  a 
greasy,  ' 'smelly''  iilm. 

GOLD  DUST  not  only  cuts  grease  and  dirt 
with  scarcely  any  rubbing,  but  is  an  antiseptic 
that  goes  deep  after  every  minute  and  oft-times 
hidden  impurity.  It  will  sterilize  your  dishes 
and  kitchen  things,  and  make  them  wholesome 
and  sanitary. 

A  teaspoonful  of  GOLD  DUST  in  your  dish- 
water  will  work  wonders  on  dishes,  glassware  and 
silver — and  save  you 


fully  half  the  labor. 

Why  not  get  a  pack- 
age of  GOLD  DL^T  at 
your  nearest  grocer's, 
and  try  it  after  your 
next  meal. 

You'll  thank  u;>  for 
the  suggestion. 


■Let  tkt  OOLD  DViTTwina  do  your  work^ 


Made   by    THE   N     K.    FAIRBANK   COMPANY 
Makers  of  FA.IRY  SOAP,  the  oval  cake. 


octogenarian,    named      Mtne. 
wa.s  thought  to  have  died  in  I 
The  doctor  who  wa.s  called  pn 
the   woman   to   be   dead,   and 
nients    were    made    for      the 
This  was  to  have  taken  place 
lowing  afternoon.      An  hour  « 
fore    the    departure    for    the 
the  dead  woman  startled  the  j 
by    sitting    up    in    her    cotfin 
ing  to    be  suppli'-d    with   soni' 
drink,  as  .she  wa.s  thirty. 

The  spectators  of  this  incid 
two,    fled    from    the    house, 
who  preserved  their  presence 
removed   the    "corpse"    from 
tin    and    put    her    to    bed,    w 
soon   went  .soundly  to  sleep. 

Mine.  Crislii  is  Quite  w( 
and  knows  nothing  of  the  nt 
cape  she  ha.s  had  of  being  but 
Very  curiously,  she  has  rec*: 
the  member.-?  of  the  family 
dreamed  she  was  dead  and 
buried. 


Crlstln. 
ler  sleep. 
)nouncod 
arrange- 

fuJieral. 

the  fol- 
)r  so  b-»- 
cemetery 
nourners 
md  a.sk- 
•thlng   to 

ent,  save 

The  ^wo 

of  mind 

her  cof- 

tiore    she 

dl  again 
.rrow  es- 
ied  alive. 
unled  to 
that  she 
lad   been 


Builders'  Hardware.  Mer- 
chanis'  Tools.  Fine  Cutlery 

QUAYLE-LARSON  CO. 

23Srcond  Avenae  West. 


GRAND  DIKE  TO  BF  A  MONK. 


Cou.sin  of  tho  fzar  Decides 
Monastery. 

St.  Pet.'rsburg,  M.i.rch 
grand  duke,  Dimitri  Conftan 
who.  born  forty-nine  yjars  a 
youngest  son  of  Grand  Du 
stantine,  brother  of  the  czar 
father,   ha.s   formally   decided 

a  monastery  and  become  a  m 

He   was  at   on?   time   a   gr 


to  Enter 


n.— The 
tlnovltch, 
50,  is  the 
ke  Con- 
's grand- 
to   enter 

^nk. 

?at   hor.so 


lover,  and  as  president  of  the  man- 
aging board  of  imperial  .studs  he  did 
much  to  encourage  iiree(h»rs  to  ini- 
pnwe  the  national  breed  of  Kussian 
hor.s«^s    without    foreign    admixtures. 

Grand  Duchess  Eiizabttli,  widow  of 
Grand  Duke  Serglus  (a.ssasslnated  In 
Moocow,  1905),  sl.ster  of  the  czarina 
and  the  mosit  beautiful  woman  in  the 
Russian  Imperial  lamlly,  now  lives  in 
the  religi.)u.s  home  for  women,  which 
.she  establi.shed  near  Mo.scow,  and 
dresses  like  a  nun 


\ear  Uoath  In   Rig  Hoad. 

It  W;i.s  a  ti;rilllng  experience  to  Mrs. 
Ida  Super  to  face  death.  "For  yearn 
a  severe  lutit?  trouble  gave  nie  Inlenae 
.suffering,"  .slie  writes,  "and  several 
timcH  nearly  caOsed  my  death.  All 
remedies  failed  and  doctors  said  I  was 
incurable.  Then  Dr  King's  New  Dis- 
covery biouglit  quick  relief  and  a  cure 
so  permanent  that  I  have  not  been 
troubled  In  twelve  years."  Mrs.  Sopar 
lives  in  Hig  Pond,  Pa.  It  works  won- 
ders in  Cough.s  and  Colds.  Sore  I^iungs, 
Hemorrhages.  LaOriiipe.  Asthma, 

Croup.  Whoiping  «Jough  and  all  bion- 
chial  affections.  Soc  and  $1.0i).  Trial 
bottle  tree.  Guaranteed  by  all  diug- 
giii-j. 


TAKES  C 


Chamberlain's  Cough  Remedy  a  Sure  Cure 


ADA  L.  MUSCRAVa 


There  are  many  i>eople  wKo  talca 
cold  easily  and  are  particulaurly  sen- 
sitive to  drafts.  Upon  the  least  ex- 
pKjsure  they  take  fresh  colds.  Such 
persons  appreciate  the  good  qualities 
of  Chamberlain's  Cough  Remedy  aa 
it  always  affords  them  quick  relief* 
and  in  that  way  they  avoid  the  risk 
of  contracting  serious  germ  diseases 
such  as  pneumonia  and  consumptiozu 

Splendid  Medicine , 

"I  would  not  be  without  Cham* 
berlain's  Cough  Remedy  for  anything 
in  the  world,"  says  Ada  L.  Musgravo 
of  1  723  Franklin  street,  Denver, Colo. 
"I  have  found  it  to  be  a  splendid 
medicine  and  a  sure  cure  for  coughs 
and  colds.  1  seem  to  be  very  suscep- 
tible to  colds,  but  a  few  doses  of  this 
remedy  soon  drives  it  out  of  my  sys- 
tem. I  have  been  glad  to  recommend 
Chamberlain's  Cough  Remedy  to  a 
number  of  friends  and  it  has  proveu 
effectual  to  young  and  old  alike.' 


Never  Neglect  a  Bad  Cold 

Never  allow  a  cold  to  run  its  course.  Too  often  its  course  is  towards  pneumoniau  Th« 
first  action  when  you  have  a  cold  should  be  to  relieve  the  lungs.  This  is  best  accomplished  by 
the  free  use  of  Chamberlain's  Cough  Remedy.  This  medicine  liquifies  the  tough  mucus  and 
causes  its  expulsion  from  the  air  cells  of  the  lungs,  pr(xiuces  free  expectoration  and  opens  tho 
secretions.     A  complete  cure  soon  follows. 

This  medicine  has  been  in  use  for  alrnost  forty  yeiiTs.  which  is  time  enough  to  thoroug^y 
test  its  qualities,  and  no  C€we  of  a  cold  having  resulted  in  pneumonia,  when  Chamberlain's 
Cough  Remedy  was  used,  has  ever  been  reported  to  tiie  manufacturers,  which  leads  them  ^ 
b:ilieve  it  to  be  a  certain  preventive  of  that  dangerous  disease.    Price  25c^  large  size  50<^ 


v.ae-Jf'StiiPvu-j 


. 

_ 

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1 

> 

.      _  _  . 

"T 


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■»1 


at» 


»"■■  .•;»■ » t.  ■!  wii 


1^,1'        I  *.W    I     * — *..      ^ 


J 


16 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH 


J).  £.  H.,  March  19,  1909. 


MINNESOTA  DELEGATION 
IS  FOR  IRON  REDUCTION; 
CONFLICT  OVER  LUMBER 


Congressmen  Are  United 

in  Move  for  Lower 

Schedule. 


0 

0 

> 
> 

o 

o 


COLUMBIA 
CLOTHING 


—I  m^  I    I 


Also    Seek    to   Obtain 

Lower  Tariff  on 

Glass. 


Great  Variety  of  Opin- 

Ions  on  Tariff  in 

Senate. 


be  made  still 
do  everything 
furtlier   leduc- 


uitrd. 

di  legation 


HE  CHARGED 
$25ADAY 

Roy    Morse    Tells    of 

Working  for  Senator 

Stephenson. 

J.  R.  Jones  of  Racine 
Says  That  He  Re- 
ceived $783.50. 


Madison,  Wis.,  March  19. — Assembly- 
man ilambrecht,  member  of  the  sena- 
torial primary  investigation  committee 
today  read  a  letter  written  by  Assist- 
ant Attorney  General  A.  C.  Titus  in 
July  1906,  in  which  that  official  de- 
clared that  a  person  s-ign>ng  nomina- 
tion papers  of  a  candidate  was  not 
morally  bound  to  vote  for  such  candi- 
date. The  question  came  up  in  the 
examiiiation  of  Attorney  Charles 
French,  wtio  signed  Cooks  nominating 
papers  and  laier  voted  and  worked  lor 
Stephenson. 

J.  R.  Jones  of  Racine,  the  first  wit- 
ness today  said  he  received  $7.STT.50 
from  the  Stephenson  campaign  fund. 
Witness  could  not  remember  all  tlie 
detail.-?,  but  he  received  $150  for  him- 
eelf. 

Koy  Morse  of  Fond  du  Lac,  the  next 
witness  said  he  received  $700  from  tiie 
Stephenson    fund.      He    told    Earle    Mor- 


gan       Stephenson's       son-in-law.  and 

Henry    Overbeck    that    lie    did    not  care 
to  take  cliarge  of  Fond  du  Lac  county, 

tliat   he   was   too   busy   and    that   if  they 

wanted    him    lie   would   liave   to   be  paid 

$i;ri    a   day,    just    what    liis    clients  paid 
him. 


WILL  NOT  PROSLCITE. 


Ex-Counly    Treasurer    of    Cailton 
County  to  Oo  Free. 

Carlton.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Ex-County  Treasurer 
Ehr,  who  was  short  $7,000  in  his  ac- 
counts, will  leave  this  week  with  hi.s 
family  for  Oregon,  where  they  will  re- 
side in  the  future. 

It  was  decided  by  Mr.  Ehr's  bonds- 
mtj-  not  to  prosecute  him  and  as  the 
sicrtage  was  returned  to  the  treas- 
ury the  thirty-eight  bondsmen,  the 
coiuity  has  suffered  no  loss.    * 


ANNUAL  SENIOR  PLAY 

Tbe   Senior  (Iiinn   I're.xentu 

"DIAMONDS  AND  HEARTS" 

Under  L)iiection  of  Mr.  A,  F.  M.  Cu.^tance 

a.'.»«k:<ibi-y  H;\i,i.,  hk.h  school, 
khiij-w,  .m.\hch1j»,  uk)!).  s  v.  m. 

Reserved  seats.  50  cents:  General  Ad- 
mission. 2ri  cents.  Tickets  on  sale  at  tlie 
Higli  School   and  at  Stones  Book  Store. 


WOUND  IN  HIS  KNEE 

HAS  FATAL  TERMINATION. 


Spooner.  Minn..  March  19. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Ludvig  A.  Nelson, 
aged  20,  died  this  week  from  Vjlood 
poisoning,  wliicii  had  set  in  in  his  knee. 
Young  Nelson  i.ad  rut  himself  with  an 
ax  while  out  cutting  in  the  timber. 
The    ax    cut   a   deep    gash    in    his    rigiit 

knee.  When  his  knee  V)ecame  quite 
bad  he  was  brought  from  his  home  at 
WabRiiica  to  tlie  Spooner  hospital.  His 
motlier,  Mrs.  Nelson,  was  with  hiin  at 
the  hospital.  The  remains  were  laid  at 
rest  in   the  Baudette  cemetery. 


Washington,  March  19.— That  there 
will  be  a  great  variety  of  opinions  on 
the  taiiff  bill  when  it  reticiies  the  sen- 
ate is  certain,  according  to  expies- 
slons  of  senators  in  whose  states  are 
located  the  various  Industries  chiefly 
affected  by  tlie  changes  of  scliedules 
propose<l  in  the  iiouse   bill. 

Ked. lotions  on  lumber  schedules  will 
be  sturdily  resisted  by  Senators  Frye 
anti  Hale  of  Maine  and  by  some  of  tlie 
senators  from  tlie  raciric  coast  and 
from  the  extreme  Nortliwest.  Senators 
from  Minnesota  and  North  and  South 
Dakota,  on  tlie  otlier  liand.  wll!  make 
a  strenuous  effort  to  secure  free  ium- 
V)er,  instead  of  tlie  mere  reduction  of 
the  tariff  as  proposed  by  tlie  liouse  bill. 

The  pioposed  inlieritance  tax  will  be 
stoutly  resisted,  and  senators  will 
have  an  oi>poitunity  to  vote  upon  an 
amendment  providing  for  an  ini  ome 
tax.  Flee  coal  and  hides  also  will  be 
resisted,  dnd  tliere  is  likely  to  be  a 
strong  flglit  against  reductions  in  the 
various   iron   and   steel   sciiedules. 

Wliile  the  general  trend  of  sentiment 
among  senators  fa\ors  an  increase  in 
some  of  the  schedules,  and  while  they 
generally  belitve  tliat  the  house  lias 
made  ainpie  reductions  to  satisiy  tariff 
reformers,  at  least  one  ItKpubllcan  sen- 
ator, Mr.  Cummins  of  Iowa,  declares 
that  tlie  taiiff  should 
lower  and  that  he  will 
in  his  power  to  obtain 
tions. 

^linuctotann     I 

The  entire  Minnesota  delegation  has 
steadily  taken  a  leading  part  in  ad- 
vocating a  reduction  in  the  iron  and 
steel  scliedule,  and  in  the  procurement 
of  free  coal  and  free  lumber,  and  the 
senators  fiom  that  state  will  continue 
to  advocate  that  course  as  well  as  to 
obtain  a  loAver  tariff  on  glass.  It  ib 
declared  that  Minne.sota,  North  Da- 
kota and  Soutli  Dakota  have  nothing  to 
fear  from  free  lumber,  wliile  tliey  are 
anxious  to  obtain  entrance  into  the 
Canadian  market  wiiich  now  has  a  duty 
on  lumber  from  the  United  States. 
The  lumbermen  of  these  states  hope, 
by  a  removal  of  the  duty  on  lumber, 
eventually  to  obtain  a  similar  conces- 
sion from  t!ie  Canadian  government, 
and  they  claim  that  the  prices  of  their 
product  would  not  be  changed 
removal  of  the  tariff. 

Senator  Frve  of  Maine  today 
that  tlic  removal  of  tho  duty 
wodd  pulp  would  transfer  trade  to 
Canada,  and  stated  that  the  10.000 
men  now  emi)loyed  in  the  wocil  pulp 
and  pai'.er  business  in  Maine  woul.l 
he  placed  in  enforced  Idleness.  Tlu-se 
industries,  he  said,  represents  $70,- 
000.000  in  capital.  With  free  hides:-, 
he  believed  the  40  per  cent  reduction 
in  the  boot  and  sjioe  scliedule  would 
be    fairly    acceptable, 

"In  a  general  way,  the  house  till 
is  (luite  acceptable  to  Connecticut.  ' 
said  Senator  Bulkeley.  He  did  not 
think  there  would  be  serious  objec- 
tion of  the  inheritance  tax.  His  state 
now    Imposses    a    tax    on    inheritances. 

"As  a  whole,  the  house  V)ill  is  a 
pretty  good  tariff  measure,"  said  Sen- 
ator Cullom.  "It  ought  to  satisfy 
those  who  have  been  elanioring  for  a 
reductions.  While  a  reduction  has 
been  made  in  the  duty  on  farm  mri- 
chinery,  the  provisions  of  this  bill 
will  allow  us  to  enter  the  markets  of 
France,   which    have    been    closed. 

"The  inheritance    tax    is  ail    right  ps 
a     source     of    national 
though    Illinois   rigidly 
of    that    kind." 

Senator    Curtis    said 
wouid    stand    out    for    a 
and    stated 
substantial 


attention  to  the  tariff  bill,  and  it  is 
well  known  tliat  he  is  fully  convinced 
that  miiny  changes  must  be  made  in 
order  to  make  the  bill  acceptj^l'le  to  the 
senate. 


SHARP  IS  ACQIHTTED 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 

Coopers,"     said     Foreman     Burke, 
we    find   John    Sharp   not    guilty." 

"You  will  retire,  gentlemen  and  re- 
ct.nsider  further  as  to  the  otlier  de- 
fendants. Is  tliere  any  reason.  Gen. 
MiCarn,  vvliy  Jolm  Sharp  should  not  be 
discharged?" 

"None,  your  honor." 

"Mr.  Sharp,  you  are  discharged  from 
custody,  acquitted,  '  said  the  court. 
Sheriff  Sharp  sat  stolid  and  indifferent. 
Not  so  his  wife.  Tlic  foreman  si-oke  in 
a  low  tone  and  she  did  not  grasp  the 
significance  of  ii  for  a  minute.  When 
she  did  she  grabbed  her  liusband's  left 
arm  with  botii  her  hands  and  seemed 
about  to  break  down.  Her  sister 
scc«Tlied  hf  r  ami  others  near  tliem 
shook  liands   with   them. 

"We  want  tlie  exact  words  of  the 
jury  recoidet],'  said  Judge  Anderson, 
of  the  delense.  "We  understood  tlie  re- 
port   was    hopelessly    tied." 

"I  do  not  recall  the  exact  language, 
but  I  an.  told  by  the  clerk  and  a  news- 
paper man  that  those  were  the  words. 
Let    tlie    clerk    so    record    them.  ' 

"Is  that  a  verdict,  your  honor?" 
asked   Anderson. 

"It  is  a  verdict  as  far  as  John  Sharp 
is  concerned,  I'ut  it  certainly  is  not  as 
far  as  1>.  B.  and  Rol  in  Cooper  are  con- 
cerned. I  sent  the  jury  back  for 
furtliei     consideration." 

The  delendant's  co;inscl  advised  to- 
gether a  while  and  assented.  Then 
Judge  Hart  adjourned  court  until  li 
p.   m. 

Sharp,  accompanied  by  his  wite  and 
sistei-in-law.  fatlier  and  mother,  tlie 
latter  two  reaching  the  jail  after  the 
verdict,  went  to  tlie  room  he  has  oc- 
cupied foi  several  months  in  the  jail 
and  held  a  little  reunion  with  the 
Coopers.  Witli  tears  of  disappoint- 
ment in  .thtir  eyes  the  two  daugliteis 
of      Col.      Cooper      congratulated      the 

and  listened  in  return  to  the  good 
wishes  in  their  own  behalf.  As  they 
left  the  courtroom,  Reed  Sharp,  the 
youngest  brother  of  Joim  Sharp,  re- 
ceived the  congratulation.'  of  friends 
and  to  all  he  remarked:  "This  is  not 
the  end  ot    this  oa.'-i  ' 


by 

said 
from 


revenue, 
enforces   a 


al- 
tax 


that      Kansas 

duty    on    hides 

that   it    would   aiscj   want   a 

protection     on     its     dried 


egg  industry.  the  importance  of 
which,  he  declared,  was  not  generally 
realized. 

Favorn    Free    Lumber. 

Senator  McCumber  declared  him- 
self in  favor  of  free  lumber  and  a 
tariff  on  hides,  and  insisted  that  the 
Inheritance    ta.x    was    ail    right. 

Senator  Bailey  Insisted  that  one  of 
two  things  would  have  to  occur  in  re- 
spect to  the  duty  on  hides  and  boots 
and  shoes.  If  boots  and  shoes  and 
other  products  of  leather  are  pro- 
tected, he  believes  there  should  be  pro- 
tection for  hides.  He  would  have  no 
objection  to  free  hides  if  the  s.-ime 
principle  of  exemption  could  V>e  adopted 
in  respect  to  articles  manufactured 
from  leather  goods.  It  is  understood 
that  Mr.  Bailey  will  give  the  senate  an 
opportunity  to  vote  upon  an  amend- 
ment providing  for  an  income  tax,  and 
he  will  maintain  that  if  an  income  tax 
has  any  element  of  unconstitutionality, 
that  objection  will  apply  with  still 
greater  force  to  a  tax  on  inheritance. 
If  the  income  from  real  estate  cannot 
be  taxed,  on  the  ground  that  it  is  di- 
rect taxaiion,  he  believes  that  a  tax 
on  the  real  estate  itself  is  in  greater 
viola  I  ion   of  that  principle. 

Senator  Aldrich.  chairman  of  the 
committee    on    finance,    is   giving   great 


21-23    West 
ISuptrior  /Street. 


ITACIK 


Where  Values 
JRtUjn  Supreme. 


Important  Announcement  of  High 
Class  Millinery  at  Popular  Prices 


We  wish  to  announce  that  our  new  and  extensive 
lines  of  Spring  MilHnery  are  now  ahiiost  complete.  They 
comprise  all  that  this  season  offers  as  the  smartest  and 
most  artistic  creations     in     fashionable  spring  headgear. 

A  great  deal  of  care  and  research  has  been  exercised 
in  this  selection  and  our  millinery  section  now  offers  what 
is  undoubtedly  the  strongest  aggregation  of  popular  priced 
millinery  ever  yet  seen  in  this  city. 

Special  for  Saturday 

In  order  to  introduce  the  new  arrivals,  we  announce  for 
three  days'  selling,  among  others,  a  group  of  200  hats — 
regular  $7.00  and"$7.50  values,  in  Trimmed    <j^^    Q  ^ 


TRAPPERS  TO 
MAKE  MONEY 

Fur-Bcaring  Animals  Are 

Plentiful  in  the  County 

This  Season. 

Bounty  on  Seven  Wolves 

Collected  From  County 

Auditor 


John  Burnside  appeared  at  the  county 
jail  this  morning  to  claim  one  wolf 
bounty  for  himself  and  eix  others  for 
trappers  in  the  northern  part  of  the 
county.  John  Lassila  is  credited  with 
two  wolves.  Jarnes  Bosher  with  two 
and  James  Grey  with  two.  With  tht 
exception  of  Lasilia,  the  rnen  are  Iii- 
dians. 

Trapping  is  good  in  St.  Louis  county 
this  winter,  and  all  of  tiie  trajipers 
will  make  money."  said  Burnside.  "It 
is  easy  to  track  the  aniniais  through 
the  deep  snow  and  they  are  com- 
pelled to  do  considerable  roaming  in 
order  to  get  food,  as  the  snow  is  cieep. 
Tliere  are  a  large  number  of  trappers 
out  in  the  nc'i'thern  part  of  the  county, 
and  they  will  come  cut  at  the  end  of 
the  season  with  a  good  stock  C(f  furs 
and  a   few   wolf  bounties   to   collect. 

"I  know  o!;e  man  who  has  eleven 
lynx  skins  and  sixty-eight  mink  skins. 
Another  man  I  know  has  nineteen  lynx 
skins.  The  skin  of  a  lynx  is  worth 
$25.  so  with  twenty  or  so  lynx  bagged 
no  trapper  need  worry  over  the  fin- 
ancial results  of  his  season's  oper- 
ations. 

"Animals  of  all  kinds  are  plentiful. 
There  are  a  few  beaver  and  otter  to 
be  trapped  and  lynx  and  mink  are 
plentiful.  The  wolves  are  roaming  in 
big  packs  and  they  are  easy  prey  for 
a  trapper,  either  in  hunting  oi  trap- 
ping. I  am  satisfied  with  my  winter's 
work,  and  all  of  the  trappers  I  have 
met    feel    the    same    way    about    it." 

HANGS  MAN  TO 
TELEGRAPH  POLE 

A  West   Virginia    Mob 

Lynches  Attacker  of 

Police  Chief. 

Elkins,  W.  Va  .  March  19. — Joseph 
W.  Brown,  said  to  have  been  an  ex- 
convict,  who  last  evening  shot  and 
seriously  wounded  Chief  of  Foi  ice 
Scott  White  at  Whitmer,  near  here, 
was  taken  from  a  jail  by  a  crowd  of 
men  at  1:30  this  morning  and  lynched. 
Brown  was  hanged  upon  a  telegrapli 
pole. 

Last  evening  Wiiite.  who  Is  a  son  of 
Mayor  Washington  White  of  Whitmer, 
remonstrated  with  Brown  for  using 
abusive  language.  Brown  drew  a  re- 
volver and  shot  White,  and  tlien  took 
to  the  mountains.  He  was  followed 
by  a  iiosse,  captured  and  placed  in  jail. 
Karly  today  it  seemed  tliat  tlie  whole 
town  was  aroused,  and  Brown  was 
(luietly  taken  from  the  Jail  and  hanged. 
The   body   was   later   cut   down. 

Chief  of  I'olice  White  is  reported 
this  afternoon  to  be  doing  well  at  the 
hospital,  and  it  is  expected  he  will  re- 
cover. 


IT'S  such  an  easv  matter  to  own  a  fine  Victor  or  Edison  that  no  home  should 
be  without  one.  Our  Easy  Paym<mt  System  makes  it  possible  for  you  to 
entertain  your  own  family,  your  guests,  to  give  an  informal  dance  or  a  high- 
class  musical.  The  world's  best  artists  are  at  your  command.  There  is  no 
more  popular  entertainer  than  a  Victor  or  Edison  machine. 


W 


E  carry  an  immense,  complete  stock  of  all  machines  and  records.  We  are 
Xorthvv'estern  Distributors  for  the  Victor  company  and  are  able  to  furnish 
at  all  times  the  very  latest  things  in  Talking  Machines. 


We  make  it  so  easy  and  satisfactory  for  you  to  buy  here,  that  you  will  feel 
more  than  repaid  to  buy  a  Victor  or  Edison  on  our  new  system  of  monthly  pay- 
ments. Come  in,  let  us  show  you  the  machines  and  records.  Let  us  show  you 
hov^^  absolutely  perfect  the  new  records  are.  They  are  life-like,  clear-toned  and 
always  satisfactory.  ^ 


A  Complete  Slock  of 
Edison  and  Victor 


New 

Double  Faced 

Records. 

Hear  Tbem. 


Machines  Always  on 


M[  a  iv  iw. 


\': 


-t" 


*■     •% 


Hand. 


military  telegraphers  and  soldiers  act- 
ing as  letter  caiiieis,  has  been'  suc- 
cesslul  in  securing  a  semblance  of  re- 
sumption in  all  branches  of  the  service. 

Squads  of  soldiers  have  been  detailed 
to  act  as  railroad  mail  clerks  and  in 
all  about  4,000  of  the  milltaiy  are  at 
work. 

In  the  provinces  tlie  strike  is  con- 
stantly securing  new  adherents  and  in 
many    large    centers    it    is    complete. 

The    strike    leaders    ciaim    that    vic- 


tory  is   within    their   grasp. 

Business  houses  are  using  special 
messenger  service  to  maintain  com- 
munication with  th<  provinces  as  we;l 
as   to  points   outside    France. 

The  government  has  prepared  a  biii 
to  extend  the  time  on  financial  jiai'crs 
until  the  state  services  are  again 
normal. 


Glrl'H    Klnyer    Eleelr«cute«l. 

Richmond.    Va.,   March   li*. — Benjamin 


I    ■■ 


Gilbert,  a  white  youtli  of  19.  was  elec- 
trocuted in  the  penitentiary  tliis  morn- 
ing for  the  murder  in  Norf<;lk,  last 
July,  of  hlK  sweetheart.  Mit:s  Amada 
Morse. 


Are  your  ten.Mits  the  sort  who  "let 
the  landlord  worry"  about  tlie  rent''  A 
few  Insertions  of  a  want  ad.  will  find 
you  the  sort  ol  tenants  who  do  that 
part  of  the  worrying  themselvee. 


A  BRILLIANT  DISPLAY  OF 
ARTISTIC  AND  STYLISH 


AT  POPULAR  PRICES  TOMORROW! 

A  truly  beautiful  collection.        We  invite  yon  to  come  and  look  them  over.       We  also 
suggest  that  you  compare  our  prices  with  a  ly  other  Hats  offered  elsewhere. 

Third  floor — take  elevator. 


Hundreds  of  New  Suits 


The  Season's  Most  Favored  Models-" 


1 


Have   First  Showing  Tomorrow! 

Stunning,  stylish  models,  in  the  wanted  colors  and  fabrics. 
We  call  special  attention  for  tomorrow  to  the  lines  we  offer. 

from  $15  to  $37.50 

These  lines  are  unmatchable  at  the  prices   anywhere. 


NEW 
WAISTS 

The  most  beautiful  showing  of 
all  that's  desirable  in  Silk, 
Net.  Linen  or  Cotton,  for  prac- 
tical every-day  wear  or  for 
elaborate  dress  occasions, 
ranging  in  price  from 

$1  to  $1.25 


The  First  Floor  Will  Offer  the  Newest  of  the 

New  Fashionable  Fabrics  and  Dress  Accessories 


/ 


Hats  at 


RANKS  OF  THE 
"  STRIKERS  GROW 


raris,  March  19. — There  is  no  ma- 
terial change  this  morning  in  the  situ- 
ation brought  about  by  the  strike  of 
the  government  telegraph  and  post- 
office  employes,  excepting  the  fact  that 
the  number  of  strikers  has  been  largely 
increased    over  niglit. 

The  government,  with  the  aid  of  the 


New  Laces, 

Embroideries, 

Dress  Nets 

and  Veilings 

crisp,  beautiful  new  goods, 
and  marked  to  sell  at 
priceN  lower  than  you'd 
ever  expect  to  Ket  them 
for. 


NEW  SILKS 
AND  DRESS  GOODS 

Special  attention  is  called  to  the  beautiful 
lines  of  Foulards,  which  we  show  In  the 
choicest  designs  (of  the  spot  proof  quality), 
at  T.'ie,  85c  and  91.00:  also  to  the  much  wanted 
satins  and  Messaline  5  in  all  the  newest 
shades,  at  75c  and  $1.00. 

The  splendid  values  we  are  selling  in  Wool 
Dress  Goods  are  adding  to  our  reputation  as 
popular  priced  leaders.  The  novelty  and  plain 
Serges.  Prunella  cloths  Taffetas  and  Mohairs, 
which  we  show  at  50c,  75c  and  $1.00,  can't  be 
equaled  anywhere.     Co  ne  and  see  if  they  can. 


NEW  WASH 
GOODS 

ON  SALE 
TOMORROW 

Many  new  lines,  both  1ti 
white  and  colored,  received 
today,  will  be  on  sale  to- 
morrow, specially  priced 
for   a   quick   selling. 


New  Jewelry 


New  Gloves     I     New  Neckfixings 


DULUTH. 


K 


SUPERIOR. 


I 


.A   ^ 


5 


iJK 


■-^•-1     -    ■    ■^* 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD: 


FRIDAY.    MARCH    19,    1909. 


Harry  Mitchell's  Editorial 


THREE  WEEKS 

Only  three  weeks  and  Easter  will  be  here.  If 
you  want  to  get  a  Spring  Suit  for  Easter,  don't 
wait  to  the  last  minute — order  now. 

I  don't  care  what  the  weather  man  says — it's 
Spring  with  me  tomorrow.  It's  business  with  me 
and  it  ought  to  be  with  you.  So,  I  say  again, 
don't  wait  'till  the  last  minute,  but  order  your 
Spring  Clothes  now. 

My  entire  line  of  Spring  Importations  are  here 
awaiting  your  selection.  You  ought  to  see  my 
new  goods.  They  range  all  the  way  from  the 
genteel  patterns  to  the  newest  effects  in  exclusive 
designs. 

For  tomorrow 's  business  and 
all  next  week,  I  am  going  to 
give  you  an  eye-opener — 

500  New  and  beautiful  patterns  of  the 

very  latest  creations  for  Spring  wear,  guaranteed 
material,  pure,  all  wool,  warranted  in  the  piece  and 
after  being  made  up,  too.  The  same  patterns 
would  cost  you  of  any  other  tailor  $35  for  suit. 
My  price  for  tomorrow  and  all  next  week,  only 


Over  1 000  Patterns — single  suit  patterns 

— no  two  alike;  elegant,  up-to-date,  in  beautiful 
stripes,  grays,  browns,  greens,  every  delicate  shade; 
the  finest  goods  in  the  world.  They  are  made  in 
England,  and  to  my  order.  They  are  exclusive 
designs.  No  other  tailor  in  Duluth  has  got  them, 
and  if  they  had  they  would  ask  you  $45  and  $50 
for  a  suit.  My  price  for  tomorrow  and  all  next 
week  is 


I  want  every  man  who  is  thinking  of  buying  a 
suit  of  clothes  this  spring,  hand-me-down  or  tailor* 
made,  to  come  into  ni}-  store,  18  East  Superior 
street,  and  look  at  these  goods. 

Yours  truly, 

HARRY  MITCHELL, 

Store  18  East  Superior  St. 


Ol'T-OF-TOA^'X  MEX:  If  you  are  thinking  of  getting  some 
Spring  «'lotlifts.  don't  buy  any  hand-me-dovvnsi  Don't  order  from 
your  li)cal  tailor  because  he  will  soak  you  just  as  sure  as  you  are  a 
foot  high.  I  can  make  your  clothes  no  matter  where  you  live 
jiiid  guarantee  perfect  satisfaction.  All  you  have  to  do  is  to  write 
me  for  samples  and  mea.surement  blanks.  I  will  send  them  to 
you  free.  I  have  a  perfect  self-measuring  system  and  any  man 
can  tneasure  you  for  your  cloth>s  and  I  guarantee  the  fit.  My 
prices  range  from  |15,  $20.  $25.  ?30  and  $3.").  Please  write  me 
today  and  tell  me  about  the  kind  of  clothes  you  are  thinking  of 
getting.  Address  your  letter  to  Hariy  Mitchell,  18  Gast  Supe- 
rior street,  Duluth,  Minn. 


LONG  THIRST  OF  CLU^J 
MEMBERS    IN    DUL 
MAY  SOON  BE  QUE 


In  the  event  of  the  club  bill,  re- 
cently passed  by  the  house,  being  con- 
curred In  by  the  senate,  thus  permit- 
ting   duly    Incorporated    clubs    to    serve 

spirituous  liquors  without  the  pay- 
ment of  a  reg4ilar  saloon  license, 
which  tliey  are  rftjuired  to  do  at  the 
prtsent  tlme-uiuler«.the  recent  ruling  of 
the  state  supreme  court.  It  is  probable 
tliat  the  Duluth  dubs  will  reopen  their 
buffets. 

\Vhen  the  ruling  of  the  supreme 
court  went  Into  effect,  all  of  the  Du- 
luth clubs  abandoned  their  buffets.  In- 
(luiry  made  today,  brought  out  the 
.•statement  that  in  all  probability  tJie 
Klfclii  Gammi  club  would  reopt*n  Its 
buffet,  should  the  club  be  permitted 
to  iiperate  a  thirst  quenching  depart- 
ment without  the  payment  of  a  heavy 
license  fee. 

Secretary    Eva    of    the       Commercial 


club  did  not  know  ^v'JnHt  action  that 
organization  would  t|»1c<',  iln  the  event 
of  the  senate  concur fif* J^i\  the  action 
of   the    house. 

At  the  Northland  Country  club  It  was 
not  definitely  known  what  action  the 
l)oard  of  directors  would  take,  should 
the  club  bill  bccomd  a  -law,  but  the 
general  opinion  seems  to:  be  Chat  the 
buffet   would    be   reopened. 

Walter  Whitehead  was  the  only 
member  of  the  Douglas  colored  club 
present  when  The  Herald  called  up  that 
organization.  Wa-lter  never  drinks, 
when  in  training,  so  that  may  account 
for  his  apf)arent  Indifference  to  the 
question  as  to  whether  the  buffet 
would  he  installed.  However,  It  is 
quite  generally  believed  that  the  color, 
ed  club,  like  the  more  artstocratic 
clubs  of  the  city,  will  probably  open 
Its  buffet  If  the  club  bill  becomes  a 
law. 


"PETRIFIED  ICE"  PROVED  TO  BE 

ONLY  A  NEW  KIND  OF  FLOORING 


An  extremely  curious  crowd  of  more 
than  a  hundred  people  gathered  In 
front  of  the  I^yceum  building  this 
morning  to  witness  the  breaking  up  of 
some  hard  substance  that  resembled 
frozen    milk. 

"There's  an  example  of  this  country," 
exclaimed  one  Interested  Individual. 
"That's  lee.  Just  as  sure  as  anything, 
as  it  lias  been  frozen  solid  In  that  bar- 
rel for  .such  a  long  time  that  it  has  be- 
come   petrified." 

"Get  out,  your  transom's  open,"  was 
the  merry  comeback  of  another  in- 
dividual, as  he  gave  the  person  of  the 
first  part  a  contemptuous  look. 


BREACH  NOT 
A  WIDE  ONE 

Believed  That  Engineers 

and  Vessel  Owners 

Will  Agree. 

Engineers    Claim    That 

Not  More  Than  175 

Men  Have  Signed. 


From  the  office  of  the  marine  engin- 
♦^ers.  In  the  Manhattan  building,  comes 
.1  reply  to  the  statement  issui'd  from 
tlie  office  of  G.  --V.  Tomlinson  yesterday. 

According  to  the  statement  uiade  by 
H.U  officer  of  the  Kn«:lneer's  union, 
some  of  tJie  men  wiiose  names  appeared 
upon  the  list  as  liaving  signed  up  with 
I  he  Tomlinson  company,  whicli  was 
published  in  Tlie  Herald  yesterday. 
have  relurnetl  their  contracts  unsigned. 

This  officer  staled  that  lie  knew  per- 
sori.illy  of  more  than  one  of  ilie  en- 
gineers whose  names  were  upon  the 
Tomlinson  list,  who  have  returned  their 
contracts  unsigned.  Mr.  Tomlinson. 
however.  In  givins  out  the  list,  .stuted 
definitely  that  every  man  on  Jjie  list 
liad  signed,  and  that  he  had  two  appli- 
cations on  file  fur  the  one  vacancy  in 
his    fleet. 

According  to  the  bulletins  and  infor- 
ination  In  the  hands  of  the  lo«al  en- 
gineer.s'  office,  there  are  not  more  than 
175  marine  engineers  signed  up  at  tlie 
present  time.  These  men.  It  is  cluiined 
by  tlie  local  muiliu.  en»?ineer.x.  arc 
mostly  in  the  employ  of  the  Pittsburg 
.Steamship   eomi);iii>'. 

They  .say  that  President  Coulby  of 
the  Pittsburg  company  has  olTered  tlie 
marine  engineers  better  terms  than  tlie 
other  vessel  companies,  with  the  iiope 
that  a  large  number  of  engineers  will 
sign.  That  is,  the  enslneers  claim,  the 
reason  wliy  most  of  the  men  who  have 
yigned.  have  signed  with  the  Pittsl)urg 
company. 

The  engineers  claim  that  it  requires 
about  1.000  engineers  to  operate  the 
vessels  of  the  Great  I^akes.  They  claim 
that  there  are  not  more  than  170  or  175 
engineers  signed  up  at  the  present  time. 

As  a  matter  of  fact,  there  Is  not  a 
very  wide  difference  of  opinion  be- 
tween the  vessel  owners  and  tlie  ma- 
rine engineers.  The  latter  claim  that 
they  have  no  fight  with  the  vessel 
owners.  There  is  only  a  small  clause 
in  their  contracts  that  stands  in  the 
way  of  all  of  the  men  signing  for  the 
season.  The  question  of  pay  does  not 
enter    into    the    affair. 

The  marine  engineers,  or  least  manv 
of  them,  are  of  the  opinion  that  the 
boats  will  not  go  out  early  this  sea- 
son. In  this  view,  they  aglee  with 
many  of  the  vessel  owners.  Some  of 
the  engineers  are  of  the  opinion  that 
when  the  time  comes  foi-  the  boats  to 
Ko  out.  the  objectionable  clause  In 
thtir  contracts  will  not  result  In  an 
open  breach,   but  will  be  waived  by  the 


As  a  matter  of  fact,  many  of  the 
people  in  the  crowd  really  did  think 
that  the  hard,  white,  glistening  ma- 
terial was  ice.  It  looked  just  like  ice 
that  had  been  frozen  for  many  years. 

It  was  some  new  patent  flooring 
preparation.  The  stuff  is  poured  into 
barrels  in.  liquid  form.  It  gets  hard 
and  ti)  use  It.  It  is  necessar.v  to  break 
the  barrel  Into  bits,  pour  tVie  stuff  on 
some  hard  surface  anj  break  it  into 
small  bits.  This  was  what  tiie  work- 
men were  doing  when  the  crowd  gath- 
ered   around    them." 

The  substance  becomes  harder  than 
granite  when  It  congeals.  When  ft  Is 
broken  into  small  bits  it  u!  put  into  a 
vessel  and  a  solution  poured  over  it. 
It  then  assumes  tlie  form  of  a  paste. 
'  In  this  form  it  Is  poured  over  tlie  tioor. 


vessel  owners,  or  revised  In  some  man- 
ner agreeable  to  both  employer  and 
employe. 

In  discussing  the  Tonillnson  list  pub- 
lished In  The  Herald  yesterday,  the 
engineers  stated  that  t'le  men  signed 
by  thn  Tomlinson  company,  were  men 
who  did  not  live  hei'e.  It  was  stated 
that  tliese  men  we^o  fr6m  Detroit. 
Port  Huron,  Cleveland,  And  other  lower 
lake   ports.  ' 

Some  of  the  engineers  argue  that  the 
boats  won't  go  out  until  late  anyway, 
so  there  Is  no  use  In  signing  up  earlv. 
They  believe  that  Aii*?  .  objectionable 
clause  will  not  be  enCoiiised,  when  the 
opening  of  navigation  )-d|iJly  arrives. 


TONIGHT 

Senior  Class  of  D.  C.  H.  S. 
Presents 

"Diamonds  and  Hearts** 

A  conie<l.v  drama  in  tliree  acts,  by 
E.  W  Alerriman,  under  the  direction 
of  A.  K;*5I.  Custance,  at  High  School 
Auditorium,   at   8   p.   m. 

CienernI    AdinlMwIon,   :!5    Centn. 
IteMerved  Sealu,  50,.roiitM. 


ARRESTED  TOR 
THRASHING  GIRL 

High    School    Principal 

Whipped  Miss  Aged 

19  Years. 

Wilkesbarre,  Pa..  .March  19. — Prof. 
Clayton  Keller,  principal  of  the  high 
sclioo!  at  Laceyville.  neat  here,  was  ar- 
rested today,  charged  with  tlirashlng 
•Miss  Ruth  Russell,  a  19-year-old  girl 
pupil,  at  his  school.  The  charge  was 
made  by  Judson  Russell,  father  of  the 
girl,  and  Kellar  gave  bail.  Tlie  case 
comes  up  at  the  April  term  of  criminal 
court,  llie  technical  charge  being  as- 
.sault  and  battery,  it  is  alleged  tliat 
.Vliss  Itussell,  in  a  spirit  of  playfulness*, 
poured  some  water  on  Prof.  Kellar's 
chair,  and  when  he  sat  down,  there 
was  a  splash,  and  he  arose  in  consid- 
erable discomfort.  It  Is  furtlier  alleged 
that  when  he  found  out  who  was  guilty, 
he  thrashed  the  girl,  who  is  alm<jst  as 
big  as  he.  until  there  were  black  and 
blue  marks  upon  her  bod.v- 


Oliver    Im    :\lad«    Senntor. 

Washington.  .March  1  !*. — George  T. 
Oliver  look  the  oath  of  office  as  I'nited 
States  senator  from  Per>Hsylvania  im- 
mediately after  the  senate  met  today. 
.Mr.  Oliver  was  accompanied  to  the  desk 
of  the  presiding  officer  b.v  his  colleague. 
Mr.  Penrose,  and  the  owtb  was  admln- 
isterd  by  .Mr.  Frye.  prfjiildent  pro  tern. 
•     •     •• 

One  day  is  time  enoygii  in  which  to 
hold  an  election,  and  ifet  the  returns; 
and  usually  one  day  Is  time  enough  to 
test  your  proposition  lii  a  want  ad.  and 
get  most  of  the  returns. 


One  Preventative 

IS  WORTH 

WO  Cures 


Wear  BUSTER  BROWN  SHOES 


li 


HEN  the  chilling  damp  rains  come 
and  make  the  ground  muddji 
and  all  out-of-doors  disagreeable, 
every  boy  and  girl  should  have  a  ne^  ^ 
pair  of  BUSTER  BROWN  BLUE 
RIBBON  SHOES.   They  are  the  Shoes 

for  wet  weather.    They  protect  the  feet  and  hold  the 

shape,  and  will  stand  the  hardest  kind  of  wear. 

C  Of  all  the  times  of  the  year,  this  is  the  time  when  the 

children's  footwear  should  be  carefully  looked  after. 

C  There  is  no  other  shoe  like  the  BUSTER  BROWN 

BLUE  RIBBON  SHOE.  -  ^ 

r 

YOU  CAN  GET  THEM  AT  _ 

This  store.  The  line  is  complete  and  embraces  Kiidwid  Calf,  also 
Tan,  Brown  and  Patent  Leather  Dress  Shoes,  Lace  and  Button — 
New  Oxfords  and  .\nkle-Strap  Pumps.  ,,.►,. 

WIELAND  SHOE  CO., 

120  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET.V'tCv 


VETOED  BY 
THEMAYOR 

He  Does  Not  Approve  of 

Changes  in  Building 

Ordinance. 


Also  Wants  Railroad  to 

Pay    for    Bridge 

Approach. 


There  are  one  or  two  features  libout 
the  amendment'  to  the  building  ordi- 
nance, adopted  by  the  council  last 
Monday  evening,  which  do  not  meet 
with  Mayor  Haven's  approval.  Before 
attaching  his  signature  to  the  measure 
lie  will  ask  the  aldermen  to  vote  in 
lavor  of  a  cliange. 

The  amendment  i.s  designed  to  change 
the  construction  of  the  Commercial 
club  building  at  the  corner  of  Fourth 
avenue  west  and  First  street.  The 
mayor  says  that  with  the  measure 
worded  as  It  is  at  present,  a  three- 
story  building  covering  a  whole  block 
miglit  be  built,  and  have  no  more  than 
one  fire  e.seape  and  one  standpipe.  He 
asks  that  this  be  changed,  and  that 
provision  be  made  for  a  proper  num- 
ber of  Are  escapes.  He  also  insists 
that  elevator  doors  in  buildings  be  so 
arranged  that  ihey  cannot  be  opened 
from  the  outside,  except  by  the  op- 
erators. 

Another  resolution  adopted  by  the 
council  Monday  evening  that  did  .not 
meet  with  the  api>roval  of  Mayor 
Haven  was  one  directing  the  board  of 
public  works  to  proceed  with  the  re- 
pair work  on  the  Sixth  avenue  west 
viaduct.  Under  the  council  resolution, 
the  railroad  would  have  to  pay  only  a 
part  ot  the  cost  of  repairing  the  via- 
duct, where  the  city  attorney  says  it 
should  pay  the  full  cost.  The  entire 
cost  of  repairing  the  Sixth  avenue  via- 
duct will  amount  to  $3_000  or  more, 
and  it  Is  claimed  tliat"  the  railroad 
company  can  be  made  to  stand  the 
entire  cost  of  the  work,  as  was  the 
case  when  the  I>ake  avenue  viaduct 
was  repaired.  Mayor  Haven  vetoed 
the  resolution  and  the  council  will  be 
so  notified  next  Monday  niglit.  Prob- 
ably the  railroad  company  will  be  in- 
structed to  go  ahead  with  the  repairs, 
and  if  it  fails  to  <lo  so,  the  work  will 
be  performed  by  the  city  and  the  ex- 
pen.se    charged    up    to    the    railroad. 


FIELD  MEET  IS 
WON  BY  OXFORD 


Three  Rhodes  Scholars 
From  United  States  Dis- 
tinguish Themselves. 

London,  March  19. — The  Oxtord-Cam- 
bridge  field  sports  at  Queens'  club  to- 
day, were  won  by  the  former  univer- 
sity, six  events  to  four. 

It  had  been  anticipated  that  O.  E. 
Putnam,  a  Rhodes  scholar  from  Kan- 
sas would  win  the  hanuner  throw  for 
Oxford,  but  he  had  to  be  contented 
witli  second  place.  Watson  of  Cam- 
bridge, beat  all  'varsity  records,  with 
a  record  of  148  feet  10  Inches.  Putnam 
was  .second  with  14:i  icet  10  inches  and 
I).  G.  Herring,  a  Rhodes  scholar  from 
Princeton,  was  thlrtl,  with  12:;   feet. 

The  hundred-yards  dash  was  won  by 
I.,.  C.  Hull  of  Michigan,  a  Rhodes 
scholar.     The   time  was   10  2-5  second.s. 

Hull  scored  anotlier  victory  for  Ox- 
ford and  the  American  Rhodes  scliol- 
ars,  by  winning  the  t]uarter-mlle  run. 
His    time    was    fiO    ;!-.')    seconds. 


PAYS  TO  BE  GOOD 
BALL  PLAYER 


Comiskey     Will     Offer 

Fielder  Jones  Princely 

Salary. 

Chicago,  March  19. — .\  special  dis- 
patch to  the  Daily  News  from  Los  An- 
geles today,  states  that  President 
Comiskey  will  offer  Fielder  Jones  a. 
salary  "larger  than  that  given  any 
member  of  President  Taffs  cabinet,  " 
to  manage  the  Chicago  American 
league  club  this  season.  .Tones  b^ 
heavily  Interested  in  timber  lands  on 
the  Pacific  coast,  and  has  named  $20,- 
000  as  the  price  of  his  services,  not 
wltli  any  idea  tliat  he  will  get  It,  but 
as  an  Intimation  that  his  business  in- 
terests are  paramount.  Tlie  dlspatcli 
states  that  the  offer  will  be  made  to 
.lones  when  the  club  starts  on  its  re- 
turn trip  by  way  ol  Portland,  Or., 
where  Jones   make  his  headquarters. 


ONE  DAY  MORE. 

Big  Bowling  Congress  \>  ill  tome  to 
Close  Saturday. 

Pittsburg,  Pa..  March  19. — Bowlers 
from  Ohio,  West  Virginia  and  Western 
Pennsylvania  will  be  prominent  In  the 
sessions    today.      The    tournament    will 

end  tomorrow.  During  the  day  one 
five-men.  three  doubles  and  seven  sin- 
gle events  will  be  played.  The  double 
games  started  at  10  a.  in.  High  scores 
in    the    first    double    event   are: 

Stauffer-Valentlne,  Breckenrldge,  W. 
Va..  1,09;',:  Love- Hoffman,  Cleveland. 
1,086-  Ilobertson-Stewart,  Y'oungstown, 
1,080." 

Curling  Games. 

At  the  Curling  club  the  .semi-finals  in 
The  Herald  event  will  be  played  off 
between  Woodruff  and  Catterson.  The 
winner  of  this  same  will  meet  Ifall's 
C  class  rink  Saturday  evening  In  the 
finals. 

In  the  A  class  finals  In  the  Manley- 
McLennan  event.  Hall  will  tonight  meet 
Brewer. 


CHIEF  JU.ST1<"PV.S  GOLF  .STROKE. 
London  Standard:  The  lord  chief 
justice,  now  on  circuit  at  Birmingham, 
had  a  curious  experience  while  play- 
ing golf  over  the  Edgbaston  course 
with  Walter  Whiting,  the  local  pro- 
fessional. At  the  second  hole  his 
lordship  drove  into  a  bunker,  the  ball 
lying  badly  under  the  bank.  Taking 
his  niblick,  he  hit  hard.  The  ball 
jumped  into  the  air  and  dropped  into 
his  right  hand  Jacket  pocket. 


CLOSIIIIB  OUT  SALE 
STILL  GOING  ON ! 


Our  Closing  Out  Sale  is  winning  the  attention  of  the 
people  of  Duluth.  It  isn't  every  day  that  merchandise  is 
offered  at  the  prices  quoted  by  us.  The  public  is  appreciat- 
ing this  fact,  and  we  have  been  kept  very  busy  waiting  on 
customers. 

This  sale  is  worth  your  attention,  consideration  and 
patronage.  It  will  pay  you  to  take  advantage  of  our 
offerings. 

Come  now  and  get  a  good  choice  of  what  is  in  our  store. 
This  is  your  opportunity. 

$1.25  DRESS  GOODS 89 

.65  ALL-WOOL   SERGE 43 

1.50  TAN  COLORED  BATISTE .90 

.40  FANCY    SUITINGS 22^^ 

.30  FANCY    SUITINGS 15 

.121/2  DRESS    GINGHAMS 061/4 

.15  DRESS  GtNGHAMS lli/o 

1.50  LADIES'   WAISTS 75 

2.00  LADIES'   BELTS 1.00 

.50  LADIES'   SUPPORTERS— 1   lot 25 

.25  WINDSOl^  TIES 16 

.45  SATIN  COVERED  BUTTONS  all  colors        .25 
.50  LACE  CURTAIN  REMNANTS— each.  . .       .19 

1.50  COTTON  BLANKETS,  large  size 89 

1.00  COTTON  BLANKETS,  fancy 66 

11.00  WOOL  BLANKETS 7.26 

2.50  COMFORTS 1.69 

2.50  RUGS— 27tc54 1.69 

CHILDREN'S  FLEECED  UNDERWEAR 
from  8c  up,  according  to  size. 


We  also  will  sell  at  a  loss,  all  our  store  fixtures. 
.Any  one  contemplating  the  purchase  of  fixtures,  will  find 
this  is  a  chance  of  a  lifetime  to  get  them  at  a  very  low 
figure. 


YTZ  CO., 


1927-1929  W.  Superior  St 


Zenith  Phone  562. 


Bell  Phone  1812. 


FLATS  AUK  COMPl.KTKD. 

Other  SimilarBiiildiiigs.lre  Planned 
for  West  End  Tlii^  Year. 

The  .Siindeen  Hats,  at  the  corner  of 
Twenty-flrst  avenue  west  and  Second 
street,  have  been  complied  and  are 
ready  for  occupancy.  These  are  a 
type  of  dwelling  house  that  the  West 
end  is  to  see  more  of. 

It  Is  understood  tliat  J  )hn  Downey 
will  erect  some  tliis  summer,  and  there 
is  talk  of  others. 


West  End  Shortrails. 

.John  J.  Aloe  of  tlie  firn  of  .lohn  J. 
Moe  &  Sons  company,  has  returned 
from  New  York  and  oilier  Eastern 
cities,  where  he  has  bee  i  doing  liis 
spring  buying. 

Sunda.N  school  teachers  in  the  Nor- 
wegian Lutheran  churches  of  the  West 
end  attended  the  conference  of  all  the 
.N'orwegan  Lutheran  teachers  at  the 
Head  of  the  Lakes,  lield  iast  evening 
ill    West    Duluth. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  George  ]>Jelson  have 
leturned  from  llibbing,  where  they 
have  been   visiting  relatives. 

Rev.  G.  H.  Voung  of  Superior  was 
the  speaker  at  the  revival  services  in 
the  Central  Baptist  church  last  even- 
ing. 

The  Young  Ladies'  Society  of  the 
First  Swedish  Baptist  churi-h  will  meet 
for  Bible  study  this  evening  at  125 
Nineteenth  avenue  west. 

Itev.  i^wan  Nelson  of  Bif:  Springs,  S. 
D.,  will  preach  at  the  imrning  and 
evening  services  in  the  V  rst  Swedish 
Baptist    church    Suiidaj-. 

The  Young  Peoples'  Soc  ety  of  Zion 
Norwegian  Lutiieran  church  will  meet 
this  evening  in  tlie  church  parlors. 

The  City  Democratic  club  will  meet 
tliis  e\'ening  in  Sloan's  hall.  The  reor- 
Kanizatiiin  will  be  perfected,  and  re- 
ft eshments    served. 

Mi.ss  Olga  Peterson  of  Kau  Claire, 
Wis.,  is  the  guest  of  Mss  ^linnie  Olson 
of  Twentieth   avenue  west. 

Cliarles  Coombs  has  left  for  Alberta, 
Can.,  where  he  will  make  his  home  in 
the  future. 

Miss  Selma  Anderson  of  Washbnrn, 
Wis.,  is  visiting  friends  in  the  West 
end. 

The  funeral  of  P^velyn  V  ctorla  Hed- 
man,  the  infant  daughter  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  C.  A.  Hednian  of  West  Sixth, 
street,  who  died  yesterditV,  will  be 
held  tomorrow  afternoon  at  the  resi- 
dence. The  interment  will  take  place 
at    tlie    Lutheran    cemetery 

J.  J.  Frey  has  returned  from  New 
York. 

The  Varde  club,  compos*  d  of  young 
Norwegian  people,  will  hold  Its  sec- 
ond meclinK  temorrow  evening  In 
Columbia  hall.  Plans  will  be  made  for 
an  entertainment  to  be  given  In  tlie 
near  future. 

The  funeral  of  Mrs.  .Toscphlne  Need, 
wife  of  Victor  Need  of  L'OOG  West  Sith 
street,  will  he  held  Monday  at  For- 
ward's undertaking  rooms.  The  Inter- 
ment win  take  place  at  Union  ceme- 
tery. Her  husband  was  uway  In  the 
woods   during   lier    last   illness. 


QUIET  DAYS 
FOR  THE  POLICE 

Harmless  Vagrants  and 

Beggars  About  Only 

Prisoners  Arraigned 

Drunks,  vagrants,  and  beggars  ara 
about  the  only  class  of  people  to  be 
arraigned  in  police  court  these  days, 
and   there  are   not  very  many  of  them. 

This  morning,  .John  McDonald  plead- 
ed guilty  to  begging  on  the  street,  and 
was  fined  Jl.j  and  costs  or  twenty  days 
in  jail.  Being  without  funds,  he  had 
to    take    the   Jail    sentence. 

Two  crippled  vagrants,  walking  with 
the   aid    of   crutches,   lined    up   with    tho 

grist.  One  of  them,  10m il  Luiidermo, 
was  allowed  to  go  umler  susj>ende«l 
sentence,  provided  he  left  town  today. 
The  other,  Pet»?r  Slone.  was  given 
twenty  days  in  jail,  Louis  Nelson,  also 
arrested  on  a  vagrancy  charge,  \^'as 
also    sentenced    t<»    iwenty    days    in    jail. 

• 

Kmerson  W'as  a  notable  sufferer  fi'oni 
the  vagaries  of  memory.  His  biogra- 
pher relates  that  he  met  him  one  day 
in  Boston_  apparently  at  a  loss  for 
something,"  and  asked  him  wliere  he 
was  going.  "To  dine,"  said  Kmerson, 
"with  a  very  ol<l  and  dear  friend.  I 
know  where  she  lives,  but  I  h<jpe  she 
won't  ask  me  her  name,"  and  then  he 
proceeded  to  describe  her  as  "the 
mother  of  the  wife  of  the  young  man  — 
the  tall  man — who  speaks  so  well,"  and 
so  on,  until  his  Interlocutor  guessed  to 
whom  he  was  referring. 


V 


J 


No  Matter  ^^'hat 
You  Wani: 

A  Want  Ad  in  this  pa- 
per will  meet  the  eye  of 
some  one  who  can  sup- 
ply it. 


Tlie  best  there  is,  from  the 
best  tliat  make  them. 

Stylish  Spring  Suits  and 
Overcoats 

from  the  "liou.se  of  Kiippen 
heimer." 

WILSON  BROS. 

NEWEST  COATS, 

and  SHIRTS, 

soft  and  stiff  bosoms. 

The  celebrated  GORDON 
HATS,  and  the  renowned 

Foot-Schultz  Shoes. 


CHARLES  MORK, 

1930  West  Superipr  St. 


.«-t= 


r 


-^    '■'     ■  —  I  fXiZ 


•^r^  ■ 


I    'w.      — 


..  »  *«  I   ■ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


t\ir  WILL  BK  OPKN  LATE  T01»I0KK0\V— EXTRA   SALESPEOPLE 
WE  Wli  «^  »Jj  ^j^  ^_^^  jjj^  WAITED  ON  PROMPTLY. 


JEWELRY  CO. 


330  West  Superior  Street, 
Dulutli,  Minn. 


Tomorrow  Last  Saturday  Bui  One 


Of  this   ever-incrtasing   Wonder   Clearanct-   Sale, 
gr.  w    the    bargains.         Bigger    and    bigger    grow 
Would  like  to  j^ee  yuu  here  tomorrow. 


Bttier   and 
th^    crowds. 


better 
We 


The  Popular  Store 


Tnmorrrw.    Satiinlay.    Mnrtli    20th. 
to    the    GOI,D-FILLEI>    HAT    PINS     we 

Our   price   has  always   been   S5c — other   deaiers 
day  only,   we  wUl  sell  two  to  each  customer,  as 
44c  ettK-h.        We  will  also   c  ffer  to 


we    will    call    your    attention 

will    place    on    Special    Sale. 

ask  you  $1.00.       This 

long  as  they  last,  for 

the  public,  any  article  in  our  store 


$11.85 
.$11.85 
.$11.85 
.$11.85 
.$11.85 
.$11.85 
.$11.85 

$11.85 

$11.85 
.$11.85 
.$11.85 

$11.85 


marked    $21  00.    lor  $11.85.        This   will  give   you   any— 

$ l:  1 . 00   Watch    for    

$L'1.0('  Scarf  Pin  for   

$1.1  ("O  Cuff  1-inks  for    

$21.0i>  Neck  Lace  or  Festoon  for •■ 

$L'1.00  Piece  of  Sterling  Silver  Ware  for 

$2l!oO  Fit  OP  Cut   Glass   for 

121.00   I'mbrella  or  Cane   for    • 

$21*00   Ring   for    

$21.(kfr  Brooch   for    

$21  00  Beauty  Pin  Set  for 

$21.0tf    Bracelet    for    .  .  .- 

$21.00  Set  of  Dessert  Spoons  or  Forks  for   .  .  ., 

$21  00    ShopiMiig    Bag    for    il,«- 

$21.00   Tea   Set    for    '2 

$21  00    Statue    for    $11.8o 

$21.00  worth  of  Sterling  Silver  Ware,  as  many  pieces  as 
you  can  get  togtther.  amounting  to  J 21  00.  for  $11.8.5 — in  the 
follr.wiiifT  patterns:  rianjieline.  William  P.  Vlkiiifr,  Majestic. 
Ornnjie  nio!^M)ni.  K«i»l.aci.  iSridal  Ro.s<\  Hour  do  Li.s,  Suffolk. 
Antique.  Uecrain  and  Mount  Vernon. 

Thirty   to   33  1-3    ptr   >.»  su   discount  on   everything  in   the 
store,  above  or  below  $21.00. 
Keep  in  mind,  we  have  huodrtds  of  articUs  in  the  sale  not  men- 
tioned  here.        Come  for  what  you  waiit.        It's,  here. 


HERALD'S  WEST  DULUTH  DEPARTlHiENT 


J.  J.   !tlornn,  405  Central   Ave. 


BRANCH    OFFlCKSi 


A.    JeuMen,    330    North    57th    Ave.    \%'eMt. 


To  Our  Trade: 

Wc  have  been  told  by  manv  of  our  patrons  that  other  jewelers 
here  are  more  worried  about  our  Clearance  Sale  than  some  mine 
owners  are  over  the  tonnage  tax.  They  pi  edict  all  kinds  of  trouble 
if  we  do  not  quit  demoralizing  the  jeweh-y  trade,  as  they  say  jew- 
elry- stores  have  got  to  have  a  good  profit,  and  here  we  are  '-^  most 
Kiving  things  away,  when  business  is  cjuiet  and  prices  should  be 
put  up  inst.  ad  of  down.  But.  dear  people,  let  them  worry— we 
are  pot.  We  planned  this  sale  weeks  ago  and  are  carrying  it  out 
just  as  plnnr.ed.  We  expected  to  take  a  big  loss  to  quickly  reduc^e 
our  stocks,  and  we  are  doing  it  willingly.  This  store,  differs  from 
the  "vofik  -em"  ones  that  are  now  doing  so  much  complaining,  as 
we  believe  in  many  transactions  with  small  profits, 
trade  increa-ts  our  per  cent  of  profit  will  decrease 
fine  busines.-^  In  l&OT— a  lai-ger 
all  records  this  year. 


one    in 


and    as    our 

We    did    a 

we    will    break 


1908 — and 
HEXRKKSEX   JEWELRY  CO 


ERICK  ANDERSON,  Agent, 

932  LUMBER  EXCHANGE  BUILDING,  MINNEAPOLIS. 


Atllroiiilnvk    Insurnnte    Company. 

Frill. li.al    .rt......    N>«    V.rl.     N.    V       (Organlzol    1. 

ISOe  ;  G.  A.  .Milctll.  presiileM ;  K.  H 
•«rtl;:ry.  AMcrnr.v  w  acupt  ftnite  iii 
ConimJfsl'.utr    if    liisurauoe. 

{•Ksu  r.\riTAT.    lifp. 000.00. 

INCOME    IN    It08. 

Reiil?    and  ii.ttre^t 

Fruiii  ;.U  otiitr  -ourtes 

Tc'tal  inoT'ine  ,,„ 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    l»C8. 

Araouni  raid  U  r  !">!•«•>       ' 

CpmmL-fi.nfi   aud    Irtkfcrate ■ 

Palarl.s   an.l  Un  tt  i.mc«i».   «g«iU  »nU 

tlDDll  >f»        ■ ,■■..' 

T«x.>i    fw    r»nt«  antl  ottust  real  wtate 

«lI'*ti»<S         

DtTidtiiU!'  :iid  intcrtj.t 

All  I '.her  disfiiTMRj tilts   


Miiiii»ii'*i«- 


l.'i.STl  6' 

i.ies.is 

261  >r?  "4 

174  ?Ui.O.': 
73.76C.S1 

5  606  f>6 

20.000  ('C 

5.077. Ho 


Tital  ili»KifSfn*iiil»   

Bicrss  ft  vU*burs(meTiT«  rvcr  lnc<rae.. 

ASSETS   DEC     31.    I9C». 
Bcndx   r.nrt  «:("'te  iwi.ol 
Ca?li  ii'  iftUe  iiiid  In  Kti"''-  ■•• 

At. run".    intfrt«t    ai.-'    »^"»^. .  _■, 

Prvmliiii:''    '-i.    <'  irx-    «'f    ctUlerti™ 

All   <ther   filniittKl   n»5»ts. 
Dul'ut     si'etiiil     ilcptsU 
lisiMlJl;    tliirton 


leDS     t7 .7 13.07 


M2.768.75 
iC. 915.01 

307. 250.  fO 

74.105  M 

3.J20.83 

44,007.01 

2.00 

7.713.07 


Lumber   InMiirnuor   (  tiinpany    of 
Mew     \urk. 

rrSnclral  office.  New  Y<rh.  N.  Y.  iOn:i.r.iznl  U. 
IWU  i  G.  A.  MlUhell,  irtslilerit:  K.  H.  .MiKclrey, 
MiTtUiry.  .Mtcmty  li>  acupt  service  in  Miiiiiescta. 
(.'I'luiulssiiiur  of  liisumiu-e. 

CASH    OAriTAI..    $200,000. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums    othtr   tliai.    i.ni.ttuaib $      270.3."0.7i 

Ktiits   i.r.1   iiittu!*! ^^i'rlej 

hiuin    ;.il    utlitr    si'urres 1  iC-.84 


Tt'Ul  admittei)  ass-yw ■  •,•  •  .     . 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    IS08. 

Unr:"'l  ItJ^'s  anil  lU.iiu.- ♦ 

Hell  "iiraiKt   n*»re    ■■■■       •  ■      \ 

Sfcl.-.rtiK     ixi-tristt.    tases.    «U»liJeiids   and 

iritfn^t    t';iK- 

Ccm'ni?!'i<  Ii-    f.nd    trokcrage 

All   'tl.ir  Uii'oiUtits 

Caiiti.1  stc^k  paid  up 


$      420.e7i.74 


IS. 570. 42 
113.083.64 

4.300.0.'! 

6  815  ;e 

4  Vi4.(".' 

ioo.o(0.:'ii 


Tital  liaUJiliiu  Includlt.g  capital. 


•-1  fc!>4.11 


Net    .nrr!!.. »        «''-^'*«^ 

RISKS   AND    PREMIUMS.    '9C8   BUSINESS 
Fin-   r>''-   \"!:tuii   dcriik   the  je;.r     .        t 
Prt  iiiuiii-   reicired  tliiTtcii 
Net  aniiunr  Ir.  f <  r.  e  .".t  «r.d  ftf  _tl.e_j«ir 


•  U  124.00 
/tC  !  18.71 
12.r.88.4St2.(»0 
ViisiNESS   IN   MINNESOTA    IN    :SC8. 

FlFe  Ui^A--^ 

I{i.-ks    wntuii 

I'riitiiiinis   If.  livetl 

l.,4  -.-is;   ir.inrrtd 

l,<i^»<-s   paid 

Aim  uiit   at   risk 

Slate    <'f    Mii.iifv"  trt.    I'lpanmn.t 

I   Herety   Oirtlfy. 


Tot&l   inccinf  ' 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 

.■Vmoiint  i.ilu  It  r  lc>.-r}'     $ 

Oommlssiorie    ai.d    In  jt*Tiigc 

Saiarlis  ar.d  fees  of  olTlnrs.   kgtnt*  and 

enipl(>><-s  ......      . 

Taxt^.   fi«*.    rents  and  othei  real  esuite 

expn!st»        .    

Di'.iueiids   ai.d   Intersi^t 

.Ml  otlKT  disliursuncuts 


Tital    disbursements * 

Excess  of   disl'iir«enitiit«   I'tr   iiiiome     ..$ 
ASSFTS    DEC.    31.    ;9C8. 

Bends   and   stcik^    cw.ifd $ 

Oath  in  ifTlic  aid  in  bank 

Accrued    Ir.nrcet    and     rtnta 

Pinnlunis  In  ii!UP«e  «f  colle<tlcn 

.iiii   i)th»T   n('.ni5't<d   asuet's 

Ijfduct    special     depislt     lefs    $46,406.55 
liaMUfy    therecn 

T«  til  atlmitted  as«etfi $ 

Assets  M't   admllttd     |14f.  SlO.r-W 

LIABILITIES   DEC.    31.    I9C8. 
Vr.pald    loffts    :  i.d    ^laiiiis'  $ 

Keji!«uranct    r€s«  rve    

Salariis.    exi<eijEcs.    tM€9,    dlvldtntto   ai.d 

luttresf   due 

Cfimmisi'lcn   ai;d    bn  kemge 

.A.11    otl*-r    llaliilitles 

Capital   ttcx  k   paid   up 

TctiJ  Ijabillliis  including  capital I 


288.020.58 

185.?,f'7.11 
7».7t'4.77 

6.001. CO 

6.875. f4 

20  OOC.OO 

5,641.23 


TROUBLES  OF  A 
SCHOOL  TEACHER 

Miss  Katherine  Macbeth 

Outlines  Difficulties  of 

Small  Salaries. 

The  troubles  a  teacher  in  the  public 
scliocls  lias  in  trying  to  make  lier 
needs*  fit  her  salary  were  luliy  de- 
stribtd  last  evening  by  Miss  Katherine 
Macbeth  ol"  Proctor,  at  the  meeting  of 
the  Literary  .^'ocJety  of  the  Westmin- 
ster  I'resbvterian  Christian  i:ndeavor 
society,  at"  the  home  of  Mrs.  Elvina 
McClelland,  615  North  Filty-ninth 
avenue    west.  ,    ^ 

Miss  Macbeths  talk  was  most  inter, 
estinfe'.  She  stated  that  even  with  the 
most  careiul  economy,  the  teacher  on 
an  ordinary  salary  has  a  liard  time 
making  ends  meet.  For.  Miss  Macbeth 
explained,  outside  of  paying  board, 
rent  and  buying  necessary  clothes, 
there  are  any  number  ol  subscriptions 
tor  charities  and  churches,  dues  to 
clubs  and  societies,  the  occasional  cost 
ol  flowers  for  a  sick  pupil,  and  little 
gifts  at  Christmas,  all  6f  which  teach- 
ers are  expected  to  take  out  of  a  small 
salary.  Miss  Macbeth  told  of  one  case 
wiiere  a  young  teacher  whom  she  knew 
saved  for  several  moniiis  and  managed 
to  get  ahead  |3(».  when  she  was  re- 
iliiired  to  pay  $lti.r.()  to  the  teachers" 
agency  through  which  she  secured  her 
position. 

Charles  I.  Towner  spoke  strongly  in 
favor  of  higher  salaries  for  teachers 
in  (he  public  schools,  and  sev:-ral 
others  present  indorsed  his  sentiments 
on  the  subject. 

The  ta'ks  of  the  evening  were  inter- 
sptihfcd    witli    several    nui.sical    luimber.s. 

duluthIpTthe 
eye  ofthe  east 

J.  J.  Frey  Returns  From 
Attending   President 
Taft's  Inauguration. 

•■People  in  the  Ka.-l  art  fast  waking 
Up  to  the  great  possibilities  in  Duiuth" 
said  J.  J.  Frey,  who  relumed  yester- 
day from  a  two  weeks'  trip  in  the 
East.  "They  are  beginning  to  see 
what  great  prospects  lliis  city  has 
ahead  of  it." 

Mr.  Frev  said  that  nearly  every  one 
with  whom  he  talked  while  away 
seemed  to  l^e  familiar  with  iJuUith  and 
its    great   advantages. 

He  went  to  Washington  to  witness 
the  inauguration  and  was  among  the 
thousands  who  sat  out  in  the  storm  for 
hours  waiting  for  William  H.  Taft  to 
appear,  onlv  to  be  disappointed.  .Mr. 
J'rey  says  that  on  Thursday  morning 
March  i.  the  streets  of  Washington 
were  covered  with  fully  three  inches  of 
slush  and  more  was  falling  all  the 
time.  Umbrellas  and  overshoes  went 
like  hot  cakes,  until  some  stores-  didn't 
have  any   left   in  stock. 

In  New  York  Mr.  Frey  called  on 
Charle.s  A.  Towne  and  talked  over 
former  I>uluth  days  with  him  for  a 
short  time.  Mr.  Frey  says  that  Mr. 
Towne  is  of  the  firm  of  Maxwell. 
Towne  &  .Spellman.  attorneys,  and  that 
thev  have  magnificent  offices  in  a 
large    liuilding    near    Wall    street. 

Before  returning  home  Mj.  Fre\i 
visited  Boston.  He  returned  to  Puluth 
by  way  of  Niagara  Falls,  Buffalo  and 
Chicago. 


1 


I  games    and     JK'or«* 
Clark.    11:    Meldahl. 


Mickish,   10, 
Waiie.    10. 


Donald.     13, 
If)     vs.    Evered, 
vsk  Hi'wltt'.   8;  Zauft,  12, 


vs. 
10; 

VB. 


DEDICATION  SET 
FOR  END  OF  MARCH 

Members  of  Euclid  Lodge 

Will  Formally  Open 

New  Temple. 

The  new  Masonic  temple  of  the 
Euclid  lodge  No.  1^8  will  be  formally 
dedicated  Wednesday  evening,  March 
31.  This  was  announced  officially  this 
afternoon  by  the  committee  in  charge 
of    the    affair. 

On  the  date  set  for  the  exercises 
Grand  Master  Pwan  will  come  to  Du- 
luth  to  conduct  the  ceremonies.  It  will 
be  a  public  dedication  held  in  the  new 
temple.  The  first  part  of  the  evening 
will  be  devoted  to  a  reception  and  the 
latter     to     the     dedication     ceremonies. 


today's  session  of  the  Wisconsin  sena- 
torial primary  hearing.  Chairman  Marsh 
accused  attorneys  for  Senator  Stephen- 
son of  coaching  witnesses.  The  charge 
called  forth  an  indignant  denial  from 
Attorney  W.  E.  Black,  who  is  looking 
after  Stephenson's   Interests. 

GILBERT  is  NOT 
INCORPORATED 

Supreme    Court   RuUs 

Against  Mesaba  Range 

Village's  Status. 

St     Paul.    Minn.,    March    19.— (Special 
to  The   Herald.) — In  an  action  brought 
the   state   of   Minnesota   to   test   the 


Pure  IJiien  Ilandkisrchiefs 

at,   each 4c 

Jet  Hal  Pins,  each 25c 


Rhine  Slone  Hat  Tins,  each .  .  50c 
Broach  Pins 25c,  30c,  75c 


validity  of  the  Incorporation  of  the  vil- 
lage   of   Gilbert,   on    the   Mesaba    range, 
the    supreme    court    of    the    state 
given    judgment      that      "upon    the 


has 

ad- 

in- 

the 

is   ordered 


VISIT  IRVINO  SCHOOL. 


Two  Members  of  School  Boanl  on 
Tour  of  Inspection. 

■VN^ilson  G.  Crosby  and  L,.  A.  Barnes 
of  iHe  board  of  education  yesterday 
visited  the  Irving  scliool  on  a  tour  of 
inspection. 

Principal  Foster  showed  the  visitors 
through  each  of  the  departments,  so 
that  they  got  a  good  idea  of  what  is 
being  done  along  every  line.  The  mem- 
bers of  the  iioard  of  education  expect 
to  visit  another  West  Duluth  scliool 
ne.\t  week. 


West  l>uhith  Briefs. 

The  funeral  of  Otto  Anderson,  aged 
28,  employeii  at  the  Proctor  shops. 
who  died  yesterday  morning,  will  take 
place  tills  evening  from  the  residence 
and  the  bodv  ->vm  he  taken  to  Little 
Falls  for  buriai.  Mrs.  K.  C.  Ainsley. 
a  sister  of  the  deceased,  lives  in  Proc- 
tor, but  his  relatives  live  in  Little 
Falls. 

It  was  at  the  home  of  Frank  Cashin, 
r.609  Cody  street  tliat  the  clock  burned 
Wednesday  nlg^V  not  at  Jolm  CasU.- 
in's.    as    reported.  - 

Stanley  Huss^il  of  Virginia  is  regis- 
tered   at    the    Ibiilips    hotei. 

Stanley  Stapita,  son  of  Lyle  Sta- 
ples, has  gone  to  Minneapolis  to  spend 
his     Easter    vacation    with    friends. 

Miss  Marie  Nicliolson  of  South  Fifty- 
seventh  avenvie  west,  entertained  at  a 
taffev  pulling  party  last  evening  at  her 
home.  About  forty  guests  were  pres- 
ent. 

Twin  sons  have  been  born  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Victor  Carlson  of  603  Nortli  Fifty- 
sixth   avenue  west. 

Mrs.  George  Anderson  of  North  Fif- 
vt-eiglith  avenue  west  has  as  her  guest 
her  sister.  Miss  Anna  Bentson.  of 
Stai>les.    Minn. 

Watcli    rejairine-.    Hurst,    'W'.    Duluth 


niitted    facts     the    village    vsas    not 
corporated       in       accordance     with 
law."    and   a    writ   of   ouster 
to  Ije  issued.  .  „«, 

The  alleged  attempt  to  incorporate 
the  village  was  begun  in  1908.  The 
platted  section  consists  of  eighty  acres 
and  the  unplatted  of  2,160  acres  of 
wild  unimproved  and  uninhabited  land, 
was  included  in  the  incorporation.  It 
is  found  that  the  village  reached  out 
too  far  in  the  effort  to  include  the 
Hobart  and  Labelle  mines.  The  platted 
portion  has  a  population  of  only  nine- 
ty-eight persons.  A  total  indebtedness 
of  $6,000  has  been  incurred. 

Justice    Lewis,    in    writing    the    opin- 

"It  was  never  designed  that  remote 
territory,  having  no  natural  t'onnection 
witli  the  village  and  no  adaptibilit>  to 
village  purposes,  should  be  included. 
An  amendment  to  the  law  ^mP^^f ^>f-f^^ 
the  principle  that  outside  unplatted 
territory  cannot  be  included  in  a  vil- 
lage unless  it  is  so  situated  as  to  be 
suojecl     to    village    government. 

ONE  TOIKIST  FOUND 

DEAI),^THER  DYING. 

Fernle.  B.  C,  -Marcn  19.— Two  English 
tourists  were  found  in  a  shack  near  the 
Great  Northern  station  yesetrday,  one 
dead  and  the  other  dying.  Tlie  first  ap- 
peared to  have  been  dead  for  two  days. 
The  other  is  demented  and  can  give  no 
account  of  himself.  By  labels  on  their 
baggage  they  appeared  to  have  lelt 
England  in  February  last  by  tne  im- 
press  of   Britain. 

TOO  PIERS  AND  BOAT 

REPORTED  IN  FLAMES. 

Ne-^  York.  .March  19. — The  two  piers 
of  the  Lehigh  Valley  railroad,  in  Jer- 
sey Cltv.  are  on  fire,  and  it  is  reported 
that  the  steamer  Eastwood  is  also  in 
flames.  The  Eastwood  arrived  recently 
from  Cardlnas   and    .Mattezans. 

TRANSPORT  REPORTED 

TO  HAVE  (iONE  ASHORE. 


mil 


I 


D     xixi  a 

18  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET 


J 


The  Place  to  Buy  Your  Ladies' 
Furnishings  and  Millinery 


POPULAR  PRICES  THE  MOTTO 

Below  are  iteirs  that  should  interest  you: 

25   Black  Taffeta  Petticoats — deep  ruffles — tbe     $5.00 

kind,    at     

50    Black   Hydegrade    Petticoats,   embroidered   ruffle — 

the  $2.00  kind,  at   

50    Assorted    Whit<;    AVaists,    tucked    yokes — embroidered 
tucked  and  lace     trimmed.        This     season's     styles — 

$1.75   to   $2.00  values,  at    

50  Watets,  in  taffeta,  messaline  and  net,  ecrus,  whites, 

blacks  and  colors — $5.00  values,  at 

$t».00   and   $7.50  values  at  $5.00. 

Pure   Silk   Stockinfs,   in   all   the   light   colorings     and 
blacks,  brown.s,  whites,  etc.        $1.50  values,  at  a  pair. 
25c  Children's  Stockings — extra  value  at  that  price — 
Saturday  only,  per  pair    


$1.25 

d    fronts — 

$1.25 
$3.98 

$1.00 
19c 


Millinery  Department 

The  very  latest  and  most  becoming  hats  are  to  be  found  here. 
Not  a  single  hat  or  piece  of  material  carried  over  from  last  spring 
season.  Consetjuently  you  cannot  get  any  but  the  newest  and  up- 
to-date  styles  and  trimmings.  Give  us  a  call  before  buying — it  is 
a  pleasure  to  .show  them.  Suit  Hats.  Dress  Hats  and  Evening  Hats 
all    at    popular    prices.        We   show    the    best   values   in    Duluth   at 

$5.00,  $7.50,  $10.00,  $12.50  and  $15.00 


2!>7.7U(i.«J5 

9670.47 

398.470.n:' 

ii3.045.ll 

4.93.'5.*3 

55.:i83  42 

see  4'.; 

122.310  P.'. 
S6l',941!.fc 


21.7r..7l 

125.35:;.  1-' 

4.900.f(. 

12  0.18  :^^ 
■.■i.-^2  ih  i 

2(tO,««().0U  ( 


Curling:  Scores. 

Four  games  in  tne  Bagley  trophy 
event  were  curled  last  evening  at  the 
Western  Curlmg  rink.  The  Bagley 
erophy  is  now  tne  only  remaining  event 
to  be  played  off.     The  following  are  the 


COPPER  STOCKS 
LITTLE  CHANGED 


Mrs.  Laaermanns 

Special  Sale  tor  Saturday, 
March  20.  ' 


Mh    Ave.    Went. 

lb 


3f'.748.3" 


{      fp<i.''.'iP.nf 

"..'..        13.580.  se 

2.117 '!• 

2.1»»7.fit' 

nu:.4«6.i>o 

It  l!iM:n!iiCf. 
Tti.it  tlie  ii.nual  sUittiuenl  «f  tin 
A.liri..i.l:.ik  I...-ur:.uce  r.miui.y.  Itr  t.he  ywr  tntlli.g 
n,.(,ii'»r  r>l«t  10(8.  of  v.!i!<-li  the  nloxe  is  an  ..I - 
Mratf  l-as  iK-n  rweUtd  an<l  ni«l  Ui  tlils  Uei-art- 
««,  ai.0  Uuly  .Prr.>.cl  by^m.^  ^  „^„.riG.VN. 
r(iit;iils?!(i.tr   if   liijiirBr.r*. 


Ntt   f uiri'js 

RISKS    AND    PREMIUMS.     1908 
Fire  risk.-  written   during  tlit-  >i-..i      . 
i'rttiuuui,H   :etei\t-il  t:.ernii 
Ntt  iiiuo'jiit  ill   tint- 
BUSINESS 

Fire    lUsbs— 
nifh?     written         .  . 
Preml^::"!   rtotived.. 
Lf.spts  ii'curicd   .... 

I.c>sto<    pnld      

Amctiiit  at  rifh  ... 
Stale   <f    Mlnntsda. 

I   lit  rely  C«nify 


...$  2  201. 4'. 

BUSINESS. 

.  ,$2»,'jiit.:.t;4.('i. 
.   .       .■(i7.:^oh.ifr 

t   pi.i;   It    ti.^   .•■t.ir.    14  1U4,;<80.H' 
N  MINNESOTA   IN   1908. 


$      748.r.84.n(: 

15.«.'iJ.»i- 

a,.'!'.'i.i(i 

3,401.10 

■ 144.10C.0y 

Pepartment  of  liisurarice. 
Ttiat  tl<e  iii.nufcl  ftatimtTit  cf  the 
Lvmltr  Ii.surame  tomiiuiy  fir  the  year  ending  l»e- 
leniUr  "let.  l'.>08.  of  wtii'h  the  aUvt  Is  an  ub- 
f  tract,  has  Ixen  rti-eJviil  and  llled  in  lld«  il<- 
partnunt  and   duly   uiFn\cd   by   tue.  ,  ^,,,  .  », 

JOH.S  A.   HAKTIO.^N. 
(■(iiuuiis^ii'i.ci    it    hisurame. 


.".OS   Xortb 

Pork    l.oSnw.    pe 

I'orU    KtiaNt.    per    lb 

r<  rk  (hupM,  per  lb 

I.Hiiib    Stew,    per    lb 

i.niiib  Shoulder  Honxt.  p«r  lb. 

Ituiinil  SteJik,  per  lb 

sirloin    Steiik.    per    lb. 
INrlerSioiiNe   Steak,  per  lb.... 

Shoiitder   Koant,   per   lb 

I"rej«b   KggN,   per  doxen 


.    lOc 
.  .lie 

.  .  .So 
.  .  lOc 

i:;>..e 

I4e 
.  loe 
.  .10c 
.  .aie 


The  Market  Is  Quiet  and 

Shows  But  Slight 

Deviation. 

The  copper  stock  market  was  quiet 
today  and  values  showed  sliglit  devia- 
tion from  yesterday's  ciuotations. 
North  Butte  opened  at  $67.25.  advanced 
to  168,  declined  to  %61.'M\i  and  closed 
at  $67.:;5  bid  and  167.50  asked.  Amal- 
gamated opened  at  $68.12 1/^.  went  to 
$69,  declined  To  $68.25  and  closed  at 
$68.12^8    hi<i   and    $68.25   asked. 

Gieene-Cananea  opened  at  $9.37^. 
advanced  to  $9.."0.  declined  to  $9.12  Vij 
and  closed  at  $9.25  bid  and  $9  371-^ 
asked.  Butte  Coalition  opened  at  $22.50, 
advanced  to  $22.87  "s.  declined  to 
$22.62 '/fe  and  closed  at  $22.50  bid  and 
$22.75    asked.         Calumet      &      Arizona 


Belllngham,  Wash..  March  19.— Frag- 
m«-nts  of  a  wireless  message  were 
iiicked  un  here  this  forenoon,  indicat- 
ing that  'a  United  States  transport  had 
gone  ashore  near  the  enirance  to  Puget 
sound,  and  that  several  lives  were  lost. 
No    confirmation    can    he    secured. 

SUPREME  (01  ilT  DECISIONS. 

St.  Paul,  Minn..  March  19. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Decisions  rendered  by 
the  supreme  court  today  are  as  follows: 

Alice  Campbell,  respondent,  vs.  the 
Duluth  &  Northwestern  Railroad  com- 
pany appellant,  reversed  and  a  new 
trial  nrdtrcd.     From  St.  Louis  couiUv. 

Orrin  D.  Kinney,  appellant,  vs.  Emil 
Munch,  et  al.  respondents,  reversed. 
From    Pine    county. 

Henrv  T.  Simons,  appellant,  vs.  Emil 
Munch,'  et  al,  respondents,  affirmed. 
From  Pine  county. 


The  Most 
Attractive 


HATS 


that  it  has  ever  been  our  pleasure  to  offer.  The  most  i-killed  hat- 
ters in  the  business  have  produced  styles  this  season  that  cannot 
but  meet  with  yuiir  approval  Our  $3.00  Hat  C'Sicwert  Special") 
has  no  superior  st  the  price,  DUNLAP  and  STETSON  derbies 
soft  hats,  crushers,  silk  and  opera  hats  Exclusive  styles,  identical 
wnth  those  shewn  in  their  New  York,  Philadelphia  and  Chicago 
shops— $2. 30  to  $12. OO. 

Gloves  $1.50  Upwards. 

hand-sewn,  pique  and  overseam. 


All 


Fownes'  London  and  Paris 
sizes. 


A.  B.  SIEWERT&Co., 

304  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


opened  at  $100  and 
I'ld  and  $100  asked. 


With  the  End  of  Winter  Come 
Thoughts  of 


NEW 


and  OXFORDS! 


Early  Spring  Styles  and 
Advance  1909  Styles  of  Ox- 
fords are  here  for  LADIES  and  GENTLEMEN.    All 
leathers— including  Tans,  Browns  and  Wines.     Priced  at 


WEST  DULUTH  GROCERY  CO 


5202  Ramsey  Si  Jcnilli  Phone  3244. 

-Tin  SUire  Ihat  S<ir(>  >'('<.   Afoiei/" 


OECO 

123  West  Superior  Street 


9 


A  Problem  for  Boys  &  Girls 

When  Stone-Ordean-Wells  Com- 
pany's coffee  man  places  K'O  pounds 
of  green  coffee  in  tlie  roaster,  cost- 
ing 20c  per  pound,  smd  this  coffee 
.xl'.ririks  l,n  per  cent  in  the  process 
of  roasting,  what  is  the  cost  per 
pound  of  the  roasted   coffee?  •* 

Anv  boy  or  girl  presenting  this 
problem,  correctly  flg.ired  out  in  de- 
tail before  Easter  Sunday,  April  llth 
will   rcieive 

A  QUART  OF    E  Q  C  C 

PEANUTS—-  r  n  C  C 

V,'hen  making  a  cash  purcliase  of 
.\'..koi!,is   Frosli    Hoastf-d   (."i  fft . 

Nokomis  Nokomis  Nokomis  Nokomis 
20c     25c     30c      35c 

SPECIilL  SUGAR  r-4DUCEMENT 

25  lbs.  Sugar  $1.00 

l;r.  lbs  Sugar,  »l.tK».  with  $H'  cash 
purchase  of  other-grcceries.  of  which 
we  <|Uote  you  a  few  of  our  low  at- 
tiactive    pleasing  prices: 

1  buw.  PotatocN.  fancy  white 

M(<rek    fl.0.% 

33  barn   I.nuiidry   Soap 91. iO 

•^7  vanm  IM«  Milk fl.OO 

«    buxeM    Kellogg*!*    Toawted 

Corn     FlakeN 'JHe 

4   lits   bulk    Fariua line 

3  IbN  of  <ioo»l  illee -.'o 

3   Ibh   of   <;<!4m1    HaiMiuM 2'»e 

3  lb-*  of  Oood  I'ruuew liSe 

Flour  $1.60- $1.65 

Tl.re*  best  vaiues  in  L'uliith — Oe- 
eldcnt  Flour,  the  best  money  can 
buy: 

»w  lbs.  »3..10:  49-lb  i.nek  ^Llf."! 

IMSlMbsiry'H  Bent  Flour,  f3.-'0 

aad    »«.«0 

Ben*    of    .\11    Flour    —    biieb- 
griiiie   unUtn    fiour,    Meeoud 

to  noue,  !|i^.::0  and fl.<TO 

y<le  are  always  glad  to  quote  you 
casli  prices  on  tiuantitics  and  get 
V(.'ur  tiade. 


closed  at  $9!>.87»^ 
Glroux  opened  at 
$8.37 ',s.  declined  to  $f'.:!5  and  closed  at 
$8.37 >i  bid  and  $8.50  asked.  Anacon- 
da opened  at  $41.  advanced  to  $4 1.37 '2. 
declined  to  $4<.'.87i2  and  closed  at 
$40.87  1.2    bid. 

Superior  &  Pittsburg  sold  at  $13.25 
and  $13  and  closed  at  $13.25  bid  and 
$13.r>0    asked.  Doin-Arizona    sold    at 

$3.75  and  closed  at  $3.62  >^  bid  and 
$3.75  asked,  Niitional  at  57  and  54  cents 
and  closed  at  C2  cents  liid  and  54  cents 
asked  and  Cactus  at  $1.50  and  closed  at 
$1.37 1^    bid  and   $1.50  asked. 

Butte  &  Superior  was  inactive  and 
closed  at  $1  bid  and  $1.1 2 1^  asked, 
Calumet  &  Sonera  at  $14  asked.  Globe 
at  $5  bid  and  $t'.12'*.  asked,  Red  War- 
rior at  $2.12^/2  bid  and  $2.37 ',a  asked. 
Mowitza  at  $1.25  bid  and  $1.37  >/2  asked, 
Caiman  at  $1.12^  bid  and  $1.25  asked. 
.Savanna  at  $2  bid  and  $2.25  asked. 
Butte-Pallaklava  at  $16  bid  and  $16.25 
asktd.  Copper  Queen  ol  Idaho  at  $1.50 
bid  and  $1.75  a.'-ked,  Cliff  at  $1.5<*  bid 
and  $1.75  askeii.  and  Chief  Consolidated 
at    94    cents    bid   and    99   cents   asked. 

Bia(k  Mountain  sold  at  $1.12'/^  and 
$1.  and  closeo  at  $1  bid  and  $1.12'.^ 
asked. 

•  •  * 
Piper.  .Tohnson  &  Case,  the  brokers, 
in  their  latest  market  letter  have  a  lot 
to  say  about  Giroux  Consolidated,  a 
copi>er  stock  which  has  recently  come 
into  the  local  limelight  through  the 
fact  that  Thomas  F.  Cole  and  the  In- 
terests allied  with  hi'u  have  taken 
over  the  property.  Ainiuig  other  things, 
the  letter  says: 

"It  is  impossible  in  a  few  words  to 
(lescritit  a  mining  property  as  exten- 
.>.ive  Jis  the  Glroux.  but  a  fair  idea  of 
the  prospects  of  the  company  may  be 
brielly  set  foith.  In  the  tirst  place  the 
success  of  any  mining'  proposition  must 
depfnd    largely    upon    three    things. 

"First — The  supply  of  raw  material, 
that  is.  the  ore  possible  to  be  extracted 
and  its  character  as  regards  concen- 
tration and  smelting. 

"Second — Sufficient  capital  for  de- 
velojung  and  carrying  on  the  business 
of   the   company. 

'1  astly.  and  probably  the  most  im- 
portant of  all.  an  aggressive,  capable 
and  thoroughly  competent  manage- 
ment. 

"We  believe  that  there  are  few  com- 
panies now  in  the  field  of  copper  min- 
ing in  V  hich  these  three  requirements 
are   .^o  luutly    furnished   as   in   Giroux." 


WHAI.K    STOLE    THEIU    lAKK. 

San  Francisco  Chronicle:  Up  among 
the  torn  bergs  of  the  Arctic  a  monster 
■whale  is  cruising  about  with  a  harpoon 
embedded  in  his  thick  back  and  some- 
thing less  than  half  a  mile  of  stout 
hempen  rope  trailing  after  him. 

The  crew  of  the  steam  whaler 
Thrasher,  which  returned  Sunday  night 
from  an  eight  months'  cruise  in  the  ley 
North,  declare  that  "Mister  Whale  got 
all  tlijit  was  coming  to  him." 

"H<^  got  away  from  us."  muttered  the 
mate,  spitting  viciously  into  the  scup 
pers.  "but  we  will  get  him  next  sea- 
son. It  was  good  rope  we  used,  and 
hell  get  tangled  up  on  something,  so 
we  will  be  one  whale  to  the  good  when 
we  get  back  there. 

"He  was  a  bad  one.  though.  You  see 
Kilva.  the  boat  steerer.  slimg  the  hook 
into  him  when  we  were  in  open  water 
t'^tween  two  big  Itergs.  Off  he  goes 
with  tlie  stick  in  his  lock,  and  the  rfipe 
went  out  like  a  man  tumbling  from  the 
l<ift.  He  ducked  and  dived  until  one 
tub  of  rf)pe  was  gf)ne.  and  he  did  the 
same  with  another.  He  w.as  making 
for  the  nearest  floe,  and  when  he 
reached  it  he  spit  a  lot  of  water  Into 
the  air  and  took  a  deep  dive.  The  edge 
of  the  ice  cut  the  rope  like  a  knife, 
and  he  v^as  off  for  good,  with  2.0O0  fee', 
of  the  Tlirasher's  line  and  .1  good  har- 
poon with   hm." 

»  # 

Sixty  languages  are  in  every-day  use 
in    Freetown,    .Sierra    Leone. 


.MerchantN'     IVatioiiai     >!Hiual     Fire    In- 
Nurauce  tonipanj'. 

Principal  office,  Fargo,  Nerlli  Dakf  ta.  (Organl/crt  in 
1904).  W.  C.  JJaffailden.  prttideiit;  F.  H.  Wildtr, 
setTftary.  Attorney  to  acctpl  service  In  MJnnetota, 
Conuni'sldiitr     of     In.«iiraii<-e. 

INCOME   IN    1908. 

Gross   preniluni';   niul  .i.-t^f.-Mncuts $      46,130,18 

Kt nis   and   Interest 

From  all  other  tourcts 


6541.68 

l.befc,40 


Total    Income 


Indiaula    A    Ohio    Uve    Stock    InMurauoe 
Coiiipauy. 

Piinriral    otl'Ue.    CraiMoidsville.    bid.    (OrFanizetl    In 

18!>:i,)   Jciliii   It.    Honiifll.   i^residcnt;   Cliarhs   I..    (Jood- 

Ijar.     MdctaD'     and     Irei^s.ir.r.       Atti  nicy     tn     aiocpt 

stnlic    In    Miniir-sota,     (■i,inmls«ii.r.ir    of    iiisuiance. 

CASH    CAPITAI,.    $100,003. 

INCOME    IN    1908. 

T»rfmli!ins   RccehMl— 

U\e  ^1<.<1(    $183.903.19 

Total    premium    Income $18;<.9(':i.  1 1' 

Fmin  Interest  and  rents 8, '.1011.13 

From   all   ether  sources, 310.31 


DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1608. 

Amount    paid    f  (  r    lo-.-ses' $ 

Itetiini  jrcniluius  and  otiier  prcflta  to 
policy     holdeis 

Commissions,  trokerage,  salaries  and  aJ- 
l<>»ance8  to  ageiits,  officers  and  em- 
ployes      •  • ■  • 

Taxes,  lee?,  rents  and  other  real  e«Ut« 
expenses     

All   otlin  disbursements 


46,667.26 

28,023.90 
137.011 

9,707.22 

538.99 
9.4t:&,4ij 


Guaramtoe   Company   of   Xorth   America,. 

Fr.ncii'i:!    «iltir<       .'>7     H»h\<r    Hail     IhJl,     .\li  sitieai. 
("an.      (Commentnl    liuMiit>s   In    1872,  >      Edwan'    Ka\- 
iliigs,     prtMder.t .    Kichi.rd    B.    t^cott.    seireUary-tneas 
urer.     AUvni<;.    to  acceit   senire  in   itiiineisita,   Ccm- 
mitwoner   of   J)jsiir..i!ce. 

CASH    CAPITAL    $.'h04  600. 
IMCCME     IN     t<lOe. 

Mdflily    Jl'.ilM';«.3« 

Total    prejr.l;.m   income $    190.'.f.i8,34» 

From    interest    ai.d    lenta 63.4:^5(^9' 

From    all    oilier    touitess... 87,50< 


Te-Ul 


Total    disbursements. 


.$      47.8I.^>,51 


Excess  of  Income  owr  dlsburseiaents $ 

ASSETS   DEC.  3h    1908. 

Mortgage   loans * 

Cash  in  office  and  liank 

Premiums  in   io\irse  of  ooUeclU)li 

All   other   uelmittcd   asseU 


7tl.7i 

32.500,00 
1,7:^6.03 
4,5E5.i8 
2,886,45 


Total   admitted   asset? *      41, 627, 80 

.\B»ela   net   admitted $1,065.00 

LIABILITIIS. 

Liosses  adjusted   and   unadjusted $ 

L(«>es    resisted   and   disputed 

Ileliivuranfo    rrsorve 

.411   other   lliLilities 

Total     llalilllt!f«     h:clu01ng     permanent 
or  guai;.nty   fund t 


2.500.00 

3,100,00 

23  !08,85 

4:.-, 78 


30.Clfc.C: 


Net    sun'lu!"   '      11, f  11,23 

RISKS   AND    PREMIUMS,    !908   BUSINESS. 

Fire    risks    wrillen    cliuiiit:    lin    M'iir $,'i.<i78,141.0'J 

Premiums    r«<el\r<i    ili<rc<ii 

BUSINESS    IN    MINNE:>0TA 
Fire   Risks- 
Risks    written 

Premiums    leceiveel 

I/eisses   Incurred 

bossies     paid 

Amount    at    likk 


I9«8. 

$    572.465.00 

13,.S44.11 

!i,24:<,63 

10.408..^)7 

617, 862.  Hi 


income $  263,520.93: 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Claims   Paid    (.Veti— 

Fidelity   $83.539.00 

.Net  pi-l<l  policy  holoers $  83..''.S9.0Cf 

Investiiration  a)id  adjustment   of  claims...  4.361.6;- 

Commissions    1P57,:<5. 

Pivldends   to   stx< kliolders 24,368,60 • 

Sa!.irie<!     cf     <ffi<ers.     iigenta,     employes, 

exami!  er»'    ;.n<i    msiiccUon 88. 880. t'? 

Al)   etiiei    disbursement* 34.183.15. 

T^itjJ   dlsbur-eroeiils $  2;<€,390.07i 

Eicess  of  lrj<cme  i-MT  (iisl.;irsem<nf«          $  27,1J0.8«' 
ASSETS   DEC.   31,    I9P8. 

Value  cf   real  estJ.tt  c\-.:.cd f  48,15O,0C-' 

Bonds    and    storks    owned 1.234,478.67    , 

Cr.sh  in   (flicc  and  in    Unk 152.011.8S*  . 

Aocruei!    li,tereFt    ftJid    rents ^■ip**r 

Premiums  ii.  eourse  of  ceilecUon 5,78i.5S-. 

Ueeluct      speila:      deposit      less      $2,025.40 

Ijalllity      tliereen 14.149.60* 


Tot.-.I    admlttfd   assets 

Assets   lot    adi.JU*el ,.,   $27,089.68 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims     in     prue'ss     of     aiij-,:stiijent     and 

reporteel    


$1,434,344 
$      36,323 

91» 

oc« 

$ 

36,823.00» 

26. •?2? 

98.. Me 

44,7.^7 

304.60;' 

50- 
58- 
(,0- 

Total 


Ircome      $193,122.63 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 
Claims    Paid     ((.Neti  — 

l,l>e  stcrk   $87,522.00—- 

Net   paiii   jtlicy   holders $  87.52; 

Commissions     

llivldends    to  stmkliolders 

Salaries    uf    otticir'.    ngcnts.    employes,    ex- 
aminers'   and    )iispe»tlon    fe-es 9.519.96 

-Ml   ether  elislurseme-nU 13.882.0:1 


.00 
41.583.95 
20.000. '10 


INDICTMENTS  ( H.4R(iE 

WOMAN  WITH  MURDER. 


Cambridge,  Mass..  March  19. — Four 
indictments,  each  charging  murder  in 
the  first  degijfe,  against  Mrs.  Mary 
Kelleher  of  Somefville.  have  been  re- 
turned bv  the  Middlesex  county  grand 
iury.  Tlie  indictments  charge  the  kill- 
ing by  arsenitv  poisoning  cf  Mrs.  Ke!- 
leher's  children.  Annie.  Mary.  William 
and   Katherine   M.    Keilelier. 


STEPHENSON'S  LMVYER 

DENIES  COACHING. 


Madison,    Wis.;    March       19.— During 


Total    dislursemenU $172, .'07. 91 

Exccfi  of  Income  over  disbursements $  20,614.72 

ASSETS  DEC.  31,   1908. 

Ml  rteape  leans      $  2.'"i,".00.00 

Boiids    i.nd    stoiks    owiietl 183.497.52 

Cash  in  offue  and  in   hank 9.!t!'8.51 

Acenied    interest    anil    rent* 3.3.")8.06 

Premiums    in    n'lirst    of    collee-tlon 23.528.23 

Less   agents'    riedit 504. 8(i 

Total    adndlted    assets ..^...$245,177.52 

.\sstt8  iK't  admitted $13,137.33 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims    In    process    of    adjusUnmt    and    re- 

purted    $     8,522,00 

Ciiums    reslfteel    3  (KiU.OO 

Aggregate  of  unp.iid  cialms $  11.522.00 

Keinsuraoie     reserve 91.216.  ;I3 

Ail   other  liabilities 10.541.55 

Capital   btoek   paid   up 100,000.0't 

Total    llallllUes    including    capital $213,279.58 

SunOus    our    all    linhillUc!' $.'il,897.94 

BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 

Premiums   Itee-ei^e.l.   Losses  Paid. 

Uve    stork $5,210.27        $2,205.00 

State  of  Mii.nescta.   Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Herel'.v  CerUfy.  That  the  annual  statement  of  the 
Indiana  &  Ohio  lJ*e  KtooK  Insurance  company,  for 
tlie  ve.ir  ending  Peosmber  M-t.  li!i'8.  of  which  the 
al>o>e  is  an  iil«tract.  lias  l)een  receixed  and  tiled 
In    this    department   and    dul;.'    aprrovei!    ly    me. 

JOHN  H.   iiahti<;an, 

Commissiciiei    of    Ins\iruii'C. 

HOWES  &  BADQER, 

State  Agents, 

Security  Bank  Bldg.,   MINNEAPOLIS. 

WHITNEY  WALL  CO., 

District  Agent. 


state  of  Minnesota,  Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  a  .iiual  statement  i>f  the 
Merchants'  Niitionul  Mutual  1  isur.mce  comjiany,  for 
the  vear  ending  December  3M.  1908,  of  which  tlie 
abo>e  is  an  alstrait.  lias  lieei  received  and  filed  iii 
this   department   and   duly   appr  ved   ly   mc. 

joHv  A.  hai:tic;an. 

Commlusloner    of    insurance. 


Aggregate   of   uniiald   claims 

Tiii.l     iii.ijaid     c'.aims     and     expens««     ol 

setllemciit 

K(  hif^uranee    rD-erre 

.Ml    other    ;iali;ities 

C.ipiitai  sli-ck  I'liid   up 

Total    liabilities    incluiling   capital I    474,207.06- 

Surplus   over   all    Ualllities $    9€0,13..83v 

BUSINESS  IK   M!NNESOTA   IN   I&08. 

Premiums   Ite<«iie<l— 

Fidelity,.    •  •  ■         *  '-Ju^  ' 

Sfatc   of   >Ui'rie*ita.    Department   cf   Ins  iranre. 

I    lien  IV  <<Ttify.   That   the  annual  statement   of  the 
(Juaranlee"  C(.ii:pai,y    of    North    Amer.ca 
er.i'.ing    Decemler    :Usl.     l'.!08 
an     .-itr-trait.     has     U*! 

department   and   duly   "rprcv^^^y^  me.^,,^,OAN, 
Commls>-loiier    of    Ii.surai,c«. 


let    the   y«a« 
(I    wliioh    tlie    a»*ive    i» 
r<H-eiv»d    and    filed    in    tills-. 


It's 
Buy 


a   P.retty    "Wise 


Stunt   to 
r  Slices  Early. 


Your  Easte 

Depletion  rarely  marks  our  stock,  be- 
cause it  s  so  splendidly  full  to  begin  with. 
Varities  seem  limitless — there  s  every- 
thing one  \^^ants  in  the  way  of  Shoes. 

But  it's  very  satisfactory  to  huy  your 
hest  footwear — your  Easter  Shoes,  xor 
instance  —  hefore  the  general  buying 
ds  into  a  rush. 


crowas 


We're  ijelling  lots  of  Easter  Shoes 
xight  now — Men's,  Women  s  and  Chil- 
dren's.     Yours  are  here. 

W.    &?    L.    Skoe    Store^ 


?AS  West  Superior  Street. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


i« 


*v 


■  r«- 


r 


._— -. 


IT'S  A  pleasvre:  to  bvy  at 


The  Low  Price 

Store 

Where  It  Pays  To 

Pay  Cash. 


30  E.  Superior 

Street. 

Both  Phones 

1991. 


Our  stock  is  complete  and  well  selected  to  meet  all  the  tastes  and  requirements  of  our  patrons.  All  our 
goods  are  marked  at  the  lowest  possible  price — and  are  strictly  ONE  PRICE  to  all — so  a  child  of  10  can 
buy  here  as  cheap  as  the  most  experienced  shopper.  No  matter  what  you  need  for  your  table,  it  will  pay  you 
to  get  our  prices.    Discount  stamps  with  every  purchase. 


Groceries  of  Highest  Quality 


FREI-  10  Extra  Dividend   Stamps  Iree   Mith 

each  ol  the  ioUoMrlna:  ' 

3 — lOi-  paikast's 

Corn     Flukes     


25c 


HAN.WV    SI'KtlAL — 
I-   I. arise   Banauaii 

for    


20c 


B — 15c  packages  Slireildod  W^ieat 
Biscuits    (Willi    grocery 
order)     

1 — tOc   can 

Fish     Balls     

3 — Iftc    bottles 
Ammonia    

3 — li^^jc   cans 

Wisconsin    Peas     

3 — 10c   cans    Sweet 
Su^ar    Corn     


50c 

i5c 

25e 

30c 
25c 


TKAMT    BITTKH.   per  lb.  UOc 

50c 


.1  Ibn' 
for 


)      All 
>  Three 


1   can    Tomatoes. 
1   can    Corn.  ^ 

1  bottle    Catsup.    )      For 

3   packages   Raisins,   or 
Clean    Currants     

2  lbs.    Best    Dried 

Apricots     

2  cans — 25c  value  Straw 
berries  or  Rasp»>erries  . 
2 — 25c  cans   Peaclies   or 

Apricots    

Colonial   Tomatoes. 

per    can    

(per  dozen,  S1.05.> 

1 — 50c  value  gallon   can 

Table  Syrup   


25c 

25c 
25c 
41c 
40e 
lOc 

42c 


Tried  by  Jury  of  Gonnolseurs 

ELGIN  BRANO  Vu^tTr  Lb.  33c 

VEilUICT:    "THE  BEST." 

MKAUOW  BROOK,  per  lb 30o 

STATI-:   t'RKAMKKY,  per   lb. 28o 

KKKHH  .SKLKCTED  COl  XTHY  Olj^ 

BGCiS.    p«r    doB^B    £  IW 

$1.50  ^P«*^'^'  Package  $1  00 
I         Order  for I 

CONTEXTS   OF   PACKAGE. 

•J  IbM.    Suiear    90.12 

15  XutnioiCM      1^ 

1  enu    I'ure    .*>plceit lO 

1  lb.     ItlOf     10 

1  lb.    I'ruueH    10 

1  Hack    Sail     05 

1  paokuKe    Seeded     KaininM lO 

X  bottle   Extract    I.eiiiuu  or   Vanlla      .10 

I  lb.     \tla.H     Coffee a."» 

■.'!>  lb.    Tea,    icreeii,    black    ur    uilxed      .>5 

1  paekaxe     .stareh      OH 

1  buttle    niuiui;     lU 

Priof   vou    pav   at   other  nloren 91.50 

THIS    WHOLE    PACKAGE    FOB         $1.00 

Ifl  Swe«t  Xavel  Oransea*  9  Cl* 

^;7h^^ '•'""' lOc 

;t  for  2r»e,  4  for  25o. 

CiiriimlterM,    Lettuce,    aail    all    kiadn    of 

IreMli    ^ejte tables. 


Sanitary  Meat  Dept. 

When  you  buy  nientn  from  our 
market  you  give  ytiur  family  tbe 
beiieilt  of  the  bewt  obtainable  and 
you  do  It  for  tbe  oiiialleNt  pos- 
sible outlay. 


Slrloiu   or   PorterhouMe 
.steak,    per    pound 


I5c 


Prime  Native  Steer 

Boiling,   per   1>>.   «c   and 

Fresh   Sparerlb.s, 

p«'r    lb 

Boston  Lean  Pork  Chops, 
per   lb 

Little  Pig  Pork  Roast. 

I)er  lb 

i'rewh     Oreswed     Poultry       at 

ii.hijhI    I;>%v    prieet. 


5c 
lOc 
lie 

lOc 

our 


BIB  R0.4STS — 

per  lb.   I-Vje  and 


lOc 


Choice  Family  Steak, 

per   lb,    IS^^e  and 

Prime  Steer  Pot  Roasts, 
per  lb.  I2Vac,  10c  and 

Choice  Hujnburger  Steak, 
per  lb 

Mutton  Chops. 

per    lb.    l.lc   and 

Leg  o'  Mutton. 

I)er    lb 

Hiiidquarter   milk    fed 

Veal,    for     

We  sell  the     Best     Sugar 

Corned    Beef. 

per  lb.    lUMic,  10c  and.  .  .  . 


D.  E.  H..      March    19.    1909. 

LOWEST 

Straight  Goods  Only. 

Wholesale  and  Retail. 


WANIGA 


The  Best  Whisky  Made 

For  a  tonic — use  Wanigas. 

To  ward  off  colds — use  Wanigas. 

For  making  "Rock  and  Rye" — use  Wanigas. 

For  all  purposes  where  a  pure  whisky  is  desirable 

Use  WAMGAS 

Family  Trade  Supplied  with  l*iirc."*t  PORTS,  SH£KKIES  and  BRAXDIKS. 


COXt'BROS.'  MARKET 

:  ^'^1  East  Superior  Street. 
NotnSa^  Succeeds  I#Ilc.e  Stxccess 

Our  Special  .Sale  on  ilib  Itoasts  was  .so  successful  last  Saturday,  that 
we  shall  continue  the  sale  tomorrow.  This  is  something  you  cannot  af- 
ford to  miss.  '~  • 

BIB    BOASTS-^SpecIal   quality — per   lb 12V^o 

VOlKCi    Pl«    POBK    BOASTS — Per   lb 10c 

POT   BO.AST.S— Bent    cut — per   lb 10c 

LEG  OF  SPBIKt;    L.VMB — Per  lb 18c 

THKSE   PBIt'KS    ABK   FOB   CASH   ONLY. 

Our   Dressed    Spiing   Chickens   and    Kowl.s    are    tiie    best    in    the    market. 
Kggs  are  much  cheaper,  but  tlie  quality  o(  ours  excel  all   others. 
.XiCI.EPHONE — FOR  GOOD  SBHVICE. 


FOLZ 

GROCERY  CO. 

117  East  Superior  Street. 
Phones:    Old,   234;   New,   48. 


SATURDAY  SPEQALS 

STRICTLY  niKSH  EGGS,  doz   t9c 

20  lbs.  SUGAR  for $1.00 

(With   a   $3.00   Grocery  Order.) 
Pano  DAIRY  BUTTER.  i>er  lb  25c 
1    can    Com.    Pea.s.    Tonmtoes.  .25c 

We  have  everything  in  the  Green 
Vegetable  line — 

AMi>ara^i.s,       Ciicuinl>er«i.        Shives, 

Tomatoes,    \\'ax    Beans, 

Oy.siter  Plant.       Green  Peppers. 

New  Beets,  New  CarroUs. 

New    Tnrnlps,    Cauliflower.    Celery, 

llond  Lettuce,       Leaf  Lettuce, 

Endive,  Spinach. 

Remember  our  home-baking  de- 
partment. We  use  no  questionable 
material  in  our  baking.  Come  in 
and  we  will  take  you  into  our 
kitchens. 

SPECIALS  FOR  TOMORROW 

Boston  Brouii  Breail  and  Baked 
Beans.  Baked  Macaroni  and  Cheese, 
l*otato  and  Celerj  Salad. 


Wall's  Family  Liquor  Store 

310  West  Superior   St.,  Duluth,   Minn. 


fc    li 


LUNDMARK-FRANSON  CO., 

"DULUTH'S  PURE  FOOD  CENTER." 


Of  late  you  have  been  reading  in  the  newspapers  a  good  deal 
about  the  old  and  the  new  ways  of  buying. 

The  RIGHT  way  to  buy,  is  to  buy  where  you  get  the  best 
values  for  your  money. 

Special  Values  for  Saturday  and  All  Next  Week : 

TOMATOES — 3  Cans  Standard 25f^ 

TOMATOES — I  Dozen  Cans  Standard 90^ 

EGGS— Per  Dozen 20<^ 

SUGAR— Granulated,  per  100-lb  Sack $5.00 

A  pouncT  of  our  own  Blend  Coffee  and  one  of  our  home  made 
cakes,  once  tried,  always  repeated. 


THE  ZENITH  CASH  MARKET 


14  WEST  FIRST  STREET. 


Make  it  a  point  to  buy  your  supply  of  meats,  poultry,  fish,  etc.,  here 
and  get  the  best  at  the  lowest  prevailing  prices.  Try  some  of  our  httle 
pig  pork  sausages  for  your  Sunday  morning  breakfast.  You  will  find 
them  very  palatable. 

ALL  DAY  SATURDAY  ! 

Chickens,  per  lb 12V2c  and  15c 

Pork  Roast,  per  lb 10c 

Spare  Ribs,  per  lb 8c 


Pot  Roast,  per  lb   8@10^ 

Rib  Boil,  per  lb 5^ 

Mutton  Stew,  per  lb Sf 

Mutton  Legs,  per  lb lZ}it 

Veal    Uoast,  per   lb    lOf 

Hamburger,  3  lbs  for    25^ 


Sausage   Meat,  3  lbs.   for    ....25f 

Bacon  Strips,  per  lb lO^ 

Good  Side  Bacon,  per  lb 13^^ 

California  style   Hams,  p«r  lb.. 8^ 

Hams,  per  lb 12  fi  ^ 

GEORGE  O.  SMITH,  Mgr. 


PRIMUS 

BUTTER 

It  is  delicious  to  the  taste 
and  wholesome  and  refresh- 
ing in  its  purity.  Made  from 
the  purest  and  the  best  in- 
gredients by  expert  butter 
makers  under  the  most  in- 
viting and  sanitary  condi- 
tions. When  you  order  the 
■'good  things"  for  the  Sunday 
dinner  put  PRIMUS  BUT- 
TER first  on  the  li>t. 

Your  dinner  will  not  be 
complete  without  VELVET 
ICE  CREAM,  or  some  of  our 
delicious  ices,  sherbets,  frap- 
pes  or  punches.  We  furnish 
to  your  order  ice  cream  in 
any   design  you  may  choose. 

Bridgeman= 
Russell  Co. 

16  WEST  FIRST  STREET. 
Both  'Phonse  352. 


Duluth 
Provision  Co. 

17     FIKST    AVENUE     WTIST. 


Headquarters  for  the  best  of 
Meats,  at  bed  rock  prices.  You 
can  save  money  by  buying  here. 
Little  Pig  Pork  Roast,  per  lb  8c 
Pork  Butts,  per  lb. ...... .  .10c 

California  Ham^.  p^r  lb 8c 

Best  Sugar  Cured  Hams, 

per   lb.  .......  |.j^«j^ ,  .12c 

Best  No.  1  BacoiT,  i*er  lb. .  .13c 

Salt  Pork,  per  lb lie 

Pot  Roast,  per  lb . , 8c 

Family  Steak*-  per  lb. ; 10c 

Round  Steak^^pcr  lb.*...12y2C 
Boiling  Beef,  per  lb 5c 

Shoulder  of  A'eal,  per  lb. . .  .8c 
Leg  of  Veal,  per  lb 10c 


John  Logan  &  Go. 

933   E.\ST   FOl  UTH    .STREET. 
New  'Phone  3U3.  Old  'Phone   1227. 

Eggs  ^n.  1 8c 

Fancy    California    Navel    Oranges, 
thin    skin,     sweet    and    juicy,     per 

dozen    20^     and    up.      ^O   OO 
Per  box 9bn9U 

Fancy    Florida    Grape  OI%«% 

Fruit,  4  for faWC 

Butter — Logan's    Veribest      O^f^ 
prints,  per  lb OUv 

Golden   Wax   Beans,   regular 

15c  can,  per  can 12  ^  t 

Golden  Lima   Beans,  regular 

1 5c  cans  ,per  can 12  ^^  <* 

Sliced  Pine  Apple,  per  can. .  .  .150 

Hiawatha  Sliced  Pine  Apple, 
per  can 25< 

FVesh  vegetables  in  abundance. 

Green  Onions,  2  bunches 5<* 

Head  Lettuce,  regularly  15c... lOf 

WE  SELL  NOKOMIS  COFFEE. 


McEwen's 
Mercantile  Store, 

Dl  Ll  TH   HEIGHTS. 
New  'Phone  15-11-.4. 

Trade  at  Your  Home  Grocery 

Where  HiRh  aiialltr  and  Low  Pricen 

go  hand  in  hand. 

Saturday  Specials 

Fnn4>y   Sepnriitor    nuttor,   per  lb..2Kc 

t'reiiniery  Prinl.H,  per  lb 32o 

FreMh  laiti  country  Ejckm,  per  doz  20o 
White  Clover  Honey,  per  eonib .  .  .17c 


McKENZIE 
&  McGHIE 

GROCERS. 

301-303  E.  Superior  St. 

Both  Phones  ^7. 


N'ew    made    Creamery    Butter 

in  bulk,  per   lb 30t 

Strictly  fresh  Eggs,  per  doz..20<' 
California  Artichokes,  2  for...25^* 

Asparagus,  per  bunch SO^* 

Spinach,   per   peck -iOt 

Also  cucumbers,  tomatoes,  water 
cress,  head  lettuce,  leaf  lettuce,  new 
cabbage,  new  beets,  new  carrots, 
radishes,  celery,  green  peppers, 
green  onions  and  strawberries. 

WE    SELL   '^NOKOMIS"    TEAS 
AND   COFFEES. 


GASSER'S 

209-31 1  W.  Superior  St. 

$1.30 
18c 
15c 
15c 
20c 
20c 


25-lbs  Granulated 
Sugar 

Fresh  Eggs — 
per  dozen 

Apricots — 

21  ••  lb  cans 


Peacheo — 
2i'2  lb  cans. 

Spinach — 
3-lb  cans. . 


Beets— 
2-lb  cans, 


We  deliver  to  Hnnter'n  Park  and 
Wffodlnnd  every  day.  jH?ave  here  at 
4  p.  m.  f 

Market  Grocery  Co., 

10«   West   rir«t    Street. 
Zenith  'Phone,  1074.     Bell,  307-R. 


lp-*-^«^ 


^^>^»^»^>^«»»»»*N*»^»^»»»»^^>»»^»»^»»^»»»%^^N»»»H»»»' 


Miller  &  Johnson 

722  EAST  THIRD   ST. 
New,  1663-X.  Old,  524-K. 


Special  Snaps 
for  Saturday: 


Best  Potatoes, 

per  bushel 

N'ew   Pack   Corn, 
regular  10c  cans 

Xokomis    Coffee, 

per  lb.  20f  to 

Three  25c  cans 
Salmon 

Best  Creamery  Butter, 
per    pound    


$1.05 

8c 

.40c 
50c 


34c 

Two  packages  Prosperity  C|^ 

Washing  Powder vv 

.23c 


Fresh  Eggs 
Per  Do^en 


We  sell  the  celebrated  "Nokomis' 
Brand  Coffee. 


THe   Reikson   Why 
VFc  Are  B'usy 

Wc  Vie  tlio  belt  niaterlali  obtaliialile  In 
our  goods.  Tliej  are  Iwktsl  liy  bakers  that 
kiuiw  how  to  bake.  Our  hakury  Js  rapabLe  of 
taking  care  .f  a  Urge  busltics;,.  .\lways  ileaii 
ami  neat.  If  y.)u  have  nevtt  trieil  our  goods, 
why  not  give  them  :i  trial  now?  We  know  we 
can  ^atUfy  you.  for  .Saturday  we  have  a  full 
line  of  all  kinds  of  Home  Ilakliig  and  I'lcs  that 
will   please    the    most    fasUdlotu. 

Cascade  Home  Bakery 

120    WEST    FOURTH    STREET. 
Zenith   'phone    1827-A.  Prompt   Deliverjet. 


STAT1-:    OK    MINNKSOTA,    COUNT i'    OF 

.ST.  LOUIS— tf.s. 
Di.strict  Court,  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict. 
In  tlie  matter  of  the  application 
of  Marshall  H.  Al  worth,  to 
regi.ster  the  title  to  the  fol- 
lowing described  real  estate 
situated  in  St.  Louis  County, 
Minnesota,  namely: 
All  of  Hlo<ks  One  (1)  to  Seven 
(7).  inclusive  and  all  of 
Blocks  10.  11."  13.  14,  15.  16, 
17.  18,  19.  21.  22,  26  27.  32, 
33,  35,  10.  45  and  46;  Lots 
One  (1)  to  .Sixteen  (16).  in- 
clu.sive.  and  Nineteen  (19)  to 
Twenty-eight  (28)  inclusive, 
in  lUock  9;  Lots  One  (I)  to 
Thirty  (30),  inclusive,  in 
Block  12;  Lot.s  One  (It  to  Si.\- 
teen  (16),  inclu.sive.  Lot  Eight- 
een <18).  and  Lots  Twentv- 
two  (22)  to  Thirty-two  (32), 
inclusive,  in  Block  20;  Lots 
One  (1)  to  Fourteen  (14).  in- 
clusive and  Seventeen  (17)  to 
Thirty-two  (32),  inclusive,  in 
Block  23;  Lot.s  One  (1)  to  Six- 
teen (16),  Inclusive,  and 
Twenty-nine  (29)  to  Thirty- 
two  (32),  inclusive,  in  Block 
24;  Lots  Three  (3)  to  Six  (6, 
inclusive,  11,  12  19.  20,  21, 
and  25  to  32.  inclusive,  in 
Block  25;  Lots  8.  9.  10.  and  12 
to  16,  inclusive,  in  Block  28; 
Lots  3  to  16  inclusive,  and 
Lots  22,  23.  24  and  30,  in  Block 
30;  Lots  1  to  30,  inclusive,  in 
Block  31:  Lots  1  to  15,  in- 
clusive, and  Lots  18  to  22.  in- 
clusive, and  I.,ots  25  to  30  in- 
clusive, in  Block  34;  Lots  1 
to  29.  inclusive,  and  Lots  31 
and  32.  in  Block  36;  Lots  3 
to  16.  inclusive,  in  Block  37; 
Lots  17  to  32.  inclusive,  in 
Block  39:  Lots  17  to  32  in 
elusive,  in  Block  41;  Lot.s"  11 
to  16,  Inclusive,  in  Block  42; 
Lots  7  to  12,  inclusive,  in 
Block  43;  Lot  6.  and  Lots  10 
to  28,  Inclusive,  in  Block  44; 
also  out-lot  boun<led  on  the 
north  by  4th  Avenue  North; 
on  the  IZost  by  6th  Street;  on 
the  Sotith  by  Shapawa  or 
Long  Lake;  on  the  West  by 
5tli  street,  all  in  the  town  of 
Spalding  located  upon  Gov- 
•  rninent"  Lots  Two  (2)  and 
Three  (3).  and  Southwest 
qtiarter  of  .Southeast  quarter 
of  .Section  Twenty-three  (23)^ 
and  Government  Lot  One 
<1)  of  Section  Twenty-six 
In  township  Sixty-tliree 
North,  of  Range  Twelve 
West. 

Applicant, 
vs. 
John  Llndbeck.  Anna  Lindbeck, 
George  Harder,  Daisy  Red- 
tield  St.  (.'roix  Lumber  Com- 
pany. Swan  Larson.  Ijia  Lar- 
son. Robert  Whiteside.  Fred 
W.  McKlnney,  B.  B.  Ricliards, 
Azro  T.  Crosley,  George  S. 
Grimes,  Albert  Rogers,  Aaron 
Wilson,  Peter  B.  Loucks.  Beal- 
ert  D.  Francis,  and  all  other 
persons  or  parties  unknown, 
claiming  any  right,  title,  es- 
tate, lien  or  interest  in  the 
real  estate  described  In  the 
application    herein. 

Defendants. 
The    State    of    Minnesota   to    the 
named    defendants: 

You  are  h<M-eby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  application  of  the 
applicant  in  the  above  entitled  proceed- 
ing, and  to  Hlo  your  answer  to  the  said 
application  in  tlie  office  of  the  Clerk 
of  said  court,  in  said  county,  within 
twenty  (20)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you,  exclusive  of 
the  day  of  such  service,  and  if  you  fail 
to  answer  the  said  application  within 
the  time  aforesaid,  the  applicant  in  this 
proceeding  will  apply  to  the  court  for 
the  relief  demanded  therein. 

Witness.   J.  P.  Johnson.  Clerk  of  said 

seal   thereof,  at  Duluth, 

this   6th  day  of  March, 


(26  t. 

(63) 

(12> 


above- 


Court,  and  the 
in  said  county. 
A.   D.    1909. 


J.  P. 


(Seal.) 


JOHNSON. 

Clerk. 
By  V.  A.  DASH. 

Deputy. 
WASHBURN.    BAILEY   &   MITCHELL. 

.Mtorneys    for    Ai)pllcant. 
Duluth    Evening   Herald,    March    19     26; 
April     2.     1909.  ' 


Character  of  a  Store. 

People  identify  the 
character  of  a  store 
with  the  character  of 
the  paper  in  which 
they  see  the  store's 
advertisement. 


Phoenix    Mutual 


Life 
I>nu>-. 

Principal    office,     Hartford.    Conn 

1831.)     John   M.   Holrombe,   preslder.t 

weU.    set-retary.      Attorney    to    aocep, 

tkesutji.    Coumilssloner    of    Insurance. 

INCOME    IN     1908 

First    year's    premium ...  I 

Ulvldeiid*  and  surrender  values  applied 
to    purchase    paid    up    iiifurauce    and 

annuities 

Consideration  for  original  aiutulitea. 
and  supplementary  contracts.  In- 
volving   life   conUngencles 

Renewal    premiums    ... 


Inaarance    Com- 


(Organize<1    in 

Slla.s   n.   Oom- 

serrlce   lu    Mla- 


456.424.77 


198,419.00 


29.312.00 
3,530.412.68 


Total  premium  Income $  4.214.568.45 

llcnts    and    interest ...  1,215.164.71 

Profit    <n    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

assets 50.00 

From    all    Lther   sources ...  54.711.39 


Total   Income $  5.484,494.75 

DISBURSEMENTS    DURIIIG    1908. 

Death  rlalm.4   and   matured   endo>vmeiit«.$  1.512,720.52 
\nnultles    and    prumliuu    notes    told    by 

lapse    13.27.1.34 

Surrender    values    to    policy    holders   . . .  498.018,88 

nirldends   to  poUcy   holders 443.185.9» 

Dividends    to   company 38,895.58 


ToUl    paid    policy    holders $  2.500,096.11 

DlvhUnds    held    on    dei>oslt    surrend  rred 

during    the   nar 5.332.60 

CitnimlMlons     and     bonuses     to     agmts 

first   year's   premium 213.003.94 

.Salaries   of   officers    and   employes IJl,  180.16 

Commissions  on   annuiUo* 541.20 

Conmiuted    renewal   commlssloiis 453.17 

.Salaries    and    allowances    for    agencl»..  120.291.54 

.\gcticy  supervision  and  other  expen<cs.  11,325.37 
MetUcal    oxamlner's   fees    and   in^pectlou 

of   risks    37.717.27 

Salaries   of   ofTlcers   and   employes 131.186.  lU 

I.,egal    expenses    2.081.47 

Agents'    b.ilahces    charged    off 4.299.87 

All   other  olsburstmenla 222.466.54 


ToUl  dlsburstmenU $     3.436.049.10 


Excess    of   Income    over   disbursements..! 
ASSETS   DEC.   31.    I'«8. 

Value   of   real   estate   owned $ 

Mortgase    loans     

Premium    notes    and    policy    louts 

Uonds   and   sto(ks   owned ,. . 

Cash    In    office,    banks    and    trust   cam- 

p.'xnlcs    

.\rci  ued    interest    and    rents 

Deferred     and     unpaid    ptemlums 


2,047,845.39 


508. 
.■>.035. 
2.194. 
6.387. 

54K, 
.'!4!). 
324. 


406. 0.-] 
407. OJ 
844. Cl 
2)H.60 

730.93 
U7U.':U! 
151.57 


Total    admitted    assets . . 
Assets     not     attmltted.  .  .  . 

LIABILITIES 


$  25,948.801.111 

J22I.80 

DEC.    31      1908. 


Nt<t    value   of   outsUndliiK   ix.llcles $24,085,273.00 

Present     v-tlue    on     supplementary    ■•on- 

tracts    and    cancelled    policies 44.052.00 

Claims  adju9te<l  ana  not  due.    and  iin- 

ailjusted    and    reported 42.690.00 

Premiums    paid    In    advance ...  49.47.".. DO 

DUldeniis  due  policy  holders .368.064.00 

.Ml   other   Uablhtles 1.359,249.10 


Total    liabilities    on    poUcy    hole  ert' 

accottiit    J  25.948.801.10 


OrosH    divisible    surplus t     1,166,886.10 

EXHIBIT  OF   POLICIES,    I90(    BUSINESS. 

So.  Amount. 

Policies  In  force  at  beginning  of 

the   yesr 57,6  !4     $103,080,718.00 

Policies  In  force  at  close  of  the 

ytar   59,7 '0       108.927.188.00 


THE  MUTUAL 
BENEFIT  UFE 


la 


Mutual  Benrfit   Life  Inaurance  , 
Compaay. 

Principal    office.     Newark.     N.     J.       (Organized 

1«».'  I        F.      Frelliighlngsen.     president;     J.      \Vi 

Johnson,     secretary.       Attorney     to    accept     serrlce    ta 

Minnesota.    Commlssidiier    of    Insurance. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

First   year's   premiums $     1.911.273.40 

UlrldenJs    applied    tu   purchase   paid    up 
Insurance   and   annuities    411.146.M 

CorusldtTatlfii   for  original   annuities   In- 
volving   life   contiugcncies 1.50.ri82.4f 

Uenewal    premiums 14.B7l!894!49 


Total    premium    income $  17. 344. 898. 39 

Ilents    and    Interest 5.416!523.S» 

Profit    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

a»ei«    20.610.U 

Ftum    all   otlier   sourcts 1,172.010.4T 


ToUl  Income    $  2.1,954.042.79 

DISBURSEMENTS    DURING    1908. 
DeatJi  claims  and  matured  endowments.!     7.727.743.49 
.\nnulUr8      and      premium      notes      void 

by    lapse     181.14,"i.4T 

.Surrender  values   to   policy   holders 2,504.177.99 

Dividends  to  policy  holders 2.407.243.44 


Toi«l   paid   policy   holders $ 

Commissions     nrd     l>ormsetj     to     ageuU 

first  year's  premium 

Commissions  on   renewals 

12.820.310.39 

7.36,e50.0« 
969  748.41 

ConinilMloti*    on    uniiulllea 

7,788.7T 

7.392.10 

2r.129.91l 

20,749.«S 

120  656  99 

<'ommut»-<l    renewal    commissions 

!<aluries    and    allowances    for    agencies.. 
-Vgeno   supervision  and  other  expeuse*. . 
Medical     examiner's     fees     and     inspec- 
tion of  risks   

Salaried  of  officers  and   employes 

L,ogal    expenses    

414.877.05 
43  396  90 

All   other  dubursements 

1,211.154.94 

Total   disbursement*    $16,380,158.19 


Kxccsa  of  Income  over  disbursements   . . . 
ASSETS   DEC.   31.    1908. 

Value  of  real   csfale   owned 

.MortttaBe   loans    

Collateral    leans     

Premium   notes  and   policy   loans 

Itonds  and   stock  owned 

Casli    in    oBlc-e.    banks    and    trust    com- 
panies    

Rills   receivable  and  agents'   balancea... 

.Vccnieil  Interest   and  r^'nts 

Deferred  and  uni<.ild  premiums 

Deduct   agci.li'    balance   not  allowed.... 


$     7,373,888.83 

$     3.688,053.94 

54,-.!4.».785.5.% 

2.552.400.00 

21,320.105.70 

34,462.863.51 

1..32I,076.TI 

:i4.n90.49 

2.169.7^0.90 

1.376, 139.49 

36.185.94 


Net    Increase 2.116    $    5,846,470.03 


Increased 


tUe 


ity 
»y 
Hy 
By 
By 


4.212 
713 
1  !9 
M7 


Issued,     revived     .ind 

during    the   year    

Total     terminated     durirg 

year    

By    death 

niulurlty 

expiration 

.suiTf  nd<  r 1.0  »0 

hUHe    2.019 

dt  c  Tease 

BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTik 

No. 
Policies    in    force    at    beginning 

of  the  year 8 18 

I.'suml  ('urlng  the  year TJ 

Ceased    to    be    in    force    during 

the  yctr    17 

In  force  Dec.  31,  last 81.5 


6,318     $  14.720,392.00 


8,873.922.00 

l,-.;4li.268.0(l 

268. 585. 00 

275.342.00 

2,U85.974.00 

4,510,207.00 

478.546.00 

IN    1908. 

Amount. 

$     1,560.631.00 
143,805.00 

133,195.00 
1,571.241.00 


Losses   and   cUlms   incurred   during  the 
year   9 


11.391,55 


Losses    and    claims    settled    during    the 

year     »  U.391.55 


Received    for   pretnlums $         67.175.85 

State  of   Minnesota.    Department    of   IiLsurance. 

1  Hereby  Certify.  That  Uie  annus  1  slatcmtnt  of  the 
Phoenix  Mutual  Life  Insurance  company,  for  the 
year  endliig  Dccenilier  Slat,  1908,  <f  which  tne  alwve 
is  an  alKtrHCt.  has  Ixtn  received  and  filed  In  thij. 
department    and    duly    approved    by    me. 

JOll.N    H,     HAUTIOAN. 
ConuuiSbloni  r    of    Insurance. 

B.  K.  El.MS.  Field  Siipt. 

1032    Security    Bank    Itldg., 
Miiiiu'iipolis,  M  iin. 

PHILIP  H.  .^MITJl.  Gt'ieral  Agent, 

331    Manhattan    BIda.. 

Duluth,  Mini;. 


Total   adnUtted   a.«stl3 $121,129,631.9$ 

.\84ets    not   adinltte«l $:;6.105.84 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

Net   value   of   oustandins   policies $108,9.53.828.00 

Present  value  on  supplementary  contracts       1.042,1 37. 9T 

Claims  duo  and   unpaid 55.983.0i< 

Claims   adjusted   and   not  due.   and   Un- 
adjusted   and    reported 4»2,9ft5.66 

Claims    reslsleil 60.906.89 

Premlimw  p.ild  In  advance 95.137.40 

Dividends  due  policy   holders 2,939.829.77 

All    other    UabtllUes 1.538.823.97 


ToUl     liabilities     on     policy     holden' 

account    $121,129,631.95 


GroM    divisible    surplus $    5.5<>6.«51.M 

EXHIBIT    OF    POLICIES.    1908    BUSINESS. 

Nj.  .Viii  )Unt. 

Policies    in    force    at    the    be- 

glmdiig  of   the  year 189,602     $140,742,990.09 

Policies    In    force    at    close    of 

the   year 200.819       469.247,427.99 


Net   Increase    11.217     $  28,3.14. 437.4 


Issueil.    revi\e<l    and    Increased 

<lurliig  the  year 22.247 

TotMl     ttrmiuated     during     the 

year    11.030 

By    death 2,111 

By    maturity 658 

By    cxplratim 2.:tO« 

By     surrender 3.412 

By     lapse 2.540 

By    de^rtase 

BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTA 

.N  >. 
PolicUs    in    fon-c    at    beginning 

of    the    year 

Issued  during  the  year 

CeiLsed    to    l>e    In    force    during 

tho   year 

In  force  Dec.   31  last 


$  33,865.313.09 


25.361.076  00 
5.191.806.00 
1, 592,399,00 
4,555,602.00 
8.480.9.18.00 
5.151, 714. OO 
388,647.00 
1908. 
.\  mount. 


IN 


C,,303 
869 


432 
6.740 


13,495,473.90 
1.804,9:21.90 

895.049.00 
14.405.348.90 


Losses  r.nd   claims    incurred   during   tlie 

year  f 

I>)s»es  anil    claims    settled    during    U»e 

ytar  I 

Losses  and  claims  unpaid  Dec   31 


S91.899.N 

246.4.37.00 
2,183.00 


American      UruKieiKtH'     Fire     loMurauce 
Company. 

Principal  office,  Cincinnati,  Ohio,  fOrgdidzed  in 
inoOp.  Charles  11.  .^very  president;  Frank  H. 
Freerlcks.  se<Tetary,  Attorney  to  accept  senke  in 
Minnesota.    Conunlssloner    of   Insure  nee. 

CASH    CAPITAL   $150,  )00.00. 
INCOME   IN    1908, 

Premiums    other    than    perpetuals $      35.335.63 

Items    and    interest 4,294.70 

From  all  otlicr  sources 10, 001.04 

Total   lnc(  me    $  49,63^.01 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 

Amount  paid  for  losses $  13,654,73 

Commissions    and    brokirago 3.489,59 

Salaries    and   fees   of   officers,    agen  s   and 

employes     6,581.93 

Taxes,    fees,    rent*   and    other    real   estate 

expenses    1 .038. 1 1 

All    other    disbursements 7.961.44 

Total    disbursements $      33.3J5.80 

Kxress  of  Income   over  dLsbursenienls $  16.306.21 

ASSETS    DEC.    31,    1908. 

Bonds   and   stocks   owne.1 $  168.510.40 

Cash  In  oftkc  ami  in  bank 7.888.6? 

.\c(nicil    Interest    and    rents 2.G57.48 

I'remiums  in  course  of  collection 2.906.6o 

Total  admitted  assct-s $  181,%3.13 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

Iteliisiirince   rtsenc    $  18,110.83 

.Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,    dividends    and 

Interest    due ?*}•': 

Commission   and    bnikerage 327, lo 

Capital  stock  paid  up 150.OOU.00 

Total    liabilities,    including    capital $    169.427.10 

Net  sui-plus $       12.536,03 

RISKS   AND    PREMIUMS,    I90B    BUSINESS. 

Fire   risk,    written    during   tlie   year $2,9:iU,nt)7.im 

Premiums  reielvid  thereon 3C.4KS,li2 

Net  amount   hi  force  at  end  of  the  year.     2.864,721.00 
BUSINESS     IN     MINNESOTA     IN     1908. 
Fire     Itlsks— 

KIsks     written %    123.972,00 

I'rendums  received "-"ifl*'^." 

Losses    Incurred    572.6"- 

I.OSSW     I  aid 572.02 

SUte   of   Jliimesota.    Peiiartmont   of    Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify,  That  the  an  lual  statement  of 
the  American  DniggisU'  Fire  Insuiance  company,  for 
the  yeai-  ending  Dec.  31st.  1908,  tf  which  tlic  alwve 
is  an  aUstract,  has  been  re<ehed  and  filed  iu  tills 
department    and    duly    appn^ved    by    me. 

JOH.S'     A.     HAIfntJAN. 
Commlsaloi  er  of   Insurance. 

CHAS.   H.    HUHN,    State    Ajjent. 
08    AVestern    Ave.,    Mlnnea|»oll»»,    Minn. 


National   Brewera'   Innoraiice   Compau}-. 

ITiiulpal  office.  Chicago,  ill.  (()rganlze<l  In  IHUfi). 
Wm.  11  Itehm.  president;  K.  tJraliam  ll*oad.  8e<Te- 
t.'^ry.  .\ttomey  to  accept  aerrioe  Ir  Minnesota,  Com- 
missioner of   Insur.ince. 

CASH    CAI'ITAL.     $200  500.00. 
INCOME    IN     1901. 

Premium.""  other  than  perpetuals $      2.3, 293. .3(. 

ilenU    and    Inten^t 5,4".ll.'_7 

From   all   clher   soun.es 1. .169.19 

Total    income    *  30,012.82 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN     1908. 

Amount   paid    for  losses $  7.050.62 

Commissions    and    brokerage 5.823.31 

'i^xes.    fees,    rents    and    other    real    estate 

expenses    1.064.57 

Dividends    and     Intei-est lu.000.00 

.Ml    other    disbursements 234.90 

Total   disbursements    $      24,173.43 

Excess   of  Income   ovtr   disbursement! $  5.839.39 

ASSETS    DEC.    31.     1908. 

Bonds   and   stocks    owned $  305.934.70 

Cash    In    office    and    in    bank 21,429.'J2 

.\ccriie<l    interest    and    rents 3.962. 8'.J 

Pftmiums   in   course   of   collection 3.782.95 

Total    admitted    assets $    335,109.76 

Assets    not    «dmitte<l t409..50 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

Uelnsurancc     resene J      11.984.2S 

Sal.irles,    expensea,    Uxes,    dividends    and 

i,.ter.«>t   due    500.00 

Capital   stock  paid  up _20(M»00.00 

Total    UablUiles    Including   caplUl $    212.484.28 

Net    surplus    »     122.62.5.4S 

RISKS  AND   PREMIUMS,    I90»   BUSINESS. 

Fire   ri<ks   written   duriPK   the   year $2,891  ,.(81.00 

Premluiiis    rwelved    tlien-ot. .,"!l!:!a!l  i!;! 

Net  amount  In  f'Tce  at  tn<l  of  the  year   .   2. J..9,.>8J.yo 
BUSINESS    IM    MINNESOTA    IN    1909. 

Fire    lllsks-  STOOifto 

Risks  written   »      •'^■^f:';' 

Premiums  received   66;.0 

.amount   at    risk    •••■••         S'O""'"' 

Stat."  of   MlnnesoU.    Department   ot    Insurance. 

1  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  annul, I  »tatrm«^it  of  the 
National  Brewers'  Insurance  company,  for  the  year 
inding  Decemljer  31if,  lO-'S.  of  whlili  the  aljove  Is  an 
abstract,  has  l)ecn  received  and  filed  lu  this  de- 
triment and  duly  approve«l  by  me. 
^  JOHN    A     HAII'nOAN. 

CoBUuiaslou  !t    of    Xiuuauice. 


Uecelteil    fi  r   premiums 9       401.759.55 

•Stale  of  Miniiesou.   Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  Tliat  the  annual  st-deinent  of  the 
Mutual  Benefit  Life  Insurance  company,  for  the  year 
endlhg  De<-emlx-r  31sl.  1908.  of  which  the  »liov«  U 
an  abstract,  has  U^en  recelvid  and  filed  lu  till* 
department  and  dulj-  approved  by  me. 

JOHN     H      HAIITICAN. 
Coniinissloner    i;f    Iiis'irancA. 

T.  J.  MONAHAN, 

Dislrlcl  Manager. 


407 
Dri.UTH, 


liuri'ows 


Buildiiis:. 

Ml.XXF.SOTA 


FRANK  M.  JOYCE, 

Slate  Agent. 

MIXXKAPOLIS. 


D.H.COSTEUO,  Agent, 

206-7  Lonsdale  Bldg. 


HoHtun  luMuranee  Company. 

Principal  nfllce.  Bo.;ton.  MaPS.  (OrgaiilWHl  in 
1873.1  Hansom  B.  Fullir.  president;  Freeman  Vicker- 
son.  secret rtry.  AtUimey  to  aicept  service  In  Uiu- 
nesi'ta.    Commissioner   of   Insurance. 

CASH   fAPlTAI,,    $1.0').). 000. 00 
INCOME     IN     1908. 

Premiums    other    tiiuii    peryetuali t    2.308, .3.T5. 89 

Rents    and    Int.rest 194.136.08 

Frouj    all   otlier   sources 11.344.t>tf 

I'r'iflt    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

asceii    6.923.33 


TuUI   Income $  2.520,610.U 

DISBURSEMENTS     IN     1908. 

.\nicunt   paid   f>r  losses 9  1.. 338.618.79 

Conuiilsslons    and    brokerage 471,45J.45 

.Saliirles  and  fees  of  officers,  agent!  and 

employes     180.311.61 

Taxes,'  foes,   rents   and  othet    real  estate 

exptnses    66,214.63 

DIvldcids    iind    interest 180, "00.00 

Loss  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  assets  13.586.74 

All    other    dUbiii^menU 100.311.10 


Total  dlsburstmcnu    $    2.353.193.23 


Kxces.s    of    Income    over    dlslHirsement.s     $  167,146.94 
ASSETS    DEC.    31.     I90S. 

Value   of   real   estate  owned $  47.600.00 

Mortgago   ii>ans    1,051,700.00 

Collau  ral     loans     89.6  JO.OO 

Bonds    and    stocks    owned 3.550.615.50 

Cash  in  office  and  in  bank 338.004.42 

Accrued    Interest    and    rents 29.337.64 

Premiums    in   course   of   collection 431.648.33 

All    other   admitted    assets 410.99 

De<luct     spe<lal     depoklt    U«s     $2,.306.87 

Uabillty    thireon 17.743.13 


Total    admitted    Rs.srt« $     5 

.Vsaets    not   adndlfed    $48,SJ9.17 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

I'npald   losses  and   claims $ 

llelnsuraiice  reserve   1 

.Salaries,   e.vpeusea.   taxes,   dividends  and 

Intf-rest   liue      

Commisi<lon   and    brokerage 

All   other   liabilities 

Capital   slu<k   paid    up 1 


521,17J.T$ 


358.013.51 
435,027.91 

25.396.94 

50,325.4S 

14,.'i30.£( 

Oi)0.000.00 


Total   lUUUIUes    Including   capUal $     2.883,693.49 

Net    surplus $    2, 6.'>7. 479.29 

RISKS    AND    PREMIUMS.     1908    BUSINESS. 

Fire    risks    WTllteii    during    the    )ear $lt;;i.5;i3,957,00 

Premiums    rMclved   thereon l.'.»U,034.73  ♦ 

Marine  and  Inland   risks  written   during 

the    year 139.073.311.00 

Premiums    received    thereon 1.616.084.50 

.Net  amount   in   force  at  end  of  the  .vear  193,128.308.09 
BUSINESS   IN   MINNESOTA   IN    1909. 

Marine 
Fire  IllskR.   and   Iijbiuil.   AgiEregate. 

Risks     written $331,018     $3,820,330     $4,151,339 

Premiums    re<eived   ...       5.856  32.309  :«.ia3 

losses    incuiivd    4.822  12.992  17,814 

l,<.s.ses    paid    4.81!'  7.!'y4  12,814 

.Amount    at    risk 393,04:t  758.227        1,151.270 

Slate  of  Minne-ol»,   Department  of  Insurance, 

1  Hensby  Certify,  'Hut  the  aiuiual  statement  of  t%» 
lioston  Insurance  company,  for  the  year  eii'ilng  !»•- 
t-ember  31st.  I'.tOS,  of  which  the  above  U  an  ab- 
stract, baa  Ijeen  re<'elve<l  and  fUrd  in  tids  deparimeut 
ai:d  duly  approved  by  mt. 

JOHN    A.    HAUTICAN. 
Commissioner  of   Insurance.. 


No  matter  what  yon  want 
it  will  save  you  time  and 
money,  if  you  will  use  The 
Herald's  Wants, 


The  Chinese  method  of  relievinK  on© 
pain  with  another  is  ^uing  out  of 
voKtie.  and-  there  Is  a  large  sale  of 
patent  medicines.  Sedatives  are  Judged 
and  \alued  by  what  they  do  iu  ibtt 
shortest  time. 


ta. — g 


'  '■■       ■'  -^  ■ 
■  »  1    « 


<->» 


' 


20 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD: 


FRIDAY.    MARCH    19,    1909. 


WHEAT  HAS 
WEAK_TONE 

Northwestern    MarKets 

Pay  No  Attention  to 

BuUish  Influences. 


THE  MARKETS  AT  A  GLANCE. 


Flax  Has  a  Quiet  Session 

and  Closes  Easier  in 

Duluth. 


Duliitli 
"Wheat   V, 
Chicago 
markets 


Board    of    Trade.   March    19. — 

;ts5    somewhat   irreg^ilar   today. 

May     and     the     Southwestern 

were    firm    at    the    close,     but 


Puluih.  and  Minneapolis  were  easier, 
receipts  in  the  Northwe.«t  furnishintf 
an  irrepressible  bearish  influence. 
Wheat  liad  been  comingr  to  market  at 
a  rapid  rate  in  Duluth  and  Minneapolis;. 
There  was  some  export  demand 
ManitoVa    a»id    durum    wheat. 

The      Mouem      Mli'.er     was 
Btand-off.      It    say.": 

"Ileports    of    winter   killing 
favorable      nppearance      of 
wheat   t»la"t    tome    from 
of   the   soft   winter  wheat   states,  a   low- 
average     conditio:!     b»^ing     reported     by 
goutliern    Illinois 
advicea  are 
hstrd 
Man 


for 

about     a 

and    un- 
the    winter 
some   sections 


a 
a 

it 

ii 

n 
a 


IrJ^  ^  jf^  ^  ^  ^  V  ^^^^p  ^  ^  ^^^  ^  ^  *•■ 


a 
a 
it 

a 

a 

a 

a 

*  ^j^ 


Duluth  May  wheat  closed  %c  lower. 

Chicago  May  wheat  closed  y^c  higher. 

Minneapolis  May  wheat  closed  a  shade  lower. 

Liverp  ol  wheat  cables,  i/gd  higher  to  1/2^  lower. 

Duluth  May  flax  closed  %c  lower. 

New  York  stocks,  easy  and  dull. 

Boston  copper  stocks  closed  about  unchanged. 

Duluth  curb  coppers,  unchanged. 

Chicago  live  stock,  steady  to  strong. 


iHt********M**M***m*******i 


it 

it 

it 

it 
it 
it 
it 

it 
it 

it 

n 
it 

it 

it 
it 

it 
n 
it 

m 


by  <ommi.«i.'?ion  liouses.  Pit  trader.-? 
were  disposed  to  sell,  but  offering.s 
were  not  large.  May  opened  *il(V4i^ 
higher,  at  5 1 '-a  ftt  r.4^»o  and  for  a  time 
lield    within    the    opening    range. 

An     advance     of     ."ic     in       live 
prt)nipte«l    considerable    buying   of 
visions,     resulting     in     a     firm     market 
early    in    the    day.      Prices    at    the    start 
were   a    shade    lower   to    10c    higher. 


hogs 
pro- 


.\r  tides — 
Flour,  bl>ls. 
Wheat,  bu 
»_'orn,  bu.  . 
Oats,  bu.  .  . 
live.  bu.  .  . 
Barley,    bu. 

t^ar     lot 
witli    17    of 
cars,    with 


Shipments. 

27.800 

5i(,000 

231.800 

136.400 

2,000  , 

115.500 

receipts:     Wheat. 

contract    grade; 
11    of    contract 


>»d 


millers.        C)therwise 

favorable,  especially  In  the 

winter    wheat    territory,    the    wet 

li     having    been    of    benefit    to    the 

■winter   wheat  crop  at   large." 

Argentine  shipments  ot  wheat  were 
bullish,  as  anticipated.  They  were  1.- 
tiS  000  bu  against  5,096.000  bu.  last 
week    and   6.7:>2.00    bu.    a    year   ago. 

The  Liverpool  market  closed 
higher  to  'ttd  lower.  Antwerp 
higher  and  Budapest  I'ic  lower. 

The  Mav  optitm  closed  ^gc  lower  m 
Puluth,  Uc  higher  in  Chicago,  a  shade 
lov.er  in  Minneapolis.  »»c  higher  In 
New  York.  •%  iJi  '>jc  iiigher  in  St.  Louis 
and  Kansa.s  Oily,  and  ^»c  lower  in 
"Winnipeg.  The  July  option  closed  i^c 
lower  in  Dulutii.  'sc  lower  in  Chicago, 
>4c  lower  in  .Minneapolis,  '»c  higher 
In  New  York,  a  shade  lower  in  St. 
l^ouis.  is'y'-iC  lower  in  Kansas  ^ity. 
and    '^  .U  ^c   lower  in    Winnipeg. 

Mav  corn  closed  \^c  higher  in  Chi- 
cago." and  igd  higher  in  Liverpool.  May 
oats   «lii.sfd    *4C   higher    in    Chicago. 

Broonihall    cabled    from    Liverpool: 

•Wheat — There  was  a  steady  open- 
ing in  wheat  with  values  unchanged  to 
%i{  low^r  and  following  the  opening 
March  advanced  J^d.  Un  the  whole, 
the  market  laiked  any  special  In- 
fluence, but  the  steady  undertone 
•was  the  result  of  the  firmer  American 
cables  and  the  firmness  of  Argentine 
markets  with  a  further  decrease  in  the 
vi.«ibie  supply  tl»ere  with  the  slilp- 
ments  disapp-..>inting  as  compared  with 
last  week  and  last  year.  FollowlTig 
tlie  opening  the  market  eased  off.  tlie 
distant  months  lc>sing  '4d  to  \<.l  on 
the  improved  American  outlook,  and 
the  liberal  .chipmenis  from  Australia. 
At  midday  the  market  was  easier  and 
unchangeil  to  ^sd  lower  than  yester- 
day. 

"Corn  was  steady  and  at  the  open- 
ing the  market  was  unchanged  and 
later  advanced  »sc  for  May,  Marcli  be- 
ing umiuoted.  Support  was  the  re- 
sult of  the  firmness  of  American  ot- 
terings. ' 

t;ar  receipts  at  I>uluth  were  104 
against  2'J  last  year,  and  at  Minneapo- 
lis 22S.  against  265  last  year,  making 
a  total  for  the  Northwest  of  332, 
against  2i>3  last  year.  Chicago  re- 
ceived J*,  against  16  last  year.  Winni- 
peg   received   154   against   112    last   year. 

Primary  receipts  of  wheat  were  562.- 
000  bu.  last  year  502,000  bu.  Ship- 
ments 267.000  bu..  last  year  266.000  bu. 
Clearances  of  wiieat  and  Jlour  aggre- 
gated   113,i>70    bu. 

i'rimary  receipts  of  corn  were  512.- 
000  bu.,  "last  vear  544.000  bu.  Ship- 
ments 366,000  bu..  last  year  4S9.000  bu. 
Clearances  of  corn  were  720,366  bu. 

Wheat  was  active  in  Duluth.  May 
wheat   opened   ^c  lower  at  $1,14  4.   ad- 


Beceipts 
23.000 
44,700 
187,200 
285.700 
1.000 
52,900 
58  cars, 
corn,  240 
grade;  oats, 
122  cars.  Total  receipts  of  wheat  at 
Chicago,  Minneapolis  and  Duluth  today 
were  390  cars,  compared  with  301  cars 
last  week  and  310  cars  the  correspond- 
ing   dav    a    year    ago. 

Close:  Wheat-  May.  ?1.16;  July, 
$1.03 ';,  ft  1.04:  September.  [)7 %  (S  91  % c . 
December.  98^40.  Corn — March,  64V2c; 
Mav.  eei-jc:  .Inly,  65"«fr|66c;  September, 
6o*4c:  December,  68  ^ic.  Oats — May, 
54-\c;  Jalv,  IbVsc;  September,  4tiV2<fi' 
4t>^c.  Pork  — May.  $17.60:  .Tuly.  $17.60: 
September.  $17.riO.Lard — May,  $10.07  V2: 
Julv,  $10.07 '2®' 10.20:  September, 

$10!32l5.  Kins— May,  $9.25;  .July.  SO. 40; 
September.  $9.55.  Kye — Cash.  SOftiSlc; 
Mav,  SOc.  Barley— Cash,  64(&70c.  Tim- 
othy— March,  $3.85.  Clover — March, 
$8.76.  Cash  wheat — No.  2  red,  $1.224j- 
1.241*:  No.  3  red,  $1.16*??  1.23;  No.  2 
itard,  $1.153Bli  1.18;  No.  3  hard. 
1.15*4.;  No.  1  nortliern,  $1.18^1 
2  northern.  $1.15(y;].17i^ ;  No.  3 
$1.12  (ij  1.17.  Corn — No.  3, 
No.  3  white,  66r(i66M!c;  No, 
WCSiic:    No.    4,    63',^W64c 


liiple    iirup, 
FlU'crta, 


2  7 


52c;  No.  3  white,  52».i@54c 
53  4c;   standard. 


54c. 


$1.12® 
.19;    No. 

spring, 
64-%  (fi  65'4c; 
3  vellow,  65 
Oats— No.  3, 
No.  4  white, 


vaiiced   to    $1.14^8    and 


ranged    1 
the    first 


etween 
of    the 


that  and  $1.14  during 
session,  closing  at  $1.14'4.  a  loss  of  ^.kc 
from  yesterday.  July  wheat  opened 
%c  lower  at  $1.14"8.  advanced  to  $1,154 
and  ranged  between  that  and  $1,14  4 
during  the  rest  of  the  session,  closing 
at  $1.14'^.  a  loss  of  4c  from  yesterday. 

Durum  wlieat  closed  4t'  lower  and 
cat^li  spring  wheal  was  selling  on  a 
basis   of   Ic  over  May   No.    1   northern. 

Mav  llax  was  dull  and  closed  off.  It 
opened  unchanged  at  $1.53.  and  ranged 
between  that  and  $1,614  during  the 
re^t  of  the  day,  closing  at  $1.62 S.  a 
loi-s  of  %c  from  yesterday.  July  flax 
closed  4c  lower  at  $1.62.  September 
flax  sold  at  $1.38 fti  1.39 »*  and  closed  un- 
changed at  $1,394.  October  flax  sold 
at  $1.35 H  and  closed   4c  lower  at  $1.3o. 

Barley  closed  4c  lower  and  other 
course    grains    unchanged. 

Following    were    the    closing   prices 

Wheat — No.    1   hard  on   track.  $1.16^4 
To  arrive:   No.    1    northern.   $1.15i 
2    northern,     $1.13 '4.    On    track: 


THE  MINNK.\P0L1S  MARKET. 

Demand  for  Flax  Strong.  But  Offer- 
ings Are  Light. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  March  19. — Local 
elevator  stocks  of  wheat  decreased 
200,000  bu  for  the  week.  May  opened 
at  4c  below  yesterdays  closing  and 
throughout  the  session  ilie  market  was 
nervous.  There  was  only  a  range  of 
lialf  a  cent  frotn  the  high  to  low  point. 
May  closed  at  $1.14 't,  the  same  as  the 
opening.  Minneapolis  today  received 
228  cars  against  265;  Duluth  104 
against  29:  Winnipeg  154,  against  122. 
Mav  opened  $1.14 ''4;  high,  $1,14  4;  low, 
$1.13"8;  close,  $1.14  »4.  July  opened 
$1.15;  high.  $1.15ra  1.154:  low-,  $1.14'Si; 
close.  $l.i4"4;  cash  wheat  was  in  good 
demand.  Local  »nillers  were  more 
eager  buyers  than  the  country  millers, 
but  both  were  quite  general  buyers. 
Offerings  were  lieavy  and  the  market 
was  active.  No.  1  noJthern  sold  for 
l='4'U2>4c  over  May  and  No.  2  for  '4c 
under  to  '4c  over  the  May  vuice.  Close: 
No.  1  northern,  $1.16:  to  arrive,  $1.1554 
(tjl.l6;  No.  2  northern,  $1.14  (it  1.14 'i  ;  to 
arrive,  $1.13^4  (fj  1.14  No  3  wheat,  $1.10 
(^i  1.12;  No.  3  vellow  corn,  6IS4C.  No3 
vhlte  oats,  504®514.  No.  2  rye,  73?4(a' 
7  6  3.4  c. 

Flax  receipts,  14  cars  today  against 
53;  shipments,  none.  Demand  was 
strong,  but  offerlgs  were  too  light  to 
allow  an  active  market.  Prices  were 
the    same       as       Duluth       May.       Close, 

$1,62  4. 

Barley  receipts,  16  against  25;  de- 
mand, "although  active,  was  not  as 
strong  as  yesterday.  Prices  were  4c 
off  for  the  top  grades.  Keceipts  were 
a  little   heavier.        Close,   61  4  (?i  63c. 

Mlllstuffs  shipments.  1.590;  demand 
was  strong  and  the  market  was  very 
active.  Shipments  were  about  steady 
with  vesterdav  and  prices  held  firm. 
Bran     in     bulk.     $23.00ffx  23.50. 

Flour  was  in  only  slow  to  fair  de- 
mand, coming  In  small  orders  from  do- 
mestic trade.  Kxport  news  lacked 
feature.  Shipments,  47,946  barrels. 
First  patents.  $5.55^5.65;  second  pat- 
ents. $5.454i5.55;  first  clears,  $4.40t}i 
4.50;   second  clears,   $3.151t3.25. 


10-lb.    cans 1 

m;Ts. 

per   It 

Krfiich    walnuti,    >er   lb 

Calif onilA    iutt-9l>eUeU    tralnuts.    pM 

lb     

Cocaimts,    per  dox 

liraziU,   per  doz 

Mixed    tjuts.    per    lb 

feaiiuts.    per    Id 

t'br<Uiutfl,  per  lb 

KKUITS. 

BuiL-inas,   per  lb 

UaliiKii    gr»pes,    per   keg    

l>i»tt».    liard.    i:«-lb.    box 

Dates,   sugar  watuuts,  10-lb.   box.... 

Figs,   snuriia.   lu-lb.   box 

Kiss.     I'aUforuia 

Urangea    

Lemoits,    CaiifwrtJla     4 

Llnies.   per  box 1 

Urape  liuil.   per  box 4 

Apples      ' 

(.•ruiibcrriw.    per   bbl 

Klorlda   plueappli-s,    per   iTalt    

tiKKk;N    VbCKTABLJiS 

Wax  beans,   per  lia«ket   

Pie  plant,   per   box 

Cucumbers,   botUouse,   doz 

Kaniy  cluliien  lluut  celer; 

Eudlvea,    per    bus 

Lettuce,   bothouse,  per  bus 

itadlstic*.    per   ac 

Long  roUislie!.   per  do* 

.^printji.    per    lb 

rumaloea,    us    basxeu 

VKGKTABLES. 

Pumpkins,     per    ooz 

llubbarU  tauath.   per  doz 

Cabbages,    per    cr;ite 

Onlcns.  .ScacUb.  per  trate 

Jloiicradlsh,    per    bbi 

Uetl    Uluba   oiduns.    ui.-w.    ocr    100    Iba 

rotatocs.   per  bushtw 

Sweit   pctatoet,    per    bua 1 

Brown    beans     3 

BeeU.  per  lu* t 

New    carrots,    pot    bui 

Turnips,    per   bus 

Bagas.    per    bus 

Parsley,    per    do« 

Oyster  plant,   per  dox 

NEW 

New  apple  elder,   per  keg 

Black    raspberry    JiUce 

Orange,  cberry  or  pear 

FOP    CORN. 

Choice,    per    Id 

lUce   com,    sbcl'e'.l    

DRKSSKD    roUI.rKT, 

.Spring!!,    per    lb 

Hci>,    i>er   lb 

Turkeys  .  .  . 
Uuv*.«.  per 
Ueese.    per 


33 

14 
19 

IS 

60 

3  SO 

U% 

8 

U 


<a      s;t 


00 
i» 
10 

23 
85 
75 
00 
tfO 
00 
00 
12  5U 
«  M 

2  SO 
1  23 

a  00 

3S 


@ 


4^ 


]    35 


& 


53 
50 


DECLINES 
INJTOCKS 

MarRct  Started  Narrow, 

Firmed  Slightly,  But 

Soon  Be(fame  Easy. 

Large  Offerings  of  United 

States  Steel  Were 

a  Feature. 


ClUEIl. 


00 
25 
75 

ra 

1: 

60 

50 
60 
00 
00 
50 
50 
03 
75 
00 
73 
7» 

r» 

75 

40 
7» 

S  50 
3  SO 
8  60 

4 

S 


9       «3 


u«       19 


®  1  00 


9 


New  York,  March  19. — Prices  drifted 
sluggishly  within  a  very  narrow  range 
en  light  opening  dealings  In  stocks  to- 
day. Wltli  the  exception  of  a  rise  of 
1 's  in  St.  Paul  and  ^4  In  Tennessee 
Copper,  there  was  no  change  recorded 
a.«   great  as    >i 

The  stock  market  showed  momentary 
strength  as  a  result  of  an  active  de- 
mand for  Rock  Island  and  American 
Smelting.  Free  offerings  of  the  active 
stocks,  particularly  3ieadlng.  caused 
the  entire  list  to  react  sharply.  The 
local  traction  stocks  suffered  from  se- 
vere liquidation.  At  11  o'clock  the 
market  was  irregular,  Northern  I'acitic 
rising  to  a  point  over  yesterday's  close. 

The  movement  shaped  more  definite- 
ly upward  with  the  extension  of  North- 
ern Pacific's  rise  to  i^.  There  were 
scattered  declines  of  some  minor 
stocks.  The  tone  was  heavy  and  dull 
at    noon.      Bonds    w:ere    irregular. 

There  was  no  effort  made  to  move 
prices  during  the  mid-session  hour,  the 
lists  showing  extreme  dullness.  Dis- 
tillers' .Securities  declined  l')%  and  Erie 
first    preferred    declined    1. 

Tlie  maiket  closed  easy  and  dull. 
The  apathetic  demand  allowed  prices 
to  drop  to  the  low  level  of  the  day. 
Some  large  offerings  of  United  States 
.Steel  were  a  feature,  the  price  yielding 
to   below   44. 


New    York    stock 
by   Piper.   Joiinton 


auotatixiis 
tt  Cas3. 


furnished    Tlie   Herald 


lb., 
lb.. 


Pike,    per  1!) 

Perch,    per    lb 

Kresh  salmon,   rer 

I'lckcrel,    iwr   lb 

Wliiie.    ptr   lb 

b'rekh   lake   trout    ... 
Utiriiig.  per  lb.    ... . 

Timothy,    per    ion... 
Ijpiaud.   No.    I,    per 


FISH. 


lb.. 


15 

« 

17 

16 

w 

17 

2:) 

17 

0 

18 

14 

« 

IS 

C 

(« 

10 

7 

«• 

8 

11 

v» 

IS 

9 

w 

10 

10 

s 

Shi^s 
Uran. 
Oats, 


.  per  ton . 
per  ton. . . 
per   bu . . . . 


HAY. 

ton 

FEED. 


MEATS. 


11  00 
9  SO 

27  00 

26  00 

37 


Beef    

Mutton    . . . 

I.anl     

Pork  loins 

Veal    

I.au.ba    


7     @       IOV2 
0 
11^ 


11 

7 
12 


@ 


11 '4 
9^ 
13 


CbicaKO. 

Chicago.  March  ly.  Butter  -  .Market  Mrm;  creara- 
erlei.  liairfS'Jc;  ilalrles.  ao(ff:i5c.  Kggs  .Market  steady; 
firsts.  ISc;  prime  flrsU,  lOc.  Cheese— Market  steady; 
(In  Isles.  15 'ic:  twins.  l.'«c;  young  .^nurIcRS.  16c; 
long  lii.nis.  Iti'ic.  Piilatoee— Market  steady:  choice 
10  fancy.  JSJiSOc:  fair  to  good.  80(0  8;c.  Poultry— 
.Mavliet  bteady:  turkeys.  17c:  dilckenii.  Ki'ac;  springs. 
ID'sc  Veal — Market  tasy;  SO  to  60-poui.<l  uelKhts. 
74n''>c;  «0  10  85iK)uiiU  weights.  Sfe'Jc;  83  lu  IIJ- 
pound   weights,    S»(«llc. 


Car    Foundry. 
Ixiromolive.  .  . 

Cotton    Oil 

Smelters    


.\IIJ4  Chalmers    . 

dii   pfd    

.\Mialgaraatet1 

.\miri6an    Sugar 

.American 

.\nierlciin 

.\m<rlcan 

.^merican 

.\naconda      

.Mclilson     

do     pfd      

naltlniore    &    Ohio     .. 

Bn>i.klyn    ILipid    Transit.*. 

(.Viitral     I-eathtr     ..... 

Chesapeak>.>    &    Oldo 

Chlcago-Ct.  We«tiril  colli 
Chlcago-»;nal  Wotcrn  .\ . 
Chlcago-tJrtat   Wcsteni  B. 

C..    M.    &    St.    I'aul 

Colorado    .Southern    

Colorado    Fuel    &    Iron... 

Con^olMated   tJas    

Canadian   I'adflc    

/i£    Ilud/on 

Kio  Orande 


■4,    No. 
No.     1 


northern,  $1.1514;  No.  2  northern. 
|1.13>4:  Mav.  $1.14>4;  July.  $1.14^4; 
Septembfr.  $1.01  Vi.  Durum  on  track: 
No.  1.  $1.02*4  :  No.  2.  $1.00»4;  May  dur- 
um. $1.0184:  Julv  durum.  $1.02.  Flax 
to  arrive.  $1.63='., ;  flax  on  track. 
fl.B33g;  Mav.  $1.63'-r;  July.  $1.62;  Sep- 
tember. $1.39 >,i:;  October.  $1.35.  Oats  to 
arrive.  50'»ic:  oats  on  track,  50Tic;  rye. 
72(&75c:   barley.   6O1,  i6  62c. 

Cars  inspected:  Wheat.  104.  last  year 
29;  oats,  4;  barley,  19;  Hax  6,  last 
year  5. 

Receipts:  "Wheat.  140.163:  oats.  6.159; 
barlev.   18.154:  rve.  &06;  flax.  6.177. 

.Shipments:  W'heat.  1,000;  oats.  16.- 
642;    barlev.    1.133. 


New 


Xew     Vorlc. 

York.  March  10.  llutler 
celpts.  4.406  packages;  <ream«ry  specials.  SU'iC" 
aic;  omdal.  3'Hac;  extras.  .lOc;  third  to  first,  aiw 
'Jao.  Cheese— M.irket  firm;  receipts.  612  boxes;  state 
full  cream  fancy,  l.'i'ici  15»4C.  Eggs— Market  flnn; 
n?celpts.  19,0!<9  casr.s;  «tale  Pennsylvania  and  near- 
by brown  and  ndxc<l  fancy,  aoci'lc;  same 
choice  lU(al9»sc;  westrni  first.  18\(glSK:; 
18 '^c.' 


-Market    firm:    re- 


fair   to 
seconds. 


HIDES,  SKINS  AND  FURS. 


UIUES. 


HEARD  ON  THE  FLOOR. 


No. 

No. 
No. 
No. 
No, 


C'n.th    Sale*   Friday. 

nirth»ni  ntipat.    1    l-:i  cars 

IK  rtheni.   81  Ini   10  lbs 

liiTllKm.    LS-'iC'  bu 

ni'rtlieni.    1   car 

:i(rllnrii.   "  cars 

Bontitd.    1  cur  No.  4  northtrn 

Bor.dey.   1  lar  No.  2  iionhern 

J>ui  im.   li  <ar»   No.    1 

r>un4ni .    1    car   No.    2 

l>UTum.   a."!>    bu    No.    3 

Oats.  2  cars  No.  3  white , 

Barley.  4   cars 

Barley.  2   cars 


riax. 

rias. 


2-3  »ar. . 
1.000    bu 


to   arrbe 


.ll.lSVj 

.  1   15'» 

.  1.15% 

.  1.14>4 

.  1.11 

.  1.01 

.  1.08'i, 

.  l.o:i 

.  1.01 'a 

.  1.004 

.  .51>4 

.  .62 

.  .61'4 
.1.63 

.  1.63 


THE  rHK'A(iO  MARKET. 


Minneapolis   puts      were      $1.13*4    aitd 

$1.13^   bid  and  calls  $1.14*4   and  $1.14»4 

bid. 

Chicago  May  puts  wrere  $1.16?4'S'% 
and  downs  $1.15 '4,  Julv  ups  were 
$1.04^    and    $1.04^*    and    downs    $1.0323 

-SVi  and  $1.03 '4. 

^       •      • 

that  the  stocks  of 
Duluth  will  increase 
week,  and  that  the 
increase  30,000  bus. 
•  •  • 
Tlie  Contlnetit  seems  to  be  in  the 
market  for  durum  v/heat  and  Manitoba 
in  earnest.  Ames-Brooks  and  other  lo- 
cal ey.porters  worked  quantities  of  both 
varieties  during  the  session  today,  as 
they   have  almost   every  day  this  week. 


It    Is    estimated 
wheat   In   store  at 
600.000    bus.     this 
stocks   of  flax   will 


XeTv    )  <trk   Grain. 

New  York.  March  19. — Close:  W'heat — 
May.  $1.19'^i:  July,  $1.17 "s.  Corn — May, 
73V4c:  July,   7314c. 


Cables  and  Increased  Xoithwest  Re- 
ceipts Inipai-t  Weak  Tone. 

Chicago.  March  19. — Weak  cables  and 
Increased  receipts  in  tlie  Northwest. 
Imparted  a  weak  tone  to  the  wheat 
market  at  the  opening  today.  Initial 
quotations  being  '^  c  to  H®%c  lower 
than  the  previous  close.  .Several 
prominent  liolders  were  moderate  sell- 
ers during  the  early  part  of  the  day 
and  buying  wa.s  chiefly  by  shorts.  May 
opened  at  $1.1578^*116.  sold  up  to 
f  1.1 6^1.  and  then  dropped  back  again 
to  $1.15's-  July,  which  opened  at 
$1.04 '?z  1.0414.    sold    off    to    $1.03  T&. 

Trade  continued  (|uiet  tliroughout  the 
dav  and  prices  fluctuated  over  a  narrow 
range.  The  close  was  easy  with  May 
off  '4'?'"nc  at  $1.16  July  was  down 
^(fi'S'KC  at  $1.03-iif«  1.04. 

"Wet  weather  in  the  corn  belt  offset 
the  weakness  of  wheat  and  caused 
Blight  firmness  in  the  corn  market. 
Trading,  however,  was  rather  quiet.  \ 
leading  long  was  a  seller  of  May  and 
this  had  a  tendency  to  make  pit  trad- 
rs,  who  wre  inclined  to  buy,  to  with- 
hold such  orders.  Prices  at  the  start 
were  'gl&^c  lower  to  i-fetai/ic  higher. 
May  being  at  66^^  «t.66%c.  After 
touching  66-4'Li667ic,  May  eased  off 
again    to  66 ^c. 

Prices  slumped  quite  sharply  In  the 
last  half  of  the  day  on  realizing.  May 
declining  to  66 He  The  close  was  easy 
With  Mav  a  shade  lower  at  66V2C. 

Oats  were  firm  on  moderate  demand 


American  AVliep.t   MnrketM. 

Duliilli 

.Mhmcapolis.  rhkago. 

•New  York. 

May  - 

Open     ....I1.14HA 

$1.14^       Sl.lB-l.ivi 

$l.l!l% 

lUgh     ....   1.14H 

1.14<A          1.16H 

1.20% 

U.w     1.14 

\.n%U  1.1.->T4 

1.19% 

nose    ....   1.14H 

1.14'4          1.16 

1.19%.\ 

Close    18..   l.H-4 

1.14'4-?i,   l.n\ 

1.1&% 

July 

Open     1.14V4C 

l.l.S              1.04'i-04 

1.12 

High     ....   1.15V4 

l.lo-'fl        1.04% 

1.12% 

Ix.w     1.14VS 

1.14H          103% 

l.US 

Close    ....   1.14\B 

l.I4>.\      1.0:;'i-04B 

1.11%.\ 

Close    18..   1.15»4 

1.15'»         1.04->^ 

1.11% 

St.    Louis — 

Close    Iflth.     Close    18th. 

.May    

$i.i::'4 

$1.13% 

July    

1.01->i 

1.01% 

Kansas   City  — 

May    

LOT"* 

1.06%-% 

July  

96%-% 

»6% 

Winnipeg — 

May    

....• 1.12% 

1.12% 

July    

1.13% 

1.13%-14 

ClileaKo  C 

orn,  UatN  and  Porlc. 

Oats.            Corn 

I'ork. 

.May.            .May. 

May. 

Open     

High    

54%              «6% 

.14%              66% 

$17.72 
17.77 

l>iW    

54%              ««% 

17.60 

Close   

54%B           06%B           17.60 

heaTj  steer  hides.   o»et 
and   up. 


Green  salted 

60     lbs 

Green  salted    cows,    25    lbs. 

and  steers  under  60  lbs 

Green  salted    bulls,    stags    and    oxen, 

40   lbs.   and   up 

Green  salted   lung   haired    kips,    8   to 

25  lbs 

Green  salted  veal  kips,   15  to  25  Ib«. 
Green  salted  veal  calf.   8  to  15  Ibt.. 

(;rcci;  sailed  hog  skins,   each 

Gro.en  salted  horse    and    mule    hides, 

larg.   each   

Green  and   frozen   heavy   steers,    over 

60  lbs 

Dry    flint    Indian      trimmed      hldea. 

heavy,   over  16  lbs 

Dry    salted    Iddts.    all    sections,    over 


12  lbs 

Green    and   green 
all     sectlui.a 


salted   deer   skins. 


No.  I. 
12H 
11% 

8% 

11% 
12% 

!.'•.% 
23 

3  20 

11% 

17% 

IB 

11 


Tallow, 

Tallow. 

Tallcw, 

Grease, 

Grease, 

Grease, 

(irtase. 

Old  butler   .. 

Hougli  talluw 


TALLOW. 

rakes 

barels 


No.  1.  In 
No.   1.   In 

No.   2    

v.hlte.    choice 

ytllcw 

brown    or   dark 

Including  skunk  and  soon  oU 


«    .9 


No.  i 

11% 

10% 

8% 

10 
11 

34% 
15 

2  20 

10% 

ir% 

13 


B% 
4% 

6% 

4% 

8% 

8% 

6 

2% 


Kclaware 
Ktnver   & 

Olstlllcrs       

!>..    S.    S.    &    A 

Erie     

do     1st    pfd 

do    'Jnd    pfd 

C.rcat   N<  rlhern    

(ircal     Nirthtni     Ore. 

Inter-Met    

lowa  Centnl    

Kansa.-i    Cliy    Couthcm 
Loui?vllle  &    Nathvliie 

MeUcan  Central    

.Missouri.   Kun!>.i&  &  Tesas 

.Missouri    Pailflc    

.National     Lead      ....... 

New    York  C'.-ntral    

Norfolk   Ac    Western    

North  American  ■•■^^' 
Northern  Pacific  :..'.. 
Ontario    k    Western    ... 

I'cnnsyhaida    

People's   (Jas    

rres!!«^I    Slerl    Car 

Hepubllc  Sleei   *c   Iron. 

do  pfd    

Rock    Island    

d.j   pfd    

Reading    

Sloss-ShefTltld      

Soo    Line    

Soullum     Kailc.ay     ... 

do  pfd    

Tenne.see    Copper     . . . 

Texas    Paiific    

IVln  City    

Inlcn    I'acillc     

♦Cfah    Copper    

\\    S.    Steel    

do     ptd     

Wabash     

do   pfd    

W'.->iliiB;'cuse   

•♦Western     I'nlcn     ... 
WLsninslii    Central    ... 

do  pfd    


13% 

69 

130% 
48=<-4 
01% 

■815% 
41% 

103% 

102% 

108 
72 

29% 

70% 

4% 


run:*. 


Dulutli    Car    inapection. 

Whes.t— No.  1  hanl.  1;  No.  1  iHTtheni.  44;  No. 
2  northeni.  1.'):  No.  3  spring,  9;  No.  4  spring.  1; 
western  red.  1;  No.  1  dunnn.  22;  No.  2  durum.  2; 
No  3  durum.  4.  Total  of  durum.  '.;8;  niLxed.  2; 
velvet   'hair.    3.      Total    of    whe.it.    104:    last    year.    29. 

Flax- No.    1.    6.      Total    of   flax,    6;   last   year,    5. 

Oats.    4:    barley.    19. 

Total  of  all  cars.   133.     Cars  on  track  today.    122. 


IilTcrpooi   Grain. 

Urerpool.  Marcli  l!i.-  ("losing;  Wheat— Spot  firm; 
.No  2  red  western  winter.  8s  j'id;  futures  steady: 
May.  8s  2%d;  July,  Ss  3\il;  .Siplember,  7s  10%d. 
(•,,ni— Spot  flrai;  new  American  mixed.  5s  Ud 
tures.    «iulct;    March,    nominal;    May.    .'js    9%d. 


fu- 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 


Prices     are    steady     »nd     unchanged. 
The    following    quotations    were    rumlsbed 
secretary   cf   the   produce   excliange. 
BUTTICR. 


by    tiM 


Creamery    prints 

30 

@ 

32 

Tubs    

28 

(ef 

30 

Ilenovated    

26 

Ladles    

S3 

Packing  steck  • 

16 

(* 

17 

EOOS. 

Fresh   » ggs    

20 

0 

23 

CHKKSC. 

Full  iTcam.   twins   

IS 

« 

le 

Wisconsin  flau   

IS 

» 

16 

Block   and    wheel   cheese 

17 

Id 

18 

Llraburger,   full  cream   

18 

0 

20 

Primost    •  •  •  •  •  •• 

10 

UONET. 

New   fancy   white   clover,    per   lb 

IT 

do    per    case    

4  50 

MAFLF.    STRUP. 

Vennont,  p«»  lb 

IS 

Prima 

Bear —  Large. 
Black  Mincrsota.  Wisconsin  and  Da- 
kota       13  00 

Black  yearlir.g.   Minnesota  WUcon.sln 

and  Dakct*  10  00 

Black   (.whs.     Minnesota,      Wis<x>Dsln 

and    DakoU •  SO 

Badger — 

Northeni    2  60 

Cat- 
Wild.   Ncrthern 8  50 

House,  black,  winter  killeo SO 

House.   -Maltese,  winter  killed 18 

Uouse.  sundry  colors,  winter  killed..         !0 

Civet,  all  sections 65 

lUngtalled     00 

Dog— 

Black  long  h.\lred.  winter  killed 50 

Long    halreil.    sundry    colors,    winter 

killed    30 

Short  haired,  aU  colors 20 

Fisher— 

Northern:    dark 12  00 

Northern,    brown  or  pale •  50 

Fax — 
Black-Prlccs     vary     ag     to     color. 

beauty  and  fineness 350  00 

•Silver  Grey— Prices  vary  ss   to  color. 

beauty  and  fineness — dark 200  00 

Sliver  (5rey— Prlics  vary  a*  to  color, 

beauty  and  flreness — pale 80  00 

Cross— I'rlces  vary  as  to  color,  beauty 

and  fineness — dark 15  00 

Cross— Prices  vary  as  to  color,  beauty 

and   fineness— pale 7  00 

Red.  Northei-n    0  00 

Red.  Nebraska  and  Wisconsin 0  23 

Grey,    Northern 1  25 

Kilt   or   Swift 1  00 

Ljnx — 

Dark   18  00 

Dark    brown 8  00 

Light  brcwu  or  tale 6  00 

MInU— 
Mlnne-sota.    Wisconsin.    Upiier   Michi- 
gan   and    North    Dakota-dark    or 

dark  Irtvvn 6  OJ 

Mlnne«ot.i.    Wisconsin.    Upper   Michi- 
gan and  North  DakoU— light  brown 

or   pale    

Cotton  or  White  Grounds,  all  seiUons 

Otter- 
Minnesota.  Wisconsin,  Iowa  and  Da- 
kota—dark     

Minnesota.   Wisconsin.  Iowa  and  Da- 
kota— brown  or  pale 

RaccccD — 

Black    4 

Minnesota.  Wisconsin.  Northern  Iowa 

and    Dakota 

Skunk- 
Black,    cased 

Short   striped,   cased 

\jont-  narrow  striped,  cased 

Broad  striped  and  white,  castd 

Weasel — 

WlUte.  winter  caught,  with  tails 

Winter  caught,    badly  stained,    vllli- 

out  tails,  or  damaged 

Wolf— 
Mountain    Timber.     Northern,    casetl 

and     open 

BufTalo  and  Brush,  Northern,  cased. 
UutTalo  and  Bnish.  Northern,  open.. 
Prairie  and  Coyote,  Northern,  cased 
Prairie  end  Coyote,  Northern,  open. 
Timber.  Southwestern,  cased  and  open 

Beaver,  per  skin 

Vu^firat 


X  rlnii 
Small. 

10  00 


75 

00 

75 

50 
18 
10 
6 
35 
35 

SO 

13% 
10 

T5 

23 


I4.j% 
63% 
33 

120% 

168 

174% 
44% 
36 
17% 
24% 
37% 

141% 
66 
15 

29% 
4:^% 

i:>o% 
20% 
40% 

69% 

7C 
125% 

87% 

79% 
139% 

45% 
133% 
112% 

36% 

21 

71 

23% 

63% 
129% 

72% 
145% 

24 

62 

42% 

32% 

179% 

42 

44% 
110% 

18 

45 

79 

48% 
87% 


I  Open. I  High.)  Low.  |  Close. 

13  ~ 

41b 

68% 

130% 

48% 

5J% 

SP/ijb 

94% 

40% 

103% 

102% 

1(!7% 

71% 

29% 

69% 

4% 

2.-i%b 

6% 

144% 

63% 

32% 

128% 

167% 

174% 

41% 

:s  j  % 

17% 
24% 
37% 
29b 

140% 
6-<% 
14% 
29% 
44% 

13((i; 
20  Vj 
40% 
60% 
75% 

124% 
87% 
79 

i:<8% 

4.-.% 

130% 

112% 

36% 

21 

70% 

23% 

62% 

128% 


13% 

68% 
130% 
48% 
51 

84% 
41 

103% 

102% 

1J8 

71% 

29  % 

69% 

4% 

•j- 

144 

f.3% 

32% 
129  V* 
167% 
174% 

44  >4 

35 

17% 

24 

3-% 

140% 
66 
15 

29% 
45% 

i:;o% 
20  w 

40% 

69 

76 
12.-. 

87% 

79% 
138 

45% 

i:io% 

112 

36% 

21 

70V4 

23 '.8 

62% 
129% 

72 
145% 

24 

61% 

42 

32% 

iio" 

42 
44% 
110% 
17% 
44% 
79 

48% 


13 

67% 

129% 

48% 

50% 

'84% 

4U% 

103V» 

102% 

107% 

71% 

i9% 

69% 

4% 

■■"6% 
143% 

63 

32% 
128% 
167 
174% 

44 

3."i 

17% 

23% 

37% 

140% 
63% 
14% 
29% 
44% 

i:to 
20% 

40% 

68% 

75% 
124% 

87% 

79 
138 

43% 
130% 
112 

.'«6% 

21 

70% 

23% 

62% 
128% 

72 
143 

24 

61% 

41% 

32 

ifs' 

41 

43% 
110% 
17% 
44% 
79 

48% 
86% 


146% 

24 

62 

42 

32% 

63b 
178% 

41 

43% 
110% 

18 

44  Vs 

79 

6.'.b 

48% 

86% 


♦Kx-<UvltUnd  of  SOc. 
••1-i-dlvldend  cf  % 
T.tal  shiires,  488.100. 
Money.    1%    per    cent. 


of    1    per    cent. 


New    Vorii    l^loney. 

New  York.  .March  19.— Prime  mercan- 
tile paper  3'/i  to  4  per  cent.  Sterling 
exchange  strong,  with  actual  business 
in  bankers'  gills  at  $4.86.15(^4.86.25  for 
sixtv-dav  bills,  and  at  $4.88.30  for  de- 
mand. Coniniercial  bills,  $4.85 '^g  @ 4. 86. 
Bar  silver.  50 '/ic  Mexican  dollars.  44c. 
CJoverniiient  bonds  steady;  railroad 
bonds    irre.gular.      -Money    on    call    easy 


<0 


.'  per  cent;  ruling  rate.  1 -^^  ;  clos- 
ing bid  1»A:  offeerd  at  \%.  Time 
loans  a  I'ittle  hrmcr;  sixty  dayes.  2%(&' 
HM:  PP''  cent,  and  ninety  days.  :.'ii  per 
cent;  six  months.   '1\   to  3  per  cent. 


Hi.    I*aul    LtveNtook. 

St.  Paul,  Minn.,  March  19. — Cattle — 
Receipt.s,  700;  market  dull;  stockers 
and  feeders  -steady  and  unchanged. 
Hogs — Receipts,  2.800:  steady;  range, 
$6.30  (fi  6.60:  bulk.  $6.35®  6.45.  Sheep — 
Receipts,  800;  strong  and  unchanged; 
lambs  uiichanged. 


150  00 
75  00 
80  00 

7  50 

8  75 

3  2S 

8  00 
75 
65 

9  00 

4  SO 
3  00 


3  00 


4  SO 

1  25 

3  25 
75 

13  00 

9  00 

14  00 

7  00 

4  00 

a  00 

2  00 

1  00 

2  85 

2  25 

1  60 

65 

3  15 

1  75 

1  10 

83 

35 

30 

20 

10 

4  50 
3  00 
2  50 
2  50 
2  00 
2  SO 
8  00 
30 

S  00 
1  60 
1  35 
1  3i 
I  IS 
I  33 
3  50 
28 

Tlir   Cotton   Maricpt. 

New  York.  March  19. — The  cotton 
market  opened  steady  at  unchanged 
prices  to  an  advance  of  2  points  In  re- 
sponse to  rather  better  cables  than  ex- 
pected. There  was  a  renewal  of  such 
iHluldation  as  that  of  yesterday  right 
after  the  call  and  prices  sold  off  to  a  net 
loss  of  about  1  to  2  points,  but  the  mar- 
ket soon  rallied,  ruling  about  5  to  7 
points   net  lilgher. 

.^pot  closed  (lulet.  5  points  higher; 
middling  uplands,  9.70;  middling  gulf. 
9.95:  sales.  3.000  bales.  Futures  closed 
steady:  closing  bids:  March,  9.30;  April. 
9.32;  May.  9.33;  .June.  9.23;  .luly.  9.24; 
August  9.20:  September.  9.18;  October, 
9.18;  November,  9.13;  December,  9.13; 
.January,  9.11. 


TreuHury   Baianeoa. 

Washington.  March  19.  —  Today's 
statement  of  the  treasury  balances  in 
the  general  fund;  Available  cash  bal 
ances.  $135,257,326;  gold  coin  and 
lion.  $42,403,605;  gold  certificate.s, 
730.440. 


bul- 
$42,- 


Gold   i'''or   i.undun. 

New  York.  March  19. — The  National 
Oity  bank  today  engaged  $2,000,000  In 
gold  coin  for  shipment  to  J.,ondon  to- 
morrow. 


Midway   HorNe    Market. 

Mlnnesot^i  Tr.msfcr.  .St.  Paul.  Minn..  .Mar.'h  IP. — 
Barrett  &  Zlm:nernian  report:  Buyers  at  yesterday's 
said  were  busy  filing  t-M  their  loads  and  shipping 
their  puniiase-s.  As  Is  usual  on  Tliursday  the  re- 
ceipts utre  light.  City  business  houses  are  placing 
orilers  for  business  and  dcllver>-  horses  and  a  gooii 
movement  of  w^igon  classes  Is  retwrted.  Two  carloads 
of  big  niggeel  mules  were  sold  to  the  Richards 
pany.  who  have  a  large 
Funn  marcs  and 
have   the   call. 

Drafters,     exlra     ...'. 

KrafteR.  choice  

Uratters.    comcmn    to    g^iod 

Farm  mares  and  horses,  extra... 
Farm  mares  and  hor«cs.  choice. 
Farm   mares,    c<;mmon    to   good. . . 

Delivery      

Drivers     and     saddlers 

Mules,    according    to    ?l7;e 


railroad   c(.nfract 
h( Ties    tor    the    Dakota 


com- 
In   Canada, 
trade   sliil 

.  .$16.'>(a245 

. .  120^160 

. .  65(<i  115 

. .  H:>V  160 

. .  110(j<i35 

. .  60(ullO 

.  .  120(»1S5 

. .  12.^«'22ii 

. .  140(<i23J 


'PHONES— 

ZENri'H,    14«4.        DVLITTH,    18T1. 


REFERENCES: 

Olty  National  Bank, 

First  National  Bank. 


Martin 
Rosendahl 

Incorporated. 

CAPITAL,  $50,000.00. 


Copper  Stock 
Brokers 


414    WEST    SUPERIOR    STREET. 
102-103   MANHATTAN   BLDG. 


My  own  wires  to  the 
Copper  country.  Also  con- 
nections to  Eastern  mar- 
kets. 


Duli;ith  Copper  Curb  Market. 

N.  S.  MITCHELL  &  CO., 


PHvatc   'Wlreii. 
City   'I>boBe»,    1805. 


:t02-204    MANHATTAN    DLILDING. 

CITY    NATIONAI..  BANK.        Priva(«  I.obk  m»tanc^ 
Uulutb,  Minn.  'Phones,  1657. ISOS. 

MARCH    19,    1909. 


I     Bld.|    Ask. 


I     Bid.l    Ask. 


American  Saetnaw  . 
Arlz.-Michlpan  .... 
Black  Mountain  .  . . 
Butte  &  Suprrloi'.  . 
Butte  Ballaklava   . . 

factiLs     

t'lilcf  C'tms 

Cal.  &  Montatia  .  . . 
Calumet    &    Sonera. 

Carman    Cons 

Cliff    

Cliemuiis     

Copper    Queen    . . . . 

Cordova    

Benn-Arlzona    

East    Butto 

Globe    Cons 


3.50 
1.37 
1.00 
1.06 

16.12! 

l.!SO 

.91 

.17 

14.00 
1.25 
1.50 

19..%0 
1.37 
1.75 
3.62 

14.12 
4.87 


3.73 
1.50 
1.12 
1.06 

16.37 

1.62 

.08 

.20 

14.25 
1.37 
1.75 

20.50 
1.50 
2.00 
.•$.87 

14.37 
5.00 


Greene    Cananen    . . . 

Keweenaw •, 

Nipissin;;    « 

N'atloiuil    ., 

North    Butte 

Sup.  &  Pittsburg.... 

8up.   &    Boston 

Stiat tuck- Arizona    . .. 

Warren    

Red  Warrior    

Mowitza    

Rawliide  Royal 

Ran    Antonio    , 

Tuolumne     

Zenitii  Ix>ad  &  Zlno., 
;  Superior  &  Globe.  . .. 
I  I.Ake  Sup.  &  Sonora. 


9.25 

9.50 

4.00 

4.25 

10.62 

10.75 

..52 

.55 

67.75 

68.00 

13.37 

13.50 

14.00 

11.50 

15.25 

15.50 

3.50 

3.75 

2.12 

2.25 

1.25 

1.37 

.14 

.16 

13.50 

1.75 

1.87 

1.87 

2.12 

.961         .99 

3.75 

1 

FRED  H.  MERRITT 

BROKER. 

Stocks,  Bonds,  Grain. 

328    WE.ST    SUPERIOR    STREET. 
TclephoneKt  Duluth  1408;  Xenlth  071. 

MARCH   19,   1909. 


Butte-.\.  Soott  $2  pd. . 
Butte-Ballaklava  .  .  .  . 
Butte  &  Superior...  . 

Cactus 

Calumet  &  Sonora..  . 

C^irman   

<'liief  Cons 

Copper  Queen    

Cortlovu  $2  pd , 

Benii-Arizona 

Giroux    

GIolu"    Cons 

(ilobe  .$2  pd 

<;reene  Cananea    .  . 
Lake  S.  &  S.  $2.50  pd 

Lion  Gulch 

IJve  Ooak  $2  pd 

J^Iowitza 

Red  Warrior    

San  .\ntonio  $1  pd... 

Savanna  $2   pd 

Shattiifk-Arizona  .  .. 
.Sup.  &  Pitt.sburg.  .  .. 
Zenith    


Bid.  I 

4.00' 

16.00! 

1.00 

1.37 

13.00 

1.25 

.94 

1.25 

2.00 

3.50 

8.1!: 

5.00 

2.00 

9.12 

3.75 

10..50 

5.75 

1.25 

2.12 

13.75 

2.00 

15.25 

13.25 

2.00 


Ask. 


16.25 
1.06 
1.50 

1.25 

.96 

1.50 

"3.7.5 
8.25 


9.25 

ll.(>6 
6.00 
1.37 
2.25 

14.00 


$5.2.'j^6.20;  bulk  ot  »alw.  $6.70(b6.80.  Sheep— Re- 
(ttipts  c£tlniat(il  ul  4.000;  niark/el  eteady  ;  iiatite.  $:!.2'> 
(«.j.80;  »t*tcni,  $3.50^".. !i0:  .vearlliigs.  $«.;k)(37.25; 
lambs,    iiaUve.    W.BOteT.SO;    weKteiii,    |.">.30fe;.S»O. 


THE  COPPER  STOCKS. 


The  following  aie  tlie  closing  quota- 
tions of  copper  sloclc.s  at  Boston  today, 
reported  by  Faine,  Webber  &  Co.,  Koom 
A,  Torrey  building: 


STOCKS— 


I     Bid     I  Asked 


ChloaKo    I.lveNtock. 

Chicago.  Manh  If.— CattU— Kejiipls  fctimated  al 
l..-.<u;  market  sUady:  Inrvcs.  14.60(^7.00;  Te.\as 
steirs,  $4.40.a5.:?0;  westcni  steers.  $4.00(&.'>.40:  st4>ck- 
trs  and  feeil^-r*.  $'5.4.')W'.'>.3.):  ci.ns  and  heifers.  $1.!W 
(n;-..!iO;  ralv(-.<.  $6.0C(«8.CO.  Hcg-"— Utrelpts  egUmatrd 
at  22.000:  market  »lriiti||  u>  .V  higher:  llKht.  $6.3J 
(ji6.75:  mUtd.  $6.4'.^6.gj;  he:uy.  $«.r..">wn.»0;  rough. 
$6.55^6. 60;  food   \u  clKitce.    he^vy,   $6.6j;s6.9U;   pigs. 


Amalgamated , 

Anaconda    

Adventure    

Ahmeek    

Ailouez 

American  Telephone   . . 

Atlantic     

Arcadian    

Arizona    Commercial     . 

Begoie    

F.ostoii    Con.solidated    . 

Boston    Corbln     

Black     Mountain     ..... 

Butte    Coalilion     

Butte    &    London 

Calumet  &  Arizona    . . . 

Calumet  &  llecla    

Centennial    

Cons.    Merour     

Copper    Kange     

Cumberland    JOly     

iJaly     West     

Davis    Daly    

Dominion    Copper     .... 

Kast    Butte     

Franklin     

Firs^t    National     

Giroux     

Granby     

Greene-Cananea    

Hancock    Cons 

Helvetia      

Isle     Royale     

Keweenaw    

Lake    Copper     

La    Salle    

Mass.     Cons 

Mass.  Gas    

Mexico    Mining    

Miami  Copper 

Michigan 

Moliawk    

Nevada  Cons    

Nevada  Utah    

Newhouse 

Nippisirg    

North   Butte    

Ojibway    

Old  Dominion    

Osceola    

Parrott    

Pneu.  Ser  

Quincy    

leaven 

.Santa     Fe     

Sliannon     

Shoe   Michigan 

•Superior    Copper     

Superior  &  Pittsburg   . 

Tamarack     

Trinity     

I'nited    Copper    

United   Fruit    

U.   S.    Mining    

do   pfd    

U.    S.   Oil    

Utah  Apex    

Utah    Cons 

Utah   Copper    

Victoria   

Winona    

Wolverine     

Wyandot    

Vukon    Gold     

Arizona-Michigan    .    . . 

American  Saginaw    .  .  . 

Butte-Ballaklava    .... 

Butte  &  Superior 

Chief  Consolidated    . . . 

Cactus    

Calumet  &  Corbin    . . . 

Calumet  &  Sonora    .  . . 

Calumet  &  Montana.. 

Carman    

Cliff    

Copper   Queen    

Cordova     

Denn-Arizona     

Duiuth-Moctezuma     .... 

Kly  Consolidated 

Globe    

Goldfield    Consolidated.. 

Lion   Gulch    

Live  Oak    

Lake  Superior  &  Sonora 

Mowitza     

National    Exploration    .  • 

North  Lake 

Ohio  Copper   

Ftawhide  Royal    

Red  Warrior 

San     Antonio     


68';, 

40  Tk 

146 

38 
129% 

13>/5s 

"34^4 
19 

11  u 

17>/2 


25c 
99% 
615 
29 

■74^4 

ll%t 

4% 
10c 

14  U 
14 

6% 
8   5-16 
90 

91.4 
11  ••?4 

3U 
25^4 

3 

1614 
14  >^ 

4 
631.^ 

3-^ 
13 '4 

9»i 
60 
17^ 

2% 

3»^ 
10% 
67  V4 
1 3 14 
49 
125 
31'/* 

86 
3Sc 
2V» 
14 
54 
42 
13  1,4 
77 

13'/^ 
12V4 
133 

40 
30V2 

534 

39 

40  »^ 
4 

514 
139 
2>/i 
4 '4 
1V4 
3»/i 

16 
1 

94c 
1% 


15c 

1% 
I'/a 
1% 

"3%' 

7% 
'  "  5  % 

1% 
52c 

1.1c 
2^ 
13% 


8 
175 

39 
129% 

14 
4% 

35 

20 

11^ 

18 
I    1-16 

22  '4 

27c 
100 
620 

291/4 

30c 

74% 

7"8 

12 

4M( 
12c 
14% 
14V4 

6% 
8   7-16 
91 

9% 

■  ■  3  ^  ■ 
261/& 

3U 
17 
15 

4»^ 
64 

4% 
131*. 
10V4 
62 

17  «4 

3 

3^4 
10% 
67  >i 
14 

4914 
126 
31  li 
9 

46c 
2% 
14»4 
5434 
4-2V2 
13»^ 
78 

13V2 
12% 

133  »^ 
45 
41 

31Vi 
5% 
40 

41V4 
4'.i 
6 
141 
2% 
4% 
I'/i 
3% 

16»4 
1    1-16 

97c 

1'.4 

14 

20c 
1% 
1% 

9 

3% 

3% 
18 

5% 

7% 
11 

6 

4 

1% 
54c 

6  14 

7% 
15c 

2% 
14^ 


Ulbbtus.  — BI»A>'CH  OFI^ICES—  Superior. 

F'AID  UP  CAPITAL  $50,000.00 

M.  VV.  LEE  &  CO.,  Inc. 

BANKERS  AND  BROKERS. 

'   *  nLLlTH  CURB   STOCKS. 


Both   'Plionrx.    148S. 
ROOM  "B,"  I'IIOI3.'<fIX  BLOCK. 

J.  H.  ROBBERS. 

Copper  stocks  and  bonds 

Curb    Stocks    a    Specialty. 
Listed    Secu!-ltlea. 


N.  E.  LUGOFF 

STOCKS  AND  BONDS. 


All    Ordern    Promptly    and    CoDliden- 
tially   Kxccutcd. 

COO-501-502     LOXSDALE     BL'II  DIXG. 
Old   phone    lOUB;        /.eaith   pbunc   977. 


With   our   own 

connections     with 

Boston  and  the  coi 

of    Michigan,    Monl 

Utah,  Arizona  anc 
are  the  best  equi 
you  quick  cxecutio 
leading  local  stocks 
erage  house  in  the 


private     wire 

New      York, 

per  countries 

ana,    Nevada, 

I  Mexico,  we 
pped  to  give 
ns  on  all  the 
•  of  any  bi-ok- 
city. 


PAINE,  WEBBER  &  €0., 

313  WEST  SUPJilRIOR  ST. 
Torrey  building. 


SavaniLi     

Shatluck    

Superior  &    Boston    .  . . 

Superior    &    Globe 

Torre    Itoca     

Warren    

Wolverine    &    Arizona. 
Zenith    Lead     


<> 

2 '4 

151.4 

iol^ 

14  »4 

15 

95c 

9Sc 

3 

3>^ 

3^4 

1% 

i% 

2 

BEES    HOLD    A 

.San  P'tancisco  Call: 
down  the  east  side  of 
about  midway  betwee 
Vallejo.  In  its  most  ai 
berliood,  you  w;ill  see 
sloping  upward*  from  t 
if  you  lot)k  close  yoi. 
thing  that  will  make 
locality  a  wide  liertl 
you   take   a   stroll   in    tl 

Tliat  particular  cla; 
looking  as  it  Is.  harb' 
lively  colony  of  bur 
barb  sting  variety,  ar 
Fillmore  and  Broadv 
streets   cares    to   appr< 

The  bank  is  nearly 
and  is  th'ckly  dotted 
whicli  are  entrances  tc 
cones  concealed  withl 
tlie  ■"little  busy  bee" 
and  going,  buzzing  in 
out  again,  very  much 
his  work  and  pgying  s 
an  onlooker  unless  1 
dence  by  too  close  ar 
of  the  bees  performs 
an  al.irniingly  busir 
and  It  is  usually  hi 
which  prompts  the  i 
to  hack  up  and  colitir 
tions  from  a  safe  dist 

In    appearance   the    1 
miniature    fort    as    it 
height   over  the  sidew 
ried    rows    of i'ntranceh 


STREET. 

If    you       walk 

Fillmore  street, 
1  Broadway  and 
istocratic  neigh- 

a  bank  of  clay 
he  sidewalk,  and 

will    see    some- 

you  give  that 
1  the  next  time 
lat  direction. 
'  bank,  innocent 
)rs  a  strong  and 
ible  bees  of  the 
d  no  resident  of 
(•ay  or  Vallejo 
•ach    it    unwai'ily. 

thirty  feet  long 
witli   small    holes 

the  honey  laden 
t*.  At  all  hours 
is  seen  coming 
to   the   holes   and 

concerned  about 
mall  attention  to 
e    tempts    Provi- 

approach.      One 

sentry  duty  in 
esslike  manner, 
s  warning  buzz 
ash  investigator 
ue  his  observa- 
ance. 

)ank  resembles  a 
rises  to  a  good 
ilk,  and  the  ser- 

scatterod       o\er 


PIPER., 
JOHNSON 

(Si  case: 

BROKERS 

MEMBERS: 

Boston  Stock  Exchange 
New  York  Stock  Excliange 
New  York  Produce  Exchange 
Chicago  Stock  Exchange 
Chicago  Board  of  Trade 
Mpls.  Chamber  of  Commerce 
Dnloth  Board  of  Trade 
Winnipeg  Grain  Exchangs 

406-411  Chamber  of  Commerce  and 

New  York  Life  Arcade, 

Minneapolis 

102  Pioneer  Press  BIdg.,  St.  Paul 
Grain  Exchange  Winnipeg 

DULUTH: 

Temporary  OUIce  - 

18  3rd  Avenue  Wesf, 

R.  G.  Hobbeli,  Manager. 

BELL  PHONE  73J.  ZENITH  PUOIIE  729. 


Its  face  look  like  so  many  portholes 
through  which  a  deadly  fire  could  be 
poured  upon  an  approaching  enemy.  As 
there  are  probably  several  thousands 
of  the  bees,  anv  attack  from  tlie  out- 
side would  certainly  result  in  victory 
for   therr.. 

The  property  which  bees  liave  pre- 
empted is  part  of  a  piece  of  unim- 
proved real  estate.  Houses  will  some 
day  be  built  there,  however,  and  if  tho 
present  conditions  still  exist  at  that 
time,  when  the  workmen  drive  the  first 
pick  into  the  hill  there  will  certainly 
be   something   doing. 


SKUNK  O.N  FISH  I'OLE. 
Ventura,  Cal.,  correspondence  L,o» 
Angeles  Times:  Workmen  at  the  rail- 
road bridge  which  is  being  built  over 
the  Ventura  river  at  this  place  found 
a  skunk  in  one  of  the  stee!  cylinders 
when  thev  w*  nt  to  work  one  morning. 
The  cvlinder  was  put  In  the  previous 
evening  and  a  pile  or  two  driven  into 
it.  In  the  night  the  water  arose  in  the 
cylinder,  and  also  during  the  night  a 
skunk  tumbled  into  the  cylinder.  The 
animal  succeeded  in  reaclilng  the  top 
of  the  pile,  wlieie  he  was  perched  In 
the  morning,  unable  to  get  out.  No 
work  could  b«-  done  with  the  skunk  in 
the  cvlinder.  and  one  of  the  workmen 
finally  hit  on  the  plan  of  fishing  him 
our.  He  secured  a  long  fishpole  and 
put  a  slip  noose  on  the  end  of  it.  This 
he  dropped  over  the  odoioius  animal's 
head,  lifted  liim  out  and  dropped  him 
into  the  river  alongside,  where  he  was 
washed   out   to   sea. 


Read    the    want    ads    tonight.      Your 
neighbor  does.     It  pays  too.  • 


COOLEY  4  UNDERHILL,  Agents 

209-10-11  EXCHANGE  BUILDING. 


Xational  InNuran4>e  Conipanr. 

Prlni-lpal  <mce.  Piltsburs.  Fa.  (Orgiiiilzeil  in  iJfifi.  ' 
.loliii  TiKimptoi).  president;  II.  M.  Sclimltt,  seorelary. 
Attorney  to  accept  ttr^ice  in  JUnnesota,  Commlsbiouer 
ot   insurance. 

CASH    CAPITAI,.    $">f'n. 000.00. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums  otlur  tlian  peri>ctuals $        703.2P0,,'ib 

lU-iit«    .".ml    liitenst «0,7:!1.;(: 

Krom   all   tAlier   sources H'i.'Ji 


Total  Inc  me    

'  DISBURSEMENTS    IN 


784,095.84 


1908. 


Amount  paid  for  loi^^es $ 

Commls:-lon  anrt  hrfikeraite , . . 

Salarlts  anO  fees  of  officers,  aieiits  and 

employes  

Taxes,   fet^.   rents  and  other  rent  tstate 

fXp«'!lstS       

IilvhUnds   and  iritertst    ^. 

All    otiier   (!l3bur<-eniem« 


::i0 


lor..r.6 

,7;i2.2n 


42,072.80 

18, 747. 4.'? 
77.8«4.00 
37.625.4y 


Total    (UslmrFemtnts $  639.147.57 

Kxctss  of  income  over  dLsL'urseueiils.  .  .  ."?  144,948.27 

ASSETS  DEC.   31.    1908. 

Value   of   rral   estate   owned %  14.?.lt5.63 

Mortgaeo   Uans    l,247.0r,8.10 

Collateral   hum    I'je.R.'.o.OO 

B(jnds  and   stocks  owned 5.4Ci.jO 

Cash  In  ofJice  and  In   liank.... 123,603.54 

Accrued  interest  and  rents '■^■^'If' 

Pnmiums  in  course  of  cillcclion 98.205.5(, 

All   other  admitted   asseU 7.840.12 


Insurance     Company     of     the     State     off 
Illinoifi. 

Principal  offire,  ilockford,  Illinois.  lOreantzrd  fa 
1805).  C.  F.  Henry,  pi-esldent;  Ceoree  I,.  Wiley,  eec- 
retary.  Attcmey  to  accippt  senlce  In  Minnesota,  Com- 
missioner  of   Insurance. 

CASH  CAPIT.VL.  $300,000.00. 
INCOME   IN   1908. 

Premium*  other  than  p<nHtuals $  747. 431. 3T 

Rents    and    Interest 32.611.18 

Krom  all  cthtr  source* 4.781.M 


IN  no8. 


Total    Income 

DISBURSEMENTS    II 

.Amount   paM   f'T   losses $ 

Conunissliins   and    hroUorage 

Salaries   and  fees  of  ofTictrs,  agents  and 

employes    ...    

Taxe«;.    fees,    rents    nnd   other   real   estat* 

expenses     

Dlvliiendi  and  Interest 

Ml   other   ulabur^enitnts a 


Total   dlsbursrmeiits    % 

% 
$ 


Excess  of  income  'rer  dlshursement."! .  . 
ASSETS    DEC.    31,    1908 

Ml  rtgage  hians 

Collateral   loans    

Bonds   J.nd   stocks   owned , 

Cash  In   oPi'^e  and   In   hank 

Acciufd    Intiitst    and    rent* 

Premiums  in  course  of  collef-tlon 

.Ml  other  admitted   assets    


:84. 824.91 

3."?7. 003.88 
213.308.57 

C8.921.47 

16.213.51 
S7..'i0O.0t) 
36.888.84 

709.896. 25 

74.928. 26 

.'.35.420.42 

11. "5,200. 00 

134.209.00 

!i2.r,18.0.3 

10.449.23 

134.55.%.8» 

5. 206. 13 


Total    admitted   assets $  1.722,078.77 

Asstts   not   ai'.ralttetl $4,723.74 

LIABILITIES    DEC.   31,    1908. 

t'npald   Ic'ses   nnd   claims $  51.517.70 

Kelnsurante    nseiTe     Ct»0,406.53 

Salaries,   expenses.   t.ixes,   dividends  and 

interest    due 13.5!'9.95 

Commlrision    and    brokeniKe 732.41 

Capital  stock  paid  up 500,000.00 


Total  liabilities  Including  capital $     1,256,256.59 


Net  surplus 

RISKS  AND    PREMIUM! 

Fire  risks  wiltten  during  the  ; 

I'remluius    nceived    t!:crt(n.. 

Net  amount  in  force  at  end  o 

BUSINESS   IN   MINN 

Fire   Itlsks— 

Rl<'hs  written    

Premiums  iccelved    

Looses    Incurred    

Li'sses    paid    

.\niount  at  risk  

State   <f    Minnesota.    I><partm 

I  Hereby  CerUly,  Tliat  the 
National  Insuunoe  company 
l>eccm!)<r  :n-;t.^l9i8.  of  whi 
stract.  has  been  received  and 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  .It 
Coun 


$         465.822.18 

>,    1908   BUSINESS. 

car %  09,677..- 1,1.00 

{M)0.2.".l.i;ti 

r  the  year  121.868.500.00 

ESOTA   IN    1908. 

$     1,329.292.00 

18.154.00 

2. 42(1. 00 

4.1'j::.0o 

1.446.423.00 

tnt    of   Insurance, 
annual  statcmrent  of  the 
for     Uie     year     eiullng 

■h    the    above    Is    an    ab- 
flie<l  In  this  deparfmeul 

ii.s  A.  hartu;a.\. 

ilssioner   of   lasuriiice. 


Total   admitted  assets $ 

Assets   not   adniltfe<l $22,499.79 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31,    1908. 

t'np.ild   losses    ?r.d    (lalins $ 

Itclnsur.inc-e   reserve   

Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,    dividends   and 

liitcri  St    due 

Coratnls.^U  n    and    brokerage 

All   other  liabilities 

Capital    ttock    I'ald    i;p 


.  ...$  1,027,549.6» 


13.524.23 
573,34e.20 

7.100.00 

6.29«  27 

12  1'.'».87 

300,000.00 


Totil   liabilities   Including   capital $      912,460.57 

Net    enn>liis S      113.083.14 

RISKS  ANO   PREMIUMS,    1908   BUSINESS. 

Fire   rl-sks   v\rlinn   iluring   the   year $89.7 12. 526. 0» 

Premlunu    rtoehed    thtrion !.007.!i36.22 

Net  amount  Pi  for.-f  at  ind  of  tl:r  year..     103.284.419.00 
BUSINESS     IN     MINNESOTA     IN     1908. 

Klre  Klsks.     Turuado.     Aggregate. 
$5,17:;.  523 
78,1'40 
4<»,271 
52,510 
5.350.y'J9 


ni^ks     written 

rreiulums  received. 

I^osis     Incurnd 

I..<!Skes    paid 

.\niount    at    risk.    ■ 
State    of    Minne-sota, 
I    Henby    «:inlfy 


$5. 744. 60S 
£2.503 
49.961 
.53.207 
6.312.85* 


571.085 
3,463 

ts»o 

690 
1.9.52.949 
Department  of  Insuranor. 
Tliat  the  aiuiual  statement  of 
the  Insurance  Company  of  the  State  of  Illinois,  for 
the  year  enc'Ing  l»ec.  31«t.  19(i8.  of  which  the  ubots 
is  an  alMtrart.  has  Ucn  received  and  filed  In  UiiB 
department   and    duly    approved   by   me. 

JOHN   A.    HAHTIGAN. 
Commtsslouer    of    loaaranoib 


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DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1909. 


' 

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DESIRABLE  PROPERTY 

fi.t,750 — Six  rooms,  hardwood  flnlsli 
t!  rouffhout.  Bath.  gas.  electric 
liKht.  cellar.  Back  plastered.  Ce- 
ment .sidewalk.  New  hou.se,  1907. 
Lot  50x150.  London  road,  near 
Fifteenth  avenue. 

fS^'UMI — Seven-room  hon.'^e,  hardwood 
M.)iirs  throupchout.  Pilectrh  light. 
J'arn  In  rear.  Fine  corner  lot. 
Fifth   avenue  east. 


>Ve      write     Innurance     li 
paaien   <>iil^. 


A I     com- 


GHAS.  P.  CRAIG  &  CO. 


LOANS 

on 

HEAL  ESTATE 

No  Delay 


BVYGRS  WA.ITINO 

D.N'F. — Waiit.s    6    or    7-rooni    modern 

liouse. 
Two  customers  want  farming  lands. 

List  your  property      with   mo   for 
quick   sale 

y^.  H.  locks;?. 

3IO   T»rre>    nuili!in«;. 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

DILITH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 

Office:     426  West  Superior  St. 
'Phone.     069. 

For  Hibblng.  Virginia.  Eveleth, 
Coleraine,  ••Mount.iln  Iron, 
••Sparta,    ••Biwabik •7t40  AM 

For      Hlbblngr.       Virginia. 

••Eveleth,    Coleraine •3:50  PM 

For  Virginia,  Cook,  Ranler, 
Fort  Frances,  Port  Arthur. 
Feaudette,      Warroad      and 


Winnipeg 

•Daily.     ••Except  Sunday. 


.•7«10   PSI 


C.\fe.  Observation  Car,  Mesaba  Ransre 
Points.  Solid  Vestiouled  Train.  Mod- 
ern  Sleeper   through   to   Winnipeg. 


THE  DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  RAIL. 
ROAD  COMPANY. 

"THK  Vl::ilMILIl>X  KOUTE." 


Leare. 


UlTLUTH. 


.  f      Kitif*   Klver.    Two    Har-      1 

•  7  30  am    i  l>-iP3.     Tower.     Kly.     Aurora.  ( 

*3.I3  pmJ  <  Blwatilk.    HcKlr.Icy.    Sparta,  f 

t7.49am;i  kveloih   auj  | 

I  I.  Vlrslnia.  } 


Arrif*. 

«I2.00  m 
♦  7.45  pm 

t6.43  pm 


•  Daily   iioept   SuaJajr.      t^unila;   only. 


Daluth  &  i\iorthern  .Minnesota  Railway 

Offices,  310  Lonsdale  Bide.,  Dulutb. 

Trains  leave  Knlte  River,  20  miles  out 
on  the  D.  &  L  R.  R.  every  day  except 
Sundays,  on  arrival  of  the  train  leaving 
Union  station.  Duluth,  at  7:30  a.  m.  Re- 
turnlns  connections  are  made  at  Knife 
River  witxi  trains  due  In  Duluth  Union 
■(.itljt)  M  7:45  p.  m.  Cnuiei-tloii*  ara  m.i.Je  dally,  ex- 
CcD(  -t-.i.-iJu  At  Baptldin  lUver  wUli  stagj  Una  for 
Graiil   .M^rata  and  <ill  north  Shore  p<.unu. 


NORTHERN  PACIFIC  RAILROAD 


A<Maod    and   Raat 

Aahliiid   1U1   Eu( 

.Mltiii.  and  DalbJta  ICxpresa 
.  . . .  North  Ci)»it  Uinltud .  .  .  . 


Leavd.     I 
•4  00  pm  . 
•8.00  amK 
•7   30  pm, 
•8.  15  am;. 

l^Kva.     I  "l>uluUi    Stiiort    Liue.' 

:9  00  am 
1   55  i.m 
•  II    10  pm 

•Ualiy.      tl'iily  pxi-nit  SuiiJar 


ST.     PAUL 
MINNEAPOLIS 


Arrlte. 

•11.15  am 

•8.40  pm 

*8   IS  am 

«6  25  pm 

Arrive. 
•6.30  am 
t2  05  pm 
•7  00  pm 


D«{>'>t  .ii-.d  5J4  West  i$up«rli>r  atraat. 


Phoue,  214.   L'uluo 


Morth-Western  Iine 

L2 »C.ST.  P.  M.ae  ri'my^l*''^ 


Lt  Duluth       »3  ipfun  bj  i;pin|Lv  Duluth      tSj^am   a4  jspm 

I.»  Stip<?rtor       ?  55pm  5  J5{)m|l.v  Superior      90pm      4  sspni 

ArE^u     liire  3  }.>ptn  ivj  aopm ;  Ar  St.  Paul       430pm      9  5;i>iii 

ArMa.ti>ir\       3  i5aia  3  43aaii Ar  M'puUi       505pm     lo  a5pm 

ArM:<iaa?e   7  4oani;        Pu.imin  sloepcrt  and  chair 


Ar  lar.  •,-.  illi  4  i;am  4  3jaiii 
At  Chi>:.*^;>  7  ooant  7  joair 
•  L^at:>       c>L'xcept  Sunday. 


ciri  fo  Ciiica^.  Pirlur  and 
>Mt'-  car*  to  Twin  Citic-..  Office 
—  yjj  W.  iup»tijr  St..  Dulutli- 


DULUTH,  SOUTH  SHORE  AATLANTiO 


No   8 
A.M. 


No.  3 
P.M. 


So.  7 
A.M. 


No.  5 
P.M. 


f7.45     ♦S.OO.Lv. 
^8.05l   'SISi... 
^.M.      A.U. 
f7.45,    •5.40  Ar. 
t8.35     »8.30... 


r8.55 
t7.45 


Duluth    . 
Superior 

Houghton 
Calumet 


.Ar 


.Lt 


•  J  501 Ishppminc    . . . 

•4.30 Mirmett*    ... 

•10.15 Sault  .s-e.    Uarte. 

•BOO MiMitriai 

•8.13 Boaton    


•10.301 

•I0.I5 

PM 

•10.30 

•9  40 

P.M. 

•12.25 

•11.30 

•5.30 

•9.50 

•10.00 


t7.55 
t6.40 


A.M. 

t7-55 
1-8.4} 


A..M.  I  P..M.  I 

t8  50;    »7.I0,Lt....    Montreal 

P.M.  i  A.M. 

t8.00'    '/.IS  Ar New   York. 


I  A.M. 
.Ar    •7.30 
P.M. 

.Lt'   •r.OO 


P.M. 
tlO.IJ 
A  SL 

t8.45 


•Daily.       ^ Daily    escepi    Sunday. 
Trains   Nos.    7   aud   S. 


Dlnluc    car    oa 


THE  GREAT  NORTHERN 


Leav' 


STATIO.NS. 


Arrive. 


te.OO  am 
•3.25  PIT 

»ll  10  pm 
•8  45  a.Ti 
•8  55  pm 
t2  20  pm 

^.00  am 


I  8T.    PAUL  .      I  IflO.IS  pm 

'  and  V     •!  55  pm 

MINNEAPOLIS.  l\   •b.30  am 

I     Crooloton.     Grmul     Korks,    ]'■   •S.SS  pm 
Mi-niana  arj  Coast.  J  i    •7.15  am 

.■<wan  Hirer.  lUbblna.   Virginia.  1 12.30  pm 
-St.   Cloud,  Wllm.ir.  Sioux  Clty.[f  10.  |5  pm 

Twin  City  sleaperi 


•Dally.      tl>ally  Mept  Sunday 
ready  at  0  p.   m.     OlTloe.  Spaldlnj  hjteL 


HOTKL  I^CNOX 

afost    thoroughly    equipped    in    the 
Northwest.      Sanltatinn   perfect. 

KUROPE.4N,    iLOO   AND    UP.    ' 
AMERICAN,    92.00    AND    UP. 


ORMONDE  HOTEL 

'2'H-'i'23  Lake  .Avenue  South. 

•me   Only    FlrMt-Claas   $1.00  Per   Day 

Hotel   In   the  City. 

Every      room     heated     and     modern 
throughout. 

American  and  Faropenn  Plan. 
>IIKK    GLKK.S(>.\,    Prop. 


Womari 


la  Interejtad  .and  should  kno"' 

aiiout  the  wonderfnl 

MARVEL  Whirling  Spray 

I  The  new  Tarlaal  Syrlsga.     Ejec- 
tion and  .'iurtion.  lleat— H.*f- 
eat— Moat  ConTenlant. 
ItCi««a(*aU>taatJ7 


Aak  r««r  imnltt  for  It. 
If  h«  cannot  supply  UiO 
MilRVKI..  accept  no 
OthiT.  t>'.it  9«nd  (tamn  for 
lUuairaied  Ixrok— •ealnl.    ft  glres 
lull  partluular<i  and  dlrcmions  tii- 
Talu.tble  to  ladles.  .MARVKr  iO., 
««  K.  SSa  !iT..  SmW  tl^UK. 


Par    Sala    by    Max    Wlrth.    Orufgitt 


SAVE  TIME! 

Telephone  your  want  ads.  to  The 
Herald.  The  mtea  are  the  same. 
■  nd  v«-e  vTllI  mall  you  a  bill  after 
Ita    Insertion. 

BOTH    'PHONES,    824. 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

FROM  PAGE  22. 


FARM  LANDS 

FOlt  SALE— THE  LAND  DEPART- 
ment  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
Railroad  company  is  preparing  to 
put  on  the  market  a  number  of  ten 
and  twenty-acre  trai:ts  for  poultry 
farming  and  truck  gardening  at 
Meadowlanda.  These  lands  will  be 
well  ditched  and  drained  and  sold 
on  easy  terms  and  lonK  tnnie.  For 
further  information,  address  L.and 
Commissioner,  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
liallroad  company.  512  Wolvin  build- 
ing.   Dulutli,    Minn. 


FAR.M  LANDS— 128  ACRES.  HUBBARD 
county;  iron  lands;  on  lake  shore; 
$1,200.  A  =!nap.  Isiah  Henry  Brad- 
ford, 213-214  Torrey   building. 


FOR    SALE— WHITE    EARTH    RESER- 

vation  In  Minnesota.  An  agricultural 
paradi.'-e  of  unlimited  resources; 
thousands  of  acres  of  prairie,  brush 
and  timber  lands  at  $S  to  $15  per 
acre.  BeauUeu  &  Dahl,  317-19  Palace 
Building,  Minneapolis. 


FOR  S.VLE— TWENTY -ACRE  FARM, 
two  miles  from  car  line;  splendid 
sfix-room  cottage;  large  barn  and  hen 
house;  will  sell  In  live-acre  lots 
if  so  desired.      Address   H  65.   Herald. 


lOii  SALE— FIVE  AND  TEN  ACRES; 
small  fruits,  chicken  buildings,  near 
St.  Paul;  good  car  service;  new 
liousos;  income  on  berries  this  year. 
P.  B.  Pruden,  Route  4.  St.  Paul. 
Minn. 


WHOLESALE  BARGAINS  —  12.800 

acies  in  Montana  at  $5.75  per  acre; 
40.000  acres  in  Texas,  at  $1.75  per 
acre.  Jay  P.  Morrill,  Palace  building, 
Minneapolis. 

FOR  S.\LE— EIGHTY -ACRE  FARM 
twelve  miles  from  town,  on  Rice 
Lake  road.  Will  sell  cheap  for  cash. 
J  61,  Herald. 


MEDICAL. 

L.XDIKS — $1,000  reward:  I  positively 
guarantee  my  great  successful 
"Monthly"  remedy.  Safely  relieves 
Home  of  the  longest,  most  obstinate, 
abnormal  cases  in  three  to  five  days. 
No  harm,  pain  or  interference  with 
work.  Mail,  $1.50.  Double  strength. 
$2.  Dr.  L.  M.  Southington  R  Co.. 
Kansas   City.    Mo. 


LADIES— DH.  LA  Fr.A.N'CO'S  CO.M- 
pound;  safe  speedy  regulator;  25c. 
Druggist  or  mail.  Booklet  free.  Dr. 
La   Franco.  Philadelphia.    Pa. 


FOR  RENT— HOUSES. 

FOR  RENT— MODERN  FL'RNISHED 
house;  centrally  located.  Call  Getty- 
Smith  company,  201  Manhattan  build- 
ing. 


FOR  RXNT— NEW  6-ROOM  HOUSE  TO 
couple  without  children;  rent.  $25.  803 
East  Third  street.  "Phone  13SS-K.  old. 


FOR      RENT— EIGHT-ROOM    DWELL- 

ing;  water,  etc.;  Forty-fifth  avenue 
west,  one  block  from  street  car  line; 
rent  reasonable.  Dickermau  Invest- 
ment   company.    I>onsdale    building. 


FOR     RENT— 407      TWENTY-FOURTH 

avenue  west.  $20;  water,  sewer  por- 
celain batli;  five  rooms;  hardwood 
floors  on  first  floor;  Hrst-class  condi- 
tion    Little  &  Nolte,   agents. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES. 

BUSINESS  CIUANCK^^OVING  Pic- 
ture exhibitors  and  operators  should 
see  some  of  the  high  class  outfits 
we  have  on  sale  at  half  price.  Kdlson, 
Lubin.  Powers  and  the  optlgraph. 
Films  at  >15  per  l.OOO  feet.  New 
song  sets.  We  can  fit  you  out  com- 
plete for  road  or  liou.''e  shows.  Oper- 
ator." and  partners  wanted.  Outfits 
bought.  Si>ld  and  exchanged.  Nation- 
al Employment  company.  5  South 
Fifth    avenue    west. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE — DOCTOR:  I  HAVE 
a  bargain  for  you;  a  strictly  office 
practice  In  a  city  of  40,000  inhabit- 
ants; business  averages  $700  per 
month  cash;  If  you  mean  business 
write  me;  If  not.  don't  waste  your 
time  or  take  mine;  price  $3,000; 
$2,000  cash,  $1,000  on  time.  Address 
P    O.  Box  603.   Kalamozoo,  Mich. 


BUSINESS  CH-\NCP:— WANTED  A  JOB 
of  sawing  lumber;  have  new  and 
complete  sawmill  plant  of  good 
capacity  and  practical  men  to  oper- 
ate It.     Address  F.  M.  Blare,  Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— UP- 
to-date  restaurant  in  tiie  West  end. 
Complete  outfit.  Doing  good  business. 
Other  business  to  attend  to.  In- 
quire  614  West   First  street. 


Bl'SINESS  CH.VNCE— HAIR  DRESS- 
ing  parlors,  doing  good  business; 
best  in  city;  will  sell  reasonable  price 
to  responsible  partj'.  Address  J.  80, 
Herald. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES  —  FOR  S.\LE. 
large  twenty-room  modern,  steam- 
heated  hotel,  including  large  sample 
room,  parlor,  etc.;  fine  lawn,  good 
town,  big  business;  will  .sell  on  easy 
terms.  George  McDonald,  Sr.,  City 
Hotel.  Hawley.  Minn. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE- 
for   driving   horse. 


-Will   trade   piano 
123    W.    First   St. 


BUSINE.s-S  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— A 
restaurant  and  confectionery  outfit. 
Including  dishes,  lunch  counter, 
stools,  showcases,  shelving  and  re- 
frigerator. Will  sell  separate.  231 
Central    avenue    west,    upstairs. 


London    AnMurnnoe   Corporation. 

Prlr.ripal  olTloi-  In  tl;c  fiiitetl  .•^iati«.  N>'«-  York.  N. 
Y.  (Corainetioed  bii*ine*i4  In  the  I'liitetl  States  1872.) 
Cliarlea  L.  Ciiie.  K»iieral  maiiagtr  in  the  fnited 
States.  Attorney  to  aicept  sendee  lu  Minnesota,  Coni- 
ailsiioiuT    of    Ii'..<uraiire. 

DKPOJ^IT    (  APITAI,.     $625,000. 
INCOME   IN    1908. 

Premlunu   othor   than   ptrpe'.uaU $     2..'>12..W8.97 

Kentrf  and  hileresf 104.928.0.'; 

Prufit    en    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

ai4«U    in.121.33 

Fiom  aU  other  sources 57.637.8'J 


Total   Im-ome $  2,485,286.11) 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 

Amount  paid  for  lorst-s $  1.206. 010. 8i> 

CninniUstoiL't    and    broker.ig« 4!*l,55o.l8 

.'^alarirs  and  ff«a  of  officer},  agents  aud 

employca   183.365.72 

Taxes,  fees,  rents  and  other  real  aaiate 

espen.''M    85.207.82 

Keturn   to   home   office 391.826.90 

.\ll    other    dl-^bur-'eiuenn 131.235.83 

Loss    on    sale    or    ua-tturlty    of    ledger 

aiicta     7.325.00 


Total   dlsbtiwcmenu    $  2,496.555.34 

Kxcess  of  dLsbiir^ements   orer  lnronie...$  11.269.15 
ASSETS    DEC.    31,     1908. 

Bonds    and    stmk.H    owned %  2.515.655.00 

Cash  hi   otfli-e   and  in   bank 177,!>10.ilO 

Aivrued    interest    and    rents 31.S12.P1 

Prenilntns   in   course   of  collection 417.434.61 

.\ll  other  i>dmitte<l  assets 6.654.27 

Deduct    special    deiMJsit    less    $68,698.38 

llablUty  thereon    45.101.72 


Total    admltte.1    assets $  3.103.865.97 

Asset}    not    admitted $121,140.79 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31,    1908. 

Cnpald   losses   atid  claims $  201.867.50 

Uolii-iurancu    reserve 1.86;:,93.l.2;i 

.-Salaries,  e.xpenses.  taxes.  dlTidends  and 

Interest  due    32.895.50 

CumFnlsslons    and    brokerage 27. 764. HI 

UetiinH  and   reinsurance  premiunu 3S.394.72 

Deposit   capital    625.000.00 


ToUl  UabiUUes  Including  capital I     2.789.905.86 


Net   aurplu?    $        313.9Cli.ll 

RISKS  AND  PREMIUMS.   1908  BUSINESS. 

KIre   risks   written   during   the  year $302. 141. 37.".. 00 

PrcmluuH  re<*lTe«i  therpon 2.472. iy;>.;)6 

Marine  and  inland  risks   written  during 

the  year 245.416. 2S6.00 

Premiums  recei\ed   thereon 955.426.61 

Net  amount  In  fon-e  at  end  of  the  year.    .107 . 3;>3. 246. 00 
BUSINESS   IN   MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 
Marine  and 
Fire  Rhks.         Iidand.         .Aggregate. 

RUks  written $1,803.;;38.00  $370,331.00  $2,173,667.00 

Fremhuns    rrcM.         26.340.31  1.620.02  27  96 J. 36 

Losses  incurred   .         12.123.11         12.123.11 

Losses     paid 14.4.>6.U         14.456.11 

Amn't   at    risk...    2.692.057.00         

.State   of    Minnesota.    Department   of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  annual  statem.-.'!it  of  the 
fAMidon  Asiumni-e  corporation,  for  the  year  ending  De- 
cember 31st.  1908.  of  which  tlie  atxivc  is  an  abstract, 
has  been  received  and  filed  In  tills  department  and 
duly  approred  by  me.  JOHN  A.  HAItTIC.A.N. 

Commissioner   of   Insurauc*. 


H 


WANTS- 

BRIN(5% 
^  QUICK    <A 


-suw 


FOR  SALE— HORSES. 

FOR  SALE- 
HORSES  HORSES  HORSES  HORSES. 
We  art,  leaders  in  our  line  and  can- 
not be  undersold.  Our  motto,  "quick 
sales  and  small  profit."  ^Ve  have  from 
40}  to  60o  head  of  liorses  on  hand, 
consisting  of  draft  horses,  farm 
mares,  delivery  horses  and  mules. 
V\e  can  sell  you  one  horse  or  a  car- 
load. Auction  every  Wednesday  at 
1:30  p.  m.  Private  sales  dally.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Take  interur- 
ban  cars  from  either  city.  Barrett  & 
Zimmerman,  Midway  Horse  Market. 
St.   Paul. 

FOR  SALE— 6-YEAR-OLD  HORSE, 
weight  1.250  pounds;  cheap  if  taken 
at  once.  Inquire  Northern  Scrap  Iron 
Co.,  foot  of  Sixth  avenue  west.  Ze- 
nith   'phone    1041. 

For  Sale — I>raft,  delivery,  farm  mares 
and  drivers  always  on  hand  at  our 
now  stables.  308  East  First  St.  Also 
wagons   of  all    kinds    L.   Hammel   Co. 

For  Sale — Horses,  mill  wood.  Also  ashes 
removed.  2119  w.  Ist.  Qld  'phone  1937-M. 


WANTED    TO    BUY. 

We  buy  furniture  and  stoves.  Joe  Pop- 
kin,    22    W.    1st   St.   Zenith    1857-X. 


Highest  prices  paid  for  2d-hand  furni- 
ture and  clothes.  619-D,  Zenith.  1 
West    Superior   street. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— SINGLE  HORSE 
or  team  about  8  years  old.  223  Lake 
avenue   south. 

WANTED     TO     BUY— IF     Y'OU     WANT 

to  sell  or  buy  property,  any  kind, 
anywhere,  write  the  Nortliwestern 
Business   Agency,    Minneapolis     Minn. 

Highest  price  paid  for  cast-off  clothing. 
M.  Stone.   213   W.    1st  St.   Bell   1834-L. 


WANTE1>  TO  BUY — A  LARGE  OR 
small  tract  of  land  for  investment. 
I    69,    Herald. 


FOR  SALE— COWS. 

FOK^SALE — K.  <;ARUS0N  ARRIVES 
with  a  carload  of  fresh  milch  cows 
Saturday,  March  20.  2201  West 
Twelfth  street.  Zenith  'phone   1654-D. 

FOR  SALE- 1.  L.  LEVINE  WILL  AR- 
rlve  with  a  carload  of  fresh  milcii 
cows,  Sunday,  Marcli  14.  S21  Fourtli 
avenue    east.      Zenith    'phone    170S-D. 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES. 

FOR  SAL&^-ROOM  MODERN  HOUSE 
except  heat;  lot  50x140;  easy  terms. 
626    East    fceventh    street. 


FOR  SALE — 7-ROOM  HOUSE.  WITH 
water,  gas  and  sewer.  Bargain  if 
taken   at   once.   H.  S.  Merry    729   East 

_  hixth    street. 

FOR  SALE  —  FOUR-ROOM  HOUSE, 
small  barn  and  sixty-five  chickens. 
Price  $300.  Inquire  at  224  Forty-fifth 
avenue   west. 


FOR  SALE— ELEVEN-ROO.M  HOUSE, 
50-foot  lot.  In  Minneapolis;  easy 
terms,  or  will  «ichange  for  prop- 
erty In  Duluth.  A  bargain  for  some 
one.  R.  C.  Black.  314  West  First 
street. 


FOR  SALE— EIGHT-ROOM  HOUSE, 
with  all  modern  conveniences.  To 
deal  with  owner.  Zenith  'phone 
2005-X.      1016   East  Sixth   street. 


FOR  SALE — SEVEN- ROOM  HOUSE, 
water,  electric  light,  sewer,  bath; 
doable  lot.  concrete  foundation  and 
walks;  rea.ionable.  Reason  for  sell- 
ing, owner  leaving  city.  115  Vernon 
street 


CLAIRVOYANTS. 

.MADAM  'rOSWeTX'eGYPtTaN  PALM- 
1st,  118  Third  avenue  west,  tells  past, 
present  and  future  on  all  affairs  of 
life;    satisfaction    guaranteed. 


MADAM  STERLING,  PALM  READING 
25c.  Card  reading  50c.  114  East  Su- 
perior   street 


PATENTS. 


PATENTS — ALL 
See  Stevens,  610 


ABOUT 

Sell  wood 


PATENTS, 
building. 


DANCING  ACADEMY. 

COKKI.NS.      18  l>ake  aieiiue  north.     New    'phone   1242. 
Old    'phono    1427-lt.    Oix.ni   afternoons    and    evenings. 


Mendenhall   &    Iloopos.   .\{irenl.s. 

Detroit   Fire   &   >Iarln<.>    In.-iurauce    Coih- 
pnny. 

Principal  office.  Detrnlt.  Mlih.  fOrgai.lzcd  in  ISfiii. ) 
K.  II.  Mutler.  presideni;  A.  H.  McDonnell,  secre- 
tary. Altorney  to  accept  scriice  in  ^Uiuusuta,  Com- 
mUsioner   of    Insiinmre. 

CA.SII    (AITT.Vf..     $i(»0, 000.00. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums  other  than  jKipcluals $      545.,S27.9i 

Ilenls  and  lrten"<l 79.7:17.97 

From  all  other  souic« 4.58U.i;G 

Profit    on    gale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

aaaeU    738.00 

Tot.i4    Income $  6.30,890. ;'7 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 

.\mount  i>ald    for   los.4<s $  372.819.41 

Commissions   and    hnikcr.ige 110.U69.32 

.'talarten  and  fees  of  olTlcers.   agents  ami 

employes     45,717.92 

Tasss.   fees,    reiits  and  other  real  estate 

expenses     14.122.18 

Dlrldends  and  interest 50.000.00 

lx«s  on  sale  or  maturity  of  letlger  assets  49J.3I 

.\U    other    dUbursemenU 38.481 . 58 

Total    dlsbnr-enicnt'? $  640.700.70 

Kxcess   of  dl!biir''eiiH'nts   mcr  liiconie ..    .$  9.810.13 
ASSETS    DEC.    31.     1906. 

Value  of   real  esUle  owned $  244.077.88 

Mortgage    loans     682,910.47 

Collateriil     leans 35.250.01' 

Bonds  and  stock.-  owned 796.850.00 

Ccsh  In  office  and   in   bank 69.11,S.1M 

Accrued  Interest  and   rents 27.008.23 

Premiums  In  course  of  collection 74.470.15 

All  oUier  ai'mltted  assets 2.560.66 

Total    admitted    aRS«'ts $   1.932.251.59 

AasiTts   not   adnUtted $2,119.61 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    I9(». 

I'npald    losses    and    claims $  63.568.71 

Iteli'siirance     rtser\p 459.735.81 

Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,    dividends   and 

Interest    due 11.811.81 

CommlssIot\   and    brokerage 102.38 

Capital   stock   paid    up 500,030.00 

Total    UabiUUes    including    capital....!  1.035.281.77 

Net   aurplus    $       890, 969. S2 

RISKS   AND    PREMIUMS.    1908    BUSINESS. 

nr*   risks  wrllten   during  the  year $59,408,484.00 

I'renUums    recclvetl   thereon 607.789.29 

Marhio   and    Inland    risks    written    during 

the  year    4.658.955.00 

Premiums    received    thereon 23.27U.i>9 

Net  amount  In  force  at  end  of  the  year.   79. 002,505. OJ 
BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 
Marine  and 
Fire  Risks.         Inland,     .\ggregatc. 

nUks   written $2,084,938     $1,227.86.-;     $:{.312.8ol 

Premiums  received...         33.814  6.502  40.31b 

Loascs  Incurred I7,9l»  292  28.212 

l^sse^    paid 30.073  350  30.424 

Amount   at  risk 3.101.762  ...  

State   of   Mlni\eM)ta.    iK-partment    of    Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  annual  statement  of  the 
Detroit  Fire  &  Marine  Insurance  company,  for  Ihe 
yea.-  ending  December  31st.  1908.  of  which  the  above 
is  an  abstract,  ha.s  been  received  and  filed  In  Uiis 
department   titd   duly    approved    by    me. 

JOHN    A.    HAP.TIGAN. 
OommUsivntr  of  Insurance. 


**********illi***^*t****i^*****llfi***^ 


'S 

PROGRESSIVE 


fiti 
J? 


FIRMS! 


Something  is  Always  Wanted.    Just 

I  what  it  is,  who  makes  it,  sells  it,  or 

does  it,  and  where  it  may  be  obtained 


11 

Ml  A  lie 


IF  YOU  think  of  chang- 
ing your  business  and  in- 
vesting your  cap.tal  else- 
where, The  Herald  "BUSI- 
NESS CHANCES"  will  dis- 
pose of  your  present  busi- 
ness without  any  trouble, 
and  our  "WANTED  TO 
BUY"  will  get  you  all  fixed 
in  a  new  one,  whi?n  you're 
out  of  the  old.  Try  them 
once. 


AUTOMOBILES. 


Thomas  Flyers.  40-hp.  e-cylinder. $3,000 
Thomas  Flyers,  60-hp.  6-cyllnder.    4.500 

rr,. t:,. „ ..     ,^        ™  ..        .  .^^q 

5O0 

Auto  Co.  Garage  rear  B.  of  T.,  Duluth. 


Thomas  Flyers,  60-hp.  6-cyllnder.    4.5C 
Thomas  Flyers.  70-hp.  6-cvllnder.    6,0( 

Chalmers  Detroit.  30-hp.  6-cyl l,5i, 

Most   perfect   cars   In  America.     Mutus 


ATTORNEY. 

William    Marx,      Attorney    at    Law,    510 
Burrows    bldg.      Zenith   'phone    384-A. 


BLACKSMITHS  AND  WAGON 
MAKERS. 

Horseshoeing    and    repairing — Devaney 
&    Jordan,    20-22    First    avenue    west. 


BOATS  AND  LAUNCHES. 

All  kinds  built  to  order  and  for  sale; 
also  gas  engines.  H.  S.  Patterson, 
Railroad  street  and  Sixth  Ave.   west. 


COAL  AND  WOOD. 

City    Wood     Yard.      Prompt    deliveries. 
J.   D.   O'Connell,   Prop.      Both   'phones. 


CIVIL   ENGINEERING. 

Duluth  Engineering  Co.,  W.  B.  Patton. 
Mgr.,  613  I'alladio  Bldg.  Specifications 
prepared  and  construction  superin- 
tended for  waterworks,  sewerage,  etc. 


DENTIST. 

Dr.   W.   H.   OLsonTaiTlJew'  Jersey  Bldg. 
All   work  guaranteed.     Both    phones. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICE. 

Natl    Emp.   Co  5  S.   5th   A  v.   W.      f^sfb. 
1882.    'We  get  the  men."  Pkones  376. 


ENGRAVING. 

Jewelrv   and   Silverware,   lowest   prices. 
Dul.    Eng.   Co.,    4th    av.    W.    &    1st   St. 


FINANCIAL. 

Bu.v    Germania-Tungsten    stock,    $100.00 
share.  Ilolfman.  605  Man.  Zen.  1731-D. 


FLORIST. 

W.    W.    Seekins,    302    E.    Sup.    St.      Cut 
flowers  and  floral  einblems.  all  kinds. 


FURS  STORED  AND  REPAIRED. 

Fur  garment.^  made  to  order  a  special- 
ty.    Duluth   Fur   Co.   327    W.   First   St. 


FAMILY    THEATER. 

S.\VOY' — Vaudeville     and     feature     pic- 
tures,   afternoon    and    evening.       10c. 


FURNACE  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work   done   on    short   notice.   Burrell   & 
Harmon,  308  E.  Superior  .St.     'Phones. 


FURNITURE  RECOVERED. 

Let    Forsell    do    your    UPHOL.STERING. 
334  E.  Superior  St.  or  'phone  Zen.  949. 


FURNITURE  AND  PIANOS. 

Polished    and    repaired.      Thompson    & 
HIM,  336  E.  Sup.  St.  Old  'phone  1202-1* 


FURNITURE  AND  STOVES. 

.Ml  kinds  at  lowest  prices*.     Shapiro,  12 
First   avenue  west.     Zen.  'phone   1032. 


FRENCH  CLEANER  AND  DYER. 

pairing     and     tailoring.      Old     1834-L. 


HOME  BAKERY. 

The  Zenith  will   furnish  you  bread  and 
pastry.       Zen.     1879-D.       427     E.    4th    St. 


HAT  MFR.  AND  CLEANER. 

Geo.    G.    Moosbrugger.    successor    to    C. 
Volland.  2  4   First  avenue  E.     'Phones. 


HAY,  SEED  AND  FARM  MCH'Y. 

TT^AT^carieTL^m^Wv'lsr^     ^Phonesl 
Make  Lakeside  Tuesdays  and  Fridays. 


*  ■^'  ■V  *r  V  "  "  W^ 

HARDWARE  AND  TOOLS 


O.    A.    Geise,    10    W.    1st    St.    with    first 
class  tin  .shop  in  connection.  'Phones. 


IMPROVED    SHOE    REPAIRING. 

GOpmcrTsHoiPwoRKi^^ 

avenue  west  and  12  4th  avenue  west. 


KODAKS  AND  CAMERAS. 

Eclipse   View  Co..   Inc..   30  4th   Ave.    W. 
Develops    and    finishes    for    amateurs. 


LAND   FOR  SALE. 

We  always  have  bargains  In  ^v^ld  and 
improved  land.  List  with  us.  E.  H. 
Hobe  Land  &   Lber  Cu.  10   otii  av.  W. 


LOAN  OFFICE. 

Money   loaned   on   all    articles  of  value. 
City  Loan  Office,   524    W.  Superior  St. 


LYCEUM  SCENIC  STUDIO. 

I'hotogiaphlc     background     painted     to 
order,  decorating  all  kinds.     Lyceum. 


LAUNDRY. 

Model    Laundry,   126    E.    1st   St.      'We   do 
the   work."      Old,    2749-L.     New,    1302. 


MATTRESS  MANUFACTURER. 

Duluth    Bedding^"c<rr3^^rXake'^A^er^ 
Mail    orders    a    specialty.      Zen.    1732. 


MUSICAL   MERCHANDISE. 

Boston  Music  Co.  Mail  orders  a  si)ecial- 
ty.   121   W.   1st.     Old  2787-M.  New  673. 


PROFESSIONAL. 

DR.  MITCHELL,  electro-magnetic  spe- 
cialist, has  positive  cure  for  kidney, 
stomach,  liver,  lieart.  deafness,  blind- 
ness, piles,  sexual  weakness,  all  fe- 
male troubles.     325  West  First  street. 


PHOTOGRAPHER. 

Snap    shots.     25c    a    dozen    at    McKen- 
zie's,    30    East    Sujterlor    St..    up.stalrs. 


PLUMBING  AND  HEATING. 

Geo.    McGurrin   Co.,    329    E.   Superior   St. 
Old.  815.  JOBBING.  New,   98:^. 


PAINTS,  OILS  AND  GLASS. 


k 


The  Little   Paint    Man    says: 

Sherwin-Williams    is   the    best. 

NORTH WESTEItN  PAINT  CO. 

323    West    First    Street. 


PAINTERS    AND    DECORATORS. 

John    Hogan    &    Co..    22    E.    1st    St.      Let 
us   figure   on   your  work.      Zenith   741. 


PRINTERS  AND  BOOKBINDERS, 

Mcrrltt  &  Hector.  Rallwav  and  commer- 
cial printing.  30-32  W.  1st  St.  Phones, 


PLASTERING  AND  BRICKWORK. 

E.stimates   furnished.   W.  J.   Darby.  New 
■phone.     1224-A;     old     'phone.     424-M. 


RELIABLE  SHOE  STORE. 

.Shoes  that  wear  and  fit  for  all.     Lowest 
prices.  Joe  Williams,  123  1st  Ave.  W. 


ROOFING  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work     executed    promptly.       Burrell    & 
Harmon,   308   E.  Superior  St.   'Phones. 


SHIRTS  AND  UNDERWEAR. 

Made     strictly     to     order,     fit     guaran- 
teed.    C.   C.   Smith,    409   Torrey   Bldg. 


TYPEWRITING. 

Public  stenographer  and  notarv   public. 
Miss  Ortoii.   433   Man.  Bldg.  Zen.   1598. 


TURKISH  BATH  PARLORS. 

Guaranteed     cure,     all     rheumatic     ail- 
ments.   S.  Kasmir.  under  Hotel  McKay, 


UMBRELLAS  RECOVERED 

And  repaired.     It  pays  to  do  them  now. 
Gingold,    Mir..    125    E.    Superior   St. 


The   Capital   Fire     Invatrance   Company. 

Prhiclpal  offUe,  Concord.  New  llampsMre.  (Or- 
ganised in  13Si=p.  l.ynian  Jackaan.  prcaldciil;  Itufus 
.\.  KIwell,  Fecietarj.  Attorney  t'<  accept  service  In 
Minnesota.   Commissioner  of  ihinrance. 

CASH    CAPITAL.     $200,000. 
INCOME  IN   1908. 

Premium.*    olhcr    than    perpetual* $      441.011.94 

Hrnts    and    Interest .' 33. 71.]!. 70 

Fnun    all   other   sources 1.255.2;! 

Profit  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  assets  238.25 

Total   Imome $  476.222.12 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

.\mount   paid  for  lo;Si>a $  273.561.51 

Comml.sslons   and    br.keragB 108.099.37 

.Salaries  and  fees  of  officers,   agents  and 

employes    27.730.77 

Taxes,    fees,    rents    and   other   real   estate 

expenses     1 1.664.41 

Dividends   and   interest    10.000.00 

I,os<  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  asset* .  661.25 

AU   other   dlsbuj,enu'nu 15.001.96 

Total   disbursements    I      449.722.30 

K.\res3  of  income  o\cr  ■ri.<hiir;inieiifi $  26.499. 82 

ASSETS    0£C.    31.     1908. 

Value  of  real  estate  owned $  90.200.90 

Mortgage   loans 80, 018. .'>.'> 

Collateral   loans    19.7oo.oo 

Bonds  and  stocks  ownetl 4.58. 456. 00 

Cash  In  office  and   in   hank 59.092.85 

Accnied    Inten-st    and    rents 5.l80.ii3 

Premiums   in   course   of  collection 66.177.81 

Deduct     special     deposit     less     $4,890.55 

liablUty    therec'n 6.306.45 

Total  admitted  assets $      763.545.82 

Assets   not   admltteil $7,719.61 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

I'npald  losjes   and  claims $        .19,498.5.5 

Reinsurance  resene    348.804.77 

Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,   dlrldends   and 

Ijiterest    due 22.525.69 

Capital  stock  paid  up gQO.OOO.OO 

Total  UabiUUes  including  capital $      610.829.01 

Net   surplus    $      152.716.81 

RISKS  AND  PREMIUMS.  1908  BUSINESS. 

Fire  rUki  written  dorlng  the  year $17,140,085.00 

Pnmluras   recel' cil   thereon 586.171.16 

Net  amount  in  fori-e  at  end  I'f  ll»e  year.   58,487.772.00 
BUSINESS   IN   MINMC80TA   IN   I90B. 

Fire  Rlska  -  'i'^;"' 

Risks  written    •.".• $  1.371.887.00 

Premiums    received 21.766.15 

Losses   li.curred ,  ^. ' 23.4,-.6..57 

Losses     paid 22,266.09 

State   of   Minnesota.    Depamnent  "f   Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  Tliat  the' a«iual  statement  of  the 
Capital  Fire  Insurance  compaiiT.  for  the  year  ending 
l>cre:nb(r  31st.  1903.  of  vvhUlf  the  atjove  Is  an  ab- 
stract, has  been  re<-elved  and  tliid  in  tills  depart- 
ment  and   duly   approved  t/f  nte. 

JflHN    A.    HAR-nOAX. 
CdiDuilsslouet  of  Iitsuntuco, 

'tun  u: 


Great   Rastern  Caauaity  and  Indemnity 
Company. 

Princif-al  ofrice,  Ni.w  York.  N.  Y.  (Organized  In 
1892.)  1..  H.  Fibal.  presM-':it:  J.  H.  luillns.  iecre- 
tarv.  Attorney  to  accept  lervico  in  Minnesota.  Com- 
mi-ssioner    of    In:<urancie. 

C.1.SH  CAPIT.XI..    $200,000. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premium*    Received  — 

Acddttu  and  health $398.973.07 

Total  premium  Inconw ..$398,973.07 

From  Interest  and  rcids lii.703.<15 

From  all  other  sources 37.655.54 

Total  Incr,ma   $153.. ",32. 26 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 

Claims    Paid    cNeti  — 

Accident    aid    health $140.727.18 

Net  palil  policy  holders $140,727.18 

Inrestigalion  and  adjustment  of  claims 3.308.23 

Comrai.^le.iH     127.472  25 

Dividends   to  'tockholders 10,000.00 

.Salaries   of   oflKers.    agents,    employes,    ex- 

anduers'  and   iii.'pectlon   fetss 89.403.62 

AU  olhcr  disbursements 43.728.50 

Total   disbursements    $414.6:i9.78 

Kxcess  of  income  oyer  ilNburriemt  iits $  3S.C92.lj 

ASSETS  DEC.  91.   IMS. 

Romls    and    .s'lKks    owned $433. 437. 5» 

Cash  In  oifrce  and  in   bank 34.211. ..6 

.\ci-nied   interest   an,i    rents 3.295.97 

Premiums   In   eoucss   of   collection 29.909.48 

Total     admitte<l     .issets $500,881.51 

Assets    not    admltteti $1,328.25 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims    In    proct.ss    of    idjuitment    and    re- 
ported       $  11.167.73 

Claims     resisted     11,050.00 

Aggregate  nf   unpaid   claims $22,217.73 

Reserve     1.17. -552.  ;;i 

AU     other     liabilities 20.858.04 

Capital    stock    paid    up 200.000.00 

TuUl    liablliUes     Includbig    capital $350,628.08 

Surplus    over    all    UabiUUes $150,256.43 

BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 

Premiums  Received.  Loses  Paid. 

.\ccldent     $9,085.00       »3..".9ii.00 

Health     1.278.0J  251.00 

Totals       $10,363.00       $;!.8H.00 

.Stale  iif  Mlrnesota.   nepartmcnt  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  CerUfy.  That  the  anmial  statement  of  the 
Great  F.ivteni  ('a«ualty  &  Indemnity  company,  for 
the  year  ending  December  :!lsl.  1908.  of  v«hicli  the 
above  is  an  abstract,  has  been  received  and  filed  in 
this   department   and   duly   apprv)\eil   by   me. 

JOHN     H.     HARTKiAN, 
CjnniU.ssloncr    of    Insurance. 


Are  you  losing  sleep  o%'er  some  "of- 
fice worries?"  Y'ou  can't  find  "lost 
sleep"  again,  even  through  advertising: 
but  you  can  use  the  want  ads.  to  cure 
most  of  your  office-worries, 


r 


M.  r .  B  A  te:s 


Mortgage  Loans,  Real 
Estate,  Snsurance. 

S    EXCHANGE    B17ILDINO. 


Commercial    Union    Fin'    Insurance 
Company. 

Principal    offh-c.    New    Vijik.    .N.    r.       ■Orgonljed    In 
1S90  I     .\.   II.   Wray.  president:  C.   J.   Holman,   secre 
tarv.      Atlorriey   to   accept   scrvU-e   ji    Minnesota.    Com- 
missioner  of   Insuratwe. 

CASH    CAPITAL.    $2')).00-l 
INCOME     IN     1901). 

Premlunis  other  than  iH;i)etiuU $      28:1.836.1.1 

Rents  and  interest    20.iil7.60 

Profit    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

a.iseU   -    $.53.75 

Total  Uicome $  304.75T.50 

DISBURSEMENTS     IN     1908. 

Amount  paid  for  losses    $  17l.9S2.80 

Commisflons   and    brok>>rage 64.757.93 

Sal.tries   and  fees   of  ofTtcen.    agenti.   and 

employes    4.125.01 

TuM'i.   fees,   rents  and  otlier  real    »tate 

expenses 6.816.42 

Dividends  and  interest 14. 22.'). 00 

Ml  oUier  dUbursements S0.:'197.47 

Total  disbursements $      282.30166 

Excess  of  Income  ovrr  disbursements          .$  22.152.84 
ASSETS    DEC.    31,      908. 

Bond*  .■vnd  stock.<  owned $  567. .505. 00 

Cash  In  ofTl.'c  and  in  bank 31.124.00 

.Vccrueil  Interest   and  rents 4,417.90 

PremluiiLs   in    course  of   collecUon 70,974.48 

.\U  other  admitted  assets iM.'i 

ToUl  admitted  asscU $  S74. 689.36 

.\s3els  not  admitted $24.(95  24 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31,     1908. 

t'npald  losses  and  claims $  16. •112. 10 

RfliL-iurance   reserve 2:)4.377.C7 

Salarie<:.    expHjiscs.    taxes,    dividend!    and 

Interest  due 4.254.00 

ComiaUslons    and    brokerage. 8.871 .00 

Resi-ne    for   contlirgeucles 20.0:W..)l) 

All   other   Ualilllties 9.:i03.rt7 

Capital  stock  paid  up 200.000.00 

Toltal  UaWUdcs  including  cai)Ual $      522.852.71 

.Vei  surplus $      r.:.3.r.23 

RISKS  AND   PREMIUMS.   1991  BUSINESS. 

Flro  risks  written  dnriiii  the  year $41,097,455.00 

Prsinlums   recelvetl   thereon 481.6-2  Id 

.Net   amount   la   fi>re   at   ei!  1    )f   'hi'   year  .?7.178.JiO.)9 
BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA   IN    1908. 
Fire  lllsts  — 

ni,k.s   written    $      713.238. .57 

Pn.'Milunis   re<'elved 10.30  i.51 

Lo-ies   m-urred    3..r25.93 

Losses  pahl 3,038.11 

Statu  of   >Uiuiesota.    Department   of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  annual  sutement  ->f  the 
Conmicriial  Cr.lon  Mre  Itisurance  company,  far  the 
year  endii.i;  IK'eemtier  ?.lst.  1903.  ■■t  wldch  the  aliove 
is  an  .iljstract.  h.ts  b.--n  rweived  and  lilod  in  this 
department    aud    duly    approve.1    by    me. 

JOHN    A.    H.4RTI0AN 
Comtulsiio.  n;r  of  Insurance. 


CERTIFICATE  OF  INCOllPORATIO.N 

— OF— 

DILITH,  VVIXXIPEii  AND  PACIFIC 

R.ULROAD  COMPANY. 


KNOW  ALL  MEN  BY  1 
ENTS,  That  we.  whose  na 
unto  subscribed,  have  a 
do  hereby  associate  ourst 
under  the  Constitution 
Lmvs  of  the  .State  of  M 
more  particularly  under 
the  Revised  I^ws  of  1905, 
and  the  laws  amendator; 
supplementary    thereto,     i 

corporation,    under    the    r 
purposes  hereinafter 


tht 


to  that  end  do  hereby  ac 
tificate  and  the  followin 
Incorporation; 

ARTICLE  L 

Tiie    name    of    this    corf 
be.     and       is       hereby    dei 
"1>UH:TH.    WINNII'EG    A 
RAlLRO.\D    COMPANY." 
eral  nature  of  Its  business 
of   a    railroatl   company   In 
Minnesota,   including  the 
strucilon.       acquisltioii, 
eijuipment    and    operation 
reward,    of   a    line    or    lin> 
wltliin     the    State    of       M 
freight  and  passengers,  c 
or    near    the    City    of    Vir 
County  of  St.  Louis,   in  st 
extending   in    a    generally 
southeasterly  direction   to 
head  waters  of  Lake  .Sup« 
to  and  into  the  .St.  Louis 
to  into  and  !  or  through  tl 
luth.  Minnesota,  together 
all  such  branches  and  cor 
spurs  and   spur   tracks,  si 
switches     anywhere     In 
Minnesota    as    the    Board 
of  said   corporation    may 
time    deem     needful,     adv 
advisable,    and    together 
chiding  the  construction, 
purchase,     lease     or     othe 
tenance,    operation   for    hi 
and    equipment    of    all    .su 
freight    >ards.    coai    yards 
wh.arves.     docks,     depots, 
macliine    shops,    plant,    m 
appliances,    telegraph      ai 
lines    and    plant.s,    and    si 
and     terminals    and     facil 
from    time    to   time    bi>   de 
advantageous    or    advlsab 
tiun   with  the  business  of 
tlon.     And   It   Is  further  c 
appurtenant  to  and  part 
and     business     of     this    c 
consolidate  with  or  take 
ciiase,  or  in  any  way  beco 
of,   or  control   or   hold.  In 
part,    from    time    to    time. 
Dlete,   maintain,  equip  am 
hire!    or    reward,    the    prt>r 
taking,    rights,    franchises 
of  any  railroad   company 
road   of  this   company   an, 
such    other    company    can 
connected   and   operated    t 
or  without   branches,  and 
line    of    such    other    railr 
or  part  thereof  may  exte 
State   of   Minnesota,   and 
purchase,    or    In    any    wa: 
owner  of,   or  control   or   1 
or  part,  from  time  to  tirti 
stock,    bonds,    debentures, 
curlties  of  any  such   rallr 
and     this    corporation    me 
lawful       consolidation     wl 
sale,    conveyance    or    otht 
of  the  whole  or  any  part, 
time,     of       Its       property, 
rights,    franchises    and    p 
such    railroad    company, 
location    and    selection    of 
lines  of  railway  and  such 
connecting  lines,  spurs  an 
sidetracks  and  switches, 
coal  yards,  warehouses,  dc 
tlepots,     car      houses,      ma 
plants,      machinery,      appi 
graph    and    telephone    line 
buildings.       terminals      ai 
shall     hereafter     be    mad* 
and  estal)lfshed    by   the   b< 
tors  of  this  corporation,  a 
legal  and  within  the  auth 
articles   for  sucli   board   o 
cause  an.v   work   of  const 
the    authority    of    these    a 
commenced  at.  and  carriet 
point    or    points,    and     if 
pedient,    to    obtain,    on    si 
may  lie  agreed  on.  the  rig 
to    time,    to    run    locomoti 
of  this  corporation  over  a 
of    railway,    and    to    give 
way    company,    from    tim< 
such    terms   as   may    be    a 
right   to  run  locomotives 
the  lines  of  this  corporati 

The  principal  place  o 
the  business  of  this  corj 
be,  and  is  hereby  declar?' 


HV:SE  PRES- 
mes  are  here, 
greed  to  and 
dves  together 
and  General 
innesota,  and 
Chapter  58  of 
of  said  State, 
thereof  and 
13  a  railway 
ame  and  for 
set  forth,  and 
opt  this  Cer- 
S    Articles    of 


•oration  shall 
•lared  to  be. 
ND  PACIFIC 
and  the  gen- 
shall  be  that 
the  .Stale  of 
location,  con- 
maintenance, 
,  for  litre  or 
*s  of  railway 
innesota  for 
jmmenclng  at 
ginia.  in  the 
tid  State,  and 
southerly  or 
and  into  the 
rior,  and  i  or 
stiver,  and  ;  or 
e  City  of  Du- 
with  any  an.j 
necting  lines, 
le  tracks  and 
:he  State  of 
of  Directors 
from  time  to 
antageous  or 
with  and  in- 
icquisition  by 
rwise.  main- 
re  or  reward, 
ch  terminals, 
,  warehouses, 
car  house.", 
achinery  and 
id  telephone 
ich  buildings 
ities  as  may 
;med  needful, 
e  In  connec- 
said  corpora, 
eclared  to  be 
jf  the  powers 
>rporation  to 
tjy  lease,  pur- 
ine the  owner 
whrjlo  or  any 
and  to  com- 
1  operate,  for 
erty,  under- - 
;  and  powers 
whenever  the 
1  the  road  of 
be  lawfully 
ogether,  with 
wherever  the 
oad  company 
Id  within  the 
lo   actiuire   by 

■  become  the 
old.  in  whole 
e,  the  capital 

or  other  se- 
oad  company, 
y  make  any 
th,  or  lease. 
■r    disposition 

from  time  to 

undertaking, 
•wers    to    any 

The    definite 

said  line  or 
branches  an<l 
1  spur  tracks, 
'reight  yards, 
cks.  wharves, 
chine  shops, 
lances,  tele- 
a  and  plants, 
id  facilities. 
.  determined 
lard  of  dlrec- 
nd  it  shail  be 
orlty  of  these 
f  directors  to 
-uction  under 
rticles  to  be 
I  on  from  any 

thought  ex- 
ich  terms  as 
ht,  from  time 
ves  and  cars 
ay  other  lines 

to    any    rall- 

■  to  time,  rin 
?reed  on,  the 
and  cars  over 
on. 

r  transacting 
loratlon  shall 
i  to  be,  in  tb« 


t;:ity  of  Duluth,  County  of  St.  Louia 
and  State  of  Minnesota,  wherein  the 
head  office  of  this  corporation  shall  be 
kept,  but  the  operations  of  the  com- 
pany may  be  directed  from  Virginia, 
Minnesota,  or  elsewhere,  and  It  may 
have  such  branch  offices,  either  within 
or  without  the  .State  of  Minne.sota.  as 
the  Board  of  Directors  may  from  time 
to  time   determine. 

ARTICLE    IL 

The  period  of  duration  of  this  cor- 
poration shall  be  one  thousand  (.l.OOO; 
yeaTs. 

ARTICLE   IH. 

The  names  and  places  of  residence 
of  the  persons  forming  this  a.ssocia- 
lion  for  the  purpose  of  Incorporation 
are   as   follows: 

Wirt  H.  Cook,  J.  L.  Washburn,  .T.  F. 
Walsh,  L.  r.  Feetham  and  W.  D.  Ballev. 
all  re.slding  In  Duluth.  St.  Louis  County. 
Minnesota. 

ARTICLE  IV. 

The  government  of  this  corporation 
and  the  conduct  and  management  of  Its 
affairs  is  hereby  vested  in  a  board  of 
directors,  who  shall  be  stockholders, 
and.  except  as  herein  provided,  shall 
be  elected  by  the  stockholders  at  their 
annual  meeting,  to  be  held  on  the  sec- 
ond Tuesday  in  Januar.v  In  each  year, 
and  who  shall  thereafter  elect  from 
their  own  number  a  President,  and  one 
or  more  Vice  Presidents;  they  shall 
also  elect  a  secretary  and  a  treasurer, 
who  may  or  may  not  be  directors,  and 
they  may  create  such  other  offices 
and  elect  or  appoint  such  other  officers 
as  they  may  think  necessary.  The 
Board  of  Directors  may  from  time  to 
time  appoint  from  thcdr  number  an 
executive  committee,  who  shall  have 
such  powers  and  duties  as  the  said 
board  of  directors  may  from  time  to 
time  confer  upon  them.  The  number 
of  the  board  of  directors  shall  In  the 
first  place  be  five,  but  such  number 
may  be  increased  from  time  to  time  to 
any  number  not  contrary  to  law.  at 
any  annual  meeting  or  special  meeting 
called  for  the  purpose  by  vote  of  stock- 
holders holding  not  less  than  two- 
thirds  (2-3  >  of  the  outstanding  stock 
of  this  corporation,  and  the  number 
may.  in  similar  manner,  be  decreased 
from  time  to  time  to  any  number  not 
contrary  to  law.  Tiie  directors  to  fill 
the  number  as  increased  may  be  elected 
at  the  meeting  at  which  the  Increase 
is  made,  or  may  be  appointed  by  the 
board  to  hold  office  until  the  next  an- 
nual meeting,  or  until  their  successors 
are   elected. 

The  first  annual  meeting  of  this 
corporation  shall  be  held  at  Duluth, 
Minnesota,  on  the  second  'Tuesday  In 
January.  1910.  and  until  such  time, 
and  until  directors  shall  have  been 
elected  at  said  meeting,  and  shall  have 
qualified,  the  following  persons  shall 
constitute  the  board  of  directors  of 
this  corporatievn,  to-wit: 

Wirt  H.  Cook.  J.  L.  Washburn.  .1.  F. 
Walsh.  L.  I  .Feetham  and  W.  D.  Hailey. 

.\nd  until  such  annual  meeting  la 
held  and  the  directors  thereat  chosen 
shall  elect  the  President,  Vice  Presi- 
dent, Secretary  or  other  officers, 
as  hereinbefore  provided,  and  until 
Htich  officers  shall  have  been  duly 
elected  and  qualified,  the  officers  of 
thi.--  corporation  shall  be  as  follows: 

Wirt    H.  Cook.   President. 

J.   L.   Washburn,  Vice   President. 

W.    D.    Bailey,    Secretary. 

L.  I.  Feetham.  Treasurer. 

The  Pre.sldent,  Vice  President  and 
directors  of  this  corporation,  except 
tho.^e  above  liasignated  to  act  as  sucii, 
shall  liold  office  for  a  period  of  one 
year,  or  until  their  successors  ar© 
elected  and  qualified,  atid  i«t  case  a 
vacancy  occurs  In  any  of  the  offices 
or  in  the  membership  of  the  board  of 
directors  of  this  corporation,  the  same 
shall  be  filled  by  the  boarel  of  directors 
until  the  next  annual  meeting,  and 
until  such  vacancies  have  been  filled 
by  election  held  in  accordance  with 
these  articles  and  such  by-laws  as 
shall  be  adopted.  Provided,  however, 
tliat  any  Pre3id>»nc.  Vice  President  or 
director  may  be  removed  from  office  by 
resolution  passed  at  a  special  meeting 
of  shareholders  called  for  the  pur- 
pose, and  a  successor  or  successors 
may  be  appointed  by  such  resolution*. 

Stockholders,  either  in  person  or  by 
proxy,  representing  a  majority  of  the 
stock  of  the  corporation  which  has 
been  Issued  shall,  until  otherwise, 
from  time  to  time,  provided  by  by-law, 
constitute  a  quoruni  In  the  meetings  of 
the  stockholders,  and  each  share  of 
stock  shall  entitle  the  holder  to  one 
vote,  and  a  majority  of  all  votes  cast 
shall  be  necessary  and  sufficient  to  the 
determination  of  any  question  before 
such  meeting,  e.xcept  as  herein  other- 
wise provided.  Provided  always,  that 
if  a  majority  of  the  i.'^sued  stock  be 
not  present  or  represented  at  a  meet- 
ing, such  meeting  may  be  adjourned 
from  time  to  time  and  from  place  to 
place  b.v  vote  of  the  majorit.v  of  the 
stock  which  Is  present  or  represented 
thereat. 

The  board  of  directors  of  this  cor- 
poration shall  adopt  such  rules,  regtj.-^ 
iations  and  by-laws  not  inconsistent 
with  these  articles  or  with  the  con- 
stitution and  laws  of  the  State  of  Min- 
nesota, as  it  may  deem  needful  for  the 
goveritment  of  the  officers  and  conduct 
of  the  affairs  of  this  corporation.  In- 
cluding its  own  proceedings  and  meet- 
ings and  the  quorum  thereat,  and  may 
create  and  fill  such  offices,  in  adtlition 
to  those  herein  provided,  as  may  from 
time  to  time  be  ileemed  necessary  and 
advantageous  for  the  conduct  of  the 
business  of  this  corporation,  and  shall 
fill  any  vacancies  at  any  time  it  may 
deem  necessary,  and  nu.y  abolish  and 
discontinue  offices  so  createil  at  will. 

The  board  of  directors  is  liereby 
authorized  from  time  to  time,  and  is 
hereby  charged  with  the  dut.v  eyf  taking 
all  .such  steps,  and  instituting  all  such 
proceedings,  pastning  all  such  rules  and 
resolutions  am  they  may  think  exped- 
ient for  the  proper  and  effectual  ex- 
ecution of  the  purposes  of  this  cor- 
poration, including  the  borrowing  of 
money  and  the  issuance  of  promissory 
notes,  bills,  acceptances,  debentures, 
debenture  stock,  bonds  and  obligations 
of  tills  corporation,  and  securing  the 
same  or  any  of  them  upon  the  whole 
or  parts,  from  time  to  time,  of  its  prop- 
erty, rights,  powers  and  franchises  ac- 
quired or  thereafter  to  be  acquired  by 
mortgage,  trust  deed,  debentures  or 
otherwise. 

ARTICLE  V. 

The  amount  of  the  capital  stock  of 
this  corporation  .shall  he  One  Hundred 
Thou.sand  Dollars  ($100,000.00),  and  the 
same  shall  be  paid  in  as  called  for  by 
the  board  of  directors.  The  capital 
stock  of  this  corporation  is  divided  Into 
one  thousand  (1.000 »  shares  of  the  par 
value  of  One  Hundred  Dollars  ($100> 
each. 

ARTICLE  VI. 

The  highest  amount  of  Indebtedness 
or  liability  to  which  this  corporation 
shall  at  ativ  time  be  subject  is  the  sum 
of  Ten  Millions  of  Dollars  ($10,000,- 
000.00 ». 

IN    WITNE.SS    WHEREOF,    We    have 

hereunto   set   our    hands   and    seals    this 

16th  day  of  March,  A.  D.   1909. 

WIRT  H.  COOK. 

J.    L.    WASHBURN. 

J.   F.   WALSH. 

L.  L  FEETHAM. 

W.    D.    BAILEY. 

Signed,  scaled  and  delivered 

in  presence  of: 

C.   M.   VAN    NORMAN. 

F.   M.   EMANUELSON. 


41 


iac= 


■^n 


«•■ 


t0^^mm^^t^^i^^mttm 


(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 


State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St,  T^ouia 

— ss. 

On  thi.s  ICth  day  of  Mfcrch.  A.  D.  1909. 
before  me,  a  Notary  Public  within  and 
for  said  county,  personally  appeared 
Wirt  H.  Cook,  J.  L.  Washburn.  .1.  F. 
Walsh.  L.  I.  Feetham  and  W.  D. 
Bailey,  to  me  known  to  be  the  persons 
described  in.  and  who  executed  the 
foregoing  Certificate  of  Incorporation, 
and  they  acknowledged  that  they  ex- 
ecuteil  the  same  as  their  free  act  and 
deed. 

F.  M.  EMANUFILSON. 

Notary   Public. 
St.  Louis  County,  Minn. 
(Notarial  Seal.  St.  Louis  County.  Minn.) 

My  commission  expires  Marcli  11, 
1912. 


■•■■i,,!       J.»»lfTj,« 


State     of     Minnesota,     Department     of 

.State. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  In- 
strument was  filed  for  record  In  this 
office  on  the  17th  day  of  March.  A.  D. 
J909.  at  9  o'clock  A.  M..  and  was  duly 
rectjrded  in  Book  R-3  of  Incorporations, 
on  page  — . 

JULIUS  A.  .SCHMAHL. 

Secretary   of  State. 


OFFICE   OF  REGLSTER   OF   DEED.«l. 
.State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis 
— ss. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument was  filed  In  this  office  for 
record  March  18.  1909,  at  »:30  A.  M.. 
and  was  duly  recorded  in  Book  9  oc 
Misc.,    page    438. 

M.  C.  PALMER. 

Register   of   Deeds. 
By  THOS.  CLARK. 

Deputy. 


DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD,      fridav.  march  «..  im 


Yes,  You  May  Get  a  Job  Without  Advei1ising--Sometimes,  Periiaps 


Cue  Cent  a  Word  Kach  Insertion. 
Jio  Advert iM-nuMit  1-ess  llian  13  Cents. 

'  SHOPPING 

BY  tklp:phone. 

Did  New 

Thone.  Thone. 
MEAT    MARKTS — 

R    .1.    Toben    22  22 

MovU.    Hro-v 1590  1S9 

I.Al-.>DUIK<*— 

Yale   l.aiinilry 479  4  <  H 

Lutes  Laiimlry    447  447 

Trov    laundry    257  257 

DRl  <><tIST<i —  ,^„, 

Eddie  .leronlmus    1243  1027 

Bov.-e    163  163 

BAKKRIRS — 

The    Bon   Ton    1T20-I.  1128 

niEATIXi    AM>   FM.MBlXtJ— 

Arolile    AloDougal    ...1723  ?16 

W.   S.   Kllingsen    17.^0-.\ 

"real  hs-fate;  firiT 
insurance  and 
rental  agencies^ 

SohrTX^'F^epheneonPwolvin  building", 
E  D  Field  Co..  203  Kxchnnge  building. 
iJ"  A  Larson  Co..  I'rovidence  bulldinK- 
Pulford    How  &  Co..  309  E.xchangf  Hldg. 


MUSIC. 

PHOXOG  R  A  PHV''AND"'>rUSICAir^I>^ 
struments.  Send  ycur  orders  for 
popular  songs  and  record.s  to  Zenith 
Music  company.  No.  6  East  Superior 
street.    Puluth^    Minn.  

*\l.   Ml  ShAf.    i>iSTrU  uTSrtS  of  KVKKV 

~  Je»<Tlptlon.     EULscn  phciso- 

traphs.      band      »ik1        or- 

■  h  e  »  t  r  a         Justraments. 

lianos    and    organ."!.       lug- 

«»ia      wRSTt;.\ARr>.      r 
tiid   £•   Flr*t   Avfuuc   \Ve*t. 


ITl-bTi 


FOR   RENT— FLATS. 

FOR  RI^T— n1?\V^sTx^HOoSPfLA^ 
i?t.  Regi.«  apartments;  conveniently 
arranged;  heat,  water  and  janitor 
servii-e.  M.  H.  Alworth,  100  Alworth 
building. 

FOR  KCNT— FOUR -ROOM  FLAT— 
modern  except  lieat.  1324  Jefferson 
street.  Inquire  J.  V.  Wilde,  basement 
flat. 

FOR    RENT— NEW   FIVE   ROOM   FLAT 

all  modern  lonveniences.  except  heat, 
at  Twenty-seventh  avenue  west  and 
Third   street.      Zenith     phone    2208-X. 

FOR  RENT— .\T~  120'\VK8T  FOURTH 
street,  modern  .'•-room  tlat.  new  bath 
and  hardwood  lloors.  W.  C.  Sherwood 
&    Co.,     118    Manhattan    building. 

ton  RENT— NEW  FOUR-ROOM  FLAT. 
up.«tairs;  liardwood  floors,  elec- 
tric light:  $11  per  niontii.  803  Elgiith 
avenue  ea.st. 

FOR  RENT — 1-ROOM  FLAT,  ELEC- 
tric  light,  gas.  batli.  hardwood  floors. 
30  Fourth  avenue  east.  Inquire  18 
Fourth    avenue    east. 


FOR    RENT— AT    120    WEST    FOURTH 

street,  modern  5-room  Hut;  new  bath 
and  hardwood  floors.  W.  C.  Sher- 
wood   &    Co.    lis    Manhattan    Bldg. 


FOR  RENT— NICE  FLATS,  FOUR  AND 
five  rooms,  opposite  new  courthouse. 
Call    noS    West    Third   street. 


FOR  liENT— 6-ROOM 
bath,  electric  light 
roa<1.  Inquire  1913 
Zenitii     'i'lioii*',     luIU" 


1325    London 
London       road. 


PERSONAL. 

PERSONAL — IF  TxTEiTe  S  T  E  D  IN 
Hypnotism,  Mind-reading,  Clalrvoy- 
ance.  etc..  take  my  private,  practical 
course  on  Mental  Science  and  learn 
to  apply  them.  Scientific  Demon- 
strators. Box   5S6.  City. 

PERSONAL— PLAIN    SEWING    W^ANT 
ed    at    once,    bv      good      dressmaker. 
Call   Zenith   'phone,    1352-Y, 


PERSONAI^— A    LADY    IN    THE    CITY 

wislies  tlie  companionsliip  of  a  gen- 
tleman. For  further  particulars,  ad- 
dress J    S9,  Herald. 


PERSONAL — WHY  DONT  YOU  FIND 
out  how  to  take  care  of  your  hard- 
w^ood  floors?  It  costs  nothing  to 
have  the  lloor  expert  call  on  you.  M. 
J.  Roos,  313  West  Third  street. 


PERSONAI., — Foot  specialist;  corns  ex- 
tracted. 2.')c;  inverted  nails  and  bun- 
Ions   cured.      Scott,    17    E.   Sup.   street. 

PERSt>N.\L — Electric  cahiiiet  Turkish 
baths.     Knauf  Sistfrs.   24  W.   Sup.  St. 

Personal — Manicuring,  massage,  scalp 
treatment.   S13   Torrey;    'plione   946-X. 


PERSONAL  —  LEARN  HYPNOTISM. 
Free  lessons  and  particulars.  Box 
152   E.^therville.    lowa. 

Wanted  old  clothes,  furniture,  etc.  Sal- 
vation Army.  Old  1003-K:  new  2134-X. 

PERSONAL— PAINTING  AND  PAFER- 
hanglng.     Zenith,   1518-X.     C.  Gill. 

PERSON  AT. — OLD      MIRRORS      RESIL- 

vered.     St.  Germain   Bros.,   121      First 
avenue   vest. 


CARPET  CLEANING. 

INTERSTATE  CARPET  CLE.\NING 
Co..  Sinotte  &  Van  Norman,  com- 
pressed air  cleaners  and  rug  weavers. 
Both   'phones.      1701-03    W.   Mich.   St. 


SHEET   METAL   WORKS. 

Hoofing,  guttering,  eave  troughs,  con- 
ductor pipes  a  specialtv.  H.  Popkin, 
29   Fifth   avenue   west.   Zenith   2062-D. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Kacli  In.sertlon. 
Xo  .\dvertiseineiit  Less  Tlian  15  Cents. 

FOR     SALE  — MISCELLANEOUS. 

Ft^R^^.VLl^SAFK.sr^OFFlCE  FURNI- 
ture.  architects  :in<l  engineers'  sup- 
plies, tvpewriters  and  supplies.  J.  S. 
Ray  Co..  406  W.  Sup.  St.   Both  phones. 

i"OR  SALE— send"  US  VOUR  NAME. 
We  will  mail  >  ou  the  new  Victor  and 
Edi.-^on  rccoid  lists  each  month.  Free 
of  charge.     French  &  Bassett. 

FOR  S ALE— T HE ~^n"e W  ST Y LE  Vic- 
tor "O."  A  gcnuitie  brand  new  Victor 
nuicliinc  willi  horn,  nee<i!es  and  len 
10- inch  new.  perfect  records.  Direct 
fro.m  the  Vicior  factory.  All  com- 
plete for  JJ3.50.  Easy  terms.  French 
&  Hassett. 


FOR  SALE— B.VBY  GO-CARTS— THE 
new  Princess  one-motion  collapsible 
folding  go-cart  In  ihe 
$6.50  up;  call  and  look 
send  for  free  booklet, 
Duiuth. 


is  tlie  linest 
world ;  prices 
"em  over,  or 
Bay  ha  &  Co., 


FOR  SALE— ONE  MAHOGANY  PIANO, 
nearly  new  and  in  good  condition;  a 
splendid  bargain;  flO  cash  and  )5  a 
month.     French  &   Bassett. 


FOR      SALE   —    I*HONt)GRAPH3      AND 

records;  don't  buy  till  you  get  our 
prices.  We  carry  by  far  the  largest 
lines  of  Vicior  and  Edison  machines 
and  records  in  Duiuth;  only  new  and 
peifect  goods.  Outfits  $10  up;  cash 
or  easy  payments;  catalogues  and 
record   lists  on   request.  Bayha  &  Co. 


FOR   SALE— 25-FOOT    LAUNCH.   FULL 

cabin,  drop  windovv.s,  leather  cush- 
ions, full  brass  fittings,  etc.;  6-h.-p. 
engine,  used  but  few  weeks.  Zenith 
•phone.    6040. 

FOR  SALE  —  36 -FOOT  CRUISING 
launch;  good  reliable  engine;  toilet, 
cooking  galley,  Ice  boxes,  sleeping 
cai.acliy  for  six  persons;  storage  de- 
partment on  top;  electric  lights, 
nickel  plated  trimmings  and  complete 
in  every  respect.  inquire  28  East 
First   street. 


FOR  S.VLE  CHEAP— NEW  EDISON 
graphophone  with  twenty-seven  late 
records.     Address  K  90,  Herald. 


FOR  SALP:— IKUN  REDS.  ALL  SI/.E.S, 
at  half  price.  Kngtr  .\i  Olson,  L'OlJ 
West   Superior   street. 


FOR  SALE— NEW  VICTOR  AND  EDI- 
son  records,  direct  from  the  factory. 
Full-toned,  perfect  record.*!.  They 
last  longer  and  sound  better.  Buy 
them  of   French  &   Bassett. 

FOR  SALE  —  EIGHTEEN  FOOT 
launch,  fifty  inch  beam,  2-hnrse  en- 
gine; first-class  order.  Address  J. 
iil.   Herald.  

FOR     SALE— 24-FOOT       LAUNCH      4  »4 

horsepower  engine;  also  tent  and 
camping  outfit.  Call  &31  East  Supe- 
rior   street,    or    old    "phone,    277S-L. 

FOR  SALE— SET  FLAT~nib"NS,  1  GAS 
plate,  two  good  Indies'  worsted 
dresses  and  other  wearing  apparel, 
|5.      K  94,   Herald. 


FOR  SALE — TWO  FOUR-FOOT  SHOW 
cases.  Inquire  514  East  Fourth 
street. 


FOR  S.VLE  —  LEASE  AND  FURNl- 
ture  of  10-room  house:  rent  $15  per 
month;  centrally  located.  Big  bar- 
gain.     H  91.    Herald. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Kneh  Insertion. 
XoAtlvertiscnient  Le.ss  llian  15  Cents. 

HELP  WANTED— FEMALE^ 

WANTED— A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  Must  be  good 
cook;  good  wages.  24  Butte  avenue, 
Hunter's   i'ark.     Old    phone   1011. 


WANTED — LADIES  TO  C.\LL  AT  THE 
daylight  trunk  store.  Our  g()ods 
stand  the  sunshine.  A  square  deal. 
Try  us.  Repairing  reasonable.  North- 
ern Trunk  company,  1:28  W.  First 
street,   opposite   Wolvin    building. 

WAN'TED— A  THOrTh^GHLY  COMPE- 
tent  working  housekeeper,  three  In 
family;  small  modern  htmie;  wages 
$L'0  Sail  after  6:30  p.  lo.  Old  phone 
1689-L^ 

WANTED — DINING  ROOM  GIRL.  5310 
Roosevelt    street. 


WANTED — THE  LADIES  TO  KNOW 
that  Mrs.  C.  F.  Morgan  has  removed 
her  dressmaking  parlor  from  ::3 
Columbus  block  to  :;i4-rl6  West 
First  street. 


W.XNTED — TWO    DISHWASHERS  AND 

scrub  girl.     Boyles*  restaurant. 

__  __- 

First 


WANTED— COMi'F.TENT  GIRL 
general  housework.  711  East 
street. 


WANTED— SHORT    ORDER   COOK    AT 
L'532    West    Superior   street. 


WANTED— COMPETENT     COOK.     Mr*.. 
J.  T.  Hale.  1203  East  First  street. 


WANTED— LADY  OR  GIRL  IN  E.\CH 
town;  good  pay  spare  time;  copy 
names  for  advertisers;  cash  weekly. 
Stamp  for  particulars.  Am.  Adv. 
Bureau,    Sanbornvllle.   N.    H. 


WANTED— AT    ONCE,    GIRL    WHO    IS 
•  able  to  keep  books  and  tend  to  store. 
European    Bakery.    732       East      Third 
street.        Must    have    references. 

WAN T E D— G I R ll      eC'T^  WEST    THIRD 
street.    Call    mornings. 


WANTED— CH.\MBERMA1D. 
McKay. 


HOTEL 


WANTED  AT  O.NCE  —  GIRL  FOR 
general  hbusework.  512  East  First 
street. 


WANTED— A  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework;  good  wages.  C^all  fore- 
noons.   1109    East    Third    street. 


WANTED — EXPERIENCED     DI  N  I  N  G 
room   girl.      Delmonico   Restaurant. 


WANTED— I'OMPETENT 
general       housework: 
1810   East   Fifth   street. 


GIRL      FOR 
no     washing. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Kaeli  Insertion. 
No  .Advertlsi-nient  Ia'ss  llian  15  Cents. 

WliTS 


SITUATIONS  WANTED— 

FEMALE^ 

SITUATION  WANTED — PLACES  TO 
wash  and  iron  and  house  cleaning. 
119  Third  avenue  east. 


SITUATION  WANTED— A  COLORED 
woHian  wonts  cooking  in  our  out  of 
city,  or  work  out  by  the  day.  1020 
West  Superior  street;  new  'phone 
l;lol-Y.     Mrs.   L.  Carroll. 


SITUATION  WANTED— GOOD  WOMAN 
will  do  all  kinds  of  scrubbing  from  8 
until  6.     Address  M.  B.,  care  Herald. 


SITU.VTIO.N  WANTED— DAY  WORK 
by  middle  aged  woman.  Call  or  ad- 
dress,   415    Second    avenue    west. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  WORK  BY 
tile  day.  Anna  Wesley,  116  West 
Second  street. 


SITUATION  WANTED— THOROUGHLY 
experienced  cook  and  liousekeeper 
wants  position  in  private  family; 
widow  with  cliild  2  years  old.  K  86, 
Herakl. 


SITUATION  WANTED   —   EXPERI- 

enced    dressihaker    wants    sewing    by 
the  day.     K  95.  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  COMPETENT 
bookkeeper  and  sienographer,  en- 
gaged only  part  of  day,  desires  posi- 
tion to  fill  in  balance  of  time;  thor- 
oughly proficient  and  a  willing  work- 
er.     H    88,    Hemld. 


SITl'ATION  W.XNTED— WASHING  OR 
Ironing  or  plain  sewing  by  the  day. 
321    West   Fifth   street. 

SITUATION  WANTED  .VS  STENOG- 
rapher  or  general  office  work.  Old 
■phone    1643-K. 

SITUATION  WANTED— AS  HOUSE- 
kceper.  bv  reliable  woman.  Address 
H    4  1,     Herald. 


WANTED— NORWEGIAN  GIRL  FOR 
kitchen  work  In  boarding  house.  Ad- 
dress M.  Edwardson,  Two  Harbors, 
Minn. ; 

\\A.\TE1>  —  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework,  small  family.  109  South 
Fifty-seventh  avenue  v,e6t. 


WANTED — DISHWA.SHEH. 
West  Superior  street. 


AT      1919 


^^MPLOYMENT  OFFICES. 

MRS.     SOMERS'      EMPLOYMENT      OF- 
lice.    17    L'nd    Av.    E.       Botlh     phones. 


FOR      SALE  —  M.-VHOGANY      PARIOR 

cabinet  and  oak  china  closet  at  118 
East  Fourth  street,  flat  D.  Call  be- 
tween  9   and    12   o'clock. 

FOR  SALE— STRICTLY   FRESH  EGGS, 
2215    West    Fifth   street. 


FOR  SALE— 

CA.-^.I    REGISTERS. 
We   manufacture   a   cash   register 
every  two  minutes,     i^iberal  allow- 
ance  for  exchange  of  registers. 
Call  and  see  our  1909  models. 


THE  NATIONAL  CASH  REGISTER 

CO.MP.\NY. 

E.   \V.   Ru.'^sell.   Sales  Agent. 

425  West  Superior  Street. 

Zenith.   817. Bell,   2585. 

FC)R  SALE— BIG  BUNCH  OF  $2,000, 
also  sample  to  make  one  quart  of  rye 
whisky  by  mall  for  50  cents.  Ernest 
G.  Carlson,  Mandan,  N.  D. 


FOR  S.\LE  —  FURNITURE.  STOVES, 
c-arpets,  draperies  and  house  furnish- 
ings of  every  description  at  money- 
saving  prices;  cash  or  easy  payments. 
Bayha  &  Vo.,  Dulutlis  largest  house- 
furnishing  concern. 


FOR  SALE— KIMBALL  PIANOS  NOW 
sold  direct  from  factory  to  your 
home.  No  canvassers',  no  agents',  no 
dealers'  profits  for  you  to  pay.  Come 
in  on  your  own  accord  and  buy. 
Korby  Piano  Co.,  the  Kimball  factory 
store,  201   East  Superior  street. 


FOR  SALE  —  ADDRESSOGRAPHING 
machine,  cheap.  It  can  be  seen  at 
Bayha  &   Co.s. 


FOR  SALE — SAFES  AND  VAULTS 
opened,  combinations  changed;  fire 
and  burglar-proof  safes,  vault  doors, 
safety  deposit  boxes  and  bank  vaults. 
Christie  Lithograjih  &  Printing  Co., 
Northwestern  agents.  Herring,  Hall, 
Marvin  Safe  company,  manufacturers 
of  the  original  Hall  safes. 


FOR  RENT— STORES  &  OFFICES. 

FOTrTtENT^^n^?"'wESTnm^^ 

Central  avenue.  fine  corner  store, 
with  basement,  and  warehouse  in 
rear;  steel  ceiling:  hard^vood  floors 
in  both  store  and  warehouse;  one 
of  the  best  corners  on  Central  ave- 
nue. For  rent  from  May  1.  W.  C. 
.Sherwood  &  Co..  118  Manhattan  block. 


FOR  RENT— SMALL  STORE.  APPLY 
Nelson  Bros.,  Knitting  Mills,  Twen- 
ty-first avenue  wett  and  Superior 
street. 


FOR  RENT — STOREROOM  SUITABLE 
for  grocery  store  and  meat  market. 
Infiuire  'on  premises.  1804  I'ledmont 
avenue,  or  Cooley  &  Underhlll,  209 
Exchange    building. 


FOR  RENT  —  A  PORTION  OF  THE 
store  room  In  Gidding's  Annex,  May 
1.  Inquire  at  Madame  Warde's  mil- 
linery,   5    West    Superior  street. 


FOR  RENT— NO.  114  WEST  MICHIGAN 
street;  four-story;  25x90;  railroad 
track  at  the  rear;  elevator,  refrig- 
erators and  office  all  In.  P.  Beneteau. 
St.   Paul.   Minn. 


FOR  KENT— DESK  ROO.M;  X'SE  OF 
both  'phones:  $7  per  month.  A  snap. 
Inquire    1010    Torrey    building 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE. 

FOR  SALE— TWO  GOOD  LOTS  FOR 
$300.  on  Woodlan<l  avenue,  one  block 
from  street  car  line.  S.  L.  Smith, 
lis   Manliattan  building. 


STENOGRAPHERS. 

TVPF:\\TtTTTN?;.   STENOGRAPHY'   AND 
copying.     Lt  nox   hotel  notary. 

GRACE  BARNETT.  FIRST  NAT.  BLDG. 
E.  J.  F.VIIRELL,  yceuin  Bldg.  Old  2380. 


PIANO  TUNING. 

C.   A.   GREGOUY.  ZENirTr^PHONE   fi06. 


DRESSMAKING. 

DRE.SS.MAKLVG— TThnXCBLE  DRESS- 
mak-r  and  ladies'  tailor,  with  ten 
yeais'  experience  in  Twin  Cities,  will 
make  suit.'s.  skirts  and  waists  at  rea- 
sonable prices.  All  work  guaran- 
teed. 331  West  Third  street.  Zenith, 
1602 -.X. 


MISS    VICrORIA    GA.JEWSKI,    DRESS- 
making,   817   First   avenue  east. 


Mrs.     J.   R.   SLOAN,   119    WEST      FIR.ST 
street.  Old  'phone  2137-L;  Zen.  2083-D 


FANCY    DRESSM.VKING      AND      TAIL- 
oriiig.     515   East  Fourth  street. 


DRESSMAKING— GOOD  DRESSMAKER 
can    be   .secured    by    1717-L. 


FOR  SALE  —  ONE  OAK  PIANO, 
splendid  tone,  fine  action.  This  in- 
strument Is  a  big  snap  for  the  lucky 
buyer.  Price  only  $17o;  $10  cash  and 
$5  a  month,     French  &  Bassett. 

For  Sale — Typewriters,  safes,  cash  reg- 
isters, cabinets.    Edmont,   116  W,  Sup. 


FOR  SALE  —  WOOD  AND  IRON- 
working  machinery:  sawmills,  edgers, 
lathmlUs,  saw  tables,  surfacers, 
sharpers.  Northern  Machinery  com- 
pany,   Minneapolis. 


OPTICIANS. 

C.  C.  STAACKE.  203  NeW  JERSEY 
building.  106  West  Superior  street. 
W^edne.sday  and  Saturday  evenings. 


FOR  SALE  —  W.\NTED.  VACANT 
property  In  exchange  for  Jackson, 
Mich.,  lots;  will  pay  cash  difference. 
"W.   H.  Locker.   310  Torry   Building. 

FOR  SALE— NEW  9-ROOM  HOUSE  IN 
perfect  condition.  East  end;  50-foot 
lot,  most  desirable  location.  B.  48, 
Herald. 


SITUATIONS   WANTED  — MALE. 

SITUATION  \VANTED^^^^A  FIRST^ 
class  window  trimmer  and  card  writer 
want3  position,  also  able  to  sell 
goods;  best  of  references.  Reply  to 
.S.  H.  723,  FIftv- fourth  avenue.  West 
Duiuth.      Zenit'h     phone    3222-D. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  PAINTER 

and  grainor  wants  work;  would  like 
to  lake  a  Job;  leasonable  prices;  first- 
cla.ss  work.  Let  me  figure  on  your 
job.     H   84,   Ileiald. 


SITUATION  WANTED — A  POSITION 
commencing  about  April  1  or  later, 
as  bookkeeper  or  office  assistant,  in 
or  out  of  citv.  Please  grant  Inter- 
view.     H    92,.   Herald. 

SITUATION    \\' ANTED— POSITION    BY 

salesman,  acquainted!  with  grocery 
and  meat  trarte.  In  DulutJi,  Superior 
and  Northern  Minnesota:  can  furnish 
best    of    references.      H    9ft.    Herald. 


WANTED— BY  GOOD  CARPENTER, 
work  at  once;  stranger.  Address  II 
83.  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED—  PRUDENCE 
Robert,  public  Janitor  and  porter, 
winilows  washed,  floors  mopped,  etc. 
Branch   Bethel,   508  \V.  Sup.   Zen.   391. 


FOR      RENT— MISCELLANEOUS. 

FoiT  'SAL^K^^^^^THFIKK  BUILDINGS 
suitable  for  barns.  700  feet  of  8-foot 
fronts,   at   new   courth.ousc. 


ARCHITECTS. 

Olsen  &  Ms^^ney,  513-14  Sellwood  Bldg. 
Fit  A  ?acY.~  YOUNG  &  CO.,  201  Pal.  Bldg 


TENTS  AND  AWNINGS. 

POIRIER    &    CO.,    108    E.    Superior    St. 


AGENTS  WANTED. 

AGENT  AV  ANTED  RESIDING  IN  DU- 
luth  to  represent  established  line 
union-matle       shirts,     overalls,     coats 

and  aprons  in  Duiuth  and  the  Iron 
range.  Apply  to  Twin  City  Manufac- 
turing compenv.  214  Nicollet  avenue. 
Minneapolis,    Minn. 


PICTURE  FRAMING. 

GUSTAVllENNECKErinT^ErSUP.  ST. 


STOVE  REPAIRS. 

WE  CARRY  IN  STOCK  REPAIRS 
for  10,000  different  stoves  and  ranges. 
C.  F.  Wiggerts  &  Son,  410  East  Su- 
perior street.       Both  telephones. 


LIQUOR   HABIT   CURED. 

Prof.  J.  B.  Fissette.  .\ntl-Llquor  Cure; 
guarantees  to  cure  the  worst  habit- 
ual drunkard  in  two  weeks,  or  mon- 
ey refunded.  No  danger  to  health. 
Investigate.  Testimonials,  advice  free. 
Call    or    write    815    West    Superior    St. 


BOARD  OFFERED. 

Two  desirable  rooms  with  board  at  the 
Colonial.    16   West  Second  street. 


BOARD  OFFERED  —  FURNISHED 
rooms,  steam  heated,  with  or  with- 
out  board.    122   East   First   street. 


MILLINERY. 

Gr"X'7x)Xr^3o'"EAST'"FOl'IlTH    ST. 


MRS.    BRANDT.  114  WEST  FOURTH  ST. 


SWEDISH  MASSAGE. 

A.      E.   H.ANSEN,   MASSEUR.      400   NEW 
Jersey    building.    Old    'phone    1826-K. 

Mrs.   H.   Wiklng,  Swedish  massage.  Flat 
2.    2018    W.    Sup.    St.       Zenith,    1894-D. 


Maria  Grlndereng,  graduated  masseuse. 
Dt   Averdson's  Inst.  Sweden.  Zen.  844. 


FOR  RENT— BOARD   AND  LARGE 

front  room  with  alcove  for  two  peo- 
ple, private  family  In  East  end.  Call 
old    'phone,    2806-R. 


BOARD    OFFERED — A    CHANCE    FOR 

two  gentlemen  to  secure  board  and 
room  in  private  family;  East  end; 
walking  distance.  Zenith  'phone 
213S-D. 


'a>. 


BOARD  AND  NICELY  FURNISHED 
room  in  private  family  In  East  end. 
Address   B.   53,   Herald. 


Room 

and 

board- 

-301 

East 

Third 

.St. 

Room 

and 

Board- 

-318 

W. 

Second 

St. 

BOARD     AND     ROOM     OFFERED — 426 
East   Third   street. 


Phone  Your  Ad  Tonight 
or  Early  Tomorrow  for 
The  Saturday  Herald. 
Both  Phones  324. 


If  you  have  no  phone  in  your 
home,  your  nearest  grocer  or 
druggist  will  be  giad  to  phone 
for  you. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Ka«'h  Insertion. 
No  .Advertisement  l.<ess  Than  I.'i  C«-nt.s. 


HELP  WANTED— MALE. 

vn^ottei^^^two^Trs^ 

salesmen.       Howard,     Farwell     &    <'o., 
120    East    Superior   St.,    Duiuth,    Minn. 

WANTED — 100   MEN  TO  BUY  Watches 
at    Esterly's    Spalding  Hotel  Jeweler. 


WANCED- LFJARN  BARBER  TRADE, 
big  Ucinu'id  tor  barbers;  big  wages: 
easy  work  .'•hort  time  to  learn;  tools 
given;  ca'alogue  free.  Moler  Bai  her 
College,  27  E.  Nicollet  avenue,  Min- 
neapolis. 


WANTED  -RAILWAY    MAIL   CLERKS. 

Salary  $800  to  $1,400.  Examinations 
in  Duiuth  .May  15.  Common  educa- 
tion sufficient,  t^andidates  prepared 
free.  Write  immediately,  Franklin 
Institute,    Rochester.    N.   Y. 


WANTED— YOUNG  MEN  WHO  WISH 
to  become  moving  picture  operjtlors. 
Answer  immediately.  Address  L.  45, 
Herald. 


WANTED  —  STENOGRAPHERS  AND 
bookkeepers  wanting  positions   should 

.  register  at  tlie  National  Accountants 
and  Stenographers'  Bureau.  Minne- 
sota office  at  tl'.e  Duiuth  Business 
University,  600  Christie  Building. 

\V\\NTED  -^^"XPERIENCEI^  CLOTH- 
ing  salesman.  Harry  Mitchell,  18 
East   Superior   street.  

WANTED— BUSS 
Louis    hotel. 


BOY    AT    THE      ST. 


WANTED— MEN  AND  WOMEN  TO 
know  that  I  do  first  class  paper- 
hanging  and  painting.  Call  new 
'phone,    2003-D. 


WANTED— MEN  TO  INSPECT  OUR 
$4.25  cowhide  suit  cases.  Don't  get 
fooled  on  sheepskin  cases.  We  man- 
ufacture. Trunk  and  case  repairing 
verv  reasonable.  Northern  Trunk  Co., 
228*  West  First  street,  opposite  Wol- 
vin building. 


WANTED  —  MALE  STENOGRAPHER. 
Out  of  city  position.  Alust  be  good 
penman  and  willing  to  assist  upon 
books,  payroll,  etc.  Address  J  77, 
Herlad. 


WANTED  —  INSURANCE  .MEN  TO 
handle  best  line  of  health  and  acci- 
dent policies,  costing  $1  per  month 
and  up.  Include  latest  and  most  at- 
tractive features.  Big  money  to  be 
made  under  good  contracts.  Call  or 
write  National  Casualty  company,  506 
Palladio    building     Duiuth. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Ilaeli  Insertion.       . 
\«»  .\dverlls<-ineiu  Less  Than  15  Cents.    


SECRET  SOCIETIES. 


FOR  RENT— ROOMS. 


HOTEL, 
and  First  ave- 
le-like  rooms, 
ot  water  heat; 
ling  water  in 
e   now  making 

winter. 
iV,   Prop. 


FREDERIC 
Corner  P'irst  street 
nue    west.       106    hoi: 
single  or  en  suite;  h 
hot     and     cold     runti 
evf  i-y   room.      We  an 
special    rates  for  thi 
JOHN   J.    HAL 


MASONIC. 
PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79, 
A.  F.  &  A.  M. — Regular  meet- 
ings first  and  third  Monday- 
evenings  ot  each  month,  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting 
M-'rei,  29.  1909.  Work— Sec- 
ond degree  Andrew  C. 
Volk.  W.  M.;  H.  Nesbitl,  secretary. 


■::'-!i--?:-:!ii--^':i-?;i6-»iiii^-}i--^-?h<i'^^ 


LOST  AND  FOUND. 


IF    YOU     LOSE    ANYTHING -AdvtrUse    It 

her*-.  It  win  hv  nXv.rtmX  tn  you  If  an  honest 
piTsoii  finds  if.  UcmarkaWe  rwoverics  arc 
truiglit  about   every  day  througii   Hits  column. 

IF  YOU    FIND   ANYTHING  bring  It  to  llie 

HERALD  OFFICE. 

Ret  a  rl.ilm  check.  Have  It  advtrilsed. 
Kc<l:iiin   II   if   the  owiht  docs  not. 

THE  LAW--"Kvcrj'  ptrson  who  sliall  find 
lost  prni^eny  under  circumstances  which  g»ve 
him  knowledge  or  means  "f  Intjuiry  as  to  the 
true  owner,  wlio  sliall  appropriulo  such  prop- 
erty to  his  own  use,  or  to  ttie  use  of  aiiotlicr 
ptr.^on  not  entitled  Ihcrrto.  without  having 
first  made  reasonable  effi  rt  lo  tlnd  the  owner 
and  iistore  the  property  to  him.  shall  be 
pullly  of  larceny."— Section  5086.  Kevlsed 
I.ans.    Minnesota,    1935. 


LOST— GOLD  NECKLACE  ON  FIF- 
teenth  avenue  east  between  Supe- 
rior and  Tliird  streets.  Finder  will 
receive  suitable  reward  for  return  to 
226    Fifteenth    avenue    east. 


OST — BLACK  HAND-BAG  CONTAIN- 
Ing  small  black  purse,  $20  in  bills, 
Kome  loose  change,  calling  cards, 
etc.,  lost  between  No.  5  East  Fifth 
if.eet  and  Forest  Hill.  Return  to 
Herald    for   reward. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN. 

iTo^YOU^TlTl^nTlJoNEY  ? 
Money  loaned  In   Duiuth  or  Superior  to 
salaried  people  without   security;   also 
on  pianos,  furniture,  horses,  wagons, 
etc.    Business  absolutely  confidential. 
Call    and    get    our      rates     and    terms. 
Monthly   or   weekly     payments  as  de- 
tlred.     No    good    applicant    refused. 
W^ESTERN    LOAN   CO., 
521    Manliattan    Building. 
New  'phone    930.  Old  'phone,  1036. 


FOR  MEN  ONLY, 
and   women  who  need  money,   we  make 
loans   from    $5.00   up.      Your   note    Is    all 
that's   necessar.v.      Our   rates    are   right. 
Everything    private    and    confidential. 
DULUTH  FINANCE  CO., 
301  Palladio  Bldg.  Both  'Phones. 


MONEY  TO  LO.^N  ON  PIANOS,  FUR- 
niture,  horses,  wagons  and  fixtures 
at  low  rates  and  on  small  payments. 
A  liberal  discount  if  paid  before  due; 
business  confidential. 

YOU    CAN    GET    IT    TODAY. 

Security   Mortgage   Loan    Company, 

401    FIR.ST    NATIONAL    BANK    BLDG. 

Zenith  'phone,  612. 

MONEY    T^T-OAN 
On     real     estate     or     household     furni- 
ture.    Business  confidential. 

MUTUAL    LOAN    COMPANY. 
2104    West    Supeiior    street,    over    Moe's 
department  store.     Side  entrance.     New 
'phone.    1679-A. 


MONEY     TO     LOAN      ON      DIAMONDS, 

watches,  furs,  rifles,  etc.,  and  all 
goods  of  value,  $1  to  $1,600.  Keystone 
Loan  &  Mercantile  Co.,  16  W.  Sup.  St. 

Money  supplied  to  salaried  people  and 
others,  upon  their  own  names,  with- 
out security.  Easy  payment.'*.  Qffi^'es 
in    66   cities.     Tolman's,    509    Palladio. 


Ftirnlture  and  salaried  loans  by  ITnion 
Loan  company,  303  Palladio  building. 

MONEY  TO  ^TOAN— ANY  AMOUNT 
from  $500  to  $5,000,  on  improved  real 
estate.  No  dela.v.  J.  B.  Greenfield, 
306    Burrows    building. 


monf:y     loaned     on    personal 

PROPERTY.      Minnesota    Loan    com- 
pany.  205    Palladio   building. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN— LOANS  MADE  ON 
farms  and  timber  claims.  Guaranty 
Farm  Land   t'o.     416   Lyceum. 


ASHES  AND  GARBAGE. 

ashes!    gXiTba ge      and^^'manui I E 

hauled.     Dick  Barrett.  Zenith  'phone 
1274-Y. 


RE.MOVED— GU.ST    HOL.MGREN.       1906 
London  road.     Old  'phone.  :h:i1-M. 


WANTED  TO  RENT. 

WA.NTED— YOUNG  LADY  DESIRES 
good -sized,  modern  room,  with  or 
without  board,  within  fifteen  min- 
ut*>.s'  walk  of  postoffice.  K  500,  Her- 
ald. 


* 


FOR  RENT  —  MODliRN  FURNISHED 
room  in  private  family;  reasonable. 
Zenith  2138-D. 


FOR  RENT. 

A  Carpenter  Shop:  good  stone 
building,  rear  of  ;:7  East  Supe- 
rior street.  Call  >  ienna  bakery, 
207   West  Superior  Mreet. 


FOR  RENT  —  FURInMSHED  ROOM: 
electric  lignt;  cooki  ig  allowed.  lllVi 
East   Fiftli  street. 


FOR  RENT — THREE  ROOMS  FOR 
light  liousekeeping.  or  two  rooms 
furnished  for  gentlemen,  1718  West 
Second  street. 


FOR   RENT— FURNIS^ED   ROOMS,  229 
East   Superior  street. 

Fc7r~^R E N "T^^^^TH Rl C E~  ROOMS      In~ 
quire  at   628  West  First   street. 

F^irRENT^3-ROOM   BASEMENT,    -A.T 
720   East  Third  stre.?t. 


FOR  RENT  —  TWO 
nished  front  rooms 
steam  heat,  hardwo 
light  and  gas;  will  i 
will  buy  furniture. 
Call  after  7  p.  m.  a 
Temple. 


NICELY     FUR- 

."or  housekeeping, 

»d    floors,   ele<'lric 

ent  to  party  who 

Reasonable  rent. 

409   old  Masonic 


THREE    PLEAS- 

t      housekeeping; 


FOR    RENT— TWO  OR 
ant    rooms    for    ligl 
one   furnished,    if   dtsired.       521    West 
Fourth   street. 

F(tJR~  RENT— 3  ROOAIS  FOR  LIGHT 
housekeeping;  secor.d  floor.  627  Hu- 
ron  street. 


FOR  RENT  —  FUPJCISHED  ROOMS 
for  light  housekeeping.  101  East 
Superior  street. 


IONIC  LODGE,  NO.  186,  A.  F. 
&  A.  M. — Regular  meeting: 
second  and  fourth  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting, 
March       22.       1909.         Work — 

Tliird    degree.      Clarence    B.    Miller.    W. 

M. ;   Hugo  Burgo,  secretary. 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER,  NO. 
20,  it.  A.  M. — Stated  convoca- 
tions second  and  fourth 
Wednesday  evenings  of  each, 
month  at  7:30  o'clock.  Next 
meeting,  March  24th.  1909. 
Work  — P.  M.  and  M.  E.  M.  degrees.  Will- 
iam D.  Underliill,  H.  P.;  Alfred  Le 
Richcux,    secretary. 


DULUTH  COI'NCIL.  NO.  6.  R. 

yy  S.  T. — Regular  meetings  first 

AX  and  third  Friday  evenings  of 

/  j\        each    month    at    7:30    o'clock. 

i=^.»A       Next  meeting.  March  19,  19«9. 

Work  —  Royal       and       Select 

Master    degree.     Andalla    W.    Torrance. 

T.   I.   M. ;   Alfred   Le    Rlcheux.    recorder. 


^  -.     DI'LUTH  COMMANDER Y  NO. 
A^>     IS.    K.    T.— Stated       conclave 
^>5-"\\     first  Tuesday   of  each    month 
at  7:"30  o'clock.  Next  conclave 
will    he   held   Tuesdav.    M.arcli 
16.    Work— Drili,   C.    E.    Peas- 
lee,    acting    E.    C;    Alfred    Le    Richeux, 
recorder. 


SCOTTISH  RITE— REGULAR 
meetings  every  Thur.sday 
evening  at  7:30.  Next  meet- 
h  g.  March   2rith.  1909.     Work 


— 'Ihirtietli 
Cooley,  secretary. 


degree. 


J.       E. 


FOR  RE.NT— FURNISHED  STEAM- 
heated  room;  light  housekeeping  al- 
lowed.      126    Ea.st    First    street. 


FOR  RENT — TWO  ROO.MS,  NEWLY 
papered,  .suitable  for  light  house- 
keeping; unfurnished,  $6.50;  fur- 
nished. $10.  Addn.ss  D.  Mars,  519 
I'Mrst  avenue  east. 


FOR  RENT— TWO  ROOMS,  FUR- 
nished  for  iiglit  housekeeping.  110 
Ea.st  First  street. 


FOR  RENT — DESIRA  3LE  ROOMS,  .\LL 
conveniences.  10  \^'est  First  street, 
Fla t    "B.  " 

FOR  RENT— FUR.\'ISHED  ROOM, 
suitable  for  two.  Rates  reasonable. 
Board  if  desired.  512  Fourtli  avenue 
east.      Zenith     phone.    2321-X. 

FOR  irENT^Fl'lt>aSHED^IlOOM  331 
West   Third    street. 


FOR  ItENT — ONE  FURNISHED  ROOM, 
all  conveniences.  (17>i  West  First 
street. 


FOR  RENT  —  VEI:Y  DESIRABLE 
rooms,  all  conveniences.  10  West 
First  street,  flat  B. 


DYE  WORKS. 

zenithT-ity   dye  works— larg- 

est  and  most  reliable.  All  work  done 
in  Duiuth.  Work  called  for  and  de- 
livered. 'Phones:  Old,  1154-R;  new, 
1888.     232  East  Superior  street. 

Duiuth  Dye  Works — French  dry  clean- 
ing; fancy  dyefng.  Old  'phone 
1202-R;   new.    1191-A.      330   E.  Sup.   !rt. 


FOR  RENT— TWO  LARGE  ROOMS 
for  light  housekeeping;  all  modern. 
Both  'phones;  old,  1714  K;  new, 
689-A. 


FOR  RE.VT  —  FURNISHED  ROOM, 
with  board,  if  dt  sired.  813  East 
Fourth  street. 


FOR  RENT— FURNI!-;HED  ROOM,  218 
West  Fourth  streel,  first  floor,  side 
entrance. 


FOR  RENT— 1  FURNISH  F:D  ROOM. 
all  conveniences,  $•>  per  month.  316 
West  Fourth  street. 


FOR   RENT — TWO  FRONT  ROOMS, 

newly  furnished  or  light  house- 
keeping; modern.  513  East  Fourth 
street,    upstairs. 

f6r~RENT— 3  pn'RsIsHED  ROOMS ; 
complete  for  housekeeping.  A.  Camp- 
bell. 2805  West  Rai  road  street. 


FOR  FIENT  —  FIVE  AND  SEVEN 
rooms;  n\l  modern  t  onvenienct  s.  Ap- 
ply A.  H,  W.  Eckstein,  301  Burrows 
building. 


FOR    RENT  —   LARGE.        DESIR.VBLE 

furnished   room:  all  conveniences.   316 
I-Iast    Second    street 


TIMBER   LANDS. 

SIIELl)f)N^^MATHl^TniBER  CO.     309 
I'ist  National  Bank    bldg.      'Phones. 


TI.MBER  AND  CUT-OVER  LANDS 
liought:  mortgage  oans  made.  John 
Q.  A.  Crosby.   209  Pilladio  building. 


I    buy    standing    timter;    also    cut-over 
lands.     Geo.  Rupley    322  Lyceum  bldg. 


WATCHES  REPAIRED. 

Guaranteed    Main    Siu  Ing,    $1.00;    watch 
cleaned.   $1.     Garon   Bros.,   213   W.   1st. 


.<fe^. 


zp:nith  chapter,  no.  25. 

Order  of  Eastern  Star.  Reg- 
ular meetings  second  and 
fourth  Friday  evenings  of 
each  month.  Next  meeting. 
*  Friday.  MarcJi  26.  1909.  Work, 

regular  business  and  iniation.  Gertrude 
Bates,  W.  M.;  Ella  F.  Gcarhart,  secre- 
tary. 


Third 
M. ;    A. 


EUCLID  LODGE.  NO.  198.  A. 
F.  &  .\.  M. — Regular  meetings 
second  and  fourth  Wednes- 
day evenings  of  each  month 
at  7:30  o'clock.  -Next  meet- 
ing, March  24th.  Work, 
degree.  Martin  J.  Murray,  W. 
Dunleavy,    secretary. 


W.    B. 

secretary 


DULUTH  CHAPTER.  NO.  59. 
R.  A.  M. — M<>ets  at  West  Du- 
iuth first  and  third  Wednes- 
davs  of  each  month  at  7  30 
p.  "m.  Next  meeting  March  17, 
Work— Royal  Arch  degree. 
Getchell.    H.    P.;    A.    DunUavey, 


Pt-Ll'TU    I-OKGK.     NO.     28.     I.     O.     «>■    J;-^'';'^ 

every     1  nduy     evening    nt     Odd     hclUwi 

h.iU.    18  Lake  i.xiiuc  norili.    -Next   ain  tin* 

M.r>li    ".'til.      Wcrk— First   d«grre.    W.    H. 

IvoiiliUr.    nuble   ursind:    K-lwin    Btr?stroin. 

rectrding   «rrelary;    A.    H.    Puul.    financial   K-cietaij. 


K.    O.    T.    M. 
ni'LVTH  TKNT.   NO.   1.  MtZtrVS  F.VEKt 

Wednesday  evening  nt  M.icca^ie  hall,  2S4' 
West  First  strett.  Vlsliing  tnemUrs  wel- 
corr.e  .\.  J.  .^n<ler^on.  i-c>nini.;iidcr.  603 
i;a*l  Fiurth  street;  3.  B.  Cellneau.  rec- 
rrd  Utepir.  Office  in  hall.  Hours.  10  »- 
m.   to   1  p.   m.     Zenith   "plKiiie  yyl  X. 


building 


iUi.s   invited. 


MOPKltN  S.\M.\KIT.\NS. 
.M.FIIA  <<»lNtlb  NO.  l-MKKTS  AT 
Kll.s'  hall  evity  Tliursday  i-xnlng  at  « 
o'clock.  lleneii<cnt  degree,  fir-t  ami  Ihird 
Thi  r«i'.iiV  •  .Sarasrltan  (Ugree,  seiond  and 
fciith  "i'hiiKdn.vs.  A.  Nelson.  O.  S.  ;  Lucy 
M.  I'urdy.  I..  O.  S  :  T.  A.  Gail,  fin- 
auiial  .scrilte.  Sd  KtrA  National  Bank 
Wallace   1'.    Weilbaiiiai.   scribe.      All   Samar- 


^' 


V'//, 


A      O.     V      W. 

FiDiou'rY    i,oik;k. 

at    Macc;i!)ee   liall. 


NO.     10,',— ilFXTS 
Wc<.t    First   street. 


„■  WMk    c-v<ry"'T!'uri^day'''..t''8    !'•   '''.^-  ,  ,.^''^^'*^"» 
%}<^^J^    member;      wel.ome.        f.ii.'-t      Lahlln.      M 
■^^^s^S^^"     W. ;  A.   K.   Pi  ring.   rr<-order;  O.   i.   Mur 


TOld. 


welcome.        tiii.'-t      i'ahlln.      M. 
„.    .:.    Pi  ring.    - 
ftn.^ncicI.    217    J:;ist    Fifth    ttrct. 


i»tu  TU  bomji:.  NO.  u>.  a.  o.  r.  w. 

—Meets  at  Odd  I'cl'owa'  l>all,  18  l^ke 
avenue  n<  rlh  evtry  Tuti'day  evening  at 
g  o'clock.  VMting  brotlurs  welcome. 
Nttman  .luhiircn.  master  wirljnun:  K.  O. 
Footc.  riHcrdcr:  T.  .1.  St.  tlcrmain,  finan- 
cUr.   121   FUsl  avenue  west. 


r.   o.    F. 

fOtUT  COMMKnCE.  NO  328.^.  1NT)E- 
pen.lent  Order  of  Fcnsters.  nieeia  first 
and  third  Friday  evenii.gs  at  8  c'l  lock, 
at  U..wley's  hall,  N...  112  West  First 
Mr(et,  Next  ugular  nineting,  Jrioxj, 
Marvli  19th.  C.  A.  Carlson.  C.  11.  W. ;  W. 
Hoope».    K.    S. 


W«t   TlUrd 


1-N1TKI>      OHOKn      OF      FOnESTICRS— 

Noith  Stjir.  No.  4P,  mwts  «vtry  sewud 
ui;d  fourth  Mondays  at  V.  <>.  F.  ball. 
■cnKr  Fourth  av«iiie  «e*l  and  First 
Bain.  C.  it..  2  OstxTix 
twarl.  se<TetBry.  222  Tl  Iril 
It.  'V'oiing,  tr<.asurer,  631 
old   'phcne. 


,<trict.      M 
bUok;  E.   M 
avenue  west 
slrrt't:    17 


Si 


V, 


ri* 


UPHOLSTERING   &    REPAIRING.! 

Have  Cameron    reuphjl.ster   your   furni- 
ture.    Both    phones      123   1st  Ave.   W. 

When  Cameron  does   your  upholstering 
It's  right.  Both  'phones?.  123  1st  A.  W. 

ED  OTT,   112   1st   Ave.    W.   Both  'phones. 


CUTTING   &    SE^^'ING   SCHOOL. 

Pupils     enter     any      :lme — Miss     Gray, 
Third  floor.  Gray-Tallant  Co. 


JPRIVATE  HOSPITAL. 

PRIVATE  HOSPITAl.. — PROSPECTIVE 
mothers  will  flnd  a  pleasant  home 
during  confinement  at  the  Ashland 
Maternity  Home,  Ai'ith  best  of  doc- 
tors; confidential;  may  board  or 
a€opt  infant.s.  Mrs.  K.  Hess,  92:i 
Second   avenue  eas' ,   Ashland.   Wis. 


Northwestern  Dyeing  &  Cleaning  Co.. 
oldest  reliable  dyers  and  French  dry 
cleaners  In  Northwest.  15  Lake  Ave. 
north.    'Phones:   New.    1516;    old.    1337. 


BT'RKE  BROS.— Most  up-to-date  diy 
cleaning  establishment  in  the  city. 
a   East   Sup.   St.      Both     phones.    267. 


MRS.  HANSON.  GRADUATE  MID- 
wlfe;  female  complaints.  413  .Seventh 
avenue  east.  Old  phone  1594;  Zen- 
ith  1225. 

Private  home  for  1  idles  before  and 
during  confinemert:  expert  care; 
everything  confideni  lal :  infants  cared 
for.  Ida  I'earson.  M.  D.,  284  Harrison 
avenue,  St.   Paul. 

Mrs.  H.  Olson,  graduate  midwife;  pri- 
vate hospital,  329  N.  58th  Av.  W.  Zen. 
3173. 

HOSPITAL  FOR  lADIES  DI'RING 
confinement.  Mrs.  W.  K.  Cody,  508 
East   Lake   street,    Minneapolis. 

MRSr^ANNA  RONGB— Graduatedmid- 
wlfe,  2018  W.  Sup.   St.  'Phone  1894-D. 

Mrs.  J.  C.  Haglund,  graduated  mid- 
wife, 634   N.    56th   A,-.    W.   Zen.   3174-D. 

CLOTHES  CLEAN  ED  &  PRESSED 

Suits  pressed.  50c:  ptints.  15c.  Ladies' 
skirts  cleaned  and  pressed,  50c.  Zen. 
1852-X.  J.   Oreckovsky,   10  4th  Av.   W. 

Fine  ladies'  tailoring  a  specialty.  Bring 
your  alterations  aid  relining  coats 
before  the  rush.  Mueller.  208  West 
First   street. 


t'NiTril*    oitidcii    OF    fork.sti;k.s— 

Ocjrt  Eastern  St;.r.  No.  8C.  meet* 
evers  fiist  and  Ihir.l  Tii«*sdays  at  V.  O. 
F.  hall,  corner  Fourth  avenJe  we-t  and 
FirKt  street.  \.  L.  Ft»tir,  f.  K..  107 
l>st  Ninth  street:  (".  K.  I'uul.  secretary, 
3  West  Siiptrlir  sirett;  Harry  Miaiet. 
Jtooui    23,    Wlnll.rcp    block;    Ztnllh    'pSniii* 


M. 

IMFF.niAb 

at   Steinway 
First   street. 


W,     A. 

CAMP   NO,    22':«   —    MEKTS^ 
hail.   Fourth  avenue  west  »n<$ 

second   ai.d    fcurtli    Tuesday* 


of   ca<li    raonlJi. 
F.    v..    I»oremus.    ronsul. 
C.    P.    Earl,    clerk.    Box 


411. 


.<?parks 


NOIITH  STAIl  LOIXl!-:  .NO.  5.  K.  of  P. 
— Moets  even'  Tuisday  night  at  Elks' 
hall.  118  West  Sup<rior  sire«t.  Nei» 
n:.-eting.  Tucfiday  evinliig.  Marh  16. 
W.rk  -Ilan«  of  Page.  Visiting  Knight* 
welcome.  I.ouls  lJv\(rsbak.  C  C. ;  L.  L 
of   It.    and   S. 


Ct.AN  STEWMtT.  .VO.  flO.  O.  S.  <".— 
Meets  first  and  third  Wuli.csdays  c»ct> 
month,  8  p.  m..  Folz  hali,  UU  West  Su- 
perior street.  Alexander  «:.  McKnlght, 
ddef;  Don  McLennan,  secret* r>  :  JohD 
Biiinett.  Bnanclal  seiretiir>.  4i:i  FlP»t 
NaUonal  B.ink  indldlng.  Next  regulaf ' 
meeting  Marcli  17.   1900.     Dancing  from  a  to  12  p.  m. 


ROYAL  Li:AOfE. 
ZENITH  cot  NClb.  -NO.  161.  ROYAL 
League-  Meets  In  i-3ks'  hall  first  arxJ 
third  Monday  evmlngs  st  8  o'clock.  O. 
L.  Hargrave*.  scrll*.  care  "f  Nortlieru 
Slioe  company;  W.  W.  UootlJ.  arction. 
care  of   Uarshall-Weils.  


WOOI>.MEN    OF    THE    WOKLO.  

ZENITH  CITY  CAMP.  -NO.  .^.— MEETB 
every  second  and  fourth  Wednesday*  at 
tlie  old  Masonic  temple,  fifth  floor.  Joha 
Hftugen,  C.  C. ;  A,  -M,  Holmes,  banker, 
720  West  Fifth  strwt,  fb.t  E;  Robert 
Forsvth.    clerk,    817     East    Stcond    street. 


tary 


ZENITH  <.1T\'  Ti:XT.  NO.  1044. 
Knights  of  the  Mo<ltm  Maccaliees,  iiu>et» 
every  se<-cnd  and  fourth  Friday  erenln^ 
of  each  mcnth  In  Maccabte  hail,  22* 
We-t  First  street.  It.  .M.  Uikir,  eoB>- 
mander;  C.  H.  Loomls,  R.  K..  1030  Wert 
Kenith    "phone    2243-V. 

^»YAL  ARCANIM.  l>ulnlU  Council.  Na 
148:i,  meets  first  and  thinl  Friday  even- 
ings. Elks'  hall.  Clinton  Uruvlu.  tec- 
relitry.    401    Durrovs    buildii.g. 

Mesaba    Coiuidl.    No.    l!>4:t.    meets    flrrt 

and   third  Wednesday   evenings,    CulumM* 

ball.    West    (nd.      A.    .M,    Juliuaeu. 

North   Tweutieih   aTenua   WMk 


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DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD 


\  HISTORICAL 


•^ssn 


28  Pages 


TWENTY-SIXTH   YEAR. 


LAST   EDITION. 


SATURDAY,  MARCH:  20,  1909. 


TWO  CENTS. 


LITTE  HOPE  OF  JUSTICE 
TO  NORTHERN  MINNESOTA 
AS  TO  REPRESENTATION 


PARENTS  OF  KIDNAPED 
BOY  ARE  EAGER  TO  PAY 
$10,000  RANSOM  ASKED 


COOPERS  ARE  GUILTY  OF 
SECOND  DEGREE  MURDER: 
ARE  GIVEN  TWENTY  YEARS 


Slim  Chance  of  the  Pass- 
age of  Reapportion- 
ment Bill. 


Tonnage  Tax  Leaders  in 

Plot  to  Prevent  Its 

Enactment. 

FairRepresentationWould 

Deprive  Them  of  Their 

Power. 


<Prom   a   SlafT   Correfipondent.) 

St.  I'aul.  Minn.,  Marcti  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — From  present  indica- 
tions. Northern  Minnesota's  cup  of  bit- 
terness is  not  yet  full,  even  though 
the  house  has  passed  the  tonnage  tax 
bill,  which  plunders  a  needy  part  of 
the  state  because  it  is  weak  in  the 
legislature,  for  the  benefit  of  a  richer 
portion  of  the  state  because  Jt  is  pow- 
erful in  the  legislature,  and  which 
nrejudices  Duluihs  opportunity  to  be- 
come one  of  the  great  steel  manufac- 
turing  centers  of  the  country. 

The  tonnage  ta^,bill  has  yet  to  run 
the  gauntlet  of  the  senate,  and  there 
l8  a  better  cliance  of  fair  play  in 
that  body  than  there  has  ever  been 
In   the    house.  .    ,.  ,  ■,      » 

But  it  is  becoming  painfully  evident 
that  there  is  absolutely  no  intention 
on  the  part  of  those  in  power  in  the 
legislature  to  grant  fair  play  In  tiie 
matter    of    legislative    representation. 

In  other  words,  the  general  belief  is 
that  there  is  no  chance  for  a  reap- 
portionment bill  to  pass,  though  the 
committees  on  reapportionment  are  do- 


Money  No   Object;    AH 

Whitlas  Want  Is 

Child. 


Father  Hopes  to  Hear 

From  the  Abductors 

Soon. 


W.  J.  OLCOTT  RESIGNS  AS 
PRESIDENT  OF  MISSABE 


(Continued    .n    page    4.    first   column) 

TRYING  TO  FIND 
THE  MURDERERS 

Italian  Police  Chief  Re- 
ports Activity  in  Pet- 
rosini  Case. 

Palermo,  March  20. — Signer  Geola, 
head  of  tho  local  police,  .«aid  today  in 
an  interview  that  the  authorities  are 
doing  ever^'thlng  possible  to  appre- 
hend the  slayers  of  Lieut.  Joseph  Pc- 
trosini.  head  of  the  Italian  bureau  of 
the  X'W  York  police  department,  who 
was  killed  in  this  city,  March  12. 
Ample   funds   have   been   provided   lor 

this  end.  _  ,       ,    •, 

New  arrest.«  are  being  made  daily, 
but  the  details  are  being  kept  secret 
in  order  that  the  Malia  may  have  as 
little  knowledge  as  possible  of  the  di- 
rection of  the  re.searches. 

SERVIA  TO 
KEEPPEACE 

-Belgrade    Report    Says 

That  the  Nation  Will 

Disarm. 


ANDREW    DAVIS 
Of  Elk  River,  Another  House  Mem- 
ber Who   Voted   Against   the  Ton- 
nage Tax  Outrage. 


HADLEY  MAY 
BE  AJIDGE 

Report    Renewed     Re- 
garding the  Governor 
of  Missouri. 

Would  Leave  Gmelich  as 

the  State's  Chief 

Executive. 


Mother  of  Charlie  Ross 

Interested  in  the 

Case. 


Sharon,  Pa..  March  20. — It  Is  confi- 
dently believed  by  the  family  of  little 
William  Whitla  that  some  word  will 
be  received  soon  from  his  kidnapers. 
The  lad's  father  is  of  the  opinion  the 
abductors  are  now  safely  ensconced  in 
some   retreat. 

The  fact  that  a  small  army  of  police 
has  failed  to  locate  any  tangible  trace 
of  the  boy  and  his  captors  after  they 
had  deserted  the  buggy  at  Warren, 
Ohio,  has  had  a  depressive  efect  upon 
the  hopes  o£  Mr.  and  :Mrs.  Whitla  and 
their  only  desire  now  is  to  open 
negotiations  with  the  kidnapers.  From 
the  attitude  of  the  parents  the  prob- 
abilities   are    they    will    willingly    pay 


William  A.  McGonagle  Is 

Elected  to  Succeed 

Him. 


MUST  PAY  $2,rf;0; 

AUTO  KILLIiD  A  MAN 


No    Official    Announce- 
ment as  to  Mr.  Cole's 
Successor. 


Considers  Attitude  of  the 

Powers    to    be 

Guarantee. 


St.  Pelerburg.  March  20. — The  Bel- 
grade correspondent  of  the  bourse  Ga- 
zette says  in  a  dispatch  that  M.  Mllo- 
vanich,  the  foreign  minister,  told  him 
today  that  Servia  had  accepted  the  ad- 
vice  of   the  powers   to  disarm. 

Servia  considers  the  action  of  the 
powers  to  be  a  guarantee,  and  she  has 
no  longer  any  reason  to  fear  armed 
attack  from  any  side. 


War  Cloud  DlnKolve*. 

Belgrade  Servia.  March  20. — The 
alarm  over  the  possibility  of  war  with 
AuBtria-Hungary  is  subsiding  rapidly. 
The  Russian  minister  here  has  hart  two 
long  conferences  with  Foreign  Minis- 
ter Alilovanovieh.  one  last  night  and 
another  this  morning.  No  official  in- 
formation has  been  given  out.  but 
there  is  reason  to  believe  a  peaceful 
settlement  of  the  controversy  is  now 
only  a  question   of  hours. 


Jefferson  City.  Mo.,  March  20. — Re- 
newal of  a  report  that  Herbert  S.  HTSd- 
ley,  governor  of  Missouri,  is  to  resign 
in  order  to  accept  a  federal  Judgeship 
is  current  here  today.  On  authority 
of  a  Missouri  congressman,  whose 
identity  is  not  revealed  by  his  friends 
here,  it  is  .said  President  Taft  has 
promised  Senator  Warner  that  Gover- 
nor Hadley  will  be  given  the  first  va- 
cancy that  occurs  on  the  federal  bench 
in  the  West  or  Xorthw— t.  Governor 
Hadley's  resultant  resignation  would 
make  Jacob  F.  Gmelich,  now  lieuten- 
ant governor,  chief  executive  of  the 
state.  He  is  a  Republican  and  was 
declared  elected  only  after  a  long  con- 
test in  the  legislature,  and  tho  recount 
of  ballot  by  a  special   commission. 

A  report  that  Hadley  was  to  resign 
and  take  a  federal  position  was  cir- 
culated in  December,  when  the  contest 
for  lieutenant  governorship  wa.s  on. 
The  run^or  was  promptly  denied  by 
the  governor,  who  said  that  he  had 
no  present   intentions  of  resigning. 

The  congressman  responsible  for  the 
present  renewal  of  the  rumor  asserts 
that  the  strictest  secrecy  has  been  en- 
joined upon  him  and  thus  far  it  is  be- 
lieved that  the  governor  has  not  heard 
of  the  report. 

LONGWORTH'S 
NAME  ON  CHECKS 

Young    Man   Held    as 

Forger  by  Cincinnati 

Police. 

Cincinnati,  Ohio,  March  20. — A  young 
man  who  for  six  weeks  has  posed  as 
the  valet,  chauffeur  or  intimate  friend 
of  the  family  of  Congressman  Nicholas 
Longworth,  and  who.  on  the  strength 
of  the  story  attempted  to  pass  bad 
checks  with  Lorgworth's  name  signed, 
was  arrested  last  night.  He  gave  the 
name  of  Fred  E.  Pearce  of  Boston.  The 
police  believe  Pearce,  wno  they  say 
also  went  under  the  name  of  Pearson, 
has  passed  bad  checks  in  other  cities. 

HAYWARD  DECLINES  JOB 

OFFERED  BY  HITCHCOCK. 


(Continued  on  page  5.  si.xth   column.) 

Mccormick  held 
as  incompetent 

Wife  of  Harvester  King's 

Son  Wants  Guardian 

Appointed. 

Santa  Barbara,  Cal.,  March  20.— That 
Stanley  McCormick,  son  of  the  har- 
vester king,  is  Incompetent  to  man- 
age his  affairs,  was  the  allegation  made 
by  his  wife  in  superior  court  in  a  peti- 
tion   to    have   a   guardian^  appointed. 

McCormick  came  here'for  his  health 
and  for  a  time  seemed  to  improve,  but 
later  it  became  apparent  that  his  mind 
was    failing. 


r  ^fc*  ^^  ^^  ^^^^^  ^^  *^  ^^  ^f  ^^  vW  ^^  ^^  ^^/  *^  ^A'  ^h*  ^^  *^  ^L*  ^h*  'A*  *Jf  ^L" 


I 


JACK,   TIIK  SCKATCHER.  * 

DEFACKS  WINDOWS.  ^ 

New  Orleans.  I, a..  March  20. —  » 
"Jatk.  the  .Scratcher."  Is  an  * 
hulivitliial    wlioni    the    police    <le 


* 

partnicnt   of   thi.s   city    is   innkinf;  0 

efforts  t<»  run  doun.     For  the  last  * 

feu-  nights  scores     of     big     <<tio\v  * 

windows  along  Canal   street,   the  ^ 

main  business  thoroughfare,  have  #r 

*  been  defaced.  ^ 

*  * 


W.   J.   OLCOTT, 

Who  Has  Resigned  From  Presidency 

of  Missabe  Road. 


SAFE  BLOWERS 
MAKE  GO^D  HAUL 

Get   Several    Thousand 

Dollars  From  an  Iowa 

BanH. 

Des  Moines.  Iowa,   Marc))  20. — Safe 

blowers  dynamited  the  safe  of  the 
First  National  bank  ( t  Iwogine.  Page 
county,  during  the  iJlght  and  took  all 
the  cash  on  hand. 

Section  hands  on  tHtlr  way  to  work 
early  this  morning  discovered  that  the 
bank  had  been  rqbbed. 

Several  thousand  dollars  were 
taken. 


More  changes  In  the  officers  of  the 
United  States  Steel  corporation  at  the 
Head  of  the  Lakes  came  this  morning 
on  the  return  of  W.  J.  Olcott  from  the 
East, 

At  10:30  o'clock  this  morning  a  meet- 
ing of  the  directors  of  the  Duluth, 
Missabe  &  Northern  railroad  was  held 
in  the  Wolvin  building,  and  Mr.  O'.cott 
tendered  his  resignation  as  president 
of  the  road.  He  still  holds  the  office 
of  vice  president  of  the  Oliver  com- 
pany. 

The  resignation  was  accepted,  and 
William  A.  McGonagle.  vice  president 
and  general  manager  of  the  road,  was 
appointed  to  fill  the  vacancy  left  by 
the  retirement  of  Mr.  Olcott.  No  ac- 
tion was  taken  toward  filling  Mr.  Mc- 
Gonagles  place,  and  none  will  be  for 
the   present,   it   is    said. 

Tiie  retirement  of  Mr.  Olcott  from 
the  presidency  of  the  road  would  ap- 
pear to  confirm  the  report  that  he  is 
to  succeed  Thomas  F.  Cole  as  presi- 
dent of  the  Oliver  Mining  company. 
Apparentlv  this  matter  has  not  yet 
been  definitely  settled,  however,  or  at 
least  it  is  not  ready  to  be  officially 
announced,  for  Mr.  Olcott  was  not  pre. 
pared  to  make  any  statement  regard- 
ing it,  in  answer  to  questions. 

Although  Mr.  Cole  had  been  Intend- 
ing to  leave  at  once  on  a  vacation  trip 
and  was  very  anxious  to  do  so.  out  of 
courtesy  to  Mr.  Olcott  he  consented  to 
defer  his  ti^  for  a  few  days,  in  order 
that  Mr.  tmott  might  make  a  short 
trip  to  the  East  with  his  family.  On  Mr. 
Olcott's  return,  it  is  understood  that 
some  definite  announcement  will  be 
made  regarding  a  succegeor  to  Mr. 
Cole. 

The  resignation   of  Joseph  B.  Cotton. 

(Continued  on  page  4,   fourth  column.) 


»»»))o>o|o»»*»)K*»»»»»»»*y*»^N^» 


Slayers  of  Former  Senator 

CarmacK  Released  on 

Ball. 


Their  Counsel  Will  Try 

to  Obtain  a  New 

Trial. 


GANGWAY  COLLAPSES; 

THREE  MEN  ARE  KILLED. 


Barrow-ln-Fiirness,  Eng.,  March  20. — 
A  gangway  connecting  the  battleship 
Vangaurd  with  the  wharf  at  the 
Vlckers  Son-Maxim  yard  collapsed  to- 
day. Fifty  workngen  were  precipitated 
to  the  dock.  Three  of  them  were 
killed  and   forty  injured. 


%  GLASS   FOVXD   BEHIND 

#  A   CHILD'S   EYEBALIi. 

%  Acadia,  La.,  March  20.— After 
^  sobbing  almost  incessantly  for 
M/e  ten  weeks    with  a  pain  which  he 

*  salil  was  in  4>n<'  of  his  eyes,  and 
'    the  cause  for  which  couUI  not  be 

located,  the  young  .son  of  Post- 
master Jack  Sutton  of  Bear 
Crock,  this  parish,  was  taken  to 
an  occulist.  A  piece  of  glass,  half 
an  inch  long  and  n<»arly  as  wide, 
was  found  lo<lgcd  bchhid  U»e 
child's  left  eyeball. 


GOVERNOR  B.  E.   COMER. 

Birmingham,  Ala..  March  20. — A  con- 
sent verdict  for  $2,7.'.0  against  Gover- 
nor Comer  of  Alabama  for  the  killing 
of  J.  D.  Biles  by  the  governor's  auto- 
mobile has  been  awaried  here.  The 
governor's  chauffeur  was  en  route  to 
the  depot  to  meet  him,  when  the  ac- 
cident happened. 


STUNG?  ASK 
INSURGENTS 

They  Grow  Dubious  Over 

Their  House  Rules 

Victory. 

May  be    Harder    Than 

Ever  to  Get  Bills 

Throujiti 


^)H|HN^-»»»»»»»)iO>C  )!(»*»*»*»»**»» 


GIVES  mU  A  PAIN. 


Old  Party:    Now  I  know  why  they  caU  it  the  Payne  biU. 


Nebraska  City,  Neb.,  March  20. — A 
telegram  from  \Va.shington  states  that 
Judge  William  Hayward,  who  was 
tendered  the  position  of  first  assistant 
po.stmaster  general,  h.".  •,  declined  and 
will  remain  secretary  of  the  National 
Republican  committee. 


LIVE  WIRE  SCORES  TOUCHDOWN 

ON  EX-STAR  FOOTBALL  PLAYER 


Pasadena,  Cal.,  March  20. — While 
working  in  the  Carnegie  solar  observ- 
atory Dr.  Henry  Gordon  Gale,  a  Uni- 
versity of  Chicago  scientist,  came  in 
contact  with  live  wires  from  the 
transformer  and  was  hurled  to  the 
floor. 

Dr.  Gale  was  found  shortly  after 
the  accident.  He  was"* removed  to  the 
hospital,    where   it   waa   found   he   had 


been    severly    burned    about    the    hips 
and  lower  parts  of  the  body. 

No  serious  results  are  anticipated. 


Prominent    in   Athletics. 

Chicago,  March  20. — Henry  Gordon 
Gale  formerly  was  prominent  in 
athletics  at  the  University  of  Chicago. 
He  was  a  star  football  and  baseball 
player  for  several  seasons  and  later 
was  assistant  coach  at  the  institution 
with  Stagg.  He  left  Chicago  about  a 
month  ago  for  California  to  study  in 
the  Carnegie  observatory. 


Washington.    March 
the   smoke   of    battle   hi 
appear     the    Republlcai 
the   house    are    beginnii 
what  prices  they  won 
at  the  beginning  of  th 
are  making  a  careful  s 
gerald  amendments   to 
certain   just   what   theii 

The  general  feeling  ; 
bers  is  that  it  will  b 
hieeafter  to  get  a  I 
liouse  under  unanlmoi 
stead    of    having    only 

satisfy,  all  the  membe 
must  be  shown  the  wl; 
islation.  probably  unin 
or  the  public,  hut  oft« 
specific  localities.  It 
the  amendments  will 
winter  on  such  meat 
Junction  bills,  a  nioi 
regulation  of  Inlersta 
intoxicating  liquors, 
measure  for  the  Distr 
and  amendments  to  th 
trust  law^,  so  as  to  exei 
from    its    operations. 

Records  for  attenti< 
work  played  an  impoi 
filling    of    senate    couii 


(Continued    on    page    4,    8ix,i 


20. — Now  that 
IS  begun  to  dis- 
i  insurgents  of 
ig  to  discern  at 
he  rules  victory 
e  session.  They 
udy  of  the  Fltz- 
the  rules  to  as- 
•  effects  will  be. 
imong  the  mem- 
e  more  difficult 
111  through  the 
IS    consent.      In- 

the    speaker    to 

rs.  more  or  less,  i 
idom  of  the  leg-  i 
portant  to  them 
n  of  interest  to 
Is  slated  that 
orce  votes  next 
tures  as  antl-ln- 
e  rigid  federal 
te  shipments  of 
a  prohibition 
ict  of  Columbia, 
e  Sherman  anti- 
npt  labor  unions 

m  to  senatorial 
tant  part  In  the 
nittee    vacancies 

th    column.) 


Jury,  Held  to  Duty  by 

the  Judge,  Finally 

Agrees. 


Nashville,  Tenn..  March  20. — Guilty 
of  murder  in  the  second  degree,  with 
twenty  years'  imprisonment  as  the 
penalty,  is  the  verdict  of  the  Jury  re- 
turned this  morning  in  the  case  against 
Col.  Duncan  B.  Cooper  and  his  son, 
Kobin  Cooper,  charged  with  the  murder 
of  ex-United^.State8  Senator  E.  W.  Car- 
mack.  The  Jury  yesterday  acquitted 
John    B.    Sharp,    a    co-defendant. 

Immediately  the  defense  moved  to 
set  aside  the  verdict  because  of  tha 
verdict  of  disagreement  yesterday,  and 
asked  the  court  to  declare  it  a  mle- 
irial.  Judge  Hart  said  he  would 
listen  to  argument  on  this  motion 
later.  He  then  fixed  the  defendants' 
bond  at  $25,000  each,  which  amount 
was  acceptable  to  both  sides. 

The  verdict,  coming  as  It  did  upon, 
the  heels  of  Foreman  Burke's  declara- 
tion yesterday  "that  we  are  hopeless- 
ly tied  ui)  as  to  the  Coopers,"  was  a 
decided    surprise. 

DefrndanfN    .%re   Calm. 

The  defendants  took  the  verdict 
coolly,  almost  without  emotion.  Mrs. 
Burch  and  Mrs.  Wilson,  daughters  of 
Col.  Cooper,  were  brave  and,  aside 
from  tearful  eyes,  restrained  their 
emotions.         Mrs.    Burch    sat    with    her 

arm  around  her  brother  Robin's  shoul- 

— ^ — . « 

(Continued    on    page    4,    fourth    column) 

TAFT'S  SUMMER 
HOME  AT  BOSTON 

President's  Wife   Views 

Possible  Locations  for 

Vacation  Period. 

Washington,  March  20. — President 
Taft  arrived  in  Washington  from  New 
York  this  morning.  He  was  accom- 
panied only  by  Capt.  Butt,  his  military 
aide,  and  Assistant  Secretary  Mischler, 
Mrs.  Taft  and  Miss  Mabel  BoardmaD, 
who  accompanied  the  party  from  this 
city,  having  gone  to  Boston  to  look 
at   summer   homes. 

The  private  car  Constitution,  In 
which  the  president  made  the  Irlp, 
was  attached  to  the  regular  New  Yorjc 
express    on    the    IVnnsylvanla    railroad. 

NOMISHAP 
TO  SHERMAN 


JURY  DISMISSED, 
DUE  TO  VIEWS 


Members  Are  Prejudiced 
Against  Capital  Pun- 
ishment. 


Indianapolis,      Ind., 
present  criminal  court 
missed    because    the    c 
is  Informed  that  sever 
are   prejudiced   agalns 
ment    and    a    new    ven 
dered    by    Judge   Pritcl 
tlon    for    the    "murder 
is  to  be  opened  next  \\ 

The  authorities  ari 
effort  to  put  an  end  tc 
ders.  There  are  fifte< 
in  "murderers  row"  It 
trials  are  to  be  rushed 
county  officials  hope 
cases  the  death  senten 
ly  pronounced  and  ex« 
murder  a  day,"  which 
phrase  in  this  city,   wl 


March  20. — The 
jury  is  to  be  dis- 
Junty  prosecutor 
al  members  of  it 
:  capital  punish- 
ire  has  befen  or- 
lard    in    prepara- 

calendar"    which 

eek. 

5     making     every 

a  chain  of  mur- 
:n   prisoners   now 

I  the  iail.  Their 
and  the  city  and 
that    In    several 

:e  shall  be  quick- 

cuted,  so  that   "a 

Is   now   a   street 

II  pass  away. 


Stories  of  Accident  to 

Vice  President  Are 

Denied. 


He  Is  at  His  Home  In 

Utica  In  Usual 

Health. 


utica,  N.  Y.,  March  20.— Vice  Presi- 
dent Sharman  Is  at  his  home  In  this 
city  today  and  is  in  his  usual  health. 


Seoretary    Gctn    MesMase. 

Washington.  March  20. — Harry  E^ 
Devendorf,  secretary  to  Vice  President 
Sherman,  received  a  message  shortly 
after  11  o'clock  this  morning  asking 
about  official  stationary  matters  and 
making  no  mention  of  any  indisposi- 
tion. Word  had  been  received  at  the 
vice  president's  office  of  widespread 
rumors  that  Mr.  Sherman  had  met  with 
an  accident  and  this  message  was 
taken  "as  an  indication  that  the  re- 
port  was   unfounded. 

The  message  was  from  Mr.  Sherman 
and  was  received  with  considerable  re- 
lief in  view  of  constant  Inquiries  re- 
ceived at  the  vice  president's  office  as 
the  result  of  the  reports  which  were 
generally  circulated  in  Washington, 
New  York  and  other  cities. 


QUEEN  HAS  FEVER.  RESULT  OF 

ACCIDENT  IN  QUAKE  RELIEF  WORK 


Rome.  March  20. — Queen  Helena 
has  received  favorab  e  reports  of  the 
work  of  succor  beln?  done  by  the 
Anierlcan  relief  con  miltee  In  the 
earthquake  zone  and  Lieutenant  Com- 
mander Belknap,  hte  American  naval 
attache  at  Rome,  Is  the  recipient  of 
much  praise  for  the  thorotigh  way  in 
which  he  has  organized  the  work. 

The  father  of  a  d«  stitute  family  in 
Calabria  made  an  ap  ieal  direct  to  the 
queen.  His  story  was  investigated 
and  found  to  be  true.  The  queen  com- 
municated with  Ambassador  Griscom, 


who  gave  directions  that  the  wants  of 
the  family  be  supplied.  The  queen 
herself  packed  a  large  trunk  with 
articles  of  clothing  for  the  applicant's 
wife  and  the  expected  baby  and,  to- 
gether with  the  sum  of  1100,  had  her 
gift   delivered   through   Mr.    Griscom. 

The  queen  is  again  suffering  front* 
fever  from  the  broken  rib  sustained 
in  her  accident  at  Messina  shortly  aft- 
er the  earthquake.  As  a  result  she  has 
been  obliged  to  postpone  the  audiences 
arranged  for  a  number  of  women,  in- 
cluding several  Americans. 


1 

1 

1       1 

« 

DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


i^t- 


'm        '  ■ 


«•• 


<V"  ai*i  mnmm 


Ill— .JLm— a— — H  ir  I  tr» 


^r-*" 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


«'EATHER— P»rUy  cloudr  weather  tonlglit: 
S-.:ii'i.iy  protably  riln  or  snjw;  m'xlera.ui 
pastsrij    winds. 


Sapf  rior  SI.  al  Foarth  Ave.  West. 


Now  $1.50 

For  Six  Pairs,  Instead  of  $2— 
The  Guaranteed 

Holeproof  Sox 

This  makes  the  genuine,  orig- 
inal Holeproof  riox  now  only 
25c-  a  pair. 

Yet  you  get  the  same  quality 
as  before. 

The  manufacturer's  price  is 
less  to  us  because  the  price  o£ 
yarn  Is  less  to  him.  so  we  make 
the   price    less   to  you. 

But  remember,  you  will  get 
this  -same  guarantee  with  each 
bi>x  of  six  pairs:  "If  any  or  all 
of  these  Sox  come  to  holes  In 
six  months  from  the  day  you 
buy  them,  we  will  replace  them 
free." 

Think  what  that  means  to 
y.,u — and  note  the  savingf. 


C  D.  TROTT, 

THiC    CI»TlCiAPI. 

has  removed  to 


20  East  Superior  Street, 


ENGRAVING  AND  PRINTING 

We  can  .io  ens^ra'.  ing,  I'Ut  tt  lias 
lonx  sinoo  givi-n  way  bofore  high- 
gra>ie  letter  press  vrrftius,  wliich 
affords  scope  for  originality  and 
newness. 

MILLAR  PRINTING  CO., 

IJuludi   'TMione   ltl04. 


BOAT  CLUB 
IS  NOW  FULL 

Membership    Limit    Is 

Reached  and  Several 

on  Waiting  List. 

Sailing  Captain  Will  be 

a  New  Officer  This 

Season. 


Servim  for  Sunday 
in  Dniutb  Churches 

Rev.  3.  $.  Kirtky  mill  Preach  in  first  Baptist 
Church  on  "Our  Boys  and  Girls." 

Paul  Daltz,  Returned  Philippine  missionary, 
mill  Speak  at  the  V.  111.  €.  K 


At  the  First  Baptist  churcli.  Ninth 
avenue  east  and  First  street,  the  pas- 
tor. Dr.  J.  S.  Kirtley,  will  preach  at 
10:30  a.  m.,  on  "Our  Boys  and  Girls," 
and  at  7:30  p.  m.,  on  "Simon  of  Cyrene." 
TJio     prelude 


will    bo 


The  Duluth  Boat  club  now  has  a  full 
mem'ership,  and  there  are  thirty 
names  on   the  waiting   list. 

The  membership  limit  of  1.200  names 
was  reached  yesterday  afternoon, 
when  the  board  of  directors  elected  114 
persons  to  meml>€rship.  After  this  had 
been  done,  there  were  still  thirty  ap- 
plications In  the  hands  of  the  officers, 
"^ehould  any  vacancies  occur,  members 
■will  be  elected  from  those  on  the  wait- 
ing   list. 

With  the  membership  full  and  the 
addition  of  the  sailing  features  by  rea- 
son of  the  consolidation  of  the  yacht 
club  wliii  the  boat  club,  the  last  named 
organization  has  in  prospect  the  most 
Bucctssful   sea.son   in   its  history. 

Tilt-'  lirectors  yesterdaj'  also  decided 
to  make  a  change  in  the  articles  of 
incorp'jration  to  provide  for  a  sailing 
captai!!,  to  be  elected  at  the  annual 
meeting   of   the   club. 

Thev  further  decided  to  change  the 
time  for  the-  annual  meeting  from  the 
second  Tuesday  in  April  to  the  second 
TueS'lay    in    Mi  v. 


\\  HERE  TO  (iO  TONIGHT. 


LYCEUM— 'The    Girl.- 
<see  notice   bel'>w.> 


From     Berlin." 


"GIRLS  FROM  BERLIN. 


•    M 


"The  Girls  From  Berlin,'  which 
open'?d  at  the  Lyceum  theater  last 
evening,  is  called  a  musical  comedy  on 
the  program,  but  it  really  is  straight 
comedy  with  a  few  songs  thrown  in. 
The  story  of  the  play  takes  up  so  much 
time  in  the  telling,  that  there  isn't 
time  f -ir  the  amount  of  chorus  work 
tiiat  usually  goes  with  a  musical  com- 
edy. 

The  story  deals  with  the  experiences 
of  a  German  girl.  Lola,  who.  In  answer 
to  an  advertisement  which  appears  in 
a  Beilin  paper,  comes  to  America,  and 
calls  at  the  home  of  New  York's  lead- 
ing attorney,  to  And  that  an  uncle  ha.3 
died,  leaving  her  $2.0i>o,000.  Her  de- 
velopjnttit  from  an  uneducated  but 
Blirew'i  immigrant  to  the  graduate  of 
a  girl's  finishing  school  offers  a  good 
field  for  the  play  writer.  Tliere  is  a 
pretty  love  story  running  along  witli 
this   development,  and  all  ends  happily. 

Of  course,  Corinne,  in  the  chara'cter 
of  Lola,  carries  off  the  lionor.s  of  the 
evenitig.  tJlie  makes  a  quaint  and  in- 
tf'resting  figure  out  of  the  German 
girl,  and  smiled  her  way  into  the  favor 
of  h>  r  audience  She  had  several  songs, 
■whicli  were  very  well  sung.  In  the 
last  act.  in  response  to  persistent  ap- 
plause, she  sang.  "So  Long  Mary,  " 
from  "Forty- five  Minutes  From  Broad- 
May,"  the  production  in  which  Corinne 
last   appeared   In    Duiuth. 

\Ia:'.-\  Carlton  did  some  effective 
singing  and  dancing  as  t)ollie  Chorttle, 
and  Stephen  W.  ."Jcott  was  good  as 
Lolas  American  lover.  The  other  parts 
■wer-^  sitistaotorlly  filled.  The  perform- 
anc--  will  be  repeated  at  the  Lyceum 
this    evening. 


in     tiie    evening 
Gambling    In    Our    Midst.  " 

•  •       * 

At  St.  Paul's  Episcopal  church.  Rev. 
A.  \V.  Kyan.  rector,  lleV.  IJ.  S.  Read, 
assistant,  services  will  be  as  follows: 
S  a.  m.,  lioly  communion;  10  a.  m., 
Sunday  scliool;  11  a.  m.,  mornins 
prayer,  litany  and  sermon,  on  "lieal 
Living;"  7:'J0  p.  m.,  evening  prayer 
and   sermon. 

Lenten  services  will  be  as  follows: 
Monday.  Wednesday  and  Saturday,  at 
4:15  p.  m.;  Tuesday  and  Friday,  at 
7:30  p.  m.;  Thursday,  iioly  conmiunion 
at  10  a.  m..  Confirmation  Instructions, 
by  the  rector:  Monday  at  5  and  7::]0 
p.  m.;  by  the  assistant,  Friday  at  5  and 
s>:lo  p.  m.  Following  is  the  musical 
program: 

MORNING. 
Processional — 'May    Jesus   Christ    Be 

Praised"     

Canticles — Chanted    

Benedlcite.     in     A     Jefferiea 

.Solo — •Shadowland"    Bird 

Mary    Syer    Bradshaw. 

Hymn — "O   Worslilp   the    King" 

;5olo — "Lord.    My    God" Dubois 

George    Suffel. 
Anthem — "Jesus,       Priceless        Treas- 
ure"        Roberts 

Recessional — "Savior,  Source  of  Every 

Blessing"    .-.— - 

EVENING. 
Processional — "May   Jesus   Christ    Be 

Praised'     

Psalter — Chanted    

Magnificat,    in   F E.    Bennett 

Nunc  Dlmittis,  In  F E.  Bennett 

Hymn — "Art    Thou    Weary" 

Antiiem — "Like  As  the  Heart" 

Custance 

Orison    solo — "God,  Who  Madest  Earth 

and   Heaven"    

Donald    Alexander. 
Recessional — "Savior,  Source   of  Every 

Ble.'sslng"    

A.  F.  M.  Custance,  organist  and 
(.hoirmaster. 

«       •      * 

Rev.  Campbell  Coyle  will  continue 
the  discussion  on  "A  Personal  Devil" 
tomorrow  night  at  7:45  In  i  the  First 
Presbyterian  church,  the  evening  sub- 
ject being  "The  Age-I-ong  Confiict  Be- 
tween God  and  Satan  Over  the  Seed 
of  the  Woman."  At  the  morning  ser- 
vice, at  10:30,  the  suiiject  will  be,  "The 
Wastes  of  Life."  Sunday  school  and 
Brntlierhood  meet  at  noon.  Dr.  R.  W. 
IJowden.  superintendent;  Christian  En- 
deavor meeting  at  6:-t5  o'clock.  Fol- 
lowing   is    the   musical    program: 

MORNING. 
Organ — Prelude    on    Two    Hymns.... 

Guilmant 

Antliem — "Jesus.    I    My    Cross    Have 

Taken"    w Gilcnrlst 

Offertory— ^  -Andante"".  . . .     Mendelssohn 
Solo — "6,  God,  Have  Mercy""    

Mendelssohn 

Mr.    Brown. 

Postlude    Haydn 

EVENING. 
Or|:an       prelude  —  '"Song       Without 

Words"     Thome 

Anthem — "Now   the   Day   Is   Over"... 

Toros 

Offertory    Smart 

Postlude — "Marching"     Schubert 

The  choir  will  consist  of  Miss  Gladys 
Renvolds.  Mrs.  Blanche  G.  Schell,  Paul 
Gilbert.  P.  G.  Brown  and  Miss  Isabel 
Pearson. 

•  *       • 

At  Pilgrim  Congregational  church, 
Alexander  Milne.  the  pastor,  will 
preach  in  the  morning  on  "With  Christ 
on  the  Mount."  and  in  the  evening  on 
'Living  the  Strenuous  Life."  Follow- 
ing is  the  musical  program: 
MORNING. 

Prelude    Wldor 

Quartette — ''In  Thee  I  Put  My  Trust." 

Hauptman 

Quartette — ^"O,         Saviour       of       llie 

World  "    Goss 

Solo    

Mr.  Koneczny. 

Postlude    Relnecka 

EVENING. 

Prelude — "Andante""    Merk^l 

Quartette  Jesus,        the        Verv 

Thought"    Brewer 

Solo     

Miss    Woodbrldge. 
Postlude    Merkel 

The  choir  will  consist  of  Frances 
Dwight  Woodbridge,  Mrs.  O.  J.  Lar- 
son, ,Tohn  Koneczny.  Harry  G.  Gearhart 
and    Ruth    Aita    Rogers,    organist. 

•  •       • 

At  the  First  Methodist  church.  Third 
avenue  west  and  Third  street,  the  pas- 
tor, M.  S.  Rice,  will  preach  both  morn- 
ing and  evening.  At  the  morning  .serv- 
ice at  10:30  o'clock,  the  theme  of  the 
sermon  will  bo,  "Exaltation  of  Humil- 
ity," and  at  the  evening  service  at 
7:43  o'clock,  tlie  theme  of  the  sermon 
is  "The  Liar."  the  fourth  sermon  in  a 
series  of  evening  sermons  on  ''Common 
Sinners."  Subjects  yet  to  follow:  "The 
Gossip.'"  "'The  Drunkard."  Sunday 
school  will  meet  at  12:15  noon,  Watson 
S.  Moore.  superintendent;  Epwortli 
League    at    6:30    p.    m. 

•  *      « 

.\t  the  men's  meeting  at  the  Y.  M. 
C.  A.  at  3  o'clock.  Paul  Daltz  of  Wash- 
ington, formerly  a  missionary  in  the 
Philippines,  will  speak.  Charles  O. 
Applehag'en    will    sing. 

•  *       • 

At  the  First  Christian  church.  Rev. 
Black  will  speak  on  "The  Delusii>n  of 
Death."  The  evening  theme  will  be 
•'The  Outcome  of  Shirkers."  Sunday 
scliool  will  meet  Sunday  at  noon; 
Christian    Endeavor   at    6:30   p.    m. 

•  *       • 

At  St.  Joim's  English  Lutheran 
church.  Third  street  and  Lake  avenue 
nortli.  Rev.  J.  L.  Murphy,  pastor,  serv- 
heid  at  10:30  a.  m.,  with  a 
the  gospel  theme,  "Upon 
I  Feed?"  Evening  service 
at  7:30  o'clock,  with  a  ser- 
theme,  "The  Blessed  Man." 
service-  will  be  held  Friday 
at  ij   p.   m. 


Isle  of  Pines 

We  are  too  busy  selling  land 
in  the  Isle  of  Pines  to  write  an 
ad. 

Watch  the  next  issue. 


ices  will  be 
sermon  on 
VVliat  Shall 
will  be  held 
mon  on  the 
Lenten 
evening 


SHEPHERD  &  CHAKOLER 

200  Manhattan  Hide. 


school  and  Bible  class  will  meet  as 
usual  in  the  Mission  hall.  Twenty- 
eighth  street,  at  3  p.  m.  Evening  serv- 
ice with  illustrated  talk  at  8  o'clock. 
The  subject  will  be  "The  Ten  Virgins," 
a  study  of  Christ's  parables.  The  ser- 
mon will  be  illustrated  with  stereoptl- 
lon  views.  Preacher,  Rev.  Arthur  H. 
Wurteie.     Special  music  by  the  choir. 

•  •      • 

At  the  Glen  Avon  Presbyterian 
church,  Woodland  avenue  and  Lewis 
."treet,  liev.  Paul  Doeltz  of  the  Philip- 
pine Islands,  will  speak  in  the  morn- 
ing at  10:3*1.  Mr.s.  K.  N.  Best  of  Min- 
neapolis will  sing.  In  the  evening  the 
pastor.  Rev.  John  Culbert  Faries.  will 
preach  on   "Tlie    Heavenly  Image." 

•  •      • 

At  St.  John's  Episcopal  church.  Lake- 
side, there  will  be  holy  communion  at 
8  a.  m. :  Btble  school  at  10;  morning 
prayer  and  sermon  at  11  o'clock,  and 
evening  praver  and  sermon  at  5  o'clock. 
Rev.  xMbert  R.  I'arker,  rector;  A.  F.  M. 
Custance.  choir  director;  Miss  Cora 
llllliard.  leader,  and  Miss  Margaret 
I'earson,    organist. 

«  «  • 
At  tlie  Lester  Park  Methodist  church. 
Fifty-fourth  avenue  east  and  Superior 
street,  services  will  be  held  tomorrow. 
At  the  morning  service,  at  10:30.  the 
pastor  will  preach  on  tlic  theme.  "Tiio 
Value  of  An  Ideal,"  and  in  the  evening, 
at  7:30.  a  special  service  will  be  held, 
'riiis  will  be  the  occasion  of  the  an- 
nual thanks  offering  service  by  the 
Woman's  mlssionar.v  societies.  A 
splen<lid  program  of  music  will  be 
given.  Miss  Corps  and  Miss  Eogan 
will  sins  .'it>los.  and  two  or  tliroe  short 
addresses  will  be  given.  Sunday 
school  and  Blhle  c-lass  meet  at  noon,  and 
the  yoimg»people's  meeting  is  at  6:30 
in   the   evening. 

•  «       • 

At  the  Lakeside  Presbyterian  church. 
Forty -fifth  and  McCullocli  street.  Rev. 
II.  li.  Sutherland  will  preach  at  the 
morning  service  on  "Ambassadors  Or- 
dinary on  tlie  King's  Business."'  In 
the  evening,  at  7  o'clock,  the  Rev.  Paul 
Doltz  of  Hollo.  Philippine  Islands,  will 
speak.  Tlie  McCoUum  Bible  class.  A. 
L.  McDermid  deader,  will  meet  at  the 
church  at  the  same  hour  as  the  Sun- 
day school.  IHiristlan  Endeavor  serv- 
ice  will  be  held  at   (J  p.  m. 

•  •      • 

At  the  Second  I'resbyterian  church, 
the  pastor.  James  L.  McBride,  will 
preach  in  the  morning  on  "The  Inner 
Circle."  and  at  the  evening  service  on 
"The  Mistakes  of  a  Christian."  Sab- 
l^ath  school  will  meet  at  12,  and  tiie 
P'ndeavor  society  at  7.  Miss  Dora 
Williams   will    lead    the    meeting. 

•  •       • 

At  St.  Luke's  Episcopal  church, 
Nfneteecnth  avenue  west  and  First 
street.  Simday  school  will  meet  at  10 
a.  m.,  evening  prayer  anl 
7:45  p.  m.  Tlie  subject  of 
'Tiie  Enemies  of  a 
Home."       Roderick 


•  «       « 

At  the  Y.  W.  C.  A.  vesper  service 
at  4  p.  m..  Rev.  J.  S.  Kirtley  will  be 
the  speaker.  The  soloist  will  be  Miss 
Maude   Mattson. 

•  •      • 

At  Trinity  pro-cathedral  (Episcopal). 
Twentieth  avenue  east  and  Superior 
street.  Rev.  Arthur  H.  Wurteie,  dean 
and  rector,  services  for  the  fourth  Sun- 
day in  Lent  will  be  as  follows:  Holy 
communion  at  8  a.  m.;  Sunday  school 
and  Bible  class  at  10  a.  m.;  morning 
praver,  litany  and  sermon  on  the  sub- 
iect  "The  Trial  of  Jesus;  the  .Scene  Be. 
tore  Herod,"  at  11  a.  m..  preaclier.  Rev. 
A.  H.  Wurteie.  At  tlie  vesper  service 
ch'^re  will  be  an  illustrated  sermon  es- 
pecially for  cliildren.  on  the  subject, 
"The  "Ten  Virgins,  "  The  musical  pro- 
gram: 

Organ  prelude — "Adagio"    ...Beethoven 
Processional — "Fight  the  Good  Fight"" 

Parker 

Venite    and    Benedlclte Matthews 

Litany     hymn — "Lord,     in     This     Thy 

Mercy"s    Day"    Monk 

Hvmn — "Christian,     Dost     Thou     See 

Them""    Dykes 

Antliem — "Wlioso       Dwelleth       Under 

the    Defense"     Martin 

r.ecessiona!     hvmn — "O    Jesus,     Thou 

Art    Standing"     Knecht 

Organ    postlude — "Granj   Chorus".... 

Dubois 

Mrs.   Henry  K.   Brearley,  organist. 

•  «       « 

At      Park      Point      mission,      Sunday 


HIGH  SCHOOL  STUDENTS 
\%  ANNUAL  SENIOR  PLAY 

id         in 


sermon  at 
the  sermon 
Holy  and  a 
J.    Mooney, 


Will  be, 
Happy 
rector.  ., 

«  •  * 
At  the  First  Swedish  Baptist  church, 
Nineteentli  avenue  west  and  First 
street,  service  will  be  held  at  11  a.  m.. 
and  7:30  p.  m.  Rev.  Svaney  Nllson  of 
Big  Springs,  S.  D.,  will  preach  at  both 
services.  Tlie  Simday  school  will  meet 
at  10  o'clock  In  the  morning  and  in 
the  afternoon,  the  Woman's  For- 
eign Mission  society  will  have  Its 
monthly  meeting  at  4  o'clock.  Prayer 
meeting  will  be  held  Thursday  evening. 

•  •      • 

At  the  Central  Baptist  church,  Twen. 
tieth  avenue  and  First  street  west. 
Rev.  J.  Wilfrid  Lougliridge  will 
preach  at  10:30  a.  m.  on  "A  Unique 
Offer,""  and  at  7:30  p.  m^  on  "That  Same 
Old  Question";  Sunday  school  will  meet 
at  12  o'clock;  Junior  society  at  3  p. 
m. ;  B.  Y.  P.  U.  at  6:30  p.  m.  Special 
services   will   be   held  during   the   week. 

•  •       * 

At  the  First  .Swedish  Lutheran 
church,  Sixth  avenue  east  and  Third 
street,  Pev.  Carl  Solomonson,  pastor. 
The  morning  service  will  be  held  at 
10  o'clock  and  a  sermon  preached  on 
the  gospel  for  the  day:  .lolin  6:5'2-71, 
Sunday  school  will  be  conducted  in 
Swedish  and  English  at  11:30  a.  m. ; 
prayer  meeting  will  be  held  at  7 
o'clock  and  evening  service  at  8  o'clock 
In  tlie  evening.  The  subject  for  tlie 
evening  will  be,  "Christ  on  Trial  Be- 
fore the  High  Priest."  At  3  o'clock  in 
the  afternoon,  tlie  Duluth-Superlor 
Lutlieran  Sunday  School  association 
will    meet    In    the    church. 

•  *       * 

At  the  Bethel  Swedish  Baptist 
church.  Ninth  avenue  east  and  Third 
street,  morning  service  will  be  held  at 
10:30  o'clock  and  evening  service  at 
7:30  o'clock,  at  which  services,  Rev. 
Bennet  Erickson,  the  pastor,  will  speak. 
Sunday  school  will  meet  at  12  o'clock 
and  Young  People's  society  at  5  o'clock 
in  the  afternoon.  Following  Is  th» 
musical  program  for  the  evening  ser- 
vice: 
Organ    Prelude — "Andante      Graxiozo" 

Moir 

Anthem — "Be        Still.      O      My      Soul" 

Skoog 


Choir. 
Duet — "Sun  of  My  Soul" 

Miss  Alice   Forsell    and 
Offertory  —  ".\daglo 


......  Jerome 

O.   G.   Olson. 
Expressive" 

Cramer 

Enter" Excell 


Anthem — "Let  Jesus 
Choir. 
Mrs.  W.^  A.   .\nderson,  organist,  W.  A. 
Anderson,  choir  master, 

•  •      • 

At  St.  Paul's  German  Evangelical 
church.  Tenth  avenue  east  and  Third 
street.  Rev.  J.  J.  Bizer.  the  pastor,  will 
preach  at  10:30  o'clock  and  7:30  p.  m. 
.Sunday  school  will  meet  at  9:30  a.  m. 
••  ♦       •       • 

At  St.  Mark's  A.  M.  E.  church.  Fifth 
avenue  east  and  Sixth  street,  the  pas- 
tor. Jonathan  Brewer,  will  preach  at 
the  morning  service  at  11  on  tlie  "Life 
of  Hagar."  The  Sunday  cliool  will 
meet  at  noon,  Mrs.  Cliarles  Colby,  su- 
perintendent. Song  and  praise  service 
will  begin  at  7  p.  m..  Mrs.  Elizabetf. 
Mason,  leader.  At  S  o'clock  Rev.  H.  K. 
Madsen  of  the  Norweglan-Danisli  M.  E. 
cliurch  will  preach  and  his  choir  will 
sing  several  selections.  The  regular 
choir  of  the  church  will  sing  special 
numbers  during  the  day.  Miss  Eliza- 
beth Johnson,  organist;  Harvey  L.  Pitt- 
man,  director.  Wednesday  at  8  p.  m. 
prayer  and  praise  services  will  be  held. 
«       *      • 

At  the  First  Unitarian  church,  First 
street  and  FMglith  avenue  east.  Rev. 
.George  R  Gebaiier.  minister,  Sunday 
scliool  will  meet  at  9:45,  church  service 
at  11  o'clock.  Tlie  sul>ject  of  the  ser- 
mon will  be  "Dlvino  Architecture." 

*  *       « 

At  First  Church  of  Christ.  Scientist. 
Ninth  avenue  east  and  First  street, 
services  will  be  held  at  10:45  a.  m.,  and 
7:45  p.  m.  The  subject  will  be  "Matter." 
"The  regular  Wednesday  evening  testi- 
monial meeting  will  be  held  at  8  o'clock. 

*  *       « 

At  Hope  Church  of  the  Evangelical 
association.  Sixth  avenue  east  and  Fifth 
street,  the  pastor.  Rev.  S.  B.  Goetz.  will 

'Two 
eme  of 
the  morning  sermon.  "The  lOffectual 
Fervent  Prayer."  will  be  the  subject  for 
the  evening.  The  Sunday  school  will 
meet  at  10  o'clock  in  the  morning. 

•  *       • 

At  the  Second  Church  of  Christ. 
Scientist,  Burgess  iiall,  310  and  312 
West  First  street,  services  will  be  held 
at  10:45  a.  m.,  the  subject  being  "Mat- 
ter." The  regular  Wei^nesday  evening 
testimonial  meeting  will  be  held  at 
8  p.   m. 


preach  both  morning  and  evening. 
Classes  of  Sinners"  will  be  the  thei 


^■^ 


DOROTHY  OLCOTT. 
As  "Mrs.   Halstead." 


GLADYS    CLARK. 
Who  Played  "Hanna  Barnes. 


LEONARD  McHUGH. 
Who  Played  "Sammy." 

"The  best  ever"  is  what  the  audi- 
ence always  says  as  It  annually  files 
out  of  the  assembly  hall  of  the  hlgli 
school,  following  the  yearly  presenta- 
tion of  the  senior  play,  and  last  even- 
ing's performance  came  up  to  the  high 
standaTtr  detTr»TMJetl  t^y  MPi-Cu«tanc«.  in 
the  plays  ,\Y^ii«.Jj  he  manag^.^  and  pre- 
sents.    Otbaf  •  'lons.niaj- 


Duiuth  aiid 


come  to 
rn.. .  .  -  cant  consideration, 
but  the  senior  pla^  al.ways  plays  to  a 
crowded  liouse,  .every  available  seat 
and  mucli  -of  the  standing  room  be- 
ing occupied. 

"Diamonds  and  Hearts"  was  the 
name  of  tlie  little  three-act  play  pre- 
sented last  evening.  It  was  more  pre- 
tentious than  many  whicli  have  been 
been  undertaken  in  tlie  past,  and  the 
members  of  tlie  class  who  were  wisely 
cliosen  for  the  various  parts,  did  very 
well.  ■  Tiie  story  of  the  play  had  to  do 
witli  lost  diamonds,  a  designing  vlUian. 
a  lovable  heiress,  and  enough  other 
people  to  work  Into  tiie  story.  Virtue 
and  true  love  triumphed  at  the  end 
of  the  third  act,  of  course,  and  every- 
thing was  lovely. 

Miss  Cleo  Fenlon  as  the  lieiress  and 
the  young  person  whom  ail  of^he  men 
wanted  to  marry,  was  entirely  pleasing 
and  Rutli  Davis  and  Marjorie  Siiip- 
nerd  as  her  sister  and  her  friend  were 
delightfully  girlish  and  pleasing.  Miss 
Dorothy  Olcott  as.  stepmother  of  the 
heiress,  and  motii'er  of  the  vilUan 
played  the  character  finely,  having 
quite  the  air  aqd  manner  of  the  grande 
dame. 

John  Qulnn  as  "6ub"  Barnes  had  an 
•  asy  stage  presence,  and  did  some  of 
the    finest   work'  o^  the   evening   in    the 

T 


JOHN   QUINN, 
Who  Played  "Abraham   Barnes." 

part  of  the  simple,  lionest  farmer. 
Every  minute  of  liis  work  was  enjoyi-d 
by  the  audience,  Leonard  McHugh  fur- 
nished the  comedy  as  Sammy,  the  page 
boy.  Jack  Hurdon  was  tlie  liero  lover. 
and  Robert  Ely  was  the  nervous,  un- 
easy, fortune  hunter  and  vlllian.  Har- 
vard Rockwell  made  a  wise  tooking  at- 
torney in  the  last  act,  and  Roy  Kent 
was  the  ferocious  looking  sheriff  of 
St.   Louis  county. 

Tlie  second  act  was  in  a  country 
farm  house,  and  the  act  opened  with  a 
meeting  of  the  choir.  The  singing  of 
tlie  members  and  especially  tlie  direct- 
ing of  Prof.  Thumpenspiel,  commonly 
Erling  Mosfue.  was  irresistibly  funny. 
The  local  hits  showed  the  cunning  liand 
of  Mr.  Custance,  and  tliese  jokes  on 
faculty  and  fellow  pupils  were  received 
with  roars  of  laughter,  appealing  es- 
pecially to  the  students.  Tlie  soloists 
were  Myrna  Pressneil,  Myrtle  Pierce, 
and  Roger  Woodbridge  and  Miss  Helen 
Hawkes  as  "Sis  Hopkins"  recited  some 
amusing  nonsense  verses.  Every  mem- 
ber of  the  chorus  helped  to  make  this 
part  of  the  evening's  entertainment 
thoroughly  enjoyable.  Tiie  members 
of  the  class  wiio  appeared  were:  Made- 
line Miller,  Marion  Cunning'ham,  Eliza- 
beth Olcott,  Frances  Mooney,  Mary 
Marvin,  Helen  Cant.  Morrista  Myers, 
Dorothy  Gordon,  George  Ostergren, 
Gerhard  Ringsred,  Archie  Glass, 
Dwight  Larrowe,  Donald  Paddock. 
Oliver  Grettum,  Gertrude  Wellington, 
Marguerite  Turner,  Ethelwynn  Plielps, 
Ada  Patterson,  Lawrence  Jaques  and 
Euril    Wharton. 

Mr.  Custance,  who  for  so  many  years 
capably  conducted  the  class  plays 
guided  this  year's  production  to  its 
successful  conclusion.  The  stage  set- 
tings were  particularly  complete  and 
satisfying  in  detail  and  the  play  went 
oft'   without    a    perceptible    liitch. 


If     , 

E.  churcli.  Twenty-fourth  avenue  west 
and  Third  stj|e«*,' |H.  K.  Madsen  will 
preach  at  l(lf?*'£^.  m. ;  Sunday  school 
will  meet  atFj2  tr^.^  J.  J.  Moe.  superin- 
tendent. Tiie  Epwortli  League  will 
meet  at  6:45.  Rev.  J.  A.  Roberts  will 
preach  at  7:45  p.  m.  Tlie  choir  will 
sing  morning  and.  evening. 
'  «  "*  * 
At  the  P'Irst  Norwegian  Lutheran 
cliurch,  First  avenue  east  and  Third 
street,  the  pastor,  J.  H.  Stenberg.  will 
preacli  in  the  mdrning"  on  Matthew 
xxvii:  19.  "Pilate's  Wife  Dreams  and 
Warns  Her  Husband."'  The  Sunday 
school  will  niett  at  noon;  the  Bible 
class  will  begin  a'  new^  course,  the  top- 
ic   for    this    Sunday    being,    '"The    First 


isli  service  will 
the  subject  be- 
service  Tliurs- 
"Christ     Before 


Commandment."      Engl 
be  held  in   the  evening, 
ing,     "Judas."       Lenten 
day    evening,     subject, 
Herod." 

•  •  • 
At  Bethesda  Norwegian  Lutheran 
church,  Sixth  avenue  east  and  Fifth 
street,  there  will  l>e  no  services  Sun- 
day forenoon,  as  the  pastor.  Rev. 
Theodore  J.  Austad,  will  conduct  serv- 
ices at  Fioodwoad,  Minn.;  Lutiier 
Young  People's  society  wni  Yneet  at 
7:45  in  the  evening.  Norwegian  Sun- 
day school  wlUiBieet  at  9  a.  m. ;  Kng- 
lisli  Sunday  school  at  noon.  The  Lad- 
ies' -\id  society,  will  meet  with  Mrs. 
John  Christenson.  381  East  Nintli 
street,  Tliursday  afternoon.  March  25. 
at  2  o'clock.  The  Little  Girls'  society, 
w|ll  meet  witlj  Mrs.  O.  Toniling.  Sat- 
urday afternoon.  March  27,  at  2  o'clock. 


building  burned  last  night.  The  fire 
loss  was  $150,000.  Tliere  were  seven 
fires  of  supposed  incendiary  origin  in 
this  city   yesterday. 


At    the    First 


«       • 
Norwegian-Danish    M. 


BEATEN.  THROWN 
FROM  A  TRAIN 

Victim  of  Robbers  May 

be  Paralyzed  for 

Life. 

Pittsburg,  Pa.,  Slarch  20. — A  young 
man  who  lasft  night  was  beaten,  robbed 
and  thrown  tfom  an  '  easlbound  Penn- 
sylvania railroad  train  at  Wilkinsburg, 
a  suburb  of  ^his  city,  recovered  partial 
consciousness  at  the  Columbia  hospital 
today  and  said  he',  is  J.  D.  Ryan,  25 
years  old.  a  graduate  of  Yale  and  re- 
sided   on    LakevleW'  avenue,   Cliicago. 

The  youngi  man's  condition  is  criti- 
cal and  according  >to  physicians  it  is 
probable   lie  -will   ^  paralyzed   for  life. 

SEVEN  IN(  KNDIARV  FIRES 

Ib^  ONE. DAY'S  RECORD. 


f 


Rociiester,  Ii...Y..  March  20. — Martin 
McMahon  of  the  efty  fire  department  is 
in  a  critical  cDrtditton  as  the  result  of 
a  fall  from  down  itlie  air  shaft  in  the 
East   Side   Savings    bank   annex,   whicli 


ATTALIA  X  COLUMBIA 

Irrigated  orchard  and  vineyard  land  in  the 
world-famous  Walla  Walla  Valley,  the  original 
home  of  the  red  apple.  More  prizes  were  taken  by 
this  valley  at  the  recent  Spokane  Apple  Show  than 
any  other  section  exhibiting. 

EXCURSION  APRIL  6 

Special  Car.    A  Pleasant  Trip.    Free  Fare  to  Bayers. 

Attalia's  futiir»>  dcpend.s  upon  no  mushroom  boom.  It  is  staple 
and  fixed.  Its  fui  iu*e  Is  a.ssuri'd  to  an  ab.soliite  c'ertaint.v,  for  it  Is 
.situated  at  the  juiietion  of  four  railr<»ads  and  on  the  lK»autiful  Co- 
lumbia river,  a  vn-y  large  anti  navijfable  water,  piled  by  larse 
boats  the  year  around.  It  ha.s  the  rich  volcanic  ash  soil  anil  the 
deepest  in  AMashinj.ton  or  adjacent  teiTilory.  and  is  underlined  with 
a  subsoil  that  insuivs  excellent  natural  drainage.  It  has  an  in- 
exhaustible water  supply  by  gm\1ty  thmuKh  the  Columbia  canal, 
fourteen  miles  lonjj.  wltii  everlasting  concrete  dam  and  lieadworks, 
pronoimce<l  by  enplneers  as  "one  of  the  iinest  systems  un<ler  oiK^r- 
ation."  It  has  tie  longest  growing  season,  maturing  the  crops 
from  two  weeks  to  a  month  earlier  than  any  other  tlistriin. 
CROPS — Exceptionally  fine  grain's  (American  and  Euroiwan), 
apples,  pears,  pea -lies,  walnuts.  cantalou|>es.  watermelons,  celery, 
iisiuiragus  and  l>eiries,  etc..  grow  luxuriantly,  yielding  returns  of 
fronj  $300  to  $2.00(1  iK'r  acre  anmuiUy.  Two  crops  of  strawberries  and 
potatoes  and  five  tattings  of  alfalfa  (8  to  12  tons  to  the  acre*  can 
be  raised  and  all  "Tilt:  FIM.ST  on  the  MARKET."  PouUr> 
stock  thrive  amaz  ngly.  Attalia  has  an  enviable  climate.  Hie 
Walla  Walla  climate  is  not  ex«>elle<l  anywhere.  Tlie  pure  and 
perfect  air  is  imned lately  noticeable  as  one  arri\es  there.  The 
many  cures  tluit  have  been  effected  from  asthma,  rheumutism  and 
catarrhal  troubles  Ix'six-ak  this  ideal  climate.  It  is  marvelous  to 
note  the  dllTerence  in  people  after  they  have  lived  in  this  climate 
for  a  year.  The  beautiful  sumiy  days  with  a  ver>-  comfortable 
winter  and  summer  temperatiu-e,  due  to  the  famous  Columbia  CJap. 
and  tlie  leeward  si  le  of  the  t"olumbla  river.  Attalia  does  invi  have 
to  reckon  with  drought.  IUkhI.  cyclone,  frosts,  or  with  artificial  fer- 
tilization, or  with  facilities  for  transportation  to  the  extent  ^ 
prcMiiise  onl.y,  for  we  have  three  railroads  now  «>|)erating  llirough 
our  town;  the  fourth,  tlie  Xorth  Coast.  Is  now  building:  and  besides, 
an  electric  line  is  now  imder  way.  Lliu>^  making  for  Attalia  a  ituirk 
market  and  most  convenient  travel. 

It's  America's  Valley  of  the  Nile 


" 

1 

\ 

' 

It  has  no  gni 
waterway  and  i*ai 
home  life  that,  a: 
its  origiiml  state  c. 
sunshine  and  buin 
Attalia,  after  ha^ 
provements  are  ni 
the  compan.v.  I' 
development  that 
and  alxMit  Attalia 
bounds.  It  is  si 
Washington  or  el.>4 
the  Columbia. 


iibling  on  the  future.  It  has  the  climate,  soil. 
Iroads.  It  is  .■sanely  preparing  lor  wealth  and 
ter  this  woiulcrfid  soil  has  lK»eu  subdued  from 
in  no  more  Ik»  denied  it  than  can  its  daily  genial 
i.y  health-giving  climate.  I  am  just  back  from 
ng  taken  out  an  excursion,  and.  exti-nsive  im- 
)w  Iwing  made  by  many  of  our  buyers,  and  by 
oortdng  is  not  the  proix^r  word  to  expres«i  the 
Is  now  taking  place  and  will  .«iOOu  take  place  in 
The  c<Mintry  is  simply  growing  by  leaps  and 
ife  ttt  say  that  no  place  In  the  givat  state  of 
cwliere  is  so  active  at  tliis  time  as  is  Attalia  on 


ifri  "i  -m 


Don't  Wait-  Investigate  Now 

Attalia  is  .sel  ing  rapidly  and  building  up  fast.  Tenns  are 
easy  and  prices  are  atlvanclng.  Settlers  can  nearly  always  obtain 
work  at  good  waws.  Come  and' settle  in  .\ttalia.  the  district  that 
has  the  nu>st  to  offer  from  every  standpoint,  and  «>ecome  inde- 
pendent for  life*. 

For  particulais  and  information,  call  or  write  before  April  6tli. 

li.  HULTQUIST, 

S.\LES   MANAGER   ATTALIA   DEVELOPMENT  CO., 
Hotel  McKay.  Duiuth.  Minn. 


^^::':ti^  --^c^i^'..  V ; 


THE  FOUNDATION  OF  FORTUNE 


The  habit  of  saving,  formed  in  early  life,  is  the  founda- 
tion of  many  a  fortune. 

Thrifty  people  patronize  the  SAVINGS  DEPART- 
MENT OF  THIS  BANK,  and  prosper. 

The  department  of  savings  i.s  a  special  feature  with  this 
bank.  It  has  nanv  large  de])Osits.  It  has  manv  small  de- 
posits, and  ALL  DRAW  3  PER  CENT  INTEREST,  com- 
pounded semi-amually. 


I 
■■»— 

■ 


The  Northern  National  Bank,      220  W.  Snperior  Street. 


Overloailiiig  of  Horses. 

To   the  Editor  of  The  Herald: 

My  attention  has  been  called  several 
times  of  late  to  the  many  articles  in 
our  Duiuth  papers  in  reference  to  tlie 
overloading  of  horses. 

We  must  all  admit  that  Duiuth  is  a 
very  poor  place  to  lay  down  strict  rules 
as  to  how  much  we  may  load  on  a 
team,  on  account  of  the  different  per- 
centage of  grades  wliich  we  must  en- 
counter. I  do  not  believe  that  the  cause 
of  all  the  trouble  is  the  overloading  of 
wagons,  but  the  poor  management  of 
handling   teams. 

For  instance,  Thursday  night  at  just 
aliout  6  o'clock  when  crowds  of  people 
were  wending  their  way  iiome  from 
work,  a  driver,  who  was  holding  tiie 
lines  for  tlie  Stewart  Transfer  company 
in  one  of  tlieir  double  rigs,  wilii  a  team 
of  dark  l)ay  horses,  was  driving,  or 
coming  down  First  avenue  west.  Tiie 
horses  were  not  pri*perly  sliod  so  as  to 
prevent  them  from  slipping  on  the  slip- 
pery grade.  The  wagon,  or  dray,  was 
not  equipped  witli  breaks  at  all.  Tliere 
was  no  load  whatever  in  the  rig.  yet 
the  poor  horses  liad  all  that  tliey  could 
do    to    liold    the    rig    back. 

Now.  look  at  the  picture  of  this  man 
coming  down  the  hill,  not  trying  to 
assist  the  poor  horses,  but  wlilpping 
them  into  a  trot  and  when  they  fell, 
which  tliey  frequently  did.  would  apply 
the   lash   still   more   vigorously. 

On  both  sides  of  the  avenue  for 
several  blocks  I  could  see  men  and 
women  standing  looking  at  this  in- 
liunian  spectacle.  All  wanted  to  dorf 
sonietliing.  but  no  one  made  any  at- 
tempt. All  that  crowd  needed  was  a 
leader  and  I  can  assure  this  would-be 
driver  that  liad  some  of  those  men 
liad  him  In  iiand  lie  would  have  been 
given  a  little  dose  of  his  own  medicine. 

Now,  such  acts  make  people  think 
that  wagons  are  overloaded,  when  as  a 
matter  of  fact  this  is  not  the  case. 
See  tliat  your  horses  are  properly  shod. 
See  that  they  are  fed  well  and  in  good 
condition,  then  give  them  a  good 
steady  driver  and  watch  the  effect  of 
what  they  will  move  wlien  asked  to  do 
so.  Make  laws  that  compel  all  horses 
to  be  properly  shod.  see  that  all 
wagons  are  equipped  with  breaks,  etc., 
then  arrest  ail  drivers  treating  their 
liorses  in  a  cruel  manner  and  I  think 
that  you  will  solve  the  problem  of 
overloading  teams.     Respectfully, 

J.   H.   DAVIS. 

Duiuth,    March    JO. 


CONGRESS  PLANS 
A  LONGER  DAY 

Will  Work  More  Hours 

During  the  Tariff 

Debate. 

Washington.  March  20.— Neither 
house  of  congress  was  in  session  to- 
day. In  the  senate  Monday  atten- 
tion will  be  given  to  the  selection  of 
committees,  while  in  the  house  debate 
on  the  tariff  bill  will  begin.  It  is 
probable    that    an    agreBinent    will     be 


reached  whereby  tlie  sessions  shall 
commence  at  an  earlier  hour  and  run 
until   6  p.   nf,   this  arrangement  to  last 


P 
until    the    bill    is 


read 


for   amendment. 


Celtic  Is  Coniiiu;   Home. 

Naples     March    2  0. — The    American 
relief    ship    Celtic     has    arrived    liere 


from  Messina.  She  is  no  longer  needed 
in  the  South  and  will  leave  Sunday 
for  New  York.  Lieutenant  Comander 
Belknap  has  e.stablished  headquarters 
on   shore  at   Me-ssina. 


BuNy   Week   In    .\utbraoHe. 

Reading,  Pa.,  March  20. — Tills  has 
been  a  busy  week  in  the  anthracite 
coal  regions.  The  mines  of  the  Read- 
ing Coal  &  Iron  company  worked  five 
days  and  an  average  of  2'>0  loaded  cars 
of  fuel  were  brought  down  ilie  main 
line.  It  is  estimated  that  the  Reading 
mines  alone  contributed  about  440  tons 
to    the    coal    now    above    ground. 


An   Ideal  Cough  Medicine. 

"An  an  idt>al  cough  medicine  I  re- 
gard Chamberlain's  Cough  Rwnedy  in 
a  class  by  itself."  sayg  Dr.  R.  A.  Wilt- 
shire of  Gwynneville,  Ind.  *'I  take 
great  pleasure  in  testifj'lng  to  the  re- 
sults of  Chamberlain's  Cough  Medi- 
cine. In  fact.  I  know  of  no  other 
preparation  that  meets  so  fuly  the  ex- 
pectations of  the  must  exacting  in 
cases  of  croup  and  coughs  of  children. 
As  it  contains  no  opium,  chloroform  or 
morphine  It  certainly  makes  a  most 
safe,  pleasant  and  efficaciou.s  remedy 
for  the  ills  it  is  intended."  For  sale 
by   all   druggists. 


aHigin    »    lAi— 


Only  One  "BROMO  QUININE."  that  U 

Laxative  jj^romo  Oidnine 

Cures  a  ColO  in  One  Day,  Crip  in  2  Day* 


^^^ 


on  every 
25« 


VARICOCELE 

A  POSITIVE  CURE 


The  Progressive  Modical  Association 
offers    every    man    aiflicted    with    this 
destructive  malady  a  sure  and  lasting 
cure.     We  have  yet  to  fail  in  the  suc- 
cessful   treatment    of  this   affliction    so 
common    among    yovng    and    middle- 
aged,  men.        A    diseuse   which   causes 
so   much    mental    and    physical   misery 
that  It  is  simply  remarkable  men  will 
put  up  with  it  a  day   when  relief  and 
a  positive  cure  is  .so   sasily  and  speed- 
ily obtained  by  the  special  and  scien- 
tific    treatment     of     the     Progressive 
Medical    Association.        The   one    po.si- 
tive  cure  is  our  Electro-Medical  treat- 
ment.      If  you  are  suffering  with  mental  depre.ssion.  lack  of  manly  vigor, 
dragging  pains  along  the  spermatic  cord,    reflex   and    neuralgic    pains    in 
the   back  and   thighs    if   the   veins  at   the  scrotuna  are 
turous,  you  should   consult   us  without   delay 
generous   agreement   to   cure   you   or 
free.        Oftice  hours    >   a.   m.  to  8   p 

PROGRESSIVE  MEDICAL  ASSOCIATION 

1  \l'E!»T  SUPERIOR  STREET,  DUI.ITH. 


Tlie  Most 
Reliable 
and 

Suc«'essf«l 
Specialist 
in  I>iscases 
of  Men 
ill  the 
Northwest. 


dilatf-d  and      tor- 
We  make   the   fair     and 
refund   your   money.        Consultation 
m.        Sundays  10  a.  m.  to  I  p.  m. 


-TIl'TMI-triH 


I 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD,;j     S^ATURDAY,    MARCH   20,   1909. 


<  I         I  ~»r « 


■       ■ 


■i 


BRANCH    OFFICES  J 
J.  MoraB,  405  Central  Ave.  A.    Jcnfien,    330    Xorth    57*h    Ave. 


West. 


ASSIGNEE  IS 
DISCHARGED 

Affairs  of  Defunct  Amer- 
ican Carbolite  Company 
Closed  Up. 

Surplus  Money  Turned 

Over  to  New  Company 

as  Dividend. 


The  last  echo  of  the  American  Carbo" 
lite  company  of  the  Hartenstein  days, 
was  heard  In  district  court  this  morn- 
ing, when  W.  W,  McMillan,  assignee, 
aubmltted  his  final  report.  The  re- 
port was  received  and  Mr..  McMillan 
was    discharged    from    further   service. 

Mr.  McMillan  reported  that  after  the 
payment  of  all  outstanding  claims  not 
held  by  tlie  new  .\merlcan  Carbolite 
company,  he  had  H9. 334.29.  which  he 
turned  over  to  the  American  Carbolite 
company,  as  a  final  dividend  on  the 
claims     held     by     the    company. 

The  American  Carbolite  company 
traveled  a  rocky  road  during  the  time 
H.  L.  Haitenstein  was  president.  There 
were  charge.s  of  mismanagement  and 
pressing  creditors  finally  forced  an  as- 
Blgnment.  Immediately  alter  Mr.  Mc- 
Millan's  appointment  as  assignee,  lie 
began  the  operation  of  the  plant  and 
continued  to  operate  it  successfully  un~ 
til  It  was  taken  over  by  the  American 
Carbolite  company,  which  was  incor- 
porated under  the  laws  of  Minnesota, 
a    few    monllis    ago. 

The  new  American  Carbolite  com- 
pany bouglit  all  of  the  outstanding 
claims  that  could  be  gathered  together 
and  the  funds  held  by  the  assignee  at 
the  winding  up  of  the  affairs 
assignment  went  to  tlie  new 
as    a    dividend. 

The  new  American  Carbolite  com- 
pany is  now  successfully  operating  the 
plant  at  the  foot  of  Fifty-fifth  avenue 
west.  The  product  is  being  turned  out 
and  sliipped  dally  and  tlie  venture,  the 
success  of  which  was  extremely  du- 
bloii!*  for  a  time,  bids  fair  to  come  up 
to  tlie  original  expectations.  Questions 
of  the  company's  right  to  use  the  pat- 
ents on  which  its  business  Is  built. 
have  all  been  disposed  of.  It  Is  sa,id, 
so  that  there  is  no  fear  of  trouble 
from    that    quarter. 


enth  avenue  west  and  Roosevelt  street, 
there  will  be  services  in  the  morning 
conducted  in  the  Norwegian  language. 
The  services  will  begin  at  10:30  o'clock. 
Sunday  school  will  be  held  at  9:30 
o'clock.  The  Y.  P.  society  will  meet 
Thursday  evening  at  tlie  home  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Thomas  Olafson,  6724  Hunt- 
ington street. 

«  *  • 
At  the  Asbury  M.  K.  church.  Sixtieth 
avenue  west  and  Italelgn  street,  the 
pastor.  Hey.  Thomas  Grice,  will  preach 
at  both  services.  In  the  morning  at 
10:30  o'clock  his  topic  will  be  "The 
Danger  of  Disillusionment,"  and  In  the 
evening  he  will  speak  on  "Plausibili- 
ties "  A  number  of  persons  will  join 
the  "church  at  this  service.  There 
be  special  music  at  both  services, 
day  si  liool  will  meet 
and  Epworth  league. 
Crosby 
o'clock 


will 
Sun- 
at    11:45    o'clock 
with    Miss    Hazel 
as     leader,    will    meet    at    6:45 
In  the  evening. 


There  will  be  services  at  the  Merrltl 
Memorial  M.  E.  churcli.  Forty-sixth 
avenue  west  and  Halifax  street,  in  the 
•nornlng  at  11  .o'clock,  when  the  pas- 
tor, Rhv.  K.  F.  Stldd,  will  preach  on 
the  topic,  "The  Tongue,"  and  In  the 
evening  at  7:45  o'clock,  when  Rev.  C. 
K.  Hoyden  of  Two  Harbors  will  preach. 
Sunday  school  will  meet  at  10  a.  m., 
and  class  meeting  will  be  held  at 
noon.  .Junior  league  will  meet  at  3 
o'clock  and  Epworth  league  at  6:4o 
o'clock. 

•  •       • 

At  the  .«!t.  Stephen's  Evangelical 
Lutheran  church,  Sixty-seventh  avenue 
west  and  Raleigh  street,  there  win  be 
seryi<-e  tomorrow  morning  at  10:15 
o'clock,  conducted  in  the  German  lan- 
guage,  by   Rev.   \V.    Sieyors,   the  pastor. 

•  •       • 
Rev.    J.    A.     McGaughey    will    supply 

the    pulpit    of    the    'VN'^estniinster    Pres- 
byterian   church,    Sunday    morning    at 
10:30  o'clock.        y.   P.  S.  C.  E.  will  meet 
at    6:45    o'clock    In    the    evening. 
«       •       • 
At    the    "VVest    Duluth    Baptist    church 
tomorrow,     the    pastor.       Rev.       Arthur 
Iloag.   will    preach   at    both   services.    In 
tlie  morning  at  10:30  o'clock  and  In  the 
evening    at    7:45    o'clock.        The    B.    Y. 
P.   A.   will  meet  at  the   usual  hour  with 
Miss    Georgina    Ross    as    leader.         The 
subject     win     be,     "The     Wicker    Gate," 
Pilgrim's    Progress    series. 


of    the 
company 


MOTHER  GOES  TO 
BRING  SON  HOME 

Nothing  New  Has  Been 
Heard  of  Norman  Pat- 
ton's  Condition. 

In  order  to  be  with  her  son,  Nor- 
man Patton.  who  is  suffering  fronj^a 
complete  breakdown  in  Portland,  Or.. 
Mrs.  W.  Langslow  of  619  North  Flfty- 
sixtr    avenue    west    left    this    morning 

for    tlie    West. 

Mr.  Patton  disappeared  mysteriously 
over  two  weeks  ago,  and  in  that  time 
traveled.  wliile  mentally  unsound, 
across  tl-.e  continent  from  New  York 
to  I'ortland.  where  his  brother  hap- 
pened by  the  merest  chance  to  meet 
him  on  the  street.  The  brother  Im- 
mediately wired  Duluth.  stating  that 
I'atton   is   being  cared    for  at   his  home. 

Asi<le  from  the  first  news  from  Port- 
land, nothing  else  concerning  the 
young  man's  condition  has  been 
learned.  It      is     beyond     comprehen- 

sion how  he  could  have  made  his  way 
from  coast  to  coast  with  only  $30  in 
his  pocket,  in  the  time  that  he  ac- 
oompUslieU  the  trip.  It  would  have 
been  a  hard  undertaking  for  a  sane 
man. 

Mrs.  Patton  remained  In  Duluth.  to 
await  the  lif>mecomlng  of  her  husband, 
which  will  be  as  soon  as  It  Is  safe  for 
him    to    travel    again. 


in    the 


West  Duluth  Briefs. 


Miss  Martha  Digiius  and  .John 
Dlgmis  left  yesterday  for  the  West. 
Miss  Dignus  is  going  to  Tacoma, 
where  she  intends  to  make  her  home, 
and  Mr.  Dignus  went  to  Seattle,  where 
he    will   attend    tlie   fair. 

Tickets  to  or  from  Europe  for  sale 
by    .\.    J.    Lindgren.      Lowest    prices. 

The  members  of  the  Girl.s'  Sewing 
society  of  the  Ellm  Swedish  I.,utheran 
church  were  entertained  this  afternoon 
at  the  home  of  Mrs.  Anton  Wallln.  20 
North   Fiftieth    avenue   west. 

Tlie  parsonage  of  the  Ellm  Swedish 
Lutheran  church  is  being  repaired  and 
painted. 

School  supplies  at  Glanders  drug 
store.  Fifty-seventh  avenue  and  Grand 
street. 

Mrs.  S.  J.  P.  Lackle  of  Tower  Is 
visiting  at  the  home  of  her  parents, 
Mr.    and    Mrs.    Paradise. 

There  was  no  curling  last  evening  at 
the  Western  Curling  rink,  on  account 
of    the    soft    ice. 

Watch    repairing.    Hurst.    W.    Duluth 

Mrs.  Weber  of  309  South  Filty- 
seventh  avenue  west,  will  entertain  the 
Royal  Neighbors  Tuesday  afternoon  at 
2   o'clock. 

Lots  1  and  2,  block  45.  West  Duluth 
division,  were  sold  through  the  office 
of  I>.   A.    Barnes,   to   Bertha   E.   Olander. 

The  members  of  the  Asbur.v  Piano 
club  will  give  a  concert  next  Friday 
evening  at  the  church.  The  concert 
will  be  under  the  leadership  of  Miss 
Mabel    Fulton. 

Tickets  to  or  from  Europe  for  sale 
by  A.  .T.   Llndgren.     Lowest  prices. 


THE  FIRST 
BALLGAME 

It  Was  a  Glorious  Vic- 
tory for  the  Slug- 
gers. 

But  If  "Mickey"  Only 

Hadn't  Been  Helping 

His  Mother  -  -  - . 


The    baseball   season    is   here. 

The  first  local  game  was  played  this 
morning  and  the  local  ball  season  has 
been    officially   declared    open. 

The  mayor  didn't  make  a  speech  or 
throw  the  first  ball  over  the  plate,  nor 
did  the  members  of  the  city  council 
parade  the  streets  in  carriages,  but 
the  season  is  open  just  the  same,  ac- 
cording to  the  boys  who  played  the 
game. 

The  names  of  the  opposing  nines 
were  the  Eagles  and  the  Sluggers.  The 
Sluggers  won  by  a  score  of  6  to  5,  as 
nearly  as  could  be  told  by  representa- 
tives of  the   two   teams. 

There  were  nine  men  on  each  side, 
and  they  played  the  game  as  invented 
by  Father  Chadwick,  according  to  the 
boys  themselves,  for  the  entire  eight- 
een came  Into  The  Herald  office  this 
noon  to  report  the  game.  To  prove 
what  they  said,  they  brought  their 
bats,  gloves,   and  the   very   ball   used. 

They  all  wanted  to  talk  at  once  and 
It  was  with  difficulty  that  one  small 
reporter  finally  got  the  story  straight. 
They  agreed  tliat  the  score  was  cor- 
rect, 6  to  5,  and  that  the  Sluggers  won, 
but  there  was  a  great  deal  of  argu- 
ment as  to  wliat  the  score  might  have 
been  If  "Smouse'  had  not  slipped  as 
he  was  passing  third  on  his  way  home 
on  a  swift  bee-liner,  hit  by  Roy  and 
fielded    by    Rogers. 

Then  it  is  said  that  because  one  of 
the  Eagles  had  to  stay  home  and  help 
his  mother  with  the  Saturday  cooking, 
that  the  team  was  crippled  severely. 
They  feel  their  defeat  very  keenly  and 
insist  that  had  Mickey  been  in  the 
gpme.  the  score  would  have  been  re- 
versed. They  are  anxious  to  arrange 
another  game,  but  the  Sluggers  say 
they  only  played  them  for  practice 
anvway,  and  that  they  are  not  partic- 
ular about  meeting  the  team  with  the 
flighty    name   again.  .     .      » 

It  was  impossible  to  find  out  just 
exactly  where  the  game  was  played. 
One  bov  who  looked  extremely  cold  In 
a  baseball  suit,  said  It  was  on  Fourth 
street  and  Lake  avenue.  Another  said 
that  they  used  half  the  field  and  half 
the  street  as  lialf  the  field  was  as  yet 
under  the  snow.  In  order  to  put  a 
stop  to  tlie  argument,  a  fair-haired 
vouth  said  that  it  could  be  "put  in 
plavod    "in    the    city." 

"Gee.  it  is  great  to  be  able  to  play 
again,"  said  one  as  he  put  a  dent  in  a 
new  glove  with  his  right  fist.  "And 
we  cleaned  'em  up.  Say  if  you  are  the 
sporting  editor  just  put  it  in  that  wed 
like  to  get  a  game  with  the  Eighth 
Avenues."  ,        ^      ^ 

And   the  whole  bunch   trouped  out  of 
the   office. 
The   lineup: 

Eagl«».  Sluggers. 

Jones     catclier O  rx  iiell 

Kfrill    pitcher HoRer- 


c 


CDTY  H^BIErS 


Monotype    Cunipu«itiuu. 

Quick   work   by   Thwing-Stewart  Co. 


this 


nefectlve    Chimmer- 

A  defective  chimney  this  noon  caused 
a  small  fire  on  the  roof  of  the  home  of 
W.  H.  Hancock,  731  West  Third  street, 
but  the  fire  department  had  the  blaze 
extinguished  befoHM^  moRre  than  a  few 
dollars'   damage  wp|  i9op«. 

Mra.    Heln^om    Dies. 

Mrs.  Johanna  Helstrotn  of  1614  East 
Fourth  street,  64  /years,  of  age,  died 
yesterday.  She  is  survived  by  a  hus- 
band and  three  children^  The  funeral 
will  be  held  Monday  afternoon  at  2 
o'clock  from  the  Swedish  Baptist 
rhurch,  Ninth  avenue  east  and  First 
street. 


"THE  MYSTERY  OF  THE  SUITCASE," 
A  STREET  RAILWAY  DRAMA 


Death    of    .Mm.    Annie    Xold. 

Mrs.  Annie  Nold  died  at  St.  Mary's 
hospital  this  morning,  at  the  age  of 
50  years.  The  remains  will  be  sliipped 
to  Stockholm,  Minn.,  for  interment.  The 
deceased  was  a  widow,  and  had  no 
children. 


Tlie   QueMion   Ciab. 

"Resolved.  That  the  Social  Evil 
Should  be  Concentrated."  is  the  ques- 
tion for  discussion  at  the  Question 
club,  tomorrow  afternoon  at  3  o'clock, 
in    the    municipal   court    room. 


Enters    Sacred    Heart    School. 

Miss  Esther  Jessard  has  entered  the 
Sacred  Heart  institute  at  Third  ave- 
nue   east    and    Third    street. 


DancinK   Vnrty. 

The  members  of  the  Sans  Souci 
club  will  entertain  at  their  first 
dancing  party  Thursday  evening  of 
next  week  at  the  old  Masonic  temple 
ballroom.  La  Brosse's  orchestra  will 
play. 

■ 
Literary   Club   MeetInK* 

The  regular  meeting  of  tlie  Lester 
Park  Literary  club  will  be  held  Tues- 
day afternoon  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
Vaughn  of  5333  London  Road.  The 
leader  will  be  Mrs.  Goodrich.  The 
outline  Is  as  follows:  "Russian  Ex- 
pansion,' "Russia  as  a  World  Power, ' 
"The  Lyric  Poets  of  Russia, "  Mrs.  Will- 
iams; reading,  Mrs.  Pond.  Music  will 
be    furnished    by   Mrs.    Vaughn. 


Wanted    To    Buy. 

An     engineer's    transit.       McCloud    & 
Smith,   Sellwood    bitllding. 


The  persons  who  were  on  a  West 
Duluth  car  this  morning  coming  east 
about  noon,  are  no  doubt  still  puzzling 
their  heads  over  a  little  Incident  which 
took   place   on    the   car. 

At  about  Fifty-third  avenue  west  a 
young  woman  carrying  a  suit  case 
boarded  the  car  and  took  a  seat  di- 
rectly opposite  a  smartly  dressed 
young  man,  whose  profession  might  be 
guessed  by  the  sample  case  at  his  side. 
He  was  apparently  deeply  absorbed  In 
reading"  a  newspaper  and  did  not  ap- 
pear to   notice   the  lady   enter   the   ear. 

Shortly  after  she  had  taken  her  seat. 
a  kitten  began  to  cry.  the  sound  ap- 
parently coming  from  her  suit  case. 
Several  of  the  passengers  looked  In- 
(lulringly  from  the  young  woman  to 
her  traveling  case,  and  under  their 
gaze,  as  the  cries  of  the  cat  persisted, 
her  cheeks  grew  crimson,  and  she  ap- 
peared to  be  very  much  confused.  The 
conductor  hearing  the  sound  stooped 
and    glanced    under    the    seats    and    the 


SUICIDE'S  BODY 
FROZEN  IN  BLOOD 

Ghastly  Ending  of  an 
Aged  Resident  of  Me- 
nominee, Mich. 

Menominee,  Mich.,  March  20.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— Morose  over  the 
recent  death  of  his  wife  and  companion 
for  nearly  sixty  years,  Andrew  Kruse, 
aged  SI,  committed  suicide  by  hanging 
himself  In  his  barn  late  last  night.  De- 
termined to  make  sure  of  the  deed  he 
slashed  his  hands  and  arms  In  a  dozen 
places,  and  when  the  body  was  found 
by  his  son-in-law  early 
it  was  encased  In  frozen 


A.   B.   Kenn^y   Keturna. 

A.  B.  Kenney,  of  Kenney  &  Anker, 
returned  yesterday,  after  a  five  weeks' 
absence  In  the  East,  during  which  time 
he  visited  Detroit,  Buffalo,  New  York, 
Chicago  and  Kansas  City,  gathering 
ideas  for  the  remodeling  of  the  Ken- 
ney &  Anker  store  here.  Mr.  Kenney 
spent  a  few  days  at  Hot  Springs,  Ark., 
on  his  way  home,  and  where  he  met 
several  Dulutliians  who  are  enjoying 
the  fine  weatlier,  and  watching  the 
professional  ball  players  getting  in 
form  for  the  seacon.  Business.  Mr. 
Kenney  says.  Is  tetter  in  the  South- 
west than  in  the  Eftst. 


this    morning 
blood. 


Leave*   P«r    W*«t. 

Thomas  O.  Wilson,  private  of  the 
Eighth  Infantry,  Irho  has  been  sta- 
tioned in  Duluth  for  tlk-  past  two 
years,  in  charge  of  recruiting  work, 
left  yesterday  for  Vancouver  barrack.s, 
Washington.  Private  "Wilson  came  to 
Duluth  from  the  Twenty-eighth  infan- 
try. Company  I,  stationed  at  Fort 
Snelllng. 


For    Rent    May    1. 

Twelve-room  residence,  201  West 
Third  street.  Plenty  of  room  for  of- 
fices and  residence  for  a  professional 
business.  H.  H.  Hanford,  Sellwood 
building. 


Jdhiison 

Keni4 

.Mi-Graw 

Roy    

McMann 
White  . . 
W.Tlker    . 


first  \':\f.c. 

. .  .seooiul  b«?e. 
. . .thin!  base. . 
, . .  .sUort  slop. . 
....Ufl  field... 
. .  .cent* I  fieUl. . 

rlflii  fielil.  . 

S 


Ueiietl 
Abelsi'ii 
..J.  Noll 
F(>rr*»t€-r 
...  Naoy 
.  Mallei 
Mlchatul 


Carpenters*  Inion  iyio.361,  Altenfion 


All 
tend 
Ilaiii 

KHMt 

•2'J,  at 


ineiiiltrrN  lire  re<|ueK(ed  to  nt- 
Iho  fiinernl  of  Brtuher  WII- 
.\iiieH.  Servlcen  at  houMe.  IIHI 
'I'iiird   Htreet,    Monday,    March 


2:45   p.   HI.      SiKned, 

I',    T.    .M.4H.VND.4W, 

I'reMifient. 


Comniert'ial  Club 


-Meeting. 


Tlioiigh  there  was  a  good  attendance 
at  the  meeting  of  the  West  Dulutli 
Commeri-ial  <-lub  last  evening  no  mat- 
ters of  importance  came  up  for  con- 
sideration. The  membership  conwnit- 
tee  reported  that  progress  is  being 
made  in  their  campaign  for  new  mem- 
bers, and  *tlie  banquet  committee  is 
busy  making  arrangements  for  the 
club's  annuak dinner,  which  will  be  lield 
In  Wade's  hall  on   April   15. 


AUTO  SHOW 
FOR  WJLUTH 

E.  J.  Flliatrault  Says  This 

Ctiy  Should  Have  One 

Next  Year. 


c 


FE^SOii^L 


J 


is 


West  Duluth  Chiiiehes. 

At  the  Holy  Apostle's  Episcopal 
church.  Fifty-seventh  avenue  west  and 
Elinor  street,  there  will  be  services  at 
10:4o  o'clock,  when  the  rector.  Rev. 
Roderick  .1.  Mooney  will  preach  on  tht 
subject.  "Three  Enemies  of  a  Holy  and 
a  Happy  Home."  Sunday  school  will 
meet  immediately  after  the  service 
•       •       • 

At    the    Immanuel    Evangelical    Luth- 
eran   cliurch    of    the    Synod.    Fifty-sev- 


If  You  Know 

A  Good  Tiling 
When  You  See  It, 
Look  These  Up 

\VOODI>AXD. 

C9flAA  "-room  house,  large  hall. 
#&UUU  good  well  and  cistern: 
barn  and  chicken  house:  half  block 
from  <-ar  line:  garden  well  stocked 
with  small  fruits;  lot  75x100  feet; 
terms  easy. 

LESTER  PARK. 
AQCAA  .Six-room  house,  cellar: 
w&UUU  hardwood  floors;  good 
Will  and  cistern:  electric  light:  good 
barn:  fine  garden  well  stocked,  with 
bearing  fruit  trees:  two  lots  50x1-10 
and   50.\100;    reasonable    terms. 

We    Write    luNiiranoe    In    A-1 
ConipnnieN  ttuly. 

GHAS.  P.  CRAIG  &  CO. 

.%0l-504  Sellwood   BlUar. 


The   Minneapolis  Shew 

Eclipsed  the  One  Held 

in  Chicago. 


F.  L.  Flliatrault  of  the  Mutual  A.ito- 
mobile  company,  arrived  home  last 
night  at  Minneapolis,  where  he  at- 
tended tlie  automobile  show  being  held 
in  that  city.  Mr.  Flliatrault,  who  visit- 
ed both  the  Minneapolis  and  Chicago 
e.xhlbitions.  says  tliat  the  Minnesota 
show  was  far  ahead  of  that  pulled  oft 
recently  in  Chicago, 

**Tliere  was  great  Interest  in  the  ex- 
liibition,"  said  Mr.  Flliatrault  this 
morning.  "Wiiat  struck  me  particu- 
larly was  the  large  number  of  farmers 
wlio  were  on  hand  to  look  over  the  ma- 
chines   and    willing      to      buy.      Dakota 

farmers  ordered  many  machines,  as  did 
those  from  Minnesota.  Duluth  was  well 
represented,  as  were  the  range  towns. 
There  were  prospective  purchasers 
from  Port  Arthur.  International  Falls 
and  many  other  out  of  the  way   towns. 

"The  decorations  were  most  beau- 
tiful. The  walls  of  the  sliow  rooms 
were  hung  with  rich  pictures  of  motor- 
ists in  other  countries  and  models  of 
many  cars  adorned  the  booths." 

••T"here  were  a  great  many  sales 
made  as  a  result  of  the  show  and  the 
dealers  from  all  over  the  state  re- 
port a  booming  business.  A  number 
of  Duluth  men  placed  orders  for  cars 
and  you  can  say  that  there  will  be 
at  least  twice  as  many  machines  in 
Duluth    this   coming   summer   as   last. 

"The  past  winter  has  demonstrated 
beyond  a  doubt  that  automobiles  can 
l)e"  used  tiie  entire  year  in  Duluth,  "and 
this  is  a  big  factor  with  people  wlio 
wish  a  conveyance  to  serve  the  year 
round. 

"There  were  at  the  Minneapolis 
show  the  usual  number  of  freak  cars, 
but  they  do^  not  take,  and  even  those 
who  are  unfamiliar  with  automobiles 
steer  clear  of  them. 

"Duluth  should  wake  Un  and  ne.\t 
year  hold  an  automobile  show  of  her 
own.  It  brings  lots  of  business  to  the 
city  and  is  a  mighty  good  advertise- 
ment for  the  town.  This  matter.  It  is 
likely,  will  be  talked  up  during  the 
coming  summer  and  plans  made  to  liold 
the  first  show  in  the  armory  next 
winter. 


COPPER  STOCK 
MARKET  WEAK 

Shares  Have  Dull  Tone 

and  Prices  Are 

Off. 

The  copper  stock  market  was  dull 
and  weak  during  the  session  today. 
North  Butte  opened  at  $67,  declined 
to  $66,  rallied  to  $67  and  closed  at 
$67  bid  and  $67.25  a.sked.  Amal- 
gamated opened  at  $68.12  »4,  declined 
to  $68  rallied  to  $68.50  and  closed 
at   $68,121/2    bid   and    $68.25   asked. 

Greene-Cananea  opened  at  $9.37  >4 
and  closed  at  $9.25  bid  and  $9.37 'i 
asked.  Butte     Coalition     opened     at 

$23,  declined  to  $22.1214  and  closed 
at  $22  bid  and  $22.25  asked.  Calu- 
met &  Arizona  opened  at  $99.87  »^,  ad- 
vanced to  $100  and  closed  at  $99  bid 
and  $100  asked.  Giroux  opened  at 
$8..t0.  declined  to  $8.25  and  closed  at 
$8.25  bid  and  $8.50  asked.  Anaconda 
opened  at  $40.50,  advanced  to  $40.75 
and  closed  at  $40.75  bid. 

Superior  &  Pittsburg  sold  at  $13.25 
and  $13,12  1/2  and  closed  at  $13.12  Vz 
bid  and  $13.25  asked.  National  sold 
off  from  53  cents  to  50  cents  and 
closed  at  50  cents  bid  and  52  cents 
asked. 

Denn-Arlzona  wa^  inactive  and 
closed  at  $3.50  bid  and  $3.75  asked, 
Globe  at  $4.87 1/^  bid  and  $5.12 '^ 
asked,  Butte  &  Superior  at  99  cents 
bid  and  $1,12  1/2  asked.  Calumet  & 
Sonora  at  $13  bid  and  $13.50  asked. 
Red  Warrior  at  $2,121-^  bid  and  $2.25 
asked.  Mowitza  $1.25  bid  and  $1.37  i/i 
asked.  Carman  at  $1.12 '^  bid  and 
$1.3714  asked.  Savanna  $2  bid  and 
$2.25  asked,  Butte-Ballaklava  at  $16 
asked.  Cliff  $1.50  bid  and  $1.75  a-^ked. 
Copper  Queen  of  Idaho  $1.37 1^  bid 
and  $1.50  a.sked.  Cactus  at  $1.37 1/4 
bid  and  $1.50  asked,  and  Chief  Con- 
solidated at  95  cents  bid  and  98  cents 
asked. 

Black  Mountain  sold  at  97  cents, 
advanced  to  $1  and  closed  at  99 
cents   bid   and    $1    asked. 

FINEST  DOCK  ON 

THE  PORTAGE  LAKE. 


W.  F.  Lawrence  of  Two  Harbors  is 
at    the    St.    Louis. 

John  Stokke,  mayor  of  Floodwopd, 
at  the  St.   Louis. 

C.  R.  Woods  of  Chlsholm  is  at  the 
St.  Louis. 

Mrs.  Goldsworthy  of  Two  Harbors 
is    at    the    ot.    Louis, 

Louis  M.  Osborn  of  Virginia  Is  at 
the    St.    Louis.  ^  _,  , 

J.  S.  Clark  and  M.  A.  Clark  of  Chls- 
holm   are    at    the    St.    Louis. 

Charles  F.  Beebe  of  Marble  Is  at  the 
.Spalding. 

W.  H.  Patton  of  Marble  is  at  the 
Spalding. 

E.  A.  Shores  arrived  last  evening 
from  Tacoma.  Wash.,  to  be  the  guest 
of  his  daughter,  Mrs.  A.  E.  Walker  of 
Chester  Terrace.  Mr.s.  Shores  has  been 
the  guest  of  Dr.  and  Mrs.  Walker  for 
a  few  weeks. 

William  Getty  returned  home  last 
night  after  a  two  weeks'  trip  through 
the    West. 

G.  L.  Arnold  of  Cloquet  is  at  St. 
Luke's  hospital,  where  he  has  been 
operated  on  for  appendicitis.  He  is 
reported    to    be    recovering. 


BRYAN  REBUKES 
THE  UNFAITHFUL 

Scores   Democrats  Who 

Voted  With  the  Cannon 

Forces. 

Lincoln,  Neb.,  March  20.— In  a  late 
speech  at  the  Bryan  fiftieth  birthday 
anniversary  banquet,  which  lasted  until 
early  today,  William  J.  Bryan,  rebuked 
the  twenty-three  Democrats  in  con- 
gress who  had  aided  the  Cannon  forces. 

"They  could  not  say  they  did  not 
know,  "  said  Mr.  Bryan,  "for  any  man 
who  did  not  know  that  Joe  Cannon  is 
the  agent  of  plutocracy  ought  to  be 
sent  to  an  asylum  instead  of  to  con- 
gress. 

"These  Democrats  ought  to  hear 
from  their  constituents."  ^ 

TAFT  WOULD  HI  RRY  THE 
PANAMA  CANAL  COMPLETION 

Washington,  March  20. — It  developed 
today  that  during  a  recent  conversa- 
tion between  President  Taft  and  Chair 
ma  Goethals,  of  the  Isthmian  canal 
commission,  the  president  expressed 
his  desire  that  the  Panama  canal  be 
completed  by  the  Fourth  of  July,  ISl-i. 
Col.  Goethals,  however,  is  not  at  all 
sanguine  of  accomplisliing  any  such 
result,  holding  to  his  hertolore  ex- 
pressed opinion  that  Jan.  lo,  191o,  will 
•-  -jvlgation.  Col. 
New    York    for 


eyes  of  all  the  passengers  followed 
his.  A  more  pronounced  "meow" 
brought  his  gaze  suddenly  to  the  suit 
case,  tlien  a  broad  smile  spread  over 
his  face  and  he  turned  his  back  and 
went  out  on  the  platform,  leaving  the 
passengers  staring  at  ths  embarrassed 
woman,  who  In  desperiition  tried  to 
cover  her  suit  case  with  her  skirt. 

Just  then  the  young  tnan  who  had 
been  reading  pushed  tlie  button  and 
arose  to  leave  the  car.  On  his  way 
out  he  went  across  the  aisle  and 
speaking  so  that  thost;  near,  could 
hear,  said  "Madame,  I  sh'>uld  think  you 
would  be  afraid  your  cal  would  smoth- 
er In  that  suit  case." 

"But  there's  no  cat  in  there." 
exclaimed  the  confuseti  and  deeply 
mystified  woman. 

When  the  car  stopped  the  man  who 
had  been  reading  got  out.  After  that 
cries  of  the  kitten  suddenly  ceased, 
much  to  the  perplexity  3f  the  passen- 
gers and  the  relief  of  the  embarrassed 
woman. 


MAYOR  READY 
TO  DOjilS  PART 

Will  Call  Mass  Meeting 

on  Tonnage  Tax,  If 

Needed. 

Mayor  Haven  stands  r«  ady  to  do  any- 
thing that  may  be  recommended  by 
senators  from  this  district  In  regard 
to  the  tonnage  tax  measure.  He  is 
awaiting  word  from  S;.  Paul  before 
taking  action. 

"Duluth  should  mos:  certainly  do 
something  to  show  her  dissatisfaction 
over  the  passage  of  the  bill  by  the 
lower  branch  of  the  legislature,  and  to 
protest  against  similar  action  on  the 
part  of  the  senate,"  said  the  mayor  this 
morning. 

"1  am  not  prepared  to  say  just  what 
would  be  the  best  course  to  pursue.  I 
am  hoping  to  hear  from  some  of  our 
state  senators  on  this  :Joint.  I  have 
thought  of  calling  a  mans  meeting,  and 
of  sending  delegations  of  business  men 
to  St.  Paul  to  appear  before  the  senate 
and  enter  a  protest,  but  I  am  not  sure 
that  this  would  be  the  most  effective 
plan.  Some  method  of  showing  Du- 
luth's  opposition  and  indignation  at  the 
action    of    the    house    will    be    adopted.' 


REVOLUTION, 
THEY  HINT 

French  Strike  Agitators 

Make  the  Situation 

Seem  Blacker. 


Make  Capital  of  Indorse- 
ment of  Government's 
Position. 


Paris,  March  20. — It  is  too  early  yet 
to  gauge  the  effect  of  the  indorsement 
of  the  attitude  of  the  government  in 
the  present  strike  situation,  voiced  the 
chamber  of  deputies  yesterday,  but 
on  the  surface  the  outlook  is  blacker, 
than   ever. 

The  agitators  are  talking  as  If  the 
indorsement  of  the  government's  posi- 
tion might  fan  the  fiames  of  the  pres- 
ent movement  Into  a  veritable  revolu- 
tionary explosion.  The  organization  for 
the  protection  of  the  rights  of  trades 
unionism  has  called  meetings  of  every 
branch  of  industry  and  commerce,  when 
it  will  be  proposed  to  Join  them  unless 
the  government  finds  a  quick  solution. 
The  organization  voted  $1,000  to  aid 
the  cause.  Another  serious  indication 
is  a  small  contribution  from  the  Parid 
police. 

What  is  going  on  behind  the  scenes 
can  be  Judged  from  the  open  intima- 
tions in  government  organs  that  M. 
Simyan.  under  secretary  of  posts  and 
telegraplis,  will  be  eflaced,  either  by 
tran.sfer  or  by  tiie  organization  of  the 
department,  by  which  his  position  will 
be  converted  to  that  of  controller, 
under  the  postmaster  general,  as  in 
the  English   system. 

Premier  Clemenceau  and  his  col- 
leagues faced  the  strike  Interpellations 

deputies    yesterday 


STEEL  TRUST  TO 
SHUT  UP  PLANTS 


New  York,  March  20. — It  was 
learned  today  that  the  United  States 
Steel  corporation  has  decided,  unless 
business  speedily  improves,  to  close 
down  the  principal  r  lants  of  the 
Tennessee  Coal  &  Iron  company  at 
Ensley,  Ala..  April  1. 

The  Bessemer,  Ala.  plant  of  the 
company  was  shut  dov  n  recently  and 
it  was  stated  would  remain  idle  until 
business  conditions  showed  material 
improvement. 

The  Ensley  plant,  with  sixteen  blast 
furnaces,  has  a  capaci;y  of  850,000 
tons   annually. 


COLLIGAN  RESIGNS  AND 
WARDEN  NAMES  BACKHAND 


hertofore 
that   Jan.   15,   1915, 
see  the  canal   open   to   navigation. 
Goetlials      will      leave 
Panama    next    Saturday. 


DENTISTRY  PROFESSOR, 

DISLIKED.  RESIGNS. 


AWAIT  WORD 
FROM  SENATORS 


The  directors  of  he  Commercial  club 
will  await  some  word  from  tlie  mem- 
bers of  the  St.  Louis  county  delega- 
tion before  taking  any  action  upon 
the  tonnage  tax  question.  If  the 
members  of  the  delegation  should 
deem  It  wise  to  hold  a  mass  meeting, 
or  do  something  that  would  show  how 
the  people  In  the  northern  part  of  the 
state  feel  over  the  action  of  the  legis- 
lature, the  directors  of  the  club  will 
foUow  the  advice  of  the  members  of 
the  delegation. 

The  public  affairs  committee  will 
meet  next  Wednesday.  At  that  time 
the  tonnage  tax  (juestlon  will  be  taken 
up.  However,  no  action  will  be  taken 
bv  the  members  of  the  committee  be- 
fore some  word  has  been  received  from 
the    delegation. 


St.  Paul, 
cial  to  The 
ton  of 
in  the 
In  his 
dental 
passed 


St.    Paul,    Minn.,    March 
to    The    Herald.) — Michael 
lesigned  as  deputy  warden 
prison    late    yesterday     ifternoon.   War- 
den   Wolfer    accepted      he    resignation, 
to  take  effect  at  once,  and  immediately 
promoted    Jonas     W.     Hackland     to    the 
position.      John    J.    Sullivan    was    today 
appointed  by  Warden  V^olfer  as  assist, 
ant  deputy  war<len. 

CHirAOOCHRONiri'irnL 

IN  HANDS  OF  RECEIVER. 


in    the    chamber   of 

with  a  determination  to  secure  Indorse- 
ment of  the  government's  position,  or 
retire  from  office.  They  won,  for  the 
cl.amber  rejected  a  resolution  provid- 
ing for  a  commission  to  Investigate  the 
causes  of  the  strike  by  a  vote  of  354 
to  188.  The  chamber  then  adopted  a 
sweeping  indorsement  of  the  govern- 
ment's attitude  by  a  vole  of  368  te 
21i. 

Women  Return  <o  Work. 
A  semi-official  note  Issued  today 
says  that  a  considerable  number  of 
women  have  returned  to  work,  but  In 
.•^pite  of  this,  the  situation  lias  not 
sensibly  improved.  The  government 
has  formally  notified  the  strikers  that 
forty-eight  hours'  grace  will  be  al- 
lowed them  to  return  to  work,  after 
which  their  dismissal  will  be  irre- 
vocable. Orders  have  been  given  that 
notices  be  posted  throughout  the 
country  announcing  the  holding  of 
competitive  examinations  next  week. 
for   the   postal    service. 

No  atiempt  yet  has  been  made  to  re- 
store the  money  order  and  the  regis- 
tered mail  service  in  Paris. 

The  paralysis  of  business  is  becom- 
ing more  serious  with  every  hour» 
Every  concelvalile  expedient  is  being- 
used  to  maintain  communication.  Spe- 
cial couriers  are  being  sent  in  auto- 
mobiles to  the  frontier,  and  bicyclists 
are  being  employed  for  the  delivery  of 
messages  throughout  the  city.  The 
government  has  organized  a  special 
service  to  insure  communication  be- 
tween I.,ondon  and  King  Edward,  wha 
Is     at   Biarritz. 

I>aok    of    Pood. 
I      The    lack    of    food    In   the    capital,    an 
20. — (Special    outcome    of    the    Impossibility    of    for- 
C.    Colligan  I  warding     payments,     is     making     itself 
of  the  state  \  felt     today    and     provision     dealers    de- 
clare   that    if   there    Is    no    Improvement 
in    the    city,    in    a    few    days,    probably 
will     b'i    confronted    with    famine    con- 
ditions.     The   loss    to    business    In    Paris 
alone   are   variously   estimated   at    from 
1600,000     to     $1,200,000.       Only     a     few 
witnesses     today     connect     Paris     with 
Europe  and    the   outside   world. 

One  thousand  colonial  Infantrymen 
have  been  put  to  work  sorting  anil  de. 
livering  the  accumulated  mails.  No 
newspapers  have  been  delivered  since 
last    Tuesday. 


Hougliton.  Mich..  March  20. —  < Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  contract  has  been 
let  for  the  construction  of  a  concrete 
dock  on  the  water  front  between  Port- 
age and  Isle  Royale  streets. 

The  dock  will  be  266  feet  in  length 
and.  built  of  solid  concrete,  will  be  the 
finest  dock  In  Portage  Lake  waters.  It 
will  be  built  In  connecti<>n  with  the 
new  concrete  and  steel  warehouse  of 
the  Peninsula  Wholesale  Grocery  com- 
pany. 


FORMER  -WHIP"  WATSON 

DECLINES  TWO  JOBS. 


NO 


HURRY, 
NO  DELAY 


Washington,  March  20. — There  will 
be  no  abandonment  of  the  Panama 
canal  libel  prosecution  by  the  admln- 
i.stratlon  nor  unseemly  haste  in  bring- 
ing these  cases  to  trial,  according  to 
a  high  administration  official  today. 
The  cases  will  be  allowed  to  take 
their  places  on  the  criminal  calen- 
dars of  the  district  of  Columbia  and 
elsewhere  and  will  be  handled  in  the 
regular  order  of  thjf  gfovernment. 

Reports  were  circulated  today  that 
the  admrnistration  had  decided  to  let 
these  cases  lapse  for  th«  next  four 
years. 

Attorney  General  Wickersham's  in- 
vestigation 


Minn.  March  20. —  (Spe- 
Herald.) — Dr.  Forest  Or- 
St.  Paul,  professor  of  dentistry 
state  university,  today  handed 
resignation  because  fifty-.six 
students,  yesterday  afternoon, 
resolutions  refusing  to  recog- 
nize him  as  a  member  of  the  faculty 
or  as  a  professor.  The  resolutions 
were  presented  to  Alfred  Owere  with 
the  statement  that  the  students  ob- 
jected to  Orton's  personality.  It  was 
declared  that  he  was  arrogant  toward 
them. 

SUIT  BEGINS  ON  NOTES 

OF  SISTERS  OF  VISITATION 

Peoria,  111..  March  20. — Suit  for  $15,- 
000  on  the  notes  of  the  Sisters  of 
Visitation  at  Bock  Island  and  held  by 
the  National  Copper  Bank  of  Ne->y 
York  City,  was  begun  in  the  United 
States  circuit  court  here  today.  The 
notes  were  originally  given  to  the 
Fidelity  Funding  Company  of  New 
York. 

The  suit  is  in  connection  with  the 
alleged  swindle  of  the  Benedictine  sis- 
ters of  Nauvoo,  111.,  and  P.  K.  Kieran, 
formerly  president  of  the  Fidelity 
Funding  company,  now  in  the  hands 
of  the  receivers.  The  Nauvoo  Sisters 
gave  notes  to  the  amount  of  $350,000 
to  Kieran.  who  indorsed  them  to  New 
York    banks. 

IOWA  GRAND  JURY 

AFTER  THE  SWINDLERS. 


Chicago,  March  20 — The  Chicago 
Chronicle  company,  which  suspendeo 
business  May  31,  1907  was  placed  In 
the  hands  of  a  receiver  today  by  Judge 
Honore,  on  complaint  01'  John  B.  \V'alsh. 
W.  1.  Dickinson,  assist  int  treasurer  of 
the  company  was  made  receiver  in 
bonds  of  $20,000.  In  the  petition  ask- 
ing for  a  receiver  Waluh  avers  that  he 
is  a  holder  of  a  majority  of  the  shares 
of  the  capital  stock  of  the  company. 
The  liabilities  are  $1,0(0,000  and  assets 
$26^000, 


Wrlaht'M     l>ii|tiln     Soar. 

Pau.  France,  March  20. — .^^uccessful 
flights  in  the  Wright  aeroplane  were 
made  here  today  by  Count  de  Lambert 
and  Paul  Trlssandler,  Wright's  ]>upil8. 
Each  man  went  up  alone  and  remained 
in   the  air   twenty   minutes. 


ELEVATOR  (OMPANY  WINS 
AGAINST  THE  RDCK  ISLAND. 


Luverne,  Minn..  March  20. — (.Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Jury  in  the  case 
of  the  Hardwick  Farmers'  Elevator 
Company  vs.  the  Iloch  Island  has  re- 
iiirned  a  verdict  In  fa^  or  of  the  plain- 
tiff, fixing  damages  in  the  full  amount 
asked,   $218,   and   attor  ley's  fee. 

The  suit  was  to  collect  damages  for 
failure  to  furnish  ca"s  demanded  in 
writing  by  tlie  eleva  or  company  in 
the  fall  of  1907.  and  wf  s  brought  under 
the  reciprocal  demurnige  law  enacted 
bv  tiie  legislature  in  1907,  known  as 
the  Nolan  bill. 

The  railroad  contenc  od  tliat  the  law 
is  unconstitutional  in  lliat  it  is  an  at- 
tempt on  the  part  of  tlie  state  to  regu- 
late interstate  traffic,  all  of  the  cars 
demanded  being  for  interstate  ship- 
ments. The  case  was  the  first  testing 
the  validity  of  tlie  r«ciprocal  demur- 
rage law  in  this  stat;;.  The  railroad 
comnanv  will  appeal^ 


T 


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ern private  home;  easy  walking  dis- 
tance of  business  center;  price  $4  a 
week  apiece;  references  required. 
Address   J   65,   Herald. 


Washington,  March  20. — Former 
Representative  James  E.  Watson  of 
Indiana,  who  was  Republican  "whip" 
in  the  house  and  who  lost  his  fight 
for  the  governorship,  has  been  offered 
and  has  declined  the  governorship  of 
Porto  Rico  and  the  ministry  to  Cuba. 

Lieut.  Gen.  Nelson  A.  Miles,  re- 
tired, called  at  the  White  House  to- 
day for  the  first  time  in  about  eight 
years. 


of  these  cases,  it  is  said, 
has  .satisfied  him  that  the  government 
should  proceed  with  the  prosecution. 
Whether  he  has  advised  President 
Taft  of  his  attitude  is  not  known,  al- 
though he  was  today  In  conference 
with  the  president.' 

Many  important  cases  are  on  hand 
in  the  department  of  jus-tice  and  be- 
cause of  this  congestion  Mr.  Wicker- 
sham  will  not  make  the  libel  cases 
special.  The  fact  that  they  are  not 
being -pushed  f'Jv  trial  probably  gave 
rise  to  the  rep'^rt  that  they  would  be 
indefinitely   postponed. 


Council  Bluffs.  Iowa.  Marcli  20.— The 
grand  jurv  of  the  district  court  today 
announced"  indictments  In  wholesale 
swindling  cases. 

The  announcement  was  made  that 
each  of  the  indictments  Is  against  J. 
C.  Mavbrav  and  others,  but  the  names 
of  none  of  the  others  were  made  pub- 
lic, it  being  Intimated  that  some  of 
them  are  not  yet  unaer  arrest.  Con- 
spiracy and  larceny  is  charged  in  each 
Indictment. 

The  grand.  Jury  after  returning  the 
indictments,  took  a  recess  until  May. 
The  complaining  witnesses  In  the  ten 
cases  are  Samuel  Suitor  of  Cass  Lake. 
Minn.;  Joseph  P.  Walker.  Denver;  J. 
Hemelbracht.  Bancroft.  Neb.;  W.  H. 
Bedford.  Bolckow.  Mo.;  Dr.  C.  C.  Van- 
derbec,  St.    Louis. 

RAIN  AIDS  DYNAMITERS 

W  HO  ESCAPE  \MTH  $2,000 

Enid.  Okla..  Marcli  20. — Robbers  dyn- 
amited' the  safe  in  the  bank  of  Cold- 
water,  at  Coldwatcr.  thirty  miles  nortli- 
v.est  of  Enid,  early  today,  and  escaped 
with  $2,000.  A  heavy  rainstorm  aided 
in   concealinnr   their  operations. 


Great   EaMtern   CnMunlt>    and   Indemnity 
Cunipan.v. 

F^ir.olral  cfflcp.  N»w  Vi.rk.  N.  Y.  lOrgaiiiztcl  In 
1892.)  I-.  H.  Flbal.  presid- iit ;  J.  H.  Darlliig.  .si^re- 
tHry.  Attorney  to  aor«pt  ^^crvi-e  In  Minnefola,  Coni- 
mi^iiibiiir    of    Insiirani". 

CASH   (  APITAI..   $200,000. 
INCOME    IN     1908. 

Premiums   ReorUcd — 

.\r<id(iit  ami  health $308.073.07 

Tot.-il    preniJuni   Imoine $398.!;7.^.07 

From   inttrest   an<i   rftits 16.703.6.1 

Krum   uU  other   sources 37.6.'>5.34 

Total  lnr<  me   $453,332.26 

DISBURSEMENTS     IN     1908. 

Clatms    Paid    i.Net)  — 

Arcldent    aid    healUi $140.727.18 

Net  paid  poUej   holders $140,727.18 

InvcMUeallon  and  adjustment  of  claims 3.308.23 

(•(^mralsslcns     127.472.i'i 

Dividends  U:  sttxkholders lO.OOO.OO 

Salarits   of  oflflc«ri.    agent«.    enip!oj-««,   ex- 

andnrrs'  r.nrt  lii'pe- lion   fees 89.403.62 

All  other  disburscminu 43.728.50 


WIFE  MURDERER  HANGS 

HIMSELF  WITH  TOWEL. 


Richmond.  Va..  March  20. — Henry  C. 
Wheatley.  the  confessed  wife  murdprer 
and  incendiary,  committed  suicide  in  the 
Cuipcpper  jail  today  by  hanging  him- 
solf   with   a  towel. 


Total   disbursements    

h^xt CSS  of  IneoDie  over  disburse  nrnts .  . . 
ASSETS   DEC.    It,    1908. 

Bonds    atid   stocks    owned 

Cash  In  office  and  In  bank 

Acrnicd   lnf<  rf st    and    rents 

Premiums   In   i-curse   of   collection 


.  .$414.r..-«9  78 
.$  38.6!':.48 

.    $433.43:.J3 

. .      34.241.  "le 

3.29."..97 

. .      29.90y.4S 


WANTED   AT   ONCE— PLAIN   SEWINO 
by   the   day.     Address  J   98,   Herald. 


FACE  AND  SCALP  TIIBATMENT. 
shampooing,  manicuring;  large  stock 
of  first  quality  hair  goods  made  to 
order  at  Miss  M.  Kelly's,  over  .Suffel's. 


Have   Cameron  reupholster   your   furni- 
ture.    Both    phones.     123  1st  Ave.  W. 


IT  PAYS  TO  BUY  THE  BEST.  WB 
sell  only  first  quality  hair  goods. 
Miss  Horrigan.  Chrislle  Bldg. 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 

K.  O.  Saterstrom  of  Waard  county, 
N.  D..  and  Anna  O.  Johansop  of  St. 
Louis  county. 


BIRTHS. 

CLEMAXS — A  son  was  born  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Ezra  Clemans  of  5602  Albion 
street.  March  11. 

CAMEUON — A     son     was    born     to    Mr. 

and    Mrs.    Donahl    Cameron.    810    East 
Keventh    street.    March    9. 


DEATHS. 


Total     admitted     asseU $500,884.51 

Assets    not    admitted $1,328.25 

LIABILITIES. 
rialm.s    in    proctss    of    adjustirent    and    re- 

porte<l      $  11.167.73 

Claims     resisted 11,050.00 

Aggrcitalo   of    unpaid    claims   $  23.217.73 

iicsene    i;t7.5&2.:n 

All     other    llaliiimcs 20.8.-,8.04 

CaplUl    stock    paid    up 200,000.00 

Total     UablUtifs     Including     capital $.3.'>0. 628.08 

Surplus    over    all    llablUlle* $150,256.43 

BUSINESS    IN    MINNiSOTA    IN    1908. 

Premlunis  Hecelred.   Loses  Paid. 

\ccl»Vent     $9.08.".00       J3,.')96.00 

Health         • 1.278.0J  251.00 


-Josephine    Need    of 
street.  37  years  old. 


200C 
died 


West 
March 


NEED- 

Flftli 

17. 
BERG — Theodore    Berg   of   419   Garneld 

avenue.   7   years  old.  died  March    16. 
HEDMAN — FJvelyn        V.      Hedman.      11- 

months-old  daughter  of  Mr.  and  .Mrs. 

C.  W.  Hedman,  died  March   18.  at  her 

home.-3S24   West  Sixth    street. 
COrtBETT— E.   K.  Corbett  of  230.i  West 

Fourtii      street.    64      years      old.    die<l 

March   14. 


F^nrthqiiakr  Felt  In  Spain. 

B.'t".  cel'ina.  March  2t>. — An  earthquake 
Kck  was  felt  in  Catalonia  province  at 
this  afternoon. 


Totals       $10,363.00       $3,848.00 

SUte  of  Mlnne»oU.    Pepartmeit   of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  •Jtrt'.fy.  That  the  innual  statement  cf  the 
(ireat  tUi«t«ni  I'lsualty  &  lidemnity  <f>mpany.  for 
'lir  year  ending  liccrmbr  olsl.  1908.  <f  which  the 
ao</\«-  i«  an  abstract,  has  bee  i  r.;K-elvcil  and  file<l  in 
udi  detiartnitnl  and   duiy   api  roved   by   me. 

jttHs   H.    hauti<;an, 
C'ommi  sslonei    of    Insurance. 


-t-g.'T— s 


^ 


1 


Att  m-'m  m  t~ 


BUI1.DING  PERMITS. 

To  Commercial  Building  & 
Realty  company,  brick  office 
building  at  the  corner  of 
P'ourth  avenue  east  and  First 
street    I   65,000' 

To  the  Duluth  Vehicle  com- 
pany, garage  building  on  East 
Superior  street,  between  Four- 
teenth  and    Fifteenth  avenues       7,000 

To  John  Klosowsky.  brick 
apartment  building  on  Jeffer- 
son street,  between  Sixteenth 
and  Seventeenth   avenues  east      12,000 

To  J.  W.  Johnson,  frame  dwel- 
ling on  East  Fifth  street,  be- 
tween Nineteenth  and  Twen- 
tieth avenues 2,00^ 


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THE    DULUTH    EVEt^NG    HERALD:     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


Blood  is  the  Power 


That  Defends  the  Body 

This  is  the  greatest  and  most  important  discovery 
of  modem  medical  science. 

It  ranks  with  the  discoveiy  of  the  circulation  of 
the  blood,  which  was  made  centuries  ago. 


The  blood  protects  the  organs  and  tissues  from 
disease,  but  it  does  so  only  when  it  is  healthy 
itself. 

Healthy  blood  is  pure  blood,  and  at  no  season 
is  it  more  necessary  than 

IN  THE  SPRINa 
when  there  is  so  much  exposure  to  disease  germs. 

Hood's  Sarsaparilla  makes  healthy  blood. 

It  is  the  medicine  that  purifies  and  enriches 
the  blood  and  makes  it  normal  in  red  and  white 
corpuscles  and  all  other  constituents. 

It  cures  all  humors  and  eruptions,  catarrh  and 
rheumatism,  relieves  that  tired  feeling,  restores 
the  appetite,  cures  paleness,  weakness,  nervous- 
ness, and  builds  up  the  whole  system. 


my  household  duties.    I  no  longer  have  that  tired 
feeling."    Mrs.  Marion  Bruce,  Cumberland,  Me. 


HIS  ONE  MEDICINE. 
**I  have  used  Hood's  Sarsaparilla  twenty 
years  or  thereabout.  During  said  time  I  have 
not  paid  out  one  cent  for  doctor  bills.  I  ha\e 
for  a  long  time  used  only  four  bottles  per  year, 
two  in  spring  and  two  in  fall.  My  bowels  are 
regular,  I  sleep  sound,  feel  like  always  being 
young,  entirely  free  from  any  malaria,  etc. 
Chas.  F.  Roberts,  P.  0.  Box  478,  Peoria,  Ills. 


ft 


BEST  BLOOD  MEDICINE. 

"I  have  taken  Hood's  Sarsaparilla  for  a 
preat  many  years,  and  I  think  it  the  best  blood 
medicine  in  the  world.    I  use  it  spring  and  fall. 

"'This  last  winter  and  spring  I  was  in  very 
poor  health. 

"I  was  weak  and  had  lost  all  my  appetite  and 
I  was  all  run  down.  As  soon  as  I  began  taking 
Hood 's  Sarsaparilla  my  strength  came  back  and 
my  appetite  returned. 

"I  am  now  a  well  woman  and  can  go  about 


li:^='Hood's  Sarsaparilla  effects  its  wonderful 
cures,  not  simply  because  it  contains  sarsaparilla, 
but  because  it  combines  the  utmost  remedial 
values  of  more  than  20  different  ingredients,  each 
greatly  strengthened  and  enriched  by  this  pecu- 
liar combination.  These  ingredients  are  the  very 
remedies  that  successful  physicians  prescribe  for 
the  same  diseases  and  ailments.  There  is  no  real 
substitute  fur  Hood 's  Sai-saparilla.  If  urged  t « 
buy  any  preparation  said  to  be  **just  as  good," 
you  may  be  sure  it  is  inferior,  costs  less  to  make, 
and  yields  the  dealer  a  larger  profit. 

Begin   taking  Hood's   Sarsaparilla  today,   in 
usual  liquid  or  tablets  known  as  Sarsatabs. 


TEN  YEARS 
IN  PRISON 

Sentence  Is  Pronounced 

by  Judge   Cant   on 

Aiphonse  Laurin. 

Will  be    Put    at    Hard 

Labor  in  the  State 

Penitentiary. 


Ten  y^ars  at  hard  labor  In  the  state 
penitentiary  at  Stillwater  Is  the  sen- 
tence that  wa-s  Imposed  in  district 
cjurt  yesterday  atternoon  by  Judge 
Cant  upon  Aiphonse  Laurin,  who  was 
convicted  by  a  jury  tn  district  court 
on  the  charge  of  having  criminally  as- 
saulted Mias  Elna  Stahbrodt  on  the 
Herniantown  road  on  ttie  evening  ot 
Feb.  la. 

Th«    minimum    punishnient    to   which 

the  young  man.  who  is  not  yet  21  years 

oi  age,  was  liable.  «ris  soven  yearsT 
and  tlie  maximum  was  thirty  years. 
In  pronouncing  sentence  Judge  Cant 
said  the  crime  of  which  Laurin  iiad 
baen  found  guilty  was  one  of  the  most 
heinous  offenses  for  which  tlie  law 
provides  punishment,  scarcely  less 
atroci<)us  than  homicide.  He  asserted 
that  under  such  a  convlctli>n  the  pris- 
oner -'ould  iiardly  expect  a  mild  sen- 
tence, and,  feeling  that  a  reformatory 
sentence  wuuld  be  Inadequate,  and 
^•ould  not  carry  out  the  spirit  of  the 
law.  lie  Imposed  the  penitentiary  sen- 
tence. 5, 

The  March  grand  Jury  Indicted  Lau- 
rin on  the  charge  of  criminal  assault. 
Evidence  showed  that  he  assaulted 
Miss  Stahbrodt,  whom  he  had  known 
for  several  years,  twice  on  the  Her- 
mantown  road  Feb.  Id.  Ht-  was  frigiit- 
ened  a^vay  by  the  approacli  of  a  sleigh. 
whl  h  proved  to  contain  two  girl 
friends  of  Miss  Stahbrodt.  who  is  2i 
years  old.  She  was  taken  home  In  the 
sleigh,  and  her  father  was  so  enraged 
at  her  story  that  he  seized  his  gun  and 
started  in  pursuit  of  Laurin.  He  over- 
took him,  but  the  gun  missed  Are.  and 
the  father  drove  on  into  the  city  and 
complained  to  the  police,  who  later 
caused  the  arrest  of  Laurin,  who  is  Z*) 
years  old. 

County  Attorney  John  H.  Norton  told 
the  court  that  he  Is  usually  inclined  to 
feel  lenient  towards  a  young  man  who 
has  committed  a  sligiit  indiscretion, 
but  tn  tills  case  he  believed  the  law 
sh'>uld  be  given  Its  full  course.  He 
called  attention  to  the  fact  that  Laurin 
apparently  had  no  regret  for  the  crime, 
and  that  his  attitude  during  tlie  whole 
trial  had  not  been  such  as  to  create  a 
good  impression. 

Laurins  parents  are  still  living. 
Their  home  is  at  Port  Artliur.  Laurin 
told  the  court  that  he  left  home  five 
years  ago.  For  the  last  two  or  three 
seasons  he  has  been  working  as  flro 
man  on  tug  boats  at  the  Head  of  the 
Lakes. 


LITTLE  HOPK  OF  Jl  STICK 
TO  NORTHERN  MINNESOTA 
AS  TO  REPRESENTATION 


MT*ontlr.uvi  from  page  1.) 

lug  -^ome  desultory  work  that  does  not 
deceive   anbody. 

Furthermore,  it  is  also  becoming 
evident  that  while  Northwestern  Min- 
nesota  is  as  mucii  interested  in  reap- 
portionment as  it  Northeastern  Minne- 
sota, and  wiiHe  Northwestern  Minne- 
sota made  the  passage  of  tlie  tonnage 
tax  bill  in  the  house  possible,  there  is 
a  direct  connection  between  the  plot  to 
fasten  that  unjust  measure  upon 
Northern  Minnesota  and  the  plot  to 
prevent  tlie  passage  of  a  reapportion- 
ment   bill. 

The  same  men  who  have  helped  put 
the  tonnage  tax  bil!  through  the  house. 
and  who  may  be  counted  upon  to  try  to 
put  it  tt! rough  the  senate,  are  parties 
to  the  plan  of  preventing  the  passage 
of    the    reapportionment    bill. 

The  tonnage  tax  bill  was  put  upon 
the  p«»ople   of   Northern    Minnesota   be- 


OIAMOIHOS 

■U'e  have  a  large  stock  of  unre- 
deemed Diamonds,  which  we  will 
sell  at   greatly  reduced  prices. 

KEYSTONC  I^OAN  CO. 

lU  WeMt    Superlur  .Street. 


cause  Southern  Minnesota  liad  the 
power  to  do  it. 

Southern  Minnesota's  power  to  per- 
petrate tins  iniquity  is  based  upon  an 
anjust  distribution  of  legislative  rep- 
resentation, wliereby  a  smaller  popu- 
lation in  the  older  and  richer  portions 
of  the  state  holds  tl;e  Italance  of  power 
in  the  legislature,  and,  therefore,  holds 
the  whipliund  over  the  poor  and 
weaker,  though  more  populous,  sec- 
tions of  the  state. 

If  representation  were  fair  there 
would  be  no  tonnage  tax.  If  represen- 
tati<.>n  is  made  fair,  there  will  be  no 
further  chance  to  impose  such  a  tyran- 
nical-and  oppressive  measure.  Theer- 
fore,  the  flght  for  the  tonnage  tax  and 
the  fight  against  reapportionment  nat- 
urally gi  hand   In   hand. 

Th  chief  enemy  of  reppttrtlonmesnt 
in  tlie  senate,  who  is  masking  his  real 
purpose  by  a  pretense  of  fair  play, 
under  the  guise  of  which  he  is  work- 
ing deftly  fur  postponements  that  will 
prevent  action  upon  this  reform,  is  one 
of  the  very  men  who  may  be  counted 
upon  to  make  an  active  flght  in  the 
senate    for    tlie    tonnage    tax   bill. 

Postponement  of  reapportionment  at 
this  time  means  more  than  It  looks 
upon  its  face.  Two  years  hence  the 
senate  will  be  <^omposed  of  sixty- 
three  men.  who  have  been  elected  for 
four  years,  and  who,  if  they  vote  for 
reapt>orLionnient  at  the  session  of  lf»ll, 
will  be  voting  to  cut  their  terms  in 
two.  That  was  liie  very  reason  why 
the  attempt  at  reapportionment  in  the 
session  of  1907  was  hopeless. 

If  there  is  no  reapportionment  this 
year  tliere  will  be  none  in  1911.  If 
there  Is  none  in  1911.  the  fact  that  an- 
other state  census  is  approaching  will 
furnish  a  good  excuse  for  further  post- 
ponement, and  there  will  be  none  until 
after  1913.  when  the  state  census  is 
taken. 

In  short.  If  there  Is  no  reapportion- 
ment this  year  there  will  be  none  for 
an  indeiinite  period  in  the  future.  There 
is  absolutely  no  excuse  for  a  failure 
to  reapportion  tins  year,  except  the  de- 
sire of  Southern  Minnesota  to  continue 
to  liold  the  power  whicli  makes  It  pos- 
sible for  it  to  inflict  upon  a  helpless 
minority  such  outrages  as  the  tonnage 
tax  bill. 

*  •      * 

The  senate  committee  on  reappor- 
tionment held  a  meeting  yesterday  af- 
ternoon at  which  action  was  further 
postponed  until  some  time  next  week, 
tlie  time  to  be  subject  to  the  wish  of 
the  chairman  of  the  committee.  Sen- 
ator Frank  Clague  of  Lamberton.  A 
bill  is  practically  ready,  and  it  could 
liave  been  introduced  this  week  as 
easily  as  next  week  or  the  week  after. 
The  difference  apjiears  to  be  that, 
owing  to  the  near  approach  of  ad- 
journment, there  might  have  been 
some  cliance  for  a  bill  introduced  this 
week;  and  there  is  very  little  chance 
Indeed  for  a  bill  introduced  next 
week. 

Senator   Laybourn   of  Duluth  made  a 

determined  fight  against  further  delay, 
when  the  proposition  was  made  to  the 
committee  to  put  tlie  matter  over  until 
next  week.  He  said  that  it  was  time 
the  members  of  J.he  committee  found 
out  whether  any  real  attempt  at  reap- 
portionment was  Intended  or  not.  He 
wanted  immediate  action,  but  though 
he  was  supported  by  one  or  two  North- 
ern Minnesota  senators,  members  of 
the  committee,  the  proposal  to  post- 
pone   was   adopted. 

The  bill  upon  which  the  senate  com- 
mittee has  practicall.v  agreed  to  make 
its  stand — even  if  that  stand  is  made 
so  late  that  it  is  hopeless — provides 
for  tifty-six  senators,  a  reduction  of 
seven,  and  121  liouse  members,  an  in- 
crease  of   two. 

Each  county,  with  the  exception  of 
two  or  three  small  ones  like  Cook  and 
Mahnomen,  would  have  one  hou.se 
member.  St.  Louis  county,  with  Lake 
and  Cook,  would  have  the  same  num- 
ber of  senators — three — and  would 
gain  one  house  member,  which  would 
go  to  Lake  and  Cook  counties  com- 
bined. 

In  the  Eighth  congressional  dis- 
trict Mllle  Lacs  county  would  be  taken 
out  and  added  to  a  Sixth  congressional 
district  senatorial  district,  and  the 
legislative  districts  would  be  as  fol- 
lows; Anoka,  Isanti  and  Kanabec 
counties,  one  senator  and  three  repre- 
sentatives; Chisago  (from  the  Fourth 
congressional  district)  and  Pine  coun- 
ties, one  senator  and  two  representa- 
tives; Carlton  and  Aitkin  counties,  one 
senator  and  two  representatives; 
Itasca  and  Koochiching  counties,  one 
senator  an.i  two  representatives;  St. 
Louis,  Lake  and  Cook  counties,  three 
senators  and  seven  representatives. 

This  would  be  a  gain,  of  course — if 
there  was  any  probability  that  the 
measure  would  have  consideration  in 
the  legislature.  As  to  that,  there  is 
little  hope. 

*  *      • 

Neither  the  house  nor  the  senate  are 
in  session  today,  tlie  senate  having 
adjourned  yesterday  afternoon  to  Tues- 
day morning,  and  the  house  having 
adjourned  from  yesterday  afternoon  to 
Monday    afternoon. 

*  *      * 

The  special  order  on  the  Cashman 
distance  tariff  bill,  wliich  had  been 
fixed  in  the  senate  for  yesterday  after- 
noon, was  postponed  until  next  Thurs- 
day. 

*  «      * 

The  house  committee  on  mines  and 
mining  has  recommended  for  passage 
the  Bendixen  bill  providing  a  new  law 
for  state  mining  leases  to  take  the 
place  of  the  law  repealed  two  years 
ago. 

*  «      • 

The  house  committee  on  public 
health  and  pure  food  has  recommended 


for  passage  the  following  bills: 

By  Itepresentative  .Mien — Allowing 
appeals  to  the  district  court  from  the 
action  of  the  stale  board  of  medical 
examiners  in  refusing  to  grant  licenses 
to  practice  medicine. 

By  Kepresentative  Henry — Authoriz- 
ing pliysicians  to  practice  dentistry 
outside  of  cities  and  villages  williout 
taking   nut   dental  licenses. 

By      Kepresentative      Conley — Giving 
the    state    board    of    health    supervision 
of  water  supply  and  sewage  systems, 
*      *      * 

The  house  yesterday  afternoon 
pa.«*sed    the    following    bills: 

Uy  the  iiouse  committee  on  forestry 
— Proposing  an  amendment  to  the  con- 
stitution imposing  a  tax  of  one-tenlli 
of   one  mill   for   forestry   purposes. 

By     Representative     Spcnce — Author.^ 
izlng  county   boards   to  spend  money  to 
advertise      the      natural      resources      of 
their  counties  and  to  attract  immigra- 
tion. 

By  Representative  MacKenzle — For- 
bidding the  taking  of  game  in  state  or 
national    forest    reserves. 

By  Repri'seiitative  Spooner — Regu- 
lating the  charges  of  telegraph  com- 
panies. ' 

By  the  house  committee  on  public 
lands — .Appropriating  ?I5J)«>0  as  a  re- 
volving fund  for  the  purchase  of  dy- 
namite to  be  sold  at  cost  to  settlers 
for  use  in  clearing  cut-over  lands  of 
stumps. 

By    Reiiresentative    \V.    H.    Putnam — 
Repealing  all   state   laws   giving   boun- 
ties for  horse  thieves,  etc. 
«      •      • 

The  house  passed  the  senate  bill 
against  catching  rabbits  by  the  use  of 
ferrets,  after  amending  It  so  as  to  ap- 
ply only  to  Itamsey  and  Hennepin 
counties. 

«      •      • 

The  1909  bluebook  has  been  Issued 
by  Secretary  of  State  Julius  Schmahl, 
six  weeks  earlier  than  ever  before,  and 
it  is  neater  and  completer  than  it  has 
ever  been.  Not  onlv  that,  but  an  Issue 
of  25.000  copies  is  costing  12,000  less 
than  the  previous  Issue  of  5,000  copies 
less. 

%Vherefore  the  house  passed  a  reso- 
lution of  thanks  to  Mr.  Schmahl,  in- 
troduced by  Representative  R.  J.  Wells. 

The  blue  book.  In  the  biographical 
sections,  contains  material  on  which 
statistical  fiends  got  busy  yesterday 
afternoon. 

For  Instance,  In  the  matter  of  nativ- 
ity it  is  discovered  bj-  an  analysis  of 
the  biographies  that  thirteen  out  of 
the  sixty-three  senators,  and  thirty  out 
of  the  119  house  members  are  foreign- 
born.      Birthplaces   are   as    follows: 

Senate — Illinoi.s,  5;  Virginia,  2;  New 
York,  3;  Wisconsin.  8;  Minnesota.  18; 
Norway,  4:  Sweden,  4:  Iowa,  2;  Ver- 
mont, 1;  Pennsylvania.  2;  Indiana,  2; 
Ohio.  2;  West  Virginia.  1;  Connecticut, 
1;  Ireland,  1:  Wales,  1;  Canada,  2; 
Germany,    1;    Maryland,   1;   not   given,    1. 

House — Milnnesota,  42:  Norway,  9; 
Sweden,  6;  Wisconsin,  13;  Pennsyl- 
vania, 6;  Denmark,  1;  Germany,  7; 
South  Dakota.  1;  Illinois,  4;  Canada. 
6;  not  given.  1:  Ireland,  1;  Iowa.  4; 
New  York,  6:  Massachusetts.  1:  Michi- 
gan, 3;  New  Hampshire,  2r  Maine,  2; 
Ohio,    1;    Maryland,    1;    Vermont,    2. 

Tlie  average  age  of  the  senators  Is 
50    years. 

The  oldest  senator  is  78  and  the 
youngest  is  33. 

The  average  age  of  the  house  mem- 
bers   is    64   and    the    youngest    is    46. 

The  oldest  house  member  Is  64  and 
the   young'est   is   25. 

The    senate    has    no    members    under 


W.  A.  McGONAGLE, 
New  President  of  the  Duluth,  Missabe  &  Northern  Road. 


W.  J.  0L(  OTT  RESIGNS  AS 

PRESIDENT  OF  MISSABE 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


attorney  for  the  -SSteel  corporation,  does 
not  take  effect  until  May  1,  and  no 
action  has  yet  been  taken  toward  nam- 
ing  his    successor. 

The  changes  niaite  today  are  not  ex- 
pected to  make  any  material  difference 
in  the  methods  of  operation  of  either 
the  Oliver  Mining*  company  or  the  Mis- 
sabe road.  Ml-.  McGonagle,  as  general 
n  anager  of  tlie  road,  has  been  in 
acth  e  charge*  of  the  operating  depart- 
ment,   wliile   Mr.   Olcott.   as   vice   presl- 


COOPERS  ARE  filTLTY  OF 

SECOND  DEGREE  Ml  RDER 


and  Mr.  Olcott 
being  practical 
Olcott  has  had 
in    the    mining 


dent  of  tiie  Oliver  Mining  company,  has 
taken  an  active  part  in  the  direction  of 
its  affairs. 

Both    Mr.    McGonagle 
have   the   reputation   of 
railroad    men.   and    Mr. 
a    thorough    schooling 
company's    affairs. 

"No  action  was  taken  this  morning 
in  regard  to  my  successor."  said  Mr. 
McGonagle.  "The  (juestion  has  not  yet 
been  considered  by  the  directors  of  the 
road." 

Mr.  Olcott  stated  that  until  his  re- 
turn from  the  East  he  was  not  in  a 
position  to  make  any  announcement 
or  statement  for  puWicallon,  regarding 
the  report  that  he  would  succeed  Mr. 
Cole. 


(Continued  from  page  1.) 


Wilson      was 


at    .  her 


der    and    Mrs. 
father's    right. 

The  Jurors  were  tired  looking  and 
dlsheleveled,  aUd  wlien  court  said,  *'I 
thank  Yon,  .gcfitlemeu,  for  your  pa- 
tience and  devotloji  to  the  state,  and 
dismiss  you  IQ.  your  homes  and  person- 
al vocations,  tke  entire .  twelve  sprang 
from  their  (leats  as  oCne  man  and  hur- 
rlodlv  Itft  th«  court^ciom.  The  de- 
fondants  and  •tlinr.'«oynael  remained 
to  complete  the  bond  preliminaries  and 
motlon|j   for   a   new    trial. 

.  .     '  ,    Ct>uri    Im   Crowded. 

VarioiKSi  and.  fncoiisistent  rumors  that 
the  jur>'  had  jigreej  were  responsible 
for  a  crowded  courtroom  this  morn- 
ing and  ftu".  the  presence  of  attorneys 
on  botli  sides  long  before  the  usual 
hour  for  wnvening. 

As  soon  as  Judge  Hart  entered  court 
and  even  before  he  removed  his  coat, 
he  ordered  the  jury  and  the  defendants 
brought   into   court. 

"I  understand  they  have  agreed."  he 
remarked  to  the  press  table,  "and  am 
sending   to   see." 

In  a  moment  tlie  twelve  men  entered. 

"Have  you  agreed  upon  a  verdict, 
gentlemen?"   said   Judge   Hart 

"We  have,"  replied  the  foreman 
hoarsely. 

Foreman,    and    read 


^ind  the  defendants, 
and  Robin  J.  Cooper. 

In  the  second  degree 
punishment  at  con- 
—  -' for 


the 


would  bring  them. 
Walter  O.  Parmer 
lor  the  balance. 

'I   will   sign   for   a 
remarked. 


In  a  few  moments 
arrived    and    signed 


million 
James 


for 
K. 


these 
Cald- 


and  40,  twenty 
50.    twenty-flve 
between  60  and 


no 
30.  has  four  between  30 
four    between    40    and 
between   50  and  60.  six 
70,  and  one  over  70. 

The  house  has  four  members  under 
30,  twenty-five  between  30  and  40.  fif- 
ty-three between  40  and  50,  twenty- 
seven  between  50  and  60,  five  above  60, 
and    none    above    70. 

Occupations   are    as    follows: 

Senate — Farmers,  9;  bankers,  8;  mer- 
chants, 10;  lawyers,  18;  real  estate,  4; 
nf»  occupation  given,  4:  druggists.  2; 
newspaper  men,  capitalists,  brokers, 
cigar  manufacturers,  hotel  proprietors, 
brick  manufacturers  and  mining  men, 
1  each. 

House — Farmers,  27;  lawyers,  26; 
merchants,  10;  no  occupation  given,  2; 
real  estate,  3;  telephone  managers,  3; 
bankers.  4;  doctors,  4;  bridge  builders, 
2;  newspaper  proprietors.  2;  land  deal- 
ers, 3;  traveling  salesmen,  2;  drug- 
gists, 2;  manufacturers,  liarnessmak- 
ers,  liverymen,  tailors,  creamery  man- 
agers, stock  breeders,  butchers,  book- 
keepers, deputy  sheriffs,  dentists,  mar- 
ket gerdeners,  lumber  dealers,  plumb- 
ers, cut  stone  contractors,  "manager 
tax  rebate  company,"  contractors,  re- 
tired merchants,  investment  brokers, 
hotel  proprietors,  retired  farmers,  tem- 
perance lecturers,  land  surveyors, 
plasterers   and   bricklayers,    1   each. 

STILLMAN  H.   BINGHAM. 


Ch«ok   a   Cough    in    its   first   stages.      In 
niiig  It  win  ylfld  to  a  mllil  remedy.   Bidwh': 
Troclies    aro    u»efiil    when    coiiclis.    Colds. 
Influenza.     Hoarf.enC5»     and     Sore     Tliroats 
alent.   giving  Immoilate   relief. 


the    bcfin- 

I  UroiirhinI 

Bruiiihltls, 

are    prev- 


FIFTY  NEW  PHARMACISTS. 


Fargo  N.  D.,  March  20. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Of  the  class  of  seventy- 
five  who  took  the  examination  before 
the  state  pharmaceutical  board,  fifty 
were  successful.  Twenty-one  of  these 
secured  full  permits,  and  twent.v-one 
were  permitted  to  work  as  assistants. 


Ask  your  grocer  for  "Salada."  It  Is 
guaranteed  to  be  the  purest  and  most 
delicious  tea  in  the  world.  Trial  pack- 
age at  10c.    Black,  Mixed  or  Green. 


"Advance,     Mr. 
the    verdict.". 

"We     the    Jury. 
Duncan  B.  Cooper 
guilty   of  muider 
and    assess    tUeir 

flnement    in    the    slate    penitentiary 
a  period  of  twe^ity  years." 

"So  .say  you  all.  gentlemen?" 

"So   say    we   all,"    In    chorus. 
Senteuee.lM  PiiMMed. 

In   a   moineiU   Judge  Anderson   of 
defense  v.as  on  his  feet,  exclaiming 

"V'our  honor,  We  move  the  case 
declared  a  mistrial,  because  of 
verdict  yesterday.  We  contend  that 
yesterdav's  verdict  was  the  onl.v  one, 
and  that  it  accjuitted  John  Sharp,  but 
declared  a  disagreement  on  the  other 
defendants.  '  We  also  ask  that  the  de- 
fendants be  ailinitted  to  bond  at  once." 

"Tiie  verdict  of  the  Jury  makes  It  a 
bailable  case,"  wa<j  the  court's  reply. 
"Henc".  I  will  fix  the  bond  of  each 
defendant  at  S25,(JO0,  unless  there  be 
some  objection.  In  that  event  1  will 
he,-ir  argumc^its."   ' 

"It  is  satisfactory  to  us,"  said  At- 
torney General    McCarn. 

"And   to  use."  sai<l   And»^rson. 

"There  seems  to  be  nothing  left  but 
for  the  course  to  pass  sentence,",  added 
Judge    Hart. 

"I  do  not  think  that  necessary,"  said  ■. 
Judge  Anderson.  "We  move  that  Judg-  \ 
ment  be  susiiended  and  that  we  be  I 
given  a  new  trial.  We  will  be  pre- 1 
pared  to  argue  the  motion  later — prob-  ] 
ably   next  week.  i 

"All  right.  Judge,"  remarked  the ! 
court.  "I  know  you  will  not  delay  un-  j 
necessarily  and  I  will  take  It  up  at  I 
your   own    convenience."  I 

"Bring  in  the  bond  book."  said  Judge  I 
Anderson.      It    was    done    and    the    de-  I 
fendants  signed  the   bond  and  returned  i 
with   their   relatives   and    friends    to   the  ; 
room    they    have    occupied    in    tlie    Jail  | 
building.      Mrs.    Burch,    who    had    stood  ■ 
bravely   and  even   smiled   in   the   court- 
room, collapsed  as  she  reached  the  nar 
row    corridor    leading    to    the    pall    and 
had    to    be    supported    by    her    husband. 
Mrs.    Wilson's      eyes    were      streaming 
witli   tears. 

yo  Consi»lmoy. 

Both  young  women  have  counted 
confidently  on  acquittal,  although  even 
their  counsel  advised  agaist  build- 
in  too  many  hopes  on  the  result.  The 
jurors  were  not  inclined  to  talk,  but 
one   of   them    said: 

"On  the  first  ballot  we  acquitted 
John  Sharp  and  disregarded  the  con- 
spiracy theory.  On  this  same  bal- 
lot we  stood  six  for  guilty  of  murder 
In  the  first  degree  with  mitigating  cir- 
cumstances, five  for  murder  In  the  sec- 
ond degree  with  twenty  years,  the 
maximum  penalty,  and  one  for  ac- 
quittal. The  ballots  all  day  Wednes- 
day and  Thur.sday  showed  the  same 
result.  Yesterday,  the  man  who  voted 
for  acquittal,  went  over  to  murder  In 
the  second,  but  demanded  that  only 
ten  years  be  assessed.  The  rest  of  us 
did  not  deem  ten  years  as  anything 
like  adequate,  so  we  disagreed  again. 
Of  course,  all  this. refers  to  the  Coop- 
ers, not  Sharp,  whom  we  had  acquitted. 

"Early  tills  morning  the  man  who 
was  holding  out  for  ten  years  agreed 
to  twenty  years,  and  the  six  who  were 
voting  for  a  first  degree  verdict  agreed 
to    this    verdict." 

John  Sliarp  hurried  to  the  court- 
house when  he  heard  of  the  verdict, 
and  was  soon  closeted  with  the  defen- 
dants and  their  counsel.  Mrs.  Sharp 
was   In    court   when    the   Jury   reporte 


men,"    he 

well  later  signed  for  $25,000  on  each 
bond,  and  H.  B.  Chadburn  and  C.  W. 
Anderson  for  $2,500  each  on  each  bond. 
This  makes  the  total  bond.-s  in  both 
cases  $110,000,  altliough  omy  $50,000 
was  asked. 

The  Burch  automobile  came  up  a 
little  later  and  the  parly  was  whirled 
away  to  the  Bradford  home. 

There  will  be  no  further  proceed- 
ings In  the  case  for  about  a  week. 
A  Remarkable  Cane. 
The  Cooper-Shaii)  trial  ha.-<  been  one 
of  the  most  remarkable  murder  cases 
In  tiie  history  of  the  South,  not  only 
becau.-^e  of  the  prominence  of  the  prin- 
cipals, but  liecause  of  the  reasons  that 
led  to  the  killing. 

Col.  Duncan  B.  Cooper,  a  former  of- 
ficer in  tlie  Confederate  army  under 
Forrest  and  a  man  very  prominent  in 
Democratic  state  politics  once  lived  in 
Columbia,  Tenn.  In  that  town  also 
lived  Edward  Ward  Carmack,  a  young 
lawyer  who  did  some  newspaper  work. 
Cooper  bought  the  Nashville  American, 
and  induced  Carmack  to  come  to  Nash, 
ville  to  be  its  editor.  Whether  the 
men  ever  were  In  thorough  accord,  is  a 
disputed  point.  Carmack's  friends  say 
not.  Col.  Cooper  swore  on  the  stand 
that  they  were  close  friends  until  Gov- 
ernor Taylor  opposed  Carmack  for  re- 
election to  the  senate.  This  fight  was 
long  and  bitter  and  a  feature  of  it 
was  a  series  of  joint  debates,  and  Car- 
mack lost.  Copper  supported  Taylor, 
but  Robin,  the  boy  who  killed  the  sen- 
ator,  sui)ported    the   latter. 

Lrgred  Into  the  Race. 
Malcolm  R.  Patterson  was  governor 
of  the  state  at  the  time  of  the  Car- 
mack-Taylor  fight,  and  announced  his 
candidacy  for  re-election,  Carmack, 
just  beaten  for  the  senate,  was  urged 
Into  the  race  for  governor  against  Pat- 
terson. This  was  last  June  and  the 
,  j  fight  between  the  men  for  the  Dem- 
f-'®  I  ocratic  nomination  was  the  most  spec- 
tne  I  tacular  ever  seen  In  Tennessee.  Again 
joint  debates  were  arranged  and  again 
tlie  feeling  between  the  factions  grew 
very  bitter.  In  these  debates,  Cooper 
charged  that  Carmack  assailed  the 
colonel's  good  name.  <I'ooper  was  au 
ardent  Patterson  man — the  governor 
on  the  stand  described  him  as  "my 
closest  personal  and  political  adviser." 
Again  Carmack  lost,  and,  a  month 
before  the  election,  became  editor  of 
tlie  Nashville  Tennessean.  He  had 
made  the  race  on  the  Prohibition 
platform,  and  while  he  did  not  get  the 
nomination,  he  secured  enough  repre- 
sentatives to  assure  the  pa.ssage  of  the 
state-wide    liquor    bill. 

In  the  meantime.  Governor  Patter- 
son and  Former  Governor  C!ox,  once 
deadly  enemies,  were  reconciled.  The 
Tennessean  charged  that  Col.  Cooper 
brought  this  reconciliation  about,  and 
referred  to  it  in  a  humorous 
and  sacrtistic  vein.  Carmack  also 
Intimated  that,  to  save  Governor  Pat- 
terson, tlie  Democratic  leaders  were 
preparing  to  trade  Bryan  for  the  gov- 
ernorship. 

Col.  Cooper  was  chafing  under  the 
comment,  and  becoming  more  incensed 
ever.v  day.  Sunday,  Nov.  8,  the  day  be- 
for  the  killing,  the  following  editorial 
appeared   In    the   Tennessean: 

*'AoroHM  (he  Muddy  Chaisin." 
"We     trust     tliere     will     be     no     un- 
seemly    ribaldry    on    tlie     part    of     the 
base    vulgar    concerning    the    happy    re- 
union   of    long    sundered    hearts    which 
was  accompllslied  In   the  Joyous  recon- 
ciliation  of   his   excellency,   Hon.    M.    Ic. 
Patterson    and    hi.s    ex-e.\cellency,    Hon. 
John     Isaac    Cox.       All     honor     to     that 
noble      spirit.      Maj.      Duncan      Brown 
Cooper,    who    wrought    this    happy    re- 
union    of    congenial       and       conHuxiblt- 
spirits     separated     by     evil      fates     al- 
though   both   for   each   other.     All    hon- 
or  to   Maj.   Dune  and  may   the   blessing 
of  the  peacemaker   be   upon   him.      May 
I  he    be    heir    to    all    the    beatitudes,    and 
I  especially   to   the   blessing  reserved   for 
those     who     hunger     and     thirst     after 
I  righteousness.      And    there   goes   al.-^o    a 
I  blessing    to    his    exceilencj- — for    as    he 
I  has   been   merciful    to   Cox,    so   shall    he 
1  obtain    mercy. 

i      "But    the     choicest     blessing,     as     is 

I  right     and     proper,     are     for     Governor 

i  Co:<    himself.      For   If  there    be   any    re- 

1  ward    for    meekness,    and    any    for    en- 

I  during     persecution     for     righteousne-ss 

I  sake,  he  shall  inherit  the  earth  and  his 

1  is    the    kingdom    of    heaven.      Yet    such 

!  is    the   meekness    of   his   spirit   that   we 

doubt  not  that  Governor  Cox  would   be 

entirely      comforted    with      the      meek 

man's    reward. 

"If  we  pause  here  briefly  to  review 
the  unhappy  differences  that  have 
armed  those  valiant  souls  against  each 


daughters    of- 
presence    and 


and    comforted    the    two 
Col.     Cooper     with     her 
sympathy.  i 

John  J.  Greener  signed  for  $10,000 
on  each  bond.  Several  others  had 
been  sent  for  and  telephoned  that  they 
would  come  as  quickly  as  automobllas 


Life  Insurance 

Boston.   Mass. 

RMii,1,ird    P.)!!.l.-s.      lox    Net    Tout. 
C.  H.  GIDDi:WG«<,  Oeneral  A^ent, 

311  Lyceum  BIdg..  Duluth,  Minn. 


i 


Other    It    is   for    no    purpoiie    of    renew- 
ing the  strife,   but  rather  of  emphasiz- 
ing   by    contrast,     the    felicity    of    tlie 
present   situation.       It   will  serve   also 
to  bring  out  in  bold  relief  the  gracious 
spirit    which    enables    Govt  rnor    Patter- 
son   to    condescend    to    uie  i    of   low    es- 
tate,   lift    up    where    he    has    trampled 
down  and  lay  a  poultice  of  warm  words 
upon  the  reputation  he  has  so  fearftilly 
bruised.         It    will    teach      also      those 
who  most  unjustly  have  regarded  Gov- 
ernor   Cox    as    a    man     o!     proud    and 
haughty    spirit,    that    he    is,    in    fact,    a 
man   of  modest   stillness  itnd    humility, 
one   who    can    forget   injuiles   the   most 
grievous,     forgive     Insults      the      most 
Hagrant    endure  every  as.«riult  upon  his 
honor   and   good   name   wl:hout   resent- 
ment,   and.     in    general,     lumble     him- 
self  that   he   may   be   exalted        It  will 
also  show  that  none  can  tver  sin  away 
his    day     of    grace    with    the      present 
all-merciful  machine;  thai    no  man  can 
ever    become    so    vile,    so    degraded,    so 
corrupt    in    its    estlmatio  i    that    It     is 
not    ready    to    raise    him    up    and    load 
him  with  dignity  and  honors  if  he  onlv 
will    give    up    everything    and    serve    It 
with  fidelity  and  singleness  of  heart. 
ObIj-    One    Motlk'e. 
"It  will    be   romem  bored    that   Gover- 
nor   Patterson    professed    to    have    only 
one   great  motive  in  seeking  the  office 
of    governor— the    wholly    patriotic    and 
unselfish    desire    to   purge    the   state   of 
the  shame  and  Infamy  brought  upon  It 
by  Cox  and  the  Cox  machine.    He  open- 
ly declared  that  he  would   rather  some 
other    than    he    had    the    task    and    the 
honor,    but   hla   soul    woulci   eot   coiisent 
that  such  a  man  as  Cox    ihould   be   the 
governor    of    Tenne.-Jsee.       He    charged 
that  Cox   had   degraded  aid  debauched 
the  politics  of  the  state;  he  repreiwOted 
11m   as    the   pliant   tool   o'.   the  saloons 
and  the   corporations;   he   charged   that 
he   was  Democrat   only   In  name,    a   Re- 
publican    in     fact;     he     called     him     a 
'^traitor  to  the  Democratic  party.'     Not 
only     thac,     but    he    vicioj.sly    assailed 
hla    personal    honor,    his    ;>ecunlary    In- 
tebrity,   and  from  every  stump  in  Ten- 
nessee he  pictured  him  in   the  bitterest 
words    In    his    vocabulary    as    a    com- 
mon    grafter.        And     the     whole     crew 
joined    their     voices     in     one     universal 
chorus   of   damnation— 'crook,'    'grafter,' 
"corrupt  politician,'    "clieaii   .lo'nn   dema- 
gogue'— such   were   the  words  that  flew 
thick    and    fast    from    the    mouths    of 
Duncan    B.    Cooper   and    a. I    the    leaders 
in    the   great   movement   to    reform   and 
purge  and  purify  the  state,  to  destroy 
the  power  of  the  politlca    machine  and 
r-stor©    power    to    the    ptople    ot    Ten- 
nessee,    The  whole  campuign  was  con- 
ducted  with  a  view  not  only  to^defeat 
Governor    Cox.    but    to    load    him    with 
Infamy   and  drive  him   ott  of  the  poli- 
tics   of    Tennessee.      So    far    w-as    this 
carried,    that  after   Governor  Patterson 
had   been   nominated    for   governor   and 
Cox   had   been   nominated  for   the   .^tace 
senate,  Maj.  Cooper  jobrneyed  to  Bris- 
tol  for   the   purpose    ot   getting   out   an 
Independent    candidate    against    biji'-  , 

"These  fact.j  will  serve  to  glorify 
the  recent  pact  of  pea  :e.  It  .shows 
how  far  Governor  Patterson  had  to^ 
stoop,  how  much  Governor  Cox  had 
to  forgive,  and  matches  an  infinite 
condescension  witii  an  nfinite  humil- 
ity. Of  course,  there  are  other  de- 
tails. When  Governor  Cox  was  sum- 
moned Lo  Nashville,  soue  weeks  ago, 
it  was  not  simpiy  for  trie  purpose  of 
falling  on  somebody'es  nock,  or  of  hav- 
ing somebody  fall  upon  his.  There  are 
honors  and  dignities  ar  d  offices  and 
stubstantial  rewards  to  bts  distributed — 
things  that  go  'to  heal  the  hurt  that 
iionor  feels' — and  these  things  were 
talked   of  and   considered. 

"But  no  doubt  the  main  thing  was 
that  Governor  Cox  agreed  to  join 
liimself  with  Ban  Murray.  Dune 
Cooper  and  Sparrel  Hill,  and  aid  them 
in  their  battle  for  the  Holy  Cause  ot 
Local  Self -Government." 

By  local  self-governnicnt.  Carmack 
meant  tlie  light  against  prohibition. 
The  liquor  Interests,  lee  by  tiie  gov- 
ernor, declared  In  favor  of  local  option, 
and  of  lettiing  each  corimur.ity  settle 
the  saloon  question   for    tself. 

Col.  Cooper,  upon  leading  this  edi- 
torial, sent  the  famous  message  to 
Carmack:  "If  my  name  appear.s  in  the 
Tennessean  again,  one  oT  us  must  die.  " 
The  warning  was  delivered  to  Senator 
Carmack  by  ex-State  Treasurer  Craig. 
Carmack  said  that  Coi.  (looper's  threat 
had  made  a  cessation  of  the  editorial.s 
impossible — tliat  if  tn  ?  Tennessean 
never  again  used  Coopt  r's  nam.e,  the 
public  would  believe  tl:at  the  jiaper 
had  been  bluffed,  and  it  would  lis.? 
caste.  So  on  Monday,  Nov.  9.  the  day 
of  the  killing,  there  appeared  In  the 
Tennessean   this   editorial: 

"The  niiilomnt  of  the  Sf^lebnnd." 
"To  Maj.  Duncan  Brown  Cooper,  who 
wrought  this  great  .olitlon;  who 
achieved  the  liarmoniou.*  conrtuence  of 
incompatible  elements;  who  wielded  the 
pewter  handle  to  the  U'ooden  spoon, 
who  grafted  the  dead  boigh  to  the  liv- 
ing tree  and  made  it  to  bloom  and 
bourgeon  and  bend  witfi  golden  fruit; 
A\  he  made  playmates  of  the  lamb  and 
the  leopard  and  boon  companions  of 
the  spider  and  tly;  who  made  soda  and 
vireunr  dwell  placidly  in  the  same  bot- 
tle, and  who  taugl.t  oil  und  water  how 
they  might  agree — to  Maj.  Duncan 
Brown  Cooper,  tlie  greg.t  diplomat  of 
tlie  political  Sweibiuid  be  all  honor  and 
glory   forever."' 

What  happened  next  I»i  history, 
state's  witnesses  said  Jarmack 
shot  down  from  behind,  while  he 
It.  the  act  of  raising  his  liat  to 
Eastman.  The  Coopersi  swore 
walked  across  the  street  to  reason 
Cariuack  and  that  he  opened  fire  at 
onc(\  wounding  Robin  vho,  thereupon 
and  in  selfdefense  fired  the  shots  which 
killed  the   editor. 


STAR  THEATER 

^      THE   HOlSfC   OF   MIRTH,     .^ 

^         Newly    remodeled    with        ^^ 


NEW) 


SONGS, 
FACKS. 


;new 


Featnrea    For   Tomorroiiv. 

"Modern  Pirates" — A  tale  of  a  sea- 
going automobile. 

Mr.  Adams  sings — "All  I  Want  In 
this    Wide,    Wide    World    Is    You." 

Miss  Clark  sings — "Watermelon  am 
Good   Enough   for   Mine." 

Miss  Harrington  plays — "Kuyaw- 
lak,"   by  Wienlewski. 


*  w 


WHEN 


The 

was 

was 

Mm 

tney 

with 


STUNG?  ASKS  INSLRCiENTS 


^Continued  from  jiage  1.) 


which  has  just  been  completed  by  the 
cojiimittee  on  committees.  Oreatar 
prominence  has  been  giv  »n  to  the  daily 
work  records  jf  senators  as  a  reason 
lor  preferment  on  committees  than 
ever  before  in  the  senate,  where  the 
length  of  service  has  a  Iways  formed 
so  great  a  factor  in  fixing  precedeno- 
in  such  matters.  It  is  understood  tliat 
whenever  a  senator  has  applied  for  a 
coveted  committee  assignment,  one  oi 
the  first  questions  considered  ha.s  re- 
lated to  his  record  for  attention  to 
business  on  the  committees  with  which 
he  has  been  connected  Tlie  reply  to 
that  question  it  is  said,  has  had  much 
to  do  with  the  assignment  as  finally 
determined    upon. 

After  this  discussion  of  senatorial 
records  many  senat')rs  ire  wondering 
whether  when  the  regular  session  as- 
sembles, in  December,  thure  will  be  leas 
difficulty  than  has  been  experienced  in 
securing  quorums  and  prompt  action  on 
measures    referred    to    ooinmittees. 


IS  BOUND  OVER 
TO  GRAND  JURY 


Andrew  Gombaiie  Admits 

Shipping  Dynamite  in 

a  TrunL 

Andrew  Gombase.  charged  with  of- 
fering explosives  to  a  common  carrier 
for  shipment  without  properly  mark- 
ing them,  pleaded  guilty'  before  Capt. 
Thomas  H.  Pressnell,  United  States 
commissioner,  yesterday  afternoon.  He 
was  bound  over  to  the  federal  grand 
jury,  which  meets  next  July,  and  in 
default  of  $250  bail  ^^a3  committed 
to  jail. 

Gombase  admits  havlrg  put  eighteen 
.sticks  of  dynamite  in  a  trunk  at 
Aurora.  Minn.,  the  trur  k  to  be  ship- 
ped from  there  to  Clayton,  Wis.  Some 
residents  of  Aurora  became  aware  ot 
what  had  happened  acd  telephoned 
ahead  to  the  agent  at  Two  Harbors. 
The  .station  agent  informed  the  author- 
ities and  the  offender  was  arrested 
and  brought  to  Duluth  He  Iiad  no 
defense   to    offer   yesterday. 

Foley's  Honey  and  Tai-  cures  coughs 
quickly,  strengthens  the  lungs  and  ex- 
pels colds.  Get  the  genuine  in  a  yel- 
low  package.   Sold   by   all   druggists. 


YOU 


GO 


on  business  or  pleasure 
and  want  the  most  sat- 
isfactory hotel  accpm- 
modatlon.  for  a  reason- 
able amount  of  money, 
you  will  make  no  mis- 
take in  trying  the 

Park    Avenue    Hotel, 

3>nd    Hud    ll'ird    ,^treet9 
and   Park  Aveuue. 

It  i.-  a  magnll'icent 
building,  with  an  open 
central  court  and  palm 
garden,  ninety  by  one 
hundred  and  ten  "feet; 
insuring  the  best  light 
and  ventilation  of  any 
New   York  City  hotel. 

It  Is  absolutely  fire- 
proof, replete  with  every 
convenience  and  luxury, 
up-to-date  In  every  de- 
tail; in  close  touch  with 
amusement  and  slioi)- 
ping  center  and  trans- 
portation lines. 

It  Is  famous  for  the 
courteous  attention  giv- 
en to  all  guests  by 
every  employe. 

Its  dining  room,  res- 
taurant and  cafe  f  Euro- 
pean plaiu  are  noted 
for  excellence  of  fare, 
high  class  service  and 
moderate  price. 

Advance  engagement 
of  rooms  will  add  great- 
ly to  your  comfort. 

Write    for    illustrated 
booklet    and    any    infor- 
YORK      rnatlon  desired. 
*^^**-**'  REED  &  BARNETT, 

Proprietors. 


*r 


TO 


NEW 


/■ 


1 

r 

w 
1 

r'' 

Beautiful  Oddities  in 

JEWELRY 

to  be  found  at 

Qruesen's. 

•WATCH     EXPERT." 

12S  West  Superior  Street,  Ipiitaira. 


\ 

1. 

■ 

1 
1 

■ 

4 

1 

t 

1 

1 

-T- 


'Consultation 
Free 


Burrows  Building: 

Rooms  504-505. 

Zenith   Phone:     Office  909-Y. 

Residence,  1595. 

"Specialist"        In        Rheumatism, 
■Sciatica.   Lumbago.   Paralyses,   Con- 
stipatl.:)n.  Kidney  Disease!?,  Asthma. 
Stomach    Trouble.      Liver    Trouble, 
Female        Weakness.  Bronchial 

Trouble,  A  Sur-?  Cure  for  the  Blues 
and  Downheartedness,  which  is 
nothing  more  than  Low  Vitality. 
Have  cured  many  old  and  chronic 
cases  of  years'  standing,  in  a  com- 
paratively short  time.  It  costs 
you  nothing  to  have  your  ca.se 
diagno.sed    correctly. 


1 

t 

1 

1 

t 

1 

) 

\ 

• 

1 

1 

Comply   with  the    law  and    address  your 
paclia^e  with  a  ateacil  cut  by  the 

Bradley  Stencil 
Machine 


for  sale  by 

Chamberlain-Taylor  Co. 


J 


GOPHER  SHOE  WORKS 


Where 
You 


GOPHER 


1 

1 

1 — 

1  • 

1 

Improved 

Shoe 
Repairing 


DILI  TH — »0    Int    Ave.    W. 

i;:    4th    A*o.    W. 
Superior— 1418    Tower    Ave. 


By  the  Way 

When  buying  a  cigar  call  for 

Elcora  or 
Mataafa 

AK  Dealers  Sell  Them. 

DULUTH  CICAR  CO..  Makers 


Beaotiful  Breast  Pins 
T.  L  REINHiVRT, 

JEWELER.    129  West  Snperior  SU 


■ii 


^i*" 


1 


tCJB     HKI^pi 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


mra 


COLERAINE  CAN 
CLAIM  COMPOSER 

Alfred  Erickson,  Young 

Finn,  Wins  Praise  for 

New  Waitz. 

Coleraine,  Minn..  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Coleraine,  the  infant 
city  of  the  Mesaba  ranKC  boasts  of  a 
composer  of  niu.slc.  Alfred  V.  Krick- 
Bon  recently  receivt-d  the  honor  of  hav- 
ing a  nui.'-ical  composition  accepted  by 
one  of  the  leading  music  publishing 
companies.  Jt  Is  an  ln.>!truinental  sc- 
lectii>n  for  the  piano,  entitled,  "The 
Illusion  Waltz."  Music  critics  pro- 
nounce it  an  excellent  production  for 
a    b€'ginner. 

Mr.  Krlckson  came  here  from  Besse- 
mer. Mich.,  two  years  ago,  where  he 
had    been    working    in    the    mines.      He 


visit     to     North     Yakima.     Wash.       Mr. 
Booth    may    possibly    remain    all    suni- 

Mrs.  Frank  Durant  and  Mrs.  F.  A. 
Stewart     have     returned     from     I>uluth. 

Arthur  Klinger  of  Chicago,  who  has 
been  visiting  his  brother.  John,  has  re- 
turned home. 

E.  B.  Dunning  of  Duluth,  who  has 
been  in  Tower  on  business  has  re- 
turned   home.  .        - 

A    royal    welcome    will     be    tendered 
the    Superior    Elks'    minstrel    show 
the    local    lodge   of    B.    P.    O.    E.    at 
Fav   opera  house   Sunday  night. 

There    will    be    a    special    meeting 
the  common   council   Sunday  afternoon. 


by 
the 

of 


had  also  learned  the  trade  of  a  brick 
mason.  Since  coming  to  the  place  he 
has  been  a  leading  member  of  the  Col- 
eraine Symphony  orchestra,  under  the 
direction   of  E.   J.   Anderson. 

Seven  years  ago  Erickson,  then  a 
^youlh  of  19.  came  from  Finland,  where, 
like  thousands  of  ambitious  Finns,  he 
was  dissatisfied  with  the  Russian  in- 
fluence in  his  native  country.  He  had 
completed  a  common  school  education. 
His  early  passion  for  music  found  ex- 
pression With  the  accordion,  which  he 
began  playing  at  8  years  of  age.  Four 
years  ago  he  began  playing  the  clari- 
net, of  which  he  is  passionately  fond. 
and  It  is  his  ambition  sometime  to  play 
hl8  favorite  Instrument  In  one  of  the 
great  orchestras  of  America.  He  in- 
vests a  large  part  of  his  income  in  the 
best  musical  Instruments  he  can  pur- 
chase. 


HIBBING  IS  FOR 
INDEPENDENTS 

Fans  Against  Being  in 

League— Officers  of 

Club  Elected. 

Hibbing,  Minn.,  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  large  and  very  en- 
thusiastic baseball  meeting  was  held 
In  Judgt^-Bradys  office  last  evening, 
and  plans  for  the  coming  season  gone 
into. 

Remarks  were  made  by  1- rank  Aus- 
ley.  Dr.  Weinick  and  T.  F.  Brady.  Tlie 
idea  of  entering  league  ball  was  taken 
up  and  Immediately  voted  down.  It 
seemed  to  be  the  prevailing  opinion 
that  Hibbing  would  do  better  In  In- 
dependent ball  owing  to  the  variety 
of  teams  which  visit  here  and  also 
because  it  would  mean  an  entirely 
»eam.  as  most  of  the  present  mem- 
bers would  have  to  quit,  as  they  are 
in  business  here  and  could  not  get 
away  for  any  considerable  length  of 
time.  The  following  officers  were 
elected:  President,  Dr.  H.  R.  Weirlck: 
vice  president.  Frank  Dear;  treasurer. 
Frank  Ausley:  secretary.  H.  G.  Burn- 
ham;  directors.  Mike  Sommer.  H.  R. 
Weirick.  Frank  .\usley.  B.  H.  Hayes, 
Frank   Dear;   iTianai?er.   T,    K.    Brady. 


HIS  BACK  IXJl  RED. 

Logger  Near    Tower    Hadly   Hurt, 
Falling  From  Log  Load. 

Tower,  Minn.,  March  i;0.  —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — John  Carroll,  a  resident 
of  this  city,  who  has  been  In  the  em- 
ploy of  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
railroad  for  the  past  four  or  five  years, 
in  the  summer  season,  and  has  been 
foreman  in  the  woods  for  various  par- 
ties during  the  winter  months,  had  his 
back  badly  injured  Thursday,  while 
loading  logs  at  Murray  Siding,  between 
here   and   Ely. 

While     getting     upon     the     logs, 
hold    gave    way    and     he    was 
to  the  ground  with  such  force 
jury    resulted.      He    was 
Soudan    hospital,    where 
he  may  recover. 

HIBBlMi  KEVERSK8 

SCORE  W ITH  CLOQUET. 


his 
thrown 
that  in- 
taken  to  the 
it    is    reported 


for  several  hours,  agreed  on  a  verdict 
of  not  guilty.  At  the  time  that  the 
jury  was  deliberating,  a  warrant  was 
sworn  out  for  the  arrest  of  Noble  and 
a  man  named  Parker,  who  had  also 
appeared  as  witnesses  against  Kastcr. 
Parker,  having  been  able  to  get  bonds, 
ws  released,  but  Noble,  not  being  so 
fortunate,  is  now  in  jail  on  his  failure 
to  ot>taln  $500  bonds  to  await  his  trial. 
which  will  be  held  Monday. 


ARE  REMODELING 
HIBBING  STORES 

Other   Current    Events 

Gathered  in  the  Lively 

Range  Community. 

Hibbing.  Minn..  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  stores  on  the  cor- 
ner of  Third  and  Pine,  owned  by  J.  J. 
Cox,  are  being  entirely  remodeled,  and 
as  soon  as  completed  will  be  occupied 
by  Mr.  Cox  by  his  drug  store  and  the 
Hekstein  Furniture  company. 

The  National  Protective  legion  gave 
a  card  party  and  dance  at  Espamer 
hall  this  week.  .-Vbout  fifty  couples  at- 
tended, launch  was  served  and  a  good 
time   was   enjoyed    by    all.  ,     „      i. 

The  Misses  PwUth  Bates  and  Ruin 
Carmichael  entertained  at  the  Bates 
home  on  Mahoning  street  during  the 
week.  The  entire  senior  class  of  the 
high  school  attended,  and  all  had  a 
very  enjoyable  evening.  Miss  Itankin 
and  Miss  Stephens  were  guests  of 
honor. 

C.  N.   Colburn   of   this  city  was   mar 
rled    during    the    week    to    Miss 
Billings  of  Michigan,     Rev 
performed    the    ceremony. 

£lace    at    the    bride's    siste 
Incoln  street.  ,       ♦,  „ 

B  C  Anderson,  formerly  of  the 
Shenango  location,  has  taken  up  a 
residence    in    Hibbing. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  Dear  is  rejoic- 
ing over  the  birth  of  a  new  heir,  who 
arrived    Thursdav    morning. 

Baert  Hayes  has  been  in  town  the 
past  couple  of  davs.  having  come  down 
froni  his  sawmill  at  Two  Harbors  on 
business    matters. 

Peter  Wring,  chief  of  police  here  has 
returned  from  I»uluth.  where  he  went 
on  business  in  connection  with  a  dam- 
age suit  against  him. 

Louis  Hekstein  has  gone  to  Grand 
Rapids,  Mich.,  on  a  furniture  purchas- 
ing  trip. 

A  son  has  arrived  at  the  home  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  T.  F.  Silliman  of  Fourth 
avenue. 

W  C  Northev  and  Walter  Trennery, 
who  have  been  away  on  an  extended 
trip  through  the  East  returned  home 
the  other  day.  ^  ... 

L.     Booth     has     left     for     a     month  s 


Hibbing.  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Cloquet  high 
school  basket  ball  team  went  down  to 
defeat  before  the  local  high  school  five 
in  the  gymnasium  of  the  high  school 
last  night,  being  defeated  by  a  score  of 
38   to  29.' 

The  visiting  team  was  handicapped 
by  the  ceiling  of  the  place  being  lower 
than  they  were  used  to,  they  claiming 
the  steam  pipes  were  especially  obnox- 
ious to  them. 

The  game  was  voted  a  fast  one. 
Knipes,  of  the  locals,  was  the  hero  of 
tlie  evening,  making  thirteen  baskets. 
Schmitz   of   Hibbing,   umpired. 

Only  last  week  the  Cloquets  defeated 
the  Hibbings  at  Cloquet  by  a  score  of 
5"  to  9.  and  the  boys  from  Slabtown 
cannot  understand  how  it  happened 
last  night.  I'rof.  Cobb  of  the  Cloquet 
high  and  Mrs.  Cobb,  came  here  with 
the  team,  and  all  returned  to  Duluth 
today. 


LOSES  HIS  TOES. 


Em- 


Lottie 

Mr.  Durant 

which    took 

sister's    home    on 


Oliver   Iron  Mining   Company 
ploye  Hurt  at  Chisholm. 

Hibbing,  Minn.,  Marcli  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Daniel  Kanlpes,  an 
old  employe  of  the  Oliver  Iron  Mining 
company,  suffered  a  very  severe  ac- 
cident last  night,  having  the  toes  of 
his  left  foot  entirely  cut  off,  Mr. 
Kanlpes  had  just  finished  his  day's 
work,  and  attempted  to  board  a  Great 
Northern  local,  bound  for  Hibbing  from 
Chisholm,  when  his  foot  slipped  and 
the  wheels  of  the  caboose  passed  over 
his  foot,  severing  his  toes,  from  the 
instep. 

PUBLIC  EXAMINER  TO 

INVESTIGATE  AFFAIRS. 


Grand  Rapids.  Minn.,  March  20. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — In  response 
to  a  petition  far  an  investigation  of  the 
affairs  of  scliool  district  No.  1,  which 
have  been  the  subject  of  much  discus- 
.«ion  and  many  differences,  by  the  pub- 
lic examiner,  the  county  board  has  de- 
cided  to  ask   for  such    examination. 


ENGINE  THROWS  \>  HEEL. 


DULUTH  BREWING 
&  MALTING  CO. 


Cor.  29th  Ave.  W.   &    Helm    St. 
The  Monarch  of  All  Pure 
Malt  Beers. 


Deer  River.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  engine  of  the 
eastbound  Great  Northern  passenger 
train  "threw"  a  drive  wheel  about 
midnight  Thursday,  near  Ball  Club, 
the  first  station  west  of  here,  and  ran 
quite  a  distance  on  the  ties^  That  a 
di.«<astrous  wreck  did  not  result  Is  con- 
sidered miraculous.  The  engine  and 
tender  v.ere  wrecked,  but  the  engin- 
eer and  nrcman  escaped.  Another  en- 
gine was  procured  from  Cass  Lake,  and 
tiie  train  went  east  several   hours   lute. 


PAVING  MATTER 
COMING  TO  HEAD 

Eveleth    Council  About 

Ready  for  Decision— 

Free  Delivery  Plans. 

Kveleth,  Minn.,  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herild.) — The  resignation  of 
Assessor  John  Murnik  was  received  at 
the  council  meeting  last  night  and  ac- 
cepted. His  successor  was  not  ap- 
pointed. 

The  city  clerk  and  street  and  alley 
committee  were  instructed  to  see  about 
the  placing  of  street  signs  at  the  cor- 
ners, and  the  numbering  of  the  houses, 
to  insure  free  delivery.  Some  of  the 
houses  have  numbers  from  previous 
makers  of  directories,  but  a  few 
changes   will    have  to   be   made 

The  postoffice  for  the  past  fiscal  year 
showed  gross  receipts  of  $10,973,  so  it 
comes  in  the  class  allowed  free  de- 
livery. The  department  at  Washing- 
ton has  written  to  the  postmaster,  ex- 
pressing surprise  that  free  delivery 
was  not  taken  when  offered,  last  year. 
As  soon  as  the  street  and  house  signs 
are  up,  application  will  be  made  for 
the  delivery. 

Ordinance  No.  85,  requiring  bells  on 
all  hor.«es  drawing  sleighs,  had  its  sec- 
ond reading. 

The  citizens  committee  has  circu- 
lated a  petition  among  property  own- 
ers and  the  majority  favor  paving  this 
year,  but  are  not  decidid  on  the  kind 
of  paving.  Tlie  committee  will  be  asked 
to    report    at    the   next    meeting. 

The  city  clerk  was  instructed  to  ad- 
vertise for  bids  for  two  steel  tanks 
for  hauling  garbage.  The  tanks  will 
contain  about  four  cubic  yard.  The 
council  expects  the  tanks  and  wagons 
to  cost   about   $500. 

SAY  HE^TOUCHED*' 
A  SLEEPING  MAN 

Virginian  Arrested  on  a 
Serious  Charge- 
Other  Events. 

Virginia,  Minn..  March  20.— ^Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Joseph  Le  Mere  has 
been  arrested,  charged  with  having 
touched  William  McCall  for  $22.  The 
accused  is  charged  witli  taking  tiie 
money  from  McCall  while  the  latter 
was  asleep  in  one  of  the  local  saloons. 

The  revival  services  at  the  Presby- 
terian church  under  the  direction  of 
Kev.  Loose  and  Prof.  Krwin  have  been 
Interesting  and  exceptionally  well  at- 
tended, the  capacity  of  the  church 
and  auditorium  being  filled  niglitly. 
They  will  remain  here  over  Sunday  and 
conduct  services  both  morning  and 
evening.  There  will  be  no  services  to- 
night. ^  .   , 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Gilbert  Erickson 
mourn  the  loss  of  their  infant  son. 
who  died  Tuesdav.  Funeral  services 
were  held  at  the  family  home  Wednes- 
day afternoon,  followed  by  interment 
in    Greenwood    cemetery. 

Mrs.  Thomas  Carroll  and  her  children 
of  Fosston  are  guests  of  her  parents, 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Stearns. 

J.  R.  Meining,  the  traveling  man  of 
Duluth,    spent    Thursday    in    this    city. 

Mrs.  H.  S.  Gillespie  and  little  son 
went  to  Duluth.  Wednesday,  for  a  two 
weeks'  visit  with  her  parents,  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Mnnro. 

F.  B.  Rosso  mhas  returned  from  a 
two  weeks'  trip  to  Mexico,  where  he 
went  on  a  tour  of  inspection  of  the 
Sonora   gold    fields.    «  ..     ^      ^, 

The  Ladies'  Aid  sBclety  of  the  Nor- 
wegian Lutheran  church  will  meet 
next  Wednesday  afternoon  with  Mrs. 
Andrew    Nilson   on   Locust   street. 

John  Coggswell,  formerly  editor  and 
publisher  of  the  Two  Harbors  Iron 
News,   is   in   the  city.  ^         „     ^ 

Several  friends  visited  Mrs.  F.  C. 
Whiting  Tuesdav  afternoon  to  help  her 
celebrate  her  "birthday,  taking  with 
them    a    beautiful    plate   as   a    memento. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Jalley  of  Min- 
neapolis are  spending  the  week  with 
Mr.  and  Mrs.   E.  C.  Strauss. 

The  Minneapolis  symphony  quar- 
tette will  appear  at  the  Roosevelt  aud- 
itorium Monday  evening. 

The  lip.ndsome  new  home  being 
erected  by  James  Lavick  on  Maple 
street  near  completion,  and  Mr.  Lavick 
and  family  expect  to  occupy  same 
about  May  1.  ,         ,         . 

E.  M.  TredvPay  spent  Wednesday  In 
Duluth    on    business. 

Born,  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Alfred  John- 
son, Tuesday,  a  son. 

J.  S.  Cherne  this  week  concluded  a 
deal  for  the  purchase  from  A.  F. 
Thaver  of  the  business  of  the  Virginia 
IMumblng  &  Heating  company,  and 
will  continue  it,  having  leased  the 
small  building  at  the  rear  of  Tred- 
ways   drug   store. 

VIROINIA  BREWERY 

IS  BEING  ENLARGED. 


courst  of  construction  on  the  second 
floor  of  the  brewery  proper  a  room 
21x21  with  16-foot  celling,  which,  when 
completed,  will  be  used  a  fermenting 
room,  thus  giving  an  additional  capa- 
city   of    1.200    barrels   per   month. 

PAT  BOYLE  MANAGER. 

Eveleth   Ball   Fans  Gettting  Ready 
for  Season's  Sport. 

Eveleth.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — .^t  an  enthusiastic 
baseball  meeting  last  night  directors 
were  elected  and  plany  talked  over 
for    the   coming   season. 

The  following  were  elected  directors: 
S.  E.  Helps,  Mat  Doyle.  E.  H.  Dormer. 
William  Davey,  James  A.  Robb;  F.  R. 
Campbell.  John  Glode.  Father  Floyd, 
J.  P.  Tredlnnlck.  It  was  decided  to 
sell  shares  at  $10.  fully  paid  and  non- 
assessable. A  number  of  fans  have  al- 
ready expressed  themselves  as  willing 
to  buy  several  shares,  so  that  quite  a 
sum  of  money  should  be  raised  In  a 
short  time,  Pat  Boyle,  the  former  Min- 
nesota university  star,  who  played 
tliird  base  here  last  year,  and  is  work- 
ing at  the  Adams  mine,  was  appointed 
playing  manager,  and  will  start  get- 
ting   fast    players    next    week. 

Four  of  the  old  men  of  last  year's 
team  are  here,  Mark  Freer,  shortstop 
and  fielder,  Pat  Boyle,  third  base;  Toby 
Farrell,  fielder,  H.  J.  Gebeau.  pitcher. 
These  will  probably  be  on  the  team 
this  year.  Games  will  be  played  two 
or  three  times  a  week.  As  far  as  pos- 
sible the  men  will  be  secured  positions 
for  the  .  rest  of  the  week.  Practice 
will  commence  as  soon  as  the  snow  is 
all    off    the    ground. 


Helped  Build  Lincoln's  Cottage 


Only  36  Years  Old  in  Spirit 


IS  PLATTING  GHEEN. 


Virginia  Surveyor  Laying  Out  Ne^v 
State  Town. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Engineer  C.  M.  Dor- 
way  of  this  city  is  in  charge  of  the 
platting  of  a  new  townsite  for  the 
state  on  the  northeast  of  the  southeast 
of  section  6,  63-19,  near  what  is  now 
known  as  Gheen,  on  the  line  of  the 
Duluth,  Rainy  Lake  &  Winnipeg. 

The  new  townsite  is  in  the  heart  of 
a  fine  section  of  country,  the  adjoin- 
ing lands  being  of  aiv  agricultural  na- 
ture, while  the  timber  supply  of  the 
north  country  Is  so  closely  contiguous 
that  it  insures  a  live  winter  town  at 
that   point   for  many   years. 

GAVE  FINE  PROGRA.M. 

Eveleth     Literary    Society    Enter- 
tained Large  Audience. 

Eveleth.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Crescent  Literary 
society  of  the  high  school  gave  a  de- 
lightful program  last  night  at  Fayal 
hall  to  a  large  audience.  The  feature 
of  the  evening  was  the  shadow  pic- 
tures, depicted  by  Mae  Furlong,  Ade- 
line Rohrer  and  Rachel  Harwood.  to 
the  singing  of  Esther  Rabinowiiz,  Hu- 
go Sholund.  Walter  Corbln  and  Ger- 
trude   Owens. 

The  playlet  was  entitled  "Dina  and 
Her  WilLickens."  and  showed  the  cruel 
fate  ofTittle  Dlna  because  of  her  true 
love  for  Willickens.  The  little  sketch 
was  produced  under  the  direction  of 
Ml.'ises  Denfeld.  Kendall  and  McFad- 
den  of  the  faculty.  A  piano  and  cello 
duet  by  Rachel  Harwood  and  R.  W.  rl- 
win  was  much  appreciated  by  the  audi- 
ence. Harry  Rablnowilz  gave  a  lit- 
tle recitation,  "The  Sant  I'Ouverture." 
Inga  Bjornaas  gave  a  a  boo  kreview 
on  "F»rince  Otto,"  which  was  much  ap- 
plauded. The  journal  reading  by  An- 
thony I'ryor  provoked  much  laughter 
with  its  stinging  sarcasm  and  jokes. 
The  high  school  orchestra  made  Its 
fiist  appearance  and  the  played  two 
numbers    in    a    very    pleasing    manner. 


Mr.  Andy  Lewis  Fillinger, 
of  Danville^  111.,  who  is 
84  years  old,  and  helped 
to  build  a  cottage  for 
AbreJiam  Lincoln  about 
1855,  says  he  has  been 
using  Duffy's  Pure  Malt 
Whiskey  since  that  time 
as  a  tonic  medicine  with 
entire  satisfaction.  He 
feels  like  a  man  of  35* 

1908, 


Mr. 


Fillinger 

1  be- 

tonic 

at 


or 


MR.    ASDY    LEWIS. 


Yours 


April  4th, 
wrote :  "As  I  now  remember 
gan  using  your  medicine  as  a 
and  stimulant  in  about  1855, 
lea.«.t  at  the  time  I  was  building 
Abraham  Lincoln's  house  in  the  city, 
of  Springfield,  111.,  and  have  contin- 
ued its  use  until  the  present 
with  beneficial  results. 

"I  am  now  past  84  years  of 
and  feel  like  a  man  of  35  years.  I 
can  truthfully  say  Duffy's  Pure  Malt 
Whiskey  gives  entire  satisfaction  to 
the  user." 

Every  testimonial  is  guaranteed 
genuine,  and  is  p\iblished  in  good 
faith  with  full  consent. 


da/ 


age. 


uffy's 


Pure  Malt  Whiskey 

)ng  and  vigorous  and  have  on  your  cheeks  the  glow  <•(  perfect  health,  take  Duf- 
Kcording  to  directions.     It  toies  and   strengthens   the   heart  action   and  purifies 


If  you  wish  to  keep  young,  stro 
fy's  Pure  Malt  Whiskey  regularly,  accorUing 

the  entire  system.     It  is  invaluable  for  overworked  men,  delicate  A-omen 
and  longevuy;  makes  the  old  young  and  keeps  the  young  strong. 

CAUTION— When  you  ask  your  druggist,   grocer  or  dealer  for  Duffy's  Pure  Malt  Whiskey  be  sure  you  get 


and  sickly  children;  is  a  promoter  of  health 


the  genuine, 
bulk.  Price 
is  unbroken. 

booklet  and 


It  is  the  only  absolutely  pure  medicinal  mih  whiskey  and  is  sold  m  sealed  bottles  only;  never  m 
$1.00.     Look  for  the  trade-mark,  the  "Old  Chemist."  on  the  label,  and  make  sure  the  seal  over  the  cork 

Write  Consulting  Physician  Duffy  Malt  Whiskey  Co.,  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  for  a  free  illustrated  medical 
free  advice. 


HIBBING  WAITING  FOR 

THE  BIG  ELKS'  SHOW. 


Hibbinp.  Minn..  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  announcement  In 
last  night's  Herald  that  the  Superior 
Elks  will  give  their  famous  minstrel 
performance  at  the  Powers  opera  house 
here  tomorrow  (Sunday")  night,  has 
aroused  much  Interest,  and  the  sale  of 
tickets  promises  that  there  will  be  a 
banner    audience    present. 


GRANT  MINE  AT  Bl  HL 

PROMISED  BUSY  SEASON. 


Virginia.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A.  V.  Hollcy,  .super- 
intendent of  the  Grant  mine  at  Buhl 
was  a  business  visitor  Wednesday.  The 
Grant  will  be  one  of  the  busy  mines  In 
the  Buhl  district  this  summer.  A  con- 
tract has  been  let  for  stripping  the 
property  and  a  considerable  amount  of 
ore   in   a 


McDonald 
released 

Millionaire.  Charged  With 

Bigamy,  Is  Given  His 

Freedom. 

Governor    of    Missouri 
Withdraws  the  Requis- 
ition for  tlim. 


mariage?"   demanded  Governor   Hadley. 

"It  does  not  say  anything,"  replied 
Fryberger.  "He  denies  end  she  as- 
serts   the    marriage." 

•The  complaining  witnes?  in  the  case 
is  not  Mrs.  Hamilton,"  he  said  "but  a 
man  of  whom  we  know  n  Jthlng."  He 
Insisted  that  the  4  cents  a  ton  royally 
would  net  Mrs.  Hamilton  Jl  10,000,  and 
that  he  had  thought  It  to  )  much  to 
pay.  but  that  Mrs.  Catherir  e  McDonald, 
the  lumberman's  Wife,  tolc  him  to  pay 
It  and  avoid  publicity  and  save  her  two 
voung  daughters,  aged  12  and  15,  from 
the  notoriety  that  would  have  been 
caused  by  a  legal  fight.  The  children 
are  in  a  boarding  school,  he  said. 

Fryberger  also  told  Go  i,ernor  Had- 
ley that  McDonald  would  easily  have 
been  worth  millions  had  lie  not  dissi- 
pated his  fortune  within  i  he  past  two 
or  three  years,  and  said  he  believed 
the  lumberman  was  worth  considerably 
less  than  a  million  at  the  present  lime. 
Among  the  documents  offered  the  gov- 
ernor was  one  declaring  iliat  whatever 
was  done,  Mrs.  Hamilton  did  not  be- 
lieve McDonald  guilty  of  ^vilfully  com- 
mitting  a   crime. 


Charlie  Floss,  who  was  stolen 
home   in   July,   1874.  and  never 


from   his 
found. 


Jefferson,  City.,  Mo.,  March  20. — Gov- 
ernor Hadley  has  decided  to  withdraw 
the    requisition     for    the     return     from 


Minneapolis  to  Kansas  City  of  Mitchell 

A.    W.    McDonald,    on    a   charge   of   big- 

amv.     The  mental  condition  of  McI>on- 

,  ,        .  ,  ,      ,    aid   was  given  as  the  reason   for  wllh- 

and  a  considerable  amount  ot    drawing    the    re(iuisltlon.      H.    B.    Fry- 

11    probabilUy    will    be   shipped,    bprger  of  Duluth,  McDonalds  attorney, 

"""     Grimmer,    attorney    to 


CoininK   to   "Ben    Hur.** 

Eveleth.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  large  number  of 
people  are  planning  to  go  to  Duluth 
next  week  to  see  "Ben  Hur,  "  which  is 
attracting    much    attention    here. 


VIRGINIA  SOON  VOTES 

ON  ITS  NEW  CHARTER. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — It  is  expected  the 
new  home  rule  charter,  adopted  by 
fourteen  out  of  fifteen  members  of  the 
charter  commission,  will  come  up  be- 
fore the  cit.v  council  for  consideration 
and  ratification  at  the  next  regular 
meeting,  and  It  is  anticipated  the  coun- 
cil will  order  a  special  election,  at 
which  the  citizens  will  vote  on  the 
adoption   of   the  document. 


Virginia,  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  ^  .rginla  Brew- 
ing company  Is  making  a  decided  im- 
provement  at    Its    plant,    having    in    the 


Virginia   Teinpernnee  Tallc. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  Alarch  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — W.  G.  Calderwood, 
secretary  of  the  Minnesota  and  Na- 
tional piohibltion  commiltees.  will  de- 
liver a  lecture  on  the  temperance 
cause  at  the  Finnish  Temperance  hall 
on    Tuesday   evening   next.   March    23. 


VirKinia   Properly  Soid. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  March  20.  — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A.  N.  Thompson,  lo- 
cal manager  of  the  Singer  Sewing  Ma- 
chine company,  this  week  concluded  a 
deal  for  the  sale  of  his  Central  avenue 
property  to  the  Johnson  Supply  com- 
pany, of  Eveleth.  C.  R.  Johnson,  man- 
ager, and  will  give  possession  of  the 
ground  floor  on  April  1. 

WASECA,  MINn!.  woman 

KILLED  IN  MEXICO. 


Minneapolis.  Minn.,  Maich  20. — Mit- 
chell A.  W.  McDonald,  thi  millionaire 
Minneapolis  lumberman  who  has  been 
imprisoned  In  the  Hennepin  county 
jail  because  of  a  chargt  of  bigamy 
made  against  him  by  a  M  ssouri  wom. 
an,  was  released  yesterday  afternoon, 
on  the  motion  of  his  attorneys,  after 
Governor  Johnson  had  received  word 
that  the  requisition  frcm  Governor 
Hadley  of  Missouri  had  been  with- 
drawn. 


TRIED  ON  OLD  CHARGE. 


Man 


Living   Near   Blackdnck, 
quitted  of  Killing  Moose. 

Grand     Ilaplds,    Minn..     March 
(Special    to    The    Herald.) — There 
been     Interesting     developments 
local    justice's    court    of    late. 

ing  the  alleged  violations  of  the 
laws. 

Last  week  William  Noble,  who  lives 
in  Third  Klver  township,  in  this 
county,  near  BlackducK,  obtained  a 
warrant  for  the  arrest  of  E.  M.  Ras- 
ter of  that  neighborhood,  charging 
him  with  having  killed  two  moose 
calves  on  July  3.  1907.  The  trial  of 
Kaster  was  held  Thursday  before  H.  S. 
Huson,  a  local  justice  of  the  peace, 
and  a  jury.     The  Jury,  after  being  out 


Mexico  Citv.  Mex..  March  20.— Mr.". 
F.  A.  Everett  of  Waseca.  Minn.,  was 
killed  last  night  in  a  collision  between 
a  wild  engine  and  the  regular  passen. 
arer  train  bound  from  Vera  Cruz  to 
Mexico  Citv.  Shortlv  before  the  sta- 
tion of  La  Villa  was  reached,  a  rock 
was  thrown  through  a  car  window. 
The  train  was  stopped  and  rural 
guards  sent  In  pursuit  of  the  mis- 
creant who  threw  the  rock.  While  the 
train  was  standing,  a  runaway  en- 
gine crashed  into  the  car.  killing  Mrs. 
Everett  and  injuring  a  number  of 
others. 

Mrs.  Everett  was  touring  the  repub- 
lic, and.  it  is  said,  was  the  wife  of  a 
wealthy  flour  mill  owner. 


WOMAN  WINS  HER  SUIT 
AGAINST  MODERN  WOODMEN 


Lincoln,  Neb.,  March  20. — Mrs.  Lena 
Margaret  Lillie.  this  morning  won  her 
suit  against  the  Modern  Woodmen. 
The  jury  In  the  district  court  last  night 
handed  in  a  sealed  verdict.  When 
opened  it  was  found  that  Mrs.  Lillie 
had  been  awarded  the  sum  of  $4,283.75. 
She  sued  for  |4.000  and  interest  and 
this  sum  was  allowed.  Mrs.  Lillie 
started  the  suit  to  collect  the  amount 
of  the  policy  held  by  her  husband. 
i  whom  she  was  accused  of  murdering. 
She  was  convicted  and  was  pardoned 
bv  Governor  Mickey  just  before  he  re- 
tired  from   office. 


and  Harvey  W. 
Governor  Johnson  of  Minnesota,  ap- 
peared before  Governor  Hadley  yester- 
day and  requested  that  he  withdraw 
his  requisition  for  McDonald.  Mr. 
Grimmer  explained  that  he  had  been 
sent  at  the  expense  of  the  state  of  Min- 
necota.  because  Governor  John.son 
thought  the  warrant  charging  McDon- 
ald with  bigamy  was  unfair,  but  added 
that  Governor  Johnson  did  not  wish  to 
refuse  a  requisition  from  the  Missouri 
governor. 

Mr.  Frvberger's  story  to  Governor 
Hadley  was  that  McDonald  was  a  Ca- 
nadian switchman  who  was  for  many 
years  what  is  known  in  the  lumber 
country  as  a  timberjack;  that  he  start, 
ed  as  a  laborer,  acquired  lumber  land, 
cut  off  the  timber,  and  later  found  the 
cut-over  land  to  be  rich  in  iron  ore. 
McDonald  organized  his  land  Into  the 
Chicago  Ore  company  and  leased  it 
to  the  Steel  corporation  on  a  tonnage 
basis. 

In  March,  1908,  said  Fryberger,  Mc- 
Donald's health  was  poor  and  he  went 
to  Hot  Springs,  where  he  met  Mrs. 
Belle  Hamilton,  the  woman  on  whose 
account  McDonald  Is  now  sought  to  be 
extradited  to  Missouri. 

Frvberger  also  told  Governor  Hadley 
that '  Mrs.  Hamilton  asserts  she  and 
McDonald  were  married  at  Windsor, 
Can.,  lust  across  the  river  from  De- 
troit, but  that  McDonald  insists  upon 
another    version.  , 

"I  don't  know  aV>out  the  facts."  said 
Fryberger,  "but  later  they  met  In  Chi- 
cago and  undoubtedly  they  were  to- 
getlier  In  Kansas  City.  McDonald  in 
the  mean  time  made  trips  to  Minneapo- 
lis, where  he  has  a  wife  and  family. 
In  November  last  Mrs.  Hamilton  sued 
him  In  Minneapolis  for  |25,000,  and  to 
avoid  publicity  we  went  into  a  settle- 
ment agreement  with  ner.  This  agree- 
ment was  made  at  Minneapolis  Dec. 
29,    1908  It    was    signed    by     Amber 

Hamilton  and  M.  A.  W.  McDonald,  and 
provided  that  4  cents  a  ton  royally 
on  all  the  ore  taken  from  the  McDon- 
old  mines  in  the  Me.saba  range  should 
be  paid  to  Mrs.  Hamilton  in  quarterly 
pavments.  In  return  for  this  Mrs.  Ham- 
ilton was  to  release  McDonald.  Joseph 
Molineaux,  Mrs.  Hamilton's  attorney 
and  trustee  in  this  transaction,  was 
to   he   paid   $15,000  as  his   fee. 

"What    does   the   contract    say   about 


PARENTS  OF  KIDNAPED 
BOY  ARE  EAGER  10  PAY 
$10,000  RANSOM  ASKED 

(Continued  from  page  1.) 


"Murder    a     >Iere     PaxUme." 

Chicago.  March  20.— The  intensity  of 
interest  caused  here  by  the  kidiiapiugf 
of  WUiie  Whitla  at  Sharon,  Pa.,  ia 
reflected  in  a  signed  statement  made 
by  State's  Attorney  Wyman  here  today 
as  follows: 

"The  kidnaping  of  Willie  Whllla  has 
stirred  the  activity  of  the  officials  of 
Cook  county.  Chief  of  Detectives 
OBrlen,  with  all  the  aid  at  his  com- 
mand, and  Chief  of  Police  Shippy,  are 
t'.sing  the  entire  police  antl  detective 
force,  not  onlv  In  an  effort  to  catch 
the  kidnapers.  If  they  should  come  Into 
the  state,  but  are  giving  advice  to  the 
Eastern  officials  as  to  the  methods  to 
be  employed.  I  have  assigned  all  my 
detectives  to  the  case  and  two  of  my 
assistants    In    running    down    all    clues. 

"I  believe  the  kidnaping  of  a  child 
Is  the  worst  offense  that  can  be  com- 
mitted. In  comparison  with  the 
fiendishness  of  this  sort  of  criminal, 
murder  Is  a  mere  pastime.  I  think 
the  penalty  for  kidnaping  should  be 
capital  punishment,  and  while  the 
punishment  now  Is  from  one  year  to 
life  in  the  penitentiary  and  the  pris- 
oner is  not  eligible  to  parole,  it  does 
not  seem  severe  enough.  This  office 
is  at  the  command  of  anyone  wh<j  has 
tlie  slightest  clue  as  to  the  where- 
abouts of  this  little   V>oy." 


Conntorfclt    Car    Tiekeiw. 

Mexico  Citv.  March  20. — Fifteen  em- 
ployes of  the'  street  car  system  of  this 
city  have  been  arrested  as  the  result 
of  an  Investigation  of  the  source  of 
numerous  counterfeit  street  car  tickets 
which  have  been  presented  recently. 
Officials  of  thQ  road  estimate  that  at 
least  $15,000  worth  of  counterfeit  tick- 
ets have  been  used. 


Rtirnl   Mail   Carrieni. 

Washington.  March  20. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Rural  carriers  appoint- 
ed effective  April  1:  Brookpark.  Route 
1.  Ira  N.  Deuore,  carrier;  Frank  A. 
Miller,  substitute:  Menagha.  Route  2, 
George  I.  San  ford,  carrier.  John  L  San- 
ford,  substitute. 


sthma 

Bronchitis 

])ifiicult6reatlun0 

Omeia  Oil 

Pour  a  teaspoonful  of  Omega  Oil 
in  a  cup  of  boiling  water,  hold  the 
mouth  and  nose  close  to  the  cup,  and 
inhale  the  arising  steam.  The  steam 
carries  the  healing  properties  of  the 
Oil  into  the  throat  and  lungs  and 
gives  quick  relief*    lOc,  25c.,  &0c 


the  ransom  of  $10,000  If  ?iven  an  op- 
portunity to  do  so.  Money  is  no  object. 
Tliev    want   their  child. 

Neither  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Whllla,  or 
William's  little  sister,  Salina,  10  years 
old,  have  slept  over-much  since  the 
kidnaping.  They  are  apparently  re- 
.slgned  to  the  fact  that  tlie  kidnapers 
have  the  upper  hand  in  the  affair  and 
anxiously  await  some  Intelligence  from 
the  men  as  to  what  they  are  to  do  to 
get  William  back. 

Every  clue,  no  matter  1  ow  slight,  is 
being  run  down  by  the  boys  uncle, 
Frank  H.  Buhl,  the  mirionaire  steel 
manufacturer  and  other  relatives  of 
the  fam'.ly.  Their  efforts  have  been 
unsuccessful,  however,  aid  Mr.  Buhl, 
who  conducted  an  exhaustive  search 
In  Cleveland  last  night,  \.lll  return  to 
Sharon    this    afternoon. 

KccailM  PrevluuM  Cnne. 
The  abduction  of  the  Whitla  boy 
has  served  to  recall  alinjst  a  similar 
kidnaping  at  Sharon  in  l!i99,  ten  years 
ago,  when  the  son  of  a  wealthy  resi- 
dent, A.  Levine,  was  the  victim.  At 
the  time  it  was  kidnap  ?d,  the  child 
was  eight  months  old  a  nth"  was  in  a 
baby  carriage  in  charge  of  a  nurse. 
The  nurse  had  wheeled  the  carriage 
along  one  of  the  avenues  of  the  city 
and  on  reaching  a  drug  sitore,  left  the 
babv  and  carriage  on  the  outside  while 
she  entered  to  make  a  p  jrchase.  Dur- 
ing her  absence,  unseen  by  any  one, 
the  baby  was  stolen  from  its  carri- 
age. 

Several  hours  later,  as  in  the  Whitla 
case,  the  parents  of  the  ?lilld  received 
a  letter  Informing  them  'hat  the  child 
was  all  right  and  that  It  would  be  re- 
stored to  them  on  the  payment  of  the 
sum  of  $5,000  and  no  publicity.  Tiie 
parents  notified  the  police  and  It  was 
decided  to  pay  the  ransom  demanded. 
A  spot  In  the  outskirts  of  the  town 
was  designated  and  tvro  detectives 
were  detailed  to  watch  ihe  place  and 
make  an  arrest,  after  the  money  had 
been  taken  from  the  des  gnated  place. 
The  kidnapers,  hpwevei ,  seemed  to 
know  every  movement  Df  the  police 
and  the  parents  and,  ar  hour  before 
the  time  agreed  upon  for  the  placing 
of  the  money,  a  letter  ws.s  received  by 
the  parents.     It  read: 

"You  have  the  i)ollce  watching  us  to 
arrest  us.  We  do  not  want  your  mon- 
ey now,  but  we  have  got  your  baby. 
You   win   never  see   him  again." 

The  kidnapers  were  nc  t  heard  from 
again,  and  ll»e  father,  who  was  also  a 
friend  of  J.  I'.  Whitla,  spent  nearly 
everv  cent  he  had  In  tr:lng  to  gel  a 
trace  of  the  child.  It  vas  not,  how- 
ever until  a  year  later  that  a  peddler 
discovered  the  kidnaped  child  in  a 
home  at  Punxsulawney,  Pa.,  where  it 
had  been  left  eleven  months  previously 
by  a  man  and  a  woman  ^.'ho  were  .sup- 
posed to  have  been  Iniflkrated  In  its 
kidnaping. 

I^M^'  Is  Seveie. 
The  law  In  Pennsylvania  against 
kidnaping  is  severe.  Ji'ollowlng  the 
Pat  Crowe  episode  at  Omiha.  the  l<gls- 
lature  passed  a  bill  making  the  punish- 
ment for  kidnaping  imprisonment  for 
life  or  for  any  term  of  years  at  ihe 
discretion  of  the  court.  Any  person 
assisting  in  a  kidnaping  may  be  pun- 
ished by  a  fine  of  $5,000  and  Imprison- 
ment not  exceeding  tweity-flve  years, 
at  the  discretion  of  the  .rourt. 

No  one  read  the  storv  of  the  kid- 
naping of  the  Whitla  child  with  more 
interest  tlian  the  mother  of  the  famous 


SENTENCK 
IMPOSED 

Three  Men  Committed  to 

State  Reformatory  by 

Judge  Cant. 

Raymond  Glenn  Given 

Term  for  Attempting 

Suicide. 


Three   reformatory   sentences     were 
given  erring  youths  by  Judge  Cant  in 


yesterday     afternoon. 

get  a  chance  to  reform 

life    and    the    way    of 

when    they    come    out 

to    take    a    proper 


district      court 
There  they  will 
their    ideas    of 
I  living,    so    that 
they    will    be    able 
place  in  the  world. 

Ravmond  Glenn,  the  first  person 
ever  "convicted  <>'  attempting  to  com- 
mit suicide  in  St.  Louis  county,  was 
given  a  reformatory  sentence.  When 
arraigned  for  sentence  he  again  pro- 
tested that  he  didn't  mean  to  kill  him- 
self when  he  took  carbolic  acid. 

Eugene  Oliver  Goulot  didn't  have 
any  e,\cuse  at  all  for  raising  a  time 
check  from'  |6.90  to  $68.90  and  he  was 
given  a  reformatory  sentence  also.  He 
said  he  was  under  the  Influence  of 
liquor  when  he  committed  the  crime. 

Edward    Malancy    again    worked    a 
twist    in    names   when      he      was      ar- 
raigned  for  sentence.        He  said   on  a 
previous   occasion    that   his   name   was 
"  " '   "  Yesterday  he  went 

again  and  Malancy 
a  reformatory  sen- 
a  horse  in  the  town 


Edward  Mahoney. 
hack  to  Malancy 
it  is.  He  drew 
tence  for  stealing 
of    Meadowland.s. 


A  PASSPORT  TO  HEALTH 


.\t  Small  Kxpen-se  Over  a  Safe  Road. 


The  desire 
vmiversal. 

head  and 
every  one 
When  the 
course   of 


to  be  well  and  strong  la 

Sound      digestion,      clear 

pure    blood    are   needed    by 


In  this  work-a-day  world, 
body  is  run  down,  a  short 
Beecham's  Pills  will  work 
wonders  for  a  weak  stomach,  tired 
brains,  or  impoverished  blood.  The.^e 
pills  are  good  for  all  the  ordinary  ills, 
and  act  in  a  pleasant  manner  on  the 
Liver,  Kidney."?,  Stomach  and  Bowels. 
Beecham's  Pills  are  convenient  to 
take,  and  they  can  be  had  In  10c  and 
25c  boxes. 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     SATURDAY.    MARCH    20,    1909. 


iim  CO. 


330  West  Superior  Street, 
_.„__  Dululli,  Minn. 

Monday  We  Give  You  $22  for  $12.85 

The  reasons  why  have  been  fully  explained  in  our  previous  ads. 
We  are  determined  to  reduce  our  enormous  stocks  of  jewelry,  and 
know  of  no  better  way  than  by  the  power  of  price. 

Quality,  Regardless  ol  Price 

We  say.  yon  know,  there  are  certain  established  price  traditions 
handed  down,  especially  in  watches  and  d!amt)nds.  Every  store  must 
have  its  Sl.iX)  watch,  its  $5.00  to  $10.00,  and  some  their  $9.95.  worth 
$1500,  and  so  on  BUT!!!  But  what  a  difference  in  quotation  and 
variation.  Every  store  does  its  best,  comes  up  to  its  own  standard 
according  to  its  possibilities  and  capacity.  But  it  is  the  test  of  time, 
the  wear  test  or  in  dry  g>>ods  vernacular,  the  "'vvashtub"  test  that  tells 
all  in  the  end.  We  know  good  watches  and  we  are  competent  judges 
of  diamonds.  On  MON'D.W,  MARCH  22nd.  1909,  we  will  offer  to 
the  Duluth  public  any  article  in  our  store  marked  $22.  for  $12.85.  You 
have  vour  choice  of  any  goods  vou  can  find  in  any  department  marked 
$22  for  $12,85.  This  will  give'yo":  W.\TCHES,  CLOCKS.  STER- 
LIXG  SILVERWARE.  CUT  GLASS.  PLATED  SILVERWARE. 
SOLID  GOLD  JEWELRY.  DLWIOND  SET  JEWELRY,  SHOP- 
PING BAGS.  NOVELTIES,  HAND  PAINTED  CHINA.  UM- 
BRELLAS. CASKS,  DESSERT  SET.  ETC. 

MARCH  CLEARANCE  SALE  DISCOUNT: 

30%  to  331/3%  Discount  Above  or  Below  $22.00. 


OUT-OF-TOWN  PEOPLE 

Can  take  advantage  of  :his  clearance  sale,  as  we  maintain  a  mail 
order  department  that  will  fill  your  orders  with  the  same  care  as 
if  you  were  at  our  ct^unter.  Never  hesitate  when  you  want  any- 
thing usually  carried  by  a  metropolitan  jewelry  house.     Write  us. 


MEETING  TO 
BE  BUSY  ONE 

Many  Matters  ef  Import- 
ance to  Come  Before 
Council. 


SHADES  OF  PROCTOR  KNOW 

SUPERIOR  WASN'T  ON  THE  MAP 


Isn't  Superior  on  the  commercial 
map? 

It  doesn't  look  that  way.  It's  a 
shame  to  tell  it.  but  down  in  New 
OrleaiLs,  where  they  are  supposed  to 
know  that  the  war  is  over,  they 
couldn't  find  Superior  on  their  rail- 
way   maps. 

William  Pattison.  who  owns  prop- 
erty in  both  of  the  cities  at  the  Head 
of  the  Lakes,  and  who.  by  the  way.  is 
acquiring  more  property  in  the  live 
town  of  Duluth.  but  whose  home  is 
really  in  Superior,  because  some  years 
ago  he  built  his  domicile  there,  is  the 
person  to  discover  that  poor  old  Su- 
perior is  notlisted  in  the  regularly  de- 
fined routes  of  travel. 

Mr.  Pattison  was  In  New  Orleans. 
and  after  viewing  the  festivities  of  the 
Mardi  Grus  city,  belliou^ht  him  of 
home  Tiien  he  went  to  the  ortice  of 
the  Illinois  Central  railroad  and  asked 
for  a  ticket  to  Superior. 

The  ticket  clerk  l'»oke^  puzzl^-d  an^l 
then  went  to  consult  hte  rat.-  book. 
He  scanned  that  book  thoroughly.  He 
came  baek  to  the  countt^r  and  asked 
Mr.  Pattison  if  he  were  sure  that  he 
had  the  ripht  name  of  the  villuge  he 
wished  to  go  to. 

That   was  too  much.        Not  kn  .w  of 


ELMQLIST  WILL  SPEAK. 

Rev.  A.  F.  Elmquist.  pastor  of  St. 
Johns  Englisii  Lutheran  church,  Min- 
neapolis, will  be  the  principal  speaker 
at  tlie  social  to  be  given  Thursday 
evening.  March  25.  In  Bethany  Swedish 
Lutheran  eliurch.  Twenty-third  avenue 
west  and  Third  street.  The  exercises 
will   begin    promptly  at   8   o'clock. 

Dr.  Elmquist  was  for  several  years 
pastor   of   Bethany    church    and    he   has 


Superior:  Shades  of  old  Indian  days 
and  the  glorious  history  of  the  boom, 
that  boomed  across  the  until  Proctor 
Knott  picked  upon  us  and  started  our 
spunk:        Not  know  of  Superior.  Wfs.f 

That  got  to  Mr.  Pattison's  pride.  He 
told  the  clerk  v.here  the  city  of  Supe- 
rior was  located,  and  even  described 
Tower  avenue,  with  its  surging  crowds 
of  a  Saturday  night.  But  still  the 
man  who  sells  tickets  for  the  Illinois 
Central  in  New  Orleans.  looked 
puzzled. 

Then  Mr.  Patti.'^on  informed  the 
ticket  clerk  that  Superior  was  across 
the  bay  from  Duluth.  Ah!  That 
was  different.  The  furrows  evapor- 
ated from  the  brow  of  the  clerk.  He 
looked  intelligent.  Te.^.  yes,  Duluth. 
surely;  the  Queen  of  the  L'nsalted 
Seas;     the    Zenith    City    uf    the    North. 

Bjjt  even  when  the  clerk  learned,  in- 
directly, the  location  of  Superior,  he 
was  unable  to  sell  Mr.  Pattison  a 
ticket  to  the  village  acro.ss  the  way. 
So  accordingly  Mr.  Pattison  purchased 
his  ticket  to  Duluth.  There  is  noth- 
ing like  coming  back  to  a  good  city, 
even  though  your  home  is  across  tlie 
bay  from  it. 

From  the  lighted  reefs  of  the  New 
England  coast  to  the  Guif-waslied 
shores  of  Texa.s  Superior  is  the  "city 
across  the  bay  from  Duluth." 


of  Gorman  post  of  the  G.  A.  R.  and  the 
Sons  of  Veterans.  Mr.  Corbett  was  G.'i 
years  of  age  and  a  veteran  of  the  Civil 
war. 

He  came  to  Duluth  about  a  year  ago 
from  Port  Arthur.  He  was  an  officer 
of  the  Jasper  Copper  company,  wlii(.h 
owns    North   shore  mining   properties. 

The  remains  will  be  taken  to  Tekon- 
ska.  Mich.,  for  burial. 


Carpenter  License  and 

Election  of  President 

Among  Them. 


The  council  meeting  next  Monday 
evening  will  be  a  busy  one.  Several 
matters  will  come  up  for  consideration. 
Mayor  Havens  annual  message  is  now 
ready,  and  will  be  read  Monday  night. 
It  Is  understood  to  be  very  comprehen- 
sive, containing  numerous  recommen- 
dations for  different  city  departments 
for    tlie    year. 

The  Carpenter  Bros,  saloon  matter 
will  conie  up  again,  and  probably  will 
be  tinaliy  disposed  of.  Tiie  Carpenters 
were  found  guilty  in  municipal  court 
of  selling  luiuor  to  minors  at  their 
saloon  in  tlie  West  end,  and  two  weeks 
ago  all  the  witnesses  wl»o  appeared 
in  court,  and  several  others,  were 
called  before  the  council  to  testify 
in  regard  to  the  affair.  The  Carpen- 
ters also  appeared,  to  show  cause  why 
their   license    should    not    1>€    revoked. 

After  some  heated  arguments,  the 
aldermen  voted  to  postpone  action  for 
two  weeks.  An  application  has  been 
made  for  a  transfer  fo  the  Carpenter 
license  to  William  Meier,  who  owns 
the  building  in  which  the  saloon  is 
located,  and  some  of  the  aldermen 
favor  allowing  the  transfer  to  be  made. 
in  place  of  revoking  tlie  license,  pro- 
vided tiie  Carpenters  themselves  sever 
all  connections  with  the  busines.s, 
which   they  promise   to   do. 

.\nollier  attempt  will  be  made  to 
elect  a  president  of  the  council.  The 
aldermen  could  not  ajfree  on  a  presi- 
dent last  Monday,  and  it  is  .said  they 
are  no  nearer  an  agreenient  now  tlian 
they  were  before.  Ten  ballots  were 
taken  last  Monday,  and  il  may  take 
several  times  that  many  before  a  man 
is  chosen,  .\ldernian  Shartel  is  in  tlie 
lead,  with  seven  votes.  He  needs  nine 
to    elect. 

Probably  the  council  will  order  con- 
demnation proceedings  for  the  exten- 
sion of  Railroad  street  from  Fifteenth 
avenue  west  to  Garllcld.  The  proposi- 
tion to  start  condemnation  proceedings 
for  an  easy  grade  road  over  tlie  hill  at 
i^ifty-seventh  avenue  west  will  also  be 
voted   on. 

Alderman  Shartel's  ordinance  making 
it  a  mi.sdemeanor  for  minors  to  misrep- 
resent w'i"ir  Hges  to  bartenders  in  order 
that  they  may  secure  drinks,  is  due  to 
come  up  aKain  Monday.  There  was  a 
warm  discussion  on  it  at  the  last  meet- 
ing, and  the  motion  to  adopt  did  not 
come  to  a   vote. 

The  ordinance  committee  may  make 
a  report  on  the  "overloading"  ordi- 
nance, designed  to  prevent  the  over- 
loading of  horses  on  Duluth  hills.  In- 
stead of  proviiring  that  no  horse  shall 
draw  more  tiian  double  its  own  weight, 
the  measure  may  be  amended  so  as  to 
make  the  loads  in  proportion  to  the 
grades  up  which  they  are  to  be  hauled, 
the  lees  steep  the  grade  the  larger  the 
load. 

The  resolution  adopted  at  the  last 
council  meeting,  ordering  the  repair  o^ 
the  Sixth  avenue  viaduct,  will  be  re- 
turned to  the  council  without  Mayor 
Haven's  signature,  ami  with  his  rec- 
ommendation that  the  city  engineer 
be  instructed  to  prepare  plajis  and 
specifications  for  the  repair  of  the 
structure,  and  that  after,  the  council 
lias  approved  s\ich  plans  and  specifica- 
tions, the  railroad  companies  having 
tracks  under  the  viaduct  be  instructed 
to  make  the  repairs  along  lines  sug- 
gested by  the  cil.v  engineer. 


REV.  A.  F.  ELMQUIST. 


a  large  circle  of  friends  throughout  the 
city.  .\  young  churchman,  born  in  j^his 
coiintr.v,  he  has  already  taken  a  prom- 
inent place  among  the  Lutheran  di- 
vines in  this  country  and  he  is  consid- 
ered a  capable  and  entertaining  speak- 
er. His  address  will  be  in  the  Swedish 
language. 

Tl'.e  social  will  be  given  under  the 
auspices  of  the  Men's  society  of  Beth- 
an.y    church.  _^ 

WILL  BUILD  A  HALL. 


Go«tl  Templars  Planning  to   Erect 
Home  in  West  End. 

The  West  end  lodge  of  Good  Tem- 
plars is  to  have  a  clubhouse  all  Its  own. 

Plans  are  being  made  for  the  erec- 
tion of  a  lodge  room  at  the  comer  of 
Twenty-sixth  avenin^  west  and  Second 
Btfeet.  The  new  building  will  be  used 
exclusively  by  the  lodge  Nordsteger- 
man  No.   11. 

The  new  structure  will  be  a  frame 
affair   and  will   cost  about   $3,000. 


West  End  Shortrails. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  S.  H.  Zlrn  of  2Sn  West 
Third  street  entertained  last  evening 
In  linnor  of  Miss  Alma  Malniquist. 
Games  were  pla.ved  and  a  very  pleas- 
ant  evening  was   spent   by  all. 

A  daughter  was  born  yesterday  to 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  P.  Murphy  of  2607 
Railroad  street. 

The  Young  People's  society  of  Zion 
Norwegian  Lutheran  church  met  last 
evening  for  Bible   study. 

The  funeral  of  Evelyn  Victoria  Hed- 
nmn.  daugliter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  E. 
Flednian.  is  being  held  this  afternoon 
at  the  residence.  Iiiterment  takes 
place   at   the    Lutheran    cemetery. 

Rev.  Swaney  Nilson  of  Big  Springs. 
S.  D..  is  at  the  AVest  end.  He  will 
preach  tomorrow  in  the  First  Baptist 
church. 

Harry  Bishop  and  Will  Gened  of  Al- 
ston. Mich.,  are  visiting  in  the  West  end. 

The  City  Democratic  club  met  last 
evening  in  Sloan's  hall.  The  club  en- 
dorsed the  plan  to  pave  Garfield  avenue. 
Among  the  speakers  were  former  Mayor 
Cullum.  T.  J.  McKeon,  I'harles  Hoar, 
J.  Levine  and  George  Doran. 


WORKINGHIEN ! 

.-Vu^ust  Guilhaus,  National  Organizer  of 
the 

SOri.\MST    I..\BOR     PARTY, 

On  Sunda.v.  March  21st.  at  8  p.  m.,  at 
Odd  I'ellows'  hall.  20  Lake  avenue  north, 
will   speak    on   the   following  subject, 

"SO<  IAI.ISM," 
and   its   bearings  on  the   present  world- 
wide industrial  crisis.     Admission.  Free. 


Sad  Rites  for  Coibett. 

The  funeral  of  E.  K.  Corbett,  said  to 
have  been  the  discoverer  of  copper  on 
the  north  shore  of  Lake  Superior,  who 
died  Tuesday,  is  being  held  this  after- 
noon at  Forward's  undertaking  rooms. 
Rev.  M.  S.  Hioe  preached  the  service 
"^nd   the   arranjfements   were   in  cha»-i*» 


WATERWAYS  BILL 
REINTRODUCED 

Congressman  Ransdeil  of 

Louisiana  Betiind  the 

Measure* 

Washington.  March  20. — (Special  to 
The  Herald- — Representative  Ransdeil 
of  Louisiana,  president  of  the  national 
rivers  and  harbors  congress  and  chair- 
man of  the  special  committee  author- 
ized by  the  congress  to  prepare  a  wa- 
terways measure,  has  reintroduced  a 
bill  providing  for  aii  issue  of  150.000.- 
000  of  bonds  per  annum  for  the  next 
ten  years,  aggregating  $500,000,000  for 
improving  the  rivers,  harbors  and 
canals   of   the   United  States. 

This  bill  was  prepared  by  Congress- 
men Ransdeil  of  Loul.olana.  Moore  of 
Pennsylvania.  Bartholdt  of  Missouri, 
and  Shirley  of  Kentucky.  under  a 
resolution  adopted  at  the  last  annual 
convention  of  the  national  rivers  and 
harbors  congress  and  is  in  accord  with 
tlie  well  known  views  of  President 
Taft  as  expressed  in  his  inaugural  ad- 
dress that  waterway  improvements 
should  be  chargeable  not  alone  upon 
the  country  today,  but  that  future  gen- 
erations should  bear  their  due  pro- 
portion of  the  burden,  a»  tUey  will  eu- 
lov   the    benefit*. 


MEINING 

Moved  to  106  West  Superior  St. 

New  Jersey  Building,  where  slie  is 
showing  a  most  elegant  line  of  Easter 
Hats,  and  will  be  glad  to  have  all  her 
old  and  new   patrons  call. 


INJUSTICE  OF 
TONNAGE  TAX 


ienlly  enfon  imI  and  lived  up  to.  Com- 
mon sense  and  honesty  at  heart  are 
what  we  need  more  than  anything,  and 
if  we  can  produce  that,  we  will  have 
more  justice.  .So  much  c()mmon  sense 
ouKht  to  be  expected  from  the  legisla- 
tive body,  that  for  the  sake  of  selHsh- 
iiess  they  should  not  work  agaitwt  the 
interests  of  the  whole  state  for  tho 
benefit  of  a  few.  Yours  for  common 
sense  and^uAtlce, 

'•^     Canton  gronseth. 

Duluth.  «*r<ilf  19.^ 

WILL  ASK  COUNTY 
TO  REPAIR  ROAD 

Settlers    Say  Legalized 

Highway  Is  in  Bad 

Condition. 

Claiming  that  it  will  be  necessary 
for  the  country  to  improve  a  two  and 
one-half-mile  stretch  of  legalized  road, 
so  that,  they  can  get  in  and  out  to  the 
north  shore  road,  a  number  of  the 
settlers  in  52-12  are  preparing  a  peti- 
tion to  be  presented  to  the  county 
board  at  an  early  date. 

The  road  was  legalized  on  the  sec- 
tion line.  Ijetween  31  and  32,  52-12. 
about  tliree  years  ago,  when  $500  was 
spent,  cutting  it  out  and  stamping  it 
for  about  half  a  mile.  Since  that  time 
nothing  has  been  done  to  finish  or  im- 
prove the  road,  and  it  is  said  to  be  in 
aiy almost  impassable  condition.  There 
are  about  tliirty-five  families  living 
along  the  route,  and  the  farmers  are 
an.\ious  to  have  something  done  for 
them  this  year.  They  think  they  have 
■waited  long  enough. 

They  claim  that  if  it  had  not  been 
for  August  Banks,  wlio  owns  a  farm 
in  tiie  town  of  Duluth.  and  who  also 
follows  the  logging  business,  they 
would  not  be  able  to  get  out  to  the 
north  snore  load  at  all.  Mr.  Banks  has 
been  keeping  two  bridges  in  repair,  at 
his  own  expense,  for  the  past  two  or 
three   years. 

/       Stiff   .Neck.. 

Stiff  necjjt  Isi  caused  by  rheumatism 
of  tlie  muscles'  of  the  neck.  It  Is 
usually  i&nflned  to  one  side  or  to  the 
back  of  ttkt  ivegk  and  one  side.  While 
It  Is  often'  QOiie  pai'.iful.  quick  relief 
may  be  hafi  byiippiylng  Chamberlains' 
Liniment. -Jfolt  ine  case  oJ  rlieumatism 
In  ten  reqt^ireS  internal  treatment. 
When  the'ni  isAio  fever  and  no  swell- 
ing as  in  ^^N^Wlar  and  clironic  rheu- 
matism, Cf^jSerlain's  Liniment  will 
accomplish  tn^B?'  than  any  Intcrr.i.} 
treatment.  JFor^ale   by  all   druggists. 


BIDDING  FOR 
TOURISTS 

Western  Cities  all  Want 

Tiieir  Share  of  Coast 

Travel. 


Duluth  Will  Benefit  From 

Heavy  Movement  to 

Coast. 


Anton  Gronseth  Protests 
Against  Such  Discrim- 
ination in  Taxing. 

To   the    Hditor   of  The   Herald: 

When  I  read  in  your  jiaper  at  Hib- 
bing  last  night  the  "KoUs  of  Honor 
and     Dishonor,"     1     noticed     in     looking 

over  the  list  that  St.  Paul.  Minneapolis 
and  Duluth  as  a  trinity  fought  against 
the  passage  of  the  tonnage  tax  bill. 
That  goes  to  show  that  the  leading 
business  men  of  tlie  state  have  cour- 
a.ge  and  convictions  to  stick  up  for  the 
rigiit.  On  tlie  "list  of  dishonoi'"  I 
noticed  that  it  was  headed  by  Adams 
and  ended  by  Wright,  both  of  Fergus 
Fails.  Adams  did  not  do  the  right 
thing,  neither  did  Wright,  when  they 
voted  for  the  discrimination  in  taxes. 
Any  man  who  has  his  full  senses 
ought  to  be  able  to  see  the  injustice 
in  such  action  as  taken  by  tiie  house. 
Fergus  Falls  is  well  represented  on  the 
passing  lists,  and  when  we  know  that 
Fergus  Falls  is  a  place  where  they  are 
trying  to  restore  the  upper  story,  I  am 
not  surprised  at  that;  neither  am  I 
much  surprised  at  Lake  Park,  the 
"city  of  darkness,"  the  home  of  the 
originator  of  the  tonnage  tax  bill.  For 
tweiilj'  years  1  have  been  acquainted 
with  that  place,  and  I  would  suggest 
to  tliose  who  are  ambitious  of  reform 
to  begin  at  home  first.  In  the  first 
place,  they  need  a  lighting  plant 
for  their  enlightenment  before  they 
try  to  father  something  they  do  not 
understand.  When    my    wife    was     a 

girl  she  lived  at  Lake  Park  for  a  while, 
but  her  aggressive  spirit  drew  lier  to 
i>uluth  and  out  of  "darkness  into 
light." 

If  the  tonnage  tax  becomes  a  law,  I 
will  not  only  be  ashamed  of  the  legis- 
lative body,  but  rather  ashamed  of 
living  in  a  state  where  such  injustice 
is  festered.  Discriminations  should 
not  be  tolerated  on  Minnesota  soil.  It 
is  a  shame  that  the  people  who  live 
in  the  fertile  section  of  this  state,  so 
rich  in  agricultural  products,  should 
suggest  and  frame  such  an  injustice 
to  the  northern  part,  which,  up  to  late 
years,  has  been  considered  a  vast  bar- 
ren country.  When  the  energetic 
Northerner  has  surprised  the  South- 
erner with  turning  the  barren  country 
into  a  land  of  great  resources,  then 
the  Southerner  turns  jealous  and  wants 
to  suck  our  heart's  blood  from  us, 
which  we  will  not  stand  for. 

The  men  in  the  legislature  should 
use  some  common  sense  and  not  so 
much  style.  It  is  ridiculous  to  see  the 
Hood  of  bills  Introduced  on  every  im- 
aginable subject.  In  my  estimation, 
our  country  has  more  need  of  revising 
the  state  laws  than  the  tariff,  as  wo 
certainly  could  cut  out  more  than  half 
of  the  laws  on  the  statute  book  and 
yet    have   more   than   could   be   conveil- 


and 


Mrs.  Fred  E.  Hough  of  the  Buffalo 
Hats  was  hostess  Wednesday  after- 
noon at  a  luncheon  and  bridge  party 
in  honor  of  Miss  Barbara  Haug,  whose 
marriage  to  U.  Wiiliam  Walter  Lewis 
of  St.  Paul  will  take  place  Monday 
evening.  -Only  intimate  friends  of 
the  bride-to-be  were  present.  Miss 
Haug  has  also  been  the  guest  of  honor 
at  Several  other  pretty  affairs.  in- 
cluding bridge  parties  given  by  Mrs. 
Spencfcr  S.  Kumjiey.  Miss  Myrtle 
Butchart,  Miss  Alise  Lautensclilager, 
an  aftiP^noon  tea  by  Miss  Bartlett  and 
a  luncljeojiiffiven  by  Mrs.  T.  P.  Bradley 
Pk.  ..  ^ 
-■*;■.  •■■■  • 
_  of  t\i*,  tuther  Young  Peo- 
ety  of  «ethsada  Norwegian 
church  will  ^ntuJ'tAin  at  a  pie  social 
Friday  eVehin^  of  next  week  at  the 
church,  cori>er  of  Sixth  avenue  east 
and    Fiftir  litreet. 

'«•.     ••■     • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Stuart  Dalrympl#  ar- 
rived today  from  St.  Paul  to  be  the 
guests  of  Mrs.  Dalrymple's  parents, 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  James  Butchart.  They 
will  be  guests  at  the  wedding  of  Miss 
Barliara  Haugh  and  Dr.  W.  W.  Lewis, 
which  will  take  place  Monday  evening. 
•       •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Korby  entertained 
at  dinner  Wednesday  evening  at  tlieir 
home.  1408  Fast  Second  street.  In  honor 
of  Mr.  Korby's  birthday  anniversary. 
Decorations  of  green  were  used  about 
the  rooms  and  on  the  dining  table. 
The  guests  were: 
Messrs.   and  Mesdames — 


E.   B.  Fox, 
W.    Bender. 
W.    Butchart."' 
Victor  Orant." 

Misses —  ^  '  1 

Broman, 
Messrs. — 

W.    Kirchner. 


A.   F.    Maas    . 
Lihverson. 
a.    Hotchklss. 


Schwanson. 


Kauppl. 
•       •       • 

Miss  Emmott  was  pleasantly  sur- 
prised last  evening  at  her  home.  705 
East  Fourth  street.  An  informal  even- 
ing was  enjoyed  by  the  following 
guests: 
Misses — 

Bertha   Klein.,  Rutli    Stynsberg, 

Ethel  Campbell,         Evelyn    Carey. 

Anna  Stasber^, 


PII.RS    CI  RKIJ    l.\    0    TO    14   DAYS. 

P.^ZO  OINTMENT  is  guaranteed  to  cute  any 
rag:  of  Itchinj:,  Blind,  BIeedin>{  or  Frotrudini; 
Piles  in  6  to  14  days  or  money  refunded,    joc. 


MAKE  PEACE 
WITH  KIELLEY 

Permit  Issued  by  Build- 
ing Inspector  for  Com- 
mercial Club's  Home. 

Building  Inspector  Kielley  and  the 
Commercial  &  Realty  company  have 
come  together  in  regard  to  the  build- 
ing   being    erected    at    the       corner    of 

Fourth  avenue  west  and  Superior 
street,  to  be  occupied  by  the  Commer- 
cial club,  and  a  permit  for  its  con- 
struction was  issued  this  morning.  Ac- 
cording to  this,  the  cost  of  the  struc- 
ture   will    be    $65,000. 

The  builderp.  have  agreed  to  make 
all  the  chahfTffg  In  the  plans  and 
specifications,  to  comply  with  the 
building  ordinance.  These  changes  are 
in  the  fire  escapes,  width  of  balcony, 
width  of  corflit^.  and  In  the  rear  stair- 
way and  hall>  A  doorway  will  be 
placed  in  the  assembly  hall  near  the 
fire  escape:  a  hollow  wall  will  be 
made  in  the  large  flume  in  the  chim- 
ney; the  freight  elevator  will  be  pro- 
vided with  self-locking  door,  and  a  pit 
below  the  lowest  floor  will  be  pro- 
vided for  the-  eievator  shaft. 


That  every  city  in  the  West  is  mak- 
ing a  great  bid  for  the  attention  of  the 
crowds  that  are  expected  to  travel 
across  the  continent  this  spring  and 
suninner,  because  of  the  exposition  at 
Seattle  and  other  attractions  that  will 
be  held  in  Western  cities  this  summer 
is  evident  from  the  fact  that  practical- 
ly every  Western  railroad  has  Hoodod 
the  offices  of  the  Duluth  railroads  with 
literature  extolling  the  resources  and 
attractions    of    the    Western    country. 

Practically  every  railroad  that  runs 
into  the  state  of  Washington  or  that 
reaches  that  state  over  connecting 
lines,  has  pampiilets  describing  the  re- 
sources of  that  state,  its  agricultural 
development,  and  the  attractions  it 
possesses  for  the  merchant,  the  manu~ 
facturer,  the  man  seeking  a  home,  or 
the  professional  man. 

Idaho  and  Colorado  have  also  sent 
out  volumes  of  literature  setting  forth 
the  attractions  of  these  two  states  to 
the  business  man.  tlie  farmer,  or  the 
manufacturer.  The  mining  resources, 
the  agricultural  industry  and  the  fu- 
ture of  these  two  states  are  painted  in 
glowing  colors.  The  wa.v  the  Western 
people  are  going  after  the  attention  of 
the  traveling  public  i.s  simply  another 
illustration    of  the    Western    hustle. 

The  Elks  will  meet  at  Los  Angeles; 
there  will  be  a  big  convention  at  Den- 
ver; and  another  big  gathering  at  Salt 
Lake  City.  All  three  of  these  cities, 
not  forgetting  Seattle  of  course,  are 
making  every  effort  to  get  their  re- 
sources  before   the   public. 

rtailroad  men  here  are  of  the  opinion 
that  the  travel  to  the  coast  will  be  im- 
mense Besides  the  regular  tourist 
travel,  there  will  be  tiie  flood  of  im- 
migrants, seeking  the  cheap  lands  of 
the  West.  Then,  practically  all  of  the 
Western  railroads  will  offer  cheap 
lan.lseekers"  rates,  which  in  the 
opinion  of  the  railroad  men.  will  re- 
sult in  an  increased  immigration  travel 
to  the  West  and  the  great  territory  of 
the  Southwest. 

A  heavv  travel  to  the  West  will  be 
of  materfal  benefit  to  Duluth.  Much 
of  the  tourist  travel  will  pass  through 
Duluth  -Many  of  the  people  going  to 
the  Seattle  exposition  will  take  the 
lake  trip,  going  frohi  Duluth  over  the 
two  Minnesota  lines. 

How  can  any  person  risk  taking 
some  unknown  cough  remedy  when 
Foley's  Honey  and  Tar  costs  them  no 
more?  It  Is  a  safe  remedy,  contains  no 
harmful  drugs,  and  cures  the  most  ob- 
stinate couerlis  and  colds.  Why  experi- 
ment with  your  health?  Insist  upon 
liaving  the  genuine  Foley's  Honey  and 
Tar.      Sold    by    all    druggists. 


THE  POLICE 
COURT  GRIST 

West  Duluth  Man  Held  on 

a  Grand  Larceny 

Char$;e. 

Trial  of  West  Duluth  As- 
sault Case  is  Be- 
gun- 


BENEFIT  SKI 
TOURNAMENT 

Tomorrow  Afternoon  at  2:30 

chi<:!!<tii:r  hil.l.. 

The  Duluth  and  Superior  Ski  clubs 
have  united  in  a  benefit  for  Chris  Gun- 
hus. 

EVERBODY   TURN   OUT. 
Hill  is   in  fine  condition.     Records  may 
be   broken. 

Tleke«« — Oblldren,   lOcj    AduUfi.   25ci- 


George  Prysazny  v 
municipal  court  this 
grand  larceny  charge 
over  to  the  grand  jui 
a  plea  of  not  guilty. 
J500,  which  the  man  w 

nlsh.  It  is  charged  t 
cash  from  the  trunk  ol 
in  a  West  Duluth  boa 

Joseph  Crozler.  arr 
ago  for  an  alleged  att 
glary  of  a  West  end  g 
arraigned  In  police  cu 
charged  with  burglar; 
gree.  lie  pleaded  not 
bound  over  to  the  g 
was  fixed  at  $200. 

Just  before  noon,  in 
the  trial  of  Tony  Si 
Luzalct.  charged  with 
upon  the  person  of 
cliich,  was  begun.  Tl 
to  have  w.curred  in  V 
woman  is  unable  to  s; 
some  difficulty  was  1 
with  Interpreters.  Tli 
not  very  well  unders 
and  the  Judge  and  a1 
a.s  mucrh  trouble  un 
It  wasn't  so  bad  when 
an  didn't  know  what 
on.  but  when  he  ma 
that  she  didn't  know 
her  husband,  it  began 
interpreter  wouldn't 
a  change  was  asked  f 
was  secured  from  amt 
for  the  defense. 


as  arraigned  in 
morning  on  a 
arid  was  bound 
y.  upon  entering 
Bail  was  fixed  at 
as  unable  to  fur- 
hat  he  stole  $50 
'  John  Wltowsky, 
rdlng  house. 

>sted  two  weeks 
empt  at  the  bur- 
rocery  store,  was 
urt  this  morning 
'  in  the  third  de- 
guilty.  and  was 
rand    Jury.      Ball 


municipal  court, 

naltz    and    VasiU 

indecent  assault 

Mrs.     M.     Naron- 

R  assault   is   said 

est  Duluth.     The 

•  eak  Englisli.  and 

lad    this    morning 

e  first  man  couhl 

tand   tlie   woman, 

torneys    had    Just 

Jerstanding-     lilni. 

he  said  the  woni- 

street    she    lived 

le    the    statement 

the  first   name  of 

to  look  as  if  tlie 

fill    the    bill,    and 

or.     Another  man 

»ng  the  witnesses 


HOSPITAL 
IS  IN  SIGHT 


Council   Will    Probably 
Call  for  Bids  Mon- 
day Night. 

All  of  the  Preliminary 

Plans  Have  Been 

Made. 


Carpenters'  Local  No.  361 
NOTIC  E ! 

.%ll  meniberH  mti-  reqiieMted  to 
meet  at  12H  ICawt  Fifth  Mtreet,  at  2 
l>.  ni.,  Monday,  Mnrrh  T2,  ]»0i).  to 
nttenri  the  funend  of  liruther 
\\  illiaiu  Atiio!*.     Brine  hndKen. 

\VM     PE.1  RSON,  Sec'y, 


EMBEZZLEMENT 
IS  CHARGED 


Employe  of  Eveleth  Laun- 
dry Alleged  to  Have 
Violated  Trust. 

Frank  E.  Hall,  the  affent  f <Jr  tTie 
Eveleth  Steam  Laundry,  was  '  brought 
to  the  county  jail  today  cliarged  with 
the  emhezzlement  of  $5i>0  of  his  em- 
ployers" money.  He  will  be.  gK^en  an 
examination  in  the  municipal  court  of 
Eveleth  Tuesday  and  in  the  meantime. 
he  Is  being  held  in  .ail  in  default  of 
bonds. 


All  preliminaries  in  connection  with 
the  construction  of  the  city  contagious 
hospital  have  been  attended  to.  The 
matter  will  come  before  the  council 
next  Monday  evening,  and  that  body, 
it  is  expected,  will  Instruct  the  city 
clerk  to  advertise  for  bids  for  the 
hospital's  construction.  .As  .soon  as 
a  bid  is  accepted,  work  will  be  begun 
on  the  building,  and  it  will  be  rushed 
through    to   completion. 

The  site  for  the  structure,  at  Four- 
teenth avenue  west  and  Third  street, 
has  already  been  secured.  In  fact, 
a  whole  block  has  been  purchased 
there.  Later  on.  when  the  city  can 
afford  it.  a  municipal  hospital  for  the 
care  of  all  sorts  of  diseases  will  be 
erected,  to  operate  in  conjunction 
witii  the  contagious"  ward.  The 
council  has  set  aside  $15,000  for  the 
construction   of   the    building. 

There  has  been  considerable  delay 
in  getting  the  project  under  way. 
After  the  purchase  of  the  site,  some 
legal  difficulties  presented  themselves 
that  had  to  bn  straightened  out  be- 
fore actual  building  operations  could 
begin.  Then  it  was  learned  that  all 
the  four  sets  of  plans  submitted  by 
local  architects  called  for  a  larger 
expenditure  than  had  been  provided 
for  by  the  city.  Xone  <jf  the  plans 
came  futirely  up  to  the  requiri'ments 
in  other  respects,  either,  and  it  be- 
came necessary  to  call  for  new  plans. 
The  plans  as  finally  approved  by 
Mayor  Haven.  Health  Commissioner 
Patton,  and  the  committee  of  Duluth 
physicians  appointed  to  act  on  the 
matter,  were  furnished  by  i^lyde  Kelly. 

It  is  believed  that  under  these 
plans  the  building  can 
within  the  $15,000  limit, 
tain  parts  of  it  cannot 
without  an  additional 
Mayor  Haven  will 
proof    construction. 


be  erected 
although  cer- 
be  finished 
•  •xpenditure. 
insist  upon  fire- 
whlcli     Is     some- 


VERDKT  MLST  STAND. 


A  GREAl  ER 
UNIVEIiSITY 

Duluth  Alumni  Working 

to  Extend  Scope  of 

institution. 


Prof.  George  James  Will 

Speak  on  This  Topic 

in  Duiuth. 


ORAXfiEH  BY  THE  BUSHEL. 


.\n     Ottninwn,     Iowa,     Grocer     MnkeM     a 

Hit   aad  liiauwekerperM   KMjuy   tlie 

Kovelty. 

The  publlfi  te  accustomed  to  huylng 
oranges  by  the  dozen.  An  Otiumwa. 
Iowa,  gro«er  «ould  think  of  no  logical 
reason  for  this  except  custom,  and  for 
the  novelty  ofsllt  he  advertised  to  ^ell 
oranges  by  the  half-peck,  peck  ^nd 
lialf-bushtl..  lu  figuring  up  he  discov- 
ered thatdSHCaflBes  were  much  cheaper 
per-  buslH^ttiln  choice  table  apples. 
Consequently  the  daily  papers  of  Ot- 
tumwa  aarrt«^  large  advertisenxents 
announcirg  .C^lfornla  oranges  by  the 
half-peck.  '|>eck  and  bushel  at  this 
store.  He  Ipid  a  number  of  measures 
filled,  som^  with  apples,  some  with 
oranges,  ai^  the  prices  he  quoted  for 
oianges  w€pe  really  cheaper  by  the 
measure  thMl  those  quoted  for  table 
apples.  At  the  present  time  oranges 
running  Jtroi^lilG  to  150  to  the  box 
ara  verypieidible  sizes. 


Judge  Cant  Denies 
missal  of  luj 

The     motion     of     tl 
judgment    notwithstai 
and    the   dismissal    of 
Sakich  against  the  Co, 

pany  was  denied  by  J 
trict    court    this   morn 
Sakioli    was   given   a 
against    the   company 
trict  court.      He  sued 
injury   to   liis  eye.   sus 
of    iron    flying    off    a 
crew    was    at    work    i 
shovel.      Sakich     was 
Yates  mine  near  Buhl 
motion    for    judgment 
the    verdict    and    the 
case,    v.as  argued    las 
special    term,    and    .Ii 
denying  it.  was  fik d 


Motion  for  Dis- 
nry  Case. 

«     defendant     for 

iding    tlie    verdict 

the    case    of  Mike 

isomers'  Ore  com- 

udge  Cant  in  dls- 
ng. 
verdict   of  $1,500 

hy  a  jury  in  dis- 
for  $15,000  for  an 
tained   by   a    piece 

hammer  when  a 
epairing   a    steam 

injured      at      tiie 

Aug.  2,  1907.  The 
notwithstanding 

dismissal  of  tiie 
:  Saturday  at  the 
dge    Cant's    order 

liis  morning. 


what  more  expensive  than  construc- 
tion that  is  not  fireproof.  There  is 
some  thing.s  about  the  building  that 
can  be  left  incomplete  for  a  year  or 
two.  until  more  money  can  be  appro- 
priated, without  injuring  the  efficiency 
of  the  institution.  Tlie  ho.«:pital  will 
be  three  stories  in  height,  and  will 
be  con.structed  along  the  most  mod- 
ern and  approved  lines.  Th-re  will 
be  no  doors  connecting  different  dis- 
ease wards,  and  the  elevator  shaft  will 
be  outside  the  Imilding  proper.  It 
will  be  necessary  to  g.>  to  the  veranda 
before  one  can  go  from  the  diph- 
theria to  tho  scarlet  fever  ward,  for 
exatnple. 

"My  ."J-year-old  boy  was  hadly  constl- 
jjated,  had  a  high  fever  and  was  in  an 
awful  condition.-  I  gavt^  him  two  <<«b<»8 
of  Foley's  Orino  Liaxative  and  the  next 
morning  the  fever  was  gone  and  he 
was  entirelv  well.  Foley's  OrIno  Lax- 
ative savrtd  his  life."  A.  Wolkush. 
Casimer,    Wis.      Sold    by   all    druggists. 

HEDGEHOG  BOUNTIKS  I'P-ST.XTK. 
Utif'a  Observer:  When  the  Essex 
county  board  of  supervisors  last  year 
passed  a  resolution  placing  a  bounty 
of  25  cents  on  hedgehogs  killed  in  the 
county,  there  were  some  who  claimed 
that  there  were  not  man.v  of  these  tim- 
bei  and  produce  destrojing  animals  in 
the  county.  The  committee  on  bounties 
reports  that  .3,617  hedgehogs  had  been 
killed  in  the  various  towns.  At  2b 
cents  each  this  brings  the  total  amount 
paid  in  bounties  on  these  animals 
aione  up  to  $904.25.  and  this  amount 
will  undoubiedl.v  be  increased  a  little 
by  claims  that  will  be  i)resented  at 
the    December    session. 


rv  *♦»  •  WW  W»*-.T^  #*,rw>  .. 


Knauf  .Sisters'  faci;: 
blackheads  and   pimpl 


1   treatments  cure 
es,   24    W.   Sup.   .St. 


An  advo'.ate  of  the  vcgftarian  diet 
has  stated  that  the  nut  trees  of  the 
world  are  capable  of  supplying  food, 
all  tlie  year,  to  the  population  of  the 
globe. 


URINARY 

DiSCHARGESj 

p.i::ie\t:d  in 

24  HOURS] 


fu'e    bc:irs(MIDYJ: 
the  naini-iB^N^^X 

Beware  qf  rounter/mtf 

AI.L  ORlf.OISTS 


There  is  a  growing  feeling  In  the 
state,  that  here  in  Minnesota  there  is 
need  for  a  greater  university.  Such  a 
college  would  not  only  extend  its  bene- 
fits and  influence  to  the  students  who 
came  Into  immediate  contact  with  It; 
but  would  extend  its  broad  infiuence 
throughout  the  state,  offering  its  fac- 
ilities    to     all     the     people. 

The  Duluth  alumni  of  the  university 
have  worked  along  this  line.  They 
have  fallen  heartily  in  accord  with  the 
sentiment  that  Is  growing  for  a  great- 
er university,  and  in  line  with  this 
work  the  local  graduates  will  bring 
to  Duluth  Prof.  George  James,  dean  ol 
the  educational"  department  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Minnesota,  who  on  March 
29  at  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  will  speak  upon 
"The    Greater    University." 

There  Is  a  growing  belief  throughout 
the  centeis  of  culture  in  the  country, 
that  a  university  should  be  a  great 
forum  of  knowledge  and  information, 
and  that  this  information  and  the  fac- 
ilities possessed  by  a  university  for 
gaining  knowledge,  should  be  placed 
at  the  service  of  the  people.  The  uni- 
versity is  owned  and  endowed  by  the 
people  ol  this  state,  and  it  should  meet 
their    needs,    it    is    claimed. 

The  broatier  minded  members  of  the 
faculty  of  the  university  have  already 
ad\ccated  such  a  plan.  Some  of  the 
members  of  the  faculty  are  at  the 
present  time  working  with  members  of 
the  alumni  to  bring  about  such  a 
condition.  They  believe,  with  members 
of  the  alumni,  that  when  a  university 
is  lending  its  knowledge,  moral  in- 
fluence, and  ideas,  to  the  people  as  a 
whole  It  Is  performing  the  higTiest 
function   that  any  college   can   perform. 

Prof.  James  has  been  one  of  the 
foremost  members  of  the  faculty  en- 
gaged in  spreading  this  idea.  He  was 
secured  for  the  Duluth  appearance 
through  the  efforts  of  the  members  of 
the  Duluth  alumni  association,  and 
Dr.  F.  C.  Bowman,  the  president,  and 
in  his  address  here  will  tell  what  he 
believes  should  be  embodied  in  the 
work    of   a    greater    university. 

• 

Are  your  tenants  the  sort  who  "let 
the  landlord  worry"  about  the  rent?  A 
few  Insertions  of  a  want  ad.  will  find 
you  the  sort  of  tenants  who  do  that 
part  of  the  worrying  themselves. 


PARKER^S 
HAIR    BALSAM 

Cl«ai»M  aad  bMotlflai  **»•»< 
P>xjmut««  »  lomrMint  frowtn. 
Kevor   T»1U  to  Bect«r«   Orty 

Hklr  to  lU  TontM^il  Color. 
CuTM  acftlp  ditMM*  «  hab  iiOBa^ 


who  wart  to  onlorllfe  siio'iW 
bny  o  hnx  of  KERXTE  BEAKS. 
TbOT  rpllfl've  nervoufc  decline  ana 
^  ^  _^_  g^  ,3,  v.c»knem«s,  restore  •trentfth  Mid 
tmUd  up  tbc^rstem;  most  wonderful  Titallrlng  remedy 
Cor  rouoz  anct  ol-J.  Try  •.  box  und  note  the  effect.  •!  »t 
Bore*  Diu»  Co..  83S  Superior  St.JJuluUi.  Minn. 


CHICHESTER'S  PILLS 

W  y,.--.^  TIIE  «I.*.MO>D  BRAND.       A 


Ladicet  AnL  your  Hrusatet  for 
ChlKthee-ter**  Vlaneiid  Brmad/ 
IMIIa  In  Bed  and  Uold  vrtsItlcN 
boxes,    sealed    with    Bhie    Ribbon. 
Take  ae  other.    Bajr  ef  roar    ^ 
Vrmsslat.    Aw  for CIll-Cireft-TeK'S 
DllM't.Nn  ItRAND  PILLM,  for  •«. 
ye»rs  known  C5  Bot.  barest.  Always  RcliaUle 

SOLO  BY  DXUGQISTS  EVERYWHERE 


KMnr 


RUSSELL  (}.  COLT, 
Son    of  the   Millioniiirc   Head  of   the 
Rubber     Trust,     and     His     Bride 
Ethel  Barrymore,  the  Well  Knowii 
Actress. 


CONTR.ST  NOTICE — 

Department     of     the     Interior,     I'nited 

States  Land   Office. 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March   6.   1909. 

A  sufficient  contest  affidavit  having 
been  filed  in  this  office  by  William  T. 
Biss,  contestant,  against  homestead 
entry  No.  1.'..320  made  October  8,  1901. 
for  S1-:V4NEV4,  E>^tsEVi  Sec.  3'J.  and 
Ni:V*NE»r4  Section  31.  Township  60  N, 
Range  IT  W.  bv  Anna  Larsen,  Contes- 
tee.  In  wliicii  it  is  alleged  that  said 
Anna  Larseu  has  never  resided  on.  im- 
proved or  cultivated  said  land,  and 
that  she  has  failed  to  make  final  proof 
on  said  homestead  entry  within  th« 
time  required  by  law.  and  that  said 
alleged  absence  from  said  land  was  not 
due  to  her  employment  In  the  Army, 
Navy  or  Marine  Corps  of  the  United 
Stales  during  any  war,  said  parties  are 
hereby  notified  to  appear,  respond  and 
offer  evidence  touching  said  allegation, 
at  9  o'clock  a.  m.  on  April  27,  1»09.  be- 
foie  the  Register  and  Receiver  at  the 
Ignited  Slates  Land  Office  in  Duluth. 
Minn. 

The  said  contestant  having,  in  a 
proper  affidavit,  filed  February  23.  1909, 
set  fortl'  facts  which  show  that  after 
due  diligence  personal  service  of  this 
notice  can  not  be  made,  it  is  hereby  or- 
dered and  directed  that  such  notice  be 
Kiven  by  due  and  proper  publication. 
J.  C.  HERMAN  ENGEL, 

Register. 
W.  H.  SMALL  WOOD.  Atty.  for  Contest- 
ant. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald.    Macph    20-27, 
April  U-10,   1909. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     SATURDAYi    MARCH    20,    1909. 


LIST  OF  WINNERS  IN  THE 
BIG  "BEN  HUR"  CONTEST 


Iffames  of  Those  Who 
Comprise  Herald  Thea- 
ter Party. 

interest    Displayed    by 

Pupils  Surprised  Even 

the  Editor. 


Everything  pertaining  to  the  big 
**Ben  Hur"  contest,  planned  and  exe- 
cuted by  The  Herald,  has  been  carried 
out  exactly  as  per  schedule.  The  list 
of  Tvinncrs  is  printed  today.  They 
stand  exactly  as  handed  in  to  The  Her- 
ald by  the  committee  of  two  teachers, 
who  judged  the  contest. 

The  matter  of  judging  was  left  en- 
tirely to   the   teachers,    not   one  of  the 

letters  being  opened  in  the  newspaper 
office.  They  were  sent  to  the  high 
school  unopened,  and  they  were  opened 
for  the  first  time  by  the  judges  them- 
selves. 

It  is  unfortunate  that  there  could 
not  have  been  more  than  150  tickets. 
The  teachtrs  had  many  a  difficult  Job 
to  decide  between  the  papers,  and  they 
report  that  as  a  whole  the  essays  were 
of  a  verj   high  order. 

The  Herald  wishes  to  congratulate 
those  who  won  prizes.  They  won  be- 
cause their  essays  excelled,  and  they 
have  reason   to  be  proud. 

Notwithstanding  the  many  times  the 
conditions  were  printed,  some  dis- 
obeyed them  in  one  way  or  another. 
The  most  noticeable  one  was  writing  on 
both  sides  of  the  paper.  These  essays 
were,  of  course,  tlirown  out.  as  they 
bad  not  lived  up  to  the  conditions  of 
the  conteet.  STome  forgot  to  sign  tlieir 
name.  Otiiers  did  not  tell  t-heir  grade, 
or  school.  As  the  contest  was  for 
school  children,  and  this  was  the  only 
means  of  telling  them  from  others, 
their  essays   were   thrown   out. 

Some  of  the  essays  were  especially 
strong,  and  were  It  not  for  the  reason 
stated  In  The  tierald  last  night,  the 
paper  would  undertake  to  publish  a  few 
of  ilie  best  ones. 

It  is  all  over  now  and  has  been  the 
biggest  kind  of  a  success  from  start 
to  finish.  The  entry  list  ran  up  into 
the  hundreds,  and  tlie  interest  taken  in 
the  affair  by  botli  teachers  and  children 
surprised   even   The   Herald. 

The  theater  party  comes  Monday 
evening.  The  tickets  will  be  placed  in 
tlie  hands  of  Siipt.  Denfeld  Monday 
morning,  and  after  school  hours  Mon- 
day,., tliose  who  have  foimd  their  names 
In  the  list  printed  below  may  call  at 
the  office  in  the  Central  high  school 
building  and    receive   their   reward. 

The    list    follows: 

\ame—  Addre-XH — 

Wm.    Wendland.  .  .  .425  X.  r»><th   Ave.  V.'. 
Morriata    Meyers.  .  .  3S:i3  M'geH'n  St.  AV. 
Harry    Altenian    .  .  .  320   «th   Ave.   W. 
Marif>n    Stiinford .  .  .  1415  K.   Superior  St. 
Ralph    JohDMon  ....  70S    S.   23rd    Ave.   K. 
44>i>n     SkadberK.  .  .  .4.Vt     Mesaba     -Ave. 
Marjorie     Uavln.  .  .  .  1220   E.  Ist    St. 
OHoar    Magnufiuu.  .  .  310  ii.  Slst   Ave.  W. 
Barbara     IVoor.  .    .  .  311    \.  ."Mitb  Ave.  \V. 

Kiniua     Velaun 1705     E.    Jefferaon. 

C'hnrlen    Kvanti 519    K.    6th    St. 

Kliaabeth    Buekbee.522  \.  5(tth   .Ave.  AV. 

Alfred    *itt    7rtS   E.   5th   St. 

Alice     Karrell (eatral     H.     itohuol. 

Ilella  Pur»ei. 100   Park   Ave. 

Stanley  I^anib Central     H.     school. 

Mmry     Itoberlson .  .  .  4717    Pitt    St. 
Tnblab     t:ieviteh.  .  .  Dulnlh    HelKhtn. 

I.llllan     Doble «30   Cinrfleld    Ave. 

RoKer    Powell 2014  K.  Superior  St. 

I..oretto  St.tiernuiin.  700  >'.  57th   Ave.  W. 

Helen     Xeliion 1705    Jeffertton     St. 

Sadie   Saxine 334     \V.    3rd     St. 

Robert   ThnmpMon..  10   K.    5th    St. 

Mary  Waguer 114   >.  21»it   Ave.  W. 

Mildred     Simous..    .424  5»th    .Ave.    \V. 

Lee     .McKenzle 020   24th    Ave.    AV. 

C'nthleen     KilKure..l05    hZ.   8th    St. 

Ealey    TIdhnll Central     H.     Kehool. 

Geo.    MaeaKkill 215   F?.  4th   St. 

Marjorie    Reyner.  .  .  427  E.  2nd   St. 
Florence  MekelMon.  1210    E.   «th    St. 

EdKar    Vivian SOD    R.   3rd    St. 

Helen     Balluu 511    E.    3rd    St. 

Epple   Ferguaon.  .  .  .  1021    E.    3rd    St. 
Kanice     AVhipple .  .  .  1215    E.    3rd    St. 

Ralph     Bogan 4407  E.  Superior  St. 

Homer   Krauae 203    S.   17th    Ave.    E. 

Anna    Jenka 821    E.    Superior    St. 

Bewsle    B.    Dent ....  10   W.  2ud   St. 

Asnes     W'ntta .321    10th    Ave.  E. 

Irene     .McCabe 5711    Wadena   St. 

Minn    McVeigh.  .  .  .     fflO  \.  5Sth   Ave.  W. 
Roderick     Dunn.  .  .  .  84th   Ave.   \V. 
Florence     Peterson.  410  .\.  27th   .Ave.  \V. 

Ella    Hatley 3011    C^atea    St. 

Elaic    Johnson 101   W'leklowe    St. 


*  f 
^  THE    TEACHERS    A%'lIO  * 

^  JUDGED    THE    CONTEST.   * 

*                                     * 

iflt        >'anie—                        School —  * 

^    Mr.     Sprague.  .  .  .  High    Koh<»oI.  * 

^  .Miaa  SbicldM.  .  .  .  High  achool.  ^ 
^    MI«M    lletchcl.  .  .  .  iDduNtrial     high.* 

^   Mlaa     Hel^ig.  .  .  .  Falrmount.  * 

^   Mlaa     Abott Irving.  » 

it    Misa     .McArthur.  .  Longfellow  <* 

^   MiMN     I>u«chor.  .  .  Ilryaut.  •» 

*■    Minx     White Lincoln.  ■# 

jfe    MIKM     IllckcM.  .  .  .  Adania.  * 

1^    Miaa    Thonipaou  .  Eiiieraon.  # 

^    Misa      Bclnhorn.  .  Jiickaon.  * 

^    MisN      Olda Wn.Hhliigton.  0 

*  Miaa  <  niverley.  .  Jrilrraon.  « 
^  F.  X.  Burrcll.  .  .  FrHuKlin.  « 
^  Mra.  Hoover.  .  .  .  Xctllcton.  » 
$  Mra.  Murph>  ....  Webatcr.  •# 
^  .Miaa  Pnttluaoa.  .  Whittier.  # 
^  Miaa     Dnce Endlon.  ^ 

*  Miaa      Porter.  .    .  .  I-eater    Park.  * 

^   Mlas     Bell \\  nahburu.  ^ 

^   .Mra.    Downs Ely.  ^jf 

*  ^^^^^^^^^^^     * 

Bertha    Miller 208 Vi    E.   4th    St. 

Lillian    Levy 224   5th    Ave.    W. 

Eva    Oreckovsky.  .  .  510  Lake  .Ave.  X. 

Gertrude    Ferth 210    10th    Ave.    W. 

Elln   Jones    205    Sellwoud     Bldg. 

.\alhnu     Cook 317    E.    3rd    St. 

Kubv     Purvea 10«    Park    Ave. 

Father     Riateau .  .  .  .  U04    E.    11th    St. 
Louiae    Patterson  .  .  70«    E.    4th    St. 
Cirace     tMaaon.^  .  .  .  .  708'/^    Gartield     Ave. 

Victor     Miller 10O8    W.    2nd    St. 

SIgrud   Loncgren.  .  .  12(;    lOlh    .Ave.   E. 
Winnie  Goldauilth.  .  nil    W  .    lat    St. 

Abe    Shapiro 24   7th    Ave.   B. 

Ruth    \\  hitc 515    E.    4tb    St. 

E.Htelle    Phillips 115   \V.   5tb    St. 

Olga     Liudnhl 130    11th    .\ve.    \V. 

Truman  Brooke..  .5407  Loudon  Road. 
Francia    \.    Dever.  .  4523     Gladatonc     St. 

Myrtle    .Miller    2018    \V.    3rd     St. 

.Mildred     Stewart ...  427     42nd     -Ave.     \V. 

Ida     Laraon «24    \V.  5th    St. 

.Mnrsaret     Beanah..2ll     E.    3rd    St. 
Christine    Johnson  .  410  X.  58th  Ave.  AV. 

Grace    Jonea 205    Sell  wood     Bldg. 

Father  tiilinaoa  .  .  .  520  X.  5«th  Ave.  \V. 
Leiund     tilddinga .  .  .   Xew    Duluth. 

Ruth    (irenvail 202«    W.    5tb    St. 

Myra    W  lllcacn «17   .•i7th    Ave.    W. 

Mabel     Clouae 710   W.   2nd   St. 

Lillian     tirunian.  .    .  122  E.  8th   St. 
Mlua     Macnakill  215    E.    4th    St. 

Lillian  RosenquiMt .  4000  Magellan  St. 
Myrtle  B.  Jobnaon.  20U1  \V.  3rd  St. 
Margnrette  Byron..  14  24th  .Ave.  W. 
Virginia  llarriaon  .  222vr>th  .Ave.  \V. 
Florence  Matron.  .  .  SIO  S,  <>3rd  .Ave.  W. 
Suumer  Hrrrell .  .  .  .  2i»08  Minn.  .Ave. 
JohniXorrla    Bntey.  SI2   E.  2nd   St. 

Wni.    Sninuvltx Ill    E.   2ud    St. 

Harold   Pond 5805   Oneida    St. 

Ethel    Elde 423   2nd    Ave.   W. 

.Asllda     Lcgnre OlO    K.    4th    St. 

Xora    Edwards 1828    E.    7th    St. 

Mignon     French ....  4210    Robinson     St. 

Elfva    Smith    625   X.  55th  Ave.  W. 

Duria    Phelps l.tOO   57th    Ave.    W. 

(irnce  Buckbee 532   X.  56tb  Ave.  W. 

tiierda     .Anderaon.  .  .  lOOti  AV.   3rd   St. 

Anna    AVeater 314    ISVi    Ave.    AA'. 

Dorothy   Reynolda .  .  304{    Minn,    block. 
Mnrle     A.    Saucier.  .  10.^3    AA  .    lat    St. 

Ruth    Flaher 208    S.    18th    Ave.   E. 

Emmctt     Haynes...710     E.    2nd     St. 

AVilbur    AValah 510   AV.  2cd    St. 

AVebater    Hake 1103    R.    2nd    St. 

Hilda    Carlaon 1»13  E.  3rd   St. 

Xorman    Talmadge .  113>4    E.   4th    St. 

.Agnea    Boas 1,    Lafayette    flats. 

Ada     Cartler 2821    AA'.    Huron    St. 

Hnrr>-     Randel 4601     Magellan    St. 

HJnlmar  AAahlgren.  :j20>/2    AA".    3rd    St. 
Vincent     Stockland.  310    22nd    Ave.    AA\ 

Seluia     KauppI 3    X.    63rd    -Ave.    AV. 

Irving     Grover ,801    AA'.   0th    St. 

Simon    Peteraou.  .  .  .  1015   Piedmont    .Ave. 

Roy    Coning l.%28  AA'.  Superior  St. 

Ruth     Fealer 6010   Tioga    St. 

tharlea     Everett..    .  1503   Central    Ave. 
Aictoria     Fortln.  .  .  .  212    Exeter     St. 
Ruth     Hollemback  .  10<(    AA'.    51h    St. 

Lillian     Litken 10O3  7th    .Ave.   E. 

Father    Tischer..    .012    20th     Ave.    E. 
Herb,    t'avnnaugb.  .422   X.  54th  Ave.  AA*. 
Harry     Swanaon..    .110  ISth  .Ave.  AV. 

Cecil    Stevens 6124  Green   St. 

Alice    Hubbard 1.'>26V2     F.    3rd     St. 

George     Jackaon  .  .  .  517   20th    .Ave.    AA'. 
Gladys    E.    Odell...5]3    2nd     Ave.    E. 
Lincoln    Brown..   ..708    AA'.    2nd    St. 
Douglas   .AfcKay.  .r.  .  1121    Eaat    4th    St. 

Cbe.tter    Lewis 3823  AV.  M'gell'n  St. 

Douglas    Clark 412   6th    Ave.    AA'. 

Frank     Xorakl 228  AV.   P'tab'g  .Ave. 

Alargaret     Hoyt....313    S.    21at    Ave.    E. 
Helgn     Grenvall  .  .  .  2026    AA.    5th    St. 
Helena    Bennett ....  5202    52nd    Ave.    AV. 

Hattle    AAlllls 510   1st    Ave.   E. 

Robert     Black 115  S.  30th    Ave.  AV. 

Ruth     Irgens 4805    AA'.    5th    St. 

Esther     Oatdahl .  .  .  .  224   S.   70th   .Ave.  AA'. 

Olga     CarlMon 2118    AA'.   2nd    St. 

CUfTord     Kohagen..201    E.    7th    St. 

Louis     Altman .320   «th    Ave.    AA'. 

Violet    Randall..    ..1027   W.  2nd    St. 

Hllma    Berg 14    AA'.    Sixth    St. 

Clnra     Schlennes .  .  .  1625    E.    4th    St. 

AValter   Dahl 2328   AV.    3rd    St. 

Doualda     Gregory ..  4031    AA'.    4th    St. 

Annie    Oreck 312   AA'.    4th    St. 

.Annie    Xord 2316   AA'.   3rd    St. 

Gerda  Johnson 4336    (iraud    .Ave. 

Gladys     Sullivan ...  100   39th    Ave.   AA'. 


THE  HERALD'S  HUMANE  CORNER 

Conducted  by  T.  E.  GRAE. 

I  MANY  SCHOOL  BOYS  OF  ST.  LOUIS  COUNTY 
I  INTERESTED  IN  BIRD  BOXES -THE  HABITS 
I     OF  THE  COMMON  ROBIN  REDBREAST    :    :    : 


FTKil  talking  birds  all 
winter,  the  most  natural 
thing  to  follow  is  bird 
houses.  The  accompany- 
ing cut  is  from  one  of 
several  houses  built  by 
Mr.  Young's  manual 
training  class  of  Aurora, 
Minn.  This  particular  house  was  built 
by  John  Tom  Richards,  a  boy  about 
l2  years  old.  The  remainder  of  the 
houses  were  placed  In  the  groves  near 
Aurora,  and  tliis  one  will  be  placed 
somewhere     In     Duluth.  Boys     take 

great  pleasure  in  building  and  placing 
shelters  of  various  kinds  for  the  birds. 
If  this  work  could  be  made  more  uni- 
versal, our  bird  question  would  be  set- 
tled and  settled  right,  for  each  little 
landlord  would  see  to  it  that  his 
tenants  were  not  molested  by  anyone. 
The  bright  boy  or  girl  who  closely 
observe  nature,  noting  the  places  which 
t;ie  birds  select  by  choice  for  their 
resting  sites  .will  be  sure  to  get  ideas 
which  may  be  utilized  in  making  the 
home  grounds  a  veritable  paradise  for 
bi:ds.  The  birds  may  not  respond 
very  promptly  to  the  first  attempt,  but 
the  would-be  landlord  should  not  get 
diicouraged.  Persistent  and  Intelligent 
effort  will  bring  ultimate  results  whlch^ 
will  be  sure  to  abundantly  reward  the 
attempt.  Experience  Is  the  best  of 
tepchers.  Prepare  some  bird  homes  in 
a«J  attractive  a  manner  as  you  can  get 
Jt  prevent  their  being  disturbed^  then 
watch  their  ways,  profit  by  your  ex- 
perience, and  improve  upon  the  next 
one  one  you  build  ard  place. 

• • 

The  Kt'kiit. 
In  this  country  tiie  robin  is  too  com- 
mon a  bird  to  need  an  Introduction. 
However,  even  those  who.  tliink  that 
they  have  nothing  to  learn  about  the 
robin  will  be  surprised  how  much  of 
Interest  and  value  can  be  gleaned  by  a 
systematic  study  of  the  life  history  of 
this    species    during    an    entire    season. 


Let  this  embrace  notes  on  the  migra- 
tion .courtship,  liome  building,  food, 
both'  for  young  and  adults,  how  long 
before  young  can  care  for  tiiemseives, 
how  many  broods  in  a  season,  and 
habits  after  brooding  season.  Such  rec- 
ords wjll  serve  to  remove  any  preju- 
dices, and  give  an  amount  of  real  plea- 
sure that  cannot  be  appreciated  until 
realized  by  actual  participation.  More- 
over such  a  complete  and  intimate 
knowledge  of  a  bird  will  excite  a  de- 
sire for  facts  regarding  other  species, 
which  can  better  be  obtained  by  obsei - 
vation  ttian  from  books,  and  thus  the 
observer  "will  soon  be  able  to  name  all 
the  common  resident  birds  of  his  lo- 
cality, and  know  their  relation  to  man- 
kind. In  St.  Louis  county  we  have 
about  seventy-five  species  of  birds. 
This  may  seem  incredible,  but  that 
many  kinds  have  been  seen  by  bird 
students. 

Wherever  the  robin  breeds  within  the 
confines  of  civilization,  man  Is  its 
friend,  and  a  natural  attachment  has 
grown  up  that  borders  on  sentiment. 
Alan  extends  his  protection,  and  the 
bird  rewards  him  by  making  his  home 
almost  under  the  same  roof  tree,  dis- 
playing a  confidence  in  his  human 
brother  that  is  begotten  by  lack  of 
fear.  ^ 

That  the  robin  is  a  very  beneficial 
bird  there  is  no  doubt,  although  it  is 
cia'med  by  some  persons,  especially 
fruit  growers,  that  it  eats  cultivated 
fruit  to  an  Injurious  extent.  This 
charge,  the  evidence  shows,  Is  con- 
fined to  special  localities  and  to  a 
very  limited  period  and  not  at  all  gen- 
eral. The  table  of  food  for  the  year 
shows  that  cultivated  fruit  IS  Only 
eaten  to  any  serious  extent  during  the 
months  of  June  and  July,  when  it 
amounts  to  30  per  cent.  However,  dur- 
ing the  same  months  the  insect  food 
amounts  to  over  46  per  cent,  thus 
showing  the  benefit  to  largely  exceed 
the  damage.  The  cultivated  fruit  eat- 
en in  the  month  of  October  was  neces- 
s.'irily     waste     fruit    that    was     left    on 


trees  and  vines  as  worthless.  The 
horticulturist  can  protect  his  small 
fruit  crops  by  growing  a  few  wild 
fruits  for  the  robins  and  the  cultivated 
kinds  will  not  be  disturbed;  but  thou- 
sands of  Injurious  insects  will  be  eaten 
tV.at   A\f>uld   otherwise   be   a   pest, 

A  careful  study  of  the  food  tables 
abstracted  from  data  furnished  by  the 
biological  survey.  United  States  de- 
partment of  agriculture,  ouglit  surely 
to  convince  everyone  that  the  robin 
li  a  valuable  aid  to  the  people  and 
thereforo  ought  to  be  protected.  The 
.'•:;0  stomachs  examined  were  collected 
in  the  territory  between  Massachusetts 
and  Kansas,  and  Canada  and  the  Gulf 
states,  excepting  a  few  from  Califor- 
nia. The  contents  therefore.  must 
show  in  a  fairly  conclu.slve  manner  the 
food  that  the  robin  eats  during  the 
vear.      The    wild    fruit    that    the    robin 


A  SAMPLE  BIRD  BOX. 


eats  does  not  affect  the  relation  of  the 
bird  to  man  either  way;  It  is  simply 
one  of  the  methods  that  Nature  pro- 
vides to  distribute  seeds  of  plants.  An 
analysis  of  the  44  per  cent  of  the 
robin's  food  consisting  of  Insects  is 
not  only  of  Interest,  but  Is  instructive, 
as  it  serves  to  show  that  dui  ing  the 
whole  year  the  average  Is  well  kept 
up.  Beetles  of  various  kinds  form 
nearly  19  per  cent  of  the  food  for  the 
year,  in  May  reaching  a  maximum  of 
53  per  cent,  which  is  largely  of  May 
beetles.  There  are  over  si.vty  species 
of  this  genius  in  the  United  States, 
all  of  whlon  are  harmful.  The  adults 
sometimes  completely  defoliate  small 
trees  and  do  great  damage  to  large 
ones.  The  larvae  of  these  beetles  are 
known  as  "white  grubs"  and  are  often 
great  pests,  especially  in  strawberry 
plantations  and  to  pastures  where  they 
destrtiv  the  roots  of  the  grasses.  Sev- 
eral citizens  of  Duluth  have  discov- 
ered that  if  they  harbor  birds  In  their 
yards,  by  feeding  them,  they  keep  their 
tiees  from  being  destroyed  by  these 
in.sect.s.  Grasshoppers  and  crickets  are 
also  eaten  to  a  considerable  extent, 
tiver  f>  pc»  cent  being  the  average  for 
the  y^ar;  in  August  they  comprise  over 
30  per  cent  of  the  food.  Both  of  these 
classes  of  Insects  are  serious  pests,  and 
;iny  bird  that  destrojs  them  is  too 
valuable  to  kill. 

The  other  17  per  cent  of  Insect  food 
consists  of  moths  and  butterflies,  bee.«, 
wasps,  ants  and  bugs.  Many  larvae  of 
the  owlet-moths  are  eaten,  a  family, 
which  Includes  caterpillars  so  well 
known  and  dreaded  by  the  name  of 
"cutworms."  One  robin  had  no  less 
than  forty  army  worms  In  its  stomach 
and  another  contained  125  March  files. 
Some  of  these  latter  destroy  the  roots 
of  growing  plants,  especially  grass. 
The  wise  land  owner,  whether  great 
or  small  will  use  every  means  In  his 
power  to  encourage  the  robin  to  re- 
main on  his  premises,  for  by  so  doing 
myriads  of  noxious  Insects  will  be  de- 
stroyed. 

May  we  not  be  able  to  enlist  the  In- 
terest of  all  citizens  of  St.  Louis 
county  in  the  crusade  against  the  kill- 
ing of  bird  life  of  whatever  the  spe- 
cies, in  order  that  our  trees  and  shrubs 
mav  be  preserved.  If  you  love  vege- 
tation It  is  to  your  Interest  to  aid  us; 
If  you  love  birds  and  squirrels  it  is  to 
your  interest   to  do   so. 

MINNESOTA 
UNIVERSITY 


Chapter  of  National  So- 
ciety of  the  Rocky 
Mountain  Club. 

"King  Rene's  Daughter" 

to  be  Presented  by 

Dramatic  Club. 


tn 


The  "Wellesley" 

Style  No.  C  300 


The 
■Metropolitan" 

Style  No.  C  305 


A  very  late  and  stun- 
ning "MaJdwcU"  style. 
Patent  Kid.  one  button 
strap  Blucher  Oxford. 
Mat  quarter.  Good- 
jeai  welL    .    $3.50 


The 

"Diana" 

Style  No. 
4638 


'Miidwell*  Patent  Colt 

Wiodsor  Tie,  mat  kid 

top  fancy  foxing,  large 

eye  i.    Coodyeai    wek. 

$$3.50 


^^i-:i^v^.;?;^^^.5;v^yv^;fi^'i:ViJ^A\Y?i/:i*^Vi;^ 


The  latest  styles  in  the 
graceful  stylish  and 
up-to-date  fl/l 


I 

f 


Gun  Metal  high 
cut  Call  Blucher. 
strong,  satisfacto- 
ry, stylisb.  $3.50 


The 
"Regina  I" 

Style  No.  C  332 


J« 


The  standard  quality 
footwear  for 


women 


V. 


i 

n 
I? 


Patent  Leather 
Ankle  Strap 
Pump,  the  latest 
and  swellestWoa 
an's  Shoe  en  the 
Market.    $3.50 


The 
■Lady  Helen" 

Style  No.  C  9092 


Gun  Metal 
Blucher  Oxford, 
a  finely  executed 
piece  of  Stylish 
Sboemaking. 

$3.00 


Sold  by  the  leading  dealers     | 
throughout  the  Northwest       \ 


The  "Ameri- 
can Beauty" 

Style  No.  C  325 


The  "Regina  II" 

Style  No.  C  331 


Tan  buttcm  Oxford 
with  buckle.     Good- 
year welt,  plain  toe. 
A  beautiful,  dainty 
and  stylish  bit  of 
footwear. 

Price  $3.50 


The 
"Sterling  Queen" 

Style  No.  C  308 


The  Very  latest, 
Tan,  Oxblood  or 
Wine  Color  Ankle 
Strap  Pump. 

$3.50 


Patent  CoU  "Maid- 

well*  Blucher  Ox. 

lord. 

WtX.  kid  panel  in- 

liy.      Large  eyes. 

Csoodyear  welt 

$3.50 


The 

■Country 

Club" 

Style  No. 
0  223 


Gun  Metal 

Polish, 
a  beautiful 
example  of  Top 
Clau  Shoe 
Qyality.  $4.00 


showing  her  talent,  as  the  whole  play 

centers  about  her. 

•  •      • 

Tryouts  for  places  on  the  intra- 
sophomore  debate  teams  have  been 
chosen.  The  men  are  Thompson, 
Conimer  and  S.  S.  Dahl,  opposed  by 
NichoLs,  Prebe  and  Chase.  The  ques- 
tion to  be  debated  in  the  finals  is: 
"Resolved,  that  United  States  senators 
should  be  elected  by  popular  vote,  con- 
stitutionality    granted."        The     linals 

are  to  be  in  April. 

•  •     a 

Seven  men  and  one  K'rl  have  been 
selected  by  means  of  the  preliminaries, 
to  contest  for  the  Dunwoody  oratorical 
contest.       The  prizes  at  stake  are  1 2 5, 

$15  and  $10. 

«      •      * 

"Sinclair's  Shingle  Social,"  which  is 
scheduled  for  next  Friday  evening  at 
the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  building,  bids  fair  to 
be  the  biggest  surprise  of  the  year. 
It  is  to  be  a  very  unique  entertain- 
ment and  a  lively  time  Is  in  store  for 
all  thot^e  who  atttnd.  These  so- 
called,  shingle  socials  Jmve  proved  very 
popular  at  other  coUeg^es  a^'d  enthu- 
siasm   here    has    been    aroused    and    is 

running  high. 

•  •      • 

The  new  university  hospital,  located 
at  300  Washington  avenue  S.  E.,  is 
ready  for  the  occupancy  of  patients. 
The  hospital  opened  Monday,  and  the 
training  school  for  nurses  in  which  a 
four-months'  course  of  Instruction  will 
be  given,  has  been  started  in  connec- 
tion. This  course  is  preliminary  to  a 
two  years'  training  course.  A  cer- 
tificate from   the   local,    family  or  city 


physician  is  required  for  admittance  to 

the   hospital.        This 

describe    the    nature 

illness  and  will  vouch  for  the  fact  that 

he   is  unable   to   pay   ordinary  profes 

sional,   physicians'  or 


certificate      will 
of    the    patient's 


hospital 

« 


fees. 


The  name  of  the  senior  class  play 
which  up  to  this  time  has  been 
shrouded  in  mystery,  came  very  near- 
ly being  divulged  yesterday.  A  co-ed 
member  of  the  committee  which  is 
writing  the  now  nearly  completed 
play,  in  talking  enthusiastically  of  the 
production,  let  slip  that  a  word  of  the 
title      would      be      "Arrow."  Since 

"Cupid"  usually  acompanies  this  word, 
it  is  thought  that  this  word  also  may 
go  Into  the  name  of  the  play.  Noth- 
ing Is  known  of  the  plot  of  the  play, 
for  according  to  the  usual  precedent 
this  will  not  be  divulged  until  the  day 
it  is  presented.  Camelia  Waite, 
Esther  Chapman.  Alta  Churchhill  and 
Allen  Stock,  joint  authors  of  the 
senior  drama,  declare  it  Is  very  unique. 
Exclusive  of  the  specialties  there  will 
be  twenty-four  characters.  The  play 
will  be  staged  at  the  Metropolitan  as 
last  vear. 

The  name  is  rather  mysterlou.s.  It 
has  a  Hawthornesque  tinge  to  it.  but 
the  committee  insist  that  it  is  going 
to  be  very  collegiate  and  not  a  bit 
literary.  When  asked  if  the  name 
was  a  department  in  the  March  Minne- 
Ha-Ha,  the  playwrights  looked  scorn- 
ful and  refused  to  answer, 
a       •       « 

Rev.  W.  S.  Richardson  has  been 
called  from  New  York  to  assume  the 
duties  of  a     university     pastor.        Mr. 


Rlchard-son  has  been  secu: 
the  efforts  of  the  Y.  M. 
Y.  W.  C.  A.  committees  aj 
this  purpose  and  will 
duties  next  fall.  Rev.  Rl 
at  present  assistant  pastor 
Avenue  Baptist  church  of 
the  church  in  which  Johr 
feller  is  actively  Intereste 
is  the  organizer  of  the  fa 
dard  Oil  Bible  clas.s.  whi 
Rockefeller,  Jr.,  leads.  \ 
son  graduated  from  Browi 
where  he  was  president  o 
C.  A.,  and  general  secreta 
Brown  division  of  that  be 
graduation,  he  completed 
the  Harvard  Theological  c 


•ed  through 

C.  A.  and 
•pointed  for 
ssume  his 
chardson  is 
of  the  Fifth 

New  York, 

D.  Rocke- 
d,  and  also 
mous  Stan- 
ch John  D. 
[r.  Richard- 
1  university, 
f  the  Y.  M. 
ry  of  the 
dy.  After 
a  course  in 
ollege. 


AFRICAN  CniRCH 
TO  RAISE  11,000 

St.  Mark's  Congregation 

Plans  Big  Rally  for 

July  4. 

Members  of  St.  Mark's  A  frican  M.  E. 
church  are  going  to  raise  51,000  by  the 
Fourth  of  July,  which  Is  the  date  set 
for  the  silver  jubilee  of  the  church  or- 
ganization. 

The    congregation    has    been    divided 


into  ten  companle.'?,  each  determined  t9 
raise  $100  before  the  national  birth- 
day. 'The  money  will  be  used  to  pa/ 
off  a  $700  mortgage  on  the  church 
property  and  other  debts  of  the  con- 
gregation. 

The  bishop,  Right  Rev.  C.  F.  SchafTer, 
Avill  be  present  and  deliver  the  jubilee 
address.  Addresses  will  also  be  deliv- 
ered by  otlier  pastors  of  the  district. 

Following  are  the  captains  of  the 
congregation  companies  which  are  to 
raise  the  money: 

Mrs.  Monroe  Brown.  Mrs.  William 
Johnson,  Mrs.  John  Mobley,  Mrs.  Mar- 
tha Steele,  Mrs.  Robert  Newsome,  Mra, 
Minnie  Rlchey  Adams,  Mrs.  Charlea 
Colby,  Mrs.  Charles  Black,  Mr.  Joseph 
Tunstall  and  the  pastor. 

Foley's  Kidney  Remedy  will  cure  any 
case  of  kidney  or  bladder  trouble  that 
Is  not  beyond  the  reach  of  medicine. 
Cures  backache  and  Irregularities  that 
if  neglected  might  result  In  Brlghts 
disease    or    diabetes 


AVOMAN  IS  INSANE. 


Mother  of  Fifteen  Children  Imagines 
Husband  is  Trying  to  Starve  Hep. 

Mrs.  Mary  Zykowski,  44  years  of 
age,  who  is  the  mother  of  fifteen  chil- 
dren, was  yesterday  declared  insane 
in  the  probate  court  and  will  be  sent 
to  the  hospital  for  the  insane  at  Fergus 
Falls. 

The  woman  Is  the  wife  of  a  miner 
.at  Ely.  She  has  a  hallucination  that 
her  husband  is  trying  to  starve  her, 
although  there  Is  always  plenty  to  eat 
in  the  house.  Twice  before  she  has 
been  confined  in  an  Inaane  asylum. 
The  last  time  was  in   1907. 


Arc  doctors  gocd  for  anything.^ 

Foolish  question!  Yet  some  people  act  as  if  a  medicine  could 
take  the  place  of  a  doctor !  The  best  medicine  in  the  world  cannot 
do  this.  Have  a  family  doctor,  consult  him  frequently.  If  we  did 
not  believe  doctors  endorsed  Ayer's  Cherry  Pectoral  'oi^pCou^Js 
and  colds,  we  would  not  offer  it  to  you.  ''*'  " ' 


J.  C.  AyerCo., 


Minneapolis.  Minn..  March  '  20. — 
(.Special  to  The  Herald. > — Through  the 
efforts  of  Howard  Sinclair  and  John 
Majirus,  both  of  Montana,  a  chapter 
of  the  National  Society  of  the  Rocky 
Mountain  club  will  be  established  at 
Minnesota.  Several  meetings  have 
been  held  and  all  the  Western  men 
have  expressed  a  desire  to  have  such 
a  society  established  here.  The 
chapter  will  start  out  strong,  as  there 
are  about  seventeen  Western  men  who 
have    already   signified   their   intention 

of  helping  it  along. 

This  organization  has  chapters  in 
the  leading  universities  of  the  East, 
such  as  Harvard  and  Yale,  and  also 
in  most  of  the  Middle  Western  uni- 
versities. The  society  is  a  secret  one 
and  membership  is  elective.  The  pin 
is   of   gold    shaped    as    the   head    of   a 

Rocky    mountain   goat. 

*      «      « 

"King  Rene's  Daughter,"  a  one-act 
comedy,  will  be  presented  by  the  Dra- 
matic club.  Tuesday,  March  30,  after- 
noon and  evening,  in  chapel.  There 
have  been  some  changes  in  the  cast, 
Arthur  Allen  taking  the  part  of  Tristan 
in  place  of  Augustus  Milner,  and  "Ar- 
thur Carlson  succeeding  Mr.  Allen  as 
GeofTry.  The  cast  is  exceptionally 
good,  Mary  Heritage,  who  plays  the 
role  of  heroine,  having  starred  in  "As 
You  Like  It."  The  scene  of  "King 
Rene's  Daughter"  is  laid  in  medieval 
France,  in  Lorraine.  There  is  a  fire 
in  King  Rene's  palace  and  his  daugh- 
ter, Isolanthe  is  saved  but  loses  her 
sight.  The  doctor,  Ebu  Johia,  tells 
lolanthe  that  she  may  secure  her  sight 
when  she  is  16.  and  the  play  opens 
on  her  .-ixteenth  birthday.  The  hero- 
ine has  a  remarkable  opportunity  for 


DonU  Forget ! 


Three  Times  a  Day 

'Ab  a  gentle,  non-intoxicating,  tonic  medicine,  every  tired 
woman  should  take  a  spoonful  of  Cardui,  three  times  a  day. 

Cardui  will  help  you  to  get  back  your  strength,  by  increasing 
your  appetite,  toning  up  your  nervefs,  regulating  the  proper  work- 
ing of  your  womanly  orgailte,  and  building  up  the  natural,  resisting 
power  of  your  tissues,  against  J^tigue  and  disease. 

The  details  of  how  it  does  this,  it  is  not  necessary  to  explain. 

The  thing  to  remember  is,  that  it  obtains  its  results,  by  acting 
the  female  constitution,  being  a  medicine  for  women  and  not 


npon 


by  any  manner  of  means  for  men. 

Take  Cardui  then,  ladies,  for  it  will  surely  help  you,  as  it  ha» 

helped  a  million  others,  in  the  past  50  years. 

Idrs.  Fannie  Ellis,  of  Foster,  Ark.,  writes: 
"I  ^rae  sick  for  seven  (7)  years,  with  female 
trouble.  Every  month,  I  would  very  nearly  die, 
witb  my  head  and  back.  Half  the  time,  I  could 
not  stand  on  my  feet,  without  great  pain.  I 
took  12  bottles  of  Cardui  and  was  cured,  fat, 
healthy  and  stout.  Cardui  is  a  God-send  to 
Buff<jring  women."     Try  it.     Sold  everywhere. 


Take  CARDUI 


0  207 


-■^  «= 


'  ■*■■  J"fc^'*m<  *- 


"  V 


TRAINING 
WILLBEGIN 

High  School  Athletes  to 

Get  Busy  During  Spring 

Vacation. 


Much  Rivalry  as  to  Who 
Will  Make  Minne- 
apolis Trip. 


Tho  balmy  spring  weathor  brings  joy 
to  the  hearts  of  the  Central  high 
school    athletes. 

Monday  the  spring  vacation  will  be- 
gin and  continue  throughout  the  week. 
Many  of  those  who  are  to  try  for 
places  on  the  team  will  get  out  dur- 
ing the  next  week  and  begin  their 
spring  training. 

Directly  after  tho  opening  of  school 
for  the  la.st  stretch,  a  meeting  of  the 
athletic  association  will  be  held  and 
the  date  for  the  local  meet  to 
determine  who  is  to  represent  Duluth 
at  Minneapolis  declined. 

Some  of  the  men  have  been  hard 
at  it  for  the  past  two  or  three  weeks, 
but  ni'.st  of  the  work  has  been  done 
In  the  gymnasium.  Now  that  the 
sno\v  is  nearly  gone,  the  long  dis- 
tance runners  expect  to  get  out  each 
night    for   open   air   practice. 

Capt.  Ernest  Merritt  of  the  team 
■ays  that  prospects  for  a  winning  team 
were  never  better.  There  are  several 
sprinters  In  the  school  and  any  num- 
ber of  long  distance  men. 

The  interest  is  very  grreat  in  the  big 
Minneapolis  meet  to  be  held  in  that 
city  under  the  direction  of  Dick  Grant 
the  later  part  of  May.  All  the  boys 
are  anxious  to  make  the  trip,  and 
there  will  be  more  competition  for 
places  on   the    team   than   ever  before. 

A  dual  meet  with  Blaine  of  Su- 
perior may  be  arranged  in  addition  to 
the  local  meet  to  be  pulled  off  at 
Athletic  park,  the  date  to  be  decided 
at  th3  spring  meeting  of  th  ath- 
letic  association. 

The  Duluth  school  has  never  been 
overly  strong  in  track  athletics,  due^ 
no  doubt,  to  the  fact  that  it  has  up  to 
this  time  been  Impossible  to  stir  up 
Interest  In  this  branch  of  sport.  This 
year  there  Is  both  interest  and  a 
wealth   of  material. 

Trainer  Heistand  will  train  the  men 
and  act  as  coach  so  far  as  po.ssible. 
He  was  a  classmate  of  Dick  Grant's 
and  uses  the  same  methods  employed 
by   the   famous  coach. 

Prospects  look  bright  all  around  for 
a  successful   team. 

Clabby  vs.  Bob  Stavin. 

New  Orleans.  March  20. — limmy 
Clabby  of  Milwaukee  will  meet  Bob 
Stavln  of  California  In  a  lO-round  flghc 
before  the  Royal  Athletic  club  here 
tonlplit.  George  Kltson  of  New  York 
and  Bert  Garlc.  a  local  bantamweight, 
are  scheduled  for  a  lO-round  prellmln 
ary. 


THE  LAST  OF 
THE  SEASON 

Benefit  Ski  Tournament 

Will  Be  Held  at  Chester 

Hill  Sunday. 

All  the  Old  Favorites  Will 

Be  Entered  In 

Event. 


■)M^»»»)K»»»**X(»»»»*»*>K))oKiK»»»i|o|OKiK»»»»)|oK 


C.  A.  DUNCAN'S  "ABSENTEES"  AS  SEEN 

BY  THE  HERALD  CARTOONIST! 


i******t**t**t*t*li^*t*t*ttt*t*tt***tili^*t***t****iii*iliit*t*^ 


The  benefit  ski  tournament  to  be  held 
on  Chester  hili  Sunday  afternoon  for 
Chris  Oundhus,  the  Superior  rider  who 
broke  his  leg  while  riding  on  the 
Duluth  hill  some  three  weeks  ago, 
promises  to  be  successful  In  every 
way. 

The  Duluth  and  Superior  clubs  are 
combining  to  give  the  toiirnamenc,  and 
each  one  is  contributing  to  the  expense 
fund.  The  riders  have  donated  their 
.services  free  of  cliarge,  and  as  the 
price  of  admission  has  been  lowered 
considerably,  it  is  expected  that  one 
of  the  largest  crowds  of  the  season 
will    turn    out. 

All  the  old  favorites  will  be  in  line, 
and  as  the  hill  is  in  first-class  shape, 
the  event  will  no  doubc  prove  very 
successful. 


FITWELLS  TAKE 
THREE  STRAIGHT 


Here  Are  the  Pictures  of  the  Two 
Men  Who  Recently  Met  in  New 
York  City  in  the  Prize  Ring.  Vet- 
eran Jack  "Twin"  Sullivan  Is  Shown 
at  the  icp  and  Jim  Stewart,  the 
BrooM- n  Heavyweight,  at  the  Bot- 
tom. Sullivan  Had  the  Best  of  the 
Bout. 


Clothing  House  Bowlers 
Look  Like  Sure  Win- 
ners in  League. 

The  Fitwells  took  three  straight 
games  last  nigiit  on  the  Central  alleys 
from  the  Centrals.  Paul  Sctiulcz  of  the 
Fltwell  aggregation  got  the  high 
score,  224,  and  Robert  Burke  of  the 
same  team  captured  the  high  average, 
201. 

The   detailed  scores    follow: 
Central. 

McLean    (14)    152  150  163 

Mitchell    (.17)    167  159  134 

Falrbairn    (7)     200  167  172 

MacDonald    (8)    183  163  163 

Canfleld    (7)    174  174  153 

Handicap     5-3  53  53 

Totals    929  868  838 

Fitfvell 

Berini     (1)     170  177  177 

Compton    191  158  148 

Burke    (17)     181  200  170 

Schultz     (1)     168  223  177 

S.    Olsen     214  197  168 

Handicap     19  19  19 

Totals     943  974  859 

MARATHON  STARS 
WILL  COMPETE 


W.  H.  C  0  L  E , /-EMD  HASM'r 
ZURLED  EA/OU(^H  TH<SWlNTe 
To  M/AKf  AN  iN^tP^eeJjSIUoJ 


Claims  to  ee.  th^ 

'ONuy  ACri\/E  ME/^tl^ 
OF  ThE:    BUNCH 


T^^ji-^s^        C-A.X)uwcAKi.  ShriP  OP 
''^^^THif>  Rink  Dit)  Mo^r  of  Hi^ 
CURLINCk  JXJIA/N    SOUTH. 


Bif£rsrc 


W0.2..TRV»WC,TO 

holo  up. -He 
DiCrNiry  OF  The, 


P»ChaPi>5om   takes 

\NE.tC,HTANi>  TheN   WAS  ''^l^^ 
:   eteF  STEAK-  BeFORe   R£TU<tt^C^ 


>^k^^N^^^A^^>^^^^^^^N^^  ^^^^« 


PRIZE  FIGHTERS  HAVE 
MANY  TEMPIATIONS 


The  houi-3  of  Idlene 
Ing  periods  often  hi 
feet  on  a  fighter's  fi 
his  matches  are  mad 
is  trained,  or  his  ha 
gaged  In  actual  comb. 

One  of  the  greatest 
presided  over  a  staff 
stands    In    good    with 
Dissipation  is  the  non 
Is  during   the   idle  tlr 
life   that  they   becomt 
this    old    wan  ior,    wh 
won   the  alTectlon   of 
He  leads  them  to  "spe 

Lights  of  all  color; 
and  white  being  part 
to  a  fighter  with  a  I 
tatlon,  and  "pals." 
headed  this  way  the 
the  roll  wilts,  his  abi 
pals  desert  him  for 
succulent    acQuaintan 

Ring  history  cites  i 
the  downfall  of  char 
beaten  by  things  no 
the  fighting  game; 
their  faults  are  kno 
not  seem  to  act  as 
present  generation  o 
peclally  in-  Philadelpl 
earnest  a  bunch  of 
grace   the   ring 

•Philadelphia    Jack 


ss  between  train- 
ive  a.s  .much  ef- 
iture  OLs  tfhe  way 
i,  il\6  n:|aBner  he 
ndllng  W^le  en- 
it.  ,  :'\r 
winners  ■\rho  ever 
is  a  general  who 
all  nations.  Gen. 
1  de  plume,  and  it 
los  of  k  fighter's 
acquainted   with 

0  seems  to  have 
the  beat  of  them. 
ed  carnivals." 

1  attract,  the  red 
l<?ularly  magnetic 
ank  roll,  a  repu- 
\nd    once    he    has 

end  is  not  far, 
ity  dims,  and  his 
newer  and  more 
ces. 

oany  instances  of 
iplons,  who  were 
t  connected  with 
their  names  and 
wn.    but    they    do 

a  guide  to  th^ 
f  youngster*,  es- 
lia,  which  has  as 
little    fellows    as 

'    O'Brien    Is    one 


MAKES  BIG  POT 
ON  J^IE  FIGHT 

Mclntosh'sSplmdid  Nerve 

Gets  Him  Fortune  in 

One  Night 


JEFF  CALLED  A  "HAS-BEEN" 
BUT  DOESN'T  SEEM  TO  MIND 


Outdoor    Race  Planned 

for  Polo  Grounds  in 

New  York. 

New  York,  March  20. — Early  next 
month  an  outdoor  Marathon,  open  to 
tlie  world,  will  be  run  off  at  the  Polo 
ground.         It    will     be     a     professional 

sweep.stake,  and  It  is  expected  that 
the  field  will  include  the  greatest  dis- 
tance men  In  the  world — Slirubb,  Hayes, 
Simpson,  Dorando,  VViiite,  Svanberg, 
Longboat  and  Maloney,  and  possibly 
one  or  two  of  the  crack  amateurs. 

Such  a  race  was  hinted  at  a  couple  of 
months  ago,  but  nothing  definite  had 
been  settled  at  that  time.  Now  every- 
thing has  been  arranged  but  the  date, 
and  that  will  be  made  public  in  the 
near  future. 

I'owers  and  Pollock  are  promoting  the 
event,  and  this  Insures  the  appearance 
of  Longboat  and  Dorando  atr  any  rate. 
As  Charley  Harvey,  .Johnny  Hayes'  new 
manager,  is  close  to  the  combine,  the 
little  Irish-American  can  also  be  num- 
bered among  the  probable  starters. 
Unless  the  tour  Ernie  Hertberg  is  ar- 
ranging for  him  interferes,  Svanberg 
will  most  likely  start,  and  Tom  Kck  is 
so  confident  of  Simpson's  abilitv  to 
show  a  clean  pair  of  heels  to  the'best 
of  thorn  that  Fred  may  safely  be  counc. 
ed  upon  to  start.  White  and  Maloney 
are  both  seeking  matches.  Shrubb 
still  believes  that  he  can  go  the  route 
— and  he  is  not  alone  in  his  belief — so 
it  Is  not  thought  that  the  promoters 
will  have  much  trouble  in  getting  their 
men    rounded    up. 

This  race,  If  It  fills  at  all.  will  be 
the  biggest  tidng  ever  known  In  the 
professional  Marathon  line.  With  the 
possible  exception  of  Jom  Crowley, 
there  is  not  a  man  In  the  amateur 
ranks  today  who  could  defeat  the  run- 
ners named  above.  They  are  the  be.st 
In  the  world  at  the  Marathon  dis- 
tance. 

The  capacity  of  che  Polo  grounds  i;*- 
all  that  will  limit  the  size  of  the 
crowd.  When  half  a  million  people 
win  stand  in  the  streets  for  hours  just 
to  catch  a  glimpse  of  the  runners  as 
they  go  by  once  and  then  wait  an  hour 
or  two  more  to  see  them  returning,  it 
is  easy  to  figure,  how  many  would  dig 
down  to  see  real  champions  run  the 
entire    distance. 

The  purse  for  which  the  runners  will 
compete  will  be  one  of  the  biggest  ever 
offered  for  a  foot  race.  Powers  and 
Pollock  think  so  much  of  the  Idea  that 
they  will  guarantee  (10.000  or  $12,000, 
with  a  percentage  privilege,  A  con- 
servative estimate  places  tlie  attend- 
ance at  between  30,000  and  40,000.  If 
the  rates  which  have  obtained  at  the 
garden  are  cut  In  half,  the  gate  will 
still   be  a  record-breaker. 

The  track  will  be  laid  outside  the 
diamond  and  skirting  the  outfield.  The 
sod  will  be  taken  up,  and  the  very 
newest  ideas  in  track-building  fol- 
lowed. 


Puji^ilist  Recovers. 

New  Orleans,  La.,  March  20. — "Kid" 
Farmer,  pugilist,  of  Peoria.  111.,  was 
dismissed  from  the  Charity  hospital 
yesterday.  He  was  taken  there  late 
last  night  in  an  unconscious  condition 
after  striking  his  head  on  an  Iron  bar 
on  an  excursion  steamer.  It  was  at 
first  thought  that  he  had  suffered  con- 
cussion   of   the   brain. 


New  York,  March  20. — ^To  see  our- 
selves as  others  see  us  Is  only  given 
to  a  few.  James  J.  Jeffries  was  one 
of  those  few.  As  a  rule,  when  one 
gets  such  a  view  of  himself  It  Is  only 
by  accident,  and  the  exhibitor  Is 
always  more  or  less  perplexed  as  to 
how   to   smooth    things   over. 

Funny  thing  about  It  Is  that  tlie 
sight  of  one  possessed  by  others  Is 
never  especially  complimentary.  And 
"Big  Jim"  was  overwhelmed  when  he 
got  a  disinterested  view   of   himself. 

Jeff  got  up  In  the  morning  feeling 
good,  tramped  from  the  Hotel  Albany 
up  Broadway  to  Forty-sixth  street  and 
turned  into  the  barber  shop  presided 
over  by  that  well  known  tonsorlal 
artist,  "John  the  Barber."  who.  since  he 
retired  from  the  business  of  being 
angel  for  a  musical  comedy,  has  gone 
back  to  giving  close  shaves  In  the  rear 
of  the  Gaiety  theater. 

Jeff  entered  the  shop  unannounced 
and  no  person  recognized  the  big  fel- 
low. "Looie"  was  the  artist  whose 
finger  wigwag  caught  the  fighter's  at- 
tention, and  he  dropped  Into  his  chair. 
"Loole"  Is  full  of  everything  that  goes 
to  make  up  the  news  of  the  day  and 
is  not  noted  for  his  taciturnity.  He 
has  disturbed  more  naps  in  a  barber 
chair  than  any  other  barber  In  New 
Y'ork.  .  He  holds  the  Marathon  barber 
talk  record. 

"Looie's  deft  fingers  fitted  the  towel 
under  Jeff's  neck.  He  passed  his  hand 
once  or  twice  over  the  jaw  that  has 
felt  the  caresses  of  some  of  the  world's 
greatest  gladiators;  he  ran  his  fingers 
through  the  champion's  flowing  locks 
and  suggested  a  little  tonic  for  the 
cure  of  dandruff. 

The    big   fellow   grunted   and   "Loole" 


frot  busy.  He  rattled  the  brush  around 
n  the  cup,  .smeared  the  lather  over  the 
massive  phiz  of  the  Golden  State  pride, 
washed  It  off  with  a  sponge  dipped  in 
hot  water,  aft^r  he  had  carefully 
rubbed  it  In;  lathered  It  up  again  and 
commenced. 

"Weather  seems  to  have  settled  after 
the   big  storm." 

"Umph-umph." 

"Must  have  had  a  tough  time  of  It 
down    In    Washington." 

"Umph." 

"New  York  suits  me  all  right  in- 
auguration time." 

No  reply  to  Ibis.  "Loole"  realized  he 
had  struck  th?  :wrong  lead. 

"Think  business  will  Improve,  now 
Taft'a   in?" 

"Dunno." 

Another  "wrong   load. 

•Pretty  hot  play,  that  'Girl  From 
Rector's.'  "     -  .  « 

No  reply,  Jn  bad  again.  "Loole" 
took  another  tack. 

"Vaudevlllt^'a  going  to  be  the  great 
drawer   next    week." 

"Yes?" 

"Yes.  Every  house  got  a  big  at- 
traction.     Jeffries    is    the    best." 

"Think   so*" 

"Sure.  He'll. ,4raw  like  molasses  does 
files.  Do  you  think  he's  goin'  to  fight 
Johnson?" 

"Well,    he   seems    to   be    in    doubt." 

"No  wonder.  1  think  he's  a  has-been, 
myself.  Fact  Is,  I  never  did  see  him 
tlie  way  other  people  did.  He  was  all 
right  for  a  little  while,  but  he  soon 
played  out.  .At  that  I  always  thought 
his  fights  with  the  big  ones  were  fixed." 

"What    made    you    think    that?" 

By  this  time  "Loole"  saw  he  had  his 
victim's  Interest  and  he  waded  right  in. 

"Oh,  nothing  hardly  that  you  could 
just  name.  It  was  just  a  sort  of  feel- 
ing  of   mine.      I    knew    Jeff    well    when 


CHARLES  H.  DANIELS, 
The  Greatest  ^wimmer  Alive.  Mr. 
Daniels '  is  a.  ^Member  .of  the  New 
York  Athletic  Club,  and  has  Just 
Equaled  ^e  ..World's  Record.  Made 
By  HixaacU^  for  a  150-yard  Swim. 


I  was  in  San  Francisco.  I've  always 
been  a  pretty  good  picker  when  It  came 
to  placing  money  on  a  fight,  and  I 
wouldn't  bet  the  price  of  a  hair  cut  on 
Jeff  If  he  goes  against  the  nigger.  Is 
the    razor    hard     sir?" 

"No." 

"Well,  if  you'd  seen  as  much  of  him 
as  I  have,  you'd  say  the  same  as  I  do. 
He  may  have  been  there  once,  but  he's 
all  gone  now.  His  wind  is  bad;  he's 
too  fat;  iie  never  can  come  back." 

"He  doesn't  seem  to  think  so  him- 
self." 

"That's  his  bluff.  He  was  always  a 
good  bluffer.  Made  a  couple  of  lucky 
punches,  knocked  out  a  big  fellow  or 
two,  and  his  size  helped  him  out.  The 
rest  of  the  world  got  afraid  of  him.  My 
opinion  is  that  if  Johnson  ever  goes  at 
him  he'll  make  him  feel  like  a  man 
with  a  straw  hat  near  the  Times  build- 
ing in  March.  It's  surely  coming  to 
him  If  he  mixes  with  that  coon.  Lit- 
tle   bay   rum,    Sir?" 

"No!"   (real  short  like). 

"I.,lttle  water  on  your  hair?  Better 
trj'  some  of  our  dandruff  cure,  sir." 

"Nuh." 

"Your  skin's  a  little  tender.  Hard  to 
shave  a  man  with  a  tender  skin  Lko 
yours  without  cutting  him,  sir.  Brush 
boy." 

The  brush  boy  came  and  was  busy 
renovating  Mr.  Jeffries'  apparel.  "Loole 
was  .shaking"  out  hif;  cloth  and  getting 
ready  lor  another  \ictim.  The  door 
opcnecl  and  in  came  Jaek  Welsh  aiid 
Henry  J.  Goldsr.ilih  They  both  saw 
the  big  fellow  a*",  once,  and  made  a 
rush    for   him 

"Jeff!"  shouted  Welsh,  clasping  his 
big  paw  wltji  both  hands,  "I'm  de- 
lighted." 

"Jim,"  said  "Our  Attorney,"  "I  Just 
run  up  from  Atlantic  to  shake  your 
mitt." 

"Looie"  took  another  good,  long  look 
at  his  late  customer.  Then  he  fell  In  a 
fit.  .Teff  .smiled,  shook  hands  with  his 
friends  and  walked  out  Into  the  brac- 
ing air  of  Broadway. 

MARATHON  BUG 
GOING  AROUND 

Long  Distance  Craze  Hits 

Every  Large  City 

in  Country. 

New  York.  March  20. — Instead  of  the 
Marathon  craze  abating  the  once- 
classic  event  seems  to  be  gathering 
strength  with  the  completion  of  every 
run.  The  desire  to  participate  in  the 
nerve-racking,  body-exhausting  strug- 
gle of  twenty-six  miles  285  yards  has 
spread  from  coast  to  coast,  while 
events  of  a  similar  nature  have  seized 
tlie  athletically  inclined  Britons  as  well 
with  a  still  firmer  grip.  Memphis  is  to 
be  the  scene  of  an  all-Southern  ama- 
teur Marathon  next  autumn  and  the 
$250  trophy  has  already  created  a  fu- 
rore of  excitement  among  the  "har- 
riers" south  of  the  Mason  and  Dixie 
line. 

And  the  dual  Marathons  that  re- 
ceived their  birth  in  the  country  with 
the  Hayes-Dorando  race  In  the  Garden 
have  also  gripped  the  out-of-town 
sporting  population.  Mahgesahnequa,  a 
Canadian  Indian,  who  some  day  hopes 
to  rival  Tom  Longboat,  will  run  the 
Att»c  distance  against  Hughey  Bruce  In 
the  Auditorium  rink  at  Chicago. 

The  success  and  great  excitement  at- 
tendant upon  the  now  nistoric  Mara- 
thon from  Windsor  Castle  to  Shep- 
herd's Busli  stadium,  has  created  a  de- 
sire among  Englishmen  to  perpetuate 
the  event.  It  is  planned  to  hold  an 
annual  run  qver  the  same  course  on 
which  Johnny"  Hayes  sped  the  American 
fiag  to  victory  last  summer.  This 
year's  event  will  be  held  on  May  8,  and 
the  start  will  be  made  from  Windsor 
castle.  The  London  Sporting  Life  had 
donated  a  perpetual  trophy  valued  at 
$2,500,  and  the  race  will  be  in  charge 
ot  the   Polytechnic   Harriers. 


London,    March     20 
thousand  dollars   Is  tl: 
factory    sum    that    th 
fight  at  Rushcutters  fc 
D.    Mcintosh,    the    Aus 

The  fight  Itself  had 
ord    taking   of   $130,00 
000    was   clear   profit, 
souvenirs  were  sold  f< 
representing    $10,000 
penses    of    printing 
were  more  than  met 
ments.      Mr.    Mcintosh 
the    takings    from    "fa 
see  Johnson  and  Burn 

to    $2,500. 

The    copyright    plctu 
netted  another  $2,500. 
the   bioscope   films   in 
furnished    Mr.    Mclntc 
and   later   cables    repo 
In    Interest,    which    mt 
land  where  t^e  fight 
a  week  Is-  still  being  i 
meter's   capacious    pni 

In  England  Mr.  M 
posed  of  the  British  r 
anteed    $35,000    and    eC 

He  has  an  offer  ro 
cern  of  $7,500  and  a  p 
film  rights  for  that  c< 
is  willing  to  give  an<: 
trla  Hungary,  the  C 
China,  Japan,  the  P 
.America  and  Canada  a 
ding  for  the  rights. 
States  vaudeville  flrr 
firms  in  dozens  are  a 
sive   or  sectional    righ 

Mr.    Mcintosh    count 
$300,000  already.      He 
man.     Others   believe 
profit  win  reach   near 
mark. 

W'hat  manner  of  m 
star  in  fight  promotl 
$40,000  and  $.')0,000  pui 
Coffroths  In    the   shad 

Down    under    the    11 
where  he  was  born  th< 
private    In    the   Black 
him  "Square  Deal  Mac 
pute  arose  over  the  ch 
and  Johnson  objected 
one    of    the    best    kno\ 
sportsmen,  because   he 
the   "Texas    Brunette" 
said:      "I    know    you 
Burns,  but  all  I  want 
Mac,  and  I  know  I'll  g 
You  will  suit  me  for 

In  England  all  tha 
Mcintosh  was  that  he 
of  a  number  of  hoteh 
Parks  and  Anustraliar 
came  to  England  he 
weighed,  dissected,  at 
here  in  a  short  time 
that  Mcintosh  deserve 
tary  title  of  "Square  I 

Personally,    he    Is,    c 
small  man.     He  is  abo 
slightly    stooped,    wit 
black  hair  typical   of 
eyes    are    laughing    bl 
large    and    generous, 
smiles,    as    he    usually 
a    mouthful   of   white, 
whole  face  takes  on   t 
a  big-hearted   credulot 
who    would    buy    a    go 
ever   thinking  of  appl; 

Talk  with  him  five 
small  man  seems  to  1 
giant.  The  eyes  th 
cold  and  glinting,  the 
a  baby  smile  is  firm 
teeth  could  even  glv 
termination  to  the  f 
the  only  Teddy.  You 
his  hands  are  as  pow< 
men's,  that  his  muse 
tremendous  for  a  mi 
When  he  tells  you  tl 
house  that  started  li 
tween  Burns  and  Jol 
the  former  against  th 
him  there,  you  bellev 
you  that  Burns  was  a 
but  you  feel  that  If  I 
prime  of  his  strengtl 
forced  him  against  tl 
him  there  Just  the  san 


— Three  hundred 
6  tidy  and  satls- 
e  Burns-Johnson 
ay  will  net  Hugh 
trallan  promoter, 
a  gross  and  rec- 
),  of  which  $80,- 
Forty  thousand 
•  r  a  quarter  each, 
net,  as  the  ex- 
ind  distribution 
by  the  advertise- 
's  percentage  of 
ns"  who  paid  to 
s  train  amounted 

res  of  the  fight 
Up  to  February 
Anustralia  alone 
sh  with  $G0,000, 
rt  no  dlmlnutlfwi 
■ans  that  in  the 
took  place  $5,000 
idded  to  tlie  pro- 
se. 

:Intosh  has  dls- 
ghts  for  a  guar- 
percentage. 
11  a  French  con- 
jrcentage  for  the 
luntry.  Germany 
ther  $5,000.  Aul^ 
ttoman  Empire, 
hlllpplnes,  South 
re  spiritedly  bid- 
In  the  United 
IS  and  picture 
sklng  for  exclu- 
ts. 

s    his    profits    at 

Is   a   conservative 

;hat   the  ultimate 

the  half  million 

an  is  this  new 
ng  who  offers 
ses  and  puts  our 
iw? 

ne  In  Australia, 
;  son  of  an  Irish 
Watch,  they  call 
."  When  the  dls- 
oice  of  a  referee, 
to  Snowy  Baker, 
fn  of  Australian 
was  "a  blonde," 
spoke  up  and 
are  a  friend  of 
is  a  square  deal, 
?t  that  from  you. 
■eferee." 

:    was    known    of 

was  the      lessee 

in   the  National 

.  Alps.     W^hen   he 

was      sized      up, 

id    the    fraternity 

A'ere     unanlmousT 

1  his  compllmen- 

)eal." 

•n  first  sight,  a 
ut  middle  height, 
1  the  tan  and 
nis  country.  His 
ue;  his  mouth 
and  when  he 
does,  disclosing 
sound  teeth,  his 
iie  appearance  of 
s  sort  of  person, 
d  brick  without 
.'ing  the  acid, 
minutes,  and  the 
lave  grown  to  a 
at  laughed  are 
mouth  that  had 
and  set,  and  the 
e  points  in  de- 
imous  fan^s  of 
notice  then  that 
rful  as  Fltzslm- 
ilar  maRe-up  is 
in  of  his  size, 
lat  In  the  rough 
1  his  office  be- 
nson  he  pushed 
e  wall  and  held 
?  him.  He  tells 
s  weak  as  a  cat, 
urns  was  in  the 
1  he  could  have 
le  wall  and   held 


of  the  greatest  examples  of  the  possl- 
hlHti.es  ot  the  American  ring.  He  is 
the  middleweight  champion  of  the 
world,  and  has  spent  his  life  in  culti- 
vation of  his  muscles  and  brain.  He 
has  fought  the  best  men  in  the  world 
-successtully.  and  he  has  studied  suf- 
ficiently to  transact  all  of  the  busi- 
ness of  his  club,  the  West  End  Athletic 
club,  and  he  has  read  the  best  of  liter- 
ature and  is  a  scholar  of  no  mean  class. 

Battling  Nelson  is  another  champion 
Who  has  alway.s  taken  good  care  of 
himself  and  his  money.  Good  habits 
and  a  good  constitution  have  caused 
Nelson  to  have  a  bank  account  In  the 
neighborhood   of   $200  000. 

Abe  Attell  is  another  wise  guv.  At- 
tell  takes  good  care  of  himself."  flgtits 
oftencr  pro;)abW  tha.:  any  other  cham- 
pion, but  always  gets  the  monev  and 
seldom  jjels  the  worst  of  the  argu- 
ment. 

Freddie  Welch,  wha  of  late  has  been 
much  In  the  limelight.  Is  a  model 
young  man.  He  Is  the  only  vegetar- 
ian fighter  in  the  ring,  never  partaking 
oC    meat    of    any    kind. 

Of  course,  there  are  others  who  walk' 
in  the  straight  and  narrow  path,  but 
for  every  one  it  would  be  possible  to 
name  ten  others  who  like  the  glare  of 
the  white  light,  tlie  clink  of  the  glass 
and   the   pace   that   kills. 


banders,    and    I      want    just    one    crack 
at    them.      Maybe    they    could    give    me 

"li"f'    •'."^    J"^*-   *^t   me   at   'em.      That's 
all  I  ask." 

Sutor's  firm  belief  In  his  own  ability 
aoesn  t  amottnt  to  swell-headednes.s. 
ana  he  is  not  so  sure  of  hi.s  job  as  to 
be  offensive.  He  Is  just  game  clear 
through  and  feels  that  he  has  a  vic- 
tory cindied  as  soon  as  he  is  an- 
nounced  to    pitch. 

Everything  in  the  baseball  business 
lays  befoi-e  the  young  southpaw.  He 
is  a  little  over  I'l  years  old.  strong 
as  a  bull  and  already  a  crafty  fellow, 
who  knows  the  value  of  a  change  of 
pace  and  kindred  tricks.  His  fielding 
and  the  left-handers'  cidef  asset — how 
to  make  base  runners  stick  close  to 
first — are  not  developed  to  half  their 
possibiUiies.  Moreover,  those  tricks 
are  not  easy  to  learn  either,  and  per- 
haps Sutor  will  not  be  fortunate 
enough  to  pick  them  up. 


\\  OHLD'S  RECORDS  GO. 

Winnipeg  Horse  Does  Half  Mile  on 
Ice  in  One  Minute. 

Winnipeg.  Man.,  March  20. — At  the 
horse  races  at  Kenora.  Ont.,  yesterday 
afternoon  two  worlds  records  on  an 
ice  track  were  broken.  Little  Payne 
went  the  half  mile,  troc  or  pace,  in 
1:01.  In  the  second  heat  of  the  free- 
for-all.  Little  Payne  again  lowered  the 
world's  record,  cov*-rliig  the  half  mile 
with  22  feet  additional  in  one  minute 
fiat.  This  horse  is  owned  by  H.  B. 
Harrison  of  Winnlt)eg. 

• 

Yale  \\'pe.stlers  Win. 

New  Haven,  Conn.,  March  20. — The 
intercollegiate  wrestling  match  be- 
tween Yale,  Princeton,  Cornell.  Penn- 
sylvania and  Columbia  was  won  for  the 
fifth  time  last  night  by  Yale,  no  other 
college  having  ever  taken  it.  Yale 
made  13  points,  Princeton  8,  Cornell  6. 
Pennsylvania   1   and  Columbia  0. 

William  A.  Goebel,  the  football 
guard,  retained  the  Intercollegiate 
heavyweight  championship  by  defeat- 
ing Talbot  of,  Cornell,  the  latter  hav- 
ing   won    the    honor    last    year. 


Westerners  in  Lead. 


Boston,  Mass. 
Ing  an  average 
out  his  match 
Boston,  Charles 
night  won  the 
three  matches 
lards  In  which 
meeting'    local 


,  March  20. — Maintain- 
of  .65  points  through- 
wlth  Allen  Mason  of 
Morln  of  Chicago  last 
second  of  a  series  of 
of  three-cushion  bill- 
Western     plavers     are 

billiardisls.       His     total 


score,  was    50    to    Mason's    32,    and    lie 
scored    five   for   a   high    run. 

Morln's  victory  gives  the  Western- 
era  the  first  two  games.  Dr.  Will 
Campbell  of  St.  Louis  having  won 
Thursday    night. 


HIS  OPINION  OF 
HIMSELFJ^OT  BAD 

San  Francisco  Pitcher  to 
Burn  Things  Up  in 
Maybe. 


Chicago- 

San    Francisco,   Cal., 

confidence   counts   for 

Sutor,    the    new    left- 

W^hlle   Sox,    ought    to 

pitching  marvels.  He  1 

for    permission    to    op 

against  the  Tigers  at 

'I'd  Just  like  a  chai 
those  left-handed  hiti 
side-wheeler  last  nigh 
nine    bee.      "They    hav 


March  20.— If 
anything  Harry 
aander  of  the 
be  the  king  of 
3  already  asking 
en    the        season 

Detroit,  April  14. 
>ce  to  get  at  all 
ers,"  said  the 
t  during  a  fan- 
9   got    five    left- 


The  Thornton  Stakes. 

San  Francisco,  Cal.,  March  20. — The 
most  Important  four-mile  race  of  the 
American  turf  will  lie  decided  this 
afternoon,  when  six  horses  face  tho 
barrier  at  Oakland  for  the  Thornton 
stakes  valued  at  $5,000.  At  least  four 
of  the  starters  are  cracks  In  a  distance 
race  and  the  betting  is  evenly  divided. 
Nadzu  is  considered  a  sure  winner  In 
caise  of  rain.  Cloyne  has  been  shipped 
from  Arcadia  especially  for  the  big 
stakes  and  will  carry  mucli  Los  An- 
geles money.  A  big  crowd  is  expected 
to    witness    the    famous    race. 


JOCKEY  WALTER  MILLER, 
One  of  the  Best  Jockeys  of  the  Amer- 
ican Turf  in  Recent  Years,  Who 
Recently  Was  Heavily  Fined  by  the 
New  California  Jockey  Club,  Has 
Brought  Suit  in  Court  to  Recover 
the  Fine. 


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4 — 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


CONGRESS 
NEARS  END 

LIpman  Team  of  Chi- 
cago First  in  Five- 
Men  Class. 

Al  and   Tony  Schwoc- 

gierWin  in  the 

Doubles. 


Pittsburg.  Pa..  March  20. — The  last 
day's  session  of  the  ninth  annual  In- 
ternational tournament  of  the  Ameri- 
can Bowling  congress  started  today 
at  9  a.  m.,  with  two  double  and  four 
single  events  participated  In  by  teams 
frcm  Chicago.  Columbus,  Cleveland  and 
Western  Pennsylvania  points. 

The  roll  off  of  the  tie  for  the  first 
Individual  honors  between  F.  Brugge- 
man  of  Siou.x  City,  Iowa,  and  Larry 
Sutton  of  Rochester,  N.  Y.,  who  both 
have  691  to  their  credit,  will  take  place 

tcniglit. 

The  prize  winners  In  the  three 
classes,  five-men,  two-men  and  Indi- 
viduals, have  been  compiled  by  the 
Associated  Press,  and  while  twenty- 
fcur  hours  m  advance  of  the  official 
list,  it  is  not  believed  the  scores  of 
the  games  yet  to  be  played  will  ma- 
teriallv,  If  at  all,  chajige  the  re- 
sult. 

First  honor  in  the  five-men  class 
is  captured  by  the  Lipman  team  of 
Chicago,  with  a  world's  record  score  of 
2,»6L'.      Their  prize  Is   |700. 

Al  and  Tony  Schwoegler  of  Madison, 
Wis.,  are  first  in  the  double  class  with 
a  world's  record  score  of  1,304.  Their 
prize    is    $430.  ,.    .^      ,       , 

First  place  in  the  individual  class 
Is  undecided.  F.  Brueggeman  of  Sioux 
Citv.  Iowa,  and  Larry  Sutton  of  Roch- 
ester N.  y..  are  tied  for  this  honor 
with  a  score  of  691.  The  tie  will  be 
rolled    off    this    evening. 

In  the  all-events  honor  roll,  J.  Blou- 
|n  of  Ciiicago  Is  first  with  a  score  of 
1,885.      His   prize    is    $160. 

There  are  sixteen  prizes  to  be  award- 
ed in  the  all-event  list,  with  a  total 
cash   amount    of    $S40. 

GETS  DECISION 
OVER  PAPKE 

Jim  Flynn  Defeats  Former 

Champion  at  Los 

Angeles. 

Los  Angeles.  Cal.,  March  20. — Jim 
Flynn  was  given  a  decision  over  Billy 
Papke  In   a   ten-round   bout  last  night. 

Flynn  was  the  aggressor  In  every 
round,  but  at  no  time  did  he  have 
Papke    close    to    being    out. 

Fvnn  started  the  bout  by  getting 
Pap'kea  nose  to  bleeding  in  the  first 
round  and  the  first  tliree  rounds  were 
Flynn's  bv  a  wide  margaln,  but  after 
that  Papke  straightened  out  and  held 
his  own  until  tlie  final  round,  when  he 
■eemed  to  weaken.  In  the  seventh 
Flynn    chasde    Papke    to   the   ropes   re- 

?eatedlv.  reaching  him  with  blows  un- 
Jl  just  before  the  close  of  the  round, 
•when  he  drove  Papke  through  the 
ropes  and   tlien   fell   tlirough  Iflmself. 


BASEBALL  SCORES 


»)MHtHNe»^M(-»^^»»***:K*»»»»»»yy»»*»»»»»)>[*)((»»*»»» 


riiiH>y  ^n)tit>y  )iti^ty  y  )itJt()ic)|(H(H()|^-jiH^ 


MOST  SUCCESSFUL  CURLING  SEASON 

IS  RAPIDLY  DRAWING  TO  A  CLOSE 


MUCH  WORK 
IS  INJIGHT 

Several  Big  Street!   Im- 
provement Contracts 
to  be  Let. 


Sixth  Street  and  Garfield 

Avenue  May  be 

Paved. 


ii 


6000 

MILES 


OF 


THE  DUNLOP  RINK. 
Winners  of  the  Bagley  Event.     Edward  Walker,  A.  J.  Wasgott,  Harry  Din- 
ham  and  Bert  Dunlop,  Skip. 


WALTER   HALL, 
One  of  the  Club's  Most  Successful  Skips. 


The  most  successful  curling  season 
in  the  history  of  tlie  Duluth  Curling 
club,  is  now  practically  over.  There 
are  still  a  few  games  to  play,  but  they 
will  be  finished  during  the  early  part 
of   the   week. 

Dunlop  won  the  Bagley  event.  Hall 
won  the  president's.  Feetham  cap- 
tured the  St.  Louis  trophy,  and  Jacobi 
froze  to  the  Board  of  Trade  buttons. 
The  Herald  and  Manley-McLennan  are 
not  vet  finished,  but  only  a  few  games 
are  required  to  wind  them  up  and  these 
will  be  played  Monday  and  Tuesday. 
Hall  and  Brewer  are  winners  in  the 
A  cla«s  In  the  ManTey-MoLennan.  They 
will  play  off  the  tie,  and  the  winner 
will  meet  Dinhams  C  class  rink  in  tlie 
semi-finals.  The  winner  of  this  game 
will  play  Hll's  C  class  rink  for  the 
trophy. 

In  The  Herald  event,  which  Is  only 
for  B.and  C  class  rinks,  Catterson  and 


Woodruff  must  decide  the  winner  of 
the  B  class  and  the  winner  of  the  con- 
test must  meet  Hall's  C  class  rink  in 
tlie    finals. 

A    Great    Seaaon. 

This  win  wind  up  llie  season,  and 
the  roar  of  tlie  stones  will  riot  again 
be  heard  until  snow  flies  another  win- 
ter. It  has  been  a  great  season. 
There  have  been  created  more  new 
enthusiasts  this  year  than  ev^  before. 
They  have  taken  to  the  game  in  most 
instances  like  a  puppy  to  his  first  bone. 
If  they  keep  on  making  curlers  it  will 
soon   be  necessary  to  enlarge  the  rink. 

The  older  men  have  been  in  the 
game  with  renewed  vigor  this  year 
and  their  enthusiasm  has  been  a  big 
factor  in  interesting  the  younger  men. 

Representatives  from  Duluth  were 
sent  to  two  bonsplels  this  season.  One 
was  held  at  Winnipeg,  the  other  at 
St.     Paul.         The     Duluthlans     did     not 


win  any  prizes  at  either,  but  they  had 
a  good  time,  which  was  What  they 
were*  after. 

There  have  been  many  match  games 
with  Virginia.  Superior  and  West  Du- 
luth. All  these  games  liave  been  great- 
ly   enjoyed. 

The  club  this  year  sent  Harry  Hur- 
don,  one  of  the  oldest  officers  of  the 
Duluth  club,  to  Scotland  with  the 
Canadian   curlers. 

During  the  season  many  informal 
banquet.s  have  been  enjoyed  in  the 
club  rooms  and  these  were  always  oc- 
casions   of    much    good    fun. 

The  skating  ice  has  been  In  much  de- 
mand' ever  since  the  season  opened. 
The  famines  of  the»  curlers  have  been 
furnished  music  each  Saturday  even- 
ing With  the  curling  on  one  side, 
thi  roaring  of  the  stones,  mingled 
with  the  shouts  of  the  skips,  the  music 


of  the  band,  and  the  merry  voices 
of  the  skaters  on  the  other,  the  curling 
rink  this  year  has  been  one  of  the 
most    popular    of    winter    resorts. 

Plans  for  a  new  home  are  now  being 
considered.  The  present  site  of  the 
rink  has  to  be  vacated  on  tlnrly  da>& 
notice  and  it  Is  probable  that  when 
the  season  opens  next  year  the  club  w  11 
be  in  a  new  hom.e  Tms  matter  will 
be  taken  up  at  the  annual  meeting  to 
V.e  held  in  the  club  rooms  on  the  even- 
ing   of    April    6. 

On  the  evening  of  March  30,  at  the 
St  Louis  hotel,  the  season  will  be  for- 
mally wound  up  with  the  annual  ban- 
quet That  is  always  considered  the 
event  of  the  voar.  and  is  being  looked 
forward  to  with  much  pleasure.  The 
committee  is  already  at  work  arrang- 
ing a  program  and  making  plans  for 
the  biggest  banquet  ever  attempted  by 
the    club. 


•^>^«^^^W^^k^t^k^k^k^^< 


San    Fraricls<-o,    Cal.,    March    20.- 
Franclsco,    3;    Chicago    Americans, 

•  •       • 

San  Antonio.  Tex..  March  20. — Detroit 
Americans,    11:    San    Antonio,    0. 

•  •       • 

Raleigh.  X.  C  March  20. — Philadel- 
phi«  Nationals,   1.   Trinity  college,  0. 

•  •      » 

Pasadena,  Cal..  March  20, — Chicago 
Americans  No.   1,  12:  Los  Angeles,  3. 

Glover  Gets  Decision. 

New  York,  March  20. — Johnnie  Glover 
of  Boston  easilv  defeated  Yankee 
Schwartz  of  Philadelphia  in  a  10-round 
bout  at  the  Olvmplc  Athletic  club  here 
last  night.  Schwartz  was  knocked 
^own  half  a  dozen  times  in  the  eighth 
and  ninth  rounds,  but  came  back  and 
fought  strongly  In  the  final  round.  The 
boys  fought  at  llo  pounds. 


Free  to  Boys 

I   have  a    Glove,   Mitt,   Mask,    Ball,   Bat, 

Cap  and  Belt  for  Every  Boy  Who 

M>IU    Write   to   Me. 


Tliere  are  eeTt-n  spleniild  pJecfs  In  tlils  great  niitfit 
The  Mh  b»t  is  a  aowl  (ne.  Tlie  moak  is  made  nf 
h«*Tj  wire,  full  ilif.  The  catilier's  mitt  Is  tlUfhly 
ptdded,  Tfry  lieary  and  has  patented  fa>!t«iier.  Tlie 
flOTe  Is  vf  tatined  leatlter  and  has  patriic  clasp.  The 
InUI  Is  strvnKly  tUtihed  and  will  last  A  neat,  ail 
Justable  belt  aud  a  dandy  cap  rompiete  this  great 
outfit.      Keineii,l*r   yr-u    get   the   TOlmle   outfit   of   aevfii 

rieres    for    a    Utile   easy    work.      Write    me    today    and 
will   tell   you   just   how   to  get  it. 
A.  M-  PIPER,  322  Populv  BIdg.,  Oea  MoUm,   lows. 


GHETTO  CHAMP 
HAS  GOOD  RECORD 

Abe  Attell  Is  Not  Popular 

as   a   Fighter, 

However. 

Philadelphia,  March  20.— While  the 
sports  of  the  country  are  besieging 
James  J.  Jeffries  to  come  out  of  retire- 
ment and  fight  Jack  Johnson  for  the 
world's  championship,  many  of  them 
are  ransacking  both  continents  to  get 
Abe  Attell  beaten.  The  little  feather- 
weight has  been  champion  of  his  class 
ever  since  George  Dixon  was  beaten 
by  Terry  McGovern  nine  years  ago. 
After  tiiat  contest  McGovern  was  too 
big  to  fight  at  122  pounds,  and  was 
obliged  to  scale  126  and  128  pounds, 
which  practically  made  him  a  light- 
weight. At  the  time  Attell  was  a 
mere  boy,  being  but  16  years  of  age. 
The  clever  little  Californian  then  be- 
gan his  ring  career,  for  in  the  year 
1900  he  stopped  sixteen  opponents  in 
five  rounds  or  less,  among  them  being 
Eddie  Hanlon.  Quite  an  achievement 
for  a   16-year-old   boy. 

The  following  year,  1901.  he  won  de- 
cisions over  five  men.  Including  oiie 
over  George  Dixon  in  15  rounds.  He 
subsequently  fought  a  10  and  20-round 
draw  with  the  late  world's  cliamplon 
and  added  nine  more  knockouts  to  his 
list,  being  accomplished  in  four 
rounds  and  less.  In  1902,  when  but  18 
years  old,  his  march  up  the  puglistic 
ladder  began,  when  he  beat  that  tough 
ring  general,  Kid  Broad,  In  20  rounds, 
and  won  a  lo-round  decision  over  Her- 
rerra.  the  rugged  Mexican  feather- 
weight. From  that  date  until  the 
present  time  his  record  has  been  noth- 
ing more  than  a  succession  of  draws 
and  victories,  the  only  decisive  beat- 
ing he  ever  received  being  a  knockout 
by  Tommy  Sullivan,  Oct.  13.  1904,  in 
St  Louis.  It  was  always  rated  as  a 
chance  punch,  as  he  never  could  be 
lured  to  repeat   the  trick. 

There  is  probably  no  boxer  in  the 
American  ring  who  has  fought  the 
same  men  so  many  times  as  has  Alje 
Attell  He  is  one  of  those  individuals 
who  has  supreme  confidence  in  lus 
own  ability.  Whenever  Attell  fought 
a  man  and  was  able  to  hold  him  sale, 
that  fellow  could  have  a  dozen  fights 
so  long  as  there  was  any  money  in 
sight.  He  gave  Dixon  three  chances, 
Kid  Broad  had  two.  Attell  met  Har- 
ry Forbes  four  times.  Young  Lrne 
had  four  sessions.  Battling  Nelson 
could  not  offset  tlie  elusive  little  Call- 
fornian's  cleverness  in  two  trials.  Ed- 
die Kelly,  who  was  Nelson's  sparring 
partner,  was  given  three  opportunities 
to  prove  his  class.  Frank  Carsey  was 
beaten  twice,  Harry  Baker  had  two 
trials,  and  Owen  Moran  of  England, 
had  two  tryouts.  Thus  all  down  the 
line  Attell  never  denied  an  opponent 
a  chance  to  prove  his  worth,  but  he 
invariably  had  the  better  of  the  match- 
making. 

Moran  was  the  hardest  nut  that  At- 
tell   attempted   to   crack,  as   at    the   end 
of  two  bouts  the  decisions  were  of  the 
hair  line  order.     The  recent   bout  with 
Jem    Drlscoll.    no    matter    from    which 
viewpoint    it   is   regarded,    it  was   noth- 
ing   to    Attell's    discredit.         He    made 
every    concession    to    the    Englishman, 
who    with  Moran.    was   brought   to   this 
country   especially    to   trim    the   Ameri- 
can.       That    he    did    not    succeed    in    a 
decisive  fashion  is  due  only  to  Attell's 
remarkable  skill.     When  a  return  bout 
ts  made  Driscoll  will  have  to  make  123 
pouH^js  or  else  there  will  be  no  contest. 
He    lias    always    had    a    voice    in    his 
own    matchmaking,    is   an    astute    busi- 
ness   fellow,   and    shuns    the    glitter    of 
dissipation,    eludes    the    hero    worship- 
ers,     and    for    that    reason      has    made 
himself     unpopular     with      the     rough 
claisses.       That    is    why    two    countries 
are      being    ransacked    to      beat      hlni. 
The    class    of    sports    wlio    spend    tlieir 
time    in    idleness,    picking    up   a    dollar 
here   and    there,    have   no    time    for   the 
fellow   who  does  not   loosen  up — hence 
Attell's  unpopularity.     He  was  25  years 
old  on   Washington's  birthday.     Out   of 
more  than   200   fights   in   nine   years   he 
has    only    one    decisive    beating    scored 
against    him.        He   has  a   good   pair   of 
hands,    is   as   slippery    in    the      ring   as 
the    proverbial    eel,      a    past    master    of 
the  hit  and  get  away  game,  and  at   122 
pounds  he  can  hold  his  own  witli  Drls- 
coll. Moran  or  any  other  foreign  boxer 
whom    the   disgruntled     sports    care   to 
import.      He    is    the    premier    feather- 
weight   of    America,    and     has    clearly 
earned  and  honestly  defended  the  title. 


A  FAMOUS 
POKER  GAME 


<i 


Lucky  Baldwin"  Once 

Made  $465,000  in 

One  Game. 


he  became  as  cold  and  <^lf,"?"ii'  ^'^iJb? 
ovster.  Baldwin  knew  this  fa>H"K' 
and,  like  the  true  poker  Player,  did 
not  fail  to  take  advantage  of  It-  f^«- 
denlv  when  Mac  had  dealth  and  Bald- 
win found  three  kings  looking  him  in 
The  eve  he  smiled.  A  glance  at  Sharon 
assured  him  that  the  senator,  too.  was 
well   heeled,   for  he   becanle   icy. 

•'Got  a  gbod  hand,  senator.'     inquired 
lightly    as    he    skimmfd    his 


as    l\e 
•  »  * 


Death  of  Famous  Horse- 
man Brings  Notable 
Game  to  Mind. 


The  death  in  California  a  few  days 
ago  of  E.  J.  ("Lucky")  Baldwin,  a  fa- 
mous turfman  and  plunger,  recalls  to 
old  Californians  a  poker  g'ame  in  which 
Baldwin  sat  some  years  ago  and  dur- 
ing the  course  of  which  he  won  a  pot 
containing  |465,000,  the  largest,  it  is 
said,  in  the  history  of  the  game  in 
the  Golden  State.  Baldwin  was  a  thor- 
ough sport,  cool,  calm  and  dispassion- 
ate, and  as  a  big  poker  player  he  prob- 
ably never  had  his  equal  in  this  or 
any   other  country. 

The  old  Palace  hotel.  In  San  Fran- 
cisco, owned  for  many  years  .by  the 
late  Senator  Sharon  of  Sarah  Althea 
Hill  fame,  was  the  scene  of  the  most 
remarkably  poker  games  ever  played 
In  that  city  ,and  that  is  saying  a  great 
deal.  The  old  California  pioneers 
were  as  a  rule,  inveterate  gamblers, 
and  among  the  devotees  of  the  game 
who  were  wont  to  gather  in  the  pri- 
vate card  room  of  the  palace  at  the 
invitation  of  Senator  Sharon  were  men 
high  in  the  professions — eminent  law- 
yers, prominent  politicians  and  wealthy 
men  who  forgot  the  cares  of  business 
in  the  excitement  of  the  game. 
Huge    Side    BetN. 

It  was  not  an  infrequent  spectacle 
to  see  Senator  Sharon  and  "Lucky" 
Baldwin  stand  at  tlie  Palace  hotel  bar 
and  shake  dice  by  the  hour  for  the 
drinks,  while  with  a  side  bet  of  any- 
where from  $1,000  to  |10,000.  Senator 
Sharon  wasn't  wliat  is  known  in  poker 
language  as  a  "hard  loser,"  although 
he  was  known  to  be  worth  at  least 
Baldwin,       on     the     other 


Baldwin 

""^•Nothing  much."  K'-0'^l;^»,.5^"°"v 
with  an  impatient  toss  ©^  ^  f  .^^ray 
curls.     "Have  seen  better  In  my     »me 

By  a  coincidence  every  man  in  ine 
irame  sat  up  and  looked  wise.  Smith 
fnd^'B^own  "^appeared  to  be  eager  for 
some  one  to  start  something,  it  was 
IcITtfs    edge,    and    he    casually    opened 

the  pot  for  a  white  fli'P— 'l^'^^nrt  ,.    ^^Id 

"111    have    to    hoist    that    J200,      saia 

Smith    as    he    tossed    three    white    chips 

^''-'SertL^'^said  Brown:  and  he  depos- 
ited three  white  chips  in   the  center  oi 


if 


120,000,000.       Baldwin,       on 

hand,     smiled     blandly     when     he     lost  |      _     

small    fortunes,    and    his    smile    was    no  j  sort    of    hands    he    had    dealt 


more  pronounced  when  he  raked  in  his 
winnings,  which  at  times  reached  enor- 
mous figures.  ^  ^  ,  ^ 
There  was  a  gathering  of  the  elect 
at  the  I»alace  hotel  one  niglit.  Six 
men  had  gathered  at  Senator  Sharon  s 
request  to  indulge  in  a  quiet  game  of 
draw.  Aside  from  Sharon  and  Bald- 
vin,  there  were  wealthy  Nevada  men 
whom  we  will  call  Smith  and  Brown,  a 
Texas  cattle  man  of  great  wealth, 
known  as  Scott,  and  one  of  the  most 
prominent  members  of  the  San  Fran- 
cisco bar,  now  deceased,  whose  love 
for    poker    was    unbounded,    but    whose 


the    table. 

"Looks  to  a  man  up  a  tree  ^^ 
there  was  something  doing,  remarked 
Baldwin,  glancing  shyly  at  ^I'-iron, 
"Theres  not  enough  in  the  pot.  Ut-iUje- 
men.  so  111  raise  it  Jl.OOCt."  He  tosse" 
a  red  and  blue  check  Into  the  pot  o.no 
took  back  two  white  check.^. 

The  pot  contained  $2,o00  when  It 
was  Sharon's  turn  to  see  Baldwin  s 
ralpe  or  throw  his  hand  into  the  dis- 
card. The  senator  looked  sour  as  he 
mentally  calculated  the  chances 
against  the   three  aces  he  held. 

"I'll  see  that  $1,800  and  go  it  $2,000 
better,"  said  he  after  a  pause.  ^  Three 
blues  and  three  whites  were  .thrown 
into  the  pot.  making  the  total  lo-^»»- 

"111  see  It,"  said  Mac,  recklessly, 
hoping  to  fill  a  flush.  He  found  his 
checks  were  insufficient,  and  he  asked 
permission  to  see  Sharon's  raise  on 
his    I.    O.    U..    which    was    granted. 

Scott  hesitated  for  a  moment,  then 
declared  himself  out  of  the  pot.  Smith 
tossed  his  hand  Into  the  discard,  and 
Brown  said  wittily  that  "a  hog  knew 
when  he  had  enough."  and  followed 
Smith's  example.  This  left  Baldwin 
with  Sharon,  Mac  and  Scott  behind  hlin 
to  meet  any  raise  that  might  be  made. 
"People  mav  disagree  as  to  me  being 
a  hog,"  remarked  Baldwin,  "but  in  a 
smart  poker  game  like  this  I  seldom 
know  when  I  get  enough,  bo  to  make 
it  Interesting,  Senator,  I'll  raise  you 
$5,000." 

Sharon  drew  two  cards  to  his  three 
aces  and  he  growled  deeply  when  he 
realized  that  he  had  drawn  a  pair  of 
fives.  Mac  drew  one  card  to  a  heart 
flush  and  drew  the  four  of  hearts.  The 
three  players  were  heeled  for  bear  and 
the  fur  was  about  to  fly.  After  the 
draw,  Baldwin  had  the  first  bet,  and  he 
quleflv  bet  $10,000,  writing  the  figures 
and  affixing  his  initials  to  an  I  O  b  for 
that  sum.  The  amount  in  the  pot  at 
this  time  was  $36,100. 

IIoiHted   It   910,000. 
"I  call   that  $10,000  and  raise  it   $10.; 
000,"  said  Sharon  as  he  threw  his  I  O  L 
for  the  sum  into  the  pot.  "Guess  that  11 
make  you  go  some.  Lucky."' 

It    was    Mac's    turn    to    wonder    what 

■      ■         He    fig 


ured  that  his  flush  was  worth  at  least 
a  call.  If  not  a  raise,  and,  morally  sure 
that  the  money  was  his,  he  merely 
called  the  bet.  He  was  given  a  severe 
jolt  when  Baldwin,  in  his  cool  manner, 
not  onlv  called  Sharon's  $10,000,  but 
raised  him  $20,000.  Sharon  promptly 
raised  Baldwin  $30,000.  Increasing  the 
pot  (o  $156,100  in  checks  and  I  O  Us 
that  were  worth  their  face  value  at 
any  bank  In  California. 

"Lucky"  Took  the   Pot. 
"Seems  to  me  you  are   getting  to  be 
a  high  flyer,  "  remarked  Baldwin  coolly. 


calling   of     Baldwin's     raise    of     $oO,000, 
tattened  the  pot  to  $346,000. 

"You're  nervy,  senator,  laughed 
Baldwin,  "but  I'd  never  look  a  fard  In 
tlie  face  again  were  I  to  call  this 
hand.  So  I'm  forced  to  call  this  $60,- 
000  raise  and  tilt  the  pot  another  $60,- 

Sharon  showed  the  hand,  and  with- 
out much  ado  Baldwin  raked  in  the 
pot,  which  contained  $465,000.  He  then 
showed  four  kings,  and  Sharon  flat- 
tered him.»elf  that  his  ><u P^r If -r  wisdom 
had  enabled  him  to  save  $60,000  at  a 
critical  moment.  

PROSPECTS  ROSY 
AT  WISCONSIN 

Practice   Season  Opens 
With  Plenty  of  Candi- 
dates for  Nine. 

Madison,  Wis.,  March  20. — This  week 
saw  the  close  of  the  Badger  basket 
ball  and  indoor  track  seasons,  and 
baseball  promises  to  be  the  major  sport 
for  some  time.  With  the  first  game 
a  month  away.  Coaches  Barry  and 
Hutclilns  liave  outlined  hard  work  in 
the  cage  fOr  the  squad,  which  now 
numbers  fifty  men. 

Tom  Barry  is  believed  to  be  one  or 
the  best  baseball  coaches  in  the  West 
and.  although  there  was  a  scarcity  of 
material  last  year,  he  laid  the  founda- 
tions for  the  present  season,  which 
promise  to  be  a  brilliant  one.  The 
mini  are  feared  more  than  the  other 
conference  nines,  and  the  Badgers  are 
expecting  their  first  hard  tussle  when 
the  Illinois  team  comes  to  Madison 
April   24.  ,  , 

thitflelders  are  chiefly  in  demand, 
and  many  positions  are  practicajly 
open  still.  Five  "'W  "  men  and  three 
promiennt  subs  from  last  year's  team 
fom  the  nucleus  of  the  squad.  Capt. 
"Dug"  Knight,  who  gave  several  spec- 
tacular pitching  exhibitions  last  year, 
reports  that  his  arm  is  in  fine  condition 
for  the  season's  work.  He  will  be  as- 
sisted by  Johns,  his  pitching  mate 
last  year,  and  Nash,  who  was  a  sub- 
stitute   pitcher. 

Muckleston.  of  football  fame,  and 
left  fielder  a  year  ago.  Is  out  strong  for 
the  catcher's  position.  He  is  being 
gjven  plent>'  of  competition  by  Paulus 
and  Fess,  who  caught  on  freshman 
teams  a  vear  ago.  "Bud"  Culver,  one 
of  the  strongest  men  on  the  nine  last 
year.  Is  again  slated  for  shortstop. 
f,nd  Baley  expects  to  hold  down  third 
V^ase  again. 

There  is  also  plenty  of  good  material 
among  the  men  who  are  now  eligible 
for  the  first  time  because  of  the  fresh- 
man rule.  Rumors  that  "Keckle"  Moll, 
quarterback  on  the  football  team,  was 
h.jindc-d  a  "con,"  have  proved  to  be 
groundless,  and  Moll  Is  now  out  for 
an  infield  position  on  the  Uaseball  team. 
Tinibers  and  Flanagan  look  good  for 
first  base,  and  Pergande  for  an  outfield 
position.  Luplnskl,  who  broke  hig 
kneecap  by  colliding  with  Muckleston 
in  a  class  game  two  years  ago,  has 
gotten  Into  shape  again  and  reported 
tor  practice. 

WILL  KEEP  HIS  WORD. 


The  board  of  public  works  is  getting 

In  readine.s8  to  begin  street  improve- 
ment work  in  the  spring.  From  pres- 
ent indications  the  amount  of  street 
paving  to  be  done  during  the  year 
1909  will  be  unusually  large.  Several 
big  jobs  are  in  sight,  and  there  are 
numerous  smaller  ones  to  be  under- 
taken. 

One  of  the  big  contracts  to  be  let  will 
be  for  the  paving  of  Sixth  street,  from 

Cascade  park  to  Woodland  avenue,  a 
distance  of  twenty-two  bloclcs.  There 
is  .some  question  whether  tills  paving 
really  will  be  completed,  £,s  a  mat- 
ter of  fact,  for  there  is  now  a  propo- 
.sition  up  to  only  grade  the  street  and 
make  several  necessary  fills,  the  argu- 
ment being  that  if  pavemem  is  laid  so 
soon  after  putting  in  the  fills,  the 
street  might  settle  and  Inju -e  the  im- 
provement, making  it  necessary  to  do 
it  over  again.  In  view  of  this  attitude 
being  taken  by  some  of  Ihi  property 
owners,  It  may  be  decided  to  postpone 
the   work  for  one  year. 

It  Is  proposed  to  pave  the  same 
street  from  Vista  street  to  Wallace 
avenue,  which  is  about  Tvvtnty-eighth 
avenue  east.  This  will  be  a  continu- 
ation of  the  improvement  proposed 
for  the  westerly  end  of  the  street. 

Probably  the  first  paving  Job  of  any 
consequence  to  be  undertaken  this 
spring  will  be  on  Twenty -fifth  ave- 
nue east  and  upon  Sixth  an  J  Eleventh 
avenues  east.  The  plan  is  to  pave 
Twenty-fifth  avenue  from  First  to 
Eighth  street,  and  Eleventh  avenue 
east  from  Second  to  Fifth  street. 

Sixth  avenue  east  will  be  )>aved  from 
Superior  street  to  Fourth  street.  It 
is  now  up  to  the  property  owners  in- 
terested whether  they  want  the  block 
between  Superior  street  and  First 
street  paved,  or  whether  a  concrete 
walk  and  stairway  will  be  satisfactory. 
The  grade  Is  so  steep  theie  as  to  be 
almost  prohibitive  for  ho)-ses.  It  a 
stairway  is  not  built  a  wirding  road- 
way, reducing  the  grade  from  18  per 
cent  to  11'/^  per  cent,  w  U  be  con- 
structed. 

First  avenue  east  is  to  be  paved 
from  Superior  to  Second  street.  An- 
other  job  will  be  the  gradir  g  and  pav- 
ing of  Hardy  street,  from  Columbus 
avenue  to  Princeton  avenue,  at  Wood- 
land. Another  proposed  paving  is 
Fourth  street  from  Mesaba  avenue 
to  Sixth  avenue  east,  and  another  is 
Twentieth  avenue  east  from  First 
street  to   Fourth   street. 

It  now  looks  as  if  money  for  the  im- 
provement of  Garfield  avenue  would 
be  provided  this  year.  This  improve- 
ment will  cost  in  the  neigliborhood  of 
1108,000. 


Scenic  Highway 

through  the 

Land  of  Fortune 


Colonist  Fares 

$25.00  -  ^^^^  Duluth- 
Superior,  St.  Paul- 
Minneapolis 

March  1st  to  April  30th 

LIBERAL   STOP-OVERS 


TO 

Western  Montana,  Idaho,  ' 
Washington,  Oregon, 
British  Columbia 

via  the 

Northern  Pacific 
Railway 

Mild  climate;  wonderful  yields  of 
fruits,  grains  and  grasses;  dairying 
and  stock-raising;  unparalleled  oppor- 
tunities in  hustling  cities  make  this 
the  ideal  country  for  the  homeseeker. 

Through  daily  service  ^Pullman 
Tourist  Sleeping  Cars)  Twin  Cities 
and  St.  Louis  to  North  Pacific  points 
and  the  intermediate  country. 

For  train  sarvic*..^ares,  etc.  call  on 

J.  I.  THOMAS,    G.  A., 

J   T.  McKENNEY,C.P.  A., 

334  W.  Superior  St.,  Duluth,  Minn. 

W.  H.  MITCHELL,     a.  G.  A., 

817  Tower  Ave.,  Superior,  Wis. 

For  descriptive  literature,  address 

C.  W.  MOTT,  General  Emigration  Agent 

St.  Paul,  Minn. 

A.  M.  CLELAND,  G.  P.  A. 
ST.  PAUL,  MINN. 


I  O  U. 


'Suppose 


propensity,  to.  bluff,  against   Baldwin   on    ^^^ '^^^n^iVa^^thLV  |50,000  more,  sen 

ator?"    • 


short  hands  kept  him  constantly  In  a 
state  of  financial  depression.  This  law- 
yer, for  the  purpose  of  explaining  the 
game  definitely,  will  be  known  as  Mac. 

Sharon  sat  at  the  head  of  the  table, 
with  Baldwin  to  his  right  and  Mac  to 
his  left.  Next  to  Mac  sat  Scott,  then 
Smith  and  Brown.  Each  player  bought 
chips  to  the  amount  of  |10,000,  the 
whites  being  $100,  the  blues  $500  and 
the  reds  $1,000.  The  antee  was  a  white 
chip,  and  every  pot  was  a  Jackpot  in 
accordance  with  a  rule  previously 
adopted  by  the  players. 

The  play  was  desultory  for  an  hour 
or  more,  few  bets  in  excess  of  $1,000 
being  made.  Mac  was  caught  bluffing 
several  times  by  Baldwin,  and  the  oth- 
er players  were  resting  upon  their 
oars,  waiting  for  the  cinch  hand  in 
wliich  every  poker  player  has  implicit 
faith  and  which  is  confidently  looked 
for    at    some    stage    of    the    proceeding. 

When  the  big  pot  finally  came  around 
Mac  had  less  than  $1,000  in  his  stack. 
Smith  and  Brown  were  a  few  thousand 
ahead,  while  Sharon,  Scott  and  Bald- 
win stacked  up  about  even. 

It     was    a    characteristic    of    Sharon 

that  whenever  h?   had   a  poor  hand    he 

was    extremely   Jovial,    while    when    he 

I  sat  facins  aces  up  or  tiiree  ot  a  kind 


The  pot  now  represented  $236,000  in 
value,  and  still  Sharon  was  not  satis- 
fied.    He  felt  that  his  ace  full  was  the 


BUOYANCY  IS 
STILL  LACKING 

Trade  Reports  Are  of  a 

Hopeful  Character, 

However. 

New  York,  March  20. — B.  G.  Dun  & 
Co.'s  Weekly  Review  of  Trade  today 
says: 

Most  of  the  tests  by  whi?h  trade  ac- 
tivity is  measured  make  favorable 
records.  Reports  from  the  principal 
cities  are  of  a  generally  hipeful  char- 
acter, but  the  fact  remains  that  there 
is  still  lacking  that  buoyancy  and 
readiness  to  make  long  commitments 
ahead,  which  are  features  of  a  trade 
situation  entirely  free  from  unsettling 
uncertainties.  The  week  has  witnessed 
the  introduction  of  a  tariff  bill  making 
large  cuts  in  duties  on  iron  and  steel 
and  other  products,  but  apparently 
less  Is  apprehended  from  this  than 
from  a  possible  failure  of  congress  to 
heed  the  words  of  President  Taft  and 
get  through  with  the  tariff  business  as 
soon  as  possible.  The  coal  trade  Is 
confronted  with  a  labor  crisis.  The 
Iron  trade  continues  In  the  process  of 
price  readjustment.  thou«l  a  slow  re- 
vival In  structural  lines  is  a  refiectlon 
of  increased  activity  in  bu  Iding.  Cop- 
per has  experienced  further  depression. 
Printers  report  little  ne'v  business, 
while  Southern  ginghams  continue  to 
be  active.  In  the  woolen  goods  divi- 
rion  clothiers  are  urging  t  le  early  dis- 
tribution of  samples,  witli  a  view  of 
going  on  the  road  the  first  week  of 
April.  Worsteds,  both  skein  and  piece 
dyed,  are  still  in  good  demand,  with 
many  requests  for  immediate  delivery. 
Woolen  and  worsted  yarn?  are  moving 
slowlv,  with  no  materia  change  in 
quotations.  I.inen  and  Ju;e' yarns  are 
strong  and  fairly  active. 

New  business  in  footwear  continues 
small,  but  some  New  Enifland  manu- 
facturers have  reserve  orders  which 
will  last  them  for  some  time.  Calf 
and  similar  goods  are  in  noderate  re- 
cjuest  and  some  specialties  are  favored, 
but  as  yet  the  local  Piastern  demand 
lias  not  reached  former  proportions. 
Trade  in  hides  show  con^iderable  im- 
provement. The  demand  for  leather 
continues  very  slow,  consumers  only 
supplving  their  need.s.  Prices  are 
weak,  but  union  backs  are  steady,  and 
there    is    some    improvement    in    export 


Alatka-Yukon-Paciflo  Exposition, 

Seattle:    June   I  to  Oct,   16. 

Annual  Rose  Featival,  Portland: 

June  7  to  12. 

National  Irrigation  Congreaa,  Spokane: 

Aurust  9  to  14. 

Rainier  Kafl  Park  and  Paradise  Valley,  ^y 

auto  or  rail,  from  Tacoma:  June  1  to  Oct.  1. 

Yellowstone  Nat'l  Park: 

June  6  to  Sept.  85.  CB  09 


All    kinds 


demand    for    hemlock    sole, 
of  upper  stock  are  dull. 

There  is  a  suggestion  of  permanenc* 
in  the  slow  but  steady  revival  In 
structural  lines  of  iron  and  steel.  De» 
mand  Is  light  in  the  wire  trade,  but 
considerable  inquiry  has  developed  for 
pipe. 

VILLAIN  IN  AM.\TKIR 

SHOW  REALLY  SHOT. 

Mount  Vernon.  111..  March  20. — John 
Moake,  the  "villain"  in  an  amateur 
perforinance  by  pupils  of  the  Grand 
Center  school,  south  of  here,  was  shot 
In  the  forehead  and  dangerously 
wounded  by  the  hero,  Roy  Slater.  The 
cartridge',  which  was  thought  to  have 
been  a  blank,  was  prepared  by  Moake, 
who  cut  the  bullet  off  chtse  to  tho 
rim  of  the  shell.  After  he  was  shot 
he  .said  he  did  not  think  there  waiJ 
enough  of  the  bullet  in  the  shell  to 
hurt.  The  bullet  is  lodged  in  the 
nasal   bone. 

HEKiH-HO:  HERE'S  A  NEW 
0(  EAN  MAIL  SUBSIDY  BILL. 


Washington,  March  20. — Represen- 
tative Humphrey  of  Washington  has 
introduced  an  ocean  mail  subsidy  bill, 
over  which  It  is  expected  the  ship  sub- 
sidy fight  of  the  Sixty-fir.st  congress 
will  be  made.  The  bill  grants  to 
vessels  of  the  second  class  on  routes 
to  South  America,  the  Philippines, 
China  and  Japan,  the  same  pay  for 
carrying  the  malls  as  is  now  allowed 
to   ves.sels   of   the    first    cla.ss. 

This  is  the  bill  that  Senator  Gall- 
inger  had  planned  to  introduce  in  thd 
senate,  but  it  is  under.-tood  he  will 
not  present  it  at  this  time.  It  differs 
from  the  one  considered  at  the  last 
session  in  as  much  as  it  does  not  In- 
crease the  pay  for  vessels  of  the  third 
class. 


Former   Kdltor   l>pad. 

Dubuque.  Iowa.  March  20. — Marcus 
C.  Woodruff  of  St.  Paul,  right-of-way 
commissioner  for  the  Chicago  Great 
Western  railway, -died  yesterday,  aged 
78  years.  He  was  formerly  editor 
and  publisher  of  the  Dubuque  Times, 
and  Iowa  state  railroad  commissioner. 


Portland,  Or..  March  20. — Fielder 
Jones,  who  Is  in  Portland,  said  when 
shown    the   Chicago   dispatch: 

"I  did  name  $20,000  as  my  price 
when    I    came    through   Chicago,    but    I 


winning  hand,  and  he  made  the  highest     never  gave  It  directly  to  Gomlskey,  and 


vrniS  BEAUTIFUL 
<  IdFOOT 


bet    of     the     night    when    he    promptly 
raised  Baldwin  $60,00*.     This,  with  the 


Stoddard  Dayton 

$1500  to  $3500 

RAMALEY  QARAQE,  pSSl 

The  Peer  of  All  Eieotrlcs 

CATALOGUES  ON  REQUEST 


I  have  no  intimation  that  I  ^m  to  re 
celve  such  an  offer  from  him.  Con- 
sequently I  cannot  say  what  I  will  do 
with  an  ofl'er  that  I  have  not  jjet  re- 
ceived. 1  have  made  no  plans  to  re- 
turn to  baseball." 

That  Is  all  Jones  would  say,  but  he 
has  previously  stated  that  he  had 
named  a  price  so  high  that  Comiskey 
would  never  come  up  to  it,  but.  if  by 
any  cliance  he  did,  that  having  given 
his    word,    he    would    accept. 


COMPLETE  WITH 
2*A  H.P.!  MOTOR; 
FORSfimCE 


1 


Buys  Fast  Pacer. 

Ran  Francisco,  Cal.,  March  20. — The 
Limit,  a  green  5-year-old  pacer,  which 
as  a  o-vear-old,  worked  a  mile  in  2:10, 
has  been  sold  to  Mr.  Estabrook  of 
Denver,  the  owner  of  Spanish  Queen. 
L.OU  Crellin  of  Pleasanton,  received 
$10,000  for  the  animal.  The  Limit  is 
hv  Searchlight,  out  of  Bertha.  The 
horse  will  be  shipped  by  express  today 
in  charge  of  Gus  Macey,  driver  and 
trainer  £or  Eetabrook. 


ooii 


Do  not  compare  this  laui  ch  wllh  the  low-price  producli  of  other  manufacturer*,  ThU  i*  •  high 
trade,  Maunch  and  sea-wortljr  craft,  built  with  the  lame  be«t  materials  and  expert  workmanahip  as 
all  Moore  Quality  Boats,  and  will  be  tent  to  any  one  anywhere  for  $19S.0O,  and  the  most  liberal  offer 
of  your  money  back  if  not  lalitfied.  Length  18  feet,  beam  4H  feet,  draught  8  Inches,  capacity  8 
persons,  speed  8  miles  per  hour,  and  equipped  with  a  high  grade  2H  H.  P.  gasoline  motor,  com- 
pletely installed  and  ready  for  immediate  service— In  stock  ready  for  shipment. 

SEND  FOR  BEAUTIFUL  CATALOGUE,  giving  photo-reproductions  and  full  description 
of  this  and  many  other  boats,  from  canoes  to  60  foot  cruisers.  You  cannot  afford  to  buy  a  boai  of 
any  discription  without  first  lending  for  this  catalogue.  Over  2000  Moore  Quality  Boau  on  Lake 
Minnetonka  alone— America  s  richest  resort. 

MOORE  BOAT  >rORKS.  74  Lake  Avc^  WAYZATA,  MINN. 


■ 


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at  the 

uniay 

wtnth 

fate. 

surely 


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Manager    C.    A.    Marshall      of      the 
Lyceum    theater,    always    Judicious    in 
hiB  choice   of  bookings  for  that  play- 
house, has  made  an  exceptionally  hap- 
py selection  in  securing  "Ben  Hur"  as 
a  mld-Lentfn  attraction.     The  nupiber 
of  dramat'tc   productions     which     can 
boast   of  sufferlns  no  appreciable  de- 
pression in  point  of  box  office  receipts 
during  the  penitential  season,  are  few, 
and  of  these  few   "Ben  Hur"  leads  all 
competitors.      In   fact,   it   may  be  said 
in   all    truth    that    there    are   countless 
playgoers  who  consider  a  visit  to  "Ben 
Hur"    an    important    essential    of    this 
period    of   sacrifice    and    prayer.      The 
reason  for  this  remarkable   popularity 
is  that   the  story   of   "Ben   Hur"   is  so 
closely  a3s.>ciated  with  the  Bible.  Since 
its    first    production    by    Klaw    &    Er- 
langer    at     the    Broadway    theater    In 
New   York  city  almost  ten  years  ago. 
the  religious  standard  of  this  wonder- 
ful "Tale  of  the  Christ"  has  been  care- 
fully maintained.      "Ben   Hur"   enjoys 
the  distini'tion  of  being     indorsed     by 
ministers   of   every   denomination,   and 
It    is    a    well-known    fact    that    people 
who  never  entered  a  theater  sit  in  rapt 
and  awed  reverence  as  the  great  drama 
Is  unfolded  before  them,  with  its  won- 
derful   series   of   pictures   and    Us    ab- 
sorbing and  exciting  action.     The  play 
appeals  to   people  in  all  walks  of  life. 
The  regular  theatergoer  is  thrilled   by 
Its   realism    and   charmed    by   the   love 
story  that  runs  through  the  play,  and 
the    religiously    Inclined    draw    inspir- 
ation   and    moral    strength    from    the 
subtle  influence  which  pervades  every 
line  and   scene   of  the  drama. 

From  the  moment  when  the  cur- 
tain rises  un  the  impressive  tableau  of 
the  Star  of  Bethlehem  to  the  final 
scene,  when  the  drama  ends  with  a 
burst  of  triumphal  music,  the  action 
moves  with  a  sweep  that  reache.s  its 
culmination  in  the  great  race  scene, 
the  most  marvelous  mechanical  Inven- 
tion ever  shown  on  the  stag*'.  In  this 
superb  picture  of  Roman  luxury  in  the 
most  Romanized  of  any  city  In  Asia 
Minor.  Antioch.  the  two  men  who  are 
the  central  figures  in  the  story — the 
prince  of  the  Judean  House  of  Hur  and 
the  Roman  Messala — battle  for  life, 
love,  honor  and  fortune,  and  Ben  Hur 
wins  the  terrific  struggle,  completely 
destroying  the  power  and  influence  of 
his  enemy. 

"Ben  Hur"  will  fill  an  engagement 
of  three  nights  at  the  Lyceum  theater 
beglning  with  Monday  evening's  per- 
formance. There  will  also  be  a  spe- 
cial  matinee  on   Wednesday. 

This  season's  cast  Includes  such  well- 
known  people  as  Conway  Tearle, 
Mitchell  Harris,  Anthony  Andre.  John 
M.  Troughton.  William  L  e  yd  e  n  , 
Charles  H.  0'I>onnell,  Charles  Can- 
fleld.  Walter  Markham,  Daniel  E. 
Hanlon.   Alice   Haynes,      Florence     St. 


Leonard,      Loyola      O'Connor.      Zadlee 
Appleton  and  Maud  Ream  Stover. 

Theatergoers  should  bear  in  mind 
that  the  curtain  is  raised  on  "Ben 
Hur"  performances  promptly  at  S 
o'clock  In  the  evening  and  at  2  o'clock 
at  the  matinees,  and  late  comers  will 
not  be  seated  until  the  conclusion  of 
the  prelude — a  beautiful  scene  repre- 
senting the  Star  of  Bethlehem  as  It 
appeared  to  the  Wise  Men,  accom- 
panied bj'  the  grand  symphonic  or- 
chestral and  vocal  score  composed  by 
Edgar  Stillman  Kelley. 

"Brenstcp's  Millions." 

There  is  a  keen  Interest  felt  in  the 
coming  of  the  Cohan  &  Harris' 
comedians  In  "Brewster's  Millions," 
which  holds  forth  at  the  Lyceum  next 
Thursday.  Friday  and  Saturday  with 
matinee   on    Saturday. 

"Brewster's  Millions"  has  made  an 
unprecedented  hit  in  London.  New 
York,  Chicago  and  other  large  cities 
throughout  the  world  and  Is  declared 
to  be  one  of  the  greatest  comedies 
offered  to  the  public  in  recent  years. 
The  play  Is  from  Qeorge  Barr  Mc- 
Cutcheon's  novel  of  the  same  name, 
and  tells  of  Montgomery  Brewster, 
who  tries  to  spend  J  1,000,000  in  one 
year.  The  first  act  of  the  play  shows 
Brewster  in  possession  of  $1,000,000. 
He  has  been  living  at  the  home  of 
Margaret  Gray  and  her  mother,  but 
when  he  becomes  a  millionaire  he  es- 
tablishes elaborate  apartments  of  his 
own,  and  the  first  act  represents  his 
friends  gathered  to  welcome  him  in 
his  new  home.  While  this  house- 
warming  is  going  on  Brewster,  or 
"Monty"  as  he  is  called,  is  notified 
that  an  uncle  has  left  him  $7,000,000 
provided  that  at  the  expiration  of  one 
year  he  becomes  absolutely  penniless. 
The  information  so  astonishes  the 
young  man  that  he  is  almost  speech- 
less, but  he  finally  accepts  the  condi- 
tions of  his  uncle's  will,  and  begins 
a  plan  to  spend  the  money.  The  first 
act  is  only  an  introduction  for  the 
most  unusual  occurrences  in  the  next 
three.  The  second  act  shows  the  young 
man  in  full  swing,  spending  money  as 
recklessly  and  wastefully  as  could  be 
imagined.  A  great  deal  of  comedy  is 
the  result,  a  score  of  office  boys  carry- 
ing long  drawn-out  telegrams,  and  a 
large  staflT  of  employes  doing  nothing 
for  handsome  salaries.  There  is  a 
love  story  cleverly  worked  in  the  plot, 
and  spending  $4,000  a  day  is  not  all 
that  occupies  Monty's  time.  Peggy 
Grey,  at  whose  home  he  formerly 
lived,  gives  him  much  uneasiness,  be- 
cause she  refuses  to  understand  his 
unheard  of  behavior. 

The  third  act  finds  Brewster  and  all 
the  friends  he  could  gather  together 
on  board  the  yacht  Flitter,  taking  a 
cruise  around  the  world.  The  yacht  Is 
complete  in  all  visible  details  and  the 


THE    FAMOUS   YACHT    SCENE   AND   "ROBERT    OBER"    AS   MONTY   BREWSTER.  IN   "BREWSTER'S   MILLIONS." 


marine  effect  Is  exceedingly  striking. 
The  storm,  which  takes  place.  Is  most 
thrilling  and  wonderfully  well  brought 
out.  The  fourth  act  shows  Brewster 
in  his  rooms  and  after  several  inter- 
esting complications  he  finally  gets 
rid  of  every  penny  of  the  first  $1,000,- 
000  and  comes  Into  possession  of  the 
$7,000,000  and  also  the  girl.  Cohan 
&  Harris  provided  the  piece  with  a 
superb  cast  of  comedians,  headed  by 
Robert  Obor. 


At  the  Bijou. 

Commencing  Monday  afternon,  pa- 
trons of  the  Bijou  will  have  a  chance 
to  witness  the  performance  of  Mile. 
Athmore  Gray,  the  celebrated  English 
Salome  dancer,  who  had  a  run  of  three 
months  at  the  Palace  theater,  Lon- 
don, and  Is  now  making  her  first  tour 
of  American  vaudeville  theaters.  Mile. 
Gray  has  now  appeared  at  fourteen 
theaters  in  the  United  Theaters  com- 
pany circuit,  under  the  management 
of  Sullivan  &  Considine,  at  the  Or- 
pheum,  Vancouver,  B.  C,  San  Fran- 
cisco. »Los  Angeles,  Seattle,  Spokane, 
and  Minneapolis.  She  proved  such  a 
drawing  card  that  all  business  records 
were  broken  at  each  of  the  above 
cities.  Her  dances  are  refined  and 
very  artistic.  Mile.  Gray  is  touring 
the  East,  where  she  is  booked  for  a 
summer's  run  at  the  New  York  the- 
ater of  the  Sullivan  &  Considine 
circuit. 

It  might  be  said  that  the  manage- 
ment offers  an  all-star  bill  for  the 
coming  week,  as  one  of  the  biggest 
features  and  topline  sketches  in  vaude- 
ville, will  also  appear.  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Arthur  Forks  will  present  their  fea- 
ture playlet,  entitled  "A  Wild  Rose," 
which  Is  one  of  the  prettiest  comedy 
playlets  that  has  been  seen  in  vaude- 
ville in  years. 

Among  the  other  features  for  the 
week  will  be  "The  Elite  Mu.slcal 
Four"  of  accomplished  musician.^,  each 
being  a  soloist  of  exceptional  ability. 
They  will  Introduce  severel  quartet 
selections  as  well  as  their  solo  num- 
bers. 

A  very  artistic  number  will  be  Saona 


in  "Living  Portraits  From  the  Halls 
of  Fame."  This  act  is  one  of  orig- 
inal ideas  and  one  that  has  made  a 
big    hit    over   the    entire    circuit. 

Harry  Burgoyne,  England's  famous 
singing  comedian,  will  introduce  his 
repertoire  of  original  character  songs, 
including   several    coaster   song*. 

The  Hebrew  comedians,  Fox  and 
Crystal,  will  appear  In  a  clover  sing- 
ing, talking  and  comedy  act. 

will  sing  the  popular 
hit.      entitled      "My 
The  nvoving  pictures 
subjects. 

Matineee-ar^-giv^u  daily  at  2:45  and 
evening  performances  at  8  and  9:30. 
Seats  may  be  I'l^^cvodrin  advance.  A 
school  children'.s  matinee  will  be  given 
Saturday  at  2:30,.  and  performances 
Sunday  afternoon' and  night. 

Lyceum  Notes. 

Jtory    of    "Parsifal"    Is    one    of 

In  the  Castle  of  the 

from    the    haunts    of 
relics,    the 


Isadore  Silver 
illustrated    song 
Honey  Moon." 
will   all    be    new 


Th 

Intense  interest 

Grail,    secluded 

men,    two    holy 

the    cup,    are    guarded    by 

heaven-appointed    knights 

their  king,   trusted   rather 

than  spiritual  strength  and 


spear    and 

a    band    of 

Anfortas. 

to   phj'sical 

goes  forth 


CONWAY  TERLE  AS  "BEN  HUR" 


AND  FLORENCE  ST.  LEONARD  AS  "IRAS" 
LYCEUM  NEXT  WEEK. 

.*.  ilk.   k 


IN  "BEN  HUR"  AT  THE 


against  Kllngsor,  a  magician  of  evil 
repute,  whose  chief  desire  Is  to  en- 
compass the  downfall  of  the  knights 
and  the  destruction  of  all  holy  things. 
The  fall  of  Anfoj-tas  comes  through 
Kundry.  half  woiiian,  half  witch,  who, 
under  the  sflfell  of  Klingsor,  is  trans- 
formed into  a  being  of  transcendent 
beauty.  Klingsor  secures  the  sacred 
spear  carried  by  Anfortas  and  inflicts 
therewith  aiv  IncuJ-able  wound  in  the 
knight's  side.  whlL>h  bleeds  afresh  with 
every  celebration   of  the  holy  rite. 

Torn  by  physkaSl  weakness  and  the 
pangs  of  remtfrse,  Anfortas'  condition 
becomes  desperate,  when,  at  length. 
In  answer  to  his  supplications,  a  celes- 
tial voice  is  heam  promising  him  re- 
lief. 

Parsifal  appears  upon  the  scene,  a 
mere  youth, ,  ignorant  of  the  ways  of 
the  world,  yet  TToble  born.  Klingsor 
fears  that  he  may  prove  to  be  the  re- 
deemer to  heal  Anfortas'  wound  and' 
prepares  for  him  snares  of  a  most 
.seductive  kind;  .beautiful  gardens, 
maidens  of  wondrous  charm,  and  Kun- 
dry herself  transformed  by  magical 
means  into  an  "enchanting  nymph, 
who  tempts  Parsifal,  not  by  sensual 
means  alone,  but  by  Influence  which 
traverse  the  whole  scale  of  human 
emotion. 

Against  all  these  allurements,  how- 
ever. Parsifal  is  proof  and  his  purity 
triumphs.  Mad  with  disappointment 
and  rage,  Klingsor  hurls  the  sacred 
spear  at  Parsifal.  but  Instead  of 
piercing.  It  miraculously  hangs  sus- 
pended above  the  head  of  the  youth, 
who,  grasping  it,  makes  the  sign  of 
the  cross,  whereupon  the  magician's 
spells  are  broken.  The  garden,  with 
its  wonderful  beauty,  falls  to  ruin,  and 
Parsifal  Is  seen,  high  up  on  the  broken 
wall,  in  triumphant  possession  of  the 
holy  spear  thus  recovered  from  the 
powers  of  evil.    ■ 

Again  the  scene  changes  to  the  great 
hall  of  the  castle,  and  onco  more  An- 
fortas IS  borne  in  upon  his  weary  lit- 
ter. The  knights  demand  that  he  un- 
cover the  Grail,  but  as  with  each  un- 
covering his  agony  increases,  he  re- 
fuses and  in  a  paroxysm  of  despair, 
calls  upon  the  knights  to  slay  him  and 
end  his  misery.  Unobserved.  Parsifal 
now  approaches,  bearing  the  sacred 
spear.  He  touches  the  wound  and  im- 
mediately it  Is  healed.  Then  he  pro- 
claims himself  king  of  the  Grail  and 
orders  it  uncovered.  Ascending  the 
altar,  he  raises  the  sacred  vessel  in  all 
its  crimson  beauty.  The  knights  kneel 
to  do  him  homage;  Kundry  dies  at  his 
ft^et  In  the  joy  of  repentance,  and  a 
white  dove  de.scendlng  from  the  dome 
of  the  hall,  hovers  o\'er  his  head,  while 
knights  and  singers  sound  a  hymn  of 
praise. 

The  story  Is  a  grand  exposition  of 
the  sorrows  and  suffering  of  humanity 
and  redemption  of  purity,  faith  and 
love. 

"Parsifal"  is  announced  for  the 
evening  of  March  .2  7  at  the  Lyceum. 
*  *  • 
The  remarkable  grip  which  "The 
Servant  in  the  House"  gains  on  the  at- 
tentive, of  plaj^oerg  all  over  the  coun- 
try, ft  illustrated  by  Its  bookings  for 
the  present  season.  The  company 
presenting  the  celebrated  comedy- 
drama,  an  all-star  cast  known  as 
"Henry  Miller's  Associate  Players,"  is 
now  playing  a.  return  engagement  of  a 
week  In  Grand  Rapids.  Mich.  This  Is 
the  first  time  in  the  history  of  that 
city  that  any  theatrical  attraction  has 


been  presented  there  for  two  weeks  in 
one  season.  The  same  play  and  com- 
pany will,  after  leaving  this  city,  re- 
turn for  a  second  week's  engagement 
to  St.  Paul,  Minneapolis,  Milwaukee, 
Denver  and  several  other  cities  that 
have  .seen  the  play  during  the  present 
season. 

The  seven  members  of  "Henry  Mill- 
er's Associate  Players"  are:  Creston 
Clarke,  Clay  Clement,  George  W.  Wil- 
son. Lizzie  Collier,  Gladys  Wynne, 
Wilfred  Roger  and  Henry  Dornton — 
every  one  of  whom  is  a  noted  actor  on 
the  American  or  English  stage. 

•  •      • 

Peculiar  significance  attaches  itself 
to  the  approaching  engagement  of 
"The  Lion  and  the  Mouse,"  at  the 
Lyceum,  due  to  the  fact  that  certain 
land  stealing  cases  are  up  for  speedy 
trial.  The  character  of  John  Burkett 
Ruder  so  far  as  his  contempt  for  the 
laws  of  the  land  and  his  ruthless  u.se 
of  ofllclals,  whether  government,  state 
or  municipal,  to  further  his  own  ma- 
chinations, undoubtedly  has  his  proto- 
type in  this  part  of  the  world.  When 
the  Charles  Klein  play  was  first  pro- 
duced, the  public  said:  "Such  things 
caflnot  be."  Then  came  the  various 
exposes  of  the  devious  way  of  certain 
captains  of  industry  to  secure  the  cul- 
mination of  their  gigantic  schemes, 
and  the  public  took  a  different  view  of 
the  playwright's  creation. 

*  •     • 

Almost  direct  from  the  New  Prin- 
cess theater  In  Chicago  come.s  one  of 
the  newest  musical  productions  of  the 
year,  "A  Stubborn  Cinderella."  This 
new  musical  show  Is  under  the  direc- 
tion Of  Mort  H.  Singer,  and  the  critics 
of  Chicago,  when  the  play  was  first 
produced  declared  It  to  be  the  greatest 
musical  production  ever  staged. 

"A  Stubborn  Cinderella'  Is  headed 
by  Homer  B.  Mason,  a  well  known 
vaudeville  headliner.  who  Is  making  a 
tremendous  hit  In  musical  comedy. 
Some  of  the  big  song  hits  are  "When 
You    First    Kiss    the    Last    Girl     You 


ca- 
and 


of    the    best    opportunities    of    his 
reer  as  Jules  Beaublen,   the  hero, 

is  said  to  have  lost  nor  e  of  it. 

*      •      « 

The  appearance  hert;  soon  of  Miss 
Viola  Allen  and  her  company  in  "The 
White  Sister."  the  new  play  that*  has 
been  written  for  her  Y.y  F.  Marlon 
Crawford  and  Walter  Hackett,  should 
serve  to  mark  an  event  in  the  tocal 
theatergoing  world,  for  Miss  Allen's 
enviable  record  in  the  theater'  has 
been  watched  with  considerable  inter- 
est for  some  years.  Curiously  enough. 
Miss  Allen  has  never  occupied  ^;  po- 
sition less  than  that  of  leading  ^otn- 
S,n  or  star.  At  the  age  ot  lH  she  be- 
came leading  woman  for  John  Mc- 
Cullough  and  "played  the  title  role 
with  him  In  a  number  of  playci,  tak- 
ing leads  In  such  other  mayteupieces 
as  he  was  identified  wlti  later.  In  the 
present  play  Mlas  Allen  takes  the  role 
of  Dominican  nun,  and  from  a>ll  ac- 
counts her  talents  find  a  most  fitting 
expression  in  this  chara<ter.  which  it  is 
said  has  been  prepared  with  unusual 
care  and  fldelitj-.  Lieller  & 
well-known  managers,  have 
Miss  Allen  with  a  remarkable 
tion,  if  one  is  to  judge  from 
vance   reports. 

•  *      • 

The  New  York  Knickerbocker  thea- 
ter musical  success,  "The  Red  Mill," 
is  one  of  the  early  attractions  booked 
for  this  city.  The  coriplete  produc- 
tion Includes  the  escape  from  the 
mill,  with  the  company  of  sixty,  in- 
cluding the  six  little  I>utch  kiddles, 
and  these  are  but  a  few  of  the  features 
In    this    well-known    success. 

*  «      * 

"When  Old  New  York  Was  Dutch." 
a  comedy  drama  by  Sidney  R.  Ellis, 
which  Al  H.  (Metz)  Wilson  presented 
In  New  York  city  recently  with  great 
success.  Is  a  most  interesting  and  pic- 
turesque story  of  New  York  when  It 
was  called  New  Amsterdam.  Mr.  Wil- 
son Is  booked  for  an  appearance  hero 
at    the    Lyceum    soon. 


Co..   the 

supplied 

produc- 

the  ad- 


GOSSIP  OF  THE  RIALTO 


REVIVAL  OF  "KING  JOHN"  IS  PRAISED  AS  A  PRO- 
DUCTION—THE THREE  "ZAZAS"  ARE  COMPARED 
THREE  LATE  PLAYS  TO  BE  RETIRED     :    :    : 


New  York,  March  20. — "King  John," 
Shakespeare's  tragedy,  which  many 
people  remember  for  the  famous 
scene  In  which  Hubert  attempts  to 
burn  out  Prlnct  Artliur's  eyes,  and  is 
dissuaded  by  the  boy's  entreaties  and 
tears    from    carrying   out   the   heartless 

order  of  the  king,  was  the  play  that 
followed  the  giddy  English  comedy  of 
"Kltt.v  Grey"  at  the  New  Amsterdam 
with  Robnprt  Mantell  In  tlie  title  role. 
The  performance  was  received  with 
conflicting  opinions  by  the  critics, 
but  all  agreed  that  William  A.  Brady 
lias  gone  out  of  his  way  to  provide  a 
splendid  production  and  to  give  It  an 
acting  cast  as  good  as  can  be  as- 
sembled. There  was  present  a  very 
laige  audience,  which  seemed  prepared 
to  accept  the  effort  to  revive  this 
seldom-acted  tragedy  in  the  best  of 
spirit.  Mr.  Mantell  liardly  added  any- 
thing of  distinction  to  his  performance 
of  the  title  role,  but  it  remains  to  be 
seen  what  the  general  public  will 
think. 

As  near  as  I  can  get  the  data  the 
piece  has  not  been  seen  In  New  York 
since  1874,  when  It  served  John  K.  Mc- 
Cullough  In  making  his  first  appear- 
ance In  the  metropolis.  I  was  put  on 
at  Booth's  theater  Mav  25.  1874.  and 
remained  till  the  30th.  But  McCul- 
longh  did  not  play  the  title  role,  which 
was  taken  by  J.  B.  Booth,  while  the 
star  played  Faulconbridge.  Prince 
Artliur  in  this  production  was  taken 
by  Minnie  Maddern  (Mrs.  Fiske): 
Agnes  Booth  played  Constance;  H.  A. 
Weaver  was  cast  as  Hubert,  and  Lewis, 
the  French  Dauphin,  was  taken  by 
Gustavus  Levick.  Nine  years  before 
that  the  tragedy  was  played  here  by 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Kean  at  the 
Broadway  theater.  It  is  evident  that 
Brady  figures  on  a  run  for  the  play, 
but  Is  prepared  to  supplement  it  with 
Shakespearean  plays  in  which  Mantell 
has  been  seen  here  on  previous  oc- 
casions. The  production  Is  notable  for 
its  color,  the  scenic  splendors,  the  big 
ensemble,  military  and  court  scenes 
and  the  gorgeous  costumes.  The  act- 
ing Is  on  a  uniform  level  of  excel- 
lence without  any  individual  distinc- 
tion. 

•      *      • 

This  happens  tobe  the  "Zaza"  season. 
There  hasn't  been  a  play  since  "Cam- 


ille"  that  Is  us^d  so  much  to  exploit 
the  virtuosity  of  emotional  stars  as 
this  play  of  Pierre  Boiton.  .Mrs.  Carter 
has  revived  it  since  her  engaifineiu 
began  al  the  Liberty;  Marietta  OUv 
has  just  shown  us  the  tJerman  "Zaza." 
and  now  MImi  Aguglia  (say  A-yul-ya>, 
the  Sicilian  actress,  is  i  laking  us  ac- 
quainted with  tlie  Italian  "Zaza."  Mrs. 
Carter's  "Zaza"  differs  from  both  of 
these,  though  the  Amerl-ian  version  is 
so  little  different  from  t  ;e  original  as 
reflected  through  the  German  and 
Etruscan  (I  admit  that  1  did  nut.  see 
Rejanei  that  one  stojis  t>  wojij^  why 
it  was  necessary  to  niak;  th^ct  obg  con- 
cierge so  fond  of  lier  tlppl©^  the  aunt 
of  Zaza  instead  of  her  iiotlier.  Thus 
the  American  Zaza  has  been  made  to 
repudiate  her  own  flesh  and  blood, ex- 
cept in  the  second  degree.  Mrs.  Carter 
makes  her  a  flighty  U.dy  of  32  or 
thereabouts;  Oily  makes  her  a  sensible 
woman,  but  with  a  charming  under- 
current of  devotion,  so  t  lat  you  really 
feel  Intensely  sorry  for  :;aza.  and  con- 
fess to  a  degree  of  respect.  But 
Aguglia  makes  her  all  fire  and  flame. 
Zaza  practices  every  art  and  strategy 
in  the  dressing  room  scene  behind  the 
curtain  of  the  cafe  chan  ante  to  make 
Dufresne  surrender.  Sho  is  a  perfect 
little  flend  witli  her  trieks  of  coquetry, 
her  swishing  of  skirts  and  flirting  of 
lingerie  and  concealed  laces.  8he 
stands  on  the  chair  In  front  of  her 
mirror  and  practices  her  ankles  In 
pretty  flexions  and  curves,  and  casts 
bewitching  glances  ovjr  her  bare 
shoulders,  to  notice  the  effect  of  her 
amorous  diplomacy  on  the  flattered  but 
unbending  Dufresne.  SI  e  la  a  small 
volcano  on  tlie  brink  of  a  blow-up. 
Her  Zaza  altogether  Is  a  wild  forest 
bird,  and  you  Instlnctvjley  pity  Du- 
fresne as  you  wonder  whut  will  happen 
to  him  when  Zaza  learns  the  truth 
about  his  duplicity  to  her.  Your  opin- 
ion of  her  Increases  whin  she  shows 
such  commendable  restraint  In  her 
meeting  with  Mme.  Dufresne  and  Toto. 
and  from  an  utterly  miserable  wretch 
she  revives  like  a  drooping  flower  after 
a  rain  in  the  next  act.  when  hope  again 
gets  the  upper  hand  and  slie  figures 
that,  after  all.  Dufresne  might  prefer 
her  to  his  lares  and  penaies.  Her  mis- 
ery Is  complete  when  she  Is  dlsil- 
iusloned.    and   she   sinks    down    on   the 


floor    with    a   piteous    moan    when 
parting   comes. 

I  was  rather  proud  of  myself  to  read 
in  the  papers  the  day  after  the  Aguglia 
Zaza  at  the  Criterion — the  Sicilians  are 
giving  a  series  of  special  matinees — 
(pinions  supporting  my  lonely  judg- 
ment in  pronouncing  her  a  great  ac- 
tress. Her  .Sicilian  peasant  roles  were 
caviar,  and  after  the  first  performance 
none  of  the  irltics^^went  to  see  her 
again.  Only  "yours  truly"  sat  through 
six  performances  v.ithout  understand- 
ing a  word  that  was  spoken,  and  called 
attention  to  her  exceptional  powers, 
which  through  her  "Zaza"  are  now 
pretty    well    acknowledged. 

•  *      « 
Three    of    the    plays    which    liave    re- 
cently  been   put   on   are  already  sched- 
uled   for    retirement.      Carlotta    Nillson 
closed   in   -This   Woman  and  This  Man" 

Maxlne  Elliott   cheater  last  Sat- 

night.      This    is     reallv    a    play 

seeing,    and    deserved    a    better 

If    It    goes    on    the    road    it    will 

lntere.«t     the     average     public. 

likes  a  play  with  a  sex  problem. 

1  erhaps    it    was    not    the    u.-^vchological 

moment  for  this  play  to  appear.     There 

lias    been   so    much    outcrv   against    im- 

ni.ua     plays   that   plays   which   teach   a 

mora!  are  often  Ignorantly  confounded 

wlch    the    real    offenders.      One's    ludK- 

ment  gets  muddled.     Anywav.    I  would 

so    to    see    this    p!ay    again    if    I    had 

leisure.     It.s  place  at  the  Maxine  Elliott 

playhouse    has      been      taken     by    -The 

Bachelor,"  Clyde  Fitchs  latest  comedy  - 

•  •      ♦ 
"Meyer  &  Son"   Ls  also  drawing  to  a 

close,  though  the  date  of  its  retirement 
troni  the  stage  of  the  Garden  has  not 
yec  been  announced.  That  event  how- 
over.  Is  not  much  over  a  week  off  and 
in  its  place  will  come  "The  Conflict"  a 
play  founded  on  IJalzac'.s  story  of  "the 
•Wild  Ass"  Skin.'  sometimes  called 
•The  Magic  Skin."  dealing  with  a 
metaphysical  subject. 

•  *      * 

"A  Woman  of  Impulse"  closed  at  the 
Herald  .Square  iasc  Saturday  evening, 
but  the  next  opening  was  not  until 
Wednesday  night,  wiien  Bertha  Galland 
i-ame  to  town  in  •The  Return  of  Eve," 
with  a  new  third  aci  written  since  the 
piece  was  seen  In  Washington  and 
elsewhere,  and'  which  was  lacking  to 
round  off  sundry  rough  corners. 

•  *  * 
Julia  Marlowe  will  close  her  engage- 
ment In  Mary  Johnson's  metrical  play 
"f  •  The  Goddess  of  Reason"  at  Daly's 
theater  tonight,  and  will  be  followed  by 
K.  H.  Sothern  in  a  repercoire  of  classic 
!)Iays.  although  it  is  not  improbable 
that  he  will  revive  '•Lord  Dundreary" 
!or   a    week. 

•  *      * 
Fannie    Ward     brouglit    her    engage- 
ment   in    "The    New    Lady   Bantock"    at 
Wallacks    theater   to  a   close    last   Sat- 
urday night,  and   on   Monday  her  place 

^  was  taken  by  the  English  suffragette 
play.  "Votes  for  Women,"  in  which 
Miss  Matthewson  appeared  In  London 
niore  than  a  year  ago.  and  which  Is 
thought  to  be  of  timely  interest  just 
now.  Mary  Shaw  is  seen  in  the  princi- 
pal   role. 

•  *      * 
vaudeville  events  are  again  rendered 

dignified  and  illustrious  by  two  of 
three  features  of  interest.  At  the 
American  Music  hall  I.,aurencp  Irving 
son  of  the  late  Sir  Henry,  and  his  wife' 
Mabel  Hackney,  (^ened  last  week  In 
"The  King  and  the  Vagabond."  which 
is  Mr.  Irvings  own  adaptatlt>n  of  Ban- 
vllles  "Gringolre."  Laurence  Irving 
Is  the  author  of  the  dramatization  of 
"Richard  Lovelace."  which  Sothern 
presented  several  years  ago.  and  an- 
other play  In  which  that  actor  has  been 
appearing  In  his  Western  tour.  At  the 
Colonial  May  Irwln  made  her  first  Npw 
York  vaudeville  appearance  in  GeorgV 
Ade's  "Mrs.  Peckham's  Carouse."  which 
she  played  as  a  curtain  raiser  to  •'The 
Mullosc"  early  this  season  at  tlxe  Oar- 
rick.  This  is  a  clever  piece  for  vaude- 
ville, but  which  anybody  with  a  slight 
sense  of  humor  can  enjoy  at  all  times. 
And  last,  but  not  least  among  the 
events  of  the  week,  there  is  James  J. 
Jeffries,  "'the  undefeated.*  who  met 
with  a  tremendous  ovation  at  the  Litv- 
coln  Square  theater  Monday  afternoon. 
The  honors  done  to  the  great  man 
would  flatter  a  king's  brother,  and.  fol- 
lowing closel.v  upon  the  engagement  of 
Harry  Lauder,  promises  to  prove  an- 
other tremendous  money  maker  for  the 
Indefatigable  William  Morris,  who  Is 
thus  fighting  the  vaudeville  trust  with 
a   real   fighter    for   his  xihampion. 

•  •  »  -  « 

Nance   O'Neil,   who  passed  tinder  the 

management  of  the  Shuberts  earl.v  in 
the  season.  Is  announced  to  make  hor 
re-entree  into  vaudeville  In  this  city 
next  week,  appearing  at  the  One  Hun- 
dred and  Twenty-fifili  .street  theater 
in  a  one-act  piece,  entitled  'One  Thou- 
sand Dollais  Reward.  '  l.ack  of  a 
suitable  play  is  assigned  as  the  rea- 
son for  her  retirement  from  the  Shubert' 
fold. 


Mrs.  Leslie  Carters  .stay  In  "Kassa" 
at  the  Liberty  is  scheduled  to  termin- 
ate about  the  middle  of  .\prll.  when  she 
will  go  on  tour.  In  the  meantime  slie 
will  give  two  more  special  matinees  of 
•Zaza." 

•  •      • 

Percy  Haswell,  who  has  been  gather- 
ing laurels  as  Otis  Skinners  leading 
woman  in  "The  Honor  of  the  Family" 
for  the  past  two  seasons,  is  to  be 
jolntlj'  featured  In  a  comedy,  enticled 
"Foreign  Exchange."  with  H.  B.  War- 
ner, the  son  of  Charles  Warner,  who 
recently  committed  suicide  in  this 
city,  and  who  is  now  the  leading  man 
with  \^'iltfm  Lackaye  In  -The  Battle"  at 
the  Savoy. 

*  •*      * 

The  Lleblers  announced  last  week 
that  Israel  Zangwlll's  play,  "The  Melt- 
ing Pot,"  will  not  be  brought  into  New 
York    till    next    season. 

•  •       • 

Blanche  Ring,  one  of  the  most  enter- 
taining and  infectious  comediennes  on 
the  comic  opera  stage  today,  intends  to 
star  on  her  own  account  next  season. 
The  book  of  this  musical  comedy  will 
be  founded  by  Edgar  .Selw.vn  on  a  com- 
edy of  his  own  called  •The  Wall  Street 
Girl."  The  music  l.s  being  written  by 
Karl  Hoschna.  who  was  responsible 
for  the  musi<-  of  -The  Three  Twins." 
.Miss  Ring  intends  to  begin  reliearsals 
immodiatel.v  upon  the  conclusion  of  her 
.Season  with  Joe  Weber,  and  anticipates 
an  all-summer  run  in  New  York  foi  the 
new  piece. 

*  •      • 

Arrangemenia  liave  just  l>een  made 
by  Frederic  "Thompson  whereby  the 
n<xi    play   for   Mabel   Taliaferro   will    be 


*1 


^ 

r 


written  by 
Harry  Leon 
play   is  ••The 

Margaret 
brought     her 


and 
the 


which  win  be 
from  her  own 
be  entitled  "A 
World    Beyond 


Booth  Tarklngton 
Wilson.      The    title    of 

Return  of  a  Soul." 

•  •      * 

Anglin.        who        recently 
engagement   in   Australia 

to  an   end,   has  arrived  in   Paris,   where 

she  Intends  to  remain  until  Holy  week. 

She    will    spend    Easier   In    Rome.      Miss 

Anglin   Is   ijreparing   for  put)lication   an 

account    of    lier    travels. 

illustrated    by   snapshots 

camera.     The  work   will 

Woman's    View    of    the 

the  Seas." 

•  •      * 

Andrew  Mack,  the  Irish  comedian,  has 
has  signed  contracts  for  a  season  of 
ten  weeks  In  vaudeville.  He  begins  his 
tour  toward  the  end  of  the  current 
month. 

•  •       * 

Baldwin  Sloane,  the  musical  com- 
poser, who  win  be  best  remembered 
for  his  score  of  "A  Mocking  Bird,"  is 
collal)oratlng  with  'William  Collier  on 
a  new  musical  comedy.  Collier  is  writ- 
ing the  book  and  verses,  but  It  is  not 
yet  made  known  for  whom  the  affair 
is  intended.  Mr.  Sloane  admits  that 
his  score  will  not  be  Wagnerian. 
«      *      • 

Wlnthrop  Ames,  director  of  theNe^r 
theater  in  New  York,  has  gone  to 
Eur')pe  In  connection  with  the  opening 
of    that    enterprise. 

•  •      * 

Henri  Bernstein,  the  P'rench  drama- 
tist, is  extremely  fertile  at  present.  He 
has  just  concluded  a  new  comedy, 
•'Apres  Mol."  which  is  to  have  Its  first 
production  at  the  Theater  Francais  in 
0<tober.  It  is  later  to  be  presented 
in  England  and  .America  under  the 
title.   "When    I    Shall    Be   No   More." 

•  •       • 

Abe  Erlanger  lelt  during  the  past 
week  for  a  tour  of  Europe.  Including 
all  the  principal  European  centers?, 
London.  Paris.  Berlin  Vienna  and  Brus- 
sels. Mr.  Erlanger  intends  to  look  over 
the  new  dramatic  productions  in  each 
of   these   cities. 

•  *      • 
Preparations  for  the  revival  of  "Mas- 

cott."  with  Raymond  Hitchcock  as 
Prince  Lorenzo,  are  progressing  rap- 
idly.    Flora  Zabelle  has  been  enffaxed 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:,    SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


f  w 


■ 
1 


I 


for     the    role    of    Pettina.    and     Estelle 
"VVentworth  wJll  Ping  Flametta. 

•  •       • 

William  Lawrence,  well  koown  for 
the  last  five  seasons  as  Uncle  Josh  in 
penman  Thompsons  famous  play.  "The 
Old  Hcmestead.  "  will  be  seen  next  sea- 
son in  a  new  rural  temperance  play,  en- 
titled •Unelo  L>ave  Holcomb,"  from  the 
pen  of  Annie  Andros  Hawley  and  Mr. 
Lawrtnce.  Mr.  Uawrt  nee  is  so  near  a 
replica  of  Mr.  Thompson  that  during 
the  last  engrag^ement  at  the  Academy 
of  Music  hf  appeared  in  iwo  acts  and 
Mr.  Thompson  in  two.  and  most  of  the 
audience  thoujfht  it  was  but  the  one 
man. 

•  «      • 

Ethel  Levev,  who  is  in  Europe  for 
the  further  cultivation  of  her  voice,  is 
to  return  to  this  country  early  in  the 
cummer.  Slio  has  signed  a  contract  for 
thirty  weeks  in  vaudeville  to  begin 
early  in  the  season. 

•  •      •  ■* 

The  third  new  play  to  be  tried  out 
by  Mary  Mannering  this  season  in  the 
hope  of  finding  a  suitable  vehicle  for 
her  talents  was  abandoned  last  Satur- 
day night.  It  was  a  comedy  called 
"Step  By  Step."  written  by  Langdon 
Mitchell.  The  two  preceding  this  one 
were  "The  Struggle"  and  "A  House  of 
Cards."  It  is  said  that  Miss  Mannering 
will  not  attempt  anoilier  new  produc- 
tion  until   the  fall. 

•  «      • 

Charles  Frohman  announces  that  his 
principal  production  next  season  will 
De  Henri  Bernstein's  "Israel,"  the  east 
of  wliich  is  nov,-  completed  so  far  as  its 
principal  members  are  concerned.  Mr. 
Frohman  will  present  "Israel"  with- 
put  a  star.  The  three  principal  mem- 
bers of  the  company  will  be  Miss  Con- 
»tance  Collier.  James  O'Neil  and  Hol- 
brook  Blinn,  playing  respectively  the 
mother,  tlie  fatlu-r  and  the  son.  the 
chief  characters  In  the  play. 
«      •      * 

"Cinderella"  has  been  arranged  by 
Edward  E.  Rice  for  vaudeville  purposes 
and  Is  called  "a  bit  of  fairy  musical 
extravaganza."  Among  those  In  che 
cast  are  George  Fortesque.  who-  plays 
Glorinda.  and  Jeanette  Lowrle.  who 
assunies  the  role  of  I'rince  Cliarming. 
L.lllian     Swain     is     assuming     the     title 

role. 

•  «      • 

It  is  reported  that  Henry  W.  Savage 
has  engaged  Mrs.  Campbell  for  the 
title  role  of  his  production  In  English 
of  "La  Femme."  the  Btsson  play  which 
Is  meeting  with  such  pronounced  suc- 
cess in  Paris.  It  is  a  play  of  stormy 
emotional  powers.  "La  Femme"  Is  the 
name  of  the  woman  who  Is  an  un- 
known person.  She  has  been  led  away 
from  her  husband  aad  in  later  years 
is  defended  before  the  bar  of  justice 
on  tlie  charge  of  murder  by  her  own 
son.  The  two  are  unknown  to  each 
other.  This  is  the  great  scene  in  the 
play.  Berlin  has  also  recently  fallen 
a  victim  to  the  spell  of  this  drama, 
even  though  the  critics  pronounced  it 
one   of   the    patent    theatricallsm    . 

•  •       • 

Selma  Herman  is  to  be  starred  In  a 
pew  play  next  se.nson  by  Barton  and 
Wlswell.  Her  season  Is  to  begin  on 
Sept.  5.  In  the  interim  she  is  to  play 
a  season   of  repertoire   In   Seattle. 

•  •      • 

Marie  Tempest,  the  commedienne, 
has    been    threatening   divorce   proceed- 


ings against  her  husband,  Cosmo 
Lennox-(Jordon.  but  the  two  have 
reached  an  amicable  agreement,  and 
for  the  time  being  the  public  will  not 
learn  the  nature  of  their  differences. 
Lennox-Gordon  has  been  the  fc.nglish 
adapter  of  a  number  of  French  plays, 
in  some  of  which  his  temperamental 
wife  appeared. 

♦  •      • 

Ralph  Stuart,  who  has  been  playing 
"Strongheart"  this  season  and  has  just 
closed  his  tour,  is  to  be  starred  in  a 
series   of   romantic   plays   next   year. 

♦  •      • 

Willis  P.  Sweatnam.  who  will  be  re- 
membered as  the  creator  ot  the  humor- 
ous and  eccentric  negro  character  in 
"The  County  Chairman,"  and  later 
some  of  the  Cohan  shows,  is  likely  to 
return  to  vaudeville  next  season, 
whence    he    originated. 

Paul  Hervieu.  the  French  <3ra/"j\<'f*' 
has  entered  suit  against  the  J- ^-  '^f ''" 
vie  Publishing  company  for  publisiiing 
a  book  entitled  "The  Labyrinth,  or  a 
"Case  of  Divorce."  by  George  More- 
head,  which,  the  title  page  claims,  is 
"a  dramatic  story  based  on  the  great 
play  of  the  same  name.  Hervien  Is 
the  author  of  the  play,  known  In  the 
original  French  as  "La  Dedale  which 
Olga  Nethersole  produced  in  this  coun- 
try several  years  ago.  The  French  au- 
thor claims  that  his  copyright  protects 
the  use  of  the  material  In  story  or  play 
form,  and  the  American  publishers 
plea  is  tliat  he  has  not  complied  with 
the  law.  It  is  a  question  of  techni- 
calitv  and.  on  the  surface.  It  would 
seem  'that  the  moral  right  belongs  to 
Hervieu. 

«      «      * 

George  Evans,  who  was  the  head  of 
the  Cohan  and  Harris  minstrel  troupe. 
is  speedily  recovering  from  an  opera- 
tion for  appendicitis,  which  he  recently 
underwent  in  Ithaca.  During  his  ab- 
sence Raymond  Hitchcock  has  been 
taking   his   place. 

«      •      • 

Lee  Arthur  and  Forrest  Halsey  arc 
busv  on  a  new  /play  which  Is  to  be 
called  "The  Higher  Law."  It  deals 
with  the  right  of  a  woman  to  kill  in 
defense   of    her    honor. 

•  «      « 

Chicago's  stupendous  melodramatic 
production.  "The  Sins  of  Society." 
which  had  a  triumphant  run  at  Drury 
Lane.  London,  will  be  inaugurated  as 
the  spring  and  summer  offering  at  Mc- 
Vlckers  theater  Wednesday  night. 
April  14.  This  spectacular  play,  which 
Brooks  and  Dingwall  produce  for  the 
first  time  In  America,  will  mark  an 
epoch  of  Indoor  theatrical  enterprises 
Something  entirely  new  In  mechanical 
and  scenic  effects  will  be  given  in  "The 
Sins  of  .Society."  which  will  revolution- 
ize stage  settings  for  mammoth  pro- 
ductions. 

*  •       « 

"The  Traveling  Salesman,"  which 
has  been  playing  in  New  York  since 
Aug  10,  will  close  a  run  of  300  nights, 
on  April  10,  at  the  Gaiety  theater,  due 
to  the  fact  that  contracts  executed  last 
September  call  for  its  appearance  at 
the  Illinois  theater  In  Chicago  on 
April   1"' 

One  "week  later  "The  Traveling 
Salesman,"    Company    B,    will    Inaugu- 


rate   a    spring    and    summer    season    at 
the   Park   theater  In    Boston. 

On  Sept.  C  the  third  company  will 
inaugurate  a  tour  embracing  the  cities 
of  the  Pacific  coast. 

This  latest  comedv  by  James  Forbes 
g'vfcs  e\ery  indication  of  rivaling  In 
popu!aiily  his  first  play,  "The  Chorus 
LaJy." 

•      •      * 

I'uiing  tlie  dress  rehearsal  of  "The 
Lion  and  the-  Mouse '  the  night  before 
h.  was  produced  in  London,  Mr.  Henry 
P.  Harris,  while  silting  out  in  the 
body  of  the  theater  watching  the  re- 
hearsal, noticed  a  shabbily  dressed 
man  sitting  in  one  of  the  upper  boxes, 
smokjng  a  short,  stubby  pipe.  Mr. 
Harris,  calling  to  one  of  the  atlachss 
of  the  theater,  requested  him  to  put 
the  man  out  of  the  box  who  was 
smoking  the  pipe.  In  subdued  breath 
the  servant  remarked:  "I  beg  pardon, 
sir,  but  that  is  Mr.  Barrie.  Mr.  James 
Barrie,  the  author  of  'The  Little  Min- 
ister' and  other  classics.  I  beg  par- 
don, sir.  shall  I  put  him  out?'  Mr. 
Harris,  of  course,  made  no  further  ob- 
jection to  Mr.  Barrie  sitting  in  the  box 
or  smoking,  and  a  few  minutes  later 
was  If.troducad  to  Mr.  Barrie.  and  told 
him  of  the  incident.  It  tickled  Barrie 
imniensrelv,  and  even  to  this  day  he  Is 
of  telling  how  he  came  In 
being   put   out   of    the   the- 


llnes    for 


very  fond 
an  ace  of 
ater. 


Frances  Starr's 
the    weak,      and 


truthful  portrayal  of 

_      vasclllatlng      Laura 

Murdock  of  Eugene  Walter's  play,  "The 
Easiest  Way."  has  placed  this  Belasco 
star  In  an  enviable  position  on  the 
American  stage.  After  witnessing 
Miss  Starr's  enactment  of  the  role  at 
the  Belasco  Stuyvesant  one  cannot 
imagine  another  actress  successfully 
plaving  the  part,  which  Is  a  true  trib- 
ute to  this  young  artist's  genius  and 
to  David  Belasco's  judgment  in  .select- 
ing Miss  Starr  to  portray  the  difficult 
character. 

David  Warfleld  will  make  his  first 
Philadelphia  appearance  In  his  mo.st 
recent  success.  "A  Grand  Army  Man, 
Monday  evening,  March  8.  The  engage- 
ment is  at  the  Lyric  and  will  continue 
for  several  weeks.  "A  Grand  Arnriy 
Man."  which  ran  all  last  season  at  the 
Belasco  Stuyvesant  In  New  York,  will 
be  followed  by  a  revival  of  Mr.  War- 
field's  earlier  success,  "The  Music 
Master,"  which  is  now  in  New  York 
for  its  fifth  season,  still  playing  to 
capacity  business  at  the  spacious,  his- 
torical Academy  of  Music.  In  that 
playhouse  two  seasons  ago  Mr.  War- 
field  broke  all  previous  records  for  at 


AMUSEMENTS. 


AMUSEMENTS. 


tendance, 
stage. 


known    to      the      American 


•      •      • 
&      Co.    are    congratulating 
upon    the    list    of    eminent 


LYCEUM 


LAST  TIME  TONIGHT 

CORINNE  in  "The  8irlt  From  Berlin" 


THREE  EVENNG  PERFORMANCES  PRECISELY  AT  8  OMOCK. 

MARCH  22,  23  ntvd  24 

MATINEE  ON  WEDNESDAY  AT  2  O'CLOCK 

KLAW  &  ERLANGER'S    NEW  Sk  GREATER 


STAGED  QA  A  SCALE  OF  UNPARALLELED  SPLEKDOR 

Eight  Horses  in  the  Thrilling  Chariot   Race. 


IJebler 

themselves 

men  wlio,  in  tlie  course  of  the  present 
season,  have  voluntarily  donated  their 
services  to  that  firm  in  the  capacity  of 
press  agents.  The  list  Is  Indeed  a 
formidable  one.  including  as  it  does, 
Theodore  Roosevelt,  W.  H.  Taft.  John 
D.  Rockefeller.  Oscar  Strauss,  Jacob 
Schiff,  Joseph  Cannon,  Mayor  McClel- 
lan.  Hamlin  Garland.  Daniel  Guggen- 
heim. Dr.  Charles  F.  Aked,  J.  V.  Dltte- 

;.-,.  Knbbi  Hirsch,  Gaylord  Wilslilre, 
Mrs.  Katherine  Kennedy,  Jane  Adams, 
Joshua  Wanhope,  Prof.  J.  B.  Clarke 
and  Clarence  Darrow,  to  say  nothing 
of  scores  of  clergymen,  socialists  and 
scholars  ,who.  by  written  testimonials, 
or  in  laudatory  speeches,  have  at- 
tracted public  attention  to  Liebler  & 
Co.'s  attractions. 

Israel  Zangwill's  "The  Melting  Pot." 
in  which  Walker  Whiteside  has  scored 
the  season's  success  in  Chicago,  has 
been  the  chief  recipient  of  favorable 
•-.otice  from  high  places,  though 
"The  Man  From  Home."  now  at  the 
Astor,  called  forth  a  campaign  speech 
from  the  speaker  of  the  house.  the 
hearty  applause  of  the  president-elect, 
and  an  Invitation  from  the  city's  mayor 
to  the  star  to  celebrate  the  Lincoln 
centennial  by  substituting  the  Gettys- 
burg oration  for  his  usual  curtain 
speed),  on  Feb.  12. 

Wilt3n  Lackaye.  in  "The  Battle."  at 
the  Savoy,  not  only  provoked  the  hot- 
test kind  of  a  debate  between  the  most 
prominent  socialists  and  anti-social- 
ists of  tho  city,  but  also  Interested  the 
lichest  man  in  the  world  to  that  extent 


that    he   furnished   additional 
.Mr.  Moffett's  play. 

The  head  of  the  Christian  Science 
publication  committe  of  New  York 
state,  ai*d  the  much-quoted  pastor  of 
the  Fifth  Avenue  Baptist  church,  have, 
bv  their  hearty  praise  of  the  play,  ma- 
terially increased  tlie  prosperity  of 
Eleanor  Robson's  run  in  Mrs.  Bur- 
nett's "The  Dawn  oJ  a  Tomorrow."  at 
the  Lyceum.  Not  a  bad  record  for  a 
single  firm  in  a  sin«l»-  season,  is  It? 

For  the  one  hundredth  performance 
of  Wilton  Lackaye,  In  Cleveland  Mof- 
fett's piay.  "The  Battle."  at  the  Savoy 
theater.  New  York  whfch  took  place 
on  Monday.  March  15.  LlAler  &  Co.  got 
out  a  volume  of  "Lacontlrrams."  Just 
what  the  "Laconlgrams"'  are,  is  not 
stated,  but  the  scliolar  will  readily 
recognize  as  elements  that  were  to 
make  the  word,  laconic,  epigrams. 
Lackaye  and    marconigrams. 

•  •      • 

James  I>ackaye  is  again  to  be  seen 
as  tlie  fat  gambler  in  the  Tarklngton- 
Wilion  romance.  "Cameo  Kirby."  when 
Dustin  Farnum  assunies  the  title  role. 
Two  of  the  most  remarkable  facts 
about  this  portly  brother  of  Wilton's 
are  that  he  weighs  100  pounds  more 
than  anyone  you  are  likely  to  meet  in 
the  course  of  a  day's  Journey,  and  that 
he  Is  a  total  abstainer.  One  evening, 
at  a  well-known  restaurant,  when 
"Jim"  was  putting  away  bottle  after 
bottle  of  mineral  water,  a  waiter  was 
heard  to  murmur:  "What  a  bully 
a'luarium   lie    would    makel 

•  •      • 

"The  White  Sister."  F.  Marlon  Craw- 
ford and  Walter  Hackett's  new  play, 
that  has  scored  so  heavily  in  Chicago, 
with  Viola  Alien  as  its  star,  and  with 
William  Farnum  featured  in  her  sup- 
port, has  an  especial  appeal  to  Cath- 
olics. There  have  been  a  number  of 
requests  from  convents  near  Chicago 
that  special  performances  be  given,  so 
that  the  nuns  may  attend,  and  Father 
Finn,  an  eminent  Paullst.  has  written 
a  review  of  the  play,  in  which  he  ad- 
vises every  Catholic  to  see  it.  It  will 
be  remembered  that  F.  Marion  Craw- 
ford has  been  appointed  biographer  of 
the  present  pope,  and  tliat  he  has 
always  been  held  in  high  esteem  by 
Catholics  all  over  the  world.  In  his 
present  play,  wherever  church  ques- 
tions present  themselves,  they  arj 
treated  in  a  thoroughly  sympathetic 
manner,  and  never  in  the  pedantic  way 
that  would  prove  baneful  to  ther  rapid 
action  of  the  piece. 

•  •      • 

May  Robson.  the  eccentric  and  lova- 
ble "Aunt  Mary."  says  she  plays  freak 
characters  because  she  wants  the 
money. 

"Of  course,  the  stress 
uncertainty  is  over  now 
"but  once  upon  a  ttme 
money." 

The  woman  of  smiles  enjoys  a  wait 
of  twenty-five  minutes  after  tlie  first 
act  of  "The  Rejuvenation  of  Aunt 
Marv."  Last  night  she  received  a  small 
partv  of  friends  in  her  dressing  room 
during  this  wait.  One  of  the  party  was 
a  girl  with  an  ambition  to  become  a 
starlet,  and  it  was  she  who  asked  Miss 
Robson  why  she  concealed  her  beauty 
under    the    mask    of    time. 

The   answer   was   most    interesting. 

"By  so  doing  I  found  that  I  could 
put  a  little  more  butter  on  my  bread." 
Miss    Robson   naively  answered. 

"When  it  first  became  necessary  for 
me  to  earn  my  way  In  the  world."  she 
continued.  "I  decided  to  become  a 
painter.  I  succeeded  fairly  well,  but 
that's  a  slow  way  for  a  girl  to  make 
money,  and  I  tired  of  it.  I  applied 
for  a  small  part  on  the  stage,  and  was 
accepted.  When  the  manager  found 
that  I  was  an  amateur  he  wouldn't 
consider  me   at  all. 

"After  that  I  never  admitted  my 
Ignorance  of  the  business.  My  first 
part  was  in  'The  Hoop  of  Gold.'  It 
was  a  'come-along-JesBle'  part;  that  Is, 
I  walked  on  the  stage  after  an  older 
sister,  who  said:  'Come  along,  Jessie,' 
and  Jessie  came  along. 

"I  was  disgusted.  I  wanted  to  act. 
I  didn't  want  to  come  along.  A  ser- 
vant part  interested  me.  and  I  asked 
the  manager  to  let  me  be  the  servant. 
He  finally  consented,  and  I  painted  my 
face    with    water    colors,    for    I    knew 


nothing  of  grease  paints.  My  wonder- 
fully peculiar  make-up  and  my  knowl- 
edge of  the  English  slavey  (I  had  lived 
in  London  two  years)  was  a  tremen- 
dous hit.  I  have  been  playing  queer 
people  ever  since." 

Booth   Tarklngton   is   writing   a  new 
comedy    for    Miss    Robson.        She    will 
oroduce  it  next  season. 
•      *      • 

Clara  Morris,  after  many  months  of 
the  eclipse  of  Illness,  has  a^ain  taken 
up  her  pen.  Her  first  whimsy  after 
the  long  silence  she  sent  to  the  Mati- 
nee Girl,  who  here  prints  it,  with  the 
preamble  that  on  their  tour  with  "The 
Two  Orphans,"  Miss  Morris  and  Grace 
George  selected  each  other  for  one  of 
tli»  se  close  dual  friendships  that  ob- 
tain in  companies  on  the  road  and  that 
r(  peiuble  the  chumships  of  sciiool  girl 
days. 

"When  Mile  Fifl  Invited  Countess 
ChlfCiui  and  The  Two  Orphans  for  a 
visit  I'nder  Southern  Skies  they  met 
ASigai...  and  since  one  woman  spoke 
and  thought  only  of  Divorcons  and 
c:t'jther  dwelt  eternally  on  Clotlies. 
things  came  to  such  a  pass  of  morbid 
foiiv  that  following  The  Marriage  of 
William  Ashe,  Prettj'  Peggy  consulted 
Her  Majesty,  who  in  turn  appeal  to 
Grace  George,  who  will  probably 
smooth  out  the  tangle  in  her  clever 
Woman's  Way  to  her  in  great  profit 
and  the  pleasure  of  the  public,  count- 
ing in   the  well   wishing  writer." 

Miss  Morris  said:  "While  we  were 
on  that  tour  I  prophesied  that  Grace 
George  would  become  a  great  commed- 
ienne. It  was  when  she  lifted  up  her 
face  to  be  kissed  in  'The  Two  Orphans 
I  caught  there  a  flash  of  brilliant, 
spontaneous  comedy." 

Having  finished  which.  Miss  Morris 
demanded  that  the  week's  laundry  be 
brouglit  for  her  Inspection.  Lifting  a 
pair  of  her  husbands  perforated  socks, 
she    said,    "Send    these    to    Miss    Illing- 

ton." 

•  •      • 

The  company  to  support  Thomas  W. 
Ross  in  "The  Fortune  Hunter  will 
include  Mary  Ryan.  Eda  Bruna,  For- 
rest Robinson,  Walter  Horton,  George 
Loane  Tucker,  John  Charles  Brownell, 
Grant  Mitchell,  Horace  James,  Ogden 
Stevens.  Charles  Fisher,  Edgar  Nelson, 
Amy  Summers  and   Mrs.   A.   P.   Warren. 

•  «      • 
Leo    Ditrichsteln    has    paid 

$1,000     for    challenging    Dr. 
Schavols   of   Stamford,  Conn  , 
last  summer.     The  challenge 
of    an    altercation    with    Dr. 
Mr.     Ditrichsteln    was 
time   of  the  challenge 


of  trouble  and 

."  she  observed, 

I   did  need   the 


AMUSEMENTS. 


-K-^ 


BD  I  /^F  O  ■  ^'''^*  ^^  Rows  Parquet  and  Dress  Circle  S2.00  - 
I'lf  I^EiQb  Last  6  Rows  Parquet  S1.60  Family  Circle  and 
.-  Baleony  $1.00— Gallery  50c. 


Three  Nights  frrTSS?'"'  March  25  H^EIP 

THE  GOHAH  &  HMRIS  COilEDIAWS 

In  Frederic  Thoinpson's  massive,  stupendous  production  of  Winchell 
Smith  and  Byron  Ongley's  dramatization  of  George  Barr  Mc- 
Cutchcon's  celebrated  story. 


AMUSEMENTS. 


COMMENCING  MONDAY 
MATINEE  a'ND  WEEK 


MORK  ACTS  THAN  EVERr— ARTISTIC  VALDKYILLR 


SPECIAL  ENGAGEMENT 

BRE\KI\<;  AliTi  RECORDS    AT  EVERY 
THEATER  SHE  APPEARS  \T 

MLLE.  ATHMORE  GRAY 


Celebrated   European 


1^1^©^^^^ 


Millions 

m  Robert  Ober 

And  the  same  notable  cast  and  scenic  equipment  as  seen  here  last 

^wri5'V"sVta"?:^t  YACHT8CEME! 

PRICES:  SiSrsocTorr-  SEATS  ON  SALE. 
AT  THE  GRAND,  SUPERIOH,  MARCH  24. 


Tlie  Most  Graceful.  Artistic  and  Brilliant  Dancer  tlmt  has 
ever  graced  any  stage.  


FEATURE  XO.  2 


MONDAY^  MARCH  29- 

MESSRS.   MARTIN   &   EMERY'S 
Presentation  of  Richard  Wagner's  Mystic,  Festival  Drama 

PARSIFALr 


Cominff  soon— Viola  Allen— "The  Wolf,"  "A  Stubborn  Cinderella," 
"As  Told  in  the  Hills,"  "The  Lion  and  the  Mouse,"  "The  Servant 
in  the  House,"  "The  Red  Mill,"  "The  Merry  Widow"  and  many 
others. 


MR.  AND  MRS. 
ARTHUR  FORBES 

In  the  Beautiful  Playlet 

"A  WILD  ROSE." 


A  BIG 

FEATURE 

ON 

ANY 
BILL 


FE.VTVRE  NO  3 


ELITE  MUSICAL  FOUR 


Solo   Instninicntalists. 


FEATURE  NO.  4 


MLLE.  SAONA 

I^lAing  Portraits  from  THE  IIALI.S  OF  FAME. 


FEATURE   NO.   5 

FOX  AND  CRYSTAL 

singing.  Talking,  Dancing  Comedians. 


FF^VTl  RE   NO.   6 


HARRY  BURGOYNE 

English  Comedian,  Character  Singer, 
Introducing  English  Con.stcr  Songy. 


FE.\TURE   NO.   7 


ISADORE  SILVER 

In   Real  Illu.stratcd   Songs. 


FEATURE   NO.   8 


EDISON'S  BEST  MOTION  PICTURES 


,  Evenings  at     8     and     9:30— 

Matinee  Daily.  2:45 — 10c  and  i   pric^es  10c,  15c  and  25c.     Order 
20c.        Seats   Reserved.  '^-"*~  »'-   ""*•*   "v^'-"*-""-- 


Seats  by  Botli  Telephones. 


Special  School  Children's  MaUnee,  Saturday,  2:30.       Perfonu- 
Rucis  Sunday  Afternoon  and  Night. 


a  fine  of 
Frederick 
to  a  duel 
grew  out 
tJchavols, 
arreBted  at  the 
and    fined    $3,000. 


,  Aliss 

Israel 

I>and, 


The  less  sum  Is  the  result  of  an  agree- 
ment   made    with   the    state    attorney  s 

office. 

•  *      * 

Helen  Grantley,  appearing  In 
Zangwills    "The       Never    Never 

was  so  emphatic  a  suocops  at 
the  Orpheum  theater  In  San  Francisco 
that  Martin  Beck  has  arranged  to  hold 
It    over   at   that    house     an      additional 

week. 

•  •      • 

The  llis-Powlan  company  of  twenty- 
four  acrobats,  .singers  and  comedians, 
is  plaving  In  the  West  witli  one  of  the 
most  "novel  acts  in  vaudeville.  It  Is 
called  "A  Night  at  the  Circus, '  and 
represents  the  old-styled  one-ring  per- 
formances which  were  in  vogue,  under 
canvas,  a  quarter  of  a  century  ago, 

•  •      •  Jt 

"Seldoms  Venus"  is  one  of  the  most 
recent  importations  of  the  Orpheuni 
circuit,  and  from  the  reports  from  tfan 
Francisco  is  meeting  with  more  than 
ordinary  success.  "The  Venus"  is  the 
chief  of  the  series  of  groups  repro- 
ducing the  worlds  best  statuary  of 
which  masterpieces  are  "Samson 
Bound."  "Reaching  the  Winning  Post, 
and  "The  Fountain"  form  a  con- 
spicuous part. 


CAN  BRING  IN 
ART  TREASURES 

Morgan's    $3,000,000 

Collection    May    Soon 

Come  in  Duty  Free. 

New  York,  March  20. — Priceless  art 
treasures  owned  by  Americans  and 
kept  abroad  will  no  Ooubt  be  brought 
to  this  country  when  the  new  tariff 
placing  works  of  art  more  than 
twenty-six  years  of  age  on  the  free  list 
becomes  operative. 

In  total  these  collections  will  rival 
in  Intrinsic  and  artistic  value  those  in 
the  famous  museums  of  Europe,  lend- 
ing an  unprecedented  impetus  to  the 
growth  of  art  In  the  New  World.  An 
insight  into  the  extent  of  the  collec- 
tions held  up  abroad  was  giv«  n  by  P. 
A.  B.  Widener,  the  Philadelphia  mill- 
ionaire and  art  collector,  who  said: 

"I  personally  know  of  }30,000.000 
worth  of  paintings  alone  now  In 
Europe,  owned  by  American  collectors 
which  will  never  be  brought  into  this 
country  so  long  as  the  duty  remains 
in  effect." 

The  largest  individual  owner  is  J. 
PUrpont  Morgan,  who  has  fought  the 
tariff  for  a  decade.  A  partial  list  of 
Mr.  Morgan's  art  treasures  which  will 
be  brought  to  this  country  when  the 
new  law  goes  into  effect  follows: 

Fragonard-Du  Barry  panels,  $1,- 
000,000. 

Raphael's  "Madonna  of  St.  Anthony 
of  Padua,"   $500,000. 

Mannheim  collection.  $450,000. 

Gainsborough's  "Duchess  of  Devon- 
shire,"  $150,000. 

Rubens  "Portrait  of  the  Grand 
Duke."    $125,000. 

Landscape  of  Hobbema,  $110,000. 

Reynolds  "Lady  Betty  Deime  and 
Children,"  $110,000. 

Gavet  Antiques,   $75,000. 

Pfungst  Bronzes,  $75,000. 

Total,     $2. 59."). 000. 

Good  CouBb  Medicine  for  Children. 

The  season  for  coughs  and  colds  is 
now  at  hand  and  too  much  care  cannot 
be  used  to  protect  the  children.  A 
child  is  much  more  likely  to  contract 
diphtheria  or  scarlet  fever  when  he 
has  a  cold.  The  quicker  you  cure  his 
cold  the  less  the  risk.  Chamberlain's 
Cough  Remedy  is  the  sole  reliance  of 
many  mothers,  and  few  of  those  who 
have  tried  it  are  willing  to  use  any 
other.  Mrs.  F.  F.  Starcher  of  Ripley, 
W.  Va..  says:  "I  have  never  used  any- 
thing other  than  Chamberlain's  Cough 
Remedy  for  m>-  children,  and  it  has 
always  given  good  satisfaction.'  This 
remedy  contains  no  opium  or  other 
narcotic  and  may  be  given  as  confi- 
dently to  a  child  as  to  an  adult.  For 
sale  by  all  druggists. 
• 
IT   WAS   FOR   HIS   FRIENDS. 

Washington  Star:  "Don't  confuse," 
said  John  Ellis,  the  well-known  aposde 
of  the  unemployed,  the  other  day  in 
Washington,  "don't  confuse  the  hobo, 
the  tramp  and  the  bum,  for  these  men 
are  very  different  one  from  another. 

"The  hobo."  Mr.  Ellis  went  on. 
"works     and     wanders.  The     tramp 

dreams  and  wanders.     The  bum  drinks 
and  wanders. 

"This  man,  for  instance,  would  not 
be  a  hobo. 

"He  rang  the  bell  of  a  suburban 
Uouse.  and  when  the  master  appeared 
he    said    earnestly: 

"  'Could  you,  sir.  for  the  love  of 
heaven,  give  a  hard-working  but  un- 
fortunate  man    some   employment?' 

"The  householder  laid  Ms  hand  cor- 
diallv  on  the  other's  ragged  shoulder. 

"  'Here's  work  for  you  right  on  the 
spot."  he  said.  'I've  got  out  in  my  back 
vard  a  great  pile  of  wood  that ' 

"'Thank  you.  sir.'  said  the  man,  as 
he  shook  the  hand  from  his  shoulder 
gentlv.  'I'll  let  my  friend  know  at 
once.  It's  not  for  myself  I'm  hunting 
a  job.  but  for  a  friend  a  little  way  up 
the   road.'  " 


The  British  colonial  office  recently 
sent  out  an  expert  to  report  on  the 
Kenia  forest,  in  the  East  Africa  pro- 
tectorate. He  found  the  forest  to  be 
2S7  miles  long  by  eight  broad,  and  to 
compromise  1.000,000  acres  of  timber 
valued  at  $115,000,000  for  the  wood 
aloue. 


u 


OF  DULUTH. 


■^w 


•^ 


mmm""'*' 


^»— *■ 


I  CT  EVERY 

LCI   SUFFERING 


WRITE  FOR  rnci:! 

THIS  BOOKinCCi 


It's  a  Reliable  Authority  on  Men's  Diseases 
242  Page*.   46  Free  Pre»criptlon«,  prepaid  to  all  who  write  for  it. 

All  ve  a^k  In  to  Pimply  rend  jour  nam*  and  addrcno.  incntlonlni?  thU 
raiier.  and  well  eenUjou  our  212  paw  lTlT«te  M»'.!loal  Book  Kree  pie- 
i;uld.  ooiilainiDK  40  I  ree  Keeelpt?  and  many  chapterH  of  advl.e  to  young 
inlrt^le-aKed  and  old  men  about  theuiMjlTes  and  their  dibea3es-t«llliic 
howtoiretCu!-edandhowtoavclddl««"a»ei.  ^^  e  want  no  money  for 
the  book  or  for  the  expense  of  sending  It  to  T.m  prepaid,  nor  doen  It 
place  you  under  an v  oblltratlons  to  i;?-  of  any  kind  *  liatever. 

WHAT  DO  YOU  KNOW  ABOUT  THESE  DISEASES? 

Bladder  tr<.ut!c.  Hlo-d  Fol^on.  tP/ema  Brtyhfs  DUease,  Kidney 
Trout.le.  Catarrh.  Enlarged  Prohtate  Oland,  D.al.etea  Liver  Troubl., 
Hvdrooele.  Varicose  VeinK.  Nervous  Vk  eakncFB,  Rupture,  Scrofula,  Ob- 
struction, Ncrrouf  Debility.  Varicose  I'lcer?  and  the  many  contagiouB 
difeabec;  Antid<.tes  for  FolFon,  Care  of  the  Person,  Marrtag*.  tto. 
Thia  book  tt  Us  all  about  the^e  disease*  and  other  gubje<  t»  mentioned 
and  more  t<  o,  and  It  y.  u  do  n<  t  know  anything  about  » be  above  d.i«oa«- 
es  or  are  afflicted  and  need  a<lvioc.  write  for  this  valuable  book  to<Uy. 
'•Ignorance  begets  n.li-ery,  knowle.lge  brings  hcallh  and 
happiness."    All  correspondence  strictly  confltlcnti&i. 

a^^B^Thoussndsol  men  are  in  need  ol  thit  valuable 

wS^F    work  and  are  send  ng  for  it  to  write  today  to  the      «!vi<s*.n 

HEIDELBERG  MEIDICIL  INSTITUTE  li"'p:i;'L.'.:>r'" 

1100,000  Capital       Inco  rporated  under  the  btHte  Laws  of  Mlnneeot* 


Over  120,000  Men  have  applied  to  us  for  Treatment   '"^l 


IM^J 


SAVE  TIME! 

TELEPHONE  your    want    ads.    to  The 
Herald.     The   rates    are  the  same,  and 
we  will  mail  you  a  bill  after  its  insertion. 

Both  Phones  824 


"T*  ^ '  ^^  J*"  iC-M.  JfiU*   rs 


WE 


MOVE 

PACK 

STORE 


EYERYTHIHG 


FIRE  PROOF  WAREHOUSE. 


Office  210  West  Superior  St. 


Both  'Phones  492. 


-a 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD :     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


»»»»»»»  »i|(»»4(»»){r>K»»]i(»)(i,»j|(i|(  yyyyy^yyyyy  »»»»»»»]<(» 


M^Oi?K  STARTED  AT  THE  DENN 


Pumps  Set  Going  to  Rid  Shaft  of  Water—Shaft  to 

be  Sunk  From  the  UOO  Level  to 

the  7500  Level. 


Blabee.  Arir...  March  20. — A  force  of 
betwtt-n  ihirty  ami  forty  men  was  put 
to  work  at  the  nonii- Arizona  shaft 
last  .sun. lav  lu  take  part  in  sinking 
the  ^liait  from  ilio  l._'0'i-foot  level,  a 
short  ilis lance  below  which  work  was 
stopped  ast  year,  to  the  l.:iOO.  For  a 
week  a  sn^all  force  was  preparing  the 
way    I'oi    sinking. 

During   thai  period   the   pipes   for   che 

fump  wluch  will  he  used  In  lowering 
he  waier  In  the  shaft  have  been  in- 
stalled and  the  level  of  the  water 
mattiinllv  lowered.  When  the  shaft 
has  roaohed  the  l,;tOO-foot  level,  drift- 
Jnpr  in  th.^  direction  of  the  Junction 
line  will  be  started.  Strongr  minerali- 
zation in  ihat  direction  leads  the  I>enn 
mana^'einent  to  lielieve  that  ore  will  be 
encountered  in  large  quantities  before 
the   working   has   proceeded    far. 

A.  F.  (-Sandy")  Sutton  is  foreman 
of  the  i>r>perty.  He  is  well  known 
as  a  mining  man  of  ability,  and  will 
do  mueli.  without  doubt,  toward  attain- 
ing Mnv  succes  met  with  by  the  com- 
pany. 

A    sensational    ore    strike    was    made 


recently  in  the  Shattuck-Arizona  mine, 
proving  an  ore  body  of  great  extent. 
Tlie  ore  is  an  oxide  and  is.  witiiout 
dviubt.  a  large  body,  as  the  strike  was 
the  consununatton  of  several  weeks  of 
development.  The  find  was  ttiade  upon 
the  o'>'t  level. 

Several  weeks  since  the  ore  was  t^rst 
encounteied  and  a  (  ross  cut  of  ISO  feet 
was  run  upon  it.  The  same  body  was 
siruck  150  feet  back  of  the  cross  cut, 
proving  its  dimension.  The  ore  will 
i-un  about  15  per  cent,  and  carries  suffi- 
cient iron  to  make  it  valuable  as  a 
smelting  proposition.  Another  strike 
was  made,  although  of  lower  grade  ore, 
on  the  immediate  level  between  the  000 
and  7'^'J  levels.  It  carries  about  7  per 
cent  copper,  with  considerable  Iron  as- 
.^oclated.  As  it  Is  150  feet  or  more 
north  of  th»'  otluM-  body,  it  is  supposed 
to   be  separate   from  It. 

There  are  at  pres.^nt  forty-two  men 
engaged  In  developing  the  .Shattuck. 
Xo  mining  operations  are  being  car- 
ried on.  except  in  strict  pursuance 
with  the  development  of  the  resources 
of  the  property. 


LAKE  COPPER  FINES'  OUTPUT 

«i — *■: 

Showed  Increase  in  February  of  Nearly  Seven  Per  Cent  Over 

Same  Period  Last  Year— Considerable  Proportion  of 

the  Product  Is  Destined  for  Foreign  Points. 


STRIKES  IT  RICH  IN  ALASKA 

Robert  S.  Warren,  Who  Owns  7,000  Acres  of  Ground 

on  the  Yukon  River,  Will  Visit  Duluth 

in  the  Near  Future. 


Spokane.  Wash.,  March  20. — Robert  S. 
"Warren,  a  veteran  of  the  Banneck  In- 
dian war  In  the  Walla  Walla  and  Kast- 
'  ern  Oregon  country  In  1579.  afterward 
a  resident  of  Spokane  for  nine  years, 
and  later  deputy  United  States  marshal 
at  Cleary  Creek.  Alaska,  who  is  visit- 
ing his  brother,  Joel  Warren,  ex-chief 
of  police  or  Spokane,  has  come  into  his 
own  in  the  Northland.  He  owns  7,000 
acres  of  ground  on  Blrcli  creek,  on  the 
Yukon  river,  seventy-four  miles  south 
of  Circle  Cltj'.  It  is  a  hydraulic  and 
dredging  proposition  operated  by  an 
automatic  dam.  He  lias  worked  the 
property  with  five  men  the  last  three 
years,  the  average  yield  being  $150  a 
day. 

The  discovery  of  the  rich  ground  was 
by  accident  and  was  made  by  Warren 
while  prospecting  on  Bircli  creek  from 
Twelve  Mile,  where  he  came  upon  a 
rudely  fashioned  wooden  cross  on 
which  was  carved  a  notice  of  the  death 
and  burial  of  Hector  McLean,  who 
starved  ten  years  before.  leaving  |600 
In  gold  which  lie  had  panned  out  of  the 
bar  near  by.  Warren  found  good  pros- 
pects and  immediately  located  the 
claims,  which  liave  made  him  wealthy. 
He  Is  also  interested  In  a  quartz  prop- 
erty near  Fairbanks,  from  which  the 
ore  taken  from  a  depth  of  80  feet 
ranges  from   $300  to  $9,000  a  ton. 

Warren  says  he  traveled  .50  miles  on 
anowshoes  and  118  miles  on  foot  over- 
land    with     the     temperature       ranging 


from  45  to  65  degs.  below,  in  getting 
out  of  the  country,  .\fter  i)asslng  sev- 
eral weeks  In  Spokane,  Warren  will  go 
to  New  York  by  easy  stages,  stopping 
off  at  Cripple  Creek,  Denver,  Duluth. 
Houghton.  Mich.,  Boston  and  New 
York,  returning  to  the  Northland  in 
June. 

.\  new  quartz  field  that  looks  bigger 
than  anytliing  that  lias  gone  before  is 
attracting  public  notice.  It  Is  the 
upper  Tanatia  valley.  .A  vein  of  free 
gold  quartz  has  lieen  traced  for  two 
miles  across  the  country,  showing  in 
places  a  clear  width  of  eoght  feet. 

Y'e«terday.  says  a  di.spatch  from 
Fairbanks,  three  men  who  are  the  dis- 
coverers of  the  new  quartz  fleid  de- 
parted from  the  city  with  a  complete 
outfit  of  supplies,  provisions,  tools, 
powder  and  accessories  sufficient  to 
last  them  for  the  entire  season,  and 
with  etiough  financial  backing  to  de- 
velop  an   Kidorado. 

t'sing  a  pair  of  field  glasses.  .Joseph 
Butler  has  located  a  claim  on  Barker 
creek  wlilch  promi.^es  to  be  rich.  But- 
ler was  on  the  trip  up  Barker  creek 
looking  for  a  favorable  place  to  stake 
a  claim.  Coming  out  to  the  point  from 
whence  he  could  survey  the  valley,  he 
spied  through,  his  field  glass  a  high 
bench.  He  staked  a  claim  there  and 
sank  a  shaft.  At  the  bottom  he  struck 
a  bed  of  gold  which  panned  as  high  as 
$2.50  to  the  pan.  Sixty  days  after 
staking  his  first  claim  Butler  staked 
an    adjoining    tract. 


Houghton,  Mich.,  March  17.— .(Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  production  of  the 
Lake  Superior  mines  during  February 
amounted  to  approximately  18.l0t>,000 
pounds  fine  copper.  Indicating  a  rate  of 
production  neai  ly  7  per  ctnt  greater 
than  for  the  sanie  period  a  year  ago. 
There  is  little  likelihood  that  the  rate 
of  production  will  increase  during  tlie 
immediate  future,  but  that  the  i)regent 
rate  will  be  maintained  is  probable. 
The  lull  in  copper  shipments  during  llie 
greater  part  of  February  has  appar- 
ently passed,  and  the  total  la  again 
moving  out  of  this  district  at. a  good 
rate.  A  considerable  proportM)1  of  the 
product  is  destined  for  foreign  points. 
^Vjandot. 

Wyandot's  operations  continue  cen- 
tered In  cross-cutting  the  formation 
from  the  bottom  of  an  exploratory 
shaft  700  feet  deep.  The  cross-cut  is 
driving  across  tl»e  eastern  portion  of 
the  mineral  belt  and  will  na-ss  through 
the  horizons  of  the  .Adventure,  Lake 
and  Baltic  lodes.  Five  distinct  lodes 
.are  revealed  in  the  cross-cut.  three 
of  which  appear  to  carry  copper  In 
sufficient  quantity  to  encourage  fur- 
ther investigation,  and  this  is  now  be- 
ing done.  The  fifth  lode,  so-called, 
was  recently  opened  by  drifting,  and 
though  no  copper  is  present,  much  en- 
couragement Is  had  from  the  fact  that 
the  grountl  at  this  point  Is  unusually 
wet.  generally  a  good  Indication  that 
values  will  follow.  Three  machines 
drills  are  regnlarlv  in  service. 
Victoria. 

Victoria  is  oi>eiung  exceptionally  rich 
copper  ground  in  tlie  bottom  of  the 
mine.  The  present  fine  showing  is 
being  obtained  on  the  twenty-second 
level  at  a  point  400  feet  from  the  shaft 
and  directly  under  ground  of  similar 
excellent  character  developed  on  the 
level  above.  Conditions  elsewhere  In 
the  mine  cojitinue  without  material  im- 
provement, and.  in  general,  are  poor. 
The  company  is  operating  single  shift. 
\wlng   to   the  scarcity  of  water,   and  it 


materially  lnchea«ed  before  spring. 
Power  for  the  mine  and  mill  is  ob- 
tained from  the  big  Iiydraullc  air  com- 
pressor exclusively. 

Atlantic. 

Atlantic  Is  giving  particular  atten- 
tion to  the  north  laterals,  several  of 
which  are  being  extended  at  a  good 
rate.  Ketent  developments  failed  to 
disclose  copper  In  commercial  quanti- 
ties, but  as  the  ground  Is  apparently 
growing  more  settled  as  the  drifts 
reach  out.  the  much  sought  for  miner- 
alized ground  will  .quite  likely  "come 
in."  The  condition  of  the  ground  in  the 
I  ottom  of  the  shaft,  sinking  below  the 
twenty-first  level  about  2,200  feet  from 
the  surface,  remains  unchanged  as  it 
does  in  the  laterals  south  where  a 
little  copper  Is  revealed  In  pockets 
though  quite  unworkable  owing  to  the 
shattered  condition  of  the  ground  in- 
tervening necessitating  considerable 
dead  work.  Seven  machine  drills  are 
In  service. 

Ilancoclc. 

Hancock  continues  making  record 
progress  in  shaft  sinking  and  opening 
work  generally.  The  big  vertical  shaft 
through  whicrh  the  mine  will  eventu- 
ally be  worked,  l.s  sinking  at  the  rate 
^of  about  eighty-fl\te  feet  monthly  and 
^lias  attained  a  depth  of  nearly  1,600 
feet.  The  thirteeiuh  level  crosscut 
driving  to  connect  this  shaft  with  the 
older  incline  shaft  4/»»  being  extended  at 
the  rate  of  about  131>  feet  monthly,  and 
.should  be  completed  about  the  middle 
of  April.  Operaitioivs  in  the  Incline 
shaft  are  largely:  confined  to  drifting, 
and  upwards  of  orre  mile  of  first  class 
copper  ground  "h^s-  been  opened  ready 
for  sloping. 

OJIItway. 

Ojibway's  crosscut,  on  the  third  level 
in  the  No.  2  shaft,  has  attained  a 
length  of  ninety-two  feet,  and  is  breast- 
ed In  a  changed  formation,  indicating 
the  close  proximity  of  the  lode.  In  the 
No.  1  shaft,  the  crosscut  at  this  level 
has  been  extended  to  the  hanging  wall 
of    the   further,    or    west    vein     of    the 


fo^wS^to  be  seventeen  feet  In  width  and 
richly  cliarged  with  copper.  Botli  shafts 
are  sinking  steadily  below  the  750- 
foot  niaik.  At  a  depth  of  800  feet  new 
stations  will  be  established,  and  furtiier 
crosscuts  run  to  the  lode.  It  Is  not  un- 
likely that  Ojlbway  will  be  in  a  ship- 
ping stage  before  another  year  has 
passed. 

Franitlln. 

Franklin's  newer  Pewabic  shaft  is 
sinking  steadily  at  a  depth  of  720  feet. 
I'lats  are  being  cut  at  all  levels,  but  no 
drifting  will  be  done  until  somewhat 
greater  depth  has  been  attained  in 
the  shaft,  li^  the  older  No.  I  Pewabht 
shaft,  to  the  north,  drifting  continues 
with  occasional  disclosures  of  first- 
class  copper  ground  on  the  lower  levels, 
though  the  general  average  of  the 
mine  remains  unchanged  from  ground 
that  will  carry  little  more  than  fifteen 
pounds  fine  copper  per  ton  of  rock. 
Operations  in  the  conglomerate  mine, 
adjoining,  are  confined  to  scramping. 
all  development  work  having  ceased  six 
months  ago,  and  though  the  rock  is 
unusually  low  grade,  it  is  being  won 
at  a  profit.  owing  to  the  excellent 
manner  in  which  tlie  mine  had  previ- 
ously been  opened,  eliminating  all  dead 
work  from  present  operations. 
Old    ruiouy. 

The  Old  Colony  Copper  company  con- 
tinues exploratory  operations  without 
interruption.  An  unidentified  amyg- 
daloid lode,  carrying  copper  finely  dis- 
semin.ited  has  recently  received  at- 
tention, thougii  with  rather  indifferent 
results.  The  shaft  Is  bottomed  below 
the    ninth    level. 

V^'lnonn. 

Winona  has  cotnmenced  levelling  and 
excavating  on  the  site  of  the  new 
stamp  mill,  which  is  to  be  erected  this 
year,  midway  between  the  Winona  and 
King  I'hiUip  mines.  Plans  for  the 
structure  are  now  being  drawn,  and 
ionstruction  Is  expected  to  begin  early 
(his  summer.  The  mill  will  have  a 
capacity  for  1.500  tons  dally,  and  will 
be     used     jointly     by    the     Winona    and 


CALUMET  &  ARIZONA  BUYING 

Has  Taken  Options  on  Two  Groups  of  Claims  in  the 

Courtland  District  for  $'I50,000"-Courtland 

Payroll  is  Large. 


Tombstone.  Ariz.  March  20. — Col.  L. 
W.  Powell,  vice  presider  t  and  general 
manager  of  the  Calumet  fe  Arizona,  lias 
secured  options  on  a  graup  of  twelve 
claims  in  tlie  Courtland  district  from 
Morgan  &  Snyder,  for  ai.  aggregate  of 
$150,000.  One  bunch,  consisting  of 
seven  of  the  prospects,  is  bonded  for 
$100,000,  wliile  the  remaining  five  are 
bonded  for  $50,000.  The  two  groups 
adjoin  properties  of  the  Calumet  & 
Arizona,  in  the  heart  of  the  district. 
All  of  the  claims  were  originallv  pro- 
cured from  I.  1).  Shattuck  by  Me.ssrs. 
Morgan,  of  Wilcox,  aid  Snyder  of 
Pearce,  five  of  them  being  optioned 
at  $10,000,  which  was  $40,000  less  than 
the  amount  involved  in  1  he  last  trans- 
action. It  Is  not  knovn  what  sum 
was  given  for  the  first  option  on  the 
remaining   seven. 


Courtland.  Ariz..  March  20. — In  the 
mines  of  this  district  at  the  present 
time  are  employed  350  tniMi.  This  state- 
ment Includes  only  the  Great  West- 
ern, Calumet  &  Arizona,  Copper  Queen 
and  Leadvillo  propertieu.  There  are 
other  big  mining  prospects  in  the  dis- 
trict, some  witii  the  richest  of  sur- 
face   indications  and    promising    In    ex- 


tent, but  as  yet  they  are  only  pros- 
pects. On  a  number  of  these  outlying 
properties  many  men  are  employed  in 
development  work.  The  mines  are 
not  confined  to  copper,  but  silver  and 
lead  promise  to  play  a  big  part  in  the 
development    of    the    new    camp. 

At  the  Germania  shaft  of  the  Calu- 
met &  Arizona,  seventy-five  men  are 
employed.  At  present  !>,000  tons  of  ore 
are  piled  upon  the  Germania  dump. 
This  ore  is  the  product  of  development 
work    alone. 

At  the  Mary  shaft  of  the  Great  West- 
ern, where  seventy-five  tnen  are  em- 
ployed. 4.000  tons  of  ore  are  on  the 
dump.  This,  too.  is  merely  the  pro- 
duct of  development  work.  In  fact,  at 
the  shafts  of  all  the  four  big  proper- 
ties of  the  camp,  work  thus  far  has 
been  <'onfined  to  development.  At  the 
dump  of  the  Humboldt  shaft  of  the 
Great  Western  are  piled  7.000  tons  of 
ore. 

The  Copper  Queen  has  a  splendid 
showing  of  sulphide  ore  at  its  Casey 
sliaft,  and  1,000  tons  of  ore  are  piled 
on  the  dump  ready  for  shipment.  The 
Leadville  people  have  5.000  tons  of 
sulphides  on  their  dump,  and  the  Calu- 
met &  Arizona  have  5.000  tons  piled 
on  the  Maid  of  Sunshine  dump. 


THE  OHIO  COPPER  COMPANY 

At  Bingham  Makes  Highly   Important  Discovery- 
Certain  of  U,000,000  Tons  of  Ore  Averaging 
Close  to  2  Per  Cent  Copper. 


Fait  Lake,  Utah.  March  20.— A  hlghly 
Iniportant  disclosure  was  made  recent- 
ly in  the  Ohio  Copper  at  Bingham  when 
the  400  foot  copper  bearing  quartzlte 
lode  was  tapped  in  a  Ciosscut  trow 
the    ri'iie    fbove    tlie    M^acotte    tunnel 

level.      The   rock   assayed    1.76   per   cent 
colter.      The  significance   of   the   show- 
ing    rests     In     the    fact    that    the    great  ( 
J.>de    lying     between     tlie     two    fissures. 
the     All's     Well     on     the    hanging     wall  ] 
aide,     is     unlformiy     mineralized     for     a  j 
depth   of   1,400    feet  on    the   dip  and   ap-  ) 
proximately        1.000        feet        vertically 


Therefore     the     Ohio     Copper     company ,,  ,33^,1 


outstanding  stock  of  775,000  shares, 
after  allowirg  for  the  conversion  into 
stock  of  the  last  bond  issue  of  $1,250,- 
000  at  $15  a  share  The  stock  issue  is 
required  to  meet  floating  indebtedness, 
resulting  f;om  the  drop  in  the  price 
of   copper. 

The  ore  J  ody  recently  struck  on  the 
700  level  of  the  Lost  Packer  mine  on 
Loon  creek,  Idaho,  is  maintaining  its 
richness.  A  drift  has  shown  the  de- 
posit to  be  at  least  sixty  feet  In 
length,  both  ends  being  in  the  samt- 
quality  of  ore  a  trifie  better  than  $t>o 
a  1(11.  The  Lost  Packer  Is  high  in 
the  mountain,  many   miles  from  a  rail 


is  quite  unlikely  that  operations  can  be  I  Kearsarge  lode,   which  at  this  depth   Is  •  King   Phillip   companies 

Production  About  Normal  and  Economies  Are  Constantly  Being 

Introduced — North  Butte  Veins  Showing  Up  Well  at  Lower 

Levels — Raven  Mining  Company  to  be  Reorganized. 


OREENE-CANANEA  PROGRESS 

Million-Dollar  Concentrator  of    Company     Coming 
Along  in  Satisfactory  Manner—All  Second- 
Class  Ore  Will  be  Treated  by  It 


Cananea,  Mex.,  Marc  i  20. — Rapid 
progress  is  making  on  tl  e  million-dol- 
lar concentrator  which  the  Greene- 
Cananea  Consolidated  Copper  company 
is  erecting  here.  The  b^Mich  has  now 
been  completed,  and  work  on  other  de- 
partments Is  going  forward  towards 
completion.  The  new  concentrator  will 
have  a  capacity  of  2.00(  tons  a  day. 
The  mines  are  turning  out  ore  at  the 
rate  of  1.900  tons  a  day,  and  about 
500  tons  of  concentrate  are  sent  Into 
the    smelter    In    the    same    time. 

All  second-class  ore  will  be  treated 
at    the    new    concentrator.       Much    de- 


velopment work  is  being  carried  on 
underground.  Kvery  shaft  is  work- 
ing now.  Electric  pumps  have  been 
Installed  throughout  and  oil  has  taken 
the  place  of  coal  in  all  departments 
as  a  fuel  for  the  generation  of  power. 
.V  tunnel  Is  being  driven  through  the 
mountain  towards  the  Duluth  group, 
which  will  be  2,000  feet  long,  and  which 
will  be  a  short  cut-off  *or  tlie  liaulliig 
of  part  of  the  ore,  now  conveyed 
around  the  mountain  a  distance  of 
nearly  five  miles.  This  tunnel  will  tap 
the  Kllza  mine  and  the  work  of  driv- 
ing this  big  tunnel  is  progressing  at 
an   average  of  seven   feet  a  day. 


Butte,  Mont..  March  20. — (Special  to 
The  Herafd.  1 — The  mines  of  the  Amal- 
gamated Copper  company,  with  the  ex- 
ception of  the  fire  trouble  In  the  Ana- 
conda tiilne,  have  never  been  In  better 
physical  condition  than  they  are  in  now. 


of  the  Diamond  is  the  2,200.  'The  new 
Leonard  shaft  is  down  about  1,650  feet, 
and  tlie  Badger  Sjtatp  about  1,000  feet, 
while  the  Right  Bower,  which  was 
started  only  a  few  months  ago,  is  200 
feet  deep  atid  Is  being  sunk  for  tiie 
purpose  of  explorti^g  a  new  lot  of 
\nialgamateil   ground    on       the    eastern 


They    are    being    operated    at    a    normal    slope  of  the  Anaconda  hill.    At  the  Gag 


Is  now  practically  certain  of  14,000.000 
tons  of  ore  that  will  average  close  to 
2  per  cent  copper,  with  a  little  silver 
and   a   little   gold. 

At  the  annual  meeting  of  the  Bos- 
ton Consolidated  Mining  company  held 
In  London  the  issue  was  authorized  of 
50,000  additional  shares  of  stock  at 
fll.::5  a  stiare.     This  will   make   a  total 


It     is    pos.sible     to     operate     the 


capacity,  production  not  being  pushed 
nor  restricted,  but  economies  are  con- 
stantly   being    introduced,    and    minors 

have  been  required  to  give  the  best  re- 
sults possible.  .\t  the  lowest  price  at 
which  copper  has  lately  sold,  according 
to  an  Amalgamated  official,  the  com- 
pany has  not  turned  out  any  copper 
upon  wh.ich  It  has  not  made  a  profit  of 
2  to  3  cents  per  pound.  The  fire  trou- 
ble in  the  Anaconda  mine  Is  gradually 
being  improved.  A  great  wall  Is  be- 
ing built  between  the  Anaconda  work- 
ings and  those  of  adjoining  mines  from 
the  eighteentli  to  the  twelfth  level,  and 
when  completed  the  gases  from  the 
fire  win  not  be  able  to  interfere  with 
t>peratlon  in  adjoining  mines,  and  the 
wall  will  also  keep  the  fire  from  spread- 
ing. For  a  time  the  gas  in  the  Ana- 
conda mine  has  been  so  bad.  that  min- 
ing has  practically  been  suspended 
there,  not  more  than  about  5,000  to  6,000 
tons  of  ore  being  mined  from  the  low- 
est levels  of  the  mine  per  month.  The 
shaft  of  that  mine  has  not  been  used 
for  three  or  four  months  on  account  of 
the  gas  coming  from  it.  The  fumes 
liave  been  so  strong  that  they  liave 
interfered  with  work  in  the  engine 
room  and  blacksmltli  shop  on  the  sur- 
face, so  that  it  became  necessary  to 
carry  the  gas  away.  The  Amalgamated 
company  Is  shaft-sinking  on  the  Dia- 
mond,  Leonard.  Badger  State  and  Right 


2.450  feet  deep,  and  It  cut  through  a 
vein  of  low  grade  ore  near  the  2,300- 
foot    point.      "The    lowest    working    level 


smelter  only   tliree  months   in   the   year.  |  Bower.       Tiie    Diamond    shaft    Is    about 
The   net   profit    was    given   last    year   as 
In   excess  of   $100,000. 

A  vein  of  qiiurtz  showing  values  of 
$33  In  gold  and  five  ounces  silver  has 
been  opened  In  the  property  of  the 
Mi'iard   frjn   Mining  company  near  Ka- 

(Conitnued    on   page    23.    third   column.) 


non  mine  the  company  has  sunk  the 
shaft  to  the  2,300-f6ot  level,  at  which 
depth  the  vein  is  being  opened,  and 
from  wliich  a  ver.v  superior  grade  of 
ore  is  being  mined,  Wie  best,  really, 
that  has  ever  come  out  of  the  Gagnon 
mine.  The  company  Is  also  mining 
the  Gagnon  on  the  1,900,  2,000,  2,100  and 
2,200-foot  levels.  Miners  report  that 
the  Gagnon  is  constantly  improving, 
and  if  It  keeps  up  its  rate  of  improve- 
ment it  will  soon  be  one  of  tlie  im- 
portant mines  of  the  Amalgamated 
company.  The  2,000-foot  cross-cut  of 
the  Parrot  mine  has  gone  through  the 
vein,  and  the  vein  is  now  being  de- 
veloped on  the  two  new  levels,  known 
as  the  1,900  and  the  2,000.  Actually 
the  latter  is  between  2,100  and  2,200  feet 
below  the  surface.  The  best  that  offi- 
cials will  say  ftb'oi>t  the  new  levels,  is 
that  they  "iook  good."  and  are  "show- 
ing up  well."  The  Little  Mina  .shaft 
of  the  Parrot  com|)aii.v  has  been  com- 
pleted to  the  1,200-foot  station,  and  the 
station  is  being,  fiplshed.  When  It  Is 
completed  the  cross-cut  to  the  vein  will 
be  started,  but-  a.s  it -ts  fully  500  feet 
from  the  sliaft. VTt  can  not  be  reached 
for  probably  thrive  or  four  months.  The 
vein  on  the  l^(>«-foot  level  is  being 
opened,  and  wl»ilie  it. shows  up  well  the 
ore  is  rather  *'bt*ftchy."  At  the  High 
Ore  mine  of  tlie  Anaconda  company,  a 
blower  for  ventilation  has  been  In- 
stalled on  the  new  level  being  opened 
at  a  depth  of  2.S0o  feet,  the  deepest 
working  in  the  Butt'*  district.  As  the 
level  Is  not  connected  with  any  other 
mine   working  J.he  ventilation   has   been 


bad.  making  the  blower  necessary.  A 
cross-cut  is  being  run  both  north  and 
south,  but  has  not  yet  reached  a  vein. 
At  the  Leonard  mine  of  the  Boston  & 
Montana  company,  new  machine  shops 
have  been  built,  and  a  new  cliange 
house  and  blacksmith  shop  are  about 
completed.  At  the  West  Colusa  the  old 
ore  bins  have  been  replaced  by  new 
ones.  The  Anaconda  company  has  not 
yet  comi)leted  the  enlargement  and  re- 
timbering  of  the  Belmont  shaft  from 
tlie  1.000-foot  point  to  the  surface,  but 
the  work  will  probably -ybe  completed 
within  another  month.  The  1.000-foot 
level  of  the  Belmont  is  connected  with 
the  1,600  of  the  Anaconda  mine,  the 
shaft  of  the  latter  being  situated  about 
a  mile  north  of  the  Belmont  shaft.  It 
is  understood  that  the  Belmont  will 
eventually  be  made  the  main  working 
shaft  of  the  Anaconda  company  for  all 
the  hill  mines,  and  It  Is  possible  that 
the  Anaconda  shaft  will  n^ver  be  used 
again  for  mining.  Tlie  Anaconda  com- 
pany is  mining  some  good  ore  from  the 
Poulin  mine,  through  the  Buffalo  shaft. 
The  Poulin  is  a  good  mine  and  opened 
to  a  depth  of  800  feet. 

•  Nortii    Bntte. 

The  North  Butte  Mining  company  Is 
pushing  development  work  on  the  two 
new  levels,  at  a  depth  of  2.000  and  2.200 
feet,  and  reports  from  the  propert.v  are 
that  the  veins  are  showing  up  even 
better  than  they  are  on  the  1,800-foot 
level.  There  have  been  persistent  ru- 
mors that  the  slump  in  the  stock  has 
been  due  to  unfavorable  developments 
on  the  new  levels,  but  that  Is  denied 
b.v  miners  employed  there. 

Bo.ston    &    Moiitaua. 

The  Boston  &  Montana  company  Is 
shipping  about  3.500  tons  of  ore  to  the 
Great  Falls  smelter  daily.  The  work  of 
enlarging  the  latter  plant  is  still  going 
on    and    when     completed    the    smelter 


STRIKE    ON    THE    COALITION 

Great  Pay  Shoot  Reported  in  Marigold  Lease— Big 

Strike  of  Specimen  Ore  Made  on  Parallel 

Vein  in  Mint  Lease. 


New   York.    March    20.— A   dispatch    Here  a  half-inch  seam  of  quartz  that 


(Continued   on    page    23,   third   column.) 


THE  COLORADO  DISTRICTS 

Cripple  Creek  Output  in  February  Was  Worth  $1,145,- 
20^—New  York  and  Chicago  Capitalists  Nego- 
tiating for  Purchase  of  Magnet  Group. 


Colorado  Springs,  Colo.,  March  20. — 
The  February  Cripple  Creek  output 
was  52,716  tons,  worth  gross  $1,145,204. 
The  3.920  tons  of  smelter  ore  averaged 
$6.*  a  ton.  The  cyanide  production  was 
treated  by  the  Isabella.  Ironclad  and 
Strattons  Independence  mills  reached 
.'i.840  tons,  worth  from  $2.20  a  ton  for 
the  Isabella,  to  $4  for  Ironclad  and  $6.50 
for  Strattons   liulependence.       The  20,- 

420  tons  treated  by  the  United  States 
Reduction  &  Refining  company's  plants 
averaged  $22.  while  22.736  tons  treated 
by  the  Golden  Cycle  mill  were  worth 
$19  each.  The  general  average  value 
was  $21.70.  The  Wild  Horse  and  the 
Copper  Mountain  cyanide  mills  were 
not  running  duiing  February  and  the 
Blue  Flag  did  not  report  Its  tonnage. 
Thereft»re,  the  month's  production  was 
less  in  tonnage  and  value  than  Janu- 
ary's. 

A  shipment  of  722  pounds  of  quartz 
from  the  Henry  Adney  mine.  Cripple 
Creek,  returned  a  gross  bullion  value 
of  $206.06.  or  $192.66  net.  The  ore  came 
from  a  streak  of  quartz  literally  cov- 
ered with  sylvanita  found  next  to  the 
footwall  of  the  cross  vein  recently  en- 
coHnieied  and  under  development  at 
the    :!50-foot    level. 

ITealdent  J.  W.  Neville  of  the  Free 
Coinage  Gold  Mining  compatiy.  Cripple 
Creek,  has  granted  a  two-year  lease  on 
Fitito   claim    to    the    Cnlon    I.«aslng 


the 


company.  The  mine  adjoins  the  Or 
phan  Belle  and  Empire  State  proper- 
tics  of  the  Isabella  Mines  company 
and  the  Burns  of  Jlie  Acacia  atid  has 
prodiice<l  $1,500,000  above  the  576-foot 
lev  >I. 

B.  Burke,  who  recently  secured  a  five 
years  lease  on  the  properties  of  the 
Black  Belle  Gold  Mining  company. 
Cripple  Creek,  is  installing  a  com- 
pressor   outfit. 

Denver  parties   hare   bought  a  golcL 


property  twenty-five  miles  west  of  Liv- 
ermore.   showing   $60   a   ton   value. 

New  York  and  Chicago  capitalists 
are  negotiating  for  the  purchase  of  the 
Magnet  group  of  claims  on  Saxon 
Mountain.  Georgetown,  for  probably 
$80,000.  They  are  negotiating  for  a 
lease  and  bond  on  the  Doric  tunnel  of 
the  Doric  Trust.  Ltd..  of  London.  The 
tunnel  was  advanced  3,0ti0  feet  when 
work  stopped  because  of  dissensions. 
After  four  years  of  Idleness  work  was 
resumed  in  1906  under  lease  to  George- 
town people.  A  number  of  veins  have 
been  dissected,  one  averaging  sixteen 
feet  in  width  with  a  content  of  $12  to 
$14  a   ton. 

Kdgar  S.  Moulton  has  purchased  from 
the  Rocky  Mountain  National  bank  the 
concrete  group  of  five  claims  on  Gun- 
nell  Hill  .Central  City.  The  property 
has     produced     $1,000,000.  It     Is     the 

western  extension  of  the  Gunnel  group, 
credited  with  $8,000,000  output. 

The  Lost  Treasure  on  Columbian 
mountain.  Georgetown,  Colo.,  is  iti  a 
streak  of  250  ounce  silver  ore  eight  to 
ten  Inches  wide.  The  vein  runs 
parallel  with  both  the  American  Sis- 
ters and  the  Joe  Reynolds,  whose  com- 
bined output  is  $6,000,000.  The  de- 
velopment promises  to  be  permanent. 

The  Great  Northern  tunnel  in  Idaho 
Springs.  Colo.,  is  penetrating  the  K'm 
Cit.'  lode  and  has  opened  several  small 
bodies  of  ore.  the  head  now  entering 
what  is  probably  a  big  ore  shoot.  The 
head  is  well  under  the  highest  p  »lnt 
o'"  (he  mountain,  close  to  a  zone  of  big 
veins,  the  same  series  of  lodes  in  which 
11.^  the  Almlra  veins. 

The  Silver  Creek  group  adjolnlnji  the 
Joe  Reynolds  and  Two  Sisters,  Idaho 
Sprigs.  Colo.,  has  been  reopened  after 
several  years  idleness.  A  400-foot  tun- 
nel v/as  driven  on  the  vein  when  the 
niim-  was  first  discovered.  In  eiein- 
Ing  out  the  tunnel  a  streak  of  or.j  oar- 
rvfng  150  to  1.000  ounces  In  silver  Jias 
b«ea  discovered. 


LAKE  SUPERIOR  IRON  MINES 

Outlook  for  Shipments   During  Coming  Season  is  Dubious — 
Mines  Ready  for  Large  Output  and  Railroads  Well  Pre- 
pared to  Handle  It — Sliver  Mine  to  Begin  Shipping. 


With  the  opening  of  the  season  of 
navigation  on  the  Great  Lakes  now 
not  much  more  than  a  month  distant, 
a  start  has  already  been  made  at  most 
ports  with  the  work  of  overhauling 
the  shipping.  However,  there  is  yet 
little  traffic  in  sight,  and  it  will  not  be 

many  of  the  bulk  carriers  that  will  be 
put  into  commission  with  the  disap- 
pearance of  ice  and  tlie  opening  of 
channels,  the  latter  part  of  April.  The 
outlook  for  the  season  la  dubious,  in 
fact.  What  the  closing  months  will 
have  in  store  for  the  vessel  owners  is 
not  clear  at  tlft  present  time;  but  the 
best  is  hoped  for.  It  is  conceded  th.at 
cargoes  will  be  scarce  the  first  few 
months  at  least,  and  there  will  be  need 
of  manning  only  a  portion  of  the  fleet. 
At  the  .same  time  tliere  is  expectation 
of  a  much  more  active  freight  move- 
ment as  the  season  draws  to  the  close. 
Particularly  is  this  the  sentiment  witli 
respect   to  the  Iron   ore   traffic. 

Lumber  shipments  are  expected  to 
show  little  Of  no  Improvement  over 
tho.se  of  last  year.  The  grain  move- 
ment will  depend  upon  the  crops,  and 
to  an  extent  so  also  will  that  of  coal. 
The  volume  of  the  merchandise  traffic, 
likewise,  will  hinge  to  a  degree  upon 
liusiness  conditions  In  the  •  Northwest. 
But  it  is  upon  the  movement  of  freight 
from  the  mines  of  the  Lake  Superior 
itglon  that  the  x>rosperity  of  the  ship- 
ping Interests  will  largely  depend. 
Iron  ore  constitutes  the  most  Import- 
ant Item  of  the  commerce  of  the  threat 
Lakes,  and  It  is  ohiy  when  tlie  mining 
Industry  is  in  a  thriving  state  that  there 
s  little  complaint  from  vesselmen. 
Just  now  the  iron  business  is  not  In  a 
particularly  roseate  condition.  Tlie 
probability  is  seen  that  with  the  new 
tariff  law  etiacted.  there  will  follow  a 
nottible  revival  in  the  trade;  still,  it  is 
the  belief  in  mining  circles  that  not 
more  than  30.000,000  tons  of  ore  will  be 
forwarded  this  year.  As  the  lake  fleet 
Is  in  position  to  move  easily  upwards 
ol    &0,UOO.O\)U    tons    per    season,    aside 


from  the  other  items  tliat  go  to  make 
up  the  traffic,  the  prospects  confront- 
ing the  vessel  interests  are  none  too 
bright.  There  will  doubtless  be  many 
boats  that  will  not  be  manned  at  all, 
and  there,  daubtless,  will  be  more  rate- 
cutting  in  the  scfainble  for  cargoes. 
Mnrh    fi'orli    Done. 

Notwithstanding  that  the  season's 
ore  shipments  are  likely  to  approximate 
less  than  60  per  cent  of  the  capacity  of 
the  mines,  there  has  been  but  little 
curtailment  of  operations  In  the  Lake 
Superior  region  the  past  winter.  Ma- 
terially larger  forces  have  been  em- 
ployed than  was  the  case  a  year  ago. 
and  a  vast  amount  of  work  has  been 
done.  Mining  operations  in  themselves 
iiave  not  been  pushed  vigorously,  al- 
though it  Is  noted  that  large  stockpiles 
have  b.  en  accumulated  at  many  of  the 
underground  mines:  but  the  develop- 
m«!nt  of  ore  bodies  has  been  energetic- 
ally carried  on,  and  the  season  Is  open- 
ing with  the  region  as  a  whole  pre- 
pared to  make  the  largest  outgo  in  its 
history.  Particularly  on  the  Mesaba 
range  has  the  work  of  development 
been  prosecutied  briskly.  Stripping 
operations  have  been  in  progress  at  a 
large  number  of  properties,  and  there 
have  been  made-^ieady  for  mining  by 
the  steam  shovel  a  truly  vast  quantity 
of  ore.  R.xplocation  has  been  conduct- 
ed In  all  portions  of  the  region,  and 
with  important  results,  especially  in 
the  territory  west  of  Ishpeming,  on  tlie 
•Marquette  range  and  at  the  western 
end  of  the   Menominee. 

Kaiiroada    \%>ll    Prepared. 

The  season  will  open  with  the  rail- 
roads prepared  to  .handle  almost  twice 
the  .amount  of  ore  tViey  will  be  doubt- 
less called  upon  to  transport  from 
the  mines  this  year.  Xo  new  dock 
ccnstrucfon  has  t)een  iti  progress,  but 
the  shipping  piers  have  all  been  given 
their  t  ustomarj'  winter  overhauling 
wherever  that  work  has  been  neces- 
sary. Roadbeds  have  been  Improved 
and  some  new  steel  has  been  laid.  In 
the  vicinity  of  Negaunee.  Marquette 
range,  there  has  been  an  exteiioive 
shifting  of  trackage.  The  rolling  stock 


is  being  materially  increased.  Notable 
additions  In  this  respect  are  being 
made  by  the  Cliicago  &  Northwestern 
railroad,  for  its  Ashland  division,  and 
by  the  United  States  Steel  corporation's 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  road.  Eight 
liundred  steel  ore  cars  are  to  be  re- 
ceived bv  the  latter  line.  The  Duluth 
&  Iron  Tlange  hauled  but  5.700,000  tons 
of  ore  last  season,  compared  with  up- 
wards of  8,000,000  tons  in  each  of  the 
two  preceding  years,  but  its  traffic  is 
destined  to  materially  increase  witli 
the  advent  of  the  Western  Mesaba 
mines  on  the  shipping  list  and  as  in 
consequence  of  which  business  is  di- 
verted to  it  from  the  Steel  corpora- 
tion's Duluth.  Missabe  &  Northern.  The 
Missabe  road  will  have  a  spur  track 
extended  to  M.  A.  Hann  &  Co.'s  Sliv- 
er mine  at  Virginia  b.v  the  opening  of 
the  season  of  navigation,  and  wMl 
hereafter  handle  the  output  of  that 
property  entirely,  the  Rainy  Lake  line 
heretofore  having  shared  in  the  traffic 
to  the  extent  of  conveying  it  to  tlie 
point   of   junction. 

Slilpincnts  From  Hliver. 
Stripping  work  is  being  pushed  at 
the  Sliver  and  It  is  expected  that  some 
hundreds  of  thousands  of  tons  of  ore 
will  be  forwarded  from  the  property 
this  season.  The  initial  shipments 
were  made  last  .vear.  when  50,000  tons 
were  sent  out.  Equipment  to  be  used 
In  the  removal  of  the  overburden  is 
being  assembled  at  the  Pittsburg  Ore 
company's  Croxton  mine  at  Chisholm, 
and  extensive  stripping  will  be  done 
there  this  season.  Tiie  property  has 
heretofore  been  operated  very  largely 
on  the  underground  system.  A  not- 
able Improvement  in  the  Minnesota 
fields  will  be  the  erection  of  the  new 
steel  shafthouse,  the  contract  for  the 
construction  of  which  at  the  Steel  cor- 
poration's Pioneer  mine  at  Ely,  Ver- 
milion range,  was  recently  awarded  to 
the  American  Bridge  company.  The 
foundation  of  reinforced  concrete  was 
"built  some  months  ago.  There  is  al- 
ready in  service  at  this  propert.v  a 
steel    shafthouse   which    is    the    largest 


(Continued  on  page  23,  fourth  column.) 


from  Rawhide,  Nev..  says:  Great  pay 
shoot  in  Marigold  lease  on  Rawhide 
Coalition  shows  big  improvement  with 
every  additional  foot  dept  attained. 
Bottom  of  winze,  now  do.vn  seven  feet 
below  the  130-foot  level,  shows  shoot 
of  high  grade,  eighteen  inches  wide, 
Kainpling  $1,400  per  ton  Remaining 
three  feet  of  rein  assays  from  $80  to 
$200  per  ton.  Seam  of  specimen  ore 
on  hanging  wall  averages  two  inches 
wide  for  seven  feet,  an  1  assays  $10 
per  pound.  Vein  has  been  opened 
thirty  feet  north  of  \vin:ie  and  thirty 
feet  sotith,  and  for  entire  distance  is 
in  from  three  to  six  feet  of  ore  of  good 
shipping  grade.  A  ten-  on  shipment 
of  ore  sampling  bctwe«-n  $500  and 
$600  a  ton  will  be  sent  out  next  Mon- 
day. The  Marigold  is  now  producing 
$3,000    worth    of    ore    daily. 

Mint  lease  on  Coalitinn,  300  feet 
west  of  Marigold,  on  parallel  vein, 
made  a  big  strike  of  specimen  ore 
this  morning  in  bottom  of  winze  at 
tlie  end  of  the  south  drift  on  the  300- 
foot   level,  seventy  feet  from  the  shaft. 


is  one-quarter  gold  is  exposed  for  four 
feet  along  the  hanging  wall.  The  en- 
tire bottom  of  the  winze.  5  by  9  feet, 
is  in  ore  .sampling  $120  a  ton.  This 
strike  is  ItO  feet  south  of  the  big 
stope  and  rich  winze  in  the  north 
end  of  the  drift  on  the  300-foot  level., 
and  the  great  pay  shoot  is  proved  to 
be  continuou.s  for  the  entire  di.«itance. 
At  the  Grutt  mining  lease  on  Coali- 
tion, adjoining  Marigold  on  the  north, 
new  pay  .sh.iot  in  open  cut  150  feet  up 
hill  from  Marig<)ld  shaft,  is  producing 
four  tons  dally,  half  a  ton  of  whioh  ia 
worth  $1,000  a  ton,  while  the  rest 
runs  about  $200  a  ton.  This  lease 
will  send  out  twenty-ton  shipment, 
sampling  $300,  during  the  next  few 
days. 

The  new  .strike  made  two  days  ago 

on  the  Grutt  Balloon  Hill  lea.se  on  the 
northwestern  corner  of  the  Bnlloon 
claim  of  Rawhide  Queen  is  devehjping 
into  a  great  bonanza,  tlie  fourteen- 
inch  shoot  footwall  assaying  $1,800. 
Coalition  gets  20o  feet  of  this  vein  on 
the   north  and   500   feet  on   the  south. 


MINING  IN  THE  BLACK  HILLS 

New    Work   of   Importance    Begun   by  Homestake 

Company  at  Deadwood  and  Lead—Has  Found 

Promising  Copper  Ledge  Near  Nemo. 


Deadwood,  S.  D.,  March  20. — New 
work  of  importance  has  been  com- 
menced by  the  Homestead  Mining  com- 
pany, both  at  Deadwood  and  Lead.  At 
the  former  place  an  addition  is  being 
built  to  the  slimes  plant,  \.-hich  already 
contains  twenty-six  of  the  filter  presses 
and  for  some  time  has  been  treating  at 
a  good  profit  about  1,800  tons  a  day. 
The    addition     will     contain     two    more 

presses  and  bring  the  d.illy  capacitj' 
over  200  tons.  At  Lead,  sinking  liaa 
begun  again  in  the  Ellison  shaft,  the 
deepest  in  the  Black  Hi  Is,  which  is 
now  down  1.750  feet. 

The  Homestake  also  reports  finding 
a  promising  copper  ledge  near  Nemo. 
While  the  country  In  tlia  ;  section  lias 
frequent  copper  outcroppi  ngs,  no  com- 
pany wltli  such  resources  us  the  Home- 
stake's  lias  ever  seriously  taken  up  the 
work  of  developing  a  copper  prospect. 
The  company  has  started  m  this  ledge 
by  sinking  a  shaft.  The  ledge  is  not 
far  from  the  scene  of  the  Custer  Peak 
Mining  company's  operntions  at  Al- 
bany, where  copper  abounds  in  the  up- 
per   workings. 

Word  of  a  good  strike  comes  from 
Yellow  Creek,  south  of  here.  It  is  re- 
poised  that  on  the  Eskimo  ground  near 
the  Wasp  No.  2,  a  rich  bed  of  yellow 
carbonate  sand  has  beei  uncovered 
which  assayed  about  $12  a  ton  gold. 
With  it  is  a  vertical  vein  tliat  contains 
high    values. 

In  the  Tinton  district  th^re  is  a  pros- 
pect of  considerable  work  this  summer. 
A.  D.  Tichnor.  one  of  ttie  most  ac- 
tive in  the  development  of  the  sec- 
tion around  Welcome,  has  been  busy  on 
the  Treadwell  group  o(  claims,  in 
which  some  Lead  City  men  are  also 
interested.  The  tunnel  1  as  been  run 
into  the  hill  400  feet  and  some  good 
gold   ore  is   found. 

The   Tinton   Tin    company,   which    en- 


joyed a  successful  run  In  :.t8  small  mill  1  a  resumption  of  work  there. 


last  fall,  will  shortly  resume  on  a 
much  larger  scale.  It  is  said  that  the 
tin  plate  corporation  is  behind  the 
Tinton  company.  Plans  are  being  made 
to  erect  new  buildings  and  increase  the 
milling    capacity. 

Some  time  ago  the  Saginaw  com- 
pany, operating  at  Custer,  installed  a 
new  heating  plant  in  its  ten-stamp  mill 
and  tlie  change  proved  higlily  satisfac- 
tory. The  results  during  the  cold 
weather  have  been  better  than  antici- 
pated, and  the  mill  is  now  in  shape  to 
run  continuously.  Between  forty  and 
fifty  tons  of  rock  are  being  handled 
daily.  Both  concentrates  and  tailings 
are  handled.  The  main  ore  body  a 
vein  eight  feet  wide.  Is  being  devel- 
oped in  an  open  pit  and  is  showing 
a  regular  average  of  $15  a  ton  gold. 
Recently  another  ledge  which  promises 
to    be    free    milling,    was    met. 

Work  in  the  soutliern  hills  already 
has  a  more  lively  appearance,  and  it 
is  probable  that  the  summer  will  see 
more  than  the  usual  activity.  The 
Hartwell  Mining  conipanj',  whose  prop- 
erty Is  seven  miles  northwest  of  Cus- 
ter, has  l>een  developing  all  winter. 
The  main  cro.ss-cut  tunnel  is  In  about 
345  feet  and  will  only  have  to  penetrate 
a  little  further  to  be  completed.  The 
main  ledges  over  3oo  feet  wide  and 
carries  high  values  in  gold.  Several 
small  cross  shoots  have  been   tapped. 

Near  the  Hartwell  the  Ruberta  Min- 
ing company  Is  meeting  with  better 
success  In  the  use  of  the  diamond  drill 
than  it  anticipated.  The  core  shows 
some    high    grade    material. 

At  Orevllle  the  officers  of  the  Forest 
City  Mining  company,  formerly  the 
Clara  Belle,  are  elated  ovei-  having 
struck  the  faulted  vein  for  which  they 
have  been  looking  so  long.  This  was 
at  one  time  the  ricliest  free  gold  propo- 
sition in  the  hills.  As  this  ledge  la 
supposed  to  extend  on  to  the  St.  Elmo 
and  other  adjoining  properties.  It  Is 
not  unlikely   that   the  strike   will  cause 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


IS 


r^ 


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cv^JlWl 


^l(^ 


"Mare  of  Puluth,  Minn — Dear  Sir:  I 
respectfully  take  the  pleasure  of 
droplng:  these  few  to  the  Honcrable 
mare  of  the  enterprlelngr  and  flourish- 
ing city  of  I>uluth  in  regard  of  doinpr 
me  a  favor  in  reference  to  some  mat- 
ter whioli  I  iiope  you  ran  Bcci>modate 
me  witii  from  that  part  of  the  union. 
"Will  you  please  obtain  for  me  some 
Post  cards  views  from  your  city.  1  de- 
sire to  obtain  a  card  of  a  Catholic 
Church.  Methodist  church,  City  Hldg. 
oourt  house  and  others  of  interejst. 
Ingr  plao-^p.  You  will  find  Inclosed  10 
cents  fur  the  cards,  and  if  this  is  not 
enough  for  the  cards  let  me  know, 
furthermore  can  you  give  me  the 
names  of  your  predecessors  since  1898 
up   to    the   present     mare   Hon.      R.      D. 


lavtn.       I     will     ask    you 
booklet     or    a    pamphlet    of 
giving   a    descriptive 
of    the    City    of 
can    olitaln    such 
would    please   mc 


HavVn.       I  '  will     ask     you     Is     there    a 

some  kind 
iilstory  and  views 
Duluth  is  so  where 
a  publication  for  It 
very  much  to  obtain 
a  booklet  If  there  is  one  to  be  had. 
hoping  to  hear  irom  the  mayor  of  the 
city  of  Duluth.  Wishing  you  Success, 
yours   very   truly,   etc." 

Harrv  H.  Lemont,  secretary  to  Mayor 
Haven,"  did  not  even  smile  when  he 
rt-ad  this  letter.  It  was  an  old  story 
to  him  and  the  communication  came 
In  the  daily  routine.  He  merely  slip- 
ped it  into  his  pocket,  and  on  his  way 
down  town  to  lunch  stopped  at 
book  store  and  purchased  the 
ankles,  sending  them  off 
ernoon    w/ii    a    letter       of 


a 
desired 
In    the    aft- 
Information 


of  the 
tliat  dally 
Haven-s  office,  frOm 
cour.trv,  and  most  of 
to   Secretary    Lemont 

looked 

softest    kind,   but 

the    mayor    of    an 

i_ 

writer 

is    de- 


and    with    the      mayor's      signature    ai- 

"^This*  letter,    coppied    word    for    word. 

with    all    lis    peculiarities    of    grammar 

and  spelling,  is  merely  a  samp.e 

strange       correspondence 

pours   into    Mayor 

a'l  parts  of  the 
It  is  turned  over 
to   handle.  ^   ,^  ^      „ 

Not  a  Soft   Snap. 
Political     jobs     are     generaly 
upon  as  snaps  of   the 

^r^frp^^i'I^d'floiVishiV^-cityirke 
Duluth.  to  use  the  words  of  tiie 
for  information  abt>v*U/l"''^*'''-.^  .,„,„^ 
cldedly  not  a  snap.  The  correspond 
ence  is  onlv  one  feature  of  the  ditficul- 
tles  attendant  upon  the  PO»'^"^":  "^l\f; 
ling  callers  upon  the  mayor,  keeping 
them  pacified  while  they  are  cooling 
their  heels  in  the  outer  efface,  answer- 
ing their  foolish  questions,  and  trjing 
to  turn  aside  tiiose  who  have  no  more 
business  with  the  mayor  than  Uiey 
have  with  the  sultan 
other     features.     And 

^  .  f  Vi  A  f*  e 

All  this  requires  a  lot  of  time,  a  lot 
of  patience,  and  a  lot  of  diplomacy, 
n«t  to  speak  of  a  lot  of  work.  Com- 
munications just  as  pecular  as  the  one 
given  above,  although  In  a 
way  are  received  every  day. 
culiar  ones,  naturally,  are  for 


of    Turkey, 
there     are 


are 
yet 


different 

The    pe- 

the  most 


part  from  illiterate  people,  with  funny 
grammar  and  spelling,  and  funnier  re- 
uuests  but  there  are  other  letters.  Just 
2s  peculiar  and  Just  as  funn>%  from 
people  who  evidently  have  had  good 
schooling.  ,  ,.   i   ^#  1^* 

And  then  there  Is  a  long  list  of  let- 
ters from  educated  ones,  not  funny  or 
peculiar,  which  have  to  be  taken  care 
of  and  all  of  them  are  asking  for  In- 
formation. If  Duluth  springs  some- 
thing new  in  the  way  of  administering 
the  citys  affairs,  it  calls  for  inquiries 
from  all  over  the  United  States,  many 
of  them  from  universities  and  colleges, 
and  most  of  the  communlcation.s  are 
addressed  to  the  mayor,  and  quickly 
Tall  from  his  busy  hands  Into  those  of 
Secretary   Lemont.  to  be  answered. 

Debates  result  In  a  lot  of  work  for 
Mr.  Lemont.  Not  a  week  passes  during 
the  school  vear  that  he  does  not  re- 
ceive letter."?  from  students  asking  foi 
Information  regarding  different  munic- 
ipal affairs,  the  material  to  be  used  In 
some  school  debate.  The  questions  are 
many  of  them  very  hard  to  answer, 
too.  but  they  have  to  be  answered  when 
the  secretary  desires  to  be  conscien- 
tious and  accommodtalng.  Each  of 
these  letters  averages  about  ten  ques- 
tions. Many  of  them  refer  to  the  pri- 
mary election  system,  but  all  parts  of 
the  city  administration  are  touched 
upon  one  way  or  another,  and  all  man- 
ner of  questions  are  asked  about  munic- 
ipal graft.  municipal  ownership,  In- 
competent city  officers,  civil  service 
rules,  etc..  almost  without  end. 

Comedv  relief  to  all  this  is  afforded 
by  queer"  letters  of  the  nature  of  the 
one  'feove  printed.  At  least,  it  used 
to  l*  comedv  when  Scretary  Lemont 
first  took  office,  but  it  has  become  so 
common  now  that  it  all  goes  with  the 
days  work,  and  it  has  to  be  a  very 
exceptional  communication.  Indeed,  to 
bring  a  smile  to  the  secretary's  coun- 
tenance. 

All  the  letters  are  not  from  outside 
points.  Numerous  epistles  are  re- 
ceived from  local  people.  Most  of 
these  are  anonymous.  Only  last  week 
a  letter  was  received  from  a  woman 
who  said  she  was  a  boarder  in  a 
Bowery  lodging  house.  She  com- 
plained that  the  manager  of  the  place 
Iiad  gone  out  of  his  woy  to  insult  her 
at  11:30  o'clock  at  night,  "which  was 
no  way  to  treat  a  lady,  and  a  mar- 
ried woman,"  she  complained.  She 
said  It  was  the  mayors  duty  to  see 
that  innocent  women  were  protected, 
and  said  If  he  couldn't  protect  her. 
she  would  have  to  move  to  some  other 
lodging    house. 

It  afterwards  developed  that  she 
hadn  t  moved,  despite  the  alleged  In- 
sult, and  that  she  had  made  up  with 
the  man  who  had  aroused  her  anger. 
It  turned  out  t  be  merely  a  quarrel 
between  two  people  who  appeared  to 
be  quite  fond  of  each  other,  and  after 
It  was  made  up.  "you  couldn't  separ- 
ate them  with  a  club."  as  one  of  the 
detectives  expressed  It.  In  connec- 
tion with  her  complaint,  the  woman 
had  stated  that  a  card  game  had  been 
going  on  In  the  lodging  house,  and 
called  the  attention  of  Mayor' Haven 
to  the  fact  that  it  was  his  duty  to 
put  a  stop  to  it.  Tlie  letter  was  un- 
signed, but  the  writer  was  easily  dis- 
covered, and  when  asked  about  the 
card  games,  she  said  there  never  had 
been  one  idayed  in  the  building,  so  far 
as  she  knew,  and  stated  that  she  had 
put  that  In  the  letter  because  she  was 
"mad     at     Oeorge." 

A    Letter   From    Spnin. 
A     letter     was     received     by     Mayor 


;•«*.   S 


#-s^'^ 


-^:^;  v.$..,S^: 


(D# 


In      connection 

that    are    con- 

a   never-ending 

Is     for    picture 
booklets,    etc. 


Illinois  wrote 
concerning  a 
In    Duluth     In 


Haven  not  long  ago  from  a  professor 
of  political  economy  in  Spain.  It  was 
addressed  to  "Tlie  Lord  Mayor  of  Du- 
luth,"  and  asked  information  concern- 
ing local  politics.  It  is  a  common 
thing  for  Mayor  Haven  to  receive 
communications  along  this  line  from 
foreign  countries,  and  the  many 
and  varied  duties  of  the  city's  chief 
executive  take  up  so  much  time  that 
he  naturally  has  to  call  upon  Secre- 
tary Lemont  to  help  him  out  with 
such  communications, 
with  the  other  letters 
tlnually  flowing  in,  in 
stream. 

A  common  request 
post  cards,  descriptive 
Last  summer  a  lady  down  in  Topeka 
Kan.,  wrote  to  the  effect  that  she  had 
been  reading  weather  reports  for  many 
weeks,  and  in  all  of  them  had  noted 
that  the  thermometer  in  Duluth  regis- 
tered lower  tlian  anywhere  else  In  the 
United  States.  She  said  It  was  fright- 
fully hot  In  Topeka.  and  asked  Mayor 
Havn  to  send  her  statistics  regarding 
local  weather  conditions,  to  advise  her 
regarding  hotel  and  boarding  house 
rates,  livery  rates,  whether  it  was  safe 
and  cheap  to  go  boating  on  the  lake, 
and  so  on.  Secretary  Lemont  wrote 
her  a  letter  which  would  make  a  re- 
vivalist's picture  of  Heaven  look  liko 
a  cheap  chromo,  and  two  weeks  later 
she  stepped  off  the  train  at  Duluth,  Into 
one  of  the  worst  northeast  storms  of 
the  season.  She  huddled  over  a  steam 
radiator  for  two  days,  even  if  it  was 
July,  and  then  said  reports  of  cool 
weather  In  Dviluth  had  not  been  exag- 
gerated In  the  least. 

Two  or  three  weeks  ago  a  stationary 
engineer  in  Philadelphia  wrote  Mayor 
Hfiven  that  he,  the  engineer,  had  lost 
his  license  In  a  Fergus  Falls  fire  sev- 
eral years  ago.  He  thought  that  as  It 
had  been  made  out  In  Minnesota  not 
in  Duluth,  Mayor  Haven  could  arrange 
to  get  him  anc'hcr  one. 

Recently  a  man  In 
asking  for  Information 
man  who  was  married 
1894.  He  wanted  to  know  the  date  of 
the  marriage,  whether  the  man  was 
still  living  with  his  wife,  and  what 
he  was  doing.  Secretary  Lemont  im- 
mediately appeared  In  tlie  role  of  ama- 
teur detective,  and  soon  rounded  up  all 
the  li. formation  asked  for,  and  sent  it 
en   to   the   inquirer. 

Doctors  following  out  new  ideas  in 
the  treatment  of  disease  frequently 
write  Mayor  Haven  for  information 
as  to  the  number  of  men  of  their  par- 
ticular occupation  tliere  are  In  Duluth, 
whether  they  are  making  any  money, 
whether  there  Is  room  for  one  more, 
etc.  Stenograplicrs.  clerks,  ur  on  men 
of  all  trades,  dres-iinakers  and  people 
of  all  other  callings  known  to  man 
write  to  Mayor  Haven  to  learn  cf  locti 
lirospects  in  thi.lr  line  of  work,  and  to 
ask  his  advice  reg.iioi'ig  a  change  of 
location.  When  the  mayor  has  time, 
which  Is  seldom,  owing  to  the  heavy 
press  of  more  Important  duties,  he  dic- 
tates answers  to  th?se  letters  himself, 
but  when  he  cannot  spare  the  time, 
they  rre  turned  over  to  Secretary  Le- 
mont. 

The    Daily    Callers. 

Callers  to  see  the  mayor  cause  more 
annoyance,  If  annoyance  is  possible  to 
a  mayor's  secretary,  than  all  the  let- 
ters, for  a  letter  can  be  put  aside  for 
a  time,  or  even  be  laid  over  for  a  day, 
but  nothing  of  the  sort  can  be  done 
with  a  person  who  Is  there  to  see  the 
mayor.  He  is  on  hand  to  talk  with  the 
citvs  chief  executive,  and  often  in- 
sists upon  doing  it  right  away,  regard- 
less 01"  the  number  of  people  in  line 
ahead  of  him,  or  of  who  Is  In  the  pri- 
vate office  with  the  mayor.  To  his 
conceited  self  It  looks  as  if  his  busi- 
ness was  of  more  importance  than 
anyV>ody  else's,  when,  as  a  matter  of 
fact,  it  may  be,  and  more  than  likely 
is.  something  that  should  not  be 
brought  to  the  attention  of  the  mayor 
at  all. 

An  hour  spent  In  the  mayor's  outer 
office,  where  Secretary  Lemont  Is  en- 
trenched, as  a  guard  to  the  Inner  of- 
fice beyond,  will  reveal  to  the  onlook- 
er twelve  or  fifteen  nationalities,  on 
an  ordinary  day.  In^he  course  of  a 
week,  practically  every  nationality 
known  ^  historians  •will  visit  tlie 
mayor's "f flee  on  the  second  floor  of 
the  city  hall,  and  this  comprehensive 
statement  Includes  Chinamen,  Japs, 
and    other    people    from    the    Far    East, 


not  exc-^pting  occasional   Hindu   fakers, 
the    latter    In    search    of   licenses. 

Many  pathetic  figures  are  to  be  seen 
In  this  lineup.  Pale,  sickly  women, 
clothed  in  rags,  and  with  hungry  chil. 
dren  cluthing  in  a  scared  fashion  at 
their  skirts,  are  often  there.  They 
have  pitiful  tales  to  tell  of  faithless 
husbands,  refusing  to  support  their 
families,  or  of  husbands  who  have 
mysteriously  disappeared,  or  of  hus- 
bands who  spend  all  their  money  in 
drink,  or  of  harsh  landlords  who  in- 
sist upon  turning  them  out  into  the 
cold,  or  of  grocers  and  butchers  who 
refuse  to  extend  more  credit. 

There  are  also  men  who  are  mem- 
bers of  the  down  and  out  club,  there 
looking  for  assistance.  Beggars,  sight- 
less, or  with  legs  and  arms  missing, 
or  both,  await  their  chane  to  ask  per- 
mission to  beg.  Take  out  the  business 
have  to  do  with  Important  city  mat- 
ters, and  the  number  of  mayors  call- 
ers will  be  reduced  by  a  scarcely  per- 
ceptible proportion.  The  visitors 
whose  business  is  really  of  sufficient 
Importance  to  justify  the  mayor  glv- 
ng  it  his  personal  attention  are  not 
onl-tenth  those  that  come.  The  others 
are  a  company  made  up  from  every 
walk  and  station  in  life.  They  bring 
their  sorrows,  their  Joys,  the  r  ambi- 
t  rfns  -Ind  their  grievances  with  them. 
Many  of  their  stories  brings  laughter, 
anj  many  of  them  are  fit  subjects  for 
tears.  ^      ,  , 

While  their  business  Is  not  of  real- 
iv  sufficient  importance  to  receive  at- 
tlnt  on  at  the  hands  of  the  mayor, 
Mr  ilavln  does  not  take  that  fact  in- 
fo consideration.  He  has  an  abund- 
ance of  good  nature,  and  always  tries 
fo'^see  everybody  who  calls  be  he  poor 
with  a  tale  of  woe,  or  rich  witli  a 
Plan  that  is  of  great  importance  to  the 
pian  xna^u^  ^^^  offered  financial  assist- 
ance to  all  his  callers  who  are  urgent- 
fy  in  need  of  it.  Mayor  Haven  would 
soon  land  in  the  poorhouse  h'^self. 
wi^  a  crowd  of  creditors  howling 
about  his  card.  It  is  impossible  for 
him  to  give  money  in  every  case  h,m- 
self,  but  there  are  times  w-hen  t  e 
necessity  seems  so  urgent  that  he 
cannot  withhold  an  offer  of  nio»e>  to 
tide  the  one  In  trouble  over  difficulties 
of  the  moment.  In  any  case,  if  de- 
serving, he  makes  it  a  point  to  turn 
the  applicant  over  to  one  of  the  char- 
itable Institutions  of  the  city,  with  the 
suggestion  that  assistance  be  ren- 
dered. „  , 

Settles     Many    Quarrels. 

The  mayor  is  looked  upon  as  a  board 
of  arbitration  all  by  himself,  and  many 
are  the  neighborhood  quarre  s  he  is 
asked  to  adjust.  Some  of  them  are 
excruciatingly  funny.  And  there  have 
been  cases  where  his  good-natured  ad- 
vise has  saved  the  row  being  aired  in 
court.  One  case  In  which  he  was  un- 
successful in  tills  respest  came  up  last 
summer.  In  spite  of  good  and  well 
meant  advise,  the  quarreling  neigh- 
bors worked  themselves  into  such  a 
pitch  because  one  of  them  claimed  the 
other  built  a  fence  which  infringed 
upon  her  potato  field  by  almost  two 
feet,  tliat  they  landed  In  court,  and 
even  after  a  decision  had  been  ren- 
dered. In  favor  of  the  man  who  built 
the  fence,  the  affair  was  several  times 
brought  to  the  attention  of  the  mayor 
by  the  winner,  who  claimed  the  court  s 
order  was  not   being  observed. 

A  feature  of  the  case  was  the  fact 
that  the  person  objecting  to  the  main- 
tenance of  the  fence  was  a  woman 
and  the  man  claimed  that  she  had 
threatened  his  life.  He  told  stories 
of  having  .been  assaulted  with  a 
broom,  and  every  time  she  shook  her 
fist  at  him  he  hot-footed  it  to  Mayor 
Haven's  office  to  tell  him  about  it  and 
ask  police  protection.  The  woman 
was  equally  persistent  in  nouring  her 
tale  of  woe  Into  Mayor  Haven's  ear. 
and  between  the  two  of  them  he  was 
driven    nearly    Insane. 

And  Secretary  Lemont  gets  a  taste 
of  all  this.  It  is  up  to  him  to  diplo- 
matically keep  such  belligerents  from 
engaging  in  actual  flstic  combat  when 
they  chance  to  meet  in  his  office,  as 
well  as  to  do  what  he  can  to  head 
off  other  callers  with  no  more  busi- 
ness with  the  mayor  than  they  have 
with  tlie  man  in  the  moon.  He  offers 
them  advice  of  his  own,  when  he  can 
get  tliem  to  unroll  their  story,  which. 
In  this  particular  case,  is  undoubtedly 
every    bit   as    good   as   any    the    mayor 


could  hand  them,  but  they  are  not 
satisfied  with  that,  and  llatiy  refuse 
to  leave  the  accommodating  presence 
of  Mr.  Lamont  until  tliey  have  been 
admitted  to  the  Inner  office,  and  the 
presence   of   the   mayor. 

Of  all  the  persistent  people  who  ap- 
pear In  the  city  hail  In  search  of  His 
Honor,  women,  not  the  kind  with  rags, 
and  with  children  dragging  at  tlieir 
heels,  are  perhaps  the  most  persistent. 
Also  they  are  insistent,  their  Insistence 
Ivlng  In  the  fact  that  they  believe 
tiiey  sliould  be  ushered  into  the  chief 
executives  presence  before  any  of  the 
men  In  line,  some  of  whoir  possibly 
have  been  waiting  two  hours.  No 
matter  how  many  men  are  ahead  of  her, 
a  woman  of  this  type  will  assume  an 
Injured  air,  and  throw  a  contemptuous 
glance  at  the  poor  secretary  that  fair- 
ly congeals  him,  if  he  presumes  to 
let  a  man  in,  in  his  turn,  ahead  of  her. 
Hut  all  women  callers,  let  it  be  said 
in  Justice,  are  not  of  that  description. 
It's  a  safe  wager  that  Mr.  Lamont 
breathed  "Thank  the  Lord,"  when  he 
read   that  last  sentence,  if  he  has  read 

Also  in  justice  to  womankind.  It  might 
as    well    be    said    there    are    some    men 
callers  upon  the  mayor  who  are  just  as 
offended,  and   just  as  much   insulted,   if 
they  are  not  allowed  to  enter  the  innei 
office    ahead    of    the    waiting    line,    ana 
more  than  likely  they  are  there  to  ask 
Mavor    Haven    to    indorse    the    purchase 
of  some  article  of  which  the  city  stands 
in    doubtful    need.      Their    exaggerated 
idea    of    their    own    importance    may    be 
only    assumed,    to    help    force    business. 
It    is    also    pitiful    to   see    their    chagrin 
when    the    diplomatic   Mr.    Lemont    tells 
them    they   cannot  see    the   mayor   until 
their  turn  comes,  at  the  same  time  ad- 
mitting to  the  Infier  office  a  nervously 
frightened    man    in    the    garb    of    a    la 
borer.     Of   course.   If   it   is   learned   that 
the  mission  of  the  caller  really  is  urg- 
ent and  that  it  Is  of  importance  that  he 
reach  the  mayor  Immediately,  the  mat- 
ter Is  satisfactorily  arranged   In  a  very 
short    time,    Mayor    Haven    pausing    In  I 


&" 


-iS^- 


^ 


^B  ' 


his  talk  witli  whoever  happens  to  be 
with  him  long  enough  to  attend  to  the 
newcomer.  But  the  man  lias  to  prove 
his  case  before  he  is  admitted,  and  no 
bluff  goes. 

The  BuBlnenn  Men. 
Seeing  the  mayor,  to  a  great  many, 
is  a  business  or  political  necessity. 
The  innumerable  points  at  whicii  the 
citvs  government  touclies  the  business 
Interests  of  Duluth  makes  it  necessary 
for  the  ma\or  to  meet  represntaiive 
business  men  <!iiiie  often.  Such  con- 
ferences are  usually  brief,  and  arranged 
bv  telephone.  The  representative  bus- 
iness man  values  his  time  as  highly  as 
does  tlie  mavor  of  the  city,  and  is  as 
anxious  as  he  to  dispose  of  the  busi- 
ness in  hand  in  the  shortest  possible 
time. 

Political  necessity  also  forces  many 
men  to  the  mayor's  office.  The  party 
chief  must  be  consulted,  informed, 
warned  and  solicited  for  favors.  City 
affairs  keep  him  in  his  office:  therefore 
those  on  errands  of  political  necessity 
seek  him  out  there.  The  office  seekers 
and  their  friends  are  most  numerous 
right  after  election.  Many  a  friend  oi 
the  mayor  calls  upon  him  to  "speak  a 
word"  for  some  friend  of  the  mayor  s 
friend,  who  believes  his  appointment  to 
a  city  job  would  elevate  the  public 
service  several  notches.  The  mutual 
friend  of  the  job  hunter  and  the  mayor 
may  not  be  very  enthusiastic  about  it, 
but"  he  carries  out  his  promise  and  "sees 
the  mayor."  anyway,  and  can  tell  hI^ 
friends  as  much.     Needless  to  say,  such  I 


Af/S    - 
O/'A       \    — 


/eJ^/'o/^/^^'/e 


visits  as  these  have  practically  no  in  of  any  consequence.  His  mind  is  al» 
fluence  whatever  upon  ihe  mayor  when  (ready  made  up.  and  the  talk  of  the 
it  comes  to  handing  out  political  plums  hrieud  of  a  friend  doesn't  change  It. 


SWOMIH  WOMEN  BE  ALLOWED 

TO  VOTE?  "SURE,"  SAYS  MAYOR 


Mayor  Haven  favors  the  woman's 
suffrage  movement.  In  talking,  this 
morning,  relative  to  the  Political 
Equality  club,  which  has  been  organ- 
ized in  Duluth.  he  expresses  himself  as 
being  in  favor  of  allowing  women 
equal  rights  with  men  in  the  use  of 
the  ballot. 

"I  am  willing  to  take  the  chances  of 
allowing  women  equal  privileges  with 
men  In  the  use  of  the  ballot,"  he  said. 
"This  suffragist  movement  has  great 
possibilities.  The  mind  can  scarcely 
grasp  all  these  possibilities.  The  aver- 
age woman  certainly  has  as  much  in- 
telligence as  the  average  man.  In  a 
good  many  cases  she 'has  more. 

"On  some  questions,  such  as  taxes 
I'll  admit  that  woman  is  scarcely  as 
well  qualified  as  man  to  express  an  in- 
telligent opinion,  but  perhaps  that  Is 
because,  in  the  past.  It  has  not  been 
necessary  for  her  to  pay  any  attention 
to   such   question.      Give   her   the   right 


lyPEilOl^  iEWS 


Old  Pugilist  is  Held. 

Pat  Harrington,  an  old-timer  about 
Superior,  who  once  had  a  reputation 
as  a  clever  pugilist.  Is  being  held  at 
the  police  station  pending  an  examina. 
tlon  of  his  sanicy.  Harrington  fought 
many  fistic  battles  in  Superior  and 
Duluth  eighteen  or  twenty  years  ago. 
Lately  Harrington  has  been  acting 
queerly  and  called  out  to  people  pass- 
ing his  house   to  stop. 

Talk  on  Economics. 

Walter  Thomas  Mills,  former  profes- 
sor of  economics  In  the  University  of 
Chicago,  will  speak  in  Superior  on 
economic  questions.  His  address  will 
be  given  at  Agen  hall  Saturday  even- 
ing.   March    27. 

Minneapolis  Defeated. 

Company  I  of  Superior  last  evening, 
at  the  normal  school  gymnasium,  de- 
feated the  crack  Company  B  team  of 
Minneapolis  In  the  fastest  game  of 
basket  ball  that  has  been  witnessed 
at  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  this  season. 
The  score  was  28  to  26. 
m 

Peter  Truax  Dies. 

Peter  Truax.  who  is  w^ell  known  in 
Superior  and  is  a  big  property  holder 
here,  died  yesterday  morning  at  his 
home  in  Eau  Claire  after  a  lingering 
illnes.  He  was  81  years  old  and  had 
been  a  resident  of  Eau  Claire  since 
ISSr..  He  was  a  breeder  of  blooded 
horses   and    his   stock   was   well    known 


to  vote  on  them,  and  she  might  be 
sufficiently  interested  to  post  iitrself 
in  regard  to  them. 

"On  certain  other  questions,  such  as 
those  relating  to  health,  education, 
children,  parks,  playgrounds,  etc.,  she 
is  better  qualified  than  man  to  express 
an  opinion.  Woman  certainly  would 
bring  results  in  the  campaign  against 
liquor  if  they  had  tlie  right  to  vot«=. 
They  more  than  anyone  else,  suffei 
frorn  the  sale  of  intoxicants,  througii 
the  faults  of  erring  husbands  fathers 
and  sons. 

"Women  also  make  capable  mu- 
nicipal officers.  This  has  been  given  a 
practical  demonstration  in  Duluth  in 
the  case  of  Mrs  Jeanette  Baldwin,  who 
for  several  months  past  has  held  a 
position  as  city  health  inspector.  She 
is  one  of  the  very  best  inspectors  we 
have,  and  has  accomplished  remark- 
able results.  I  cannot  speak  too  highly 
of  the  good  work  she  has  accomplished 
and   is  accomplishing. 

"Most  assuredly,  let  the  women  vote." 


on  the  race  tracks  of  the  country.     He 
is    survived    by    a    wife.  when      Mr. 

Truax's    fatlier    died    he    was    over    100 
years  old. 


means  of  reducing  the 

comers. 

Whenever  a  workma 
five    minutes   after   tinr 

gate  locked  and  he  is 
enter  until  the  half  hf 
half  hour  is  deducted  ! 
but  in  addition  he  has 
the  treasurer  of  the  L 
5  cents  for  coming  lat« 
If  he  i.s  late  more  t 
during  a  week  every 
of  the  fact,  and  the  ! 
time    he    makes   his   aj 


number  of  late 

n  is  more  than 

le   he    finds    the 

not  allowed   to 

ur  is  up.     Thi.s 

roni  his  wages. 

also  to  pay  to 

.azy  club  about 

han  once  or  so 
body  is  aware 
lecond  or  third 
ipearance   after 


starting  time  he  is  greeted  with  a  ter- 
rific combination  of  noises  produced 
on  any  available  material  by  his  fel- 
low workmen. 

At  ceitain  periods  the  accumualted 
funds  of  the  Lazy  club  are  divided, 
not  among  those  who  have  produced 
them,  it  should  be  noted,  but  among 
the  entire  staff  equally.  Thus  the  late 
workman  is  made  to  pay  the  early 
comers  for  his  laziness.  The  la.st  dis- 
tribution was  just  prior  to  a  "bean- 
feast." and  funds  accumulated  during 
twelve  months  vi'ere  distributed, 
amounting  to  over  7s  a  head. 


E:RICK  ANDE^RSON,  Agent, 

932  LUMBER  EXCHANGE  BUILDING,  MINNEAPOUS. 


Adirondack    InMurnnne    Company. 

rriiKiinl    i.fTice.    Niw    Y<  rk.     s".    Y.       (Org.iiiizfd    in 
.MJt<  liel!.    iTcs'ilcnt: 


i;<(ic  1 


R. 

Btrvice 


A 
epcr(t«iy.      Attorney    to    .icctrt 
Coniiuii'slontr    if    Iiif iir.-ince. 

CA-SIl    (AriTAL.    $.W'. 000.00. 
INCOME   IN     908. 

Premiums  (Iher  than  ptrpttualg  $ 

Hint*  and  Intc reft    

From  ail  ctliei  eourcts 


McKelnejv 

Miniiesi  la. 


244.8]8.7*< 

J5.S71.fi7 

J,160.2;i 


Woodsman  "Tonched.*' 

Ina  Johnson  was  arraigned  In  the 
Superior  municipal  court  yesterday, 
charged  with  relieving  Gus  Hill,  a 
woodman,  of  120.  Her  case  was  con- 
tinued until  next  Thursday.  Hill 
claims  that  the  girl  met  him  on  the 
street,  and  he  took  a  short  stroU  with 
her.  On  returning  he  found  his  wad 
had  departed. 

"The  Battle  With  the  Bottle." 

.\t  a  rally  of  no-license  campaigners 
last  evening  at  the  Hammond  Avenue 
Presbyterian  church.  Rev.  M.  S.  Rice 
of  the  First  M.  E.  church  of  Duluth 
spoke  on  the  liquor  question.  He  took 
as  his  subject  -'The  Battle  Willi  the 
Bottle." 

• 

THE    LAZY    CLUB. 

System:  One  of  the  best  assets  of 
a  manufacturing  plant  is  the  interest 
of  employes,  and  when  this  develops 
into  friendly  riavlry  its  value  is  many 
times  increased.  Frequently  workmen 
will  adopt  methods  spontaneously  that 
are  of  great  assistance  to  the  firm. 

In  the  engineering  shops  of  a  cer- 
tain English  firm  the  workmen  a  year 
or  two  ago  originated  what  they  called 
the  Lazy  club.  It  was  entirely  their 
own  Idea,  which  for  obvious  reasons 
has  received  neither  rcognition  nor 
financial  support  from  the  manage- 
ment,  but   has   been  a  most   excellent 


ToJBl  Iriprme    

DISBURSEMENTS     H    1908. 

Aranint  palii  fi  r  Icsses I 

Commls'lons    and    lr<  hciag'? 

.Salarljs  and  fe<f   cf  cfficers.   ajents  and 

tmpliiyfs      

Taxts.    fees,   tt-nt*   and  other   rt»l  estate 

expenses ».,•. 

Klvidinds  umi  inlere*t 

All  taller  dlsliursemtnta 

Total  dlBlnirsennfiitB    $      282. 768. To 


I      261,8-.3.74 

$      174.310.05 
7C'.785.31 

6.989.00 

.'..606..''.6 

20,000.00 

5,077.83 


Kxcrts  iif  Jlebursfments  ot<  r  Int  omt.    ...  I 
ASSETS   DEC.  3  ,    1908. 

Bonds  and  sKK-k-s  twiml     $ 

Cash  In  (fjlce  and  in  l>ank 

Accrued  interest  anti   rents 

Prtmlums    In    course    of    collect  on 

Ml   other   admitted   Jisseta 

Uetluct     frit  1  hi     deposit     lesi     17,713.07 
liaLllliy    thcrccn 

Total  adniltted  assets $ 

Assets    not    admitted      J17.628  76 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

VririUd  losses  and  claims $ 

Keinsurance  reitf'e    

Salarit-s.    cxpensts,    titles,    dlvUl"nd»   and 

Interest    due 

roinmii=si(in»   and   brokerage 

All   other  UablliUes 

Capital  sloth  paid  up 


20,915,01 

307  250.00 

74.105.97 

S.020.83 

44.007.01 

2.00 

7.713.07 

420,672.74 


16,570.42 
113,083.64 

4.300,00 

9,815.96 

4,924.09 

200.COO.Ou 


Total  liabilities  Including  capital t      351.694.11 


Orcanlryd    iB 


II. 

in 


Lumber   InNnrnnoe  Company   of 
Xciv     Vork. 

rrinclr.il    flTlce.    Ntw    Y<rl(.    -N.    Y. 
1!«>4. )      G.    A.    Mil.  hell,    prrsirleiit;    H. 
iie<rttHr>'.      Altonuy    to    accept    senlce 
Commissi!  ntr   t^f   Insurance, 

CA.SH    TAPITAI..    $200,000. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums    oiln-r   iIl-im    i*ri>etual6 $ 

Rents    and    liitcrest 

From    ail    other    vouices 


M.  K*lvey. 
>Uiine3ota* 


270,350.70 

16.467  ii4 

1,202.84 


.$      288,020.5a 


Total   Incnme 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1906. 

Amount   raid   f.  r   Ics.^es $       185.397.11 

«<.iniiiissi<n!<    aiiii    Im  faTage 72,794.77 

Sal^nts   and  fees  of  officers,   ac<nt*  and 

eini.lojes    6,991.00 

TaxtN.   ftee.    rente   and  other  real   estate 

exixnsn    6.875.94 

Pividends   and   Interest 20.0ii0.00 

All  other  dUbursciDcnts 5.641.23 


Total    dUbursements. 


,$      297.700,09 


Escras  ot  disbursements  nvir  lnrome..,.( 
ASSFTS  DEC.  31.   1908. 

Bonds   and   siockii    owned $ 

Ca.-sh  In  office  ai.d  in  bJink 

Acci-uetl    lnl»r««t    and     rrntfc 

Prcmltims  In  course  of  collection 

All   other  at'.mitted   ass«<« 

I»eiluct     spe<'lal     tleposit     less    $46,406,55 
llablUtj-    tl;erecn 


9.679.47 

398,470,00 
33.04.-1.11 
4.9.-i5.83 
55.283.42  «' 

506,48      m 

I22.310.9s/ 


<;/!- 


Total  admitted  assets I 

Asseto  not   admitted II46,89'j.56 

LIABILITIES   DEC.    31,    1908. 

t'npald   If-Sfces    and   claims | 

Uelr.surance    reserve    

Salaries,    oxperises,    taxes.    dlTldends   and 

interest  due    

Conimlsslon   and   brolterage 

All    other    UabiUUes 

Capital   f tock  paid    up 


369,949.89 


21.715.71 
125.302.  la 

4.900.00 

12,0.-i8.38 

3,722.18 

200,000.00 


Total  llatlUUe*  Including  capital t      367,748.37 


Net    suTTilus    

RISKS  AND    PREMIUMS, 

Fire   risks   written   during   the  y 

Premiums   retclved   thereon   .. . 

Net   amount  in  f'  rce  at   end  of 

BUSINESS  IN   MINNEt 

Fire  Kixks— 

niiiks    written    

Premiums   received 

Ixisses  incarrcti 

Lessee   raid        ■  •  •  9 

.\nioijn;  at  risk 

state   of    MinnescU,    Pcpartmir 

I  Herely  CerUfy,  That  the  a 
AdlrondacU  liitunnce  company 
iHcirr.Ur  ilsl.  1908,  of  which 
str«cf.  li.ia  been  received  and 
ment  and  dttly  approved  by  m 
JOH 
Couuxiii 


78.65 


1908 
ar. , . 


$         68  9" 
BUSINESS. 

.  ..$22,914,124.00 

39:1. 918.71 

the  rear.    12,588,492.00 
OTA   IN    1908. 

$       69O.fir.0.(i0 

io,-eo.36 

2,117.79 

2.167,89 

516,466.00 

t    of    Insurance. 

inual  statement   tpf  the 

for   the   year   eniUng 

the   above   Is   an    ab- 

filed    in    tlUs    depart - 


N  A.    HAKTIGAN, 

AioiiCi   of   lii^iur^.ce. 


Net    surplus $  2.201. M 

RISKS    AND    PREMIUMS.    1908    BUSINESS. 

Fire  rbks  written  during  the  year $28,206,564.00 

Premiums   received   there*  n 507.308. 26 

Net  amf'Unt  In  f(.rce  at   end  <(  the  year.    14. 124. 385. 00 
BUSINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN   1908. 

Fire    lUskb  — 

Uisks     written      $      748  S84.0O 

Premiums   received 15,65.1,62 

Losses  ii'curred   3.3ui.l0 

LOSS'S    paid    3.401.10 

Amount  at  risk   I44,l««.0« 

State   of    .Mlnnesfta.    I>«p.^^tracnt    of   In«iiran<<c. 

I  Hereby  CerUly.  That  llw  annual  stateramt  of  tiM 
Lumber  Insurance  <ompai.y.  lor  the  ye«r  eliding  U«- 
iemb«r  31st.  IHt'S.  t)f  wnlch  the  aliove  is  an  ab- 
stract, has  been  re«ci<cd  «ik1  fileil  in  ttUs  tle« 
iianmciil   aud  dul>'   approved   by  ue. 

JOHN  A.    HAKTIGA.N, 
Commlsklunei    of    Iiururano*. 


m  W  I — f*.-"***^  ■ 


1 


"  r 


— 


V 


14 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:        SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


THE  EVENING  HERALD 

AX    IN1>KPEXDEXT    NKWSPAPmt. 


Published  at  Herald  Bldg.,     First  St.  Op.  P.O.  Siiuare. 
TIIK    HKKALD    COMPANY. 

Phones:     Counting  room.  324:     Editorial  rooms,1126. 


SUBSCRII^TION  RATES  PAYABLE  IN  ADVANCE 

liiiJod  States  ami  Canada,   Postage  Proi>«l<^- 

Daily,    per    year.    In    advance *o'on 

Paily.   six    montlis,    in    advance -•   " 

lOaily.   thre<?   month.s.    in   advance '  "L' 

Daily,   one    month,    in    advance *   ** 

Entered    at  Duluth  Postoffice  as  Second-Class  Matter 


DULU-H  WEEKLY  HE^^ALD. 

P«r    yoar,    in    advance '^rn 

Six    months,    in    advance "^^ 

Throi*   montlis.    in  advance •^** 

Entered  at  Duluth  Postoffice  as  Second-Class  Matter 


BY  CARRIER,  W  THE  CITY.  Wi  CENTS  A  WEEK 
evi:j;v  Evrixixt;— delivered. 

Single    c;ipy,     daily *   •**' 


be  a  clerk.  He  kept  on  doing  it  until  he  owns 
the  busincs.s  that  he  u.scd  to  run  errands  for.  The 
principle  worked  so  well  in  business  that  he  tried 
it  in  politics.  He  tried  to  make  up  his  mind  what 
was  right  in  politics  and  then  he  worked  for  it, 
with  the  result  that  he  is  the  leader  of  the  reform 
forces  in  one  of  the  strongest  reform  wards  of 
Philadelphia,  a  ward  that  would  not  be  a  reform 
ward  for  a  minute  if  it  were  not  for  the  applica- 
tion of  Mr.  Wright's  simple  principle. 

There  are  thousands  of  errand  boys,  clerks, 
salesmen,  mechanics  and  men  of  all  classes  as 
well  as  prominent  business  men  and  statesmen, 
who  are  thinking  what  is  right  and  trying  to  do 
it  these  days  and  the  effect  is  very  plain  to  be 
seen  in  the  constantly  increasing  demand  for  higher 
ideals  of  conduct  in  business,  political  and  social 
life. 

Every  little   bit  helps. 


One    montli  . 
Three     months. 
Six     njonths.  .  . 
One    year 


TO  SUBSCRIBERS. 

It  Is  Important  when  desiring  the  address  of  your 
papei-  changed  to  give  both   old  and  new  addresses. 

TWO  CONSTRUCTIONISTS. 

A  little  more  than  two  years  ago  Thomas  F. 
Cole  and  Joseph  B.  Cotton  of  this  city,  the  former 
president  ui  the  Oliver  Iron  Mining  company,  the 
iron  mining  arm  oi  the  Steel  corporation,  and  the 
latter  the  general  counsel  for  the  Steel  corpora- 
tion iu  this  section,  went  East  and  laid  before  the 
oftici.ils  of  the' company  a  plan  to  establish  a  steel 
plant  at  Duluth.  The  officials  of  the  company  in 
the   East  did  not  believe  in  the  practicability  of  a 

steel  plant  in  MinneS'.ta.  but  they  had  the  utmost  |       „  .  . 

faith  in  the  judgment  and  business  acumen  of  Mr.  '  public  sight  as  possible.  When  they  stand  out  in 
Cole  and  Mr.  Cotton,  They  had  tried  these  gen  j  naked  truth  where  everybody  can  see  them,  these 
mmcn  many  times  and  had  not  found  them  want-    inequalities  are   so  great   and   so  unjust   that   they 

almost   compel   action  of  them.selves. 

Northern  Minnesota  has  made  progress  with 
the  greatest  difficulty.  Having  a  territory  of  won- 
derful resources  to  develop  it  has  i>een  able  to 
secure  what  it  needs  from  the  state  only  by  long 
continued  campaigns,  the  state  grudgingly  yielding 


reckless  extravagance  which  is  always  attendant 
upon  man  when  he  has  unlimited  funds, to  draw 
upon   without   cost    to  himself.  • 

Minnesota  cannot  '*get  even"  with  the  "steel 
trust"  by  the  tonnage  tax  bludgeon;  the  blows  ol 
that  bludgeon   fall   only   upon  it^  own  citizens. 


ing  L'nd.-r  Mr.  Cole's  direction,  and  with  Mr. 
Cott.)n's  coun^l.  a  most  marvelous  development 
had  been  brought  about  in  the  mining  .>f  iron; 
methods  of  mining  had  been  vastly  improved  and 
the  mining  properties  of  the  corporation  had  been 
enormously  increased  in  extent  and  value.  The 
judgment  of  Mr.  Cole  and  the  advice  of  Mr.  Cot- 
ton had  m  in  every  instance  proved  -wise  and 
profitable.  Other  ventures  which  they  had  doubted 
liad.  under  the  brilliant  management  of  these  men, 
become  vastly  protitable,  and  they  therefore  list- 
ened to  the  ppjrposition  of  their  Minnesota  chiefs 
for  a  steel  plant  in  Minnesota  with  respect  if  not 
approval  So  insistent  and  so  conttdent  were  Mr. 
Cole  and  Mr.  Cotton,  that  a  committee  was  finally 
sent  to  Minnesota  to  examine  into  the  feasibility 
of  the  proposition.  The  result  was  the  decision 
to  establish  a  $5,iXK3.'X>0  plant  at  Duluth.  This 
decision  was  arrived  at  upon  the  initiative  and 
urging  of  Mr.  Cole  and  Mr.  Cotton,  and  almost 
against  the  better  judgment  of  the  Eastern  offi- 
cials of  the  company.  In  two  years,  however,  the 
availability  of  Duluth  as  a  site  for  a  steel  plant 
has  so  grown  upon  the  officials  of  the  corporation 
that  the  decision  has  now  been  reached  to  spend 
at   least  $25 .^KX),!^!   upon   the   plant. 

This  is  one  thing  that  Thomas  F.  Cole  and 
Joseph  B.  Cotton  have  accomplished  for  Duluth 
and  Minnesota.  These  men  are  now  both  severing 
their  coiniection.  v.-ith  the  Steel  corporation,  but 
it  is  pleasant  to  know  that  both  of  thetn  expect  to 
remain  in  Duluth.  and  make  this  their  home  and 
their  business  headquarters. 

Mr.  Cole  has  been  actively  identified  with  rail- 
road  and    mining   interests   in   the    Lake    Superior 


HIS  25-CENT  FEE. 

"Not  only  was  Dr.  Bull  one  of  the  greatest 
operating  surgeons  that  ever  lived,  but  what  a 
man  he  was!"  So  wrote  one  who  knew  the  great 
physician,  to  the  New  York  Evening  Post,  telling 
the  story  of  Dr.  Bull's  25-cent  fee.  A  young  East 
Side  physician  had  come  to  Dr.  Bull  for  advice 
concerning  a  case  that  he  had.  A  little  girl  must 
die  unless  operated  upon  at  once  and  the  attending 
physician  felt  himself  in  need  of  greater  knowledge 
bef'>re  attempting  the  delicate  operation.  Instea«l 
of  giving  the  advice  Dr.  Bull  gave  himself;  he 
went  with  the  attending  physician,  saw  the  patient, 
and  himself  performed  the  operation  on  the  spot. 
The  family  was  utterly  poor  and  as  the  great  sur- 
geon left  the  house  the  father  forced  into  his  hand 
all  the  feee  that  he  had  to  give,  a  25-cent  piece. 
Dr.  Bull  accepted  it  and  went  away,  better  paid 
than  in  many  cases  when  he  had  left  the  operating 
table  with  a  fat  fee  in  his  pocket.  This  little  story 
is  but  one  of  many  that  might  be  told  of  Dr.  Bull, 
who  was  a  "doctor  of  the  old  school"  in  greatness 
of  his  heart,  as  well  as  a  great  surgeon,  one  of 
the    greatest    that    the   age   has   known. 

It  is  very  pleasant  to  know  this  little  story 
of  Dr.  Bull's  25-cent  fee  and  to  know  that  the 
great  and  noble  calling  of  medicine  has  very  many 
Dr.  Bulls,  very  many  great  physicians  and  sur- 
geons who  are  content  with  25-cent  fees,  and 
with  no  fees  at  all,  if  only  they  are  able  to  make 
human  suffering  somewhat  less  and  save  some 
lives,  however  humble.  No  6ther  calling  has  so 
many  great-hearted  men.  It  is  not  alone  the 
great  surgeon  that  honors  his  'profession  by  the 
giving  of  his  skill  freely  to  those  who  have  noth- 
ing with  which  to  pay  him  but  blessings.  Thou- 
sands of  doctors,  unknown  to  fame,  are  daily 
dicing  deeds  of  mercy  as  great  as  that  of  Dr.  Bull's. 
But  for  them  this  world  woujd  be  a  hard  place 
for  the  poor.  They,  too,  give  toythe  meanest  that 
needs  it  their  best  of  service,  and -that  daily.  They, 
too.  have  their  25-cent  fee. 

Here's  to  the  doctors,  who  are  not  only  doctors, 
:.    little   at    a    time.      All    this    because    the    vothig   ^^^^   ^^.,^^^  ^^^^^^^   ^,^^y  ^^^j 


REAPPORTIONMENT, 
liso!        The    plain    duty    of    the    Icgi.-lature    is    to    pass 

2.60  i  at    this    session    a    reapportionment    bill    that    will 

5  00 

afFord  substantial  relief  from  the  present  inequali- 
ties of  representation  in  the  legislature. 

There  is  absolutely  no  reason  why  this  should 
not  be  done.  There  is  only  the  excuse  that  such 
a  reapportionmeftt  involves  the  doing  away  with 
a  few  representatives  now  elected  from  the  south- 
ern part  of  the  state.  Some  members  of  the  legis- 
lature will  be  legislated  out  of  office. 

It  is  a  pretty  poor  sort  of  a  man  who  cannot 
perform  the  dutj'  of  his  office  as  he  has  solemnly 
sworn  to  perform  it.  simply  because  he  may 
thereby  lose  some  political  privileges  which  do 
not   belong   to   nim. 

The  inequalities  of  the  present  apportionment 
have  been  shown  again  and  again.  Nobody  denies 
them.  But  there  is  a  very  manifest  attempt  to 
forget  them  and  to  keep  them  as  much  out  of  the 


power  of  the  state  in  the  legislatui'e  is  held  by  that 
one-third  of  the  state  which  has  none  of  these 
problems  of  development.  Less  than  one-half  of 
the  population  of  the  state  has  considerably  more 
than  one-half  of  the  members  of  the  legislature. 
So  long  as  this  condition  continues,  so  long  must 
Minnesota  make  but  halting  progress  in  its  devel- 
opment. A  just  apportionment  of  representatives 
and  senators  would  mean  a  state  committed  irre- 
vocably to  the  policy  of  making  the  very  utmost 
of  all  its  wonderful  natural  resources. 

Justice    and    practical    necessity    both    demand 
a  thorough  going  reapportionment  at   once. 


HURTING  THE  WRONG  MAN. 

The  Herald  cartoon  of  yesterday  exactly  repre- 
sents the  facts  in  the  tonnage  tax  agitation.  It  is 
not  the  "steel  trust"  that  will  suiter  if  this  iniqui- 
tous tax  becomes  a  law,  but  the  business  interests 
of  Northern  Minnesota,  as  well  as  the  welfare  of 
the    entire   state. 

In  the  hostility  which  has  sprung  up  against 
the  trusts  because  of  the  many  wrongs  they  have 
thrust  upon  the  people,  the  Steel  corporatism  is 
of  course  included,  and  the  people  of  the  state 
imagine  that  in  enacting  a  tonnage  tax  law  they 
are  ''getting  even"  in  some  measure  by  delivering 
a  body  blow  to  the  "steel   trust."     No  idea  could 


region  for  thirty-nine  years.  For  many  years  past  ^^^^^-^^^^  ^^  ^^,-^^^  mistaken.  If  the  steel  trust  is 
he  has  been  in  charge  of  the  interests  of  the  Steel  j  ^.^^^  others  of  its  kind  it  will  be  able  to  make  up 
corporation  in  this  territory,  which  under  his  direc- j  ^^^  ^j^^  ^^^^^  j^  j^^,  ^^  p^^^^  ^^  matter  what  those 
tion  have  grown  to  be  one  of  the  greatest  business  ,  ^^^^^  ^^^^^  ^^^  ^,^  ^^^^^^  j^^^  ^,^^  ^^^^  discovered 
interests  in  the  world.  Mr.  Cole  has  also  mter-  j  ^j^^^  ^^^^  ^^  _^j..  ^^jj  .^,^  ^^  j^-^  dividends  when  its 
ested  himself  heavily  in  various  copper  properties' 
in  different  parts  of  the  country  and  has  made  this 
city  the  headquarters  for  those  interests.  He  is 
also  interested  very  largely  in  other  business  enter' 
prises  in  Duluth.  A  man  so  situated,  and  of  such 
capabilities,  must  inevitably  have  much  to  do  with 
the  upbuilding  of  the  city  in  which  he  lives,  and 
such  has  been  the  case  of  Mr.  Cole  in  the  largest 

measure. 

Joseph    B.    Cotton,  chief   counsel   for   the   Steel 
corporation    here,    has    been    connected    with    the 


taxes  were  heavy  as  when  they  were  light.  We 
may  be  able  to  regulate  trusts  and  curb  their 
abuses,  but  we  cannot  decrease  their  profits  by 
increasing  their  expenses. 

So  far  as  punishing  the  Steel  corporation  is 
concerned,  the  tonnage  tax  club  will  not  be  a  whit 
more  effective  than  if  it  were  a  wisp  of  straw. 
But  to  the  business  men  of  Northern  Minnesota 
and  to  the  permanent  welfare  of  the  state  of  Min- 
nesota it  is  a  club  which  descends  upon  them  with 
crushing  force.  It  is  absolutely  impossible  for 
mining  interests  of  the  Lake  Superior  region  for  |  ^^^.^^^^  ^^  ^j^^.^,^  j^^  ^^.^.  section  of  the  state  if 
sixteen    years    and    as    such    has    been    not    only    a    ^^^^  tonnage  tax  bill  becomes  a  law.     Already  the 

tonnage  tax  agitation  and  the  vote  of  last  Wednes- 
day has  paralyzed  business  as  a  hundred  presi- 
dential elections  and  a  hundred  tariff  bills  could 
not.  The  business  men  of  this  section  fear  the 
tonnage  tax  bill  as  they  would  a  venomous  snake. 
;  They  do  not  know  where  it  will  strike,  or  when. 
If  double  taxation,  as  provided  in  the  tonnage  tax 
bill,  is  declared  unconstitutional,  which  form  of 
taxation  will  remain,  the  tonnage   tax  or   the   ad 


lawyer    and    counselor,    but    a    man    whose    con- 
structive   ability    has    had    much    to    do    with    the 
amazing   development    of   iron    mining   here,    until 
the    Lake    Superior    region   has   become    the   chief 
iron   mining   region   of  the   earth.     In   deciding  to  | 
devote  all   his  time  to  his  ow  n  interests,  Mr.  Cot-  j 
ton   has  also  decided  to  remain  in    Duluth,  which  j 
■will    thus    continue    to   profit    from    his   ability    in 
the  future  as  in   the  past. 

It   is    such    constructive   citizenship   as    that    of 
Mr.  Cole  and  Mr.  Cotton  that  Duluth  needs;  it  can- 


MR.  MILLER'S  EXPLANATION. 

C.  B.  Miller,  the  Eighth  congressional  district's 
new  representative  in  Washington,  offers  an  "ex- 
planation" of  his  failure  to  act  in  any  way  with  the 
insurgents  upon  the  matter  of  the  revision  of  the 
rules,  which  is  made  up  of  a  number  of  words 
with   the   explanation   left   out. 

Mr.  Miller  says  that  having  gone  into  the  cau- 
cus he  had  to  vote  for  the  old  house  rules.  There 
will  be  few  who  will  agree  with  that  conclusion; 
but  if  the  conclusion  be  correct,  what  did  Mr. 
Miller  go  into  the  caucus  for?  He  is  a  man 
equipped  with  at  least  ordinary  reasoning  powers 
and  he  knew  perfectly  well  before  he  went  into 
the  caucus,  as  every  other  person  in  the  country 
of  the  age  of  discretion  and  sound  mind  knew, 
that  the  caucus  would  be  controlled  by  an  over- 
whelming majority  in  favor  of  the  old  rules.  If 
he  was  opposed  to  the  old  rules,  why  did  he  go 
where  he  knew  he  would  be  bound  to  support 
those   rules? 

Mr.  Miller  says  that  the  changes  made  in  the 
rules  meet  with  his  perfect  approval,  yet  he  did 
everything  that  lay  in  his  power  to  prevent  the 
adoption  of  those  changes.  Pledged  in  his  cam- 
paign to  a  revision  of  the  rules,  he  gives  no  aid 
whatever  to  those  who  fought  for  revision.  When 
the  battle  was  joined  he  was  found  in  the  ranks  of 
the  enemy. 

The  course  taken  by  the  Eighth  congressional 
district's  new  representative  in  congress  is  most 
disappointing  to  the  district.  There  will  be  thou- 
sands who  will  excuse  his  vole  for  Cannon,  as 
opposition  would  have  been  unavailing  under  the 
circumstances,  but  deliberately  and  completely 
breaking  faith  with  the  people  of  the  district  is 
a  very  different  matter.  If  every  other  congress- 
man were  to  take  Mr.  Miller's  position  in  this 
matter  the  rules  would  never  have  been  revised; 
if  two  others  only  had  taken  Mr.  Miller's  position 
last  Tuesday,  the  changes  which  Mr.  Miller  says 
please  him  so  much  would  not  have  been  made, 
and  the  country  would  be  today  just  as  firmly  in 
the  despotic  grip  of  the  speaker  as  it  has  been  for 
many  years  past. 


HOTEL  GOSSIP. 


valorem  tax?     If  the  former,  the  iron  country  will 
be   left   in   a   condition   in   which   it   will  be  neces- 


not    have    too   many   such    men.      Its    possibilities   ^^^^  ^^^  j^  ^^  ^^^  j^^  business  property  from  30  to 
by  reason  of  its  tremendous  natural  resources  and  j  - 
its   strategic   location   are   almost   infinite.;    it   also 


has  the  men  big  enough  to  realize  its  possibilities, 
and  its  destiny  is  sure. 

1 

EVERY  LITTLE  HELPS. 

There  were  never  so  many  people  thinking  so 
much  about  what  is  right  in  business  and  politics 
and  social  life  as  there  are  today.  Time  used  to 
be  when  the  business  man  and  the  statesman  and 
the  professors  in  the  universities  read  the  editor- 
ials in  the  newspapers  but  nowadays  pretty  much 
everybody  reads  them  and  thinks  about  the  con- 
ditions   that   give    rise    to    editorial    comment. 

There  is  no  more  hopeful  sign  of  the  times 
than  this  general  interest  in  all  matters  that  go 
to  make  up  this  complex  life  of  ours.  More  peo- 
ple constantly  thinking  about  what  is  right  is  a  j 
good   sign. 

Complimented  upon  his  political  shrewdness, 
Andrew  R.  Wright,  who  began  life  as  an  errand 
boy  at  $2.50  a  week  and  who  is  now  president  of 


50  per  cent  to  carry  on  the  schoola^^and  the  local 
government.  This  is  only  an  imaginary  evil,  some 
may  say.  But  can  anybody  say  that  it  is  not  a 
possible  evil?  And  how  many  other  sections  of 
the  state  would  want  to  put  themselves  in  a  possi- 
tion  where  their  taxes  might  possibly  become 
from  30  to  50  per  cent?  It  may  be  all  right  from 
a  purely  selfish  view  for  a  man  in  Southern  Minne- 
sota to  reason  '  that  it  does  not  matter  to  him 
if  a  business  man's  property  is  placed  in  jeopardy 
by  uncertain  legislation,  but  how  would  the  South- 
ern Minnesota  man  feel  if  it  was  his  property 
that  was  endangered? 

The  entire  state  of  Minnesota  will  suffer  if  the 
tonnage  tax  becomes  a  law.  In  the  first  place  it 
will   be   notice   to   outside  capital   that   if  it  comes 


Cannonism  was  only  scotched,  not  killed. 

The   tonnage   tax   is   said  to   weigh   heavily   on 
the   consciences   of   some   statesmen. 


April  ought  to  be  a  smiling  month  this  year. 
The  time  when  the  legislature  adjourns  is  no  time 
for  tears. 


The  interests  in  chorus:  "What  a  model  mes- 
sage." Taft's  tariff  message  was  the  first  mes- 
sage to  congress  in  a  long,  long  time,  that  did  not 
hit  them. 


We  wonder  what  these  "international  bowlers," 
who  are  now  ending  their  fourth  week  of  the 
tournament  at  Pittsburg,  do  for  a  living  when 
they   are    at    home. 


Ten  years  is  a  long  time  to  spend  in  prison, 
but  prison  is  the  only  place  in  the  world  for  the 
man  who  forgets  that  the  sacred  duty  of  man- 
hood is  to  protect  womanhood. 


This  is  a  great  year  for  centenary  anniversaries 
and   the  present   week  has   contributed  something 

«...   ^^   ..v^w^v.   .^   .-.r.._.   -     -    in  the  way  of  interest,  containing  as  it  does   the 

to    Minnesota,    special    forms    of    taxation    will    be  j  birthdays  of   Grovcr   Cleveland   and  William   Jen- 
devised    to   punish    it.      Capital   and   manufacturing  j  „ings  Bryan.     The  latter,  like  ex-President  Roose- 
.,.      •         -^    i_i         I.      1. :* .      .      .      .    m _ij    t  1:1,.,  1.:.^    „!,.„  ^^^^. 


enterprises  will  inevitably  seek  some  territory 
where  there  is  more  hopeful  prospect  of- a  square 
deal,  and  the  tremendous  industrial  evolution  which 

uK.j  «.v  s'—  «  "  — "  — • -  "  f "•    »s  H*M».-  making  i^s  beginning  in  Minnesota  will  be 

a  great  retail  grocery  concern  in  Philadelphia  said,  |  simply  one  wf  those  saddest  of  things  that  might 
the  other  day  "I  don't  know  that  it  takes  much  j  have  been.  In  the  second  place,  any  system  of  tax- 
political  shrewdness  to  make  up  your  mind  what  j  ation  that  draws  practically  all  the  state's  revenue 
is  right  and  then  work  for  it."  That  is  what  Mr. 
Wright  has  been  doing  all  his  life — making  up  his 
niind  what  was  right  and  then  working  for  it.     He 


velt,  is  just  50  years  old,  and  like  him,  also  appears 
to    be   in   the   full   flower   of   vigorous   manhood. 


from  a  small  section  of  the  state  is  thoroughly  bad, 
for  it  invites  to  arbitrary  and  unjust  additions  to 
that  tax  by  the  overwhelming  majority  who  do  not 


The  announcement  that  work  is  to  be  begun 
upon  the  steel  plant  as  soon  as  possible  this 
spring,  is  good  news  in  Duluth.  The  plans  for 
the  Minnesota  plant  have  steadily  grown  in  scope 
and  there  is  good  reason  to  believe  that  when  the 
plant  is  finally  finished  it  will  be  one  of  the  largest 
in  the  country,  if  indeed,  it  does  not  become  the 


did  it  when  he  was  an  errand  boy  and  he  got  to   have  to  pay  it  and  opens  wide  the  door  tQ  every .  principal  plant  of  the  Steel  corporation. 


When  asked  his  opinion  yesterday  of 
the  result  of  the  tonnage  tax  hill, 
should  the  senate  concur  In  the  action 
taken  by  the  lower  house,  D.  D.  Mc- 
Kachin  of  Hlbblng.  head  of  the  Itasca 
Mercantile  company,  who  Is  one  of 
the  representative  business  men  of 
the  range,  slated  that  It  would  simply 
rob  St.  Louis  county  of  Its  fair  and 
just  share  of  local  taxes,  and  cast  a 
blight  on  the  schools  and  other  public 
institutions  that  are  supported  by 
county   taxes. 

Mr.  McEachln  was  at  the  Spalding 
yesterday.  He  stated  that  it  Iwats 
i»othing  more  than  robbing  the  schools 
and  other  public  Institutions  of  the 
ranges,  of  ta.v  revenue  that  they  were 
justly  entitled  to.  and  upon  which  they 
depended  for  their  maintenance.  Mr. 
McF.achin  believes  that  the  result  of 
this,  if  the  tonnage  tax  measure  be- 
Lumes  a  law,  will  not  only  be  to  hurt 
imn  easurablv  the  business  of  the  iron 
ranges,  but  to  also  injure  the  ef- 
ficiency of  the  public  institutions  that 
have  depended  in  the  past  for  their 
maintenance,  upon  the  revenue  accru- 
ing   from    the    iron    industry. 

"We  think  it  unspeakable."  said  Mr. 
McEacliin.  when  asked  the  opinion  of 
tlif  range  people,  of  the  action  of  the 
lower  house.  "It  is  of  vital  interest 
to  us.  this  revenue  from  the  iron  In- 
diislrv,  and  by  diverting  the  taxes  to 
the  state  treasury,  the  legislature  will 
be  taking  away  irom  our  institutions 
that  which  is  justly  theirs.  We  can 
see  no  fairness,  no  justica  in  the  ac- 
ti  >:i  taken  by  the  lower  branch  of  the 
state  legislature.  The  results,  if  the 
senate  slioukl  concur  in  the  action  01 
the  house,  would  simply  be  prostrating 
to  the  ranges. 

•I.'>-  great  injury  will  lie  not  only 
in  the  depriving  of  the  institutions  of 
the  iron  coKntry  of  their  just  share  of 
the  la  .  It  venue,  but  it  will  also,  in 
my  opinion,  have  a  very  bad  effect 
upon  1  usiness.  We  look  at  it,  merely 
as  It  cum;  of  taking  something  that  is 
ours  bv  al"  right  ai\d  justice,  to  lessen 
the    taxes  lu   other   parts   of   the   state. 

(Jeorgo  Shea,  city  attorney  of  Vir- 
ginia, who  was  at  the  St.  I.ouis  yester- 
day, was  another  range  man  who  is  of 
the  opinion  that  tlie  passage  of  the 
tonnage  tax  intasure  will  have  a  most 
depressing  effect  upon  business  condi- 
tions upo.i   tlie  range. 

"I  am  afraid,  if  the  measure  is 
passed  by  llie  senate,  tliat  It  will  have 
the  tendency  to  injure  greatly  all 
t  lasses  of  business  upon  the  ranges.' 
said  .Mr.  Sliea.  "Of  course  the  people 
of  the  ranges  have  the  hope  that  the 
senat<^  \vill  not  pass  the  measure.  It 
means  more  to  us  than  any  one  who 
does  not  live  upon  the  range  can  re- 
alize. Ilh  effect  upon  tlie  industrial  sit- 
uation upon  the  range  cannot  be  fore- 
told, but  most  of  the  people  of  the 
ranges  are  of  the  opinion  tliat  if  the 
tonnage  lax  measure  becomes  a  law.  it 
will  paralyze  all  classes  of  business.*' 
«       «       * 

Ther^'  was  a  paliietic  solemnity  per- 
vading I  he  Lenox  hotel  yesterday,  over 
the  untimely  passing  away  of  little 
"I'ete."  the  tame  ferret,  wliose  shuffling 
eft  was  grapl.kally  described  in  the 
morning  paper  yesterday. 

Al  Kibenack.  to  whom  the  little  ani- 
mal was  affectionately  attached,  was 
p.Trtic  uhirly  affected  when  he  learnt  1 
of  the  death  of  the  rodent  chaser.  He 
did  not  know  what  had  become  of  the 
pet  until  he  recogiiized  tlie  picture  of 
the  cari-ass  in  the  morning  sheet.  It 
was  a  ver.v  lifelike  portrait  of  little 
"Pete."  and  despite  the  exciting  cap- 
tion over  the  picture,  which  misled 
inanv  wiio  were  not  personally  ac- 
Quainlei  with  little  "Pete,"  Mr.  I^lben- 
ack   recognized  his  pet   immediately. 

•  •      • 

Texas  sure  must  be  reforming.  C.  J. 
Nesbit,  Jr.,  of  St.  Louis,  who  is  at  the 
McKaj',  has  in  his  possession  a  letter 
from  a  friend,  written  upon  a  letter 
lit  ad  of  the  Commercial  club  of  Graham. 
Tex.  I'pon  the  letter  head  is  set  forth 
some  of  the  attractions  of  the  young 
and  thriving  Graham. 

It  says: 

"Graham  has  no 
negroe.s;  it  has  good 
thurches." 

Gr.ahaia  according  to  the  figures  set 
foith  upon  the  letter  head  of  the  Com- 
mercial club,  possesses  a  population  of 
2. ,500  people.  It  prides  itself,  according 
to  the  statements  of  the  Commercial 
club,  with  having  no  places  where  you 
can  drop  in  of  a  hot  and  sultry  after- 
noon, or  perchance  early  of  a  cold 
morning,  and  Imbibe  any  of  the  stuff 
that  cools  or  warms,  in  inverse  ratio  to 
the   weather  conditions. 

Not  so  many  years  ago  this  would 
have  been  no  recommendation  for  any 
Texas  town.  Good  whisky  and  free  and 
1  igii  p!ay.  were  two  of  the  cardinal 
recommendations  in  the  days  before 
tne  reform  wave  swept  over  the  broad 
acres  of  the  I^one  Star  state. 

But  now  there  is  apparently  a  pride 
of  moral  rectitude  asserting  Itself  in 
the  citizens  of  the  state  that  once  was 
a  dangerous  stamijlng  ground,  unless 
you  were  quick  witli  the  trigger  finger, 
flack  brother,  but  demon  rum  lias  fared 
They  still  have  the  old  aversion  to  the 
formers. 

•  •       • 

At  the  Lenox:  Charles  W.  Saeman, 
Proctor;  H.  A.  Corning.  Minneapolis; 
K.  T.  Platts,  St.  Louis;  H.  L.  Siddall, 
Minneapolis;  J.  E.  Koper,  St.  Paul;  G. 
M.  Mills,  Pelican  Rapids;  C.  A.  Bueker, 
Dayton;  B.  H.  Bonner  and  wife,  Hlb- 
blng; K.  R.  Miller,  Grand  Forks;  F.  W. 
Dinglev  and  wife,  Ashland;  W.  C.  Phil- 
lips, lirainerd;  A.  J.  Willard,  Minne- 
apolis; A.  C.  Johnson,  Minneapolis;  A. 
R.  Brown,  St.  Paul;  Oscar  D.  Williams. 
Pittsburg;  W.  H.  Rich,  Boston;  William 
Hellin,  Bemidjl;  B.  H.  Clark.  Chicago; 
B.  E.  Canfield.  Chicago;  F.  A.  Raddell, 
Chicago;  J.  H.  Badin,  .Soo;  D.  G.  Currie. 
Chicago;  M.  L.  Ston^,  .St.  Paul;  W.  Get- 
tler,  Chicago;  D.  E.  Hickey,  St.  Paul; 
H.  A.  Whitney,  New  York;  F.  W. 
Stockwell.  Cohasset;  Joseph  Easla- 
brook.  Minneapolis;  A.  G.  Sawyer,  Chi- 
cago: J.  Ward.  New  York;  M.  Sullivan, 
New    York;    Neil    McKinley,    New    York. 

•  *       • 

At  the  St.  Louis:  O.  Gllberton, 
Grand  Forks:  W.  H.  Wood,  Minne- 
apolis; O.  A.  Wilkinson,  Cincinnati;  C. 
O.  Klelneck.  Cedar  Itaplds;  Charles 
Spendler,  Marquette:  I.  P.  Dickson,  Chi. 
cago;  George  Foley,  St.  Paul:  A.  Foley, 
St.  Paul;  C.  A.  McCurdy.  St.  Paul;  John 
Dwan,  Two  Harbors;  A.  J.  Pfantz, 
Stanley;  W.  H.  Itoss.  St.  Paul;  T.  R. 
Fahey,  Aitkin;  William  Dennis,  Hlb- 
blng; Anne  Johnstone,  Des  Moines;  S. 
H.  Date.  Floodwood;  A.  G.  Lingheed, 
Philadelphia:  Thomas  Shaw,  Waupan; 
A.  J.  Arrivee,  Grand  Forks;  Charles 
Robert,  Marquette;  Victor  Power,  Hib- 
bing;  J.  T.  Cassin,  Hibbing;  J.  P. 
Davern,  St.  Paul;  James  Boyle.  St. 
Paul;  George  Davis,  New  York:  Matt 
Haves.  St.  Paul;  J.  M.  Dickey,  St.  Paul; 
L.   H.  Minor.  Minneapolis. 

•  •       • 

At  the  Spalding:  E.  R.  Buell,  Min- 
neapolis; Al.  E.  Lippmann.  New  York; 
G.  F.  Lathrop.  Chicago;  Jacob  H.  Mor- 
ris. New  York;  O.  E.  Bendlx.  Chicago; 
W  G.  Ward.  New  York;  J.  H.  Ander- 
son. Chicago;  J.  E.  Lee.  Minneapolis;  J. 
C  Woodley.  Chicago;  Edwin  H.  Smith. 
New  York;  L.  L.  Carr.  New  York;  Mrs. 
W  B.  Wilson,  New  York;  J.  B.  Sheri- 
dan. Chicago;  F.  H.  Thompson.  New 
York;  Thomas  H.  Craig.  New  York;  S. 
D  DeMers.  .St.  Paul;  George  Ijce  Brown. 
St  Paul:  S.  Kelssel,  Chicago;  T.  J. 
Doyle,  Chicago;  S.  H.  Kirby,  Hibbing; 
John  A.  Redfern,  Hlbblng;  G.  L.  Wood- 
worth.  Iron  River;  Eugene  Van  Cleef, 
Chicago;  W.  H.  Bowen.  Minneapolis; 
G  H.  Dunstan,  Buffalo:  George  A. 
Raterman.  Chicago;  M.  F.  Kaln,  St. 
Paul;  Clinton  L.  Nichols.  Denver;  J.  H. 
Carllng,  Minneapolis. 

«       *       * 

At  the  McKay:  S. 
blng;  M.  Henderson, 
Grace  Llnd,  Winona; 
ford.  Big  Rapids,  Mich.;  Mrs.  L.  J. 
Miller.  Two  Harbors:  Welford  Nelson, 
Minneapolis;  W.  H.  Turman  and  wife. 
New  York;  Charles  Rudd,  Minneap- 
olis; A.  B.  Cohn,  New  York;  John  Cos- 
tello  and  wife.  Grand  Rapids;  Arthur 
S  Kitto,  Tower;  Mrs.  O.  Nichelson. 
Bayfield;  L.  E.  Koseth,  Fiau  Claire;  J. 
W.  Whittlesey.  Minneapolis;  Signa 
Lindgren,  Aurora;  Mrs.  A.  Nordstrom. 
Knife  River:  James  Gilland.  Hayward: 
John  Edstrom.  Mountain  Iron;  B.  I.,ar- 
son.  Proctor:  Mrs.  A.  Larson,  Mora;  S. 
E.  Sntvely.  Wlndom;  Miss  Lena  Evan- 
son,  Two   Harbors. 


saloon      and    no 
schools  and  good 


THE  WEAThlER. 


H.  Smith.  Hlb- 
Mountain  Ii'on; 
Miss    W.    Lang- 


Kair  ^VouIan'N   Slave. 

Drapery  Times:  But  for  the  Inven- 
tive faculty  of  man  in  the  matter  of 
l>minine  clothing,  how  would  fair 
wouiau  exiat  or  enjoy  life? 


CLOVDY 


'v    .  'f 


^' %?!•// 


J  i 


1.1 


Dulut 
enjoyin 
spring  1 
The  mi 
peratur 
night  % 
above  2 
the  enl 
map  fa 
a  comn 
experie: 
thing  1 
zero  w 
Arthur, 
minimum  last  night  was  6 
zero,   came   nearest  to   it. 

The  mild  temperatures  . 
to  continue  tonight  and 
with    eitli«r   snow    or   rain 

The    sun    rose    this    mori 

and    is    scheduled    to   go   di 

A    ytar   ago    today    the    ^ 

cl&iirty. 

.^Ir.  Richardson  says  of  ^ 
ditiiins: 

'B.irometric  depressions 
Rocky  mountains  the  lo 
sippl  valley  and  New  Er 
distiicts.  These  disturbs 
i'Cht  lain  or  snow  over  t 
and  eastern  portions  of  1 
gion.  Atlantic  and  Souther 
Pacific  districts.  The  bj 
highest  over  Western  Oi 
temperatures  have  fallen 
over  the  lake  region,  Cer 
and  Southwestern  states  a: 
rising  pressures,  while  f 
sures  in  the  Atl.antic  and 
the  Rocky  Moimtain  regloi 
west  are  attended  by  mil 
generally.  The  eosterly  r 
tlie  Rocky  mountain  dlsti 
doubtless  cause  some  rain 
the  Head  of  the  Lakes  du 
or   Sunday    night." 


h       is      still 
g  balmly 

emperature. 
nlmum  tem- 
e  here  last 
^'as  22  degs. 
ero.  Indeed. 
Ire  Weather 
lis  to  show 
unity  which 
iced  any- 
10  chilly  as 
jather.  Port 
where  the 
degs.  above 

ire  expected 
tomorrow, 
on  the  .side, 
ling  at  6:11 
)wn  at  6:20. 
leather    was 

ireather  con- 

overlle  the 
wer  Missis- 
gland  coast 
.nces  caused 
he  northern 
he  la^e  re- 
n  states  and 
irometer  Is 
itario.  The 
somewhat 
tral  valleys 
I  a  result  of 
lUlng  pres- 
Gulf   states. 

and  North- 
der  weather 
lovcment  of 
trbance    will 

or  snow  at 
ring  Sunday 


Following 
temperatures 

Aliil.  no     

.\-.;i.-Ml!o      

AUhiiU       

Ulsm:irok     

n<:,»ti)ii     

H'lffalo     

Cairo    

CiilffHry    

<'liiirIeaton     

Cliirxgu      

t'IncliiiiaU    

('r.iiporilla    

D.iVCTiport    

Diviver    

Detroit    

Oevil.'t   Lake    

iioiiKe   

imlutli  

IMniontoa   

M   Piiso  

^^l'a^.llMl     

Galveston     

(iniiiii  Haceti 

Hi  ecu  Bay  

Havre      

HelMiii    

Houglituii      

[lurm     

.lai-iunrivllld    

Kduiloopi     

Kansas    City    .... 

KntixvUlc     

La    Cruse    

Lander     

Uttle     Hock     

J..OS   .\tigfles   

Maruuette    

Mevtklne    Hat    ... 


were    last    ni flit's    lowest 


...42 

41 

.•>! 

....  28 

32 

28 

40 

....  22 

5S 

.t..32 

40 

.....W 

.30 

....28 

.30 

18 

20 

....22 
....18 

40 

20 

6B 

....24 

22 

....  26 

30 

10 

....28 

60 

30 

....3J 

50 

22 

r-?«. 

. .  . .  .jO 
....48 

26 

28 


Memphis      

Miles    Cll>    

.Milwaukee    

Mlnncilr.sa     

MikUiia    

Moiitgoineiy    

Moorlu-ail    

.\ew    Orlejiu    . 

New   Yurk   

I  Norfolk    

1  Nurtlifield     

NorUi    Pli.tte    ... 
i  Okliilioma      

Uiniiha 

PhiKiiU   

I'ierro   

Plnsl)urg     

.  Pi;rl  .\nli  ir  

I'ortliuul,    Or 

Prince    Al  jert    ... 

qii'.\p|>ell(     

lUplil    City    

St.    I.DVils    

St!    Paul    

Snn    Antoiito    .... 

Sun   Krni'.(  Isco    . . . 

Santa     Ve     

Sault   .>^le.    Marie. 
I  Shreveport     

.SimkHiie 
',  .Swift  Cur-eiit   . . . 

'  Wiuslilngtoii    

I  Wliiilta        

j  Wlli»t«n     

I  Wlniituiucca    . . . . 

I  Winnipeg    

1  Yelliivvstore    


.5fi 
.28 

.:;o 
.2i) 
.28 
..'A 
.22 
]63 
.36 
.'jO 
.24 
.34 
.41 
.28 
42 
.32 
.:42 
.  li 
..IS 

2<; 

.24 

.40 
.21; 

.04 
.44 
.18 
.14 
.62 
.34 
.28 
.AS 
.34 
.30 
.28 
.lit 
.2(5 


Department      of    Agriculi 
er       Bureau.       Duluth.       M 
20. — Forecasts      for    twenl: 
ending      at       7       p.       m.    S 
lull!.    Superior    and    vlclnil 
the  Mesaba  and  Vermilion 
Partly  cloudy  weather  ton 
piobably    rain    or    snow; 
peralure    tonight    25    to    30 
zero;   moderate  easterly  wi 
H.    W.    RICH 
Local 


ure,  Weat li- 
nn., March 
'-four  hours 
anday;  I>u- 
y,  including 
iron  ranges: 
gilt:  Sunday 
lowest  teni- 
degs  above 
nds. 

iRDSO.M, 
.i'orecaster. 


Chicago.  March  20. — F'orecast  for 
twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  p.  m. 
Sunday: 

Upper  Michigan — Partly  cloudy  to- 
night and  Sunday. 

Wisconsin — Partly  cloudy  with  pos- 
sibly snow  in  south  portion  tonight  or 
Sunday. 

Minnesota — Fair  tonig  it;  Sunday 
probably  rain   or  snow. 

North  Dakota — Threatering  weather 
with   rain    or   snow    tonigln    or   Sunday. 

• 

Tears,    Idle    Tearn. 
Tears,    Idle    tears.    1    know    not   what 
they    mean. 
Tears    from    the    depth    of    some    divine 

despair 
Rise    In    the    heart,    and   gather    to    the 

eyes, 
In  looking  on  the  haiipy  a  .itumn  fields. 
And   thinking  of   the  days   tliat   are   no 
more. 

Fresh  as  the  first  beam   flittering  on 

a    sail. 
That    Itrlngs    our    friends     jp    from    the 

under  Avorld; 
Sad  as  the  last  whicli  reddens  over  one 
That   sinks  with   all  we  lo  .'e  below   the 

verge — 
Si.  sad,  so  fresh,  the  days  that   are  no 

more. 

Ah,  sad  and  strange  as  in  dark  sum- 
mer dawns 

Tne  earliest  pipe  of  I  alf-wakened 
birds 

To   dying   ears,    when    unto   dying   eyes 

The  casement  slowly  griws  a  glim- 
mering   square; 

So  sad.  so  strange,  the  diys  that  are 
no  more. 

Dear    as    remembered      kisses      after 

death. 
And   sweet  as  those   by  hcpeless  fancy 

feigned. 
On    lips    that    are    for    others,    deep    as 

love. 
Deep    as    first    love,    and    wild    with    all 

regret — 
O  Death   in   Life,    the  days   that   are   no 

more! 

—ALFRED    TENNYSON. 


Rrflc«rtIou.<«    of    a    Da 

New^  York  Pre.s.s:  Hall 
ment  to  a  girl  of  being  In 
dering   if  she  really   is. 

Because  there  are  as  goi 
sea  as  ever  were  caught 
antee  that  you  will  catch 
Men  who  sneer  at  tli 
merely  trying  to  distract 
tion  from  the  fact  that  t 
spises    them. 

puzzling    thin 

to  guess  whe 

lying    more 


Tlie    most 
a  bargain  Is 
er    fellow    is 
you    are. 

A  woman 
men's  brains 
that    what    is 


could  realli 
if  they  coulo 
I)aid    for    in 


not  mere  material,  but  t 
capacity  to  make  other  w 
able  by  not  having  soni 
costly. 


ehelor. 

the    exclte- 
love  is  won- 

)d  fish  in  the 
Is    no    guar- 

any  of  them. 

3  world  are 
your    atlen- 

le    world   de- 

g  In  making 
ther  tiie  oth- 
or    less    than 

believe     in 

comprehend 

millinery    is 

he    potential 

omen    miser- 

ethlng     more 


Cruiii'M    KiioeeMM) 

Charleston  News  and  C 
sides  being  a  business 
best  type,  largely  intere 
alTairs  of  the  community  a 
ly  Identified  with  its  peoj 
affairs,  Mr.  Durant  is  a  gt 
fellow.  He  was  born  in  M 
he  couldn't  help  that,  and 
born  again  In  Charleston, 
was  altogether  to   his   llkl 

He  Is  not  exactly  "one  t 
saying  goes  In  these  part 
than  that,  If  anything  coi 
he  Is  one  of  us.  His  horn 
money  is  Invested  here, 
done  here.  He  Is  a  man 
and  refinement.  He  look 
dress  coat,  he  saws  lui 
potatoes,  strings  beans, 
rides  horseback,  drives  o 
rlage,  runs  an  automobll 
golf.  When  distinguished 
Into  this  port,  he  will  k 
meet  them  and  they  wil 
meet  him.  He  will  mak 
representative  of  the  go 
Washington  in  the  cerem. 
the  business  of  the  coUec 
make  the  people  of  this  t 
South  feel  that  In  his  app 
Taft  1T?  realizing  his  hlg 
this  government  is  their 
and  that  its  officera  In  th« 
their   officers." 

Thank  you.  Mr.   Taft.     S 
matlon  and  good  luck,   Mr 


ourier:  Be- 
man  of  the 
sted  in  the 
1(1  thorough- 
lie  in  all  its 
od  all-round 
Innesota.  but 
he  has  been 
S.   C,   which 

f  us,"  as  the 
5.  but,  better 
Id  be  better, 
i  Is  here,  his 
his  work  is 
of  education 
s  well  in  a 
nber.     plants 

hunts  deer, 
lit  In  a  car- 
e    and    plays 

people  come 
now  how  to 
be  glad  to 
'  a  dignified 
vernment  ac 
jnial  part  of 
lor,  and  will 
own  and  the 
ointment  Mr. 
h    aim    "that 

government. 
dr  states  are 

peedy  conflr- 
.   Durant. 


A  ToaMt. 

Fashion'.  Lovely    Dam; 

Pledge    in    sparkling 
Let  us  add   her  name 

To  the  Mu6es"  nine! 


wine! 


Though  the  lovely  Nir  e 

All  should  pass  away. 
Whv    should    woman    pine. 

If   but   Fashion   stay? 

Tho'  the  Muses'  lore 

Molder   on    the   shell. 
Still    may   she   adore 

In    Fashion's   glass— -Herself. 
— OLIVKU    UEKFORD    in    Collier's. 


1km 


Human  Types— The  Optimist. 

Excellent  creatures  the  optimists  are. 
Life  would  be  dull  and  dreary  without 
them.  They  redeeme  the  darkest  day 
from  utter  gloom,  the  most  painful 
situation  from  lieginning  a  source  of 
despondency  and  despair;  and  yet  cer- 
tain kinds  of  optimists  are  more  or 
less  exasperating  to  us  who  cannot 
follow  them  In  all  their  rainbow  chas- 
ing, and  in  their  pferslstent  pursuit  of 
the  pot  of  gold  that  lies  at  the  base 
of  the  rainbow.  One  optimist  of  my  ac- 
quaintance has  for  the  last  thirty  years 
been  periodlcallv  on  the  point  of  mak- 
ing at  least  $10,000  a  year.  That 
pleasant  consummation  was  just  In 
sight — so  clear  In  fact  to  his  vision 
that  he.  asked  his  friends  to  con- 
gratulate him.  But  tlie  years  have 
gone,  and  he  is  now  70  years  old.  and 
working  ten  hours  a  day  on  a  salary 
of  $6  a  week.  But  dear,  hopeful,  kind- 
ly,  aspiring  soul  that  he  is,  I  wouldn't 
for  the  world  ever  remind  him  of  tho 
number  of  times  when  he  has  Informed 
me  that  it  was  a  "dead  sure"  thing, 
and  tliat  this  time,  for  sure,  he  was 
going  to  have  all  the  money  he  needed. 
I  know  a  member  of  the  opposite  sex 
who  has  that  same  ebullient  disposi- 
tion. Schemes  without  number  take 
shape  and  float  through  her  brain;  but 
they  come  ui>  a.gainst  the  hard,  cold 
ttsts  of  life,  and  lo".  the  bubble  bursts. 
Nevertheless  you  cannot  repress  her. 
and  at  60  years  of  age  she  is  still 
one  of  the  most  cheerful,  hopeful,  sun- 
shine-dispensing persons  of  my  ac- 
qiialntance.  .\nd  why  should  I  of  less 
s.'ir.gulne  temperament,  chide  her  be- 
cause her  dreams  and  visions  have  so 
often  faded  Into  llie  light  of  common 
day?  And,  why.  forsooth,  should  I 
f.llow  myself  to  be  provoked  because 
of  her  unyielding  tendencv  to  hope  on 
.-<nd  hope  ever?  It  is  oniy  a  relic  of 
barbarism  In  me.  a  sign  of  my  very 
r.irtia'ly  sanctified  state  that  T  do  ever 
f*'el  a  passing  thrill  of  almost  savage 
satisfaction  that  the  optimists,  like  the 
r^pt  of  ns.  must  live  In  a  r>old.  cold 
world  whch  demands  that  every  fair 
vision,  every  large  hope,  shall  prove 
not  rnly  its  beauty,  but  Its  feasibility 
ai'd   i:tllity. 

The  only  thing  we  can  ask  of  ,iny 
optimist  is  that  he  should  never  over- 
look the  actual  amount  of  difficulty, 
ignorance,  suffering  .and  sin  in  the 
world.  You  may  build  a  verv  pretty 
philosophy  by  selecting  onlv  the  facts 
of  human  life  that  accord  with  vour 
theory  a.nd  by  leaving  out  all  that  mili- 
tate agaln.st  it;  bust  .-such  a  philosophy 
in  time  di.s.>iolves.  and  tlie  better  wav  Is 
to  .see  at  the  beginning  both  both  sides 
of  the  .shield,  tlie  number  of  divorces 
as  well  as  the  number  of  happv  m.iirl- 
ncres  tl-.o  re.  kb  s.s  '  a.  :  I'i.-e  of  humaii 
life  In  ilo>  ni'ncs.  on  railioads  as  well 
as  the  snlendi  !  .ichitvi  n-f  nts  in  the  in- 
dustrial woild.  the  bitter  race  preju- 
dice that  manife.sl.-*  itsr-lf  not  only  Iti 
one  section  of  the  country,  but  in  all. 
as  well  as  the  growing  spirit  of  dem- 
ocracy and  brotherhood.  The  optimism 
that  can  maintain  itself  In  the  face  of 
these  staggering  and  depressing  facts 
is  of  a  finer  and  more  lasting  charac- 
ter than  that  which  utterly  ignoring 
them  goes  on  to  brag  of  the  wonders 
of  modern  civilization  and  the  amount 
of  joy  and  success  In  the  world  at 
h'.rge. 

My    favorite   optimist   in    literature   Is 
Browning's    "Pippa.  "      I    picture    her    as 
a    lithe,    delicate    maiden,    the    »»mbodl- 
nient     of    sunshine,       dancing       blithely 
through    the    world    and    singing: 
The   year's  at  the  spiing. 
The    day's    at    the    morn. 
Morning's    at    seven 
The  hillside's  dew-pearled! 
The  larks  on   the  wing: 
The    snail's    on    the    thom; 
God's    in    his    heaven. 
All's    right    with    the    world' 
The  greatest,  .sanest,  most   commend- 
ing optimist   in   history  i.s  Jesus  Christ, 
and   His  message  concerning  the  friend- 
liness  of  God,   the   value  of  the   human 
soul,   and   the   far-reaching   brotherhood 
of    men    constitutes    the    kind    of    opti- 
mism  to  which   we  n\a.y  all   confidently 
cling. 

THE    PAR.SON. 


MEANT  TO  BE  Fl  NNY. 


Boston    Transcrljit: 
at   first   slglit.   eh?" 

"No.  second  sight.  The 
saw  her  he  didn't  know 
heiress."- 


A   case   of   lore 


first 
site 


time 
was 


he 
an 


Maud — Would  you  marry 

I 


The  Tatler 
a   widower? 

Ethel — No.    I    wouldn't.      The    man 
inarry   I'm  going  to  tain.;  myself. 


.Sewanee  Tiger:  Hoi) — ^Would  you  like 
to  see  women  voters  at  the  polls? 

Nob — Yes,  indeed.  At  the  North  and 
South    Poles. 


Meggendorfer     Blatter:       "Sea, 

Frit*. 

we    liave    been      engaged      now 

seven 

years." 

"Yes,    dear;    that      means      so 

many 

years   less  of  married   life." 

Boston       Transcript:  Entertaining 

job   that   chap   has." 

■"W'hat's  entertaining  about  feeding 
the   lion   In   a   zoo?" 

"They  keep  the  tab!,^  in  a  roar." 


The  Sketch:  The  Husband — W^ell. 
say  what  you  will,  my  dear,  you'll  find 
worse   men   than   me  In   the   world. 

The  Wife — Oh.  Tom,  liow  can  you  b« 
so  bitter? 

Chicago  Record-Herald:  "Man,"  de- 
clared the  old-fashioned  preacher,  "Is  a 
worm."  "And,"  said  a  man  who  had 
been  married  three  times  and  who  was 
occupying  a  small  space  in  a  rear  yew, 
"woman   is  the  early    bird." 


Stray  Stories:  Father — It's  singular 
that  whenever  I  want  to  marry  a  man 
you  ijbject.  and  whenever  I  do  not  want 
to  marry  one  you  straightway  insist  on 
it. 

Daughter — Yes.  and  whenever  we  ar« 
agreed  the  man  objects. 

Kansas  City  Times:  "College  has 
done   Lowdon   a   world  of  goo<l." 

"He  doesn't  impress  one  as  carrying 
excess   knowledge." 

"He  doesn't.  But  four  years  on  the 
rooting  squad  have  been  great  for  his 
lungs,  whlcii   used  to  be   weak." 


Chicago  Record-Herald:  "Ye.s.  they 
are   Immensely  wealthy." 

"Are  they?  I  supposed  they  were  In 
comfortable  circumstances,  but  I  never 
had  any  idea  that  they  were  to  be 
numbered  among  our  millionaire  fami- 
lies." 

"Oh.  they  must  be.  At  least,  they 
buy  eggs  even  for  tlielr  hiied  help." 

• 

Poiu(«d     I'arHgrapkM. 

Chicago  News:  Airing  your  troubles 
will   not  mitigate   them. 

A  baseball  team  can't  win  with  a 
pitcher    full    of   beer. 

One  touch  of  the  sandbag  man  Is 
enough    to   make   any   one   sore. 

There's  one  sure  thing,  and  that  la 
that   you  can't    be   sure   of  anything. 

When  a  stingy  man  is  in  love  he  la 
apt    to   loosen    up — but  not    for   long. 

A  wise  man  never  calls  another  a 
fool — no   matter  what  he   may   tldnk.    . 

Fortune  smiles  on  some  men  one  day 
and    gives    them    the    laugh    the    next. 

Of  course,  the  preacher's  aim  wasn't 
accurate   when   his  sermon   hit   you. 

A  successful  politician,  like  the  in- 
terest on  a  mortgage,  keeps  everlast- 
ingly   at   it. 

When  the  parlor  gas  is  turned  low. 
It's  a  safe  bet  the  riglit  young  man 
is  In   it. 

It  takes  a  whole  legislature  to 
change  a  man's  name,  but  one  min- 
ister can   change  a  woman's. 

One  thing  a  woman  can't  understand 
Is  why  a  man  won't  wait  for  a  bargain 
sale   when   he  wants  anything. 

When  a  man  takes  his  wife  to  the 
theater  he  thinks  it's  up  to  him  to  go 
out  between  the  acts  and  telephone 
to  see  it  the   hou.se  is  still  there. 


Proitorty    auil    Proprle«on». 

Joseph  Chamberlain:  The  rights  of 
I-roperty  have  been  so  much  extended 
that  the  rights  of  the  community  have 
almost  altogether  disappeared  and  It 
is  hardly  too  much  to  say  that  the 
prosperity  and  the  comfort  and  the  lib- 
erties of  a  great  proportion  of  the  pop- 
uU'lion  has  been  laid  at  the  feet  of  a 
small  number  of  proprietors,  who 
neither    toil    nor   sylu. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    190r 


15 


TWENTY  YEARS  AGO 

Taken  From  the  Columns  of  The  Herald  of  This  Date,  1889. 


_] 


•••W.irk  will  begin  ir.  a  few  ilays  on 
the  excavation  for  the  basement  of  the 
magnificent  I»alladio  building  on  the 
corner  of  Fourth  aveniu-  west  and  Su- 
perior street.  A.  U  Warner  &  Co.  have 
th»»  contract.  F.  H.  guinl).v  of  Dululh 
has  secured  the  contract  for  all  brown- 
Btone  trimmings,  etc. 


•••P.  Pairsish  of  Kansas  City  has 
taln^d  the  contract  for  decorating 
£palding  huuse. 


ob- 
the 


•••W.    H    Cremer   ha.s   returned    from 
visit  to  his  old  home  at  St.   Paul. 


•  ••A  St.  Paul  capitalist  yesterday 
bought  lots  4U  and  47  P^ast  Third 
Btreet.  at  the  corner  of  Third  avenue 
east,  for  SS.TiOO  and  will  erect  a  mi>dern 
apartment  house  that  will  co.st  fully 
$60aioo. 

•••Capt.  Harry  Roberts,  late  of  the 
Colby  mine,  has  accepted  the  position 
of  mining  .superintendent  at  the  Chand- 
ler mine  at   lUlj'. 


officor.s  of  the  corps  are:  President, 
Mrs.  I).  M.  Hoyt;  senior  vice.  Mrs. 
Lloyd;  junior  vice,  Mr.s.  Barnes;  trea.-i 
urer.  Mrs.  Daily;  secretary.  Miss  Lloyd; 
conductor.  Miss  Russell;  assistant  con- 
ductor. Miss  Brown;  guard,  Mrs.  Sharp: 
assi.^itani  guard.  Mrs.  lOliziabcth  Hoyt; 
chaplain.  Mrs.  Davey. 


•••The  Hartford  Steam  Boiler  Insur- 
ance company  will  open  a  branch  office 
in  Dululh  within  a  few  weeks,  with  T. 
W.  Hugo,  the  well  known  engineer,  jn 
charge. 


•♦•Minimum  temperature  this  morn- 
ing was  :U  degs.  above.  The  day  has 
been  dull  but  warm. 


•••Emil  Beebles,  who  has  been 
at  Tower  for  a  year  or  two,  is 
residing  at  Rice's  Point. 


living 
again 


•••The  Eva  family,  living  on  Secona 
street.  Just  east  of  Lake  avenue.*  have 
l<een  victims  of  poisoning.  Mrs.  Kva. 
Ada,  Dora  and  'ieorge  partook  of  some 
cocoa  at  breakfast  and  soon  were  taken 
sftriously  ill.  Miss  Kthel  escaped,  hav- 
ing simply  sippe<l  at  her  cup  and  re- 
marked that  it  'tasted  peculiar."  Sus- 
picion attaches  to  a  recently  employed 
servant. 


•••The  first  anniversary  ot 
mation  of  the  local  Womat, 
Corps  of  the  G.  A.  R.  was  ob; 
a   supper   and  surprise   by   the 


the    for- 

s     Relief 

served   by 

ladles   to 


the  memoers  of  the  Grand  Army.     The 


Smith,  a  well  known 
of  Duhith.  will  be  mar- 
1*3  to  Miss  Fay  Hunter, 
Fuller,  also  of  Duluth. 


•••Fred  W. 
young  lawyer 
ried  on  March 
sister  of  K.   H. 

•••C  C.  Prindle  of  Duluth  and  Miss 
Marv  I  Oav  of  Minneapolis  will  be 
married  on  March  27  at  Minneapolis. 
Mr  Prindle  is  manager  of  the  \\  ells- 
.»<tone  cumpany  and  Miss  Da.v  i.s  a 
sister  of  Mrs.    \V.   E.   Lucas  of  this  city. 


•••R  .V  Folkerts,  a  Lake  avenue 
grocer  and  Miss  Ida  Waltman  will  be 
married  this  evening  at  tb.e  residence 
of  the  bride.  4  West  Superior  street. 


.John  Robertson  and  Miss  Maggie 
Ralston  were  married  last  night  at  the 
residence  of  John  Macfarland  on  West 
Second  street. 


THOUGHTS  ON  BOYS 


By  J.  S.  KIRTLEY,  D.  D. 
Author  of  "The  Young  Man  and  Himself/ 


etc. 


HIS  vocnvoN. 


.i'nt'Vrilhl.     1>J.'.     1>V     I>vl)l>    B      Uiwlfd.  p 

If  he  gets  his  right  vocati  mi  at  the 

right   time   it  will   be  the  right 

ni*?!!!  >>f  a  Question  that  ranks 

the  soleninest  things  tn  his  life 

^eta    Into    the    wrong   vocation 


.spttle- 

among 

If  he 

it   will 

be  like  wearing  a*  pair  of  .shoes  that  do 

not  tit  and  insist  on  pinching 

bing  and  irritating,  and 

ly  to.liav-  sense 

the  right  thing. 

tT   his    calling 


and  rub- 
he  is  not  like- 
enough  to  change  to 
But  he  must  not  en- 
till  he  his  gotten  be- 
yond the  *>  )>'  stage  Then,  wliy  con- 
sider the  matter  in  a  discussi-m  of 
boys  at  all-'  Well,  for  two  reason.s, 
surely.  H*  is  getting  himself  ready 
for  it  unconsciou.-Iy  and  hi.s  rulers  are 
deliberately  and  intelligently  prepar- 
ing him  for  it.  At  least  they  are  if 
they   are    true   to   him 

He  la  moving  right  on  steadily  to- 
T\ard  his  calling,  when  he  has  a  chance 
to  let  him.Helf  i>ut  and  to  engage  in 
some  preliminary  preparatory  call- 
ings. His  lirst  vocation  is  play  atid 
that  he  pushes  with  a  devotion  worthy 
of    him  He    cannot    have    made    a 

better  choic-  and  you  pronounce  him 
a  eucce.s.-?  You  say  he  will  be  heard 
from  yet  and  y.)u  base  your  conclu- 
sions >n  the  fact  that  he  has  already 
been   heard    from,   mightily. 

That  vocation  I3  quicliSy  succeeded 
by  another,  alao  play,  a  n-'w  pha.se  of 
play,  in  which  he  is  busier  than  ever. 
For  he  has  now  added  an  avocation,  a 
Bide  calling  g'dng  to  school,  and  per- 
haps running  01:  .-rrands  and  helping 
about  the  housi-,  or  the  school  or 
with  the  horses  or  in  the  field.  All 
along  he  is  getting  ready  for  his  life 
work  without  knowing  It  and  without 
showing  it,  save  to  trained  and  pene- 
trating  eyes. 

Another  vocation  follows  soon — still 
play  But  this  time  it  is  team  work. 
His  social  instincts  are  at  work  and 
the  sentitn-nt  of  otherism  is  getting 
hold    of    him  On    through    the    gang 

period  anj  into  the  chum  period  it  ex- 
tends, and  then  some  definite  plans 
are  lik-^ly  to  be  formulated.  All 
through  those  periods  he  has  been 
dreaming  of  being  all  sorts  of  things, 
and  he  has  been  doing  some  things. 
He  has  been  dreaming  i>f  being  cow- 
boy, lion  hunter  and  the  whole  line  of 
things  famihar  to  those  who  are  fa- 
niiluir  with  boys.  He  has  been  doing 
such  things  as  peddling  papers  or 
■working  on  a  farm  in  summer  or  being 
an  errand  boy  or  raising  vegetables  on 
the  -shares.  He  is  realy  doing  valu- 
able prepar^torj-  work,  for  body  and 
brain,   anj   heart  and  hand. 

But  you  notice  that  he  .seldom  be- 
comes just  what  he  first  wanted  to 
beconje  and  he  seldom  continues  In 
what  he  start.s  to  doing.  There  are 
reasons  for  it.  He  i.s  simply  doing 
whatever  he  can  get  his  hands  on,  in 
order  to  have  some  fun  or  make  some 
money  to  do  what  he  would  like  to 
do  Besides,    he    is    barning,    by    ex- 

perience, what  not  to  d«:».  And  we 
must  not  forget  two  facts,  that  his 
strongest  attitudes  may  he  .'■•till  dor- 
mant and  that  he  has  not  yet  the 
powH-r  of  rinal  choice. 

When  he  has  made  his  preliminary 
experiments,  has  found  those  deep  and 


the    other      president      of    the      United 
States!" 

Tyler  became  president  one  month 
after  the  new  administration  came  in. 
He  was  no  ordinary  man;  but  in  his- 
tory he  is  a  greatly  under-esiimated 
man.  He  resigned  ills  seat  in  the 
.'^enate  rather  than  obey,  or  disobey,  the 
instructions  of  the  Virginia  legisla- 
ture as  to  certain  legisiaiion.  In  the 
main  he  was  a  supporter  of  Ciays,  but 
v.- hen  he  vetoed  a  recharter  of  the 
bank,  and  that  maile  Clay  his  relent- 
less enemy:  but  Henry  A.  Wise  was 
his  friend,  and  Wise,  after  many  de- 
bates, Induced  Tyler  to  make  John  C. 
Calhoun   secretary    of   state. 

And  that  is  how  it  came  we  got 
Texas  and  the  Mexican  war  when  we 
did.  Had  Tyler  had  any  oth»»r  secre- 
tary of  state,  doubtless  the  annexation 
and  the  war  would  have  been  postponed 
for  years.  The  annexation  and  the 
war  came  with  Polk. 

•  •      • 

The  cabinet  of  President  Pierce  was 
the  only  one  In  our  history  that  re- 
mained intact  the  entire  administra- 
tion, and  that  is  strange,  coo,  when  we 
reflect  that  William  L.  Marcy  was  sec- 
retary of  state  and  .Jefferson  Davis 
secretary  of  war:  but  they  never 
clashed,  and  there  was  the  utmost  har- 
mony between  them.  Marcy.  a  candi- 
date for  president,  busied  himself  re- 
forming the  diplomatic  and  consular 
service,  and  Davis,  who  had  no 
to  be  president,  worked  like  a  Trojan 
reorganizing  the  army.  Roth  were 
emiiicnlly  successful,  especially  so  the 
secretary  of  war,  himself  an  accom- 
plished graduate  of  West  Point  and  an 
approved  brilliant  soldier  on  the  field 
i)f    battle. 

Guthrie,  than  whom  no  abler  finan- 
cier was  ever  put  in  that  station,  was 
secretary  of  the  treasury,  and  Caleb 
Cushing.  Inventor  of  Ren  Butler,  was 
the  attorney  general.  He  was  a  great 
Jurist,  and  in  his  time  furnished  more 
law  to  more  administrations  than  any 
other  man  of  oqr  history.  When  Grant 
nominated  him  for  chief  justice  of  the 
,-iupreme  court,  a  Republican  senate  re- 
jected him  for  his  friendship  for  Presi- 
dent  Davis, 

•  •       • 

Lincoln's    cabinet    was    a    disappoint- 


ment to  many  ardont  members  of  his 
party.  Seward,  Chase,  Cameron,  Wells, 
bates,  Blair,  Smith.  Of  these,  four  had 
been  Democrats  and  three  Whigs,  and 
they  were  in  no  sort  of  political  accord 
f-xcept  the  preservation  of  the  Union 
and  opposition  to  slavery.  When  Lin- 
coln was  remonstrated'  with  for  favor- 
itism to  former  I>emocrats.  a  majority 
iif  his  cabinet,  he  simply  hung  one  leg 
over  the  other  and  answered:  '•Well, 
I'm  a  Whig;   that  evens  things  up." 

But      by-and-by  -jCarferon    went    out 

of  the  cabinet  and  Lincoln  appointed 
Edwin  M.  Stanton  to  the  vacancy.  This 
man  h.ad  characterized  the  speech  of 
.leffersun  Davis,  bidding  the  senate 
farewell,  as  Inspired  ot  God.  and  be- 
tween the  inauguration  of  Lincoln  and 
his  own  appointment  to  the  war  office 
he  wrote  letters  10  James  Buchanan 
that  wore  simply  startling,  read  in  the 
light  of  his  subsequent  life,  and  yet 
the  l>iographer  of  Buchanan  says  that 
for  slieer  decency  he  suppressed  manj' 
of    the   worst! 

Let  the  man  who  would   be  acquaint- 
ed   with    the   misc%«>ant    read    the   dispu 


tations  of  Jeremiah 
and    Garfield. 


Black  with  Seward 


When  Gen. 
he  nominated 
tary  of  the 
the  secrecy  of 


Grant    became    president, 

A.   T.   Stewart   fot  secre- 

treasury.        Never      had 

the  personnel   of  a  cabi- 


net 


was 


been    so    well    kt-pt.    but    that 

de.sire    natural,  as  the  work  of  a  great  soldier. 

"^ "     Somebody     dug     up    an     old    statute     of 

1789  when  Alexander  Hamilton  was 
secretary  of  the  treasury,  prohibiting 
an  Importer  from  holding  the  office 
of  secretary  of  the  treasury.  Stewart 
w**  the  largest  importer  in  the  I'nlon. 
Gen.  Grant  saw  the  obstacle,  and  like 
the  soldier  that  he  was,  he  dispatched 
a  message  to  congress  that  was  not 
inaptlv  characterized  as  "General  Or- 
ders No.  1."  and  said  simply:  "Repeal 
the  law."  just  as  four  years  before  he 
iiad  ordered  an  army  corps  hither  or 
thither.  Congress  refused. 
•  *  • 
Garfield's  cabinet  was  not  com- 
pleted until  a  few  minutes  before  it 
was  sent  to  the  senate.  It  was  headed 
by  James  G.  Blaine  and  Wayne  Mac- 
Vuigh    was    the    attorney    general. 


Itl 


would  not  have  survived  a  single  ses- 
sion of  congress.  i-'ew  men  as  able 
as  MacVeagh  have  been  Uncle  Sams 
law  officers.  li,xcept  Jeremiah  Black. 
he  is,  perhaps,  the  most  brilliant  man 
the  bar  of  Pennsylvania  has  pro- 
duced. 

Mr.  Cleveland  weakened  his  party  by 
taking  from  the  senate  Bayard,  Lamar 
and  Carlisle,  and  putting  them  in  his 
first  cabinet,  and  Taft  will  be  fortun- 
ate If  he  docs  not  miss  Knox  froui  the 
senate  before  his  administration  is 
half  over. 

•  •       • 

Cleveland  made  ^Valter  Q  Gresham 
secretary  of  state  of  his  second  ad- 
ministration. Patriotically,  it  was  a 
great  thing  to  do;  politically,  it  was 
an  imprudent  thing  to  do.  But  then 
Cleveland  was  more  of  a  patriot  than 
a  politician.  If  there  had  been  room 
enough  in  one  administration  for  Gro- 
\-^r  Cleveland  and  William  R.  Morrison, 
a  Democrat,  would  have  been  inaugur- 
ated president  of  the  United  Stales 
this  good  day  of  March  4.  li>«i> 

McKlnley  the  disciple  of  Pig  Iron 
Kelley.  and  president  because  he  was 
the  most  distinguished  apostle  of  the 
dogma  of  protection  in  the  country, 
chose  Lyman  J.  Gage  for  the  treasury 
department,  who  had  voted  for  Gro- 
ver  Cleveland  because  of  the  tariff  is- 
sue of  1S92.  Roosevelt's  secretary  of 
commerce  and  labor.  Oscar  S.  Strauss, 
wa.**  the  enthusiastic  admirer  and  de- 
voted friend  of  William  L.  Wilson,  and 
is  as  much  a  free  trader  today  as 
Champ  Clark   or   Henry   Walterson 

•  •       • 

Franklin  MacVeagh  Is  to  business 
what  his  more  brilliant  brother  Is  to 
law — In  the  front  ranke  of  the  elite  of 
the  guild.  He.  too.  was  a  Cleveland 
I>emocrat.  for  sound  money  ana 
honest    and    ocnstitutional    taxation. 

If  the  Republicans  shall  make  an 
honest  effort  for  decent  taxation  and 
measurably  succeed.  I  do  not  quite 
clearlv  see  what  my  old  friend,  the 
Democratic  party  party,  is  gomg  to 
do  for  a  living-  If  the  Republicans 
fail  as  I  think  they  will,  then  fortune 
will'  again  knock  at  the  Democratic 
door. 


determining  aptitudes  and  has  de- 
veloped his  power  of  definite  and  de- 
cisive choice,  then  he  will  have  very 
little  ditticulty  in  finding  his  calling. 
He  cannot  well  make  a  mistake  and  if 
he  does  it  will  be  a  mistake  that  can 
be  very  easily  corrected. 

He  might  lit  into  any  one  of  a  group 
of  related  callings,  like  building,  con- 
tracting, milling  and  the  like,  because 
the  sense  of  the  mechanical  is  domi- 
nant. If  he  is  a  barterer.  he  can 
trade  in  almost  any  line.  Or  he  might 
be  a  d.'nlii^t  or  druggist  or  a  tloctor 
and  make  no  mistake  In  either  case- 
Aiiv  one  of  kindred  professions  might 
be  suitable  for  him.  He  may  have  to 
have  experience  i"  one  before  .  ettling 
in  a  closely  related  calling.  His  tal- 
ents and  tastes  must  harmonize  with 
his  trade. 

It  must  not  be  supposed  that  he 
came  to  his  calling  in  a  f.irtuitous  way 
or  solely  by  self  direction.  It  had  tJ 
be.  in  the  ttnal  decision.  his  own 
choice,  for  It  must  ever  be  a  choice 
and  not  a  coercion.  But  others  were 
preparing  him  for  the  momentous  de- 
cision They  were  watching  over  his 
play,  g'ving  -steaiy  dir.  ction.  tactful 
correction  and  constant  protection, 
and  the  subtle  power  of  making  wise 
choices  %vas  growing  in  the  lad  They 
were  preparing  his  body  by  wholes  'me 
food  and  the  right  exercise,  in  wo:  k 
and  systematic  training  as  well  as 
play-  They  were  developing  his  mind 
till  Its  more  hidden  and  tardy  talents 
should  come  forth,  to  give  their  voice 
in  the  council  chamber.  In  doing  so, 
they  sent  him  through  as  thorough 
courses  In  school  and  collTge  and  uni- 
ersity  as  pos-sible,  so  that  iie  w<.uld 
not  fail  of  any  needed  eau'pment.  For 
they  knew  al.so  that  the  boy  with  the 
well-trained  mind  has  a  distinct  ad- 
vantage over  the  rest  of  the  boys.  If 
thev  want  him  to  have  the  chai>  •  to 
become  president  of  the  ITnited  States 
they  know  that  h  s  chances,  ace  )i  d  ng 
to  the  way  it  has  already  been  going. 
are  about  thirty  times  as  sood  with  a 
college  education  as  without,  while  he 
has  not  as  many  chances  to  become 
a  sui)reme  court  Judge  and  almo-:t  as 
few  to  become  a  United  .States  sena- 
tor and  he  has  nine  times  a.s  good 
a  chance  to  succeed  in  any  other  call- 
ing. 

They  have  also  taught  him  a  trade, 
as  the  Jews  used  to  teach  their  boys. 
That  old  rabbi  was  not  far  wrong  in 
saying  that  he  who  did  not  teach  his 
boy  a  trade  did  the  .same  as  teach  him 
to  steal.  A  trade  gives  one  useful 
knowledge,  skill,  .sympathy  with  toil- 
ers and  may  provide  for  some  unfore- 
seen, yet  very  serious,  emergency. 
Our  manual  training  schools  are  pre- 
paring our  boys  for  their  callings. 
Those  who  have  charge  of  him  have 
also  been  helping  him  get  a  technical 
training  for  his  calling,  by  sending 
hint  to  school  or  directing  his  reading 
or   observations. 

There  is  one  other  element  in  the  se- 
lection of  his  calling  and  that  is  the 
pre.sence  and  will  of  him  who  gave  us 
the  raw  materials  for  all  our  callings 
and  gave  us  the  aptitudes  for  them, 
Aho  still  e.xercises  a  providence  over 
as  and  has  His  personal  plans  for  us. 
"The  boy  must  be  taught  to  respect 
that  fact  of  Pri>vid"nce  and  to  co-op- 
erate with  him  whose  will  is  so  glori- 
ous- Yet  he  must  also  make  his  own 
final  choice- 


class  by  Itself  as  a  inaga;,lne  feature, 
it  presents  an  extremely  striking  and 
vivid  picture  of  the  inner  life  of  a  cer. 
tain  artistic  and  erudite  cu  t  in  modern 
English  life.  It  is  the  world  of 
scholarship  that  Is  laid  open  before  the 
rtader,  the  human  side  of  the  Oxonian 
and  the  classicist,  in  whos ;  nature  the 
beauty  worships  and  the  Intellectual 
hedonism  of  the  old  Greek  life  find 
notiiing  incongruous  In  1  heir  juxta- 
position with  an  up-to- late  motor 
boat.  Aspasia,  the  idol  of  the  Polite 
Outcasts,  is  a  character  of  Infinite 
charm.  Cleverness  flasheii  in  every 
line  of  this  story.  Mr.  North's  novel 
makes  a  powerful  appeal  lo  the  Intel- 
lect and  to  the  imagination;  It  is  a 
veritable  dynamo  of  rapid-fire  wit  and 
scintillating     repartee. 

•  •      • 

Lincoln  memories  of  unusual  quality 
will  be  the  record  of  "Lin  "oln's  Inter- 
est in  the  Theater,"  contrl  anted  to  the 
April  Century  by  I^eonard  (Srover,  man- 
ager of  Grover's  theater.  Washington, 
during  tlie  years  of  Lintioln's  presi- 
dency. Because  of  Lincoli's  fondness 
for,  and  frequent  attendance  at.  the 
theater.  Mr.  Grover  saw  riuch  of  him 
in  a  pleasantly  informal  i.nd  intimate 
way:  and  his  reminiscence:!  have  value 
as  well  as  much  anecdctic  interest. 
"Tad"  Lincoln  was  preser  c  at  a  per- 
formance in  Grover's  theater  on  the 
night  his  father  was  assassinated  at 
Ford's  theater. 

•  •       • 

The  People's  Magazine  for  April 
strikes  an  unusual  note  in  its  opening 
number.  In  last  month'.'  Issue  first 
place  was  given  to  "The  Marlowes,"  by 
('alvln  Johnston,  a  (lualiit  and  beauti- 
ful tale  of  soul  developmeit,  told  with 
inimitable  charm.  This  month  the  chief 
novel  Is  "An  Enterprise  of  Empire,"  by 
Dr.  William  Bayard  Hale,  whose  fa- 
mous interview  with  Empi-ror  William 
was  suppressed  recently  by  the  doctor 
himself  for  grave  reasons  of  state,  at 
the  re(iuest  of  the  German  foreign 
office. 

•  •       • 

A  tale  of  piquancy,  of  daiing  repartee 
and  the  reckless  atmospliere  of  the 
Bohemian  mid-world  Is  -The  Heredi- 
tary Taint,  "  by  Eilen  P^arle^-.  in  Young's 
-April  Magazine,  that  will  bring  a  re- 
freshing novelty  to  the  man  weary  ot 
humdrum  tales.  It's  ar  audacious 
siory  of  froth  and  bubble,  but  It  rings 
the  bell  of  seriousness  now  and  then 
wlun  "the  painted  lady's  daughter"  dis- 
cusses the  narrow  morility  of  the 
world  that  jeers  lier.  It'.s  gay  with  a 
color  of  New  York  life,  jr  that  gay. 
shabbv,  struggling  part  of  life  that 
lives  in  studios  and  sky-light  lodgings 
and  fights  to  make  its  voice  rise 
against  the  roar  of  the  city.  It's  the 
stoiv  of  .\ngel  ("amiUot,  r  nd  from  the 
moment  von  met  her.  charming  and 
insouciant,  making  coffee  over  the  gas- 
jet,  it's  a  lively  series  of  new  situadona, 


THE  MAN  IX  LOWER  TEN.     By  Mary 

R(d)erts   Rinehart.      Indianapolis:  The 

Bobbs-MerriU  Co.      11.50. 

•The  Circular  Staircase"  was  one  of 
the  liapi>v  surprises  of  1908.  In  "Tlie 
Man  in  Lower  Ten"  Mrs.  Rinehart  tells 
an  even  better  story  with  even  gr»  ater 
gay»"tv,  and  even  more  intense  humor. 
.And  as  for  the  mystery — the  |»lot  so 
deeply  engrosses  tlie  reader  that  he 
tdrgels  meals  and  sleep.  A  man  goes 
to  l>ed  in  Ijower  Nine  of  the  Washing- 
ton sleeper  from  Pittsburg,  and  awak- 
ens in  Lower  Seven.  In  the  meantime 
another  man,  In  Lower  Ten.  which 
berth  the  first  man  was  to  have  occu- 
pied if  Pullman  ariangemenis  had  gone 
striiight.  is  murdered,  and  the  man  In 
Lower  Seven  finds,  as  he  starts  to  dress, 
not  his  own  clothes  and  shyes.  but  the 
garments  of  somebody  else  and  the  bag 
of  somebody  else,  instead  of  the  one 
containing  his  own   valuable   papers. 

There's  your  puzzle  for  you,  and  it 
seems  all  the  more  bafdlng  because  of 
its  very  simpllcit.v.  The  criminal  must 
be  one  of  the  little  group  of  people,  all 
ilescribed.  who  boarded  the  Washing- 
ion  car.  .Naturally,  every  reader  be- 
comes a  detective  on  b.is  t)wn  hook, 
certain-sure  that  he  has  tlie  one  cor- 
rect solution.  And  Mr.s,  Rinehart  just 
sils  back  with  her  sly  and  subtle  smile 
—and  lets  one  think  sol  Her  fun  will 
come  to  see  him  sit  up  with  a  jerk 
surprise  when  she  discloses  her 
in   the  last   astonishing   eliapier. 

It  remains  to  aild  that,  wliile  the 
bright  banners  of  humor  and  the  sinis- 
ter storm  signals  of  mystery  are 
streaming  throughout  this  story,  the 
Hag  of  romance  Hies  bravely,  too.  On 
the  fateful  Pullman  on  whbh  the  hero 
takes  passage  there  is  also  a  blue-eyed 
and  brown- haired  Isabel  whom  he  sees 
and  loves.  "The  Man  in  Lower  Ten 
thus  makes  a  three-fold  appeal  upon 
the  reader,  who  is  at  once  absorbed  by 
its  unusual  mystery,  cheered  l)y  its  de- 
lightful humor  and 
love  interest. 


.f 
secret 


H.    Fverr   & 

In    this    Int' 
able    Italian 
evolution     Is 
tlons     in     an 


charmed    by     its 


MAKING  CABINETS 


BY  SAVOYARD 


It  is  only  history  repeating  iLself 
when  a  R-pnblican  president  of  the 
United  stites  appoints  Democrats  to 
cabinet  places.  Is  it  not  written  in 
profane  story:  "The  mistress  of 
Strafford  became  the  mistress  of  Pym?" 
But  I  do  not  mean  it  in  that  possibly 
offensive  sense.  Government  is  not  an 
exact  science,  and  politics  is  a  game 
of  chance.     Nobody  is  better   persuaded 

than  1  that  Franklin  MacVeagh  and 
Jacoh  M.  L>i«;kinson  can  accept  cabinet 
places  under  William  H.  Taft  without 
the  slightest  sacritice  of  personal  hon- 
or, or  the  lea-st  recantation  of  political 
prlneipl*»s  In  lS'>t>  the  Democratic 
party  gave  indefinite  furlough  to  ev- 
ery member.  and--<ti!isted  the  Pops  as 
Janizaries. 

Tiic  t'a'oinet"  is  a  rather  indefinite 
term.  There  Is  no  warrant  for  It  In 
the  Constitution  and  little  authority 
for  it  in  statute  law.  If  he  should  .see 
fit  the  president  could  go  through  four 
years  of  chief  magistracy  without 
calling  a  single  cabinet  council.  Gen. 
Sherman  knew  that  when  he  character- 
I'/ed  Edwin  M.  Stan  ion.  tiiea  secretary 
of    war.    as    "a    d — d    clerk." 

•       •       • 
It    was    proposed    in    the    convention 

that  fram*»d  the  Constitution  to  es- 
tablish a  cii>inet,  every  member  to  be 
ch.osen  from  the  majority  side  of  the 
house  of  representatives,  -ind  no  cabi- 
net minister  to  lose  his  seal  in  that 
li  dy.  or  his  tight  to  participate  In 
del>ate  Thus  a  president  of  one  party 
would  have  been  required  to  change 
the    entire    personnel    of    his    cabinet    U 


tb.e  opposing  partv  proved  successful 
at  the  elections  held  the  middle  of  Ills 
term. 

That  would  have  been  parliamentary 
government,  which  is  g'overnment  bj 
the  people-  Besides  that,  no  member 
of  the  house  of  representatives  would 
ever  have  broken  his  neck  trying  to  be 
senator.  As  it  is,  we  have  executive 
government.  The  president  l.«  the 
whole  show,  and  in  Ills  presence  con- 
gress has  no  more  backbone  than  a 
fishing  worm.  For  seven  years  Theo- 
di-re  Roosevelt  was  only  a  more  for- 
tunate despot  than  Louis  Napoleon — 
all  because  of  the  sycophancy  and  pol- 
troonery of  the  American  congress.  As 
for  the  Constitution,  it  liad  been  hid 
away  as  the  Book  of  the  I>aw  in  the 
vanished  Ark  of  the  Covenant  in  the 
Babylonish  captivity.  Whether  It  is 
to  come  forth  again,  time  only  will 
tell.  Mr.  Taft  begins  his  administra- 
tion with  a  palpable  and  contemptuous 
violation  of  It  In  the  case  of  his  secre- 
tary of  state. 

•  *  • 
I  thought  I  would  take  a  glance  at 
some  cabinet  situations  of  the  past. 
When  the  minority  of  the  delegates  to 
the  Whig  national  convention  suc- 
ceeded in  defeating  the  majority,  nom- 
inating William  Henry  Harrison  over 
Henry  Clay.  Thurlow  W'eed,  who  had 
done    the    thing,    set    about    to    placate 

"Harry    of    the     West," 
Tyler    was    given     tlie 

vice    president,    though 
might    have    had    It    In 

When  Clay   heard  of  It 

n   Brown's   hotel   in   this 


the  friends  of 
and  thus  John 
nomination  for 
l)aniel  Webster 
si/lte  of  Weed, 
he  was  sitting' 
town,  and  terrible  was  his  rage.  Turn- 
ing to  a  gentleman  next  him.  who 
proved  a  clergyman,  he  exclaimed:  "By 
— .  If  there  w.>re  two  Henry  Clays  tn 
ibis  country  one  of  them   would   make 


•  «      • 
THE  WEB  OF  THE  GOLDEN  SPIDER. 

By  Frederick  Orin   Bartlett.      Boston: 

Small.    Mavnard    &    Co.      $1.50. 

Things  happen  in  this  romance- 
things  thrilling,  enthralling,  improb- 
able, almost  impossible — yet  tlvings 
vastlv  diverting  and  appealing  most 
potently  to  that  spirit  ot  romance  and 
adventure  which  in  most  of  us  is  quite 
content  with  perils  crowded  between 
the  covers  of  a  book,  to  be  read  in  a 
place  of  safetv  and  comfort,  whose 
charms  heighten  the  appeal  of  the  life 
of  battle  and  danger.  The  author  has 
heaped  his  measure  as  full  as  it  could 
possibly  hold,  and  if  be  had  been  les.s 
skilful  as  a  story-teller,  that  m.igbt 
have  been  dangerous.  Being  as  skilful 
as  he  is,  lie  has  made  a  story  possess- 
ing a  charm  guaranteed  to  drive  away 
the  cares  of  the  day  and  lo  replace 
them  with  a  pleasant  thrill  over  the 
troubles  of  book  people,  which  have 
a  wav  of  getting  as  desperate  as 
imagination  can  make  them,  and  then 
of  straightening  out  again  in  the  end. 

«      *      « 
THE     OPEN     SHOP.       By     Clarence     S. 

Darrow.     Chicago:  Charles  H.  Kerr  & 

Co. 

In  this  pamphlet  the  noted  Chicago 
radical  proviiies  an  appealing  brief  for 
union  labor,  and  a  pointed  reply  to  the 
arguments  in  behalf  of  the  open  shop. 
•No  one  claims."  be  tells  us,  •that  all 
trade  unionists  are  wise  or  even 
honest.  Neither  is  trade  unionism  an 
ideal  institution.  It  was  evolved  to 
«erv»'  a  purpose  an»t  to  perform  a 
dutv  in  the  upward  march  of  the 
liutnan  race.  It  was  made  to  t  a  condi- 
tion of  socletv  divided  into  the  em- 
ploying class  and  the  serving  class.  Its 
mis"sion  is  to  protect  the  weak  againsc 
the  strong.  War  and  strife  are  not 
ideal  stales,  but  they  have  been  ever 
present  with  the  human  race,  'and  so 
long  as  the  wnr  of  classes  shall  con- 
tinue the  weak  and  the  helpless  must 
ever  look  to  trade  unionism  as  its  chief 
champiop  and  its  most  powerful  de- 
fender." As  always.  Mr.  Darrow  makes 
his  argument    forceful   and   brilliant. 

*  •       * 

LETTERS  OF  A  JAPANESE  SCHOOL- 
BOY. By^  Wallace  Irwin,  New  York: 
Doubledaj-,  Page  &  Co.  fl.oO. 
A  vear  or  so  ago  there  appeared  in 
Collier's  Weeklv  a  letter  addressed  to 
the  editor  and  signed  "Hashlmura 
Togo."  Togo  describe<l  himself  as 
a  Japanese  schoolbov  age  35  years,  and 
said  that  he  "come  to  this  free  country 
for  some  following  reason:  1.  To  .save 
up  monev  for  old  age-  2.  To  learn  so 
much  I  can.  '!  To  wait  on  table  four, 
teen  hours  dally  at  boarding  house  of 
Mrs.  ('.  W.  O'Brien,  honorable  lady." 
.Vfter  explaining  that  "I  am  not  doing 
so  today  as  I  am  confined  in  hospital 
enjoying  much  pain  from  brickbat 
wound  sent  to  me  by  one  American 
patriot,  ■"Ti>go  proceeded  to  discuss  af- 
fairs of  state,  and  from  then  till  now 
he  has  continued  to  do  so  almost  week- 
ly. At  first  the  readers  of  Collier's 
chuckled  over  the  naive  and  laughable 
ideas  of  this  San  Francisco  Jap  boy. 
but  later  they  grew  to  the  conclusion 
that  the  letters  were  the  work  of  an 
American  humorist.  Now  these  letters 
appear  In  book  form  ,and  for  the  first 
time  It  Is  officially  disclosed  that  their 
author  is  Wallace  Irwin,  though  many 
familiar  with  his  style  had  "spotted" 
him  long  ago.  A  persistent  vein  of 
delicious  humor  and  philosophy  runs 
through  the  letters,  and  most  readers 
will  agree  with  Mark  Twain's  con- 
clusion that  Togo  is  "the  wisest  and 
funniest  and  dellghtfulest  creation 
that  has  been  added  to  our  literature 
for  a  long  time."  Also  with  ex-Presl- 
dent  Roosevelt,  who  declared  Togo  to 
Ive  "a  corker."  The  letters  make  a 
tremendously  delluhlful   book,   and   the 


comments   on    public  affairs  ai'e   as   apt 
as  they  are     funny. 

.SOCIALISM    AND    MODERN    .SCIENCE. 
Bv     Enrico     Ferrl.       Chicago:       Chas. 
Co.      $1. 

•resting  discussion  by  an 
theorist,  the  doctrine  of 
applied  to  social  condi- 
endeavor  to  prove  the 
claim  of  Socialism  by  the  theories  01 
Darwin  and  .Spencer.  The  Idea  of  the 
author  is  that  Karl  Marx  completes  the 
work  of  Darwin  and  Spencer,  and  he 
works  It   out   ingeniously  and  ably. 

VITAL    PROBLEM.^    IN    SOCIAL    EVO- 
l-UTION.      By  Arthur  M.   Lewis.     Chi- 
cago:     Chas.   H.   Kerr  &   Co.      50   cents. 
In    this   little   book    history,   sociology 
and  economics  are   viewed   through   So- 
cialist    spectacles.       Chapters     are     de- 
voted lo  the  materialistic  conce)>tion  of 
history,   to  the  .Socialist   theory   of  pan- 
ics,  and   to    the   discussion   of   the    ideas 
of    Spalding,     Paine,     Engels,     Duehring 
and    Proudhon.      As    Is    customary    with 
this     in':!;'enious     Chicago     thinker,     his 
discussions    are   entertaining   and    plau- 
sible. 

•  •      • 

SOCIALISM:  ITS  GROWTH  AND  OUT- 
COME. By  William  Morris  and  Ern- 
est Belfort  Bax.  Chicago;  Chas.  H. 
Kerr  &  Co.     .'iO  cents.  ^      . 

Here  is  a  historical  and  prophetic 
di.-cussion  of  Socialism  by  two  writers 
well  qualified  for  their  task.  They 
have  aimed  at  "a  continuous  sketch  of 
the  development  of  history  in  relation 
to  Socialism."  and  with  the  "aspira- 
tions of  Socialists  now  living  toward 
the  society  of  the  future."  Their  work 
has  been  well  done,  and  from  the  So- 
cialistic viewpoint  is  no  doubt  convinc- 
ing. From  any  viewpoint  it  Is  Inter- 
esting. 

•  •      » 

THE  PERFUME  OF  THE  LADY  IN 
BLACK.       By    Gaston     Leroux.       New 

York:      Brent ano's.    $1.50.  

"The  Perfume  of  the  Lady  in  Black, 
by  the  author  of  "The  Mystery  of  the 
Yellow  Room."  is  even  better  than  Its 
predecessor.  The  characters  of  "The 
Yellow  Room  "  reappear  In  the  pages  of 
•The  Ladv  in  Black."  and  the  hero  is 
again  Joseph  Rouletabille.  the  young 
reporter,  whose  powers  of  reasoning 
bring  to  light  the  most  remarkable 
mystery  known  to  the  annals  of  mod- 
ern  fiction. 

"The  Perfume  of  the  Lady  In  Black 
begins  where  most  romances  end — with 
a  wedding.  The  couple  start  on  their 
wedding  tour  with  the  brightest  antic- 
ipations fi>r  the  future,  but  long  be- 
fore they  reach  the  end  of  their  jour- 
nev  their  happiness  Is  merged  in  a 
dark  cloud  of  horror,  which  is  not 
lifted  until  the  last  iMvges  of  the  book 
are  reached,  and  then  In  a  manner 
which  startles  the  reader  as  much  as  it 
does  the  members  of  the  little  company 
assembled  In  the  St|uare  Tower  to  wit- 
ness Rouletabille's  "'corporeal  demon- 
stration of  the  possibility  of  the  body 
too  many."  ^ 

M.  Leroux  knows  better  than  any 
author  now  living — even  better  than 
the  inventor  "Sherlock  Holmes" — how 
to  create  a  thrill  and  to  awaken  the 
eager  and  excited  Interest  of  his  read- 
ers. .Anv  one  who  picks  up  "The  Per. 
fume  of  the  Lady  in  Black"  will  not 
willingly  lay  it  down  until  the  story  is 
finished  and  the  mystery  which  has 
held  him  in  its  grasp,  and  which  be  can 
not  possiblv  solve  until  the  author 
wills  for  him  to  do  so — Is  a  secret  no 
longer. 


in   a  settings  of  color,   action  and   real- 
ism. 

•  *      • 

The  timely  masquerade  girl  on  April 
10  Story  Book  makes  it  one  of  the 
striking  covers  of  the  month.  And  all 
through  tiie  issue  the  same  dash  and 
spiceness  is  featured.  Antia  Scott  leads 
the  magazine  wrth  "The  Ghost  of  a 
Red  Rose,"  a  well  written  story,  deal- 
ing with  a  certain  phase  of  life  now 
being  made  much  of  by  the  daily 
pajjers.  Another  most  tragic  story  on 
these  lines  is  "The  Singeing  of  the 
-Moth,"  by  Samuel  B.  Dicken.s.  In  a 
lighter  vein  are  "Codogan's  $':;.00a 
Brogue,"  by  Edgar  White,  'I'nder  the 
Han  of  the  Law."  by  J.  C.  Plummer, 
and  "The  Lycosa's  Bite,"  by  J.  P.  Fer- 
riter. 

•  •      • 

An  important  feature  of  the  April 
number  of  Popular  Mechanics  is  the 
itmarkable  oxygen  melting  process,  by 
which  it  Is  possible  to  start  a  chilled 
tapliole  Mowing  In  a  few  seconds.  "The 
Building  of  Roads  By  Convict  Labor," 
explains  the  attitude  of  various  states 
toward  this  important  matter,  and  tells 
just  what  has  been  accomplished,  and 
the  cost.  In  states  where  convict  labor 
Is  thus  eniployed.  "Whaling  With  Mod- 
ern Metiiods"  is  an  article  of  thrilling 
Interest;  and  the  description  of  Uncle 
.Sam's  derelict  destroyer,  whose  mission 
is  to  succor  imperilled  navigators,  re- 
pair disabled  ships  and  «iestroy  aban- 
doned wrecks,  should  be  read  by  every- 
one, young  and  old. 

•  •       • 

Hampton's  Magazine  for  April  con- 
tains m.any  attractive  features,  among 
the  more  prominent  being  "The  Heart 
of  the  Railroad  Problem,"  by  Charles 
Edward  Ru.ssell;  "A  Watch  in  the 
Night,"  a  storv  bv  Josephine  Daskam 
Bacon;  "Night  Riding — -\  Reign  of 
Fear."  by  Eugene  P.  Lyle.  Jr.;  "Dan- 
gers That  Threaten  Our  Battleships  In 
Action,"  by  Rear  Admiral  Robley  D. 
Evans;  "The  News  V;ilue  of  Old  Bill- 
ings," a  story  by  Ellis  Parker  Butler. 

•  •       • 

In  the  Issue  of  Harper's  Weekly  for 
March  nth.  John  Jay  White,  Jr..  pre- 
sents a  graphic  description  of  a  hunt- 
ing tour  made  in  company  with  Dr. 
W.  .S.  Rainsford.  formerly  rector  of 
St.  George's  church.  New  York-  through 
those  portions  of  East  .\frlca  that  will 
be  traveled  by  Mr.  Roosevelt  on  his 
expedition.  It  is  the  first  of  four  arti- 
cles that  will  he  contributed  by  Mr. 
Wliite,  and  is  illustrated  with  numer- 
ous photographs  of  the  trophies  ob- 
tained, which  Included  lions,  rhinoc- 
eros, giraffe,  zebras,  and  many  specle.s 
of  antelope.  John  S.  Lopez  eontrlbute-s 
a  homorous  aeco\int  of  the  niaiiiier  In 
which  astute  Celestials  and  bowery 
•guides"  exploit  Chinatown  In  the  in- 
terests of  country  visitors.  The  prog- 
ress of  the  women's  suffrage  movement 
is  presented  by  William  Hemmlngway, 
who  points  to  the  advance  which  it  has 
made   among   the   wealthy   class. 


».»^»»»»»»*»»»»'lt»»K)!c*)|(»*»***»*)M^**«**»»»***»»*»**** 


Among  the  .>lagazines. 

In  the  House  .and  tJarden  for  April. 
Tudor  Jenks  tells  In  verse  of  the  as- 
signment of  a  reporter  to  ""Se  what 
Tareaxacums  have  to  Say"  and  In  n. 
bright  way  tells  of  these  "scions  of  an 
ancient  race,"  the  Dent  de  Lions,  of 
their  aer'al  voyage  from  a  far  off 
Land  of  Clover  to  the  pleasant  harbor 
In  the  lee  of  the  <Jld  Stone  Wall.  The 
of  the  story  which  he 
relate  Is  but  a  reflex  of 
happiness  these  bright 
In    the    early    springtime- 


cheerfulness 
makes  them 
the  smiling 
flowers    shed 


•      •      • 
Ounters    Magazine     for 
fine     collection     of     stories 
who    like,   in   their  fiction, 
venture   and    big.    stirring 
talnment  pure  and  simpl*' 


April    has    a 
for    readers 
love  and  ad- 
plots,    enter- 
Three  feat- 


ures loom  extra  large  In  the  April 
Gunter'.s.  They  are  a  complete  novel 
bv  Clinton  Dangerfleld,  entTtled  "Cas- 
tleton  of  Kentucky.  .\  Romance qof  the 
Night-riders;"  the  beginning  of  a  ser- 
ial novel  of  love  and  mystery.  '"The 
(;able  House."  by  Arthur  W.  March- 
mont;  and  the  first  complete  story  of 
the  "Levinson  Lea.  Lawyer,"  series,  by 
Edwin   Bliss. 

*      •      * 

A  true  tale  of  shipwreck  In  the  Ice- 
floes off  the  Newfoundland  coast  opens 
the  April  number  of  Harper's  Maga- 
zine. It  is  George  Harding's  account 
of  his  own  experience,  and  his  tale  ot 
how  the  men  faced  threatening  death. 
The  drawings  were  made  by  the  au- 
tho-.  An  important  article  in  this 
numl)er  is  contributed  by  the  famous 
surgeon.  Dr.  W.  W.  Keen,  who  de- 
scribes the  latest  developments  in  sur- 
gery by  which  feats  of  almost  incred- 
ible wonder  are  performed.  Madame 
de  Bunsen.  wife  of  a  well-known  diplo- 
mat, writes  a  chapter  of  extremely  In- 
teresting reminiscences  of  her  experi- 
ences at  The  Hague  in  the  late  60's. 
Theodore  Watts-Duntou  contributes  a 
brilliant  critique  of  Shakespeare's 
••Cvmbellne,  "  for  which  the  drawings 
were  ma<le  by  Edwin  .\.  Abbey.  Nor- 
man Duncan  takes  the  reader  'Beyond 
Beersheba"  and  Into  Egypt  by  a  pleas- 
ant road,   with  much  interesting   tai«- 


telllng  and  adventure  upon  the  way. 
The  anonymous  serial,  'The  Inner 
Shrine,"  continues  to  develop  a  piquant 
and  absorbing  plot,  and  to  draw  the 
attention  of  readers  generally.  Be- 
sides there  are  seven  fine  short  stor- 
ies by  .\rtluir  Stanwood  Pier.  Elizabeth 
Stuart  Phelps,  James  Branch  <:al)ell, 
James  Barnes,  Willa  Sibert  Gather, 
Alice  M.icGowan  and  Leo  Crane.  The 
illustrations  include  a  group  of  etch- 
ings of  Chicago  by  Cliarles  Henry 
White.  -AbbeVs  Sliakespeare  pictures, 
laiiitlngs  bv  Howard  Pyle,  drawings 
Lv  Frank  Craig,  Newell,  and  many  oth- 
ers. Mr.  Howells  di.-^cusses  further  in 
his  Easy  Chair  the  question  of  ttie 
cost  of  living  In  New  York,  and  Mr. 
Alden  tak 's  for  his  theme  in  the  .Study 
the  unreality,  or  reality,  of  the  repre- 
sentation   of    life    in    literature. 

*       *       * 
Among     the    leading    articles    in     the 

April  number  of  the  Technical  World 
Magazine  are:  "Terrific  Wa#te  of  Nat- 
ural Gas,"  by  Conley  B.  Purdom;  "To 
Give  the  Birds  a  Refuge."  by  Roy 
Crandall;  "The  Waters  Under  the 
Earth"  bv  Anne  Hard;  "New  Blow  at 
the  NVhite  Plague."'  by  Frederic  Blount 
Warren;  'Fire  Fighter  that  Gives  No 
Quarter."  by  A.  W.  Rolker;  'Moving  a 
River  to  Protect  a  Railroad,"  by  Harry 
H.  Dunn;  "Shall  I'lire  Food  be  Pure," 
by  Rene  Bache;  'Conquering  the  Hell- 
Gate  of  the  Lakes,"  by  Len  G,  Shaw; 
"Motor- Boating  for  Pleasure,"  by  I>ar- 
wln  .S.  Hatch;  "Latest  In  Flying  Ma- 
chines." by  C.  F.  Carter  and  William 
Walsh. 

•  *      * 

From  the  chic  looking  Mardl  Gras 
girl  bv  John  Cecil  Clay  on  the  cover, 
to  the  last  letter  In  the  household  de- 
partment, Uncle  liemus' — The  Home 
Magazine  for  March  is  just  about  as 
salisfvlng  a  periodical  as  you  will  find. 
The  v«»ry  first  article  In  the  magazine 
is  a  startler,  it  Is  an  editorial  written 
by  Julian  Harris,  the  editor.  It  is  en- 
titled "Shall  the  Solid  South  Be  Shat- 
tered"?" and  In  It  Mr.  Harris  makes 
some  remarkable,  not  to  say  sensa- 
tional, statements  concerning  political 
conditions  in  the  South.  .Apropos  of 
the  Inauguration  of  Taft.  a  splendidly 
written  article  by  M,  A.  Lane,  entitled 
•Two  Early  Inaugurations,"  is  of  es- 
pecial interest.  In  pleasing  style.  Mr. 
I^ne  describes  the  inauguration  of 
Washington  and  tiiat  of  Jefferson.  The 
article  is  illustrated  from  photographs 
of  rare  pictures  of  men  and  scenes 
incident  to  the  two  great  events.  In 
•'She  Stoops  to  Conquer,"  Relna  Melcher 
has  written  a  delightful  story  of  child 
life.  The  author  tells  how  a  homely 
little  girl,  with  the  aid  of  a  carefully 
laid  scheme — which  has  to  do  with  val- 
entines— triumphs  over  her  more  at- 
tractive-looking rival.  Alice  Beach 
Winter  has  drawn  a  charming  illus- 
tration   for    the    story. 

•  •      • 

The  number  of  Smith's  Magazine  now 
on  the  stands  contains  sixteen  photo- 
graphic full -page  art  studies  of  stage 
favorites.  It  is  announced  in  the  same 
number  that  this  section  of  the  maga- 
zine win  be  incr«»ased  to  twenty-four 
pages  the  following  month.  Also  of 
great  Interest  is  •Lady  Frederick,  "  the 
plav  in  which  Ethel  Barrymore  is  now 
st.irring,  told  in  short-story  form,  by 
Ruth    Crosby    Dimmick. 

•  *       • 

Ainslee'a  for  April  has  an  unusually 
fine  table  of  contents.  Every  story  In 
the  list  Is  worth  more  than  the  time 
and  monev  spent  in  reading  It.  Among 
the  contributors  are  Harold  MacGrath, 
Joseph  C.  Lincoln.  Mary  H.  Vor.se, 
Steel  Williams.  Marie  Van  Vorst.  Aus- 
tin Adams,  Jane  W.  Guthrie.  Charles 
Neville  Buck,  Elizabeth  Duer.  Willidm 
.Armstrong,  Arthur  Loring  Bruce  and 
Caroline   Duer. 

•  •      • 

The  April  number  of  The  Popular  is 
filled  with  good  stories  of  this  best  of 
all  tvpe.s — the  clean,  heart-stlrrlng  ad- 
venture storv.  Take,  for  lti.stance, 
•Alan  C.>lcraft,  Squire  of  Dames,"  by 
Louis  Joseph  Vance,  the  complete 
novel  which  stands  at  the  head  of  the 
list.  It  is  a  story  of  rapid,  but  real 
action,  without  a  single  incident  at 
which  the  reader's  credulity  must 
strain;  It  contains  real  characters  and 
a  charming  romance.  Alan  Colcraft 
anil  Elaine  Nicholson  might  liave  been 
lohn  Jones  and  Sally  Brown;  but  their 
adventures,         their        actions,  their 

motives,  would  have  been  the  same — 
for  they  were  a  real  man  and  a  real 
woman,  and  each  was  worthy  of  the 
other. 

•  •      • 

Laurence  North's  novel,  "Syrinx," 
which  appears  complete  in  the  April 
Issue    of    the     Smart    Set     stands    in     a 


LITTLE  JIM  PARK 

How  the  Workers  of  Pittsburg's  Painters  Row  Made  a 
Park  of  Their  Own  In  the  Shadow  of  Tene- 
ments and  Steel  Mills. 


it 

n 
u 

it 

it 
it 

it 
it 
n 

4!- 

it 
it 
it 
it 


By  LP:R0Y  SCOTT. 
Author  of  "To  Him  That  Hath."  Etc, 

(Kxclusive  Service  Charities  and  The 
r4)niiu<>iiH  l»n»s«  Bureau.) 

HAD  til  ken  11  car  over  to 

Paint.^r's  Mill  and  P»alnt- 

er's    Row    ar  d    got    off    at 

the      farther      end      of   a 

dingy,     smol.e-hung     set- 
tlement-     I  went  through 

atid    about      the      houses 

whicji  the  great  Carnegie 
company  leases  to  its  workers 
(with  no  trouble  about  collecting 
the  rent>,  for  that  ie  taken  from 
their  weekly  wages),  ho ises  so  close 
to  the  mllP,  somo  even  wall  to 
wall  with  it,  that  they  jhare  almost 
equally  with  the  mill,  iti  smoke  and 
grime  and  clangor — houses  which  had 
been  as  insanitary  and  isease-breed- 
ing  as  any  I  saw  offered  tie  voor,  even 
bv  hardened  slum  landlords.  And 
then,  after  T  had  gone  through  the 
rows  of  houses,  at  the  end  of  the  set- 
tlement nearest  Pittsburg,  I  cam? 
upon  a  sudden  contrast.  It  was 
n    space,    with      a      portion      of 


op» 

canopied,    and    over 

black-letter -d  -<ign: 


the    canopy 


tn 

it 

this 


\  LITTLE  JIM  PARK 


It  wasn't  much  of  a  park — just  a 
little  bit  of  ground,  in  area  hardly 
more  than  an  average  clly  lot,  with  a 
.second-hand  Iron  fence  around  It,  with 
rough  benches,  a  pavement  of  tan- 
bark  and  a  few  flower  beds  bordered 
with  whitewashed  brick?.  A  poor, 
pitiably  Insignificant  little  place,  yet 
startlingly  pleasant  whei  compared 
with  it.s  surroundings.  Oit  the  one 
side,  wit  ha  row  of  dreaiy  houses  be- 
tween, rumbled  and  belctied  the  mill; 
at  its  back  was  a  littered  waste;  at 
its  front,  across  the  sxeet,  was  a 
.steep  hill,  topped  by  th'i  ramshackle 
hou.ses  of  .Stewart's  Row,  and  this  hill 
was  muddy,  stubbled  over  with  lank 
dead  weeds,  gullied  with  foul-lo<iklng, 
foul-.smelling  streams  of  waste  water 
and    garbage. 

I  entered  the  park.  .«at  down  be- 
neath the  canopy,  and  my  imagination 
proceeded  to  explain  h  )w  the  park 
had  been  established.  [ts  name  was 
a  certain  clue.  '•Lltth  Jim  Park," 
that  fairly  re.-ked  ultra-septlmental- 
ity.  Some  rich  womar  had  been 
emotionally  stirred  by  the  stori«'s  of 
the  cheerless  life  of  tenerient  children. 
Ih"  Little  Jims  and  the  Little  Marys: 
she  had  chanced  to  see  t  ow  especially 
cheerless    is    the    life    of    the    children 


uround  the  rolls  In  the  mill),  but 
pretty  .soon  a  lot  of  us  guys  had  de- 
cided it  would  be  great  if  we  could 
clear  up  the  place  and  make  a  park. 
So  we  .started  at  the  job,  and  when 
any  of  us  was  laid  off  over  at  the  mill 
we  was  workln"  here.  The  Iron  fence 
we  got  when  they  tore  down  part  of 
Painter's  Row — it  was  just  old  junk 
you  know;  the  bricks  'round  the  flow- 
erbeds were  some  left  over  from 
building  a  brewery  down  the  street. 
We  just  helped  ourselves  to  'em;  the 
arch  over  the  Kate  we  made  out  of 
an  old  pipo:  the  flag  pole  there  u.sed 
to  be  a  pump  handle  n(  a  pump  down 
on  the  rlv^r — we  swiped  that;  the  ball 
on  top  of  the  flag  pole,  a  carpenter 
give  us.  We  chipped  In  and  bought 
this  t-  It.  and  we  chlpi»ed  In  and 
bought  a  flag.  The  first  <»ne  was 
whipped  to  pieces  by  the  wind  and  we 
had  to  chip  in  and  buy  another  be- 
fore the  summer  was  over.  Then 
we  set  out  some  flowers.  splashed 
around  with  some  iiaint  and  white- 
wash, and  the  park  was  done  The 
name  of  the  church  .seemed  sorter  to 
belong  to  the  place,  so  we  called  It 
•Little  Jim   Park." 

""The  park  was  what  you  might  say 
opened  on  Decoration  day,  when  the 
kids  ome  in  and  sang  and  performed. 
It  was  a  groat  place  for  the  kids  to 
play  all  summer,  and  a  fine  place  for 
us  to  sit  around  of  evenings  and  chin 
and  .ling.  Never  had  nothing  of  the 
sort  here  before,  you  know.  But  the 
big  show  her»»  .at  Little  Jim  Park  was 
<»ld  Home  VV<-,k.  whon  we  had  it  all 
Hxc<l  op  with  bunting  and  had  It  Ht 
up  of  nights.  I  guess  the  park  ain't 
much  to  look  at  Just  now,  for  the 
geraniums  have  all  b.-^n  took  up,  and 
the  fellows  are  takin'  care  of  'em  in 
their  houses  through  the  winter.  But 
in  .summer,  when  the  flowers  are  out. 
and  things  are  fixed  up.  I  tell  you  what 
Little  Jim  Park  looks  mighty  g<Jod 
to    Painter's    Row!" 

Somehow,  when  he  had  finished,  this 
little  park,  a  park  by  the  people, 
seemed  to  be  a  thouasnd  fold  mtire 
beautiful,  a  thousand  fold  more  .signifi- 
cant. It  and  the  great  mill  stood 
there  in  striking  contrast;  the  mill 
and  the  hou.ses  expre.ssing  the  indiffer- 
ence of  the  company  to  its  human 
machines,  the  jiark  the  spontaneous 
expression  of  a  grent  native  desire, 
though  choked  down  by  long  hours 
atid  the  general  oppressive  dingines.s, 
the  upreaching,  outn-aching  desire  of 
the  people  for  light,  for  air.  f(jr  nat- 
ural happiness,   for   development. 


had  established 

it    as    title    the 

name    I  y   wh  ch 

krown  to  senti- 


We  write  nil   kIndM  of 

AUTOMOBILE  AND 
LAUNCH  INSURANCE 

Firet    Acoident    and    Liability    InMor- 
ance  of  every  kiad.  S««  um  for  rate*. 


mm 

\J  ESTATE  1  ■    I^ 


mm 


LOANS 
INSURANCE 


Mfiin    Floor.    Pnlladio. 


vf  Painter's  Row;   she 
the    park,    and    given 
more    or    less    generic 
tenement  childr-'n  are 
ment,  "Little  Jim." 

I  had  just  credited  the  park  to  my 
Lady  Bountiful,  had  just  fini.shed  with 
Romance:  when  Realism  sauntered 
into  the  park  and  took  ;he  other  end 
of  my  bench.  He  wils  a  working 
man.  whose  decent  clotLes  and  white 
collar  told  me  this  wsu*  his  day  off. 
His  coat  collar  was  turned  up,  his 
slouch  hat  pulled  dowr..  _  One  Jaw 
stood  out  with  a  quid  of  tobacco,  and 
his  face  was  deeply  wrinkled.  He 
was   perhaps   twenty-one 

"Won't  you  tell  me,"  :  asked,  "who 
gave  this  park  to  Paint*- r's   Row?" 

He    smiled    good-natHtedly    at     me. 

"Who  gave  it?     Nobody  give  itt." 

"Then    how    did    you   get    it?" 

"We   took  it,"  said    he. 

"Took   It!"        But   the   name-*-?" 

"Oh,  we  just  took  that,  too." 

Here  was  something  new  in  the 
park-building  line.  I  dr*w  nearer,  "I 
wish  you'd  tell  me  about  it."  I  asked- 

"Sure.  I'll  tell,"  said  he.  and  I  could 
detect  pride  in  the  paric  in  both  th? 
voung  fellow's  tone  and  manner.  He 
tossed  his  quid  down  i.pon  the  tan- 
bark.  "Used  l'>  be  a  little  old  church 
standing  here.  Little  Jim  church 
they  called  it,  queer  name  for  a 
church       wasn't     it?  Damned     if    I  i 

know  whv  they  named  It  that.  For  1 
the  last  five  or  .six  y<:ars  it  wasn't 
used  at  all.  and  last  jpring  it  just 
collapsed.  The  Hunkiej  come  .scram- 
bling over  it  and  cariled  away  all 
the  wood  to  burn,  and  what  was  left 
was  certainly  a  mess. 

"Well,  I  don't  know  just  who  started 
the  Idea.  I  guess  it  was  a  John  Dona- 
hue aud     Jlui    Lteary,     (Uii»/     wurka 


A    RellKlouH    Aiittaur'H    Statement. 

Kev.  Joseph  H.  l'"esperha Ji.  Salisbury, 
N.  C.  who  is  the  author  of  several 
tiooks,  writes:  "F'or  several  years  I 
M-as  afflicted  with  kidney  trouble,  and 
last  winter  I  was  suddenly  stricken 
with  a  severe  pain  In  my  kidneys  and 
was  confined  to  bed  eight"  days  unable 
to  get  Ui)  without  assistance.  My 
urine  contained  a  thick  white  sediment 
and  I  passed  same  frequently  day  and 
I  night.  I  commenced  taking  Foley's 
Kidney  Remedy,  and  the  pain  gradual- 
ly abated  and  finally  ceased  and  my 
urine  became  normal.  I  cheerfully  rec- 
ommend Foley's  Kidney  Remedy." 
Sold   by    all    druggists. 


A  BEAUTIFUL  HEAD  of  hair  U 
a  Kvoman's  rlelkcat  treasure.  Da 
not  neglect  It,  let  It  become 
GRAY  or  FADED.    USE 

Health 

and  It  wUI  be  RESTORED  to  Itfl 
NATURAL  COLOR  and  beauty;  tbe 
scalp  lATlll  l»e  clean,  tbe  hair 
bealthy,  olossy  and  luxuriant— 
somctblng  to  be  proud  of  and  to 
be  admired.  Tben  keep  It  so  In 
the  luturc  by  Its  reoular  use. 
IS  NOT  A  DYE. 

$1  AND  SOe.  BOrrLES.  AT  DBUGGIST8. 

■ay's  HarflBB  Soap  cure«   Extt-mn,   red 

-ou|fb  and  chapped  banda,  and  all  nkin  diseases 

<eeps  kkin  fine  and  soft,  25c.  drufttris'^.      Sent 

•c  for  free  books,  "'The  Care  oT  tbe  Sfcui,"  "Thi 

-are of  the  Rair." 

PltUo  Day  Sp«c.  C»^  Newark.  N.  J. 

W.  ▲.  ABUUTX; 


* 

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— ,. 


HERALD:      SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


to   make   their 


HE   warm   goldc-n   sun   of  spring  blazinjr  down   in   its  first   decep- 

Ttive,  luxurious,  oi«ulence  brings  with  it  a  great  discontent  with 
life.  How  could  one  ever  have  thought  that  the  suit  now  being 
worn  was  fit  to  adorn  any  criature,  no  matter  how  lovely,  and 
as  for  the  hats  of  the  ^ea^•on — monstrous  are  tlity.  Nothing  is 
fit  txct'pt  the  shining  new,  beautiful,  expensive  things  in  the 
shops  that  simply  glitter  and  glare  with  their  newness.  Clothes 
which  seem  after  all  tc  be  the  vejy  center,  core,  and  kerwel  of 
life,  are  the  only  attraction,  and  with  them  society  is  quite  taken  up. 
These  first  days  make  one  quite  forget  the  long  days  of  dull  gray  rain  which 
must  elapse  before  there  will  be  any  real  opportunity  to  wear  the  spring 
clothes. 

The  spring  wardrobes  and  the  graduation  gowns  are  demanding  atten- 
tion, and  the  days  may  rcal.y  be  very  full  with  just  these  details.  Many  of 
the  clubs  are  winding  up  the  year's  work,  and  church  and  charity  are  re- 
ceiving, of  course,  their  share  of  attention.  But  for  the  most  part  there 
Is  a  lack  of  excitement  that  is  truly  Lenten. 


One  of  the  most  interesiing  of  tlie  |  li 
spring  Wfddings  will  be  tliat  of  Miss 
Clarthen  Iiony-Filger  vf  Bremen.  tJei - 
many,  and  Arliuir  H.  Krleger  of  this 
Cllv.  wbicJj  will  lake  place  April  i::  at 
Bremen.  Tlie  bride  Is  the  artoptt-d 
dauRliter  of  Artluir  Fltger,  the  arii.«^l. 
who  is  a  brother  of  August  Fitger  of 
this  rity.  and  is  known  in  L'uluth 
through"  liis    work. 

Mr.  Krieger  and  liis  bride  will  go  to 
the  North  oi  Otermany  on  a  wedding 
trip  and  will  later  rtiurn  to  I'ulutii, 
to  be  at  honif  ai  S15  Kast  First  street. 
Thev  will  return  to  Puluth  about  May 
16.  'Miss  Wilhcniina  Fitger.  who  went 
abroad  a  lew  weeks  ago,  will  be  a 
Kuest    at    the    wedding. 

•  •       • 
Mr.    and    Mrs.    Albert    Abraham,    who 

spent  the  winter  touring  In  Kurope, 
will  sail  tomorrow  from  Liverpool  lor 
America.  They  will  visit  two  weeks 
at  Atlantic  City  before  returning  to 
Duluth. 

«  •  « 
Mrs.  George  S.  Hie  hards  and  her 
mother.  Mrs.  ^^tinchtield.  of  the  fpald- 
ing.  left  yesterday  for  Minneapolis, 
where  Mvs.  Stinehllt'd  will  visit  lier 
daughter.  Mis.  Hiroli.  Mrs.  Richards 
will   go   youth    for  a   trip. 

•  •       * 
Mr.    and    Mrs.     Jolin    Christie    enter- 

talnej  Thursday  evening  at  a  beautiful 
card  reception  at  tlieir  home.  1^11  Kast 
Second  street,  in  honor  of  their  twenly- 
flfth  wedding  anniversary.  The  rooms 
were  prettily  decorated  in  yellow  roses 
and  narcissi  and  smilax.  Alter  the  re- 
ception, bridge  was  played  at  ten 
tables,  and  the  lavors  were  won ,  by 
Mrs.  H.  \V.  Chead'.e  and  Mrs.  AVebster. 
and   tlie    men's    prizes   went    to    Wlliiam 


Hamblln.    at    Mac- 


Yale   and    H.   W.   Clieadle.     Tlie   guests 

w^ere: 

Messrs.   and   Mesdames — 


J.    A. 
H.   J. 
Henry 
C.    W. 
R.   A. 
I. 


Hall. 

Achenbach, 
Taylor, 
Erlcson, 
Webster. 


H.    I.    Pineo, 

\V.    B.    Henderson 

W.    A.    Hicktn, 

W.  L.    Yale, 

C.    A.    Whitemore, 

J.    Laux, 

M.   HofC. 


Margaret  Clark. 
Clarice  Hendersoi 


Simon    C'ark. 

W.  A.  McClaran. 

W.    C.    McCarter. 

E.   A.   Schulze, 

Tallant, 

C.   H.   r>unnlng. 

A.    K.    Hathaway, 

Alexander    Milne. 

Fred    Hough. 

H.    \V.   Cheadle, 

Justin    Zuger. 

H.    H.   Smith   of 
Lake  Bluff. 
Mrs.    \V.   W.   Butchart. 
Misses — 

Hall, 

Pauline  Hall. 
Messrs. — 

P.   G.    Brown,  Thomas  Cliristle. 

John   C.    Wilson.        R.    P.   Christie. 

•  «       • 

Mrs.  Arthur  E.  Gilbert  has  returned 
from  a  few  days'  visit  with  her  par- 
ents at  St.  Paul. 

•  •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  W.  Hartman  have 
gone  to  the  Twin  Cities  for  a  short 
visit. 

•  •       • 

Miss  Dora  Adron,  a  deaconess  of  the 
Methodist  church  and  connected  with 
the  deaconess  home  at  Cincinnati,  is 
spending  her  vacatlf>n  in  this  city,  the 
guest  of  her  sister,  Mrs.  J.  C.  Swan,  of 
2022  East  Superior  street. 

•  •       • 

Miss  McGregor,  assistant  state  agent 
of  the  Owatonna  school  for  dependent 
children,  is  in  the  city  the  guest  of 
Mrs.  D.  S.  Forgy. 

«       •       • 

Mrs.  A.  Ecker  lias  returned  from  a 
two  weeks"  visit  at  Charles  City,  Iowa, 
Stillwater  and  Minneapolis. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  "V\'.  M.  Chance  of  Little  Falls  is 
the  guest  of  her  niece,  Mrs.  L.  N.  Mer- 
rltt. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  Francis  Dykes  and  children  of 
New  York  are  visiting  Mrs.  Dykes 
mother,  Mrs.  L.  Huot. 

•  •       • 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  L.  M.  Brunet  have  as 
their  guest,  Mrs.  Brunei's  brother. 
Chief  Justice  Dubuc.  of  Winnipeg,  who 
has  Just  returned  from  a  two  months' 
visit  at  New  Orleans  and  Havana. 

•  «       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Fred  Merrltt  and  Mrs, 
Alma  Grace  left  last  evening  for  a 
visit  at  Chicago. 

•  *       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  G.  Ketcham  of  the 
St.  Elmo  flats  are  visiting  In  Chicago 
for  a  week, 

•  *      • 

Mrs.  T.  J.  I»avis  entertained  at  a 
luncheon  of  ten  covers  yesterday  at  her 
home.  1601  London  road,  in  honor  ol 
Mrs.  A.  E.  Shores  of  Tacoma.  who  is 
the  guest  of  her  daughter,  Mrs.  A.  E. 
Walker.  Pink  roses  were  used  In  dec- 
oration. 

«       •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  S.  Woodbrldge  left 
Monday  for  the  East,  and  will  go  to 
Cuba,  where  tliey  will  be  the  guests  for 
a  week  at  Havana  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Luther  Mendenhall  at  their  winter 
home  there.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Woodbrldge 
will  visit  through  the  Southern  states 
and  on  their  return  will  be  In  Wash- 
ington during  tlie  week  of  April  19. 
during  the  national  meeting  of  the 
Daughters  of  the  American  Revolution. 
Mrs.  Woodbrldge  will  represent  the 
Daughters  of  Libertv  chapter  of  this 
city. 

•  •      • 

Word  has  been  received  in  Duluth 
of  the  wedding  of  Miss  Anna  Amory 
Frederick,  daughter  of  C.  L.  Frederick 
of  2113  Oak  street,  Los  Ancles,  Cal.. 
to  Roy  J.  Penniwell  of  that  city.  -The 
service  was  read  Wednesday  of  last 
week  at  the  home  of  the  bride's  father 
by  Rev.  Baker  P.  Lee  of  Christ  Episco- 
pal church.  After  April  5  Mr.  Penniwell 
and  his  bride  will  be  at  home  at  3402 
Foster  street.  The  family  formerly 
lived  in  Duluth  and  the  bride  is  a 
sister  of  Mrs.  Drew  Dunn,  who  is  well 
known  here. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Panton  returned 
the  first  of  the  week  from  a  three 
weeks'    visit   in   the   East. 

•  •       « 

Mrs.  W.  T.  Bailey  and  daughter.  Miss 
Rebecca  Bailey,  have  returned  from  a 
several   weeks'   cisit    in    the  South. 

•  *       • 

Miss     Laura     Hamblln     of     1219     East 

fourth    street   and   Miss   Fanny   Lum   of 

'East  First  street  left  yesterday  for  the 

Twin    Cities,    the    former    to    visit    with 


r  brother,  Willis 
altster  college,  St.  Paul,  and  Miss  L.nn 
to  visit  friends  at  the  state  university. 
Tl.ey  will  be  tlio  guest?  of  honor  at  a 
box  party  to  see  "Ben  Hur  "  during  the 
wttk. 

*  •       • 

Miss  Carey  and  Miss  J<)sephine  Carey 
Itft  yesterday  for  a  few  days'  visit 
in    Minneapolis. 

*  *       • 
Mrs.    W.    J.    Comstock    of    1020    East 

Second   street   has   returned  from  a  ten 
days'    visit    at    Chioago. 

*  •       * 
Miss  Ethel  McCuen  of  the  high  school 

faculty  is  spending  the  spring  vacation 
at  her  home  in  Jowa. 

*  •       * 
Misses    Elsa    and    Lucille    Bieberman 

left     during     the    week       for      Chicago, 
they    will    spend    the   spring   va- 


where 
cation. 


Mr.    and    Mrs. 
day   evening    i«.ir 
way's   forji.er 


Mrs.    .A. 
have  gene 


S. 
to 


Is  now  ready  with  a  complete 
stock  of  new  Spring  Millinery. 
After  May  1st  we  will  occupy  the 
store  room  known  as  the  Gid- 
ding's  Annex.  A  portion  of  this 
room  will  be  for  rent  from  May 
1st  for  some  desirable  tenant. 


Woolway    left    Thurs- 
a    visit    at    Mr.    Wool- 
home  at    London,  Can. 

•  •       • 

Reed    and    Miss    DeBrule 
Chicago  for  a  short  visit. 

•  «       • 

Miss  Hazel  McKay  of  1121  East 
Fourtli  strctt  is  visiting  at  Hibbing 
and     Keewatin. 

«       «       • 

Miss  Kezla  Bennett  and  Miss  Ger- 
trude Williams  of  the  St.  I'aul  Y.  W 
C.  A.,  who  were  the  guests  of  Mrs. 
Wesley  Feetham  for  the  week-end  re- 
tiired    to    St.    Paul    Monday    evening. 

•  •       « 
Mr.    and    Mrs.    D.    Van    Baalen    of    r.2  4 

East   Third    street    have    returnetl    from 
a    two    mcntlis'     visit     in     California. 

•  •       • 

Mrs.    Agnes    L.    Atwood    left    the    first 
of     the     w*ek     for    a    visit    witli     M 
John  H.  Chisholm  of  Clotjuet. 

•  •       • 
Mrs.    William    R.    Edwards 

day    for    a    visit    with    her 
St.     Clair,    Mich. 

•  •       • 

Mrs.  Kittie  Scott  was  i-alled  to  Min- 
neapolis during  tlie  week  by  the  seri- 
ous  illness  of  her  mother. 

•  •       • 

Mrs.  Stella  Prince  Stocker  and  Miss 
Stocker  entertained  the  members  rf 
the  Snowshoe  club  Wednesday  evening 
at  an  informal  musicale  at  their  home 
on  East  Second  street.  Those 
were: 

Messrs   and  Mesdames — 


I'S. 

left    Sun- 
parents    at 


present 


G.   W.  C 

Misses — 
El  v. 
Ruth  Ely, 


Ross. 


J  .A.  Lawrle. 


Isabel  Pearson. 
Mr    W.  B.  Lowrie. 

*  «       • 

Mrs.  R.  A.  Williams  of  Cleveland  is 
visiting  her  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
George  Rgss,  of  ILII  East  Second 
street. 

*  •      • 

Mrs.  J.  F.  Dennis  of  211  Second  ave- 
nue west  has  returned  from  a  five 
weeks'  visit  at  Minneapc>*is,  Chicago 
and  Hamilton,  t^nt. 

*  •      • 

Miss  Lillian  Burns,  who  was  the 
guest  of  Miss  Mary  McFadden  of 
Thirty-second  avenue  east  for  a  few 
days,  returned  the  first  of  the  week  to 
Zlm.   Minn. 

*  *      • 

Miss  Jane  Mack,  who  was  the  guest 
of  her  brother.  Peter  Mack,  at  the 
Spalding,  has  returned  to  her  home 
at  Chicago. 

*  •      • 

Mrs.  W.  W  Kleckner  of  Hibbing  Is 
the    guest   of   friends    in    the    city. 

*  •      • 

Miss  Effle  Mintle  left  today  to  spend 
the  spring  vacation  with  her  parents  at 
Minneapolis. 


An  artUlic  photografJi    EASTER 
is  always  a  faahionablt    ^,  jjprp 
and  appropriate Lrlr  1 

Pose  for  them  tiow. 

DWORSHAK 


Mrs.  A.  M.  Hunter  left  Tuesday  for  a 
month's   visit    with  her   son,  Thomas   E. 
Hunter,    of    Birmingham,    Ala. 
«       *       • 

Mrs.  W.  E  Whipple  of  1710  East 
Third  street  is  visiting  relatives  in  Il- 
linois. 

*  •       • 

Rev.  and  Mrs.  J.  C  Farles  of  Hunter's 
Park  have  as  tlieir  guests  Mrs.  Best 
and  Mrs.  Coffin  of  Minneapolis. 

*  •       • 

Miss  Millie  Conley  of  52  West  Sec- 
ond street  left  the  first  of  the  week 
for  Chicago. 

•  •      • 

Miss  Ellen  Douglas  is  visiting  friends 
in  St.  Paul. 

•  •       • 

Miss  Dorothy  Lyons  was  the  guest 
of  honor  at  a  birthday  party  Tuesday 
afternoon  at  her  home.  816  East  Sev- 
enth street.  The  decorations  and  fa- 
vors were  in  green.  A  pleasant  after- 
enjoyed     by 


the     following 


noon     wf 
guests: 
Slisscs — 

Evelyn  Erickson. 

Elizabeth  Hanson, 

Agnes  Manthy, 

Bonnie  Lyons, 

Maiie  Lyons, 
Masters — 

Bertine  Nesgoth. 

Edward  Erickson, 

Asa  Lyons.  Jr.. 

«       *       • 

Mrs.    Minnie    Cuddy    of 
perior    street    entertained 
shower    TuescTay    evening 
Miss    Adalia    Oppel.       The 
prettily  decorated  in  hearts,  and 
ty-five  guests  were  entertained. 
«       •       • 

Miss  Marjorle  McMillan  entertained 
the  Charity  club,  of  which  she  is  a 
member,  Wednesday  evening  at  her 
home,  113  East  Fifth  street.  The  af- 
fair was  also  in  honor  of  the  seven- 
teenth l^thday  anniversary  of  the 
hostess. 

*       •       • 

Miss  Helen  Little  and  Miss  Myrtle 
Perry  were  "hostesses  at  a  St.  Patricks 
day  party  in  honor  of  the  sixteenth 
birthday  anniversary  of  Miss  Dell 
Perry.  An  evening  of  games  and  music 
was  enjoyed  by  the  following  guests: 
Misses — 


Gean  McFadden, 
Helen  Walker. 
Alice  Walker. 
Genevieve  Ehlen- 
bach.       • 

Bobby  Lyons. 
Walter  Goodson. 
Ronald  Hanson. 

18    East    Su- 

at    a    bxindle 

In    honor    of 

rooms    were 

twen- 


Clara  Bergman. 
.Tulia  Putman. 
Erna  Rak(5wsky, 
Austria  Larsen. 
Luclle  Hoar, 
Messrs. — 
James  Dunn, 
E.  Stevens, 
Walter  Moore. 
Perry  Sweetman 
of  Superior, 


M.irgaret  Melick, 
Dorothy  Schaliz, 
Ida  Bergman, 
May  Laveseer. 


Arthur  Le  Moigne, 
Allan  McDonald, 
George  Frink, 
Benjamin  Frink, 
Arthur  Cameron. 
•      *      • 

Miss  Lucille  Grimes  was  the  guest  of 
honor  at  a  pleasant  surprise  part> 
Wednesday  evening  at  her  home,  1721 
Piedmont  avenue.  The  rooms  were 
prettily  decorated  In  green  and  white 


Lilly  Macaskill, 
Agnes  Johnson, 
Coson. 

Gardner. 
A.  Klnely, 
Spencer  J.  Seals, 
E.    Harri.s. 
John  Steinback, 


in  honor  of  St.  Patrick,  and  the  ap- 
pointments of  the  luncheon  further  car- 
ried out  the  scheme.  Games  and  music 
were  the  amusements  of  the  evening. 
«  •  • 
Mrs.  Ch.arles  Bexter  entertained  at 
cards  Wfdntsday  afternoon  at  her 
home,  2617  West  Fourth  street.  The 
guests  were  the  members  of  the  Zenith 
thapter  of  the  Order  of  the  P^astern 
.Star.  The  oard  favors  were  won  by 
Mrs.  Cliarles  Bronson.  Mrs.  W.  A.  Gear- 
hart,  Mrs.  I'eter  Hibbard  and  Mrs.  Mc- 
Leod. 

*  *       • 

Mrs.  II.  D.  Elden  of  411  Twenty-first 
avenue  east  entertained  at  a  luncheon 
last  .Saturday  in  honor  of  Mrs.  W.  W. 
Kleckmer  of  Hibbing. 

«       •       • 

The  Misses  Whalen  of  124  Tentii 
avenue  east  entertained  at  an  informal 
party  Wednesday  evening  at  their 
home  in  honor  of  their  guests.  Miss 
Zella  Gardner  and  Miss  Ilooney.  The 
decorations  and  amusements  for  the 
evening  were  suggestive  of  St.  Pat- 
rick's day,  and  the  following  guests 
were  present: 
Misses — 

Germond. 

Florence  Moran, 

Ida  Nelson, 
Messrs. 

George  D.  Neg- 
ley. 

Royal  G.  Wilson, 

J.  W.  Anderson, 

Ray  Coson, 

Guirtsen. 

•  «       « 

The  wedding  of  Miss  Grace  Boyd, 
daughter  of  Charles  C.  Boyd,  and 
Chailes  B.  Eskelson  took  place  Satur- 
day evening  at  llie  home  of  the  bride's 
father.  H24  Loke  avenue  north.  Only 
the  iuinu'diate  friends  were  present  for 
I  lie  ceremony.  The  service  was  read 
by  Rv.  J.  L.  Murphy  of  St.  John's 
Engli.'sh  Lutheran  cliurch.  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Eskelson  will  be  at  home  in  ths  city. 

•  *       * 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  W.  Hanson  enter- 
tained at  dinner  and  cards  Monday 
evening  at  their  home.  211  Twenty- 
ninth  avenue  west.  The  card  favors 
were  won  by  Mrs.  G.  Rakowsky,  Dr. 
Osterberg  and  Andrew  Risen.  Covers 
were  laid  for  eleven. 

•  •       • 

I^Irs.  S.  E.  Catherall  entertained  at 
a  St.  Patricks  day  dinner  Wednesday 
evening  at  lier  home  at  T.,akeside  in 
honoi  of  the  seventeenth  birthday  an- 
riversary  of  her  daugliter,  Ruth. 

*  «       • 

:Mr«,  ■William  L'Estrange  entertained 
at  a  St.  Patrick's  day  party  Wednesday 
afternoon  at  her  home,  3411  Minnesota 
avenue. 

*  «      * 

The  I.  T.  R.  club  was  entertained 
Tuesday  evening  at  the  home  of  one  of 
the  members  at  West  Duluth.  and  the 
affair  was  one  of  the  most  delightful 
in  the  series  at  which  the  members 
have  been  hosts.  Each  member  was 
presented  with  a  club  pin,  bearing  the 
A  number  of  other 
planned. 


initials   "I. 
affairs  are 


T.    R.' 

being 


Mrs.  J.  L.  Young  entertained  at  an 
old-fashioned  party  Mondav  afternoon 
at  her  home,  624'/^  East  Fourth  street. 
The  guests  wore  gowns  of  tlie  fashion 
of  fifty  years  ago,  and  the  decorations 
were  the  simple  ones  which  might  be 
available  to  a  fartner's  wife  of  that 
period.  Those  present  were: 
.Mesdames — 

T.    Rogers, 
M.    St u bier, 
L.    Collatz. 
A.  Shuman, 
L.   Wiles, 

F.  Neary, 
J.    Huhn, 

G.  Stubler. 
•      •      * 

Arthur     Tilseth     was     the    guest       of 
honor     at     a     surprise     party     Tuesday 
evening  in  honor  of  his  birthday  anni- 
versary.    The  guests  were: 
Misses — 


B. 

A.   Grimon, 

M. 

Gunder. 

L. 

Johnson, 

A. 

Egner, 

J. 

Lang. 

M. 

Wesler, 

1'. 

Cilatz, 

J. 

Dittman, 

E.     Sullivan, 
Leone  Heller, 
L.    Ridgewell, 
J.  Timmerman, 
Agnes  Gevin, 
Julia   Tilseth, 
Gladys  Warner, 
Masters — 
A.    Anderson, 
Oscar  Tilseth 
C.    Ridgewell, 
R.   Ridgewell, 


Ruth   Lafald. 
Kitty  Sjuback 
Eva  Gevin, 
Rose   Thompson, 
C.   Ridgewell, 
E.  Timmerman. 


E.  Ridgewell. 
Raymond  Wells, 
Clyde  Gevin, 
H.   Timmerman. 
•      •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  August  Width  last  Sat- 
urday evening  entertained  in  honor  of 
the  twenty-second  birthday  anniver- 
sary of  Albin  Nordstrom.  An  inform- 
al evening  of  music  and  games  was 
enjoyed  by  the  following  guests: 
Misses — 

Alice    Forsell, 
Swanson, 
Edith    Miller, 
Alice    Anderson, 
Edith    Nordstrom. 


Esther  Nordstrom 
Alma    Forsell. 
Drama, 

Nan    Nordstrom, 
Louise  Burthwick 
Messrs. — 

Roy  Bridgeman, 
Julius   Baldwin, 
VN'llliam     Ander- 
son 
Gilbert   Wester 


George  Haakens, 
Gust   Pearson. 
David    Olson. 
William    Weston. 


Miss    Tlllie    Peterson    was    pleasantly 
surprised      Thursday      evening    at    her 
home    at     West     Duluth.       The    guests 
were: 
Mllsses — 

Olga   Sands. 

Dorothy  Stollar, 

Ellen   Johnson, 

Gertrude  Oettle, 

Lillie   Oettel, 

Mabel    Peterson, 

Mary   Peterson, 

Idena  Walstad, 

Theodora  Johnson 
«       • 

Albert    Woods    was    host    at 
formal     evening     last     Sunday 
home    at    the    West    end.      His 
were: 
Messrs. — 

A.    Poissant, 

F.  Blais. 

T.  Chamberlain. 

J.  Genereau," 

E.  Beaurivage, 


Mary  Franz, 
Cecile    Stevens, 
Ella    Zell, 
Freda   Sands, 
Matthilda  Jolinso* 
Vanla   Johnson, 
Anna  Brasgala, 
Agnes  Anderson, 
Mary    Sorrow. 


an    In- 

at     his 

guests 


A.  St.  George, 
A.  RobitalUe. 
W.    Lcmay, 
J.  Renauld, 
J.    Belanger. 


Miss  Anna  Bjorkhtdm  of  119  Twen- 
ty-first avenue  west  left  yesterday  for 
Des  Moines,  Iowa,  to  make  her  home. 

*  •      « 

Mrs.  Sarah  Goss  of  the  West  end 
has  been  called  to  Racine,  Wis.,  by 
the   illness   of   her   father. 

•  •      •  ' 

Miss    Grace    Anderson     of    the    West 
end    left    during    the    week    for    a   visit 
Brainerd,    Minn. 

•       * 
is  of  Brainerd  is 
Welch    of    the 


with    friends   at 


visit- 
West 


Miss  Cora  Dav 
ing  Miss  Hazel 
end. 

•  •       * 
Miss    Frances     Prenevoct,    who 

the    guest    of    her    sister    at    the 
end,   returned   the   first   of   the  week 
her   home   at    Lake   Linden,    Mich. 

*  •      • 

Mr.  and   Mrs.   Carl  Herman  and  chil- 
dren    arrived    during    the    week    from 


was 

W'est 
to 


A  Skin  ef  Beauty  b  •  Joy  Forever. 


D 


R.  T.  FELIX  GOURAUD't 
Oriental  Cream  or 
Maslcal  Beautifier. 

RemoTcs  Tan,  Pimploi,  Ffck- 
lea,   Moth   Patches,   Rath  'and 

Skla  Dis«ua«,  anJ  every 
blemUh  oa  bcAuty,  amd  d^ 
iles  detection.  It  hu  >too<t 
the  teit  of  te  )  e«rt,  and  li  lo 
harraleii  we  ta«ts  It  to  b« 
lure  It  li  properly  Bad*.  Ac 
ceptno  co'jnl:rf«li  of  similar 
name.  Dr.  L.  A.  Saxra  aald 
to  a  lady  of  the  hauttoa  (a 
patioatK  "Asnu  adUs  will 
uae  tbra.  I  recommend 
•GOUR.\UD*S  CRtAM'  M 
iJi*  leatt  harmful  of  all  tha 
•kin  pre  urailoai. "  Portal* 
by  all  druffglitl  aad  Fanc| 
Goodf  Deders  In  the  Unltrl 
Slate*.  Canada  and   r'urope. 

I«4.  X.  EwUii^  Pnp«  nCrcat  J«BM  SU  N«w  Yoit 


Copenhagen,    Denmark., 
home  at  West  DuUith. 

•  *      • 
Miss    Mary    Nordin    has    returned    to 

(ler  l-.ome  at  Llndstrom,  Minn.,  after  a 
visit    with    relatives   at    the    West   end. 

•  •".-    * 
Mrs.    P.    H.    Whalun    and    son    of    the 

V.  est  end  returned'  the  first  of  the 
week    from  a  vi«!t  to  in nnea polls. 

•  «      * 
Mrs.    George    M.    Jensen    of    the    West 

end  returned  uorins'  the  week  from  a 
visit    with    friends    at    St.    Paul. 

•  *       « 
.Miss    Ethel    Ggrldsmiili,    who   was    the 

guest  of  friends  af  the  W^est  end.  has 
returned  to  her  home  at  Montlcello, 
Minn. 

•'     e'    • 
Miss    Agnes    Brady    of      West      First 
street     is     visiting     friends    at    Minne- 
apolis. 

•  «       • 
Mr.   and    Mrs.    Walter   M.    Evered   en- 
tertained  at    cards   Wednesday   evening 
at    their   home   at    West    Duluth. 

•  e    «  • 
Miss    Sarah    Bright    of    West    Duluth 

returned  during  the  week  from  an 
eight    months"    trip    through    the    West. 

•  •       « 
Miss    Ethel    Stowell    of    West    Duluth 

returned  the  first  of  the  week  from  a 
visit    at    Neillsvllle.    Wis. 

•  •       • 
Mr.    and    Mrs.    F'red    Aura,    who    were 

guests  of  friends  at  West  Duluth.  have 
returned    to    their    home    at    Hibbing. 

•  •       * 
Mrs.     Thomas     Sharp     and     daughter 

have  returned  to  their  home  at  Eveleth 
after  a  visit  witli  friends  at  West  Du- 
luth. 

•  *       • 
Mrs.    J.     .7.     Jorgenson    and    sons    re- 
turned to  West  Duluth  during  the  week 
after    a    three    years*    residence    at    San 
Francisco. 

e       «       • 
Mr.    and    Mrs.    Pickering   of   Virginia 
visited     in     West     Duluth     during     tlie 
week. 

•  •      • 
Mrs.    Summerville    and    her    daughter 

of  Coleraine  are  visiting  Mrs.  Peter 
Cilley    of    West    Duluth. 

•  *       • 
Harry   Peterson    was    pleasantly    sur- 
prised    last     Saturday     evening    at     his 
home     at      West     Duluth.     The     guests 
were: 
Messrs.  and  Mesdames — 


C.   Gell, 

Misses — 

Caroline  Soder- 

lund. 

Ethel   Brasgala, 
Mary    Berran. 
Selma   John.son, 
Louise  Sands. 
Clara    Peterson, 
Rena  Christo- 

pherson, 

Messrs. — 

Arthur   Oettle, 
Pesse  Sand. 
Albert  Stahl, 
Oscar    Johnson, 
Charles    Christen- 

son, 

Ole  Galgaard. 
Matt  Yandall, 
Harry    Collins. 


A.    Peterson. 

Jennie  Hanson, 
Marie  Hanson, 
Maud   Mauser- 
gher, 

Ida    Olson. 
Ida    Johnson, 
Alta  Thvre. 
Tillle    Peterson. 


John  Cevbroski, 
Matt  Sloldal, 
Alford   Green, 
Perlv  Green, 
Melvin    Walstad. 
Justin   Walstad. 
Sandy     McClewin, 
Emil   Huber. 


Mrs.  Frank  Mlkesch  entertained  the 
C.  C.  club  Thursday  afternoon  at  her 
home.  Cinch  was  played  and  the  fa- 
vors were  won  V)y  Mrs.  Maokle,  Mrs. 
Earl   Moore   and    Mrs.    Kilbey. 

•  e       • 

The  wedding  of  .  Miss  Rose  Witz. 
daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Witz  of  423 
East  First  street,  and  Samuel  Altman 
of  Chisholm  took  place  Tuesday  even- 
ing, at  the  home  of  the  bride's  uncle, 
at  421  First  avenue  east.  The  wed- 
ding service  was  read  by  Rabbi  Kissam 
at  6  o'clock.  The  bride  was  attended 
by  her  sister.  Miss  D»ra  Witz.  and  the 
groomsman   was   Harry  Lipman. 

The  bride  wore  a  pretty  gown  of  soft 
satin  and  wore  a  long  tulle  veil  and 
carried  brides  roses.  The  bridesmaid 
wore  a  gown  of  pink  and  carried  pink 
roses.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Altman  will  maJte 
their  home   at    Chisholm. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  A.  J.  Milllgan  of  2830  Helm 
street  was  surprised  by  a  dozen  or 
more  of  her  friends.  In  honor  of  her 
birthday  on  St.   Patrick's  day. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Wenzel  Drescher  en- 
tertained Sunday  evening  at  their 
home,  S24  Seventh  avenue  east.  Their 
guests  were: 
Messrs.  and  Mesdames- 


Buset    of    Medfoii 
Mrs.    Heiiks    of 
^linneapolis. 
Misses — 

Mamie    Huston    oi 
Mineapolis, 
Messrs. — 

Albert    I'leer, 
Smith   of  Mine- 


Acker    of   Omaha, 
William    Seiferet. 


Reglna   Fenton, 
Irene   Seifert. 


apolis. 


Miss  Marie 
taffy  pulling 
at  her  home 
guests    were 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  George  Nelson  of  the 
West  End  returned  during  the  week 
from  a  short  visit  at  Hibbing. 

•  e      « 

Miss  Olga  Peterson  of  Eau  Claire, 
Wis.,  is  visiting  Miss  Minnie  Olson  of 
Twentieth  avenue  east. 

«      •      • 

Miss  Selma  Anderson  of  Washburn, 
Wis.,  la  visiting  friwids  at  the  West 
end. 

•  •      • 

Nicolson  entertained  at  a 
party    Thursday    evening 
at    West    Duluth.      Forty 
entertained. 

•  •      • 

Miss  Anna  Bentson  of  Staples,  Minn., 
is  visiting  her  sister,  Mrs.  George  An- 
derson   of    West    Duluth. 

•  •      • 

Miss  Ida  Doran  of  Eighth  avenue 
east  will  spend  a  few  days  at  Hibbing 
and  will  later  go  to  her  home  at  Grand 
Rapids,   Minn. 

Miss  Amanda  Ellefson  of  the  West 
end   is  visiting  relatives   at   Chicago. 

Miss  Isabel  McLean  will  leave  Mon- 
day to  visit  her  sister  at  Fergus  Falls, 
Minn. 

Miss  Fanny  Lipplt  has  gone  to  Solon 
Springs,  Wis.,   for  a  week's   visit. 

Miss  Anita  Anderson  left  today  for 
her  home  at  Maple   Hill,   Iowa. 

Miss   Mary  Conant  of  301   East  Third 

will    spend    the       week    of    the 

vacation   in   Minneapolis. 

Violet      Robinson      will       visit 

at    Wadena   and    Cloquet    next 


street 
spring 

Miss 
friends 
week. 

Miss 
Altuna, 


Mabel      Dlley      has      gone       to 
\yis.,    Menominee,    Minneapolis 


and  Eau  Claire  for  a  week's  visit. 

The  members  of  the  Men's  League  of 
the  First  Methodist  church  entertained 
at  the  annual  ladles'  night  Thursday 
evening  at  the  church  parlors.  The 
affair  was  a  banquet  followed  by  a 
musical  program.  Decorations  of  green 
were  used  on  the  tables,  and  the  menu 
cards  were  also  suggestive  of  the  fes- 
tival of  St.  Patrick.  Covers  were  laid 
for  250  of  the  members  and  their 
friends.  There  were  informal  speeches 
by  Alfred  Merritt,  N.  M.  Young  and 
Rev.  Alexander  Milne,  and  vocal  solos 
by  L.  Dworschak  and  A.  E.  Btolter. 
\Irs.  W.  C.  Culmer  played  some  piano 
numbers  and  Mrs.  Fannie  Zimmerman 
sang.  The  arlon  quartet  also  sang, 
with  W.  H.  Hancock  as  accompanist. 
W.  L.  Smithies,  president  of  the  league, 
was  the  toastmaster. 

«      «      • 

Mrs.  J.  Stubler  of  108  East  Second 
street  was  the  guest  of  honor  at  a 
surprise  party  Tuesday  afternoon  at 
her  home.  The  guests  were  the  mem- 
bers of  the  Royal  Neighbors  of  Dewey 
Camp  1255.  Mrs.  Stubler  was  presented 
with  a  pretty  gift.  The  card  favors 
were  won  by  Mrs.  P.  H.  Levy  and  Mrs. 
L.  Copeland.  Those  present  were: 
Mesdames — 

Northfield,  Krojanker, 

Copeland,  Borth, 

Levy,  Dicky. 

Brugger,  Huhn, 

Kruchlnsky,  Bmollett, 

McClellan,  Jones. 

Swanson,  Lystadt, 

Ostby,  Murray, 

Turrell,  Hargraves, 

Johnson,  Erickson, 

Truset, 

•  •      • 

Misses  Mabel  anji  Emeline  Moberg  of 
301  East  Third  street  left  today  for  a 
visit  at   their  home  at  Minneapolis. 

•  •    ,  • 

Miss  Edith  Pattison',  principal  of  the 
Whittler  school,  will  spend  the  week  of 
the  spring  vacation  at  her  home  at  St. 
Cloud,  Minn. 

*  •      * 

Miss  Clara  Thomas  has  gone  to  her 
home  at  St.  Cloud  for  a  week's  visit. 

*  *      * 

Mr,  and  Mrs.  William  McFarlane 
were  pleasantly  surprised  Thursday 
evening  at  their  home,  1901  West 
First  street.     Tbe  affair  sras  in  boaor 


German    Literature   Class 

The     last     meeting     of 
the    German     Literature 
Twentieth    Century    club 
Tuesday     afternoon     at 


the  year  of 
Class    of    the 

will  be  held 
the     clubroom 


of    the    library 
Sunken    Bell," 
concluded. 


The    reading    of    "The 
by    Hauptmann,    will    be 


Matiner    Miisloale. 

Tho  I'fgular  meeting  of  the  Matinee 
Musicale  will  be  held  Monday  after- 
noon at  tlie  auditorium  of  the  Young 
Men's  Christian  association.  St.  Peters- 
burg as  a  musical  center  will  be 
studied.  The  program  has  been  ar- 
langed  by  Miss  I'earson  and  Miss 
Hyland. 


Aline's  Philosohpy 


By  Beatrice  Lee. 


£:ieot    OflTlferM 

At  tlie  annual  business  meeting  of 
the  evening  department  of  the  Twen- 
tieth Century  club,  which  was  held 
Monday  evening  at  the  clubroom  of 
the  library,  L  A.  La  Vole  was  re- 
elected leader  of  the  Evening  Shake- 
speare class  for  next  year;  Miss  Ger- 
mond was  elected  assistant  leader, 
and  Miss  I..ena  Fleer  was  re-elected 
stcrctary  of  the  class, 
will  be  studied  next 
"Othello,"  "Romeo  and 
Caesar"   and    "Macbeth.* 

The  class  will  continue  meeting 
during  the  remainder  of  March 
.\pril. 


The   plays  that 

year    will     be 

Ju4iet,"    "Julius 


weekly 
and  In 


PoIMioal    Rquallty    Club. 

The  next  leguiar  meeting  of  the 
Political  Equality  club  will  be  held 
Wednesday  evening  of  nexc  week  in 
the  city  council  chambers.  A  large 
attendance  is  desired,  as  the  principal 
business  of  the  meeting  will  be  the 
framing  of  a  constitution  by  the  so- 
ciety. 


AVnmrii'H   Mlniilonary    Society. 

The, twenty-first  annual  meeting  of 
the  Women's  Missionary  society  of  the 
Duluth  Presbytery  will  be  held  Tues- 
day and  Wednesday  of  next  week  at 
the  First  Presbyterian  church.  An  In- 
teresting program  has  been  prepared 
and  at  each  session  a  speaker  of  in- 
terest from  out  of  the  city  will  speak. 
Miss  Hayes,  who  will  address  the  Tues- 
day afternoon  meeting.  Is  from  Sitka, 
Alaska,  end  will  speak  on  the  mission- 
ary work  there;  Mrs.  Edwards  of  St. 
Paul,  president  of  the  Synodical  For- 
eign society  will  speak  at  the  Wednes- 
day morning  meeting,  and  Miss  Myers, 
who  will  speak  Wednesday  afternoon 
is  the  field  secretary  of  the  Northwest 
board.  She  has  been  on  the  mission 
field  In  China  and  Ceylon.  Mr.  Doltz, 
who  is  to  speak  at  the  Y.  M.  A.  tomor- 
row afternoon  will  also  speak  Wednes- 
day afternoon. 

The  program  for  the  sessions  Is  as 
follows: 

Home   Work. 

TUESDAY,    10   O'CLOCK. 

Mrs.  W.  J.  McCabe,  Presiding. 

Devotional    Mrs.   W.  L.   W  hippie 

Welcome    Mrs.  Campbell  Coyle 

Minutes    of    Previous    Y'ear    

Mrs.   G.    M.    Smith 

Appointing    of    Committees    

Roll  Call- 


Lakeside, 
Mora, 
Sandstone, 
Two    Harbors, 
Westminster. 


Carlton, 

Cloquet, 

First    Church, 

Glen    Avon, 

Grand  Rapids, 

Hibbing. 

Muslo     

Reports    of    Officers — 

Treasurer    Mrs.   W.   H.   Burrls 

Freedman's   Secretary   

Mrs.    J.   Blackmarr 

Literature  Secretary  ..Mrs.  L.  V.  Scott 
Contingent  Treasurer  Mrs.  C.  L.  Pierce 
Extracts   from   Letters   of  Home  Mis- 

sonarles    Miss  Anna  Upham 

Question   Box Mrs.  J.  C.  Faries 

Announcements    

TUESDAY.  2   OCLOCK. 

Devotional Mrs.  C.  F.  Hopkins 

Report   of  Corresponding  Secretary.. 

Mrs.    h:   B.   Sutherland 

Music    

Offering    

Talk  on  Alaska  Miss  Hayes 

Hymn    

Foreign    Work. 
W^EDNESDAY.   10  O'CLOCK. 
Mrs.   W.   J.  McCabe,  Presiding. 

Devotional    Miss  Ella  Shields 

Minutes  of  Previous  Y'ear  

Mrs.  G.   M.  Smith 

Report  of  Election  of  Officers    

Mrs.    W.    C.   Agnew    

Reports    From    Societies — 

First  Church   S.  S. 

Forward  Guild, 

Glen   Avon   Mission 

Glen    Avon    Mission 

Glen   Avon  Mission 

Hibbing, 

Mora, 

Two   Harbors. 

Two   Harbors   Young   People. 
Report   of  Officers — 

Corresponding  Secretary    

Mrs.    J.    C.    Farles 

Treasurer    Mrs.   W.   L.   Jackson 

Address    Mrs.  Edwards 

WEDNESDAY.    2    O'CLOCK. 

Devotional    Miss   Earhart 

Young    People's    Secretary     

Miss   Abble   Upham 

Solo    Miss  Maude  Matteson 

Address    Miss   Myers 

Offering    

Communion   Rev.  J.  C.  Farles 


Circle. 
Study 
Band, 


Class, 


EiveniiiK   Sbakespenre   Class. 

The  Evening  Shakespeare  Class  of 
the  Twentieth  Century  club  will  meet 
Monday  evening  at  7:30  o'clock  at  the 
clubroom  of  the  library.  The  study  of 
"Richard    II"    will    be    continued. 


Rxecatlv«    Board    Meeting. 

The  last  meeting  of  the  year  of  the 
executive  board  of  the  Twentieth  Cen- 
tury club  will  be  held  Monday  morning 
at  10  o*clock  at  the  clubroom  of  the 
library.  The  nominating  committee 
will  be  named  at  that  time,  and  It  is 
desired  that  every  member  be  present. 

Simple  Remedy  (or  La  Grippe. 

La  grippe  coughs  are  dangerous,  as 
they  Crequently  develop  into  pneu- 
monia. Foley's  Honey  and  Tar  not 
only  stops  the  cough  but  heals  and 
strengthens  the  lungs  so  that  no  seri- 
ous results  need  be  feared.  The  gen- 
uine Foley*s  Honey  and  Tar  contains 
no  harmful  drugs  and  Is  in  a  yellow 
package.  Refuse  substitutes.  Sold  by 
all  druggisUi 


"My  dear  Aline,  I  wot 
deacon's  goodness  worry 
you;  for  aepeiid  upon  It,  i 
as  good  as  they  seem!" 
advised  Mrs.  Calverly-Bur 
dolently  sank  back  amoi 
ions,     sophisticated     and 

"Oh.  yes  you  wotild  If  y 
as  well  as  I  do.'*  sighed 
"Still  it  is  awfully  sweel 
give  me  a  ray  of  hope;  I 
Is  rectitude  itself,  and  h< 
lapse  Into  the  little  Irreg 
make  other  men  so  at 
tantalizing.  Here  I  have 
only  four  years,  when  hea 
seems  like  400.  When  I 
other  couples  of  our  ac<]i 
joying  such  delightful  litt 
all  under  the  rose — I  feel 
go  Insane  from  this  intoi 
Their  affairs  are  not  rei 
you   know,   but  oh!   so  enj< 

Fred  Culver  was  a  vei 
He  was  interested  in  a 
widely  different  concei 
Texas,  coal  in  West  Vlri 
in  Michigan,  and  fire  insu 
nectlcut,  gave  him  llt4.1e  ti 
money.  His  well  belove 
to  live  in  Hartford,  so  th 
llshed   his   headquarters. 

On  returning  home 
Burkes,  .Mrs.  Culver  founc 
her  husband  to  the  eff 
Stevens — the  manager  ol 
Corset  company — would  di 
that  evening.  He  proved 
of  50  odd,  who  could  talk 
"shop." 

When  he  -was  Introduce^ 
ed  his  hostess  with  visi 
ment  which  greatly  puzzl* 

After  the  first  small  t 
Mr.  Stevens  said  rather  al 
have  no  idea,  Mrs.  Cul" 
tirely  you  differ  from  mj 
ture  of  you." 

"In  what  respects?"  quel 
pleasantly. 

"In  the  first  place  you 
the  very  reverse,  and  thei 
so  tall." 

The    last    rather    plgued 
while   her   spouse   stood    ".' 
In  his  socks,  she  was  on 
order. 

"How   did   you   happen 
a    decided    Impression    of 
appearance?"   she  asked, 
fled    smile. 

"Why,   It  was   from  thos 
made    up    for    you    while 
Chicago   with   Fred   last   w 

"Goodness,"  thought  Ali 
must    be    mad.      I    was    st 
take    the    trip,    but    Fred 
simply  out  of  the  question 
have     no     time     to    fool    J 
woman.**     Aloud   she  said 
that  was  the  way   of  It?' 
her    as    being    very    non-c 
might    mean     anything,    a 
time  to   think. 

"I  was  very  much  pleas* 
told  me  that  you  were  pe 
fled  with  our  work;  for  y 
were  much  too  fine  to  t 
never  saw  anytiiing  llk< 
your  special  design  was 
so  simple,  and  yet  such 
ment  over  the  old  regu 
that  I  wondered  no  one 
of  it  before,"  hurried  '  on 
Stevens. 

"That  is  what  brought 
ford  this  time.  Fred."  1 
"If  we  could  bring  out  8 
model  on  exactly  the  sb 
your  wife's  design,  o 
would  be  made.  I  tell  yc 
Y'ou  don't  realize  it,  man! 
I  must  get  your  Joint  cc 
wished  to  talk  with  Mrs. 
sonally." 

Turning 
er    tone: 
win    have 
object    if 
after    you?" 

Something 
Fred's   lips. 

Mr.    Stevens     beamed     g 
him.     "I    see    you    are    sur] 
remember    your    wife's    na 
vou   will   not   be   the    first 
use,"   he   added,    fearfully. 

Aline  was  stunned.  The 
past  denying,  was  forced  t 
thev  should  not  see  how 
saw  that  Fred  was  wholl 
the  occasion,  so  she  spok< 
"Mr.  Stevens.  I  am  graiefi 
your  approval.  You  may 
sign  and  welcome,  but  t 
me  ungracious  if  I  wlthhol 
Celeste.** 

Her     guest — astride     his 
blind    to    all    else — contlni 
prepared   in   case   of     your 
suggeat    "The      Symphony 
one    of    those    twelve    girc 
the  name  both  In  color  an 
owe   the   word     to     Fred 
of  the   lot   was   that    bewi 
of    delicate,    shadowy      tlr 
Into     almost      Itnperceptat 
burnt      orange      and      em< 
Though    It    was    impossible 
finger    on    a    single    spot 
colors,  yet  I  felt   sure  the 
Fred    said    It    was   a   perfe 
of    color,    reproducing      th< 
shades    of    your   hair  and 
now  that;  he  was  joking,   1 
Is    that    fine    Irish    blue-bh 
word  stays  Ir  my  memory 

"Then  that  heavy  crear 
mine  satin  brocade — It  w 
est  color  scheme  I  ever  sa 
help  being  amused  over 
thusiasm  when  he  declar< 
cheeks  rivaled  it,  for  you  • 
turning  to  the  unhapp 
"that  carmine  Is  a  pretty 
to  apply  to  a  ladv's  natu 
Then  to  Aline:  "Leaving 
every  one  was  a  gem;  am 
tell  me  the  fairy  loom  tha 
fabrics  you  will  be  the  m 
business.  You  know  th< 
lady  in  the  land  who  coul 
dreams  of  loveliness." 

For  a  brief  moment  it 
Aline  as  If  here  was  whe: 
a  cropper,**  for  what  coi 
xnew    less    than    nothing 


to   Aline,   he   sa 
'Of    course    the 

be    named. 

called    it 


to 
we 


ildn't  let  the 
me  if  I  were 
len  are  never 
Thus  wisely 
ke,  as  she  in- 
ig  the  cush- 
erene. 

ou  knew  him 
Aline   Culver. 

of  you  to 
ut  alas,  Fred 
!  will  never 
ularities  that 
ractlve  and 
been  married 
yen  knows  It 

hear  about 
laintance  en- 
le  Intrigues — 
that  I  shall 
erable  ennui, 
illy  wicked, 
lyaVile." 
y    busy    man. 

number  of 
ns.  Oil    in 

i^lnia,  corsets 
lance  In  Con- 
me  and  much 
1  wife  chose 
ere  he  estab- 

from  Irma 
I  a  note  from 
^-ct    tliat      Mr. 

the  Culver 
ne  with  them 
to   be   a   man 

nothing   but 

1,  be  regard- 
ale  astonish- 
d   her. 

alk    at    table 

)rui>tly:     Y'ou 

.•er,    how    en- 

mcntal    plc- 

led  that  lady 

r  coloring  Is 
I  you  are  not 

Aline,  for 
ix  foot  two' 
he  miniature 

;o  form  such 
my  prol'able 
»-ith  a  mysil- 

le  girdles  we 

you    were    in 

fnter." 

ne.   "the  man 

>    anxious    to 

said  it  was 
.  as  he  would 
iway  with  a 
quietly:     "So 

This  struck 
ommlttal.  It 
nd    gave    her 

•d  when  Fred 
rfectly  satis- 
3ur  materials 
e  ruined.  I 
(     them;     and 

so  original, 
an  improve- 
latlon  girdle 
ever    thought 

the   voluble 

me  to  Hart- 
e    continued. 

new  spring 
me  lines  as 
ar  fortunes 
■  u   it's    great! 

I  knew  that 
nsent,    and    I 

Culver    per- 

id  In  a  llgt- 
new  girdle 
Would    you 

The    Celeste,' 


like     a      gr^an      escaped 


?nlally  upon 
)rlsed  that  I 
me.  Surely 
to    forbid    its 

awful  truth, 
ipon  her— but 
It  hurt.  She 
/  unequal  to 
up  bravely, 
il  to  you  for 
have   the   de- 

0  not  think 
d  the  name — 

mfw    etoln 

hobby     and 

ed:      "I    was 

refusal  to 
"  for  every 
les  deserved 
d  contour.  I 
My  favorite 
tching  thing 
ts  merging 
le  flecks  of 
raid      green. 

to  lay  a 
of  the  vivid 
were  there, 
ct  symphony 
;  marvelous 
eyes.  I  see 
or  your  hair 
Lck;    but    the 

1  and  ear- 
as  the  rich- 
w.  I  couldn't 

Fred's  en- 
»d  that  vour 
vill  admit" — 
y       deacon — 

strong  tern- 
ral    blushes.* 

jokes  aside, 
I  if  you  will 
t  wove  those 
iking  of  our 
re  is  not  a' 
1  resist  such 

looked  to 
•e  she  "came 
Id    she,    who 

about     tiie 


for    1 

very 
with 
•An« 


corset  conu 
tc  dinner,  and 
the     Deacon'8* 


wretched  girdles  answer?  But.  with 
a  new-'oorn  horror  of  defeat,  she 
l^roed  herself  to  reply.  "You  do  not 
rtalize  what  you  are  doing.  Mr.  Stev- 
en.s,  when  >ou  ask  a  woman  to  relln-^ 
quisli  her  cherished,  unique  tieasurc*' 
to  be  CO!  icd  arid  shMcd  hy  every  wom- 
an id  ilie  v.orld  v.ho  fancies  tiiem.  " 

Then,  with  malicious  afterthought, 
tlie  added:  "As  for  the  falrv  loom  vou 
.«peak  of.  1  red  can  best  Inform  you, 
*<'r  I  only  those  Irom  samples  that  ho 
fuini.shed   i:ie." 

This  perforce  brought  tc  life  her  ap- 
parently petrified  husband,  but  Aline'a 
courage  had  inspired  him  and  he 
came  bravely  to  the  fore.  "No,  Ste- 
vens. I  could  not  think  of  rol>l>ir.g  my 
wife  of  her  derest  whims — her  exclu- 
siveness,  her  originality.  The  design 
and  the  name  "Symphony"  we  may  \ise 
hut  not  the  exact  i  epi  oductlims.  As  Ik 
favor  s!ie  may  be  persuaded  tc  select 
anotlier  .«£upply  of  materials  from  4 
different  lot  of  samples.  Will  yotj 
do  this  for  us,  dear'.'  lie  pleaded  lame- 
l.v.  careful  to  avoid  her  name  and 
eyes. 

"Certainly  I  will  be  glad  to."  re- 
turned Aline,  letting  Iter  open,  honest 
gaze  fall  full  'on  the  deacon's  defence- 
less face. 

We  will  drav,'  a  veil  over  the  house 
of  Culver  until  U'  o'clock  on  the  fol- 
lowing morning,  wlien  Mrs,  Calverly- 
Burke  ruslied  into  Aline's  holy  ct 
holiest,  in  obedience  to  a  hastily  pen- 
ciled note  from  that  petite   madame. 

"Oh,  you  daillng  Irma  liow  good  of 
you  to  hurry  over."  cried  Aline,  as  she 
gave  iiei  a  butterfly  caress.  "Do  make 
yourself  perfectly  comfortable; 
have    so    much    to    tell    you. 

"You  remember  how  very, 
mucli  I  wanted  to  go  to  Cliicago 
Fred  la.st  winter?"  irma  nodded. 
you  know  he  pretended  that  he  would 
be  so  busy  he  could  scarcely  take  time 
to  choke  down  his  food?"  Another  sj«n- 
pathetic    nod. 

"Weil,  last  night  the 
pany's  manager  was  here 
I  found  out  all  about 
trip.  Tiiere  the  old  goosey  sat  and  de- 
scribed with  startling  minuteness  the 
shocking  details  of  Fred's  adventures 
right   before  his  face. 

"You  never  heard  of  such  an  utterly 
Irresponsible,  shameless  thing  as  that 
Celeste.  On  a  wager  she  left  the 
theater  one  night  and.  Just  as  she  was 
took  a  forty-mile  ride  in  the  cab  ot 
an  er.glne,  regardless  of  her  exquisite 
opera  cloak — an  inspiration  in  mauve, 
he  called  it.  Of  course,  it  w&s  a  wrecH 
at  the  end  of  her  mad  ride  and  she 
twisted  it  up  in  a  wad  and  stuffed  it 
into  a  greasy  corner  of  the  cah  Theit 
she  returned  to  Chicago  In  a  prosald 
Pullman  bareheaded,  with  Fred's  coal 
over  her  decollete  gown  In  the  broad 
light  of  day.  Mr.  Stevens  was  pleased 
to  consider  that  brilliant  of  me  In- 
stead  of  idiotic. 

'One  day,  when  Fred  seems  to  have 
been  actually  busy.  Celeste  beguiled 
the  time  away  with  an  automobile. 
She  was  alone  and  must  scorch.  She 
would  not  stop  until  several  policemen 
had  hailed  her,  thereby  getting  a 
string  of  charges  for  resisting  officers. 
After  a  frantic  search  Fred  found  hl»- 
missing  treasure  in  the  station  house; 
When  on  trial  she  further  compllrated 
matters  by  making  verv  wlltv  Ihougli 
impertinent  remarks,  about  tVie  iudge^ 
which,  however  diverting  tc 
present,  was  contempt  of  court, 
must  have  felt  no  end  of  pride 
prodigy. 

"Her  minor  iniquities  were  posi- 
tively without  number.  She  bleached 
Fred's  mustache,  and  that  exnialn$ 
why  he  came  back  without  it.  It  Is  a 
thousand  pities  that  she  did  not  bleach 
his    hair,    too.' 

"But.  Aline,  dear,  what  did  Fred  say 
to  all  of  this  when  you  two  were  \^{\ 
alone  together?"  asked  Irma  when 
she  could  finally  stem  the  flew  of  the 
torrent. 

"He  admitted  that  there  was  a  Cel- 
este— an  actress — a  favorite  In  Chi- 
cago, and  that  the  girdles — a  do7en 
beautifies — were  made  of  materials  she 
furnished.  from  her  original  design, 
free  of  charge,  as  an  advertisement. 
Fred  had  not  liked  to  confide  In  Mr. 
Stevens,  so  had  told  him  that  the 
girdles  were  for  his  wife  How  inno- 
cent! Further  than  this  he  would  not 
go. 

"W'hen  I  asked  how  the  actress  came 
to  bleach  his  mustarhe  he  said  that  ll 
was  "an  Infernal  lie' — when  It  was 
shaved  off  its  natural  c<dor  was  Invio- 
late. He  had  intended  having  it  shorn 
for  some  time  before  leaving  for  the 
West,  but  had  been  too  busy.  Did  It 
ever  strike 'you.  Irma,  how  overpower* 
Ingly  busy  our  husbands  are  when  Wf 
least  suspect  It?  '' 

"We  talked  till  daylight.  We  found 
that  we  had  been  strangers  and  had 
never  understood  each  other  before. 
Each  had  been  afraid  of  the  other.  We 
had  posed  and  sought  our  pleasures 
apart.  But  that  is  all  past  and  gone, 
for  this  morning  I  agreed  to  forgive 
and  forget — to  tell  the  truth  I  never 
thought  of  doing  anything  else — and 
we  are  going  to  begin  our  married  life 
over  again.  Soon  Fred  is  going  t<  tako 
me  on  a  second  honeymoon  trip  in  the 
south  of  Europe.  We  are  going  to  bp 
jolly  good  fellows  and  get  all  the  fuft 
out   of  It  we  can. 

"You  know  I  always  despised  women 
who  got  all  cut  up  over  a  thing  IJko 
this  and  went  home  to  their  parents 
and  dragged  their  troubles  through  th^ 
divorce  courts.  I  always  said  that 
would  do  the  sensible  thing,  and  I  ant 
going  to. 

"Fred  said  I  was  plucky  and  a  trump, 
and  that  we  will  always,  always  love 
each  other,  and  tliough  I  am  wonder- 
fully happy" — try  as  she  would  the 
brave  voice  trembled — 'I  believe.  If  you 
don't  mind,  you  dear,  kind  Irma,  that  | 
will  lay  my  head  down  in  your  lap  ana 
cry  just  a  very  little  bit." 


thostt 

Fred 

in   hie 


1 


iffPRicrs 


CELERIEO 


III 


WHEAT  FLAK^  F  WW 

No  breakfast  food  can  compare  with  it, 
as  it  contains  all  tbc  elements  iouud  i» 
the  body. 


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'     ■ 1 ' 


■  .     .    <  .  I    ^      »       ■       .  I  II  ■  II  II       I    I 

■1  ^^ i 


THE   DULUTH    EVENING   HERALD    SATURDAY    MARCH   20.    1909. 


The    Boys    Who    Played    Hookey    and    What    Happened    to    Them 


BY    WILLIAM    WALLACE.    JR. 

CHEUE  were  three  of  the  boy«  In 
the  school  who  did  not  Uke  the 
teacher.  Not  that  he  was  a  cross 
teacher,  nor  an  unreasonable 
twii^'her.  nor  a  jiartlal  teaoher.  but 
because  he  was  a  TEACHER.  And  <lui- 
Ing  the  entire  winter  term  of  school 
these  three  boys  haJ  l>eeu  mischievous 
an.l  at  times  rather  unruly,  causing  the 
teacher  much  trouble  and  anxiety.  lu- 
fact.  tbe  teacher  was  a  Rood  Httle  man. 
of  nervous  disposition,  and  It  wounded 
his  feelluKH  to  have  any  of  hU  pupils  f*;el 
BO  uukiudly  toward  him,  and  to  have 
them  Bliss  their  lessons  and  to  cheat  at 
exams.  And  more  than  anything  else  It 
hurt  him  to  be  obliged  to  punish  the 
pupils   fiw   their  shortcomings. 

The  school  was  In  the  country  nnd  was 
what  is  usually  called  n  district  school." 
There  were  no  "grades."  and  all  the  pu- 
pils, raufflng  frt>ni  Ave  to  1«  years  of  age, 
were  lusUucted  by  the  one  teacher,  the 
good  little  man  alluded  to  In  the  pani- 
grnph  rt!'ove.  Now.  the  boys  and  girls 
who  attend  the  town  and  city  graded 
schools  can  have  no  Idea  of  the  trying 
duties  of  a  teacher  In  an  "ungraded" 
country  s.-hool.  He  must  teach  the  In- 
fant class  their  letters  and  Instruct  the 
niiwe  advanced  pupils  in  Latin.  So  you 
win    readily    understand    how   he    must   of 


Idea  of  playing  hookey  that  afternoon 
and  of  going  to  the  river  a  mile  distant. 
The  river  was  always  the  place  of 
rendezvous  for  the  boys  during  the  sum- 
mer vacation,  but  Pat  decided  the  vaca- 
tion time  was  too  fnr  distant  to  wnit  for^ 
so  he  iletermined  on  playing  hookey  if 
he  could  get  "confederates"  to  join  him 
In   hU   wrongdoing. 

When    he     whispered    his    "scheme"    to 
Jack   and   Hunk   they   at   Brut  shook   their 


•He     w«»     hansluic     on     for     dear  life." 


necessity    be  a   patient   teacher. 

The  names  of  the  three  boys  who, 
without  cs'i^e,  disliked  their  good  little 
teacher,  were  Jack  Adams,  Hank  Blg^'s 
and  Pat  Donivan.  Pat,  a  red-haired, 
freckle-faced  little  chap  of  12  years,  was 
the  leader  of  the  three,  and  was  himself 
as  full  of  mlsclilef  and  unnillness  as  It 
is  p^wsibie   for  one   young   mortal    to  be. 

One  beautiful  day  toward  the  end  of 
March  Pat  called  Jack  and  Hank  to  the 
rear  of  the  schoolhouse  In  private  con- 
8ultati>n.  It  was  during  the  noon  honr 
and  Pat  had  felt  the  laziness  of  the  com- 
ing warm  weather  in  his  bones,  as  he 
expressed    It.      And   he   had   conceived   the 


heads,  feeling  a  bit  afraid  to  steal  away 
from  school  for  half  a  day.  They  often 
consented  to  play  along  the  road  to 
school  of  a  morning,  arriving  there  very 
tardily  and  having  no  valid  excuse  fr>r 
being  late,  but  to  play  the  truant  for 
half  a  day  was  a  bit  scarey  to  contem- 
plate. 

"We'll  get  flogged — or  kept  In  at  noon 
for  a  weeK,"  whispered  Hank.  "Yes. 
an'  teacher'll  send  word  to  our  folks 
about  what  we've  doue."  deilarfd  Ja"k. 
"Why  don't  we  wait  till  Saturday  aud 
then  go   to   the   river?" 

"Yes,  wait  till  Saturday  an"  wake  up 
to    tind    It's    raining,    or    that    you've    got 


enough  chores  to  keep  you  busy  for  the 
whole  day.  "  said  Pat.  "No,  siree.  I  say 
lets  go  while  it's  fine,  and  while  we're 
free  from   chores  at    home." 

So  Jack  and  Hank  gave  In  to  the  per- 
suasion of  their  leader  and  the  three  re- 
mained behind  the  schoolhouse  till  the 
bell  rang,  announcing  1  o'clock  and  time 
for  study.  While  the  other  pupils  were 
marching  into  the  schoolhouse  Pat,  Jack 
and  Hank  stole  off  over  a  hill,  and  once 
getting  out  of  sight  of  the  hated  P 
they  took  to  their  heels  toward  the 
river. 

They  reached  there  all  out  of  breath 
and  sat  on  the  bank  to  rest.  The  river 
was  swollen  very  high  from  the  melting 
of  the  last  heavy  snows  and  a  recent  pro- 
longed rain.  Pat  declared  the  river  would 
be  full  of  fish  during  the  summer,  for 
after  heavy  snows  and  rains  there  were 
always  plenty  of  fish.  "Gee.  but  we'll 
come  here  fishing  and  swimming  during 
July  and  Augunt."  he  declared  In  a  voice 
of  happy   anticipation. 

"Yes.  aud  1  wish  we'd  waited  till  vaca- 
tion time  had  come."  admitted  Jack,  not 
a  very  bad  fellow  at  heart,  but  easily  led 
Into  wrongdoing  by  his  companions.  "I 
really  doiit  like  playing  hookey,  for  you're 
sure  to  be  found  t>ut.  and  then  you'll  get 
punished  at  school  and  at  homo.  My 
mother  will  settle  with  me  for  doing  this 
today." 

"Oh.  the  teacher  may  not  say  anytning 
about  our  playing  hookey."  assured  Pat. 
"He's  not  so  verj-  bad.  but  I  dont  like 
hlni  a  little  bit.  He's  so  tasy  and  good- 
natured." 

"Well.  I  can't  say  that  I  positively  hate 
Teacher."  laughed  Jack,  "but  I'm  not 
afraid  of  him.  and  that's  why  I  dare  to 
do  so  many  things,  for  I  know  he'll  let 
us  off  easy.  He's  got  no  backbone.  If 
he  had  more  nerve- more  real  sand  In 
his  craw— I'd  be  afraid  of  him.  Put  hes 
so  good-natured  that  I  don't  care  whether 
I   mind   him  or  not." 

"Say.  there's  a  fine  tree,"  exclaimed 
Pat.  pointlug  to  a  tall  tree  that  grew  at 
the  river's  edge  and  bent  far  out  over  the 
water.  "Oee.  Its  a  dandy  to  climb!  I'm 
g(dng  up  it  and  see  If  I  can  get  a  glimpse 
of  the  old   schoolhouse." 

"Y'es,  maybe  you'll  see  old  Giddy  look- 
ing out  of  the  window  for  us,"  laughed 
Jack.  "Old  Giddy"  was  their  teacher, 
the  name  having  been  given  to  him  by 
Pat.  His  real  name  was  Glddlngs.  and 
Pat  thought  It  clever  to  play  upon  the 
good-natured  and  kindly  teachers  name. 
Pat  threw  off  his  coat  and  shoes  and 
was  soon  going  up  the  tree  like  a  sqtilr- 
rel.  for  he  was  an  expert  at  climbing. 
And  Jack,  also  being  good  at  the  sport, 
divested  himself  of  shoes  and  coat  and 
followed  Pat.  They  were  soon  In  the  very 
top  of  the  tall  tree,  perched  together  on 
a  slender,  swinging  limb. 

"Sav.  you'd  l»etter  get  off  that  Umb. 
cried  out  Hank,  for  from  where  he  sat 
on  the  ground  he  could  see  that  the  limb 
was  not  sufficiently  strong  to  hold  the 
weight  of  the  two  boys,  and  was  threat- 
ening to  break  from  the  body  of  the  tree 
at  any  moment. 

"Oh.  a  fellow  has  got  to  take  chances, 
called' baik  Pat.  "It's  no  fun  always  be- 
ing In  a  safe  corner  where  no  danger 
lurks.  I  like  danger.  It's  almost  as  much 
fun  to  risk  your  neck  as  it  is  to  tease 
old   tliddy."  ,        ,  . 

Then  Pat  and  Jack  began  laughing  and 
swinging  the  tree  limb,  and  Hank,  fear- 
iug  that  an  accident  might  happen  to 
them,   again   warned   them   to  get  off   the 


limb.     "Anyway,  one  of  you'd   better  get 
off."  he  said. 

"All  right.  I'll  Jump  Into  the  river!" 
called  out  Pat.  making  believe  to  prepare 
to  Jump.  Just  as  he  did  so  the  limb 
broke  and  he  fell  headloug  to  the  river 
below,  striking  with  such  force  that  he 
went  at  once  to  the  very  river's  bed. 
And  hardly  had  he  fallen  when  Jack  set 
up  a  cry.  for  he  was  hanging  on  for  dear 
life  to  the  dangling  limb,  which  was  still 
attached  to  the  mother  trunk  l>y  a  mere 
sti-tng  of  bark,  which  would  break  away 
with  another  moment's  exertion  from 
Jack. 

Hank  looked  at  his  comrade  In  the 
water,  then  hurriedly  turned  his  eyes  up- 
ward to  where  Jack  hung  in  such  a  peril- 
ous position.  He  was  so  excited  and 
frightened  that  he  could  not  speak  and 
ran  first  toward  the  water,  where  poor 
Pat  was  struggling,  aud  then  to  the  base 


SPRINGTIME. 

IN  the  springtime  all  the  chil- 
dren 
Love    to    run    and    romp    and 
shout, 
For  'tis  lovely  when  old  Winter 
Says  "Goodbye"  and  then  steals 
out: 


When  the  days  of  snow  are  over 
And  the  sunshine,  warm  and 
bright, 

Comes  to  bring  life  to  the  flowers, 
It  is  such  a  dear  delight. 


Everywhere  you  hear  sweet  laugh- 
ter 
From  the  little  ones,  so  gay, 
For  they  all  love  nothing  better 
Than    a    glorious    new    spring 
day. 


of  the  tree,  as  If  Intending  to  try  to  res- 
cue the  crying  Jack.  What  should  he  do? 
Pat  needed  his  help,  but  he  feared  to 
plunge  Into  the  water,  for  he  always  got 
cramps  when  the  water  was  cold,  and 
the  river  had  some  bits  of  floating  Ice 
still  on  Its  surface.  Then  he  felt  that  he 
should  not  delay,  but  climb  to  where 
Jack  was  honglng  helplessly  from  the 
loosening  limb. 

But   the  cries  from  Jack,   and   an   occa- 
sional   strangled    cry    from    Pat.    brought 
to    Hank    his    voice,    and    rushing    up    the 
hillside,  he  called  out  -with  all  his  might: 
"Help:      Help:     We're   drowning!      We're 
hanging!     Help!     Murder!     Fire!     Death!" 
Then    he  felt   a   hand    on    his   shoulder, 
and  turned  to  see   beside  him  Old  Giddy, 
who   had  suddenly  come   through  a   hedge 
that    grew    down    to    the    water's    edge. 
Hank    told    him    as    be«t    he    could    about 
what  had  happened,  and  the   teacher  lost 
no  time  In   hurrying  to  the  river.     There 
Pat    was    still    struggling    to    keep    above 
the   driftwood   that   came    sweeping   down 
upon  him.   but  which   was  imperiling   him 
every     moment.       Owing    to    the    swollen 
condltlou    of    the    river,    and    the    floating 
driftwood   and  bits  of  Ice-cake.   Pat  could 
not    swim,    and    was    In    danger    of    being  j 
drowned  at  any  moaient  by  being  beaten 
under  by  the  driftwood. 

Mr.  Glddlngs  took  in  the  situation  of 
both  boys  at  a  glance.  With  a  call  to 
Jack  to  hold  on  a  moment  longer,  and  to 
not  struggle,  for  struggling  caused  the 
limb  to  loosen  from  the  tree,  and  then 
Instructing  Hank  to  climb  to  Jack's  as- 
sLstance.  he  threw  off  shoes  and  coat 
and  hat  and  was  In  the  water,  making  his 
way   as  best  he  could  to  the  side  of  Pat. 

It  was  Indeed  a  hard  struggle  to  get  j 
ashore  through  floating  Ice  and  driftwood  ' 
with  a  burden  hanging  to  his  back,  but 
the  teacher  was  as  brave  aud  determined 
as  he  was  kind  and  gentle,  and  soon  he 
got  ashore  with  Pat  dinging  to  his 
shoulders,  but  so  exhausted  that  he 
could  hardly  speak  for  several  minutes. 
In  the  meantime  Hank  had  succeeded 
in  assisting  Jack  to  safety,  though  It  was 
no  easy  task,  and  they,  like  the  teacher 
and  Pat,  were  exhausted  from  their  ef- 
forts and  excitement.  As  soon  as  all 
four  were  assembled  on  the  bank  the 
teacher  said:  "Now,  boys,  let's  have  a  fire 
to  dry  out  our  clothes,  aud  to  warm  us 
tip  a  bit.  for,  although  the  day  Is  fine  for 
March,  it  is  hardly  as  warm  as  one  would 
like  It  for  a  swim  In  an  oi)en  stream. 
So  let's  gather  up  some  b'-ush  and  have  a 
fire." 

As  they  set  to  work  gathering  wood  for 
the  fire  Pat  said  to  Hank:  "Say,  what 
do  you  suppose  brought  Mr.  Glddlngs 
here?  I'm  ashamed  to  look  him  In  the 
face  he  has  been  so  kind,  and  has  really 
saved  my  life  In  the  bargain.  What  cau 
I  ever  sav  to  him,  anyway?"  The  boys 
were  out  of  Mr.  Glddlngs'  hearing  aud 
could  discuss  the  recent  excitement  and 
their  own  wrongdoing  without  being 
overheard. 

"Well.  I  haven't  the  slightest  Idea 
what  brought  him  here"  said  Hank; 
•'but  I'm  all-fired  thankful  that  he 
dropped  from  the  skies  Just  when  he 
did,  for  otherwise  there'd  be  two  boys 
dead  ou  this  bank.  .\nd  I  say  he's  a 
hero,  and  I  mean  to  make  a  clean  breast 
of  inv  part  in  playing  hookey  and  my 
past  ugly  feelings  toward  him.  He's  a 
good  little  man.  and  a  better  teacher 
than   we  have  deserved.     Let's  try   to   be 


worthy  of  him  in  future.     What  say  you, 
eh?" 

"I  was  Just  thinking  the  same  way." 
confessed  Pat;  "and  I  mean  to  tisk  hla 
forgiveness." 

At  that  moment  Mr.  Giddlugs  had  a 
roaring  fire  built  and  called  to  tie  boys 
to  Join"  him  and  Jack  In  the  enjjymeut 
of  It.  As  the  four  stood  about  the  blaze 
Mr.  Glddlngs  said:  "Well,  boys.  I  sup- 
pose you  wonder  how  I  came  to  be 
Johnny-on-the-spot  Just  when  you  needed 
me.  The  truth  Is.  I  saw  you  gilng  off 
over  the  hill,  and  I  knew  you  meant 
to  play  truant  this  afternoon.  I  eft  the 
school  in  charge  of  Miss  Mattle  Strong 
aud  followed  you  here,  intending  to  try 
my  powers  of  persuasion  on  you,  for  It 
hurt  me  to  feel  that  I  had  no  good  In- 
fluence over  you.  I  wanted  you  to  like 
the  school — to  feel   kindly   toward  me." 

"Stop.  Mr.  Giddings.  you  make  ive  feel 
like  a  criminal!"  said  Pat  in  a  tr?jnbllng 
voice.  "We  are  a  most  unpaleful 
bunch— Hank.  Jack  and  I,  and  I've  been 
the  meanest  of  the  three,  too.  But  I  um 
ashamed,  and  1  want  .vou  to  forgive  me. 
You've  been  too  kind  and  tolerai  t  of  us 
all  winter,  and  now  you  cap  it  by  saving 
my  life.  It's  too  much,  I  say.  You've 
been   too   good    to   us.      You   ought  to   flog 


us    till    we've    turned     black    aud    blu^ 
that's  what  I  think." 

Mr.  Glddlngs  took  Pat's  hand,  and  look- 
ing Into  his  face,  said:  "I  have  kuowa 
your  good  heart  all  along,  my  boy,  but 
1  didn't  know  how  to  reach  It.  I'm  sor- 
ry we  had  to  have  this  terrible  accldeat 
that  I  might  find  the  way  to  It.  But- 
well,  let's  get  good  and  dry.  Then  we'll 
all  go  to  my  house  for  a  little  supper 
and  talk  over  our  afternoon  aud  the  day* 
to  come.     What  say  you,   boys?" 

"You're  a  brick.  Mr.  Glddlngs!"  cried 
Jack.  And  Hank  declared  the  same. 
And  all  expressed  their  pleasure  In  ac- 
cepting the  invitation  to  sup  with  the 
good  teacher  whom,  until  the  preseat 
hour,   they   had   despised  so   heartily. 

"And.  Mr.  Glddlngs.  I  mean  to  mak« 
up  for  my  past."  said  Pat.  "I've  lota 
to  undo,  and  I  mean  to  begin  undoing 
it    right    from    this    hour." 

•Well  forget  the  past,  my  boy." 
smiled  Mr.  (Uddlngs.  "We'll  live  in  th« 
present  aud  work  for  the  future.  So  th« 
past  Is  dead  between  us.  except  '.his  hour 
when  v>e  got  to  understand  each  other. 
And  now  we'll  pay  attention  to  drying 
out.  80  we  can  hurry  home.  Miss  Mat- 
tie  will  look  after  the  school  all  after, 
uoon  for  me." 


Helpful    Hints    For   Otir   Yoting  Artists. 


I.K.SSON     NO.    4:i— THK    TEI>OV     KKAR     CVTCHING     A     FISH. 


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INSIDE    BILLY'S 
POCKET. 

BILLY  liad  a  pocket, 
Neither  broad  nor  deep, 
But  inside  this  pocket 
Little  Bill  did  keep 

Half  a  dozen  marbles, 

A  little  rubber  ball, 
A  kite  string  and  some  scissors, 

A  jack-knife  anri  an  aw! : 


7ke    Troutles    of   Master    Marck   Wind. 


A  bit  of  chalk,  some  pencils, 

An  empty  bottle,  too, 
Some  tacks,  a  wornout  thimble. 

The  top  of  an  old  shoe ; 

Some  crooked  pins,  all  rusty, 

A  pipe  stem  made  of  clay ; 

All  these  were  in  Bill's  pocket. 

And  he  put  them  there  to  stay. 
■I  0m  " 

Question  of  the  Hour. 

"We  are  really  at  a  loss  to  know  how 
to  punish  Earlle,"  she  said.  "We  have 
tried  all  the  punishment  In  our  kinder- 
garten list  without  effect.  We  have  rea- 
soned withhim  and  told  him  that  he  will 
cease  to  be  our  petty  pet  and  will  grow 
up  to  be  a  bad.   bad   man,   and" 

"Madam,  "  Interrupted  the  gentleman  of 
the  old  s.-hool.  who  was  visiting  them, 
"you  will  find  on  the  trunk  in  my  room 
a  very  excellent  strap  that  I  shall  not 
need   temporarily." 

But.  of  course,  he  didn't  know  any- 
thing about   modern    methods. 

HIS    IDEA. 

Father— I  think  Tommy  will  easily  se- 
cure n  position  with  the  gas  company 
when    he   grows   up. 

Mother-  How  do  you  know? 

Father— lu  all  hi.s  arithmetic  exam- 
ples  he   insists    that   twice   two   Is   eight. 


m  ASTER    March    Wind    was    Just 
a     little    fellow— a     mere    baby- 
breeze— when    the    incidents    to 
l>e    related    In   this   story    began. 
He    had    Just    come    Into    being 
aud    had    not   yet    learned   the   world.      A 
beautiful     mother     Master     March     Wind 
had.  a  young  and  lovely  mother,  and  her 
name   was    Dame   Spring.      Wherever    she 
walked  flowers  would  soon  spring  up.  and 
If  she  but  smUed  at  the  trees  buds  burst 
forth,    soon  to  blossom   Into  leaves.     And 
her    presence    caused    the    skies    to    smile 
through   the    leaden   veil    that   old    \Mnter 
had  left  draped  over   thMn.     But  in   spite 
of    her    gentleness    and    beauty,    and    her 
love    for   flowers   and    bright    skies,    Dame 
Spring    had    many    trials.      One    of    these 
trlalsor,     I     should     say,     her     greatest 
trial— was  her  own  dear,   boisterous  son. 
Master   March   Wind.      He   was,   from    the 
very  first,   a   mischievous  little  chap,   and 
it    was    his    pleasure    to    rash    forth    of    a 
moriUiig  a.nd   blow   through  the  grass  and 
tree*  aud    make    them    rattle   and    shake, 
frightening   the  early  Insects   and   the   ht- 
tle nesting  birds.     And  then  as  he  grew— 
and    he  did   grow    tremendously   fast!— he 
became   bolder  and   would   rush  down   the 
road,   kicking  up  the  dust  and  causing  It 
to    fly    into    people's    eyes,    making    them 
cry      out:        *'Oh,      this     terrible      March 
Wind!" 

Then  he  got  to  playing  with  the 
school  children,  pulling  at  their  hair  and 
Jerking  off  their  hats  and  bonnets,  carry- 
ing them  off  down  the  town  street  or  the 
country  lane,  making  the  youngsters  race 
after  him  to  recover  their  possessions. 
But  the  children  so  enjoyed  Master 
March  Wind  that  he  grew  very  fond  of 
them,  for  they  never  cried  out  agahist 
him  and  always  loved  a  race  with  him. 
Even  the  little  girls  delighted  to  have 
him  blow  their  curls  about  wildly,  and 
to  take  away  their  little  shoulder  capes 
and  bonnets.  They  would  laugh  merrily, 
declaring  they  loved  Master  March  Wind, 
aud  whihed  he  might  stay  with  them  al- 
ways. 

But  pretty  soon  Master  March  Wind 
got  to  be  a  very  big.  strong  fellow,  and 
he  would  go  about  the  country  blowing 
down  fences,  young  trees  and  small 
houses.  And  he  enjoyed  ripping  the 
clothes  rrom  clothes'  Ikiea  as  soon  as  the 


washerwoman  had  hung  them  up  to  dry. 
Oh.  he  did  make  himself  troublesome  at 
times! 

One  day  while  he  was  resting  his 
dear,  fond  mother  came  to  him,  saying: 
"Son,  I  wish  yon  would  be  less  stormy 
and  bothersome.  You  create  such  a  dis- 
turbance everywhere  you  go.  and  people 
are  afraid  of  you.  Why,  I  overheard  a 
dear  old  farmer  talking  to  his  son  the 
other  day  and  he  was  complaining  that 
you  had  blown  the  chimneys  from  his 
bouse,  and  that  on  the  same  day  you 
had  blown  the  ricks  of  hay  from 
the  fields,  causing  him  much  trouble  In 
gathering  It  up  again.  Now,  I  know  you 
love  to  frolic,  but  you  should  not  do 
harm  to  the  property  of  people  or  to  the 
people  themselves." 

But  Master  March  Wind  only  laughed 
and  laughed,  till  his  mother  declared  he 
had  no  consideration  for  either  herself 
or   others. 

"Well,  gentle  mother."  smiled  the  hap- 
py and  frolicsome  youth.  Master  March 
Wind,  "I  can't  help  my  disposition.  I» 
is  my  nature  to  be  rough  and  noisy,  and 
to  play  pranks  on  people  and  things. 
But  why  should  you  bother  about  my  do- 
ings? I  help  you  In  your  work  every 
day.  You  canse  the  grass  to  grow,  and 
I  come  along  and  olow  against  It,  caus- 
ing it  to  become  hardy  and  self-support- 
ing. Were  I  to  be  mild  and  gentle  the 
grass,  the  weeds,  even  the  trees,  would 
become  so  weak  that  they  would  not 
be  able  to  hold  up  their  heads.  I  blow 
against  them,  and  they.  In  self  protec- 
tion, lift  up  their  bodies  and  brace  them- 
selves against  me.  It's  a  battle  for 
strength,  you  see,  and  It  makes  them 
strong  to  hold  out  against  me."  Then 
Master  March  Wlud  smiled  at  his  moth- 
er, whom  he  loved  very,  very  dearly, 
waiting  for  her  reply.  She  sighed  gently 
and  said: 

"Maybe  you  are  right,  my  son.  In  re- 
gard to  the  flowers  and  trees;  but  what 
excuse  have  you  for  having  blown  down 
certain  houses  and  hay  ricks?  That-  was 
doing  real  harm  to  property." 

Again  Master  March  Wind  tanghed. 
Then,  with  a  more  serious  face,  he  ex- 
plained: "You  see.  mother  dear,  I  do 
these  things  to  make  men  more  careful. 
Why,  the  houses  I  blew  down  were  mere 


HE    WAS    WILLING. 

His  Mamma— Willie.  I'd  like  to  put  In 
one  whole  dav  without  once  having  to 
scold  or  punish  you. 

Willie— You    have   my   consent,   mamma. 


Gardens    for 

tKe  CKilclren. 

IT  will  soon  be  time  for  making  gar- 
dens, and  there  is  nothlug  more  de- 
lightful or  more  wholesome  for  the 
children  than  to  take  spa,.:  e  and  hoe 
and  dig  Into  old  mother  earth,  pre- 
paratory to  seed-planting.  Looseulng  the 
soil,  leveling  It,  shaping  It  I  Uo  pretty 
beds  for  the  growing  of  flowers  aud  vege- 
tables, all  Is  such  joy,  such  a  a  Interest- 
ing work,  for  boys  aud  girls. 

And  after  the  garden  has  hem  finished 
will  come  the  satisfaction  of  seeing  the 
little  gif^n  sprouts  peep  thiougb  soil. 
Then  will  form  tiny  leaves,  and  next  Lit- 
tle Boy  and  Little  Girl  will  >e  able  to 
name  the  growing  plants.  "Ati  onion!  A 
cai-ot!  A  radish!"  you  will  hoar  the  lit- 
tle Boy  explaining  happily,  pclnting  out 
various  growing  bits  of  green.  'A  marl- 
gold!  A  four-o'clock!  A  sweet  pea!"  Lit- 
tle   Girl    will    exclaim,    direetln?   your    no- 


He   wonld    BTO   about    blowlngr   down 
fences,   youns:  treen  and 
■mall  houHeM." 

weak  wooden  frames,  and  not  houses  fit 
for  people  to  live  In.  Men  throw  up 
these  useless  structures  and  put  their 
families  therein  to  live.  That's  an  in- 
justice to  the  famlUes.  So  I  come  along 
and  throw  down  the  ugly  and  frail 
shack,  and  then  the  man  has  to  build 
a  better  home  for  his  family.  So,  my 
mother,  yon  see  there's  method  In  my 
madness." 

"Well,  I'd  rather  you  ased  more  meth- 
od and  less  madness,  my  son,"  said 
Dame  Spring,  for  she  was  of  such  a 
gentle  turn  of  mind  that  any  rudeness 
or  loudness  irritated  her  and  made  her 
unhappy. 

"Well,    I    have    a    purpose    to    fulfil    In 
this      world."      laughed      Master      March 
Wind,     "and     sluce    it    is    not     a     pretty, 
peaceful     duty,      bnt     a     rugged,      fierce, 
fighting  one.    I    mnst   do   it    with   a    will, 
and   not  allow   myself  to   worry   over   the 
consequences.    Do  you, ever  stop  to  think 
of   the   good    I   do   by   Starting   little    hur- 
ricanes,    mother     dear.?      Why,     I     blow 
sickness   and   disease   out   of   the   land.    I 
find   old   heaps  of   filth|  piled   up   here  and 
there,    breeding    disease    germs.    What    do 
I   do  about  them?    I  don't   trip  past  and 
leave    them    to    smolder    and    ferment.     I 
Just  go   to   blowing,   and    I   blow   them    to 
pieces— scatter    the    debrjs,    and    so    dry 
It    and    purify    It    by    opening    It    to    the 
sun's  rays,   thus  removing  from  humanity 
a    very    grave    menace.       That's    why    I 
blew    the    hay    ricks    away    from    the    old 
farmer's    field.    Those    ricks    were    rotting 
and  old.  and  all  beneath  them  was  moist- 
ure and   heat,  and  that   was  causing  dis- 
ease.   So    I    blew    them    down    and    scat- 
tered    them,     and     made     them    healthy 


again." 

"I  Ijelleve  you  are  right  after  all,  my 
son,"  confes.-'ed  Dame  Spring.  "I  never 
thought  of  the  good  your  mischief  does 
at  times.  I  shall  know  that  from  hence- 
forth your  motives  are  good,  no  matter 
how  you  work  to  accomplish  your  pur- 
pose. I  have  heard  so  much  complaint 
about  you  that  I  had  not  given  your 
side  of  the  matter  as  much  thought  a" 
I  should  have  done.  But  now  I  am 
proud  of  you.  for  under  all  your  merri- 
ment, your  mischievous  nature,  there  Is 
much  good  purpose.  Go  on  blowing,  my 
son,  and  blow  good  and  hard." 

"Yes.  my  mother,  and  It  Is  time  for 
me  to  rise  from  my  rest.  I've  been 
lying  down  all  afternoon,  and  the  mead- 
ows and  fields  are  still  very  wet  from 
the  melting  of  the  heavy  snows,  and  in 
no  condition  for  the  farmer's  plow.  I 
must  blow  and  blow  aud  dry  th'lngs  up. 
So   farewell   till   later,    mamma." 

Then  Master  March  Wind  r^se  and 
blew  with  all  his  might,  causing  the 
housewives  to  rush  to  their  open  windows 
to  close  them.  "Oh,  It's  that  awful  March 
Wind!"  cried  many  of  the  housewives, 
not  understanding  the  good  of  the  very 
Wind  they  were  condemning.  "And  It 
will  blow  and  blow  all  night,"  declared 
one  pretty  young  girl  who  was  going  to 
a  party  that  evening,  "and  I'll  have  to 
wear  my  high  shoes  and  my  warm  wrap, 
for  this  March  Wind  is  so  fierce  that 
slippers  and  a  light  wrap  are  out  of  the 
question." 

When  Master  March  Wind  heard  the 
little  Miss  make  this  remark  he  smiled. 
"Ah-ha,"  he  whispered,  "If  I  hadn't  risen 
and  blowed  like  a  fury  of  demons,  that 
dear  girl  would  have  gone  forth  clad  as 
for  summer.  And  that's  when  I  came  at 
the  right  time,  for  I've  saved  her  a  sick 
spell  and  her  father  a  doctor's  bill.  And 
yet  folks  abuse  me  and  wish  1  would 
remain  away.  But  what  care  I?  I  know 
my  work,  and  I  delight  In  doing  It.  Now 
away  to  blow  and  blow,  and  to  toss  over 
some  old  shacks  of  houses  that  have  no 
right  to  stand.  And  I  shall  make  merry 
everywhere  tonight,  for  I'm  full  grown 
now,  and  know  my  strength."  And  then 
Master  March  Wind  broke  forth  Into  a 
regular  gale  that  was  glorious  to  see. 


tlce  to  various  little  growing  p. ants  which 
she  cau  easily  tell  by  their  Individual 
shapes,  for  Little  Girl  has  stulled  botany 
long  enough  to  recognize  var  ous  garden 
plants  while  they  are  still  in  :helr  infant 
state. 

And  isn't  it  a  curious  fact  that  Little 
Boy  always  delights  in  gardei  iug  vegeta- 
bles and  fruits,  while  Little  <ilrl  devotes 
her  time  to  flowers  and  ornamental 
plants?  But  this  is  as  It  sh(.uld  be.  for 
we  must  have  the  practical  and  useful 
combined  with  the  beautiful  and  orna- 
mental. 

There   Is    one   very    necessary   thing   for 

the  young  and   hiexperlenced  gardener   to 

learn,  aud  to  learn  well;  he  or  she  must 

know    the   difference    between    the    weeds 

and    vegetables    or    flowers.     \    little   boy 

one  time  pulled  up  all  the  tonato  sprouts 

in     his     mother's    garden,     thinking    they 

were  weeds,   and  he   wished  1o  be  of  use 

In    helping    to    keep   the    garden    clean    of 

that     ruinous     intruder,    the    weed.        But 

alas!    the   little   fellow  did    n  ore  damage 

than     good,     and     he    should     have     been 

taught    to    know    the    shapes    of    various 

vegetables  and  flowers,  for  tlien  his  labor 

would   not  have  been   lost,   and   no  harm 

would  have  come  to  the  tomito  bed.     So. 

take  warning  from  that  boy'it  experience, 

and   study   your  botany  as   ^rell   as   your 

gardens.  MAKY    GBAHAM. 


OUR,PUZZLE 

NOVELIST    ACROSTIC. 

All  the  words  described  contain  but 
four  letters  and  If  rightly  guessed  and 
written  one  below  another,  the  Initials 
will  spell  the  surname  of  a  novelist  who 
is  very  popular  w'ith  the  girls  aud  boys 
over  twelve   years  of  age  : 

1.  Something  we  use  at  table.  2.  A 
most  necessary  metal.  3.  That  which 
causes  the  thermometer  to  fall.  4.  A 
crowned  monarch.  5.  The  title  of  a  no- 
bleman. 6.  A  part  of  si)eech.  7.  That 
which  covers  the  beach. 

LETTER     ENIGMA. 

My  llrst  Is  in  yellow,  but  not   In  black: 

My  second  is  In  l»oat,  but  not  la  smack: 

My  third  Is  In  urge,  but  not  In  beg : 

My  fourth   Is  In  anatomy,  but  not  in   legi 

My  fifth   Is  In  heart,  but  not  in  beat: 

My  sixth  Is  In  fir-?,  but  not  in  heat : 

My  seventh  Is  the  same  as  my  third,  yoa 

know  : 
My  eighth   Is  In   love,  but  not   la  bestow » 

My  whole  spells  that 

Which   we   all   dearly    love ; 

And  you'll  know  what   It  la 

If  you  read  the  ab'Jve. 

BEHE.VDI>Ci9. 

(1)  Triply  behead  a  church  oflScer  and 
leave  to  study  a  lesson.  (2)  Triply  !»• 
head  a  precious  stone  and  leave  that 
which  ladies  wear  over  their  hair.  t3> 
Behead  a  di.sreputable  man  and  leave  • 
primitive  habitation  in  the  woods  used 
by  huntsmen.  _ 

Cl'RT.AILINGS. 

(1)  Doubly  curtail  a  song  and  leave  a 
social  function.  (2>  Doubly  curtail  a 
child  in  sch.wl  and  leave  a  young  do«. 
(,3)  Doubly  curtail  an  opening  in  the  Bid* 
of  a  building  and  leave  a^breeze. 

AXSnERS  TO  LAST  WEEK'S  PUZZLES. 

HIDDES   ARTIST  PUZZLE:  Bonheur. 

LETTER  ESIGMA:   Shamrock. 

BEHEADISaS^:  (1)  £>c«pa»r-poir.  (2) 
EHnt-lint.      (3)    Pledge-ledge. 

CURTAILIUQS:  (It  Oallant-gaU.  (2) 
Qravel-grave.      (3)    Stek-aee. 

Black   Dot    PnT.r.le    for   'll'e©    One*. 


•  •         • 


L 


Take  n  Mhurp  •«-;«»l  j.«?«-.  '«  anJ 
connect  the  dota  by  black  line*. 
If  thla  l«  properly  done  a  fat  boy, 
wearlns   a   hat,   nrlll  appear. 


/ 


I 
I 




tf.«l«  ar'-mtm 


.  ,1        .r    o,.,.-- 


Bralnerd.  Minn..  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  HtfialJ.)— C.  ii.  White  has  sold 
hlB  ipsidence  on  the  Soutli  side  to  K. 
"W.  Lagerqulst,  and  will  build  a  fine 
borne  on  North  Fourth  street  this  sum- 
mer. His  new  home  will  cost  about 
M.Ot>0.  ^        ^  .      ^, 

Mrs.  Bcriha  Theviot  has  been  In  bt. 
yaul  this  week,  called  there  by  the 
serious  illness  of  her  daughter,  Mrs. 
Charles   VVIttlg,  of  that  city. 

Mrs  V  l>.  uBrien  has  returned  from 
Mlnnoapoila  and  Faribault,  where  she 
was  f-ailed  by  the  Illness  an<l  deaih  of 
h«r  mother.  Mrs.  Kellington.  Mrs. 
O'Brien  was  accompanied  on  her  return 
by  her  sister.  Mrs.  J.  F.  Doran,  and 
children,  who  will  visit  at  the  O'Brien 
Dotne  tor  some  time. 

Thfe  Seventh  Street  Norwegian  Luth- 
eran church  will  erect  a  large  edifice 
th«  coming  summer,  if  they  tan  sell 
their  present  church  and  site.  The 
tlte  Is  almost  In  the  business  section, 
and  In  a  few  years  will  probably  be  In 
the    heart    of    business.  ,     ,    ,^ 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  Slmonitsch  left 
Saturday  for  Moorhead.  and  from  there 
•will  go  to  Seattle,  wiiere  ihey  will 
make    their   future   home.  .  -^    ,    ^-^ 

f£r.  and  Mrs.  G.  E.  Warren  of  Duluth 
urned  home  Sunday,  after  a  v-islt 
at  the  home  of  Mrs.  Warren's  father, 
Barry  Edwards.  Mrs.  Warren  had  been 
her©  several  weeks  recuperating  from 
a  flc  of  sickness. 

Mrt.  Vivian  KeiUy  entertained  ten  of 
her  young  lady  friends  to  dinner  Sun- 
day evening  in   honor  of  her  birthday. 

R.  W.  Mock  relumed  to  his  work  as 
train  dispatcher  on  the  Minnesota  & 
International  railroad  Sunday,  after  an 
enforced  vacation  of  two  months  on 
account   of   sickness. 

John  Fremling  was  held  to  the  grand 
Jury  on  the  charge  of  steaimg  an  over- 
coat and  grip  from  Mike  Collins  of 
iauk  Center.  The  men  were  drinking 
together,  and.  according  to  Collins, 
Fremling  and  the  property  disappeared 
from  the  depot  together.  Fremling  s 
•tpry  is  that  he  took  the  property  to 
take  care  of  It.  It  was  found  In  J. 
Douglae'  saloon,  wbere  it  had  been 
planted   by   Fremling. 

Peter  Held  of  Emily  went  to  Minne- 
apoMs    Wednesday    to    consult    an    ex- 

fiert    regarding    an    eye    which    he    had 
njured  a   short    time  ago, 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  E.  Barker  returned 
home  Wednesday  from  Slayton.  Minn., 
where  they  were  called  some  weeks 
ago  by  the  illness  and  death  of  Mr. 
Barker's  father,  who  was  a  leading 
business    man    of    that    city. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Herrlngton 
and  James  Herrlngton  of  Lidgerwood, 
N.  D.,  left  for  home  Wednesday,  after 
a  visit  at  the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  D. 
R.   ilcQaffigan. 

Miss   Cecil   Boyle   of  Duluth   returned 

tiome   Wednesday   morning,   after  visit- 
ng    at    the    home    of    her    friend,    Miss 
May  O'Brien. 

Mrs.  S.  Buttress  and  Mrs.  M.  J.  Will- 
Uma  went  to  St.  Cloud  this  week  to 
represent  the  local  Rebekah  lodge  at 
ha  district  meeting  of  that  organiza- 
tion, 

W.  D.  Edson  and  J.  T.  Hale  of  Du- 
luth were  In  the  city  and  surrounding 
country     this     week.        They      are      re- 

f sorted    to    have    been    buying   up   landa 
a  a  hitherto  unsuspected   iron   belu 


for  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  hrfe, 
was  recently  badly  injured  at  Shawnee, 
Okla. 

Mrs.  William  Moulton  pleasantly  en- 
tertained a  number  of  lady  friends  at 
her  home  on  Second  avenue  Friday 
afternoon. 

Mrs.  M.  K.  Knauff  has  returned  from 
a  visit  with  relatives  at  the  Twin 
Cities. 

A.    Hoagland    was 
Monday. 

Sullivan    has   gone 
for  a   few   weeks' 


a    Duluth 


to    Eddy- 
vlslt   with 


TWO  M^^BO^S 


March      20. — 

— F.    E.   Evans 

North    Yakl- 

weeks'B    visit 


Two    Harbors.    Minn.. 
(Special   to  The   Herald. )- 
departed    Wednesday    for 
ma,    Wash.,    for    a    three 
with   relatives. 

Mrs.  Adolph  Elg  has  returned  from  a 
week's  visit  with  relatives  at  Braln- 
erd,   Minn. 

L.  E.  Hosford  has  gone  to  Allen 
Junction  to  work  as  second  operator 
for    a    couple    of    weeks. 

The  Tuesday  club  met  this  week 
with  Mrs.  D.  A.  Burke.  The  program 
was    a    musical    afternoon. 

A  number  of  Two  Harbors  people 
have  been  In  Duluth  this  week  as 
witnesses  on  the  $35,000  personal  In- 
Jury  suit  of  John  L.  Madden  against 
the   Duluth    &   Iron    Range   railroad. 

The  monthly  birthday  party  given 
by  the  local  Ladv  Maccabees  will  be 
held  Wednesdav  afternoon,  March  31, 
at  the  home  of  Mrs.  F.  T.  Mcllray.  The 
guests  of  honor  will  be  Mesdames 
Reiton,  Mason.  Farmer.  Koneczny  and 
Mcliray. 

J.  B.  Therrun  has  moved  his  fam- 
ily to  Pine  City.  Minn.,  where  he  has 
charge  of  the  Minnesota  Land  & 
Abstract    company's    office. 

The  dance  given  Wednesday  even- 
ing hy  the  Ladies'  auiliary  of  the 
B.  of  L.  B.  was  a  successful  event  in 
every  way.  About  twenljr  from  Knife 
River  attended,  a  special  train  being 
run   from   there. 

The  Modern  Samaritans  held  a  plas- 
ant  social  session  and  dance  after  the 
meeting    Friday    evening. 

E  Bunker  has  resigned  his  position 
with  the  Lake  County  Lumber  com- 
pany. 

Dr  E.  P.  Chrlsteneon  attended  to 
professional  business  at  Breda  Thurs- 
day. 

John  F.  Coggswell,  a  former  resi- 
dent and  editor  of  the  Two  Harbor."? 
Iron  News,  llslted  friends  here  over 
Sunday.  Mr.  Cogswell  is  now  con- 
nected" with  the  Minneapolis  Journal 
Frank  Kempffer  transacted  business 
at  Baystrom  Hiver  on  the  D.  &  N.  M. 
railway  Tuesday. 

A  meeting  will  be  held  at  the  court- 
house this  afternoon  for  the  purpose  of 
organizing  a  Lake  County  Farmers' 
club. 

J.  F.  Ryan  has  returned  from  Chi- 
cago and  resumed  his  duties  as  switch- 
man In   the  Endion  yard. 

A.  F.  Pfautz  and  family,  of  Cedar 
Rapids.  Iowa,  arrived  here  and  will 
locate  at  Stanley  Station,  on  the  Du- 
luth &  Northern  Minnesota  railway, 
about  six  miles  west  of  the  city,  where 
Lord  &  Charles'  sawmill  is  located  and 
where  Mr.   Pfautz  will   start  a  store. 

Yardmaster  D.  W.  Owens  is  taking 
his  annual  vacation.  John  Martin  is 
relieving    him. 

Nolan  Bros.  &  Laird  are  getting 
things  in  shape  and  will  put  on  a 
night  shift  at  their  mill  at  Sklbo,  com- 
mencing   Monday. 

The  Creamery  association  Monday 
evening  approved  the  plans  for  re- 
modeling their  building,  recently  pur- 
chased from  Gust  Nelson,  and  awarded 
the  contract  for  the  same  to  George 
Spurbtck,  Work  on  It  will  commence 
next    week. 

Owing  to  his  illness  Emil  Anderson 
has  temporarily  closed  his  barber  shop 
on   Cedar   street. 

T.    W.    Sawser,    a    former    switchman 


Mrs.  C. 
visitor    on 

Mrs.  C. 
ville.  111., 
relatives. 

Ml-s.  C.  H.  McDermott  of  Eveleth,  and 
Mrs.  Kate  Jury  of  Sparta,  visited  with 
Mrs.    M.    Grant   here    last   week. 

The  supper  given  Wedensday  even- 
ing by  the  Cliristian  Endeavor  society 
of  the  Presbyterian  church,  was  a 
pleasant  and  successful  affair. 

Dispatcher  F.  Buell  of  the  Duluth  & 
Northern  Minnesota  railway  at  Knife 
River,  was  In  town  Saturday,  on  bus- 
ness. 

H.  F.  Knack  and  family  of  Toledo. 
Ohio,  have  moved  here.  Mr.  Knack 
has  purchased  a  160-acre  farm  two 
miles    north    of    the    city. 

Mrs.  E.  M.  Owens  pleasantly  enter- 
tained a  number  of  lady  friends  at  her 
home  on  Ninth  avenue  Tuesday  after- 
noon. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Rodmark  are 
the  happy  parents  of  twin  boys,  born 
Wednesday. 

Mrs.  Herman  Douglas  of  Sparta  is 
visiting  at  the  -home  of  her  mother. 
Mrs.   Paul   Barcomb. 

The  work  of  remodeling  the  Interior 
of  the  Swedish  Lutheran  church  is 
about  completed.  The  seating  capa- 
city of  the  church  will  be  much  in- 
creased. 

Charles  House  has  purchased  the 
Peterson  property  on  the  corner  of 
Poplar    street   and    Ninth    avenue. 

Mesdames  Jamse  Shea  and  Charles 
Cotter  have  returned  from  Starbuolt. 
Minn.,  where  they  were  called  by  the 
death  of  a  brother. 

Rev.  W.  E.  J.  Gratz  assisted,  by 
oCnductor  A.  H.  Clark,  conducted  a 
series  of  spet-ial  meetings  at  the  M.  E. 
church  at  Hibbing  this  week. 

Frank  Burg  transacted  business  at 
Duluth    on   Monday. 

The  matter  of  purchasing  a  couple 
more  blocks  of  land  for  enlarging  the 
City    park    is    being    considered. 

NelB  Westlund  has  purchased  the 
Gust  Carlson  property  on  Fourth  ave- 
nue. 

yi.  Hanna  and  Dennis  Dwan  have 
returned  from  St.  Paul,  where  they 
were  delegate*  to  the  state  Samaritan 
convention. 

Matt  Carlson,  an  employe  of  the 
Alger-Smith  company,  is  at  the  Budd 
hospital  with  a  badly  Injured  hand,  the 
result  of  an  accidental  stroke  with 
an    axe. 

Mesdames  E.  M.  Owens  and  D.  W. 
Owens  were  Duluth  visitors  on  Mon- 
day. 

Mrs.  Thomas  Sullivan  visited  with 
friends  at  Knife  River  on   Monday. 

N.  L.  Shank  has  completed  his  ship- 
ment.-i  of  logs  from  Mile  69  to  the  Al- 
ger-Smlth  company.  Tower,  Ijut  has 
some  pulpwood  to  forward  yet  before 
clearing    up. 

Rev.  W.  J,  Gratz  preached  at  Sktbo 
Monday  evening. 

The  home  of  John  Warren  on  Second 
avtnue  is  under  quarantine  on  ac- 
count of  diphtheria  and  the  home  of 
Mrs.  Katherine  Carey  on  Poplar  street, 
on  account  of  smallpox.  The  scarlet 
fever  quarantine  has  been  raised  from 
the   home   of  Rev.    W.    J.   Gratz. 

Judge  W.  S.  Andrews  is  rapidly  re- 
covering   from    his    recent    illness. 

Felix  and  Hubert  Pronovost  have  re- 
turned from  Payne.  Minn.,  where  they 
have  been  conducting  log!ging  opera- 
tloii.s   duriiig   the    winter. 

The  local  lodge  of  Swedish  Sons  of 
America  will  give  a  basket  social  at 
the    Scandia    hall    this    evening. 

Mrs.  J.  G.  Miller  was  a  Duluth  visitor 
on   Monday. 

The  local  lodge  Eastern  Star  will 
hold  iritiation  and  a  banquet  at  their 
meeting    Monday    evening. 

The  new  officers  of  the  township  of 
Two  Harbors  held  their  first  meeting 
Sat  11  vary. 

Miss  Frances  Roloff  has  returned 
froi:i  a  trip  to  Milwaukee  and  Chicago. 
The  ladies  of  the  Presbyterian 
church  are  arranging  for  a  sale  and 
pvpi-er  t(  be  given  at  their  church 
parlors  AA  <  dnesday  evening,  April  7. 

1  lie  home  of  Supt.  H.  Wilson  of 
the  Lake  County  Lumber  company  at 
Stewart  has  been  quarantined  on  ac- 
couiit   of   diphtheria. 

].<.:>ir.  Tuesday,  the  16th,  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.    Andrew   X.    Johnson,   a   son. 

Mike  Whalen.  an  employe  of  the 
Alger-Smith  company  at  Camp  3  Is  at 
the  Budd  hospital  with  a  broken  leg. 

Mrs.  William  Mooulton  and  Mrs. 
John  Dorsey  visited  with  Mrs.  J.  R. 
Reipart  at  Nashwauk  a  few  days  this 
week. 

Mrs.  Frank  Maxwell  of  Lethbridg^, 
Alberta,  Can.,  came  here  Monday  to 
attend  the  funeral  of  her  mother,  lira. 
Kate   Beckett. 

W.  D  Ljiwrence.  who  went  to  Cali- 
fornia some  lime  ago  on  account  of 
poor  healtli  is  expected  home  today, 
a  id  Is  reported  much  Improved. 

Fred  Wurster  has  returned  from  a 
week's  visit  with  his  parents  at  Kau- 
kauna,  Wis. 

George  H.  Spurbeck  transacted  busi- 
ness  at  Duluth   on   Monday. 


years,    left   for   Oregon,   111.,   the  first   of 
the  week.  ^      ^    , 

The  city  engineers  were  at  Fond  du 
I^c  Monday,  laying  out  the  line  for  the 
purpose  of  building  a  new  bridge  on 
Tlilrd  street,  which  will  be  built  of 
brown  stone  and  concrete.  Mr.  Ladely 
of  New  Duluth  has  the  contract  of  do- 
ing the  mason  work  for  the  new 
bridge. 

The  young  daughter  of  Mrs.  W.  E. 
Shipley,  who  has  been  sick  the  past  two 
weeks,    is   recovering. 

A.  La  France  spent  the  first  of  the 
week  in  Woodland  visiting  his  brother, 
Philip   La   P'rance. 

J  AI.  Curtis  spent  Wednesday  even- 
ing  in   West    Duluth.  ^     ^ 

Mrs.  Gust  BeckBian  returned  from 
Zlin,  Friday,  where  she  has  been  visit- 
ing her  daughter,  Mrs.  Nat  Naslund  for 
several  days. 

A  dancing  party  was  given  at  the 
home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Gust  Beckman, 
Saturday  evening.  Those  present  were: 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Carl  Runquist,  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Ed  Eskola  of  Duluth;  Misses 
Manda  Hogstad.  Katherine  Runquist, 
Olive  Scott  of  the  West  end,  Willie  and 
Blanche  Beckman,  Edla  and  Johanna 
Nelson,  Bertha  Durke.  Clara  Johnson; 
Messr.s.  Magnus  Johnson,  Carl  Edberg 
Eddie  Hogstad,  Emll  Axel,  Robert  and 
Walter  Johnson.  Alfred  Anderson,  I^ule 
Heaney,Godfrey  and  Oscar  Nelson,  Louie 
Beckman,  Krick  Nelson,  Andrew  Erick- 
son.  ,       ,, 

Mrs.  Thomas  McOllvery  and  Mrs. 
Cameron  Iluett  of  Duluth  spent  Tuesday 
at  Fond  du  Lac. 

The  residence  of  Mrs.  D.  Heaney  on 
the  Wisconsin  side  caught  fire  from  a 
defective  flue  this  week.  The  men  of 
Fond  du  Lac  promptly  formed  a 
bucket   brigade   and    put    the   fire   out. 

Mrs  D.  C.  Hewitt  entertained  a  few 
of  her  friends  Tliursday  evening  In 
honor  of  her  husband's  birthday.  Din- 
ner was  served  and  a  pleasant  evening 
was   spent. 


-(Spe- 
Nord- 


ar- 

few 

Mrs. 

her 


to 


to 
visit 

Clo- 


Southern 


Moose  Cake,  Minn.,  March   20.- 
clal   to  The   Herald.)— Miss  Jean 
Strom   arrived   from   Duluth   Friday    for 
a  visit  with  her  sister,  Mrs.  i.  R-  Wal- 

Mrs    H.   Serland   and    son.   Floyd, 
rived    from    Mora    Saturday    for    a 
days'     visit    with     her     daughter. 
Charles    Brown,    before    going 
home    in    Cloquet. 

Miss     Alice     Nordstrom     returned 
Duluth    Thursday,   after  a   week  s 
wltli    lier   sister.  ^  ,   ^ 

Miss  Beryl  Sterland  returned,  to 
quel   Monday. 

Robert    Bergqulst    was    In 
Minnesota  last  week   on   business. 

Rev.  Jamieson  of  Duluth  held  ser 
vices  in  the  McCabe  church  Thurs 
day   evening. 

W.  D.  Dyer  returned 

Mr.    Palmqulst  was  a  Duluth  visitor 
Tucsd  3  V 

Mesdames    George    Nevers    and    Flor 
ence    Anderson    and    Miss    Julia 
son    attended      the      dance   at 
River  Wednesday  evening. 

Mr     and    Mrs.    Charles    Johnson 
little   son   of   Duluth   are   visiting   here 
with  relatives.  ^   .      tt  a 

E.    A.    Rydeen   returned   to   Hayward, 
Wis.,  Monday.  ^    ^    ^ 

L.   Backstrom   transacted   business 
Carlton   Thursday. 

Miss    Julia    Johnson     returned     from 
St.    I'aul    Sunday. 

County    Supt.    Colovln    was    here 
week 

C.   J.   Dodge  made  a  business  trip  to 

Denham   Monday. 

•irs.J.    P.    Thompson    and    Mrs. 
V.  Thompson   of  Barnum  were  in   town 
Saturday.  ^  ^ 

Miss   Lizzie   Anderson  returned 
extended  visit  In  Cloquet  this 


to  be  given  und^^r  the  auspices  of  the 
Women's  charitable  organization  has 
been  abandoned,  and  a  charity  ball 
will  be  given  on  Thursday,  April  15. 
La  Brosse's  orchestra  of  Duluth  will 
furnisii    t"he   music. 

Mrs.  Otis  Smith  spent  Monday  In  the 
Zenith    City. 

W.  S.  Cochrane  transacted  business 
In  Duluth  Wednesday  and  Thursday. 

Mrs.  L.  P.  Runkel  and  Miss  Rachel 
Epperson  spent  Wednesday  evening 
with   friends  at   Brookston. 

Miss  Margaret  Raleigh  and  Emma- 
line  Hlggins  of  Duluth  were  the 
guests  of  Miss  Jean  Stapleton  this 
week. 

Mrs.  R.  D.  "Vlbert,  Mrs.  F.  D.  Vlbert 
and  Mrs.  C.  L.  Dixon  were  Duluth  visi- 
tors Wednesday 

An  interesting  announcement  was 
made  this  week,  that  William  Jen- 
nings Bryan  had  been  slated  to  speak 
In  Cloquet  on  the  afternoon  of  May  10. 
under  the  auspices  of  the  Lyceum  Pool 
of  the  y.  M.  C.  A. 

Oscar  Mitchell,  attorney  at  law  in 
Duluth,  win  speak  at  the  meeting  of 
P.  S.  A.  club  tomorrow  afternoon. 

The  membership  committee  have 
made  arrangements  for  a  ten-day 
membership  canvass  in  an  effort  to 
raise  the  membership  of  the  men's  de- 
partment to  the  500  mark;  the  present 
number  is  in  the  neighborhood  of  -100. 
May  25th  will  mark  the  first  anniver- 
sary of  the  Cloquet  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  and  a 
committee  consisting  of  I...  A.  Fauley 
and  Prof.  W.  C.  Cobb  has  been  ap- 
pointed to  make  arrangements  for  an 
appropriate  celebration.  A  "hard  times  " 
party  will  be  given  to  the  members 
and  ladies  on  the  evening  of  April  1. 

A  Bible  Study  club  has  been  or- 
ganized with  the  following  officers: 
President,  Charles  D.  McDonald;  vice 
president,  H.  H.  I.,amson;  secretary  and 
treasurer,    Raymond    H.   Brack. 

Miss  Fay  Cook  entertained  a  num- 
ber of  friends  Wednesday  evening  at 
the  home  of  Dr.  and  Mrs.  W.  G.  Dolan. 

Edmond  Huot  has  been  confined  to 
the  Cloquet  hospital  this  week,  an 
operation  having  been  performed  Tues- 
day  for  throat  trouble. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Clarence  Gronan  re- 
turned Thursday  to  their  home  at 
Waterloo,  Iowa,  after  a  visit  of  a  few 
days    with    friends    and    relatives    here. 

Mrs.  Mike  O'Hara  of  Duluth  spent 
Sunday    with    friends    In   Cloquet. 


and,  with  Mrs.  Gwathmey,  accompanied 
the  remains  to  the  former  home,  where 
the  funeral  was  held  Sunday,  under  the 
auspices  of  the  Masonic  lodge. 

The  play,  "Finnegan's  Fortune,' 
under  the  auspices  of  St.  James' 
ollc  church  Wednesday  evening, 
opera  house,  was  a  success  in 
way.      Those    taking    part    were 


'  given 

Cath- 

in   the 

every 

all    a 


credit   to   themselves, 
amounted   to  $120. 


and   the  proceeds 


to  Duluth  Mon- 


John- 
Wlllow 


and 


in 


this 


J.    M. 


an 


from 
week. 
Andrew  Fornes  returned  from  Be- 
mldjl  Frldav  morning,  where  he  has 
charge    of    some    lumber      camps      this 

winter.  _  ,    ,,  -c.     ^ 

Mrs  F.  R.  "^^^Iters  and  Mrs.  Fred 
Gay  entertained  the  young  people  at 
the  Gav  home  Wednesday  In  honor  of 
St  Patrick.  The  house  was  beauti- 
fully decorated  in  green,  and  all  those 
attending  who  were  not  decorated 
otherwise  had  to  put  up  a  forfeit.  A 
number  of  contest  games  were  played, 
after    which    lunch    was    served. 

Mrs.    C.     W.     Ehr     was       down 
Carlton    Wednesday    to    visit 
daughter,  Mrs.  Fred  Olson, 
ing    for    their    future 

Mr.    and    Mrs.    Ted 
of    Carlton     visited     with 
family   this  week. 

Frank    Ehr    of    Duluth 
his    brother.    John,    here 

J.    P.    Thompson    spent 
his   family   In  Barnum. 

W.  D.  Cooper  visited  with  his  brother 
in    Carlton    Thursday   last. 

Andrew  Forness  made  a  business 
trip    to   Duluth    Monday. 

A  number  of  students  from  District 
No.  12  were  here  Wednesday  to  take 
examinations. 


from 
with    her 
before  leav- 
home    In    Oregon. 
Gav   and   children 
the    Madsen 


visited 
Sunday. 
Sunday 


with 
with 


Fond  du  Lac.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Rev.  Mr.  Strum- 
berg  of  Twentieth  avenue  held  serv- 
ices at  the  Swedish  Mission  church  Fri- 
day evening. 

Mrs.  D.  L.  Bishop  spent  Friday  In 
Ironton    visiting    friends. 

Miss  Lula  Hewitt  of  Duluth  spent  the 
la^t  of  the  week  with  her  parents,  Mr. 
and   Mrs.    D.   C.    Hewitt. 

Mr.  and  Mr.s.  Cameron  Hewitt  of  Du- 
luth  .cpent  Sunday  at   Fond  du   Lac. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ed  Eskola  of  Duluth 
visited  their  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  E. 
L.    Hogstad.    the    first    of    the    week. 

Born — To  Mr.  and  Mrs.  B.  L.  Gomo  of 
the  powerhouse,  at  the  hospital  In 
Duluth.  a   son.   March    12. 

Bert  Blackburn  of  San  Francisco, 
Pal.,  who  has  been  visiting  relatives 
in  W'est  Duluth  and  Fond  du  Lac  the 
past  three  weeks,  returned  to  his  home 
Tuesday. 

Shipley  visited  her  mother, 
and  sister.  Mrs.  C.  M.  Phil- 
of  the  week  In  West  Du- 


Mrs.  W.  E. 
Mrs.  Haynes. 
lips  the  first 
luth. 

Mrs.  C.  O. 
Ladies'     Aid 


Bergqulst    entertained    the 
of     the     Swedish     Mission 
church    Wednesday   afternoon. 

Frank     Rogers,     who    has     been     em- 
ployed at  the  powerhouse  the  past  two 


RISING 

ST 


And  many  other  painful  and 
distressing  ailments  from 
which  most  mothers  suffer, 
can  be  avoided  by  using 
Mother's  Friend.  This  rem- 
edy is  a  God-send  to  expect- 
ant mothers,  carrying  them 
through  the  critical  ordeal  with  safety.  No  woman  who  uses 
Mother's  Friend  need  fear  the  suffering  incident  to  birth;  for  it  robs 
the  ordeal  of  its  dread  and  insures  safety  to  life  of  mother  and  child, 
leaving  her  in  a  condition 
more  favorable  to  speedy  re- 
covery. The  child  is  also 
healthy,    strong    and    good 

nofiirpH  Oar  booK  containing  valua- 
imiui  cu.  ^jj^  information  will  be  sent 
fiee  by  writing  to 

BRADFIELD  REGULATOR  CO. 
Atlanta.  Ga. 


Cloquet.  Minn..  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Miss  Bessie  Marko- 
wltz  of  Duluth  spent  Sunday  here  the 
guest   of  Miss   Fannie  Summerfield. 

Miss  Coy  of  New  Haven,  Conn..  Is 
the  guest  this  week  at  the  home  of  her 
brother.  Sherman  L.  Coy. 

Rev.  F.  C.  Coolbaugh  preached  at  St. 
Luke's  Episcopal  churcli  at  Duluth 
Sunday,  while  Roderick  J.  Mooney  of 
Duluth  held  services  at  the  St.  An- 
drews'  Episcopal   church  in   this  city. 

Mrs.  J.  J.  DeLescaiUe  and  son,  Victor, 
of  Davenport,  Iowa,  spent  the  week 
visiting  friends  in  this  city. 

Misses  Fay  Cook,  Jean  Stapleton  and 
Mabel  Nel.son,  who  are  students  at  the 
Duluth  normal  school,  are  spending 
their  spring  vacation  at  home  here. 

Impre.'tsive  funeral  services  were 
held  Sunday  afternoon  for  Peter  Simp- 
son, who  died  on  Tuesday,  March  9,  at 
Denver,  Colo.  The  members  of  the 
local  aerie  of  Eagles  and  the  Independ- 
ent Scandinavian  Workmen's  associa- 
tion escorted  the  body  to  St.  Andrew's 
Episcopal  church,  where  Rev.  F.  C. 
Coolbaugh  conducted  the  services  and 
later  to  the  Protestant  cemetery,  where 
the  body  was  laid  to  rest. 

F.  P.  Thompson  returned  Monday 
from  Mlnot,  N.  D.,  where  he  has  been 
for  some*  time  In  charge  of  temporary 
business. 

Misses  Murel  Redfleld  and  Racliel  Mc- 
Millan visited  friends  at  Thomson  Fri- 
day evening. 

Mrs.  M.  E.  Davis  and  Mrs.  J.  J.  Col- 
burn  entertained  at  a  St.  Patrick  party 
Wednesday  afternoon  at  the  home  of 
the   former. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Horace  Irvine  of  St. 
Paul,  arrived  .Saturday  for  a  tew  days' 
visit  with  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  A.  McDon- 
nell. 

Next  Friday  afternoon  at  the  high 
school  the  following  program  will  be 
rendered:  Music.  Symphony  club;  "Life 
of  Van  Dyck,"  Henrietta  Peach;  essay 
on  paintings  of  Van  Dyck,  Hilda  Itob- 
erts;  music.  Girls'  Glee  club;  original 
story.  Ruth  Blair;  recitation,  Ruth 
Swehson;  music,  male  quartette. 

The  high  school  basket  ball  team 
plaved  a  return  game  at  Hibbing  last 
evening  and  although  the  game  here 
was  a  walkaway  for  the  locals,  a  hard- 
er proposition  was  expected  at  Hibbing. 
The  girls'  teams,  A.  and  B.,  will  play  a 
match  game  next  Friday  evening,  to 
which   ladies    onlv   will   be   admitted. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  P.  Heasley  enter- 
tained a  number  of  friends  at  cards 
Saturday  evening. 

Mrs.  Agnes  L.  Aywood  of  Duluth  ar- 
rived Monday  for  a  short  visit  with 
Mrs.   John    Chisholm. 

Mrs.  I.  Bonnier  spent  Saturday  and 
Sunday  at  Hibbing,  visiting  her  daugh- 
ter. Bonnie. 

Mrs.  W.  F.  Heasley  was  the  hostess 
at  a  luncheon  Tuesday  afternoon. 

The  theatrical  production  which  waa 


Aitkin.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Mrs.  F.  E.  Kreck  has 
been  confined  to  her  home  by  Illness 
during  the  past  week. 

George  Falconer  has  returned  from 
Akeley,  where  he  has  been  employed 
for  several  months. 

Fred  Stearnes.  former  county  aud- 
itor, departed  Monday,  accompanied  by 
his  family,  for  Vancouver,  where  they 
expect  to  make  their  home. 

Mrs.  P.  A.  Woolley  returned  Wednes- 
day from  a  visit  with  her  mother  at 
Foreston.  ,.,    ,, 

Mrs.  Florence  McDonald  of  Walker 
spent  Sunday  here  at  the  home  of  her 
brother,  J.  D.  Farrell.  . 

C.  J.  Kordes  has  been  reappointed 
boiler  Inspector  for  this  senatorial  dls- 

F.  A.  Nlles  of  Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa, 
came  up  last  week  to  look  after  his 
farm  at  Round  Lake. 

The  record  of  births  and  deaths  In 
Aitkin  county  for  the  past  year  shows 
290   births    and   ninety-seven   deaths. 

Foster  Wakefield  is  at  home  from 
Superior,  Wis.  v      ^      ^,,,  .. 

The  home  of  R.  t>.  Guptill  on  the 
South  side  Is  tmd«r  quarantine  for  scar- 
let fever,  the  '^-year-old  son  being  ill 
with  the  dlsea.se. 

George  Reynolds,  Jr.,  of  Aitkin  and 
Miss  Annie  Anderson  of  Rossberg  were 
quietly  married  last  Thursday  at  the 
home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  G.  A.  Reynolds. 
Judge  Harrison  performing  the  cere- 
mony. ,         ^     ^. 

George  Demlng  has  purchased  the 
residence  property  on  the  South  side, 
formerly  occupied  by  Fred  McDonald, 
and  win  take  possession  April   1. 

Aitkin  county  will  receive  this  year 
as  the  March  apportionment  for  schools 
$4,149,  being  at  the  rate  of  $1.80  for 
2,305   pupils. 

Peter  Lauzon  has  returned  from  Min- 
neapolis, where  he  recently  underwent 
an  operation  for  the  removal  of  a  cata- 
ract on  his  eyes. 

George  Ridley  and  wife  from  Braln- 
erd spent  Sunday  here  with  Mrs.  Rid- 
ley's parents.  ^  ^     , 

Mrs.  S'hank  has  gone  to  Grand  Forks. 
N.  D.  to  visit  her  friend,  Mrs.  John 
Melin.' 

W.  F.  Jungck  of  Walker  spent  Sun- 
day here  with   friends. 

Some  of  the  farmers  of  Cutler  have 
organized  the  Culler  Guernsey  Breed- 
ers* association,  and  have  already  pur- 
chased  some    thoroughbred   stock. 

J.  L.  Spalding  attended  the  grand 
lodge  of  the  Samaritans  at  Minneapolis, 
as  a  delegate  from  the  local  order. 

The  public  schools  were  closed  this 
week  for  the  spring  vacation.  Supt.  G. 
E.  Butler  and  wife  have  been  spending 
the   week    in   Minneapolis. 

John  Petraborg  is  having  material 
hauled  onto  his  lots  In  the  new  town 
of  Ciiyuna,  where  he  will  erect  a  store 
building  as  soon  as  the  weather  Is  fav- 
orable. ,  ^    , 

W.  E.  Doar,  Jr.,  came  up  from  Cedar 
Rapids,   Iowa,   last   week. 

Stephen  Rowrliff  died  last  Friday,  at 
the  home  of  lils  daughter,  Mrs.  W.  B. 
Gwathmey  after  a  week's  illness,  with 
paralysis.  Mr.  Rowcllff  came  here  from 
Osceola,  Wis.,  six  years  ago.  after  the 
death  of  his  wife,  and  had  not  been  in 
good  health  at  any  time.  He  was  81 
vears  old,  and  is  survived  by  a  daugh- 
ter and  two  sons.  One  son,  T.  J.  Row- 
cliff  of  Osceola,  arrived  here  a  few 
davs    before    his    father    passed    away. 


Eveleth,  Minn..  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  daughter  was  born 
Thursday  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  Kenner 
of  Adams  avenue. 

A  daughter  was  born  Wednesday  to 
Mr,  and  Mrs.  John  Smith  of  the  Adams 
location. 

A.  H.  Soule  and  Hugo  Epstein  were 
here  Thursday  from  Chicago,  visiting 
with  friends,  and  attending  to  business 
matters. 

J.  Sweetelsky  of  Minneapolis  was  In 
town    during    the   week. 

Arthur  May  of  the  Adams-Spruce  en- 
gineering force,  who  was  hurt  about 
a  week  ago,  by  falling  over  a  slight 
raise,   Is   Improving. 

City  Clerk  Mclntyre  returned  Mon- 
day from  Duluth. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  L.  W.  Forncrook,  who 
have  been  visiting  for  some  time  with 
relatives  at  Manistee,  Mich.,  have  re- 
turned. Mrs.  Forncrook  was  away  for 
almost  two  months,  and  her  husband 
went  down  about  three  weeks  ago  to 
return    home    with    her. 

Israel  Kaner  was  here  Friday  for  a 
chort  time,  from  Virginia,  leaving  early 
in  the  morning  for  Duluth,  to  visit 
relatives.  „ 

Cashier  R.  M.  Cornwall  of  the  First 
National  bank  Is  planning  on  starting 
a   small   poultry   farm. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  N.  B.  Arnold  are  re- 
ceiving congratulations  on  the  birth 
of    a    daughter    Wfednesday    morning. 

Rev.  R.  C.  Johnson  of  the  M.  E. 
church,  has  returned  from  a  two  weeks' 
trip  to  Minneapolis.  Mrs.  Chilton,  his 
mother-in-law.  who  has  been  visiting 
at  his  home  for  a  while,  has  returned 
to   her   home   at  Aitkin. 

Mrs.  F.  C.  Cerveny,  who  has  been  vis- 
iting with  relatives  In  Superior  for  a 
while,  has  returned  home.  Her  mother, 
Mrs.  Rust  of  Superior,  is  visiting  with 
the  Cervenys  at   present. 

Jack  Dalley  of  Proctor  Is  here  for 
a  short  time,  waiting  for  the  railroad 
season  to  open  up.  He  has  recently 
returned  from  an  extended  trip  West 
and   South. 

J.  F.  Wright  of  St.  Paul  was  here 
during  the  week,  visiting  with  friends. 
Clarence  Wesley  of  Rhlnelander, 
Wis.,  was  here  for  a  few  days  during 
the  week.  He  Is  a  brother  of  Richard 
Wesley,    who    died    here    recently. 

Deputy  Coroner  J.  J.  Gleason  has 
been  laid  up  for  the  past  few  days  with 
an  attack  of  rheumatism,  but  is  get- 
ting  better. 

Postmaster   Sundqulst   of  Corbln   was 

here    early    In     the    week,     transacting 

business.     He  says   the  settlers  around 

Corbln    are    much    In    favor    of    having 

rural  route  out   of  Eveleth. 


Little  Falls  the  fore  pert  of  this  week, 
returning  Friday. 

Frank  Graham  returned  from  Rich- 
wood,  Wednesday,  wlnre  he  has  been 
employed  in  a  lumber  oamp  during  the 
winter, 

James  Worth  arrived  here  Ttusday 
from  Chicago,  after  an  absence  of 
three  months. 

Alfred  Vldeen  of  Minneapolis,  who  is 
in  the  employ  of  Charles  Wllklns  com- 
pany, was  here  Mond£  y  and  Tuesday, 
inspecting  the  heating  and  plumbing  in 
the    schoolhouse. 

The  camps  of  the  IJichols-Chisholm 
Lumber  company  hav(  broken  up  for 
the  winter  and  the  lumbermen  are  re- 
turning. It  Is  reportetl  that  they  have 
cut   40,800,000    feet   of  logs. 

J.  T.  Me  vers  left  on  Friday  for  New- 
burg.  N.  D.,  where  he  will  conduct  the 
harness  business  and  make  his  future 
home.  He  has  sold  h:s  house  to  Mrs. 
Schrandt. 

Mrs.  G.  G.  Goodrich  and  Miss  Net- 
tie Jordahl,  of  Lake  Pai-k,  were  visitors 
here  Tuesday. 

Jake  Kohler  and  wife 
from  Breckenridge  last 
they  spent  the  winter. 

Paul  Koshinek  canre  from  Devils 
Lake,  N.  D..  Sunday  and  visited  with 
his    friends    for   a   couple    of   days. 

S.    W^    Day   and    motier    arrived 
this    week    from    Iowa,    with    their 
load  of  household  goods  and  farm 
chlnery,  having  purchj.sed  a  farm 
miles    east    of    town. 

William  G.  Calhoun,  of  Wood  Bros.' 
Manufacturing  compaiy,  of  Kansas 
City,  was  a  visitor  heie  Tuesday,  look- 
ing  after  his   real   estate    interests. 

R.  G.  Schultz  and  wife,  who  have 
been  visiting  relatlv«!S  here  for  the 
past  month,  returned  to  their  home  at 
Casselton,  N.   D.,  Tueslay. 

Sufficient  stock  has  been  subscribed 
to  warrant  the  erection  of  the  creamery 
and  the  foundation  of  concrete  will  be 
put  in  as  soon  as  tie  weather  per- 
mits. The  creamery  will  be  located 
on  the  banks  of  the  river,  adjoining 
the  office  of  the  Wilcox  Lumber  com- 
pany. 


remain 


daughter    of 
Mrs.    Benson 


Grand 

Tues- 


Tuesday,  where  she  expects 
for  some  time, 
some  time. 

Mrs.  Larson  and 
Lake  visited  with 
day. 

Earl  MIer  is  on  the  sick 

The  Ladies  Union  Aid 
give  a  10-cent  social  at 
Mrs.    Carr   Saturday   evening. 

Joseph   J.    Brlndos   will    give   a   dance 
at    the    Ijall     Saturday    night. 


list. 

society    will 
the    home    ox 


arrived   home 
week,    where 


here 
car- 
ma- 
four 


Zlm,  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Miss  Lillian  Byrnes  re- 
turned Monday  evening  from  Duluth, 
wliere  she  was  the  guest  of  Miss  Mary 
McFadden. 

OUIe  Proudlock,  who  has  been  spend- 
ing the  winter  here,  returned  Monday 
from  a  brief  visit  with  his  family  In 
Cloquet. 

Walter  Scott  of  Eveleth  was  a  caller 
here    Thursday. 

Miss  Laura  Govett  of  Iron  Junction 
spent   Sunday   here   with    friends. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Byrnes  spent 
Saturday    in    Eveleth. 

Richard  Lind,  who  has  been  spend- 
ing the  past  month  In  Payne,  returned 
Saturday   evening.  . 

Axel  Norllng  of  Furmoy  was  a  visi- 
tor   here    Wednesday    between    train.s. 

Misses  Alma  Lind  and  Ellna  Wutula 
were  shopping  in  Eveleth  Wednesday. 
Others  who  were  In  Eveleth  during  the 
week  were.  Adolph  Hammer,  Ole  Olson, 
Lars   Olson   and   Lars   Samuelson. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Byrnes  spent 
Monday  and  Tuesday  In   Dulutlr. 

Albert  Peterson  returned  Sunday 
from  his  fatlier's  camp  near  Virginia, 
where  he  has  been  spending  tiie  win- 
ter. 

Mrs.  Peter  Peterson  Is  visiting  with 
friends    In    Duluth    this    week. 

Mrs.  August  Gradine  spent  Friday 
In    Forbes. 

A  dance  will  be  given  this  evening  at 
John    Peterson's    house. 


Iron  River,  Wis.,  March  20.— Special 
to  The  Herald.)- — Moses  Matonen,  a 
farmer  living  near  Bi  ule,  was  terribly 
injured  Wednesday  of  last  week,  when 
he  attempted  to  open  a  box  which  he 
supposed  contained  screws.  The  box 
was  filled  with  dynamite  caps,  which 
exploded,  tearing  ofl  both  Mr.  Mat- 
lonen's  hands  at  the  wrists.  His  eyes 
were  also  Injured  and  pieces  of  the 
box  penetrated  his  chest  and  pierced 
his  lungs.  He  was  taken  to  St.  Joseph  s 
liospital  at  Ashland,  where  death  ended 
his  sufferings   on   Frhlay   night. 

Mrs.  Thomas  McCann  died  at  the 
home  of  her  daughter,  Mrs.  Columbus 
Miller,  Monday  afternoon,  March  16, 
of  a  general  breakdown  In  health  due 
to  ola  age.  The  dec?ased  was  nearly 
83  years  of  age.  Tho  body  was  taken 
to  Chippewa  Falls  \A'ednesday  for  In- 
terment. 

Mrs.  Leanord  Hill  31ed  at  her  home 
In  the  town  of  Oulu  ast  Sunday  night 
of  tuberculosis.  Her  death  leaves 
seven    young   children    motherless. 

The  W.  C.  T.  U.  'viU  hold  a  gospel 
temperance  meeting  at  the  Congrega- 
tional church  next  Sunday  evening. 
Mr.  T.  E.  Cumming?  will  be  the 
speaker. 

Mesdames  Tarter  and  Morris  spent 
last  Saturday  visitin?  at  the  logging 
camps  of  Tarter  and  Morris  near 
Odanah. 

The  Girls"  Sewing  circle  met  with 
Laura  Esswein  on  Saturday. 

The  city  was  in  darkness  last  Sat- 
urday night,  owing  it  a  breakdown  of 
the  engine  at   the  powerhouse. 

C.  P.  Morris  attended  the  Irish- 
American  banquet  at  Superior  Wed- 
nesday  evening. 

Miss  Nina  May  l^erguson  of  this 
city  and  Alfred  J.  Jnckson  of  Clinton, 
Iowa,  were  married  at  Chicago  on 
March   10. 

G.  L.  Pettinglll  ma3e  a  business  trip 
to  Chicago  the  first  of  the  week. 

W.  R.  Holford  lef;  for  Grosse  Isle, 
Mich.,  Sunday  evening,  where  his  fam- 
ily have  been  during  the  winter.  Mr. 
Holford  will  engag.;  In  the  confec- 
tionery business  at  that  place. 


New  Duluth.  Minn.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — A  most  enjoyable 
surprise  party  was  given  at  the  Inter- 
national iiotel,  Tuesday  evening,  in 
honor  of  Clifford  .Mekeel's  birthday. 
Games  were  played  and  refresiimenta 
were  served.  Those  present  werei 
Messrs.  and  Mesdames  Ed  Herbert, 
Cliarles  Hicks,  Mrs.  A.  L.  Mekeel,  Missed 
Isabel  I'hayer,  Ropamond  Mekeel  Grace 
Eartz,  Ruth  Herbert.  Tina  Patry, 
Jennie  Hicks.  Constance  Willner, 
Messrs.  William  Rleckhoff,  Jr.,  ^epheii 
Roxy,  William  Mekeel,  Alfred  Mekeel, 
Herbert  McKay,  Marion  Bloyer.  Ernest 
Olson.  Jerry  Lockhart,  Roy  Dunham. 
George   Lee. 

Mrs.  Andiew'Berg  and  son,  Lawrenc©» 
of  W'est  Duluth  spent  the  week  in  New 
Dulutli  as  the  guests  of  Mrs.  William 
Lewis,  Mrs.  Leah  Sprague  and  Mrs. 
Alfred    Leonard. 

Miss  Mary  Thayer  is  visiting  fri«nds 
in   Duluth. 

Melvin  Becklinger  returned  home 
Thursday  from  a  Inp  to  Uie  Facifio 
coast. 

Miss  Gertrude  Larson  went  to  Sparta, 
Wis.,  Tuesday,  to  accompanv  Mrs.  J. 
D.  Filbert  tack  to  Ntw  Duluth,  when 
she  return.?  to  her  home  here. 

Miss  Selma  Linweli  was  very  pleas- 
antly suri>rised  Saturday  evening  by 
iier  pupils  at  the  Stowe  school.  Gaines 
and  mtisic  were  enjoyed  and  refresh- 
ments were  served.  Tliose  present  were: 
Misses  Florence  Olson,  Rosamond 
Mekeel,  Jennie  Erickson  Emma  Erlck- 
son,  Emma  Fischer  Agnes  Wills, 
Nancy  Wideil.  Vivian  (Troger,  Margaret 
McEachin,  Lorette  McKay,  Masters 
Carroll  Christopherson,  Raymond  Dar- 
dis,  Henry  I>ordis,  Hans  Bert.  John 
McEachin,  Carl  Smith. 

J.  J.  Palmer  spent  part  of  the  week 
with   his  family   in   New  Duluth. 

Ed  Farrell  spent  the  first  of  the 
week  in  Duiuth  with  his  family. 

Adolph  Holm  of  New  St.  Louis.  Wis, 
spent  Sunday  at  llie  home  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.   John   Moe. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Gufetafson, 
were  hosts  at  dinner  i^unday  for  their 
relatives  in  New  Duluth.  Covers  were 
laid  for  sixteen.  Those  present  were 
Messrs.  and  Mesdames  Charles  Strand, 
Gust  Jacobson,  Ed  Johnson.  MisseH 
Florence  Jacobson,  Hazel  Jacobson, 
Mamie  Gu.stafson,  Bernlce  Johnson; 
Messrs.  J.  M.  Carlson,  Lester  Johnson, 
Sidney  Jacobson,  Lawrence  Jacobson, 
Mrs.  C.  Becklinger  spent  Tuesday  in 
Superior. 

Mrs.    Frank    Naprvlck    has    moved    in 

with    her    sister.     Mrs.     Frank     Babka, 

and   win    make   lier   future   home   there, 

Albert     Dresser     spent     part     of     the 

week   In   Duluth 

C.  Becklinger  dicve  to  West  Duluth 
Sunday. 

Mrs.  Peter  Parenteau  and  children 
have  returned  from  Cloquet,  where 
they  visited  Mrs.  Parenteau's  mother, 
Mrs.   Patry. 

Stewart  Collins  visited  friends  in 
Duluth   Saturday    and   .Sunday. 

Miss  Ethel  Becklinger  spent  Satur-» 
day  in   Duluth   with  Misa  VJna  Kerr. 

Miss    Mollie    Herbert    of    Duluth    was  • 
the  guest  of   her  parents,   Mr    and  Mr^»i 
EO    Herbert,   Sunday. 

Mrs.  Jolin  Smiih  and  Miss  Barah 
Smith  spent  Saturday  in  Duluth  aa 
the  guests  of  Mrs.  Peter  Sjoselius  ana 
Miss   Alice   Sjoselius. 

Miss  MartJia  Salkowski  of  West  Du- 
luth is  the  guest  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Benjamin   Grosliek. 

Mrs.  William  Hicks  spent  Thursday 
in    Duluth. 

The  Stowe  school  closed  Friday  for 
the  annual  spring  vacation,  to  rtcpea 
on  Monday.  March   JH. 

The  Ladies'  Social  Lfea.gue  will  giv^ 
the  '.Spinsters'  convention"  at  tjie  fir^ 
hall  .Saturday  evening,  March  20,  fo» 
the  benefit  of  the  Presbyterian  church. 
Mrs.  J.  J.  Palmer  and  eon,  Karl  spent 
Wednesday    in   Duiuth. 

Theodore  Schueriiig  is  on  the  sick 
list. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ed  Johnson.  MIfs  Ber- 
nice  Johnson  and  Lester  Johnson  of 
Short  Line  Park  visited  relatives  in 
New    Duluth   Sunday. 


1 

|4 

t 

Duluth    between 

Schubert       and 
Duluth  shopping 


DOWNWARD  COURSE 


Fast  Beiilg  Realized  by 
Duluth  People 


hack    Is 


A  little  backache  at  first. 

Daily    increasing    till    the 
lame   and   weak. 

Urinary    disorders    quickly    follow; 

Diabetes  and  finally  Bright's  disease. 

This  Is  the  downward  course  of 
kidney    ills. 

Don't  take  this  course.  Follow  the 
advice  of  a  Duluth  citizen. 

Thomas  G.  Thompson,  624  W.  Sec- 
ond street,  Duluth,  Minn.,  says:  "1 
was  in  poor  health  for  several  months 
and  I  suffered  a  great  deal  from  pain? 
in  the  small  of  my  back.  I  had  often 
heard  Doan's  Kidney  Pills  recom- 
mended as  a  cure  for  such  trouble  and 
believing  that  my  kidneys  were  dis- 
ordered, I  decided  to  try  this  remedy. 
After  using  one  box  my  health  was 
improved  in  every  way  and  since  that 
time  I  have  no  further  need  of  a  kid- 
ney remedy.  As  I  have  found  that 
Doan's  Kidney  Pills  live  up  to  the 
claims  made  for  them,  I  do  not  hesi- 
tate to  give  this  endorsement." 


Meadowlands,  Minn.,  March  20.— 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  U.  H. 
Smith  and  her  daughter,  Florence,  were 
Duluth   visitors  Tuesday. 

Mr.  Shoalts  of  North  Dakota  arrived 
Thursday  morning  with  an  emigrant 
car.  Mrs.  Shoalts  and  children  are  ex- 
pected Monday.  Mr.  Shoalts  has  bought 
what  Is  known  as  the  Joe  Miller  farm. 
Mr.  Miller  and  wife  will  leave  in  a 
short   time   for    Pipestone,   Minn. 

Harry  Smith  went  to  Duluth  on  bus- 
iness  Monday. 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Smith  and  Mrs.  Will 
Bailey  of  Elmer  visited  the  school  Fri- 
day  afternoon. 

Wednesday  morning  about  7  o'clock 
Mrs.  J.  W.  Reisinger  discovered  that 
their  home  was  on  fire.  The  stove  pipe 
had  become  disjointed  and  the  upstair.> 
floor  had  caught  fire  and  was  blazing 
almost  to  the  roof.  John  Peterson  as- 
sisted Mrs.  Reisinger  and  daughter  In 
quenching  the  confiagration.  Mr.  Reis- 
inger and  eldest  son  were  both  away 
from  home  at  the  time.  Tlie  second 
rtoor  was  almost  ruined,  but  no  furni- 
ture was  destroyed.  This  is  the  second 
time  since  October  that  a  fire  ha.s 
started  in  their  home,  but  was  discov- 
ered in   the  nick  of   lime   to  save  it. 

John  Rabenburg  went  to  Duluth 
Tuesday. 

While  putting  up  ice,  Andrew  Nelson 
accidentally  fell  and  cut  his  knee  very 
badly   and  wrenched   his  back 

Mesdames  Joseph  and  Lewis  Miller 
visited  with  Mrs.  J.  W.  Reisinger  Tues- 
day. 

The  Swedish  Ladies'  Aid  society  met 
with  Mrs.  Nels  Malison  Monday.  The 
Lutheran  minister  was  present  and 
baptized  Mr.  Malison's  Infant  child; 
also  S.  1'.  Lundeen's  young  baby. 

A  play  is  to  be  given  by  llie  Meadow- 
lands  Farmers'  club  Saturday  evening, 
called  "The  Deacon,"  a  flve-aci  comedy 
two  and  one-iialt  hours  long,  acted  by 
home  talent. 


Alborn.  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Eln  er  Trolander,  who 
is  attending  Ma.cales  ter  college  In  St. 
Paul,  has  been  home  for  a  week. 

James  Maloney  of  Amery,  Wis.,  has 
been  visiting  his  parents  here  for  a 
week.  He  returned  "I'uesday  to  Duluth, 
where  he  expected  to  visit  his^  siler, 
Mr.    Harris. 

P.  Maloney  was  l;i 
trains   Monday. 

The  ,  Misses  Llllh; 
Martha  Prinz  were  in 
recently 

Several  voung  people  attended  the 
dance  at  Kelsey  last  Saturday  evening. 
Among  them  being:  Martha  Prlnz, 
Ethel  Ringquist,  Carrie  Erickson, 
Mollie  Benson,  lHuth  Trolander. 
Messr.  Augut  Swan  5on  and  Homer 
Carr.     All  had   a   gocd   time. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Fred  Mell  came  from 
Pengllly  Sunday  to  visit  with  Mrs. 
Mell's  parents.  iiiey  went  to  Duluth 
Monday. 

Arthur  Johnson  entertained  a  few 
friends  at  a  sleigh  lide  party  Monday 
evening.  They  calh'd  at  the  Skars 
residence,  where  rofreshments  were 
served. 

Miss  Elizabeth  Carlson  entertained 
a  few  of  her  friend j  Monday  evening 
the  occasion  being  her  fourteenth 
birthday. 

Miss    Hulda    Mell        wentto        Kelsey 


Kelsr-y,  Minii.,  March  20. —  (Spcial  to 
Th  Herald.) — Miss  Ruth  Trolander, 
with  several  companions  from  Alborn, 
attended  the  dance  held  at  the  Wood- 
man  liail.   lasl  Saturday   evening. 

M.  M.  Nelson  of  Cotton  has  built  a 
camp,  near  the  location  of  the  RaJny 
Lake  road,  for  the  purpose  of  taking 
out   ties  for  that  road. 

Ed  Crandell  is  going  to  finish  his 
contract  of  logs  for  the  Johnson  Went- 
worth  company,  and  is  rapidly  Hear- 
ing completion. 

Mrs.  II.  Person  of  Dunblane  went 
to  the  Zenith  City  Wednesday  on  busi- 
ness, returning  same  da.v. 

Mrs.  A.  Mobery,  tieasurer  of  the 
Ladies'  Sewing  society,  and  Mrs.  Will- 
iam Soderlund,  president  of  the  same 
of  Cotton,  were  shopping  here  Wednes- 
day. 

Mrs.  L.  J.  Larson  cf  Cotton  called 
here  this  week. 

A.  M.  Tollokson  lost  a  horse  thl» 
week. 

J.  B.  Donville.  scaler  for  the  Northern 
Lumber  company,    was   called    home   by 


^' 


'.fc 


Home  CheeBo 

What  is  more  enjoyable,  after  a  hard  days  work, 
than  to  si  t  at  your  O'wti  fireside  and  drink  a  glass  of 


For 

cents. 
New  York, 
States. 


sale    bv    all    dealers.    Price    50 

Foster-Milburn     Co.,     Buffalo, 

sole  agents  for  the  United 


Remember  the 
take  no  uthor. 


name — D  oan's — and 


Frazee,  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Herman  Lehrman 
and  daughter.  Sophie,  returned  from 
Minneapolis,  Monday,  after  an  absence 
of   two   weeks. 

Misses  Edith  Stillings  and  Glady.s 
Gumner  are  spending  a  few  days  vis- 
iting  friends    in    Detroit,    this   week. 

The  Eastern  Star  gave  a  farewell 
reception,  In  honor  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  F. 
C.  Kemnenan.  They  will  leave  sliortly 
for  Detroit,  where  they  will  make  their 
future    home. 

Mrs.  William  Cummlngs"  visited  in 
Perham.  Wedne.sday  and  Thursday. 

Miss  Minnie  Luher  has  resigned  as 
saleslady  In  Baer  Bros.'  store.  The 
vacancy  has  not  as  yet  been   filled. 

John  Briggs  made  a  business  trip  to 


too,  affords  you  supreme  satis- 
faction, to  offer  this  delicious,  spark- 
ling beverage  to  your  friends  who 
stop  in  of  an  evening.    Its  delicious 
flavor  i3  not  all— the  food  and 
tonic  values  derived  from  choic- 
est bar  ey  malt  and  Bohemian 
hops  build  up  wasted  tissue 
and  f:ive  you  vim  and  a 
clear  brain.    For  health 
and  liospitality,  keep  a 
few  b  Jttles  in  your  cellar. 

FITGER  BREWING  COT 

DULUTH,  MINN. 


i 

1 

■   1 

{ 

1 

i 

■  --^^ 

Cfi 


J—'' 


\ 


"The  best  temperance  workers  among  us 
that  I  know  are  the  m^n  who  brew  our  light, 
pure  American  beer." 

Andrew  D.  White,  Autobiography,  Page  519. 


R^ 


¥k 


4   ^ 


=1^ 


1 


' 


^^ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD: 


SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


a  telegram  that  his  wife  was  very  sick,  t 

J.  C.  Bronlock,  check  acaler,  oame 
from  Zlm  TriJay  and  proceeded  to  Ben- 
gali's camp. 

The  lumbf  r  jacks  are  coming  in  every 
day  from  tno  camps  and  taking  the  first 
train  for  different  points. 

J.    N.    Yoakum    and    family    left    here 

£"rtday  on  a  short  vi.««lt  to  Aitkin.  Minn., 
nd  expect   to  be  back   in  a  few  days. 
Mrs.    Lund    visited    with    Mrs.    McKay 
AVednesday   and    spent    a   pleasant   time. 


Bmm 


Barnum.  Minn..  March.  20. — (Special 
lo  The  Herald.  1 — Mls.-^es  Gertrude 
Fuller,    Tena    McMillan.    Lorene    Hallon 


and  J.  Skelton  attended  a  party  in 
Fond    du    Lac    Friday    evenlnR. 

Ml.-oes  Florence  and  Elsie  Gerlach 
and  Mabfi  and  Mildred  Stons  spent 
Sunday  with  Mls.ses  Eunice  Speck  and 
Ethel    Llllig   at    Proctor. 

H.  Lower  of  Moose  Lake  was  in  town 
Wednesday. 

Mr.s  R.  K.  .lohnson  entertained  two 
of  her  nieces  and  Mr.  Hud.son  and 
daughtc.    of  McGregor  Sunday. 

H  C  Han.son  was  down  to  Moose 
Lake    on    business    Wedne.'^day. 

J  O  Tiiompson  of  Moose  Lake  spent 
Sunday   with    hi.s   family   here. 

Mis<  Millie  Mathison  of  Atkinson  is 
the  guest  of  MidS  Gertrude  Fuller. 

Russel  Hamilton  of  West  Duluth. 
has  moved  here  this  week  and  will  oc- 
cupy the  E.  Zauft   farm. 

B.  M.  Stone  and  J.  D.  Barstow  tran- 
sacted   buslnes.s    In    Carlton   Saturday. 

Miss    Mae   Hagberg   came   down    from 


Duluth  Wednesday  for  a  visit  with  her 
parents 

Mrs.  I.  Gilbertson  entertained  a  num- 
ber of  young  people  at  l^r  home 
Wednesday    evening. 

Miss  Bessie  Kenney  Is  visiting  at  her 
home    In    Willow    River. 

F.  M.  Duesler  of  Carlton  was  in  town 
Monday  .„ 

Mrs.  N.  Gerlach  entertained  Rev. 
William    Fischer   and    wife   Sunday. 

Supt.  E.  J.  Colortn  was  visiting  the 
school  here  Friday. 


Arnold,  Minn..  March  20 
The  Herald.) — Messrs.  E. 
and    Wm.    W.    Schaub 


—(Special  to 

N.    Holmrud 

were    in    attend- 


ance as  representatives  of  the  Arnold 
Guernsey  club,  at  the  meeting  of  the 
Guernsey  breeders  of  the  territory  ad- 
joining the  Head  of  the  Lakes  at  the 
Commercial  club  rooms,  Dulut*.  last 
Saturday  afternoon. 

Surveyors  have  been  working  lately 
laying  out  6-acre  tracts  In  section  22 
for  W.  M.  Prlndle  &  Co. 

Jacob  Friedman  arrived  home  from 
Jiis  work  in  tlie  w^oods  Monday.  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Joseph  Cramer  and  family 
came   back  at  the  same  time. 

Mrs.  James  H.  Cramer  Is  very  sick. 
Her  grand-daughter,  Mrs.  Joe  Haller 
from  the  city,  was  here  Saturday  and 
Sunday  taking  care  of  her. 

Clirlst  Melln  is  home  after  his  win- 
ter's work   in   the   woods. 

Carlson  Bros.,  celery  growers,  are 
starting  their  hothouse  for  another  sea- 
son. 

Mr.    and    Mrs.    Chas.    Peirson    of    the 


West  end  were  the  guests  of  Charles 
M.  Nelson  last  Sunday  afternoon. 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  Presby- 
terian church  took  place  Friday  even- 
ing. 

The  Ladies'  Aid  society  of  the  Luth- 
eran church  will  meet  Thursday,  the 
25th. 

The  Flinch  club  met  Thursday  even- 
ing with  Mrs.  T.  J.  Bowyer,  whose  hus- 
band Is  out  selling  goods  on  the  road. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  W.  Murphy,  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  A.  Hoslg.  Mrs.  L.  Schoof.  Misses 
E.  Remf^v  .and  A.  Johnson,  and  Will- 
lam  W  Sclmub  were  present  and  spent 
a  very  enjoyable  evening. 

Miss  Esther  Friedman  was  visited 
Sunday  bv  friends  from  the  city.  They 
were  Misses  Selma.  Anna  and  Betty 
Erlckson.  and  Ellen  Brlnteson. 

Mrs  B.  J.  Johnson  has  been  sick  sev- 
eral days  lately,  but  Is  better  now. 

Rev.   J.   G.    Leltch    Is    to   speak   at   the 


Presbyterian    church     Sunday    at    11:45 


a.    m.  ,  ^       » 

Mrs.    Anna    Swedberg    spent    most    of 
the  week  visiting  in  Superior. 


Bemidji.    March    20. — (Sped 
Herald.) — Word     comes     fron: 

postoffice,  on  the  north  shor< 
Red  lake,  to  the  effect  tl 
Kolar.  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J( 
died  at  the  Kolar  home  a  few 
The  boy  was  two  years  of  ag 
born  In  Chicago,  being  brou^ 
inaas  by  his  parents  a  lltl 
year  ago. 

M.    D.    Stoner   has   returned 
Paul,     where     he     had     spent 


il    to    The 
Domaas 

of  upper 
lat  Eddie 
ihn  Kolar, 
day.**  ago. 
B  and  was 
ht  to  Do- 
te   over    a 

from   St. 
the    past 


week  looking  after  some  private  busi- 
ness  niatters. 

J.  G.  Morrison,  .Ir.,  who  is  engaged 
in  the  mercantile  busines.s  at  Red  Lake, 
came  in  Monday  morning  for  a  short 
busines.s    visit    In    the    city. 

Mrs.  F.  F.  Reu.'iswfg  and  Mrs.  T.  H. 
Glysdale  of  Grand  Rapids  returned 
home  on  the  east  bound  train  Monday 
noon  after  enjoying  a  few  days'  visit 
with  friends  in  this  city  as  a  guest  at 
the  home  of  Mrs.  C.  M.  Shannon.  Mes- 
dames  Reus.swlg  and  Glysdale  were 
very  well  pleased  with  Bemidji  and  ex- 
pect to  return  to  this  city  again  next 
summer. 

Mayor  Pogue  and  Dr.  McDonald  of 
St.  Cloud  returned  Saturday  afternoon 
from  a  trip  of  iiispection  among  the 
lumber  camps  of  the  Crookston  Lumber 
company  in  the  vicinity  of  Fowlds. 

A.  G.  Wedge,  Jr.,  vice  pre.sldent  of 
the    First    National    bank,    and    general 


^ 


_. •  «  « « I  '. 


•4    Ot 


WILL 


MOST  CONSIDERATE  ATTENTION  flJ^^Y^ll 


"— ' —  ^ -— - 1    IlllIO     l_-.lOlCU    uc- 

low,  satisfaction  7s  assured  every  buyer;  same  satisfaction  tliat  would  be  expected  by  a  person  who  stood  in  front  of  the  counter. 


Monthly 
Style  Book 

Free  if  You  Write  for  It. 

A  monthly  publication  showing  all 
the   newest  . 

LADIES'     HOME 
JOIRXAL    PATTERNS. 

We  fill  mall  orders  for  Ladles' 
Home  Journal  patterns  and  every- 
thing  In   Dry  Goods. 

lir-ll»  West  Superior  St. 


PANTON  &  WHITE 

Class  Block  Store! 


/o/i/i .  I  Afof  \  SvijM 

(  fvnirHj  Mn^^tU't  I  

itif  Apt  It^i  Suprnof 


VC€^. 


Tl.f  tirst  fn^ 

Drgar^rnm  t Storm 


DuJuth 


This  Big  Department  Store 
Sells  Almost  Everything. 

Newest  Styles.   Lowe.st  Prices.     Send 
to  l^s  for  Anything  You  Want  Quick. 
Orders  filled  same  day. 


JOHNJ.  MOE&SONS*CO. 

DILUTH,    MIXN. 


THE  STYLE 
STORE 


DULUTH 


Duluth 
Public  Majrket 

30  East  Superior   Street. 


The  largest  strictly  One-Price 
Cash  Grocery  and  Meat  Market  at 
the   Head   of   the   Lake.<j. 


FURNITURE 
AND  CLOTHING 


>N- 


CREDIT 


-AT 


•  t  SUPERIOR  SI.' 

auLurii.  .iiNN. 


Buy  Your  Clothing:  of 

Chas.  W.  Ericson 


RELIABLE    CLOTHIER. 


Hats,  Caps 

and  Gloves 


FOR  THE   HIGHEST   CL.\91 
READY-TO-WEAR 

CLOTHING 


COME  TO  THE 


219  West   Superior  Street. 


Clothing 
Parlors 

U2  IV-  Supoflor  Sim 

Send   for   our   Style    Book — Free. 


STOVES 

F.  H.  WADE 

Exclustve    Airency   tor      ■■'> 

RADIANT 

HOME  HEATERS 

WRITE  rS  FOR  PRICES. 
329-331  Central  Avenue. 


BUY  YOUR  CLOTHING 

BATS,  SHOES  AND  FUR- 
NISHINGS IN  DULUTH. 

And  get  the  benefit  of  our  low 
prices     and     large     assortments. 

THE     DAYLIGHT     STORE. 


331-333-335  W.  Superior  St. 


F.  D.  DAY  &  CO., 

Leadini;  jewelers. 

815  West  Superior  Street, 
DULUTH. 

Write    us    for    anythlnij    wanted 
of    a    flrst-class    je^'eler. 


Shoe  Satisfaction 


For  the  entire  famlljr. 
Sorosis  Ladles'  Shoes. 
Stacy  Adams  &  Co.'a 
Men's   Shoes. 


WIELAND  SHOE  CO. 


123    West   Superior   St. 


Steel  Die  Embossing, 

Engraving  and 
Monogram  Stationary 

Consolidated  Stamp 
and  Printing  Co., 

14  Xurtk   Fourth   Avenne   West. 
UlLtTH.    MINN. 

Everything   In    the   Stamp   and 
Printing  Line. 


Write  Us  for  the  Very  Latest 

Sheet  Music 

Ask      us      about      a      Phonograph. 
Easy    payment    plan. 


ZENITH 
MUSIC  CO. 

G  KaMt  Superior  .Street. 

A  COMPLETE   I,INE  OF   Ml'SICAli 
INSTRUMENTS. 


Floan,  Leveroos  &  Co. 


MEN'S  and  BOYS' 

Clothing! 


Special  attention  given  to  mail 
orders. 

Money  refunded  If  purchase  is  not 
satisfactory. 


Both   Telephones. 


BARTHE-MARTIN  GO. 

GROCERIES  AT 
WHOLESALE 

DIRECT  TO  CONSUMER. 


102-104    West    Michigan    Street, 
DULUTH.    MINN. 


W.  &  L.  Shoe  Store 

218  W.  Suptiior  St. 
DULUTH,  MINNESOTA 


THE  LEADINB 

SHOE  STORE 

OF   DULUTH 


The  One  Price  Stori 


Orders  for  Male 

Attire  will   be   properly   and 
promptly    filled    by    the 

COLUMBIA  CLOTHING  CO. 

Formerly  "The  Great  Eisieni." 
Third  Ave.  W.  and  Superior  'M..  Dnlath. 


Vb'lVKABh'RCiS 


Dry  Goods,  Millinery, 

and  Women's 
Ready-to-Wears. 


DUI^UTH  SUPERIOR 

First   Ave.   W.   918-20-22   Tower 
&   Superior   St  Avenue. 


r 


ZIMMERMAN  BROS., 

333  West  First  Street. 

KODAKS 

We    have    a    complete      stock      of 
Photo   Supplies. 

Let  us  finish  your  Kodak  Pictures. 
EAST.>IAN   FILMS   ONLY. 


We     nil     mall     orders     for     any 
A,  kind   ot  watch   mada 

E.  E.  ESTERLY 


Manufacturing 
Jewolorm 


MUSIC 


Largest   Watch  Heose  io  Dalutb 


428    We3t    Superior    Street. 
Spalding   UoteL 


The  iHife.  and  most  complete 
stock  of  Music  and  Musical  In- 
struments. Talking  Machines  and 
Records.  Bund  and  Orchestra  Sup- 
plies, etc.,  at  the  Head  of  the 
Lakes.     Send  us  your  orders. 

INGVALD  WESTGAARD, 

•<Dulutb'a   Leadlne  Music   House.** 


OUU/TM.  MiMNi 

(Iliei)rixjr.ited. ) 


THE     LEADING 
JEWELERS 


«$ 


Msmifarturers  of 
KINK  AND  AB- 
Tl.STIC  J  E  W  - 
ELUY.  Gold  and 
811ver>iulth4. 


Salesroom— 312  WoBt  Superior  Street.  Factory— 
rourtli  Avenue  West  and  Michigan  Street, 
Pro?ldence   building. 


None  But  Good 

SHOES 

For  Men     For  Ladles' 


''STETSON'S   •♦ 
$5.00  TO   9<i.0O. 

WALK-OVERS 
93.50,  94.00.  95.00. 


H.  H.  GRAY 

&  SON 
94.00  and  95.00. 

"PRINCESS" 
93  50. 


115  West  Superior  Street. 


CIGARS 

From  Factory  to  Consamer. 

Send  for  a  box  of  our  cigars 
and  save   the   middlemm's   profit. 

Our  »*New  Rival"  cigar  is  a  do- 
mestic panetela  at  92.15  per  box 
of  50   cigar.s. 

"El  VInoero,"  a  clear  Havana 
cigar,  93j:5  per  box  of  50  cigars, 
express    prepaid. 

F.  W.  CL4VEAl)X  &  CO. 

Fnctory  and  Saleiroomi 

325    West    First    JJtrret, 

DVLl'TH,    MIJiN. 

Established,  1S94. 


'Wliere     V^alues  Rc^en  Supremo" 


Dry  Goods, 

Cloaks,  Suits, 

Millinery  andShoosm 

21'23  We9t  Superior  Stm 

Special  Attention  Given 
to  Mail  Orders. 


EDWARD  M.  STONE 

LEADING 

BOOK  STORE. 

BOOKS,  STATIONERY, 

Offlee  and  Typewriter  Supplies. 

Blank  Books,  Drawing  Materials  and 
Instruments. 

We  carry  all  the  latest  flctlun  at 
popular  prices.  Subscriptions  re- 
ceived at  club  rate-s.  Ask  for  Catalog. 

221   A%>st  Superior  Street, 
Both   *Phonos.  DUI.UTH,   MINN. 

Mail  orders  given  prompt  atten- 
tion 


Tlie  Most  Complete  Line  of 
Ladies'  and  Gentlemen's  Shoes 
at  the  Head  of  the  Lakes. 
Prices  right.  Styles  for  every- 
body. 


OFFElft^ 


!!Ktior.it 


DULUTH. 


If  You  Buy  in 
Duluth  You 
Get  the  Benefit 
of  Big  Stocks 
and  Low  Prices 


Theo.  E.  Relnhart 

Jeweler 

Watch  and  Jewelry 
Repairing 


120   'West   Superior   Street* 
DULUTH,   MINN. 


BAR 
SUPPLIES 

5oda  Fountains,  Pool 
and  Billiard  Tables. 


RAW 


E.  F.  BURG 

108  East  Superior  Street, 
DULUTH,    MINN. 


We  have  heavy  orders  for  Mink. 
Muskrat,  Wolf,  Skunk .  Wild  Cat, 
Lynx,  Raccoon  and  Rel  Fox;  other 
furs  selling  well.  Hurr  ,r  along  your 
shipments  while  the  price  is  high. 
Satisfaction   guaranteetU 

0.  G.  SHAWAKER 

416    East    Superior   Street. 
DULUTH,    MINN. 


IfYouDoNotFind 
in  This  List  a  Firm 
HandlingtheOoods 
You  Want,  Write  to 
Mail  Order  Editor, 

HERALD, 
Duluth     -     Minn. 


■<ra 


-■  — 


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. 

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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:-    SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


auditor  for  the  North  country  banking 
Institulionp.  in  which  F.  P.  Sheldon  of 
MiJinearolis  Is  Interested,  tleparteil 
Wednesday  for  International  Falls  and 
other  towns:  north  of  liere  on  one  of 
his  regular  inspection  trips. 

E.  O.  Moore,  of  the  logK»»g  Arm  of 
E.  O.  Moore  &  Co..  of  this  city,  left 
Mondav  evening  for  the  company  s 
Camps'  luar  Northome  to  inspect  the 
work  at  that  place.  Mr.  Moore  reports 
that  he  hus  compl<"ted  the  work  near 
Rfd  Lakt  and  broke  up  his  canip-of 
100  mtn  thtre.  He  expects  to  finish 
the  logging  near  Northome  wJthln  two 
nveeks 

D  D.  Ml'ler.  manager  of  the  local 
office  of  the  T.  J.  Miller  Heal  Kstate 
compaiiv,  went  to  Blackduck  Monday 
evening",  accompanied  by  C.  J.  Kaaran, 
who  travels  for  the  Union  Saving  as- 
•ocialion.  .    ,    ^, 

Kdward  Dietrich,  a  substantial  Cer- 
xnan  farmer  of  yuirlng.  spent  Tuesday 
In   the  city. 

Faul  Lawrence,  who  was  badly 
■corched  in  the  burning  of  his  hotel  at 
Big  Falls  in  January,  came  in  Tut-s- 
«uv  morning  to  liave  a  local  physician 
attend   l.is    wounds. 

H.  A.  Anderson,  who  is  engaged  in 
the  mercantile  buslnes.-  at  Margie. 
Bpent  Tuesdav  in  the  city  attending  to 
vancu.-J  business  matters  and  returned 
home    Wednesday   morning. 

A  E.  Underwood  was  a  visitor  in 
the  citv  Tuesday  niglit.  Mr.  l^  »><lt r- 
wood  recentlv  returned  from  a  busl- 
nf«  trip  to  British  Columbia,  where 
he  had  been  looking  over  the  country 
with  a  view  to  locating.  Mr.  Lnder- 
wood  states  that  he  liktd  the  situation 
and  outlook  there  and  that  he  intends 
to  leave  in  about  a  month  to  make  lils 
permanei.t  lunu-  in   British  Columbia. 


Aurora.  Minn.,  March  20.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.* — l>r.  Levin  of  Lake  Lin- 
den, Mich.,  was  a  guest  of  his  parents, 
Mr.  and  Mr.«.  M.  Levin.  Sunday.  The 
doctor  was  on  his  way  to  Rochester 
and  Chicacro  in  the  Interests  of  the 
Calumet    &■    Hecla    company.  ' 

W.  1>.  Kuhn  of  L41  Crosse  has  pur- 
chased the  saloon  business  of  John 
Zupoiisic  and  has  applied  for  a  transfer 
of  license.  Mr.  Kuhn  states  that  he 
intends  to  conduct  a  neat  place  and 
hopes    to    begin    business    soon. 

Messrs.  F.ashleigh  and  Hoop  were  on 
a  Jand-lcoking  trip  south  of  town 
Tuesday   and    Wednesday   of   this  week. 

Miss  Gilman,  who  has  been  a  guest 
of  Mrs.  Darrow  the  past  month,  re- 
turned  to  Superior  on  Wednesday. 

Mrs.  Corwin  and  Miss  Levin  leit 
Tuesdav  for  Duluth  to  hear  Emma 
Earnes,"  the    noted    singer. 

Marriam  Richards  was  10  years  old 
on  March  12.  and  on  that  day  a  num- 
ber 01  her  playmates  gathered  at  her 
home  to  help  celebrate  the  occa.-ion. 

Bobbv  Benson  of  Biwabik  was  In 
town  Saturday  bidding  his  friends 
go.  lU've.  Bob  has  signed  to  play  ball 
with  a  North  Dakota  team  this  sea- 
eon. 

Oscar 
marrkil 

G.    E. 
Friday.  _,    , 

J.    C.    Laikin    left    Wednesday 
cxte.rded    visit    in    Duluth. 

Messrs.   Christianson    and   Nelson 
celved   their   nevv    auto  Saturday. 

Arthur  Olson  was  up  from  Two 
Harbors    renewing    acquaiintances, 

Mrs.  Nicholson  left  Wednesday  on  a 
wetk's    visit    to    her    parents      in    Cole- 

raine.  ,.    ,    ^      ^^t 

Kev.  Suver  was  called  to  Chicago 
Saturday    by   the   serious   illness   of   his 

mollitr. 


Jarvi    and    Filna    Kuha    were 

Mondav    by    Justice    Tillmans. 

Webb   made   a   trip  fc   Virginia 


on    an 


re- 


an  attack  of  the  grip  during  the  week. 

Ed  Donley  transacted  business  in  Su- 
perior  the    latter   part    of   this    week. 

Miss  Rika  Gradlne  has  been  confined 
to  her  room  with  an  attack  of  the  grip 
this  week. 

W  Cornelius  Jones,  postmaster  and 
operator  at  Boylston,  Wis.,  was  the 
guest  of  his  friend,  J.  Theodore  Spanlol, 
Wednesday  evening. 

Tiie  St  Patrick's  day  dance,  given  at 
the  B.  1;  A.  hall  Wednesday  evening, 
was  a  successful  event.  All  In  attend- 
ance report   an  enjoyable   time. 

The  annual  stockholders'  meeting  of 
the  Brookston  Townsite  company  will 
be  held  In  tlils  village  ne.xt  Wednesday. 

George  Martin  and  Mary  Shingobee 
were  united  in  the  holy  bonds  of  matri- 
mony bv  Rev.  Father  Simon,  on  Sunday. 
March  7.  They  will  make  their  home 
here.  ,         , 

Garland  &  Perkins  have  completed 
their  winter's  work  in  the  vicinity  of 
Congo. 

r)anlel  McKenzle  and  Bunny  Nelson  of 
Superior,  were  the  guests  of  J.  T.  Spa- 
nioi  last  Saturday.  The  gentlemen 
were  on  tlieir  way  to  the  iron  range 
on  a  pleasure  tour.  Messrs.  McKenzle 
and  Sianlol  were  business  partners 
in   Superior  some   years  ago. 

Miss  Estiier  Lsirson  has  been  suffering 
from   a    slight    attack    of    the    grip    this 

John  T.  Spanlol.  operator  at  the  local 
station,  returned  Monday  from  Superior, 
where  he  spent  a  short  time  with 
friends  and  relatives. 

A  Christenaen  Is  making  preparations 
to  erect  a  commodious  dwelling  house 
on    his    homestead    claim,    south    of    the 

village.  ,  .  ,   ^,       .T     ., 

C  P.  Osburn.  cashier  of  the  North- 
western State  bank  of  Cloquet  was  here 

Sunday. 


Park  Rapids,  Minn..  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— Henry  Flickinger 
one  of  the  pioneer  settlers  of  the  First 
F'rairie.  was  found  dead  in 
by   neighbors, 


was 


his    cellar 

who   missed    him.      Heart 

the      probable      cause      of 


gone    to   W"is- 

re turned    from 
York  and  Chi- 

Laurlum    State 

for     points     in 

he   will  spend 


THE  FIFE  AND  DRUM  CORPS. 
The  Members  of  the  New  Duluth  Corps  Reading  From  Left  to  Right  Arc: 
Chase,  Manager,  Richard  McGrath,  Leslie  Chase  and  Harry  Chase. 


past   week   visit- 
relatives   in    this 


Negaunee.  Mich.,  March  20,— (1-pecial 
to  The  Hera'.d.!— Mayor  J.  H.  Winter 
departed  Tuesday  evening  for  Bisbee 
and  other  points  in  Arizona. 

A  rarload  of  tiling  to  be  used  in  the 
Negaunee  high  school  building  has  ar- 
rived. Several  e.xperienced  men  from 
Milwaukee  have  come  to  the  city  and 
are  alreadv  employed  on  the  Job. 

The  crack  indoor  baseball  team  of 
Manisti<iue  will  meet  the  local  team 
In  two  games  at  liie  Adelphl  rink  on 
the  evening.^  of  Monday  and  Tuesday, 
the  rytli  and  30th.  The  visiting  team 
will  also  plav  the  Ishpeming  city  team 
on    the   31st.   and   from    there   they   will 

fo   on    to    Bessemer,    where   two    games 
ave   been   scheduled. 
Thomas    Fellow     has    returned     from 
Detroit  and  Cleveland,  after  an  absence 
of  several  days. 

The  workingmen  of  the  city,  who 
met  Sundav  afternoon  al  McDonald's 
opera  liouse,  held  another  meeting 
there  in  the  evening.  The  men  were 
virged  to  organize  a  union,  but  no 
movement  with  that  end  in  view  has 
yet  been  started.  It  is  said  that  there 
are  verv  few  men  in  Negaunee  holding 
membership  in  the  union.  The  or- 
ganization that  was  perfected  here 
during  tlie  strike  in  lt>95  went  to 
pieces  a  few  years  later. 

At  a  siiecial  meeting  of  the  council 
li  was  decided  that  crushed  rock  shall 
be  used  for  street  building  the  coming 
Bumm.er.  and  the  board  of  public  works 
was  instructed  to  put  the  plant  in  good 
condition,  with  the  view  of  commenc- 
ing operations  not  later  than  May  1. 


Brookston.  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.J — Mrs.  J.  F.  Ryan 
and  two  children  were  here  from  Clo- 
quet to  spend  Saturday  and  Sunday 
with    Mr.    Ryan. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  T.  Larson  and  their 
daughter,  Esther,  spent  Saturday  and 
Sundav    with    friends    In    Cloquet. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  G.  LeFevre  of  Sand- 
stone spent  Sunday  in  the  village,  the 
guests  of  J.  F.  Ryan  and  family.  Mr. 
LeFevre  was  Great  Northern  agent  at 
this  point  about  two  years,  and  he  and 
Mrs.  LaFevre  have  many  friends  in 
tliis    vicinity. 

Frank  LaDuke,  Indian  policeman  at 
Cloquet,  transacted  business  in  Brook- 
Bton  this  week. 

Miss     Bessie     Ferguson     returned     to 
her   home   In    Duluth   last   I'riday,   after 
comjileting    a    seven 
school     at     Ekiund's 
here. 

J.    H.     Raubert    of 


months     term 
farm,     north 


Lakewood 


of 
of 


spent 
Sunday    here   Avith    his    wife    and    child, 
who   are   visiting   at    the   Keable   home. 
Word    has    been    received    here    that 

?    daughter    was    born    to    the    wife    of 
L    M.     Wilkinson,    at    Clarinda,    Iowa, 
last  week. 

E.  Keable  and  his  son,  Theodore,  de- 
parted .''unday  for  Duluth.  where  the 
latter  will  take  a  course  in  telegraphy. 
Mr.  Keable  transacted  business  in 
Duluth  and  Superior  and  returned 
home  MoTiday  evening. 

L»  A.  Svilcov.  assistant  county  su- 
perintendent of  schools,  was  in  the  vil- 
lage Tuesday  reveiwlng  the  local 
school. 

Special  Agent  Galvin  of  the  G.  N. 
was   a    Brooliston    visitor  Thursday. 

Mrs.  H.  E.  Plummer  was  a  Cloquet 
visitor   Tuesday. 

The  Brooks-Scanlon  logging  camp, 
which  has  >)een  operating  west  of  town 
during  the  past  winter,  was  closed 
Tuesda.v.  the  work  having  been  com- 
pleted. Foreman  Gerrish  and  Clerk 
Bentley  returned  to  Scanlon.  where 
they  will  be  employed  during  the  sum- 
mer  months. 

Mrs.  Ed  Harber  and  two  children 
were  Cloquet  visitors  during  the  latter 
part    of   the   week. 

H.  F.  Colson  and  C.  W.  Hendrickson 
have  opened  up  a  general  repair  shop 
In  the  west  part  of  town. 

Mrs.  Runkle  of  Cloquet  spent  Wednes- 
day evening  in  the  village,  the  guest 
of   Kcal    friends. 

B.  li.  Tedf ord  ha.s  been  sufCerlns  from 


disease 

death.  ,         ^  ., 

The  Yeomen  lodge  has  been  greatly 
strengthened  during  the  past  month  as 
a  result  of  the  work  done  here  by  Mrs. 
Hanson  of  Walker.  Friday  evening  a 
class  of  about  fifty  new  members  were 
received  into  the  lodge.  Mr.  Murphy, 
one  of  the  state  officials,  was  present 
to  assist  in  the  work. 

A.  R.  Batchfeller  returned  from  De- 
troit Wednesday  evening,  where  he  had 
been    transacting   business. 

Prof.  Samuel  B.  Green  came  up  from 
St.  Paul  Saturday  and  drove  out  to  the 
state  park  on  matters  of  Interest  to 
the   state   forestry    board. 

J  W.  Busklin  received  a  message 
from  Owatonna  Tuesday  stating  that 
his  father  was  seriously  sick  and  left 
on  the  Wednesday  morning  train  for 
that  place.  ^   , 

Tlie  farm  residence  of  J.  E.  W  alten- 
baugh  of  White  Oak  was  burned  on 
Wednesdav  evening.  Mr.  Wallenbaugh 
and  family  were  spending  the  evening 
at  a  neighbor's  and  on  returning  home 
found  that  the  house  and  all  contents 
had  been    consumed. 

Charles  Liverlck,  who  has  purchased 
the  Park  Rapids  creamery,  arrived 
here  last  week  and  on  Monday  next 
will  begin  buying  cream  at  the  cream- 
fry-  .  J    1   X 

S.    L.    Mont    this       week    moved    into 

the  house  he  recently  purchased  of  Mr. 
Filch.  ,    ^ 

Anson  Pimley  living  west  of  town 
broke  his  leg  last  week  while  working 
on   a  hay  press. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  B.  Plummer  are  expect- 
ed back  from  St.  Louis  soon  to  make 
their  home  in  Park  Kapids  again. 

Ben    Glantz    has      bought    a      driving 

Attornev  P.  V.  Coppernoll  went  to 
Wa«lena  Mondav  to  attend  the  regular 
term  of  district  court  now  in  session  at 
that  place.  ,      ^      ,    ,. 

On  Thursday  of  last  week  the  ladies 
of  the  German  society,  to  the  nurn- 
ber  of  twenty-two.  drove  out  to  the 
home  of  Mrs.  John  Hess,  where  they 
were  royally  entertained. 

Frank  Hodge  returned  to  Park  Rap- 
ids Thursday  evening  last.  Mr.  Hodge 
sptnt  the  winter  in  his  launch  on  the 
Mississippi  river,  going  souih  to  with- 
in   1.50   miles    of   New   Orleans. 

Work  on  the  new  dock  and  boat 
landing  on  the  town  property  at  the 
north  end  of  Washington  avenue  has 
been   commenced. 

Mrs.  B.  Slatack.  mother  of  L.  D. 
Smith,  celebrated  her  seventy-third 
liirthdav  Sunday  by  going  to  churcli  in 
the  morning  and  going  for  a  ride  in 
the  afternoon. 

R.  F.  Maas  went  to  .Wadena  Mon- 
day, being  subpoenaed  to  act  as  inter- 
preter in   a   railroad   case. 

Attornev  Jelly  of  Minneapolis,  who 
is  state  prosecuting  attorney  In  the 
timber  trespass  cases,  visited  Park 
Rapids   Fridav   last   on   state   business. 

The  Park  Rapids  Improvement  club 
was  entertained  Wednesday  afternoon 
bv  Mesdames  Fuller  and  Coppernoll. 
Decorations  were  appropriate  to  the 
day.  There  was  a  very  interesting  dis- 
cussion on  women  suffragists.  At  the 
close  of  the  discussion  refreshments 
were   served. 

Clifford  Wheeler  has 
position  as  night  clerk 
Northern   hotel. 

Postmaster  Bills  was  a 
itor    at    the    cities    Saturday 
the  first  of  the  week. 

George  Schoneberger  and  John  Schu- 
mann, Jr.,  started  for  Oregon  Mon- 
da.v. 

S.  M.  Todd  went  to  W'alker  Mon- 
day night  to  visit  with  Joe  for  a  few 
days. 

.s.  J.  Hudson  came  up  from  Minne- 
apolis Wednesday  much  improved  in 
health. 

Mrs.  J.  D.  Campbell,  Mrs.  A.  W^  Page 
and  Mr.  and  Mrs.  August  Wagner  went 
to  Dorset  Wednesday  night  to  assist 
In  celebrating  Mrs.  Jacob  Avenson's 
birthday. 

C.  E.  Spencer  returned  from  Menahga 
Tuesday,  where  he  has  been  surveying 
west  of  that  place. 

Mrs.  H.  A.  Clements  went  to  Akeley 
Mondav  evening,  called  there  by  the 
illness"  of  Mr.  Clements,  who  is  work- 
ing  there. 

Miss  Erstgaard  of  St.  Paul  came  up 
Monday  evening  to  assist  Miss  Waid 
In  her  millinery  parlors. 

George  AVilson  returned  from  his 
camp  the  first  of  the  week.  He  has 
finished  his  logging  contract  for  this 
season. 

Clifton  Wray  has  been  quite  ill  dur- 
ing   the    past    week. 


leth.  Minn.,  spent  the 
ing  with  friends  and 
city. 

B.  J.  Gibson  of  Waukesha  spent  the 
past  week  In  Ironwood  visiting  with 
friends  and  attending  to  a  number  of 
business    affairs. 

I'aymaster  C.  J.  Shaddick  of  Ishpem- 
ing was  in  the  city  Thursday  paying 
the  employes  of  the  Cleveland-Cliffs 
Iron    company. 

M.  Schafer  of  the  Soo  spent  Monday 
in  Ironwood  attending  to  a  number  of 
business    affairs. 

M.  Brunner  of  Ashland  was  here 
Monday,  visiting  with  friends  and  at- 
tending to  a  number  of  business  af- 
fairs. 

Wliile  craneing  on  one  of  the  United 
States  Steel  corporation's  steam  shov- 
els at  Bovey,  Minn.,  James  Murphy, 
a  well  known  young  man  of  this  city 
had  his  leg  crushed  to  a  pulp  Wednes- 
day night,  necessitating  amputation. 
Corneilius  Murphy  of  this  city,  his 
brother  left  for  Bovey,  to  bring  the 
young  man  home  as  soon  as  his  con- 
dition  will   permit. 

C.  O.  .Strobridge  of  Marenisco  spent 
Tuesday  and  Wednesday  in  Ironwood 
visiting  with  friends  and  attending  to 
business    affaii's. 

H.  H.  Isham  of  Superior,  Wis.,  spent 
Tuesday    in    Ironwood.  , 

Supt.  John  M.  Bush  and  Capt.  S.  J. 
Perkins  of  the  Ashland  mine,  accom- 
panied by  Supt.  L.  Eaton  and  Capt.  A. 
Bone  of  Iron  Belt,  left  Thursday  for 
Gwynn,  where  they  attended  a  meeting 
of  mining  men  Friday. 

Walter   Henderson    of 
spent     the     past     wetk 
transacting         business 
friends. 

Aithur  Seger  of  Iron  River  was  in 
tl:e  city  Wednesday  attending  to  a 
number    of    business    transactions. 

C.  E.  Lovett  of  Rhlnelander  was  an 
Ironwood  visitor  Wednesday. 

Jacob  Manle  of  Aurora.  Minn, 
in  the  city  Thesday  visiting  with 
wood  friends. 

Mrs.   F.  L.   Buck  of  Winchester, 
spent    several    days    of    the    past 
visiting    with    friends    In    this    city. 

The  pupils  of  the  North  Side  school 
presented  "Cinderella"  to  a  large  audi- 
ence In  the  auditorium  of  the  Luther 
L.  Wright  school  Thursday  evening. 
The  play  was  well  performed  by  the 
youngsters  and  all  in  attendance  came 
away  pleased. 


to    make    their      future 


vicinity  of 
niored  that 
estry  man, 
transferred 


a 
ill 


ru- 
lor- 
bc 
Mr. 
Oneida 
Green 


Aurora,  Minn., 
in  Ironwood 
and       visiting 


,    w^as 
Iron- 

Wis.. 
week 


Long    Prairie 
home    here. 

William    McKinnon    of    the    forestry 
service   has    been   transferred   from  this 
Ashland,     Wis.       It     is 
Mark    Burns,    also 
formerly     here,     w 
back    to    this    place 
P.iiins     is    at     present     on     the 
reservation    in    tlie    vicinity    of 
Bay. 

The  Bena  marshal  was  In  the  village 
Wednesday  en  route  to  W^alker  with 
a  prisoner  named  John  Carmoly,  who 
was  bound  over  to  the  grand  Jury  on 
the    charge    of    grand    larceny. 

Mayor  Lange.  who  has  been  quite  ill 
for   some  time,   is   improving   rapidly. 

John  Caldwell,  formerly  clerk  at  the 
Endion  hotel,  returned  Tliursday  from 
a    business    trip    to    Duluth. 

M.  C.  Sciiaak,  who  has  a  claim  on 
Kitch  lake,  was  in  the  village  looking 
after    business    matters    Thursday. 

All  the  grades  of  the  local  schools 
are  making  preparations  for  an  enter- 
tainment which  they  expect  to  give 
shortly    after    Easier. 

The  Royal  league  is  making  exten- 
sive preparations  for  a  large  class  of 
candidates  which  it  expects  to  initiate 
at  its  next  meeting. 


ii  TWO®  i 


Zcbbic  Chase,  Claude  McKay,  E.  E. 


cemetery,  word  having  just  been  re- 
ceived from  his  relatives  at  Boston  for 
the    interment    of    tlie    body. 

J.  E.  Harris  of  Warroad  was  in  town 
yesterdav   on    business   matters. 

Mrs.  Evanstad  of  Baudetto  was 
called  to  Norv.-eglan  Bay  on  account  of 
the    Illness    of    her    father. 

State  Veterinary  Inspector  A.  M. 
Kenger  was   In   town   v.'cfJnesday. 


w^iecEiR 


resigned     his 
at    the    Great 

business  vls- 
returninjf 


Independence,  Minn.,  March  20. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Mr.  and  Mrs. 
William  Hovis  returned  from  an  ex- 
tended visit  with  relatives  in  Monti- 
ceilo.    Ind. 

Mr.  and  M«s.  F.  W.  Mable  were  Du- 
luth callers   Friday. 

Thomas  Olson  of  Duluth  is  visiting 
friends  In   town  for  a  while. 

John  FJerum  trapped  a  large  wolf 
last  week. 

Axel  Berkland  transacted  business  in 
Duluth   Friday. 

Mrs.  Monroe  Watkins  and  two  sons 
of  Monticello,  Ind..  are  visiting  rela- 
tives   in    Independence. 

Charles  Keller  returned  to  Cloquet 
Saturday.  He  has  been  running  camp 
here  for  tlie  Northern  Lumber  company 
this   winter. 

The  local  mail  carrier  has  been  on 
the  sick  list  of  late  and  unable  to  at- 
tend to  his  duties.  C.  Oppegard  of  Cul- 
ver has  filled  the  vacancy. 

Mr.  Bonnier,  who  has  been  scaling 
logs  for  Mr.  Long  this  winter,  has  re- 
turned  to  Cloquet. 

F  I.,awrence.  who  returned  from 
Bovey  Wednesday,  made  a  short  call  in 
lidependence. 


Twig,  Mini!.,  March  20.— (Special  to 
The 'Herald.) — A  crew  of  engineers  are 
surveying  a  new- ro«t<*  for  the  Can- 
adian Northern  railroad  west  of  the 
old  survey,  and  running  pretty  close 
to  Twig. 

Henry  Hornerman  has  accepted  a 
position  with  the  engineers  on  the  new 
survey. 

R.  J.  Andrews  of  Duluth  made  a 
business   trip   here   Tuesday. 

The  Duluth  Tie  &  Pulpwood  com- 
pany is  shipping  ties  this  week. 

Tlie  newly  elected  town  officers  met 
with  the  old  board  of  supervision  Fri- 
day to  qualify  for  their  respective 
offices. 

A  number  of  logging  camps  near 
here  are  finishing  up  for  ilie  season 
and  removing  their  outfits  to  Duluth 
and  Clo<iuet. 

Robert  Parkins  of  this  place  is  being 
treated  by  a  Duluth  ear  specialise  to 
try   and   prolong   his   hearing. 


l^HJilETTIE 


Spooner,  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Misses  Signey 
and  Esther  Swedberg  returned  Sunday 
morning  from  Bemldji  in  company  with 
Ollie  Rhen. 

of  M.  B.  A.  initiated  a 
candidates  in  the  the 
their    order    last    Thurs- 


The    Order 
number       of 
mysteries    of 
day. 

C.    1...    Is  ted 


has    been 


called    to   Min- 
the      illness   of 


LME 


Ironwood.  Minn..  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — St.  Patrick's  day  was 
celebrated  as  usual  in  this  city  Wednes- 
day. The  local  division  of  the  Ancient 
Order  of  Hibernians  had  charge  of  the 
celebration,  which  proved  Interesting 
and  Impressive  to  the  many  other  par- 
ticipants. 

Miss  Annie  I.arcey  of  Iron  Mountain 
spent  the  past  week  visiting  with  rela- 
tives and  friends. 

A  very  pleasant  surprise  was  tend- 
ered the  Twentieth  Century  Progressive 
club  Wednesday  evening  by  a  number 
of  Ironwood's  prominent  young  citizens, 
who  invited  the  club  for  a  sleighride 
to  Bessemer.  A  very  good  time  was 
enjoyed  hy  all  in  attendance.  Miss 
Mary  McCarthy  and  Josiah  Bailies  acted 
the  part  of  the  stern  and  watchful 
chaperones. 

Mrs.  E.  A.  Leapark,  a  former  well- 
known  resident  of  this  city,  but  now  of 
Duluth,  spent  the  past  week  visiting 
with  her  many  Ironwood  friends. 

Mrs.  James  Goudie  returned  Sunday 
from  Ann  Arbor,  at  which  plac  she  has 
been  for  the  past  several  weeks  attend- 
ing her  daughter.  Jean,  who  has  been 
seriously  ill  from  appendicitis,  but  is 
now  on   tlie  road  to  recovery. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Thomas  Howson  of  Eve- 


Cass  Lake,  Minn.,  March  20. — Attor- 
ney E.  L.  Rogers  of  Walker,  who  has 
recently  been  appointed  deputy  coro- 
ner was  in  the  village  the  first  of  the 
week  en  route  from  Bena.  where  he 
investigated  a  sudden  death  at  that 
place. 

E.  S.  Close,  a  former  citizen  of  Cass 
Lake,  but  now  living  in  Minneapolis, 
was  here  Sunday  and  Monday  looking 
after  some  personal   Interests. 

James  Byrne,  a  former  resident  of 
this  place,  but  now  living  in  James- 
town, N.  D.,  visited  friends  Iiere  the 
fore  part   of  the  week. 

The  St.  Patrick's  day  entertainment 
given  under  the  awspices  of  the  Cath- 
olic church  Wednesday  evening  was  a 
very  successful  affair. 

County  Auditor  Byhre  of  Walker 
was  In  the  village  Tuesday,  looking 
after    some    business    Interests. 

Mrs.  D.  L.  Stanton,  who  has  been  in 
the  Bralnerd  hospital  for  some  time 
has  so  far  recovered  as  to  be  able  to 
return    to    her    home    at    Bemldji. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ed  Lydick  have  moved 
to  .Superior,  where  they  expect  to  make 
their  future  home.  Mr.  Lydick  has 
accepted  a  position  In  the  Great  Nortli- 
crn    yards   at    that   place. 

Glen  Harding  has  returned  home 
from  Blackduck  and  will  visit  for  some 
time  with  his  parents  here. 

P.  M.  Larsen  returned  Sunday  from 
St.  Paul,  where  he  has  been  for  some 
time  In  the  interest  of  the  proposed 
new  normal  school. 

The  baseball  enthusiasts  are  already 
getting  busy  and  from  all  reports 
Cass  Lake  will  have  a  team  this  year 
111  at  will  be  able  to  cope  very  ably 
with   any   in   this  section. 

Roland  and  Frank  Hartley,  who  have 
extensive  business  interests  In  the 
state  of  Washington,  were  here  the 
latter  part  of  the  week  visiting  old 
Ir lends.       They  went  to  Duluth  Friday. 

(jicorge  Brown,  ^n  old  resident  of 
Cass  Lake,  but  now  residing  in  North 
Dakota,    is    visiting    friends    here. 

The  wife  and  daughter  of  Receiver 
Wood  of  the  United  .Stales  land  office 
arrived  here  "Wednesday  evening  from 


neapolls   on  account  of 
his   father. 

Attorney  C.  R. 
Bemldji  Monday 
court. 

The  large  smoke  stack   of  the 
lln-Mathleu    Lumber    company    is 
heightened.       The    scaffold    and 
work   are   up  and   work   is 
nicely. 

Miss   Agnes   Swanson    of 
in      town    visiting    friends. 

Born,    to    Mr.    and    Mrs. 
of  Rainy  River,  a  daughter. 

Albert  Peterson  is  moving  the 
shop  next  to  his  furniture  store, 
Ing  room  for  a  more  pretentious 
building,  which  Mr.  Peterson 
erect  as  soon  as  the  grounds 
cleared. 

A  daughter  was  born  to  Mr.  and 
FJelde    on    Friday,    March    12. 

The  seventh  and  eighth  grades  of 
the  Spooner  school  have  been  busy 
this  week  taking  the  state  examina- 
tions. 

Tolef  Thompson  has  installed  a  line 
of  groceries  in  connection  with  his 
shoe    department. 

Eileen,  the  young  daughter  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.   Habstrltt,  Is  quite  111. 

Mrs.    William    Rogers    of   Baudette    Is 
at  Duluth  for  a  couple 


MIddleton    left    for 
evening     to     attend 

Shev- 

being 

frame 

progressing 

Frontere,   is 

McCrlmmon 

tailor 

mak- 

store 

will 

are 

Mrs.. 


Walker.  Minn..  March  20. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Misses  Cosner,  who 
are  teaching  school  near  Wilkinson  and 
Cass  Lake,  spent  Saturday  in  town 
with  tlieir  parents,  this  being  their  first 
visit  liore  since  Christmas. 

Miss  .Mabel  Rogers,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ray- 
burn  and  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Pat  Kennedy 
weie  over  from  Headquarters  Camp 
this  week.  Miss  Rogers  is  the  logging 
camp   scliool   teacher. 

Ward  -McCann  of  Anoka  is  In  this  vl- 
clnitv  this  week  looking  after  the  pulp- 
wood  business  of  the  Little  Falls  Paper 
mill. 

Joseph  Todd  has  moved  his  family 
into  tlie  Inenfeldt  cottage,  near  the 
Congregational  church,  having  vacated 
the    Dare    residence. 

Gus  Kulander,  Daniel  DeLury  and  J. 
B.  Spencer,  members  of  the  local  school 
board,  went  to  Park  Rapids  Friday  to 
inspect  the  high  school  building  at  that 
place.  Walker  is  soon  to  erect  a  $35,- 
000  schoolhouse,  and  the  board  wishes 
to  see  other  schools  in  this  section  be- 
fore   letting    plans. 

Mrs.  W.  B.  Jones,  wife  of  Commis- 
sioner Jones,  was  visiting  in  town  this 
week,   coming   up   from   Sylvan. 

Miss  Flora  Goff  was  taken  to  the 
Walker  hospital  tliis  week  for  special 
treatment.  She  has  been  an  Invalid 
for   over   a   year. 

Editor  F.  A.  Dare  returned  to  Walker 
this  week  from  s?t.  Paul,  where  he  has 
been  filling  a  clerkship  in  the  legisla- 
ture since  the  opening  of  the  session. 

John  Gray,  the  electric  light  superin- 
tendent, went  to  .Minneapolis  this  week 
to   the   st.ate   electricians'   convention. 

Mrs.  Gus  Sarff  and  children  went  to 
Grey  Eagle  this  week  for  a  few  davs' 
visit.  From  there  they  will  leave  for 
the  W^est.  having  decided  to  give  up 
their  residence  in  Walker.  Mr.  .Sarff 
has  for  years  been  engaged  in  the  meat 
business  here. 

Mrs.  Florence  McDonald  went  to  Min- 
neapolis Friday,  accompanied  by  her 
daughter,  Julia.  She  will  consult  an 
oculist  while  in   that  city. 

Harry    Lapham    was   called 
this  week  by  a  message  telling  him  of 
tlie  serious  illness  of  his  aged  father. 

J.  G.  Hammer  went  to  Minneapolis 
this  week  to  meet  his  wife,  who  is  re- 
turning from  the  W^est,  owing  to  poor 
health.  Mr.  Hammer  accompanied  ills 
wife  to  Rochester,  where  she  will  en- 
ter the  Mayo  hospital. 

The  Goebel  boy  left  the 
pital     this    week,     having 
undergone     an     operation 
dicilis.      Miss    .Sears   of    W'ilsonsin    was 
also  discliargcd   this   week,   liaving  un- 
dergone  a   similar   operation. 

Alex  McDougal,  formerly  of  this  place 
but  lately  of  White  Earth,  was  in  town 
this  week  renewing  acquaintances.  Mr. 
AIcDonald  recently        disposed        of 

pine    holdings   for   $15,000.    and    expects 
to   make    his   home   at   Detroit,   Minn. 

Walker  is  to  have  a  state  land  sale 
on  June  22,  on  which  date  3,200  acres 
will   be   olTered   for   sale. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  baseball  enthu- 
siasts this  wek,  the  following  officers 
were  elected:  Manager,  J.  Schambeau; 
captain,  George  Pippen;  secretary  and 
treasurer,    H.    Sundby. 


sister  of  Justice  C. 
Ing  relatives   here. 

H.     E.    Phillips    has    uone 
tain   Valley  Springs.  Ark  ,  for 
fit   of   his    health. 

Miss  Ida  Miller  has  returned  from 
Winnipeg,  where  she  has  been  spend- 
ing the  past  eight  mon'  hs. 

The  funeral  of  the  U  te  Matt  Koskl. 
who  met  death  by  a  fal  of  rock  at  the 
Tamarack  mine,  was  held  Sunday  af- 
ternoon at  the  Finnish  Bethlehem 
church. 

William  Edwards  ha! 
consin  to  visit  friends. 

Miss  M.  B.  Leary  has 
a  month's  visit  to  New 
cago. 

Erward    Bast    of    the 
bank     left     this     week 
Lower  California,  wliers 
two    weeks. 

Emmett  V.  Corgan  ol  this  city,  who 
has  been  studying  law  in  Detroic,  has 
gone  to  New  York,  where  he  has  ac- 
cepted a  position  as  traveling  sales- 
man for  a  large  Eastern  firm. 

R.  B. Hughes  of  Misjula,  Mont.,  the 
well-known  mining  ma  i,  is  spending  a 
few   days   in   Calumet   u:i    business. 

G.  S.  Anderson  of  Detroit  and  G.  J. 
Brown  of  Flushing,  Mich.,  bank  ex- 
aminers, are  m  ilie  city  for  a  few  days. 
Mrs.  Walter  Wood  1  as  gone  to  St. 
Paul  and  other  Minnesjta  points.  Mr. 
W'odo  has  been  confintd  to  a  hospital 
at    Rochester,    Minn.,    for    some    time. 

Benjamin  Tonkin  has'  gone  to  Globe, 
Ariz.,    for   several   weeks. 

.Arthur  Tlppett  of  Calumet  and  Miss 
Elizabeth  Hiil  of  Opechee  were  mar- 
ried this   week. 

Ex-Slieriff  August  Beck  left  this 
week  for  Seattle  and  Portland  on  a 
business  trip. 

George  D.  Barnard  cf  Cincinnati  ar- 
rived in  Calumet  this  week  and  will 
take  tlie  leadership  of  the  Calumet  & 
Hecla    band. 

Mrs.  Greenberg  of  Fifth  street  has 
gone  to  Chicago,  being  calltd  there  by 
the   serious    iliness   of    i   relative. 

Evan  Thomas  of  tht  Bee  Hive  Shoe 
store  has  returned  fron  Scranton.  Pa., 
where  he  was  calKsd  on  account  of 
the  death  of  a  sister. 

Miss  Margaret  Gowan  has  returned 
from  the  South,  where  she  spent  the 
winter.  She  also  visited  at  Chicago, 
Detroit  and  the  Soo. 

Mrs.  Joseph  Ethler  has  gone  to  Du- 
luth and  other  cities  o;i  a  visit. 

John  Daniel  and  Chs  rles  Chynoweth, 
president  and  secretar;-  respectively  of 
the  Superior  &  Globe  Mining  com- 
pany, left  Tuesday  afternoon  on  a  visit 
to    the   property. 

Mrs.  R.  Mercll  of  Joliet.  Can.,  is  the 
guest    of    her    sister,    Mrs.    J.    Asselin. 

Dr.  A.  F.  Lawbaugi  addressed  the 
Calumet  Woman's  clus  Wednesday  at 
their  rooms  in  the  Y.  JI.  C.  A.  building. 
His  subject  was  "The    »Vhite  Plague.  " 

Mrs.  Thomas  Hontscn  and  daughter, 
Gussie,  left  Monday  afternoon  for 
an  extended  trip  through  California. 

Dr.  Frederick  TIce  of  Chicago  was 
tendered  a  dinner  party  at  the  Arling- 
ton hotel  Monday  by  local  physicians. 
In  the  evening  he  lectured  at  the  the- 
ater on  tuberculosis,  under  the  aus- 
pices  of   the   Calumet    Woman's    club. 

Blash  Lucas  has  gone  to  Valparaiso. 
Ind.,  where  he  will  take  a  preparatory 
course  previous  to  entering  the  uni- 
versitv  at  Ann  Arbor  t3  study  law. 

Laughlln  McDougall  has  returned 
from  Globe,  Ariz.,  whsre  he  spent  the 
past  several  months. 

Miss  Mabel  H.  Tre^  orrow,  daughter 
of  Mrs.  John  Cameron  and  William  H. 
Polkinghorn,  were  narried  Tuesday 
evening.  Rev  W.  M.  Ward  officiating. 
They  were  attended  by  Miss  Ella  Polk- 
Inghorne  and  David  Trevorrow.  The 
groom  is  connected  with  the  business 
staff  of  the  Calumet  JJews.  They  will 
reside  on  Florida  street,  Lauriuni. 

N.  J.  Miller  of  New  York  arrived  in 
Calumet  Thursday,  the  guest  of  J.  A. 
Mlnnear.  ^, 

Mrs.  John  Simmon?  of  East  Pine 
street  was  surprised  Monday  evening 
by  twenty  of  her  friends,  it  being  the 
anniversary  of  her  blrlh.  Cards  formed 
the  evening's  amusen  ent.  Dainty  re- 
freshments were  served. 

Twins  have  been  lorn  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Suo  of  Seventh  street.  • 

James  McClure  left  Tuesday  for  Chi- 
cago on  a   short   busin?ss  trip. 

John  Gummell  of  this  city  has  re- 
ceived word  of  the  death  of  his  brother, 
Thomas,    at    Ripley.   Ontario. 


gone  to  Wisconsin  for  an  extended 
visit.  They  will  return  in  the  sprlngr, 
when  the  shipping  season  opens  at  tlie 
mines. 

The  home  of  John  Seliskar  has  been 
quarantined  this  week  for  diphtheria, 
the  older  daughter,  Frances,  having  the 
disease. 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  Carpenter  entertained 
Rev.  P.  W.  Jacobson,  Prof.  E.  T.  Duf- 
field  and  Supt.  C.  I..  Newberry  and  their 
wives,  at  a  dinner  party  St  Patrick's 
day.  In  compliment  to  the  Ely  Male 
quartet. 

Misses  Annie  Mitchell  and  Dora  Ton- 
kin of  the  Duluth  normal  school  are 
home  for  the  spring  vacation.  They 
will  return  to  their  studies  the  first 
of    the   week. 

The  annual   ski  ra.«es  of  the   Finnish 
were     held   on   Long   l..ake   last 
and  were  very  interesting  ana 
exciting. 

Mrs.  Ed.  Crossman  has  gone  to 
Washington  to  take  charge  of  the  fruit 
farm  Mr.  Crossman  recently  purclia-'-ecl 
tliere.  She  will  look  after  the  work  oa 
the  farm  while  Mr.  Crossman  settles  up' 
their  business  here  preparatory  to  leav^ 
ing  for  the   West. 

The  coming  election  is  being  dis- 
cussed more  and  more  each  day,  an4 
several  rumors  are  afloat  as  to  candi- 
dates, but  sentiment  h.'is  not  as  yet  suf- 
ficiently crystallized  to  predict  the 
winners,  or  the  names  of  those  who 
will  survive  the  pre-election  gossip  and 
exchange  of  views. 

Miss  Doris  Knutson  was  a  south- 
bound passenger  Thursday  morning, 
going  to  I>uluth. 

The    Bible   class      of      the 


people 
Sunday, 


lunchi  and  amusementjij 
rculosis  committee  hela 
itly   and  considered  ana 


Methodist 
Episcopal  chureh  recentlv  Indulged  in 
a  sleighing  party  to  Winton.  They 
stopptd  off  at  the  residetue  of  Thoniaa 
Williams  at  the  Savoy  loiation  and  en- 
tertained  with    lunch'.and    amusementji. 

The  anti-tuber( 
a  meeting  recent 

accepted  the  resignation  of  P.  W.  Ja- 
cobson. who  is  unable  to  continue  oa 
the  committee  b.v  reason  of  his  removal 
from  this  i  it.v  in  the  near  ftiture. 

The  La*lies'  Reading  club  met  thla 
week  at  the  residence  of  Mrs.  J.  D. 
Ccman.  Tlie  meeting  was  one  of  the 
most  interesting  and  profitable  yet 
held.  Roll  call  was  answered  by  quo- 
tations pertaining  to  music  and  art, 
and  papers  were  read  by  Mrs.  G.  T. 
Ayres.  Mrs.  J.  L».  Conan  and  Mrs.  C.  C. 
Carpenter.  Tlie  general  topic  was 
"Beethoven."  Mesdames  Brownell  and 
Osborn  rendered  selections  from  Bee- 
thoven, and  Miss  Alice  Cowen  played  a 
piano  solo  from  his  works  in  a  finished 
and  pleasing  manner.  Miss  Doris 
Knutson  also  gave  piano  selections 
from  Beetlioven.  .ind  Mrs.  John  Sutton 
sang  a  very  pleasing  soprano.  The  next 
meeting  of  the  club  will  be  on  Tuesday 
of  next  week  at  the  residence  of  Mrs. 
Ben  Horovitz,  and  the  topic  will  be 
"Domestic  .Science  and  Art."  The  meet- 
ings are  becoming  immensely  popular 
and  the  membership  is  increasing  at  a 
very  rapid  rate. 

Work  is  progressing  very  rapidly 
laying  the  extra  Intake  pipe  at  the 
lake  and  will  no  doubt  do  the  work  in 
a  better  manner  and  much  more  eco- 
nomically than  if  they  had  let  the  con«' 
tract  as   wa.-   fust  planned. 


Walker  hos- 
suocessfully 
for     appen- 


Ely,     Minn.,    March     20. —  (Special 
The    Herald.) — Mrs.    John    Penglaze 
Douglas,    Alaska,    is    visiting    with 
to  AnokaJ.s}ster.    Mrs. 


William 
She    will 


to 

•f 

her 

La    Beau,    Br.,    of 

remain    here    for 


has    sold    his    property 
to    Attorney    George    E. 


visiting  friends 
of   weeks. 

I.  Scrlmsted 
on  Mill  street 
Ericson. 

Emll  O.  Hedberg,  cashier  of  the 
Security  State  bank, returned  W^ednes- 
day  morning  from  an  extensive  trip 
to  the  Pacific  coast.  He  also  visited 
his  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  P.  Hedberg 
at    Warroad. 

County  Commissioner  Alec  Clement- 
son  returned  from  Bemidjl  on  Satur- 
day  morning. 

Coroner  M.  E.  Ibertson  of  Bemldji 
has  appointed  J.  Albert  Peterson  of 
Spooner  and  Frank  Johnson  of  Bau- 
dette, deputy  coroners.  This  appoint- 
ment will  put  away  with  a  great  deal 
of  expense  to  the  county. 

J.  Albert  Peterson  is  laying  the 
foundation  for  his  new  store  building. 
The  building  will  be  24  by  50  and  two 
stories  high,  M.  P.  Peterson  will  move 
his  furniture  to  this  building  when 
completed. 

Mrs.  W'illiam  Rogers  returned  from 
Duluth,  where  she  has  been  visiting 
friends    for    a    fortnight. 

A  terrible  accident  occurred  at 
lioosevelt  last  Saturday,  when  Brake- 
man  Stevenson  slipped  his  footing  and 
was  literally  mangled  by  a  freight 
train.  The  remains  were  gathered  up 
and    taken    to    Winnipeg. 

Mrs.  F.  E.  Johnson  left  for  Minne- 
apolis   to    visit    friends. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Clifford  Dlx  of  Eagle. 
Minn.,  arrived  Wednesday  to  spend  the 
summer  here.  Mrs.  Dlx  is  a  sister  of 
Mrs.    Rose. 

Axel  Miller  left  Wednesday  even- 
ing for  the  Twin  Cities  on  a  business 
trip. 

James  Kelley. '  the  young  man  who 
recently  died  of  typhoid  pneumonia  at 
Baudette,  waa  Intei'red  at  the  Baudette 


Calumet,  Mich.,  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Charles  Bragg  sailed 
on  tlie  Oceanic,  Wednesday,"  for  Corn- 
wall,   England,    where   he    will    visit. 

Miss  Florence  Grant  has  resigned  as 
teacher  in  the  Calumet  public  schools, 
on  account  of  ill  liealth,  and  has  re- 
turned  to   her  home  in  Ripon,   Wis. 

Thomas  Bastlan  has  gone  to  Butte, 
Mont.,   on  a  short  business  trip. 

Alexander  Campbell  and  Miss  Camp- 
bell, his  sister,  have  returned  to  their 
home  at  McCook,  Neb.,  after  attend- 
ing the  funeral  here  of  tlie  late  Stuart 
McLean. 

S,  J.  Baker,  the  state  evangelist  of 
the  Baptist  church,  has  gone  to  Mus- 
kegon, Mich.,  where  he  will  conduct 
a    series    of    special    meetings. 

J.  Williams  of  Butte,  Mont.,  has  ar- 
rived in  Calumet  and  will  make  his 
home  here. 

John  Grlerson  has  returned  from  a 
business  trip   to  Chicago. 

Mrs.  Anna  Thompson  has  gone  to 
Globe,  Ariz.,  for  the  benefit  of  her 
health. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  J.  Webster  of  Chi- 
cago   are    visiting    friends    here. 

Floyd  Daniels  lias  gone  to  Chassell, 
where    he    has    accepted    a    position. 

Alex  Levin,  the  Oak  street  jeweler, 
has  gone  to  Butte,  Mont.,  on  a  short 
business   trip. 

Miss  T.  M.  Welslng  has  returned 
from    Chicago. 

Mrs.  Alfred  Thompson  has  gone  to 
Globe,  Ariz.,  where  she  will  spend  some 
time   for   the  benefit   of   her  health. 

Mrs.  Stewart  I..inton  has  been  called 
to  Sheboygan,  Mich.,  by  the  death  of 
her  aunt. 

Archie  Caruthers  has  returned  from 
points  In  Pennsylvania,  where  he  has 
been  visiting  for  some  time. 

Peter  Rowe  left  Monday  for  Corn- 
wall, England,  Avhere  he  will  visit 
relatives  for  some  time. 

A  number  of  friends  of  Mrs.  John 
Oleson  helped  her  celebrate  the  six- 
tieth anniversary  of  her  birth  W^ednes- 
dav    afteinoon. 

ilrs.   Alex  Onkka   of   Cokato,   Minn., 


this    city 

some    time.  ,    , 

Proceedings  are  be  ng  taken  before 
the  probate  court  tc  determine  the 
question  of  the  sanity  of  A.  Peterson 
of  Winton.  He  was  before  that  court 
two  or  three  weeks  ago,  but  was  dis- 
charged, the  court  finding  that  his  de- 
rangement was  temporary  and  due  to 
alcoholism.  It  is  now  thought  that  he  is 
mentallv  unbalanced,  as  he  has  exhib- 
ited further  signs  of  nsanity  since  his 
discharge  by  the  probate  court. 

Miss  Fannie  Trezona  of  the  Winona 
state  normal  school,  who  has  been 
spending  her  vacation  here  for  the 
past  week,  has  returned  to  her  school 
duties. 

Miss  Mayme  Hughes  of  WMnton  is 
visiting  In  Stillwater  and  nelg'liboring 
points. 

Albert  Kolstad,  who  has  been  at  the 
Shipmen  hospital  uncergolng  a  surgi- 
cal operation   is  improving  rapidly. 

The  party  given  by  the  degree  team 
of  the  Modern  Wooilmen  lodge  was 
well  attended  and  was  a  very  pleasant 
and  successful  affair.  ,      . 

Miss  Lottie  and  Theresa  Gianotli  ol 
the  Duluth  normal  scliool  are  at  home 
for  the  spring  vacation.  They  will  re- 
turn to  their  school  tiulies  the  first  of 
the   week.  .   ,  ,.      . 

Mrs.  George  L.  Brozich,  who  has 
been  visiting  at  her  home  In  Joliet, 
111.,  has  returned  home.  She  was  met 
in    Duluth    by    Mr.    Brozich. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Thomas,  while  on  their 
recent  visit  in  the  ^Vest,  Invested  In 
a  fruit  farm  in  tht  Yakima  valley, 
Washington. 

The  family  of  Frank  Hodge  is  visit- 
ing   on    the    Mesaba    range    this    week, 

Joseph  Weed  of  Fall  Lake  village, 
accompanied  Mrs.  \reed  to  Duluth, 
where  Mrs.  Weed  has  been  operated 
upon   for  appendicitis. 

Miss  Blanche  Rosten,  who  has  been 
employed  at  the  general  store  of  R.  S. 
Miller  has  resigned  her  position  and 
has  returned  to  her  home  In  Duluth. 
After  a  short  stay  there  she  will  go 
to   North    Dakota    for    the    summer. 

Over  100  students  took  the  eighth 
grade  examinations  this  week  for  state 
certificates  in  grammar,  geography, 
history  and  arithmetic.  Out  of  a  class 
of  fortv-seven  in  ai ithmetic,  all  but 
two  or 'three  passed  the  examinations. 
The  results  in  the  other  branches  were 

also   good.  ,        ,   ,   „ 

New  uniforms  have  been  ordered  for 
the  larger  boys  in  the  band,  as  they 
have  outgrown  theif  old  ones.  The 
band  Is  preparing  to  ?ive  a  public  pro- 
gram In  the  near  future. 

The  Qui  Vive  Literary  society,  at 
their  last  meeting,  -endered  the  fol- 
lowing program  PI  mo  duet,  Esther 
Gustafson  and  Esther  Slotten;  recita- 
tion, Tlllle  Martinetti;  recitation,  Hella 
Week;  recitation,  Saiina  Willman; 
recitation,  Esther  Hario;  piano  solo, 
Helena  Horovitz;  piano  duet,  Edith 
Ellefsen  and  Helena  Horovitz;  debate, 
"Resolved  That  the  Chinese  laborer 
should  be  excluded  from  the  United 
States."  Affirmative  ]da  Porthan,  Elma 
Harrle,  Elvira  Llndbeck;  negative,  Edel 
Ellefson,  Nora  Kur\  Inen,  Ollle  Miet- 
tunen.  The  decision  of  the  judges  was 
In  favor  of  the  affirmative,  by  a  ma- 
jority of  eight  points. 

Several  baseball  teims  are  being  or- 
ganized here  for  the  season's  sports, 
among  which  may  t)e  mentioned  the 
Modern  Woodmen  t*am,  the  firemen's 
team,  and  there  will  probably  be  a 
high     school     team     organized. 

Mrs.    John    Shehan    and    family    have 


Tower.  Mini;.,  Marcli  20. —  (Special  tO 
The  Herald.) — A  number  of  youngf. 
people  attended  the  dance  given  St' 
Patrick's  evening  at  the  Everett's  hall,' 
Carnations  were  presented  to  all  thf>8e 
present.  The  hall  was  trimmed  in 
green  festooning  and  evergreens. 

T.    J.    Walsh    of    Dulutli    spent    a    few., 
days    the    fore    part    of    the    week    her« 
attending  to  business  matters.  1 

Horace  Andrews  of  Two  Harbors 
spent  Sunday  here  with  friends. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  J.  Jolley  of  Minnef 
apolie.  who  visited  liere.  left  Monday 
for  Virginia  to  visit  for  a  few  days  be* 
fore   returning   to   their    home. 

The  young  people  at  Soudan  gave  a 
costume  parly  Friday  evening  at  the 
Breitung  hall. 

Gunder  Peterson  was  a  range  visitor 
a   few   davs   this   week  I 

Miss  Mabel   Murrav    who   has  visited, 
her    sister,    Mrs.    Cliarles    Anderson,    la 
Duluth.    for    the    past    few    months,    re- 
turned  Wednesday   evening. 

Miss  Effie  Pfleffer  substituted  for. 
her  sister  who  is  teaching  at  Em- ; 
barrass,    Monday. 

John  Mike  returned  Tuesday  even- 
ing from  a  week's  visit  with  friends  at 
Rush   City,    Minn.  _  I 

A  son  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J. 
W.  Burbv  Thursday  evening.  ! 

Fred  Willis  of  Eveleth  visited  wlttt 
friends   here  Wednesday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  J.  Atkins  were  Du- 
luth   visitors    Wednesday. 

Sam  McQuade.  who  has  been  visit- 
ing at  St.  Louis,  Mo.,  for  the  past  tevr 
months,   returned   Friday   evening. 

The  play,  "Tony,  the  Convict,"  glveii 
by  the  Soudan  high  school  last  Friday, 
was  so  well  enjoyed  that  they  will  put 
it  on  next  Friday  evening  In  the  Ev- 
erett hall. 

Mrs.  R.  Bruno  returned  Monday  froitj 
a  week's  visit  with  friends  in  different 
Mesaba  range  towns. 

Gus  Colberg  was  a  Duluth  busines* 
visitor  Monday. 

Casper  Campaign  came  up  from 
luth  Friday  and  spent  Saturday 
Sunday   here   with    his   mother. 

Dr.   Cameron,  who  attended  the  fun- 
eral   of    Mr.    Wiseman,    his    brother-ln-^ 
law,  held  Sunday,  returned  to  Biwablh- 
Tuesday. 

Herman  Olson,  who  is  attending  the 
Superior  Business  College,  came  uy 
Saturday  evening  and  spent  Sunday, 
with  his   parents.  ^ 

Nick  Sommers,  who  was  formerly 
employed  at  Benson's  store,  but  Is  now 
a  traveling  salesman,  visited  friend* 
here  this  week. 

John  Cameron,  who  attended  the 
funeral  of  his  brother-in-law,  Wl)llanv| 
Wiseman,  held  Sunday,  returned  to  hi* 
home  at  Hlbblng  Monday. 

Mrs.  Ned  Brown  of  Two  Harbors  vis- 
ited with  her  mother,  Mr.s.  M.  Cam- 
paign, over   Sunday. 


DU«; 

and 


We  Want 


KTilIMM 


KNOW 
THIS  BOX 


It     (wntaina     the 
bcMt    cirar*— *>>«   clg»n 
y»n    mould    smoke    alwayi  ^ 

ywn  once  tried  them.  All  you  need 
ijr  to  your  clffar  dealer  li^— 

La  Verdad 


He    wUl   then   band   yo« 

\-^^ the    one  bent  clsrar  iB 

bis    ca«e.  Im  Ver- 

dnd     cicara     are 

■lad*  In     Tampa 

~  by  expert  workmen 

from  the  rhoice«t  Vuelta 

Abajo    tobacco.      The    ieal 

of  the  city  of  Tampa  U  on  the 

iMttom      of       th« 

box  of  the   c'^na- 

tne    La    Verdada. 

Ask    your   dealer. 

BOTTOM  Or    dez  cigar  co., 

Duluth  *  Tainpe. 


If  IN  DOUBT 
LOOK  AT  THE 


' 


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■    ■  ■ 

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IF  YOU 


RHEUMATISM 


■write  your  name  and  address  plainly 
on  the  above  coupon  and  mall  to  us. 
Return  post  will  bring  you.  prepaid, 
a  regular  $1  pair  of  Magic  Foot  Drafts, 
the  ^eat  Michigan  External  Cure  for 
Rheumatism  of  every  kind— chronic 
or  acute — muscular,  sciatic,  lumbago 
or  gout.  Tlien  after  you  try  them,  tf 
you  are  fully  satisfied  with  the  bene- 
fit received,  send  us  One  Dollar.  If 
not.  they  cost  you  nTJTTllng.  You  decide 
and    we   take   your   word. 


GOOD  THING 
FORJNDIAN 

Shutting  Off  $10.00  Per 

Month  Will  Redound  to 

His  Credit. 


Red  Men  on  Fond  du  Lac 

Reserve  to  Have  Less 

Drunks. 


IF 

t 


FRKDKUICK   DYER,    Cortwpondlnf  Sec'T. 

MaB{<-  Foot  DrafU  are  rurtng  aU  chronic  fMf* J^f 
SO  and  40  veats'  auuidiiig.  after  erenthliiif  eUe  Hail 
fatlea  ai  wtU  as  all  the  nUldur  sUgts.  We  have  t^c 
•Tl.U-u.v  lo  pinte  ^U  our  cUtnu  It  mujt  b«  plain 
|]i;tt  we  couliiu't  send  twumiu'k         y 

the  I>rafU  out  every- 
where as  we  do  on 
Approval  tf  t  h  »  y 
didn't  mire.  We  want 
•terr  ^uirerer  to  try 
tnem.  s-1  *eud  us 
full    aJdnns    on    the 

oiuuon     ti).l.iy.       Our     valuable     -     j 

SlXuaiU™    e-ome,   free   vrtth    live   trial    UtafU.      Sand 
no    mirtie>— onb    the   coupon. 


lllu»trile.t      U'jok 


TRAIN  SCARES  HORSES; 
DRIVER  AND  ANOTHER  HURT 

Gtafton.  N.  D.— March^  H'-'— ^fPtvlu 
to  The  Herald.)— Nate  Lpham  a  ^v  ell 
Vnown  hardware  merchant  of  this  cuy. 
ind  Joseph  Desajitell.  a  retired.  .arm«r. 
were  seriously  Injured  In  a^ /uiiawaj 
accident  a  short  distance  north  o  here. 
Thev  were  driving  in  a  covered  buggy 
and"  were  about  to  cross  V'^,  .^'i^'^^v^s 
the  Northern  Pacific  local  train  vas 
coming  along.  The  horse  took  mght 
overturned  the  buggy  and  the  two  oc- 
cupants were  badly  battered  up. 

f-pham  was  thrown  In  such  a  manner 
as    to    break    three    ribs,    and   also    le- 
celved    a    severe    gash    just    above 
eye.      Mr.    Desautell    received    very 
vere  bruises  on  his  body. 


the 

se- 


FRANK  MASSAPIST 

WAS  ODD  FELLOW. 

Fertile.  Minn..  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Her^ra.)— People  living  in  this 
section  were  interested  in  the  news  m 
The  Duluth  Herald  that  Judge  Dibell 
of  the  Zenith  City  had  denied  the  "lo- 
tlon  for  a  trial  in  the  case  of  \\  lUiam 
Schreiber.  convicted  of  murder  in  the 
first  degree  in  killing  Frank  Massa- 
pust  near  Ashawa,  or  Cook,»ln  North- 
ern St.  Louis  county,  as  his  victim 
was   well  known   here. 

Masj:apust  was  a  carpenter  by  trade, 
and  some  ten  years  ago  was  a  resi- 
dent of  Fertile,  and  at  the  time  of  his 
death  was  still  a  member  in  good 
standing  of  the  local  order  of  Odd  Fel- 
lows.  

BEMIDJI  ELKS  ELECT. 

Bemldji.  Minn..  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.*— Bemldji  lodge.  No. 
1052.  B.  P.  O.  K..  has  elected  officers  as 
follows:  „    „    ,  ^         „j 

Exalted  ruler.  P.  S.  Lycen:  esteemed 
leading  knight.  John  C.  Parker,  es- 
teemed lecturing  knight.  James  O.  Har; 
ris  esteemed  loyal  knight.  Dr.  Tuomy: 
secretary.  M.  S.  Gillettte;  treasurer. 
James  L.  George:  trustee.  A.  Schreider; 
tiler.  A.  A.  Carter:  representative  to 
grand   lodge.   K.   H.   Jerrard. 


Cloquet,  Minn..  March  20. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  recent  ruling  of  the 
department  of  the  interior,  in  which  the 
monthly  payment  of  |10  to  those  In- 
dians who  have  money  coming  to  them 
from  the  government  was  discontinued, 
will  effect  the  Indians  on  the  Fond  du 
du  Lac  reservation  to  a  considerable 
extent. 

The  ruling,  of  course,  in  no  ways  ef- 
fects the  annuities,  t>ut  these  are  so 
small,  amounting  to  only  a  few  dollars 
a  piece  a  year,  that  little  importance 
attaches  to  the  manner  in  which  they 
are  distributed:  but  the  money  which 
the  government  holds  in  trust  for  those 
Indians  who  have  sold  their  timber 
presents  a  matter  entirely  different. 
Some  of  the  Indians  are  wealthy  as 
far  as  the  amount  of  their  trust  money 
goes,  but  the  government  pays  it  out 
onlv  at  tlie  rate  of  $10  a  month,  as  a 
general  rule.  In  some  cases,  however, 
where  the  Indian  ha.-;  proven  that  he  is 
industrious  and  capable  of  managing 
his  own  affairs,  the  government  has 
turned  over  large  amounts  for  improve- 
ments, etc.,  provided  it  is  accurately  ac- 
counted for  to  tiie  Indian  agent. 

Cloquet.  being  but  a  mile  from  the 
homes  of  a  large  number  of  Indians  on 
the  reservation,  has  seen  enougli  of  In- 
dians on  pay  day  to  feel  that  the  gov- 
ernment has  acted  wisely  in  abolishing 
tlie  indiscriminate  payment  of  $10  a 
month.  The  amount  is  not  sufficient 
for  the  average  Indian  to  live  on.  He 
must  get  his  living  from  anotlier  source 
and  therefore  the  extra  $10  puts  him  on 
•'velvet"  for  a  few  hours  during  which 
he- is  king  of  the  "Island,"  but  gener- 
ally lands  Intoxicated  in  jail  before 
morning.  There  are  some  Indians,  liow- 
ever,  who  make  good  use  of  their  $10. 
and  ft  is  for  the  benefit  of  such  that 
the  government  has  given  to  the  Indian 
agent  the  privilege  of  providing  them 
wttli  money  if  he  sees  fit  to  do  so.  On 
the  whole,  the  general  sentiment  Is  that 
tlie  new   ruling  is  ;i   wise  one. 

RAILROAD  FLAGMAN  HIT. 


SPEND  MUCH  ON 
WARROAD  HARBOR 

Government  Will  Make 
Some  Extensive  Improve- 
ments This  Year. 

Warroad,  Minn.,  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— It  is  now  assured 
that  another  $27,000  will  be  spent  by 
the  government  the  coming  summer 
in  the  maintenance  and  improvement  of 
the  Warroad  harbor.  ,     ^   .,  , 

Of  the  $:,'?, 000  it  is  stated  that  $12,- 
000  will  be  used  for  maintaining  the 
channel  and  $15,000  will  be  used  for 
the  building  of  a  retaining  wall  In  or- 
der to  prevent  the  channel  filling  in 
again.  In  addition  to  these  sums,  $3,- 
000  will  be  expended  in  work  on  Zipple 
bay  in  order  to  fit  It  for  a  harbor 
retuge.  There  is  also  an  appropriation 
for  work  to  be  done  at  the  mouth 
Rainy  river,  and,  takfen  altogether, 
appears  that  navigation  on  the 
ican  side  of  the  lake  will  be 
materially. 

■    < 


of 
it 
Amer- 
benefited 


#*!%. 


mmm 

BEAUTY 

Beauty  tneana  a  clear  smooth  skin 
free  irom  all  blenusnes,  motn- 
patcked  and  hrecVles. 

Beauty  means  a  kealtliy  skin  with 
£ne,  clean  pores  anti  a  pure, 
ratiiant  complexion. 

Beauty  means  a  -wealtn  or  lon^.. 
silky,  luxuriant,  glossy  nair  or 
youtkful  and  perfect  color. 

Tke  E.  Bumham  Toilet  Prepa- 
rations Kave  tke  qvialities  to  pro- 
duce  such  results. 

Ask  your  dealer  tor  samples  or 
Skin  Food,  Cucumber  Cream, 
Powder,  and  booklet  "How  to 
be  Beautiful"  w^bicb  contains  a 
list  of  tbe  "50"  oreparations  used 
exclusively  in  tbc  E.  Bumham 
Beauty  Establisbment  (tbe  largest 
in  the  world)  at  70  ^  72  State 
Street,  Chicago,  lU. 


Struck  Down  by  Unknown  Assailant 
and  Rendered  Unconscious. 

Menominee,  Mich.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
fial  to  The  Herald.) — Martin  Grinler, 
railroad  fiagman  on  Riverside  avenue 
crossing  for  botji  the  Northwestern 
and  the  St.  Paul  railways,  was  found 
lying  near  the  tracks  unconscious 
early  yesterday  morning.  His  scalp 
and  face  were  cut  in  a  dozen  places, 
but  his  watch  and  money  were  in  his 
clothing. 

No  motive  for  the  assault  can  be  as- 
signed. Grenier.  an  aged,  harmless 
man.  says  he  has  not  an  enemy  in  the 
world   to   his   knowledge. 

'•About  11  o'clock  at  night,  after 
having  a  lunch  down  town,  I  returned 
to  mv  sHianty.  but  In  trying  co  enter,  I 
found  the  door  bari^d,"  lie  said,  upon 
regaining  consciousness.  "Suddenly  it 
tlew  open,  samething  blunt  struck  me 
in  the  face,  and  I  lost  consciousness." 

Th*'  belief  is  that  the  asallant  was 
laying  in  wait  for  a  company's  employe 
who  was  In  the  habit  of  visiting  the 
shanty  shortly  before  midnight  regu- 
larly.  

TRIPPED  BY  SHOESTRING. 

Canadian    Northern    Brakeman    Is 
Tlirown  Before  Cars  and  Mangled. 

Roosevelt,  Minn.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
I  cial  to  The  Herald.) — R.  H.  Stevenson, 
':  a  brakeman  on  the  Canadian  Northern, 
j  was  run  over  and  killed  In  the  yards 
I  here  recently.- 

I  While  the  train  was  switching  In 
I  the  yard  Stevenson  stepped  in  between 
I  two  cars  to  make  a  coupling,  and  when 

he  attempted  to  step  back,  after  finish. 
I  ing  the  work,  his  shoestring  caught 
I  in    a    frog    and    tripped    him.      The   cars 

were    then    moving    slowly,    and       one 

wheel  passed  over  his  body,  causing 
'  almost  instant  death.  He  made  no  out- 
i  cry,  but  merely  exclaimed  "Ohl"  as  he 
I  fell,  and  when  his  fellow  employes 
'  rushed  up,  he  was  dying  and  unable  to 
I  talk. 
I       The    body   was    taken    to      Winnipeg, 

where    the    unfortunate    man's        liome 

was.     He  was  not  married. 


ATTACK  STATE'S  CASE. 

Defense  in  Nelson  Trial  After  Vva- 
secution's  W  itnesses. 

Bemldji,  Minn.,  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  trial  of  Barney 
Nelson  for  killing  Morris  Fuller  at 
Fowlds,  Jan.  3,  last,  which  has  been  on 
In  the  district  court  this  week,  JS 
drawing  to  a  close.  The  state  conclud- 
ed its  case  yesterday  afternoon  and  the 
defense  went  to  the  bat,  Henry  Funk- 
ley  of  Nelsons  counsel,  attacking  the 
states  chief  witnesses,  Archie  Brown 
and  W.  E.  Wyatt  and  trying  to  prove 
no  case  had  been  established  against 
the  accused.  The  case  may  be  con- 
cluded  today. 

O  J.  Tagley.  president  ofthe  Nymore 
village  council,  has  been  indicted  by 
the  grand  Jury  on  four  counts  charging 
him  with  signing  orders  for  J^maU 
amounts  for  bills  not  approved  by  the 
council.  He  is  at  large  on  his  own 
recognizance  and  will  plead  after  the 
Nelson   case  is  out   of   the   way. 

DELAY  WAS 'expensive. 

Failure  to  Pay  Tax  Cos.t  Duluth  & 
Northern  Minnesota  Road. 

St.  Paul  Minn.,  March  20. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Duluth  &  North- 
ern Hallway  company  yesterday  paid 
$773.63  into  the  state  treasury  as  a 
penalty  for  delay  in  the  payment  of  the 
gross  earnings  tax  on  the  road,  which 
was  due  March  1.  The  amount  of  the 
tax,  exclusive  of  the  penalty,  was  $Iu,- 
372.69,  on  which  a  5  per  cent  penalty 
was  added.  Clarence  C.  Dlnehart. 
state  treasurer,  enforced  several  of 
these  penalties  last  year,  and  the  re- 
sult has  been  that  the  payments  have 
been  prompt  in  every  case.  Formerly, 
it  was  the  custom  for  the  roads  to 
pay  the  tax  at  their  convenience. 


CHARLESHORTON 
ABLE  YOllNG  MAN 

Future  Assistant  Secre- 
tary of  Treasury  Once 
Milwaukee  Clerk. 

Milwaukee,  Wis..  March  20.  — 
Charles  D.  Norton,  whose  appointment 
to  the  office  of  assistant  secretary  of 
the  treasury  hsis  been  announced  from 
Washington,  Is  general  agent  of  the 
Northwestern  Muti>al  Cife  Insurance 
company  In  Chicago,  and  as  a  boy  was 
employed  as  a  clerk  in  the  Milwaukee 
offices   of   the   company. 

He  is  a  nephew  of  the  late  Judge 
Charles  E.  Dyer,  who  was  general 
counsel  for  the  company  In  this  city 
up  to  the  time  of  his  death. 

Mi*.  Norton  was  in  Milwaukee  yes- 
terday consulting  with  the  officials  of 
the  company  here. 

Col.  Harry  S.  Fuller,  general  agent 
of  the  company,  said  that  it  had  been 
announced  ttiat  Mr.  Norton  had  been 
selected  for  the  olRce,  but  as  he  re- 
fused to  talk  for  j>«Wlcation  regarding 
the  report,  Mr.  iFuUer  did  not  feel 
justified  In  doing  so. 

•It  will  be  moi^h^  probably  before 
he  takes  the  office,"  said  Col.  Fuller. 
"Mr.  Norton  Is  one  of  the  best  known 
business  men  of  Chicago.  He  has  al- 
ways been  active  in  tnunlcipal  affairs 
there.  He  was  president  of  the  Mer- 
chants' association  of  Chicago. 

"He  was  15  years  ^Id  when  he  en- 
tered the  office  het^. ,  After  two  years 
he  went  to  AmUerst.  college,  from 
which  he  was  graduated  in  1893.  He 
went  into  the  office  in  Chicago  after 
his -graduation,  being  first  agent,  and 
later  a  partner.  On  the  death  of  A. 
W.  Kimball,  in  19D5.  he  became  gen- 
eral agent  there.  Last  July  he  was 
made  president  o£>  th6  General  Insur- 
ance Agents'  association  at  the  meet- 
ing at  the  Plankinton  house.  He  Is 
a  young  man  of  unusual  understand- 
ing and  stands  well  among  his  as- 
sociates. I  believe  he  will  make  a 
good    official." 


DIG  UP  SKELETON 
BlRIEDjJONG  AGO 

Silver  Plate  Bearing  Coat 

of' Arms  and  Other 

Relics  Found. 

Marquette,  Mich.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Engaged  In  ex- 
cavating because  of  frozen  water  pipes, 
Eugene  Lepine  unearthed  a  skeleton  at 
the  rear  of  the  Wllmont  house,  on 
Mackinac  i-sland,  and  near  the  bones 
he  found  a  silver  plate,  bearing  the 
coat  of  ^rms  of  England. 

Oth^  relics  uncovered  were  a  hand- 
carved  piece  of  silver  in  the  shape  of 
a  half-moon  and  containing  the  image 
of  a  bear;  some  silver  buckles,  and  a 
sheath  knife.  The  place  at  which  the 
excavating  was  done  was  originally  the 
burying  ground  of  the  Mackinac  island 
Indians.  The  coat  of  arms  is  ten 
inches  long  by  two  and  a  half  Inches 
wide  and  bears  the  lion  and  the  uni- 
corn, supporting  a  crown,  around 
which,  in  Latin,  are  the  mottos.  "Evil 
to  him  who  evil  thinks,"  and  "God 
and   my   right." 

NEW  EXCURSION  BOAT. 


CASS  LAKE  ATHLETES 

FAVOR  ASSOCIATION. 


Cass  Lake,  Minn,,  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Several  of  the 
lovers  of  athletics  here  are  figuring  on 
organizing  an  athletic  association  and 
from  the  present  outlook,  it  is  believed 
It  will  be  a  reality.  The  boys  want  to 
erect  a  building  suited  to  their  de- 
sires and  which  will  contain  most  of 
the  paraphernalia  found  In  the  up  to 
date   Y.  M.  C.  A. 

— • ■ 

Former    llrainerdite    Dead. 

Brainerd,  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special 
to  Thi  Herald.) — The  funeral  of  C.  xV. 
Pierce,  for  many  years  a  resident  of 
this  citv,  who  died  in  Minneapolis,  was 
held  this  afternoon  at  2:30  from  the 
residence  of  his  daughter,  Mrs.  George 
O.  Whitney,  and  was  under  the  aus- 
pices   o(   the  Masons. 


HE  ATE  GLASS 


Babcock,  Wis..  March  20.— After 
being  treated  for  four  years  for  stom- 
ach trouble,  the  nature  of  which  his 
physicians  failed  to  diagnose,  Samuel 
Myre,  a  farmer  living  three  miles  from 
this  place,  told,  the  doctor  that  he  had 
eaten  two  beer  mugs.  It  is  now  be- 
lieved that  his  trouble  is  the  result  of 
this  feat. 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS 


Upper  Michigan   Firm  Building  a 
Steamer  for  Loner  Lake  Trade. 

Menominee.  Mich.,  March  20. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  Northern 
Michigan  Transportation  company,  in 
which  the  Hill  Bros,  of  Fish  Creek  are 
interested,  has  Increased  its  capital 
stock  from  $300,000  to  $600,000,  and 
has  practically  let  a  contract  for  a 
new  excursion  steamer  which  is  to  be 
the  largest  and  most  commodious  on 
the  Great  Lakes. 

The  company  is  now  operating  one 
steamer  bewteen  Chicago  and  Southern 
points,  but  their  new  boat  will  be  used 
solely  for  passenger  service.  It  will 
cost  in  the  neighborhood  of  $700,000, 
and  work  on  the  plans  and  specifica- 
tions is  being  rushed  so  that  it  may 
be  ready  for  use  in  the  spring  of  1910. 
It  Is  planned  to  operate  the  steamer 
between  Chicago,  Milwaukee  and 
Northern  Michigan  summer 
ports  . 


UNCLE  SAM  MAY 
GO  AFTER  BOYS 

East  Grand  Forks  Youths 

Alleged  to  Have  Durg- 

larized  Boat. 

Grand  Forks.  X.  D.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Harry  fSvans  and 
Arthur  Keller,  the  two  E^ist  Grand 
Forks  boys  who  were  arrested  In  that 
city  on  the  charge  of  bres.king  into 
and  burglarizing  two  boats,  one  be- 
longing to  tiie  government,  taking  tools 
and  other  articles,  and  wlio  were 
brought  here  for  a  hearing,  waived  a 
preliminary  examination  be! ore  Judge 
Purcell  and   were  held  In   $5C'0  bonds. 

The  government  boat,  i  he  Grand 
Forks,  and  the  Red  River  Valley  Trans- 
portation boat,  the  Fram.  were  the 
ones  burglarized.  On  the  government 
boat  two  doors  were  broken  open, 
while  on  the  Fram  the  yuung  men 
broke  through  seven  doors.  The  booty 
secured  was  hauled  to  the  E  'ans  home, 
and  the  officials  were  enabltd  to  trace 
it  through  the  fact  that  several  articles 
were  dropped  from  place  to  place. 

Wht-n  tlie  officials  arrived  at  the 
Evans  home,  the  young  fellow  opened 
ihe  barn  door  for  them,  and  there  was 
found  the  entire  loot.  Evanii  confessed 
his  guilt  and  Implicated  young  Keller, 
who  was  later  found  hiding  in  the 
basement  of  his  liome. 

The  fact  that  one  of  the  boats  en- 
tered is  government  property  makes 
it  probable  that  the  government  will 
take  a  hand  in  the  matter.  The 
steamer  Grand  Forks  is  owned  by  the 
I'nlted  States  and  is  used  i:i  the  river 
service.  In  case  the  government  takes 
charge  of  the  case,  it  is  lla  jle  to  go  a 
bit  harder  with  the  lads,  both  of  whom 
have  admitted   their  guilt. 

FELLOW  SERVANT'lAW 

Trains 


21 

This  Great  Beauty 
Book  Is  Free 

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Work  of  Beaufy  by  the  World's 

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Specialist  Will  Be  G\\tn 

Away  to  Readers  of 

This  Paper. 


Tltls  Remarkable  Book  Telli^  of  Mar- 

volloii."*     New     Process    Tliat     Often 

Makes    Wrinkles    l>isapi)rar    in    a 

Nij^lit;      That     Commence-^      to 

Grow   New   Flesh   and   Tissue 

on  Flabby  Checks  M'ithin 

24    Hours'    Tliiie, 


It  Reveals  the  Complete  Ft>rmula  for 
the    Wonderful    Hair    Grower    That 
Was  Awarded  the  Gold  Medal  by 
the    Vienna    .Jubilee    Ex|K>.>«itlou, 
and   Gives   the   Original   Pre- 
seriptiou    for    Making;    the 
Great     Skin    Pi'eparation 
which    Was      Awarded 
the    Gold    Me<1al    by 
the  Paris  Interna- 
tional Fxposltion. 


Don't   Be     Fffly.     Plain     or  Homely, 

Wlien  Tills  Great  Hook  Can  Be 

Had  for  the  Asking, 


Not 


resort 


MINNESOTA  BRIEFS 


Eaii  Claire— Peter  Truax,  a  pioneer 
of  Eau  Claire,  died  Thursday  night  at 
11-20  at  his  home  In  Truax  Prairie. 
Tlie  end  came  peacefully  after  a  linger- 
ing illness  of  several  months,  and  at 
ilie  bedside  was  his  wife,  besides  a  sis- 
ter Mrs.  B.  J.  Cliamplon  of  this  city, 
and  a  few  other  near  relatives.  Mr. 
Truax  was  SI  years  of  age. 

Chippewa  Palls — .Supt.  H.  G,  Law- 
rence of  the  Chippewa  Valley  Hallway 
Light  &  Power  company  has  returned 
from  a  purchasing  trip  la  the  East. 
He  bought  two  new  interurban  cars, 
which  are  larger  than  the  ones  in  oper- 
ation  at  present.  ,  «    ,,  o»«fo 

Ashland — The  remains  of  Ralf  Stafs- 
vic     aged    50,    who      died      Wednesday 
morning    at    one    of    tlie    hospitals 
pneumonia,    were    taken   to    Elester. 
L>.,    for    burial.      -yije    deceased    was 
sign     painter    by     occupation 
been    a    resident   ^C^AsliIand 
years  and   was   w#M   '       "'" 
city.     He  was  born 


To   Reorfraidze    Soo    Company. 

Sault  Ste  Marie,  Mich.,  March  20. — 
F.  W.  Little,  a  capitalist  of  Minneap- 
olis, announces  the  re-organization  of 
the  Sault  Ste.  Marie  Gas  &  Electric 
company.  All  obligations  are  to  be 
taken  care  of.  The  new  company 
will  .spend  $25,000  or  more  in  improve- 
ments. 


Applicable   Except    to 
That  Are  in  Motion. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D..  March  20. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) —  n  the  trial 
of  a  case  before  Judge  C.  P.  Temple- 
ton  this  week  It  developel  that  the 
fellow  servant  liability  la^^  does  not 
apply  to  anything  In  the  railway  line 
except  trains  in  operation.  The  plain- 
tiff injured  in  a  roundhouse  cannot 
claim  the  company  Is  llaale  for  his 
injuries  if  they  were  due  to  the  negli- 
gence of  a  fellow  employe.  This  was 
the  ruling  of  the  court  in  d  sposlng  the 
case  of  Theodore  Paulson  vs.  Great 
Northern. 


ROBBED  OF  SPEEC  H 

BY  KICK  OF  MULE. 


Short    Counte 

Menominee.  Mich., 
rial  to  The  Herald.) 
nual   short   course   of 


Im    I'loaed. 

March  20. — (Spe- 
— The  second  an- 
Menomlnee  Agrl 


cultural  school  closed  Friday  night 
with  a  lecture  by  State  Dairy  and  P'ood 
Commissioner  Colon  C.  Lillle.  Five 
thousand  people  from  many  parts  of 
the  Upper  Peninsula  attended  the  In- 
stitute. 


BACK  FROM  THE  PEN. 

to 


Cass 


W1m1m«1«: 
C7aiii69E. 
WuiiiactM 

StIMt 


Jo.seph    Mario w    Retnrns 

Lake  After  Doing  Time. 

Cass  Lake.  Mi-nn.,  March  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Joseph  Marlow, 
who 'Was -sentenced  to  three  years  at 
.Stillwater,  for  an  assault  committed 
here,  lias  just  been  paroled.  Marlow 
has  returned  to  Cass  Lake  and  will 
again   make   his  home  here. 

The  crime  for  which  Marlow  was 
sent  to  the  penitentiary,  occurred  hero 
about  two  and  a  half  years  ago  when, 
in  a  fit  of  rage,  he  seized  a  hug*"  piece 
of  gas  pipe  and  dealt  Supt.  Armstrong 
of  the  J.  Niels  saw  mill,  a  terrific  blow 
over  the  head.  Marlow  was  working 
at  the  mill  and  wlien  Armstrong  told 
him  to  do  a  certain  piece  of  work  he 
became  angrv  and  committed  the  as- 
sault. For  a  long  time  It  looked  as 
if  Armstrong  would  not  live,  but  he 
finally  pulled  through.  Marlow  was 
arrested  immediately  after  his  rash  act 
and  sentenced  to  three  years  at  Still- 
water. 

CASS  LAKE  PIONEER 

IS  DEAD  OF  DROPSY, 


CHICAGO.  ILL. 
For  Sale  by  All  Dealers. 


Cass  Lake.  Minn.,  March  20. — (^Spe- 
clal  to  The  Herald.) — John  Bonnalle.  a 
pioneer  resident  and  business  man  of 
this  place,  died  here  this  morning  aft- 
er a  long  Illness,  of  dropsy.  His 
funeral    will    take   place   Monday. 


Creamery   Will   Iteopen. 

Staples,  Minn.,  March  20. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  directors  of  the 
Staples  Co-Operative  creamery  held 
a  meeting  this  week  and  decided  to  re- 
open the  creamery  about  the  first  of 
April.  The  creamery  has  been  closed 
during  the  winter  months,  as  there 
would  not  be  business  enough  to  keep 
it  going  then. 


Moorhead — A  messag-e  from  Eliza- 
beth savs  that  Ottin  Sletvold  succumb- 
ed Wednesday  to  injuries  sustained  by 
a  kick  from  a  jiorse  on  his  farm,  a 
week  ago.  He  was  born  In  Norway 
and  came   to  this  country  In   1868. 

Minneapolis — Due  to  the  efforts  of 
two  students  from  Montana,  Howard 
Sinclair  and  John  Majerus.  a  chapter  of 
the  National  Society  of  the  Rocky 
Mountain  club  will  l>e  established^Ut 
the  University  of  Minnesota.  The  so- 
ciety Is  a  secret  one,  to  which  only 
Western    students    are   admitted. 

Sandstone — William  Chelgren,  was 
found  unconscious  on  the  floor  of  his 
store  recently.  It  was  found  tlmt  he 
had  suffered  a  severe  stroke  of  paraly- 
sis and  that  he  had  lost  the  control 
of  one-half  of  his  body.  He  was  taken 
to  liethesda  hospital.  St.  Paul,  but  It 
is  feared  that  the  stroke  will  go  hard 
with  him. 

Ada — The  members  of  the  high 
school  graduating  class  are  busy  pre- 
paring for  their  class  play,  which  will 
i>e  presented  at  the  opera  house  next 
week  Thursday  evening.  The  play  Is 
"Merchant  of  Venice  Up  to  Date,"  a 
parody  on  the  well  known  Shakes- 
pearean play. 

Stillwater — The  chemical  of  the  fire 
department  was  called  to  the  east  end 
of  the  bridge  over  the  St.  Croix  short- 
ly after  8  o'clock  Wednesday  night 
night  to  put  out  a  slight  blaze  in  the 
bridge  railing'.  It  is  not  known  how 
the    fire    started. 

Pine  City — J.  E.  Therrln  baa  moved 
his  family  from  Two  Harbore  and 
they  are  living  at  present  in  tlie- 
rooms  back  of  the  abstract  office, 
where  they  will  remain  until  H.  W. 
Harte  vacates  his  house  on  the  banks 
of  Snake  river.  ,  __    „ 

Akeley — Next  Monday  evening  at  8 
o'clock  the  Akeley  high  scliool  will 
entertain  the  citizens  and  patrons  of 
the  school,  at  which  time  the  several 
rooms  will  be  thrown  open  and  sam- 
ples of  work  exhibited. 

Anoka — Thomas  Walsch,  aged  58 
vears.  died  at  his  home  on  the  Mead- 
ow Brook  farm  near  Andover,  Mon- 
day, after  a  brief  siege  of  pneumonia. 
He  Is  survived  by  a  wife.  The  remains 
were  shipped  to  St.  Paul  ^Tuesday 
morning   for   burial. 

Fertile — The  general  store  of  Erstau 
&  Ness  was  consumed  by  fire  last  Sat- 
urday. When  the  fire  was  discovered 
the'  whole  building  was  in  flames  and 
not  an  article  was  saved.  The  firm 
carried  $1,000  insurance  on  the  build- 
ing  and    $3,000    on    stock. 

Little  Fall.s— A  new  industry  is 
opening  up  in  Morrison  county.  J.  Mc- 
Auley  of  St.  Cloud  has  a  contract  to 
take  out  the  granite  on  a  piece  of 
land  in  Buh  town,  the  property  of  a 
yt.  Paul  man.  The  granite  is  said  to 
be  of  a  quality  unsurpassed  by  any  In 
the  state. 

Perham — Bishop  Morrison  of  Duluth 
conducted  services  In  the  Episcopal 
church  at  8  o'clock  Friday  evening. 
There  was  no  confirmation,  but  he 
preached    an    Interesting    sermon. 

Princeton — Wednesday  evening  at  8 
o'clock  Albert  J.  Anderson  was  united 
in  marriage  to  Miss  Mary  S.  Ecklund 
at  the  residence  of  the  bride's  mother. 
Mrs.  Mary  Ecklund  in  North  Princeton. 
Rev.  George  Swertfager  of  the  Prince- 
ton Congregational  church  performed 
the  ceremony. 


of 

S. 
a 
and  had 
for  nine 
known  about  the 
in  "Norway. 
La  Crosse— Jeapitt 6  Washburn,  wi- 
dow of  the  former' ifpverndr  and  con- 
gressman, C.  C.  Washburn,  one  of  the 
most  famous  ttien'^ir-fhe  history  of  this 
siate.  died  March  12  at  Brookline, 
Mass.,  in  the  Channing  sanitarium, 
where  she  lias  been  confined  for  thlny 
years  because  of  mental  derangement. 
She  was  nearly  90  years  of  age. 

New  Richmond — Plans  for  a  pure 
seed  campaign  ha^P  been  perfected  by 
the  St.  Croix  county  branch  of  the  W  is- 
consin  Experimental  assoclacion,  the 
fourth   county   brangh   to   be   organized 

in   the  state.  „        .  „i 

Ripon— At  Rlpon  colleges  annual 
circus  Wednesday  night,  Zeldelbach  of 
the  University  of  .Wisconsin,  cliamp  on 
Western  gymna»c.  gave  an  exhibition 
on  the  horizontal  h,^vs  and  rings. 

Marinette— Martin  Griner,   a   railroad 
rlaginan.    was   the   victim   of   a   myster- 
assau 


Saloon   Kear  Depot   itnbbed. 

Menominee,  Mich..  Manh  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  saloon  of 
Kolanchlch  &  Miersch  at  Crivltz  was 
entered  by  unknown  parties  early  yes- 
terday morning  and  $100  in  cash  and 
checks  taken.  The  building  Is  within 
a  shadow  of  the  depot,  it  Is  believed 
that  "liome  talent"  is  responsible  for 
the  robbery. 

Millions  of  Fisli  Prj'. 

Sault  Ste.  Marie.  Mich.,  March  20. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — There  Is  In 
process  of  propogation  at  the  state  fish 
hatchery  here,  20,000,000  whiteflsh, 
4,000.000  lake  trout,  1,500,000  brook 
trout  and  30,000  land-locked  salmon 
fry.  The  quantity  of  the  last  named 
fish  is  the  largest  the  hatchery  has 
ever  had.  The  salmon  will  be  planted 
In  St.  Mary's  river. 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


Devils  Lake,  N.  D.,  Marc  i  20.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— As  tie  result  of 
being  kicked  by  a  mule,  the  10-yeai-old 
son  of  Jacob  Bisbee  must  1  sarn  to  talK 
again.  His  skull  was  badly  crushed 
and  a  successful  operation  was  per- 
formed to  remove  pieces  of  the 
•ranium.  The  part  of  the  brain  af- 
fected was  that  controlling  the  faculty 
of  talking,  and  nurses  at  the  hospital 
have  commenced  to  teach  the  boy  to 
speak. 

MANY  SEHLERS  ARE~ 

ARRIVING  EVERY  DAY. 

Sioux  Falls,  S.  D.,  Harch  20. — 
Whole  trainloads  of  new  settlers  are 
arriving  at  points  in  Greg  oi-y  county, 
many  of  them  being  persotus  who  were 
fortunate  enough  to  draAv  claims  in 
Tripp  county  and  the  remainder  being 
persons  who"  have  purchased  compara- 
tively cheap  deeded  lands  in  Gregory 
county.  The  freight  trafllc  into  that 
part  of  the  state  is  sj  heavy  that  two 
extra  trains  have  been  put  on  lJ>'  the 
railroad  company  entering  the  region. 
In  a  period  of  only  three  lays,  thirty- 
two  cars  of  immigrant  goc  ds  were  un- 
loaded at  one  town — Gregory — and 
other  towns,  such  as  Dallii-,  the  gate- 
way to  the  Tripp  county  lands,  is  re- 
ceiving even  a   greater   n  imb^r. 

CONTRACTOR  MeDONlsELL 

COMMENCES  SEAVER  JOB. 


The  Institute  de  Beaute  has  secured 
the  exclusive  American  rights  for  the 
publication  of  one  of  the  most  re- 
markable works  on  beauty  of  modern 
times  on  condition  that  they  give  away 
100,000  copies  of  this  book  this  year 
free  of  charge.  The  author  made 
this  an  absolute  condition  of  the  con- 
tract. 

The  book  is  written  by  a  woman 
who  is  herself  a  living  example  of  the 
beauty  and  marvelous  efficacy  of  her 
own  beauty  discoveries;  a  woman  who 
took  her  own  wrinkles  out  by  her  own 
discovery  after  face  massage,  masks 
and  steaming  pots  and  beauty  doc- 
tors had  all  failed;  a  woman  who 
.stopped  her  own  hair  from  falling  out 
and  nrevented  wliat  seemed  to  be  al- 
most certain  baldness  by  the  same 
formula  which  she  reveais  to  you  in 
this  book,  and  which  was  awarded  a 
gold  medal  by  the  great  Vienna  Jub- 
ilee Exposition  held  under  the  aus- 
pices of  His  Imperial  Majesty,  the 
Emperor  of  Austria. 

This  book  also  gives  the  exact  for- 
mula for  making  the  marvelous  prep- 
aration for  removing  pimples,  blotches 
and  skill  blemishes  and  for  treating 
eczema  and  other  skin  diseases,  which 
was  awarded  the  gold  medal  by  the 
Paris    International     Exposition. 

We  absolutely  guarantee  that  a 
good  diniggist  can  fill  these  formulas 
for  you  without  any  difficulty  whatever 
at  small   cost. 

This  wonderful  book  tells  of  a  mar- 
velous new  process  which  commences 
to  grow  new  flesh  and  tissue  on  soft, 
flabby  cheeks  and  scrawny  necks 
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night,  and  works  surprising  wonders 
in  developing  the  bust  and  bringing 
back  the  bloom  of  youth  to  the  skin 
and  complexion. 

It  is  richly  illustrated  with  the 
finest  photo-engravings,  and  contains 
a  true  picture  of  the  world's  most 
widely   known    beauty  specialist. 

No  matter  how  deep  your  lines  and 
wrinkles  may  be,  no  matter  how 
flabby  your  cheeks  or  how  scrawny 
your  neck,  no  matter  how  small  your 
bust  nor  how  sallow  and  swarthy 
your  complexion  may  be,  no  matter 
what  remedies  you  may  have  used 
or  what  beauty  specialists  may  have 
treated  you.  write  for  a  copy  of  this 
great  beauty  book  today  and  test  the 
new  methods  explained  therein  at 
your  own  home.  Each  and  every 
one  is  guaranteed  to  be  absolutely 
harmless. 

These  methods  have  taken  gold 
medals  at  every  international  expo- 
sition at  which  they  have  been  ex- 
hibited. 

It  has  cost  the  author  years  of  time 
and  $10,000  in  cash  to  gather  the  ma- 
terial and  make  the  discoveries  of 
which  this  book  tells  you. 

Do  not  waste  your  money  on  high- 
priced  beauty  doctors,  or  in  buying 
expensive  products  which  disappoint 
and  di-shearten,  when  this  rrreat  book 
may  be  had  without  one  cent  of  cost. 
Write  for  a  copy  today.  Address 
Institute  do  Beaute,  Suite  813,  Syra- 
cuse, N.  Y. 

No  money  is  required,  but  you  can 
send  stamp  to  help  pay  po.stage  if  you 
wish.  The  book,  however,  will  be 
sent  anyway,  as  the  Institute  is  com- 
pelled to  give  away  100,000  copies  this 
year  to  retain  Its  ownership  to  the 
copyright. 


tous  assault  early  one  morning.  When 
returning  to  the  flag  station,  where  he 
sleeps,  an  unknown  person  stepped 
from  a  shanty,  beat  him  over  the  head 
with  a  club  and  Inflicted  fatal  injuries. 

SPOONER  MAN  MARRIES. 

Oliver  Schroeder  Leads   Miss  Aug- 
usta Johnson  to  the  Altar. 

Spooner.  Minn.,  March  20.— (Special 
to  The  Herald") — A  pretty  wedding  took 
place  Tuesday  evening  at  the  home  of 
.Mr.  and  Mrs.  Schroeder,  when  Miss 
.Augusta  Johnson  of  Minneapolis  and 
Oliver  Schroeder  of  Spooner  were  mar- 
ried by  Rev.  T.  W.  Howard  of  Birch - 
dale,  pastor  of  the  Congregational 
church    of    Baudette. 

The  bride  wore  a  gown  of  white  lib- 
erty silk  and  was  attended  by  Miss 
Anna  Erickson.     Frederick  Cheska  was 


Gladstone — Probably  one  of  the  very 
oldest  coins  in  the  state  is  In  the  pos- 
session of  Joseph  Gagner  of  Gladstone. 
It  was  given  to  him  by  a  Spanish  war 
soldier,  who  had  procured  it  in  Cuba, 
where  It  had  been  unearthed  In  an  ex- 
cavation. The  ancient  piece  of  money 
is  some  l,8oo  years  old.  It  is  a  brazen 
Roman  coin  and  bears  the  names  of 
Nerva  and  Trajan. 

Houghton — Fourteen  beautiful  wall 
panels  of  plaster,  excellently  worked 
in  high  relief,  have  been  placed  in  St. 
.losepli's  Austrian  church.  The  four- 
teen works  of  art  tell  the  entire  story 
of  the  per.secution  and  crucifixion  of 
.Tesus  Clirist.  They  will  be  set  into  the 
wall  beneath  the  electroliers  along  the 
sides  of  tlie  edifice. 

Hancock — Henry  Key,  well  known 
Hancock  contractor,  has  been  awarded 
a  contract  by  the  Peninsula  Wholesale 
Grocery  company,  for  the  construction 
of  a  concrete  dock  along  the  water 
front,  between  Isle  Royale  and  Portage 
streets.   ' 

Calumet — A  deal  has  been  closed  by 
Which  Douglass  Bolton  and  Ed.  Terrier, 
botli  for  some  time  past  connected  with 
the  Zenith  barber  shop,  became  the 
proprietors  of  the  barber  shop  on  Oak 
street,  purchasing  the  place  from  A. 
and  I.  Leroux. 

Hancock — August   Henckel      has     re- 


Grand  Forks,  N.  D.,  March  20. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Contractor 
P.  R.  McDonnell  of  Dulu:h,  who  was 
awarded  the  contract  for  the  con- 
struction of  the  new  sewei  on  De  Mers 
avenue,  has  already  comn  enced  work. 
He  has  a  crew  of  men  engaged  at  the 
bank  of  the  river  excavating  for  the 
outlet.  The  sewer  from  the  river  to 
Seventh  street  must  be  completed  by 
May  30. 

NATURAL  GAS  MAY  BE 

DISCOVERED  NEAR  FARGO 

Fargo,  N.  D.,  March  20.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Fargo  ma;.'  be  In  the 
gas  belt.  C.  E.  Burgess  of  Devils  Lake, 
who  has  been  Investlgallng  the  gas 
finds  In  the  Mouse  river  ii round  West- 
hope,  has  reached  the  conclusion  there 
is  an  abundance  of  gas  n  jar  Fargo,  in 
this  county.  He  has  secured  options  ori 
the  gas  rights  on  50,000  icres  of  land 
around  Harwood  and  Aigusvllle,  ten 
to  fifteen  miles  from  the  city.  He  has 
ordered  one  of  the  latest  gas  boring 
machines  and  an  expert  from  Kansas 
and  believes  he  will  soor,  have  some- 
thing to   pipe  and 


"TJTumber   of   Baudette   and    Spooner    -^fned     as     manager     of     the     Mineral 
people     weer     present.       An     elaborate 
v.edding  supper  was  served.     The  pres- 
ents were  many  and  appropriate. 


Mr.    and    Mrs.    Oliver    Schroeder 
make  Spooner  their  future  home. 


will 


C.  Remington 
best  corner  50- 
and    will    erect 

brick    business 


soor,   have 
sell   to  Fargo. 


Minnea|>olis  Pioneer  Dead. 

Minneapolis.  Minn.,  March  20. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Capt.  Peter 
McKernan  a  resident  of  Minneapolis 
for  forty-six  years,  died  Thursday  at 
the  Soldiers'  Home  hospital,  at  the  age 
of  76. -"'Mr.  McKernan  was  born  In 
Leltrim  county,  Ireland,  and  came  to 
this  country  when'  only  16  years  old. 
After  his  marriage  \xi  185  7,  he  came  to 
Minnesota  subsequently  settling  In 
Minneapolis,,  where  he  was  street  com-* 
missloner  and  afterwards  police  cap 
tain  under  Mayor  De  Laittre,  resign 
ing  twenty  years  agb.  ' 

Stillwater  ISlk.s  Kleet. 

Stillwater,  Mlno.,  M^^rch  20. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  local  lodge 
of  Elk.s  has  electedthe  following  offi- 
cers: C.  P.  Donnellan.  exalted  ruler; 
T  C  Stocking.  .  esteemed  leading 
knight;  BYed  S.  Poster,  esteemed  loyal 
knight:  Nick  StarkeJU  esteemed  lectur- 
ing knight;  Paul  J.  Arndt,  secretary: 
Reuben  A.  Johnson,  treasurer;  Robert 
McLeer,  tyler;  J.  H.  Ward,  represen- 
tative to  the  grand  lodge;  J.  W.  Foley, 
alternate;  Carl  Brenner,  member  of 
executive  committe  of  state  associa- 
tion. 


Range  warehouse,  where  he  has  been 
employed  for  the  past  nine  years.  He 
will  be  succeeded  by  James  Pryor.  Mr. 
Henckel  will  take  a  position  as  checker 
of  deliveries  for  the  Armour  Packing 
company  in  this  city. 

Calumet — Thomas  Hyslop,  treasurer 
of  Osceola  township,  has  made  his  re- 
turns to  the  county  treasurer.  He  pre- 
sents a  clean  record,  all  of  the  tax  roll 
of  $81,218.  49  being  collected. 

Marquette — Nearly  8.000  more  books 
were  drawn  from  the  Peter  White  pub- 
lic library  during  the  year  and  the  dally 
average  clrcilatlon  has  Increased  from 
r^T  to  143  volumes,  according  to  t|?e 
annual  report  of  the  librarian.  Miss 
Anne  S.  Duncan.  „     ,,      .       , 

Negaunee — Reglna  S.  Hoglund.  aged 
16  years  and  8  months,  daughter  of 
Victor  Hoglund  of  Park  street,  died 
Wednesdav,  after  an  Illness  of  several 
months.  The  funeral  was  held  Friday 
afternoon  at  2  o'clock,  with  services  at 
the  house,  conducted  by  Rev.  S.  Berg- 
dahl.  pastor  of  the  Swedish  Lutheran 
church.  „     .. 

Marquette — Cyril  Valllne,  a  store- 
keeper at  dne  of  the  Cleveland-Cliffs 
Alger  county  camps,  died  very  suddenly 
Thursday.  An  official  of  the  company 
stated  that  the  rumor  that  he  had  com- 
mitted suicide  was  entirely  without 
basis  of  fact,  and  that  he  had  been  in 
111  health  for  some  time. 

Lake  Linden — The  annual  meeting  of 
the  Houghton  M.  E.  district,  which  In- 
cludes about  fifty  churches  of  the  Up- 
per Peninsula,  will  be  held  at  Lake  Lin- 
den Tuesday  and  Wednesday,  May  11 
and  12.  Delegates  from  all  the  churches, 
It  ia  expected,  will  attend. 


Final  Debate  Monday. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D..  March  20.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald. »— The  last  of  the 
series  of  Intercollegiate  debates  In 
"which  the  North  Dakota  university  will 
take  part  this  year  Is  scheduled  for 
next  Monday  evening,  when  the  strong 
team  from  Hamline  uriverslty  will 
come  here.  The  North  Diikota  team  Is 
composed  of  Arthur  Grtenleaf,  C.  O. 
Stee   and   Riehard   Wenze  . 


i;     DAKOTA  Bf{lEFS    j 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D— The  body  of 
Thomas  Rude,  who  wae  killed  acci- 
dentally on  a  road  Tiear  St.  .lohn,  N. 
D  was  brought  to  Grund  Forks  on 
Wednesday  evening  jind  taken  to  Man- 
\el   where  the  funeral  was  held  Friday. 

Fargo  N.  D. — Monday  Mr.  Morton, 
the  denatured  alcohol  < xpert  of  the 
agricultural  college,  will  start  his  testa 
of  making  denatured  alcohol  from  flax 
straw  and  It  will  only  be  a  short  time 
until  it  will  be  decided  whether  the 
making  of  alcohol  from  that  material 
is    pracHcal    or    not. 

Mlnot,  N.  D. — Judge  Goss  will  be 
a.skpd  to  grant  a  new  trial  In  the  case 
of  Mary  Gebus  vs.  the  Soo  railway.  In 
which  the  plaintiff  seeki  to  recover 
$15  000  for  the  death  of  her  husband, 
who  was  killed  at  the  boo  depot  on 
Aug.    15,    1906. 

Fargo,  N.  D. — A  concert  will  be  given 
under  the  ausplcea  of  tbe  choir 


First  Congregational  church  Saturday 
evening,  March  27.  in  the  church 
rooms.  A  program  of  usual  merit  Is 
now  being  prepared  and  the  concert 
promises  to  be  one  of  the  features  of 
tlie   musical   season. 

Bismarck,  N.  D. — P. 
has  bought  one  of  the 
foot  lots  In  the  city 
thereon  a  three-story 
and  office  block.  The  owner  of  the 
adjoining  lot  has  about  completed  a 
deal  with  Mr.  tvemlngton  for  its  sale 
and  If  this  goes  tlirougli  that  will  be 
built   on    to    match    the   other   building. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D. — The  Great 
North  ~l  has  a  school  of  Instruction 
here  for  a  week  or  so.  The  employes 
are  taught  all  about  the  airbrakes  and 
otlser  matters  and  are  obliged  to  un- 
dergo an  examination.  John  Maher  Is 
a  member  oi  the  committee  in  charge 
of  the   car.  _  ,      ^ 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D. — The  closing 
meeting  of  the  convention  of  the 
Grand  Forks  District  Ministerial  asso- 
ciation was  held  In  the  Methodist 
church  Friday  morning,  being  very  in- 
teresting. The  program  as  arranged 
was  carried  out. 

Valley  City.  N.  D.— N.  P.  Rasmussen, 
a  pioneer  resident  of  Barjies  county, 
is  dead  at  San  Diego,  Cal.,  where  he 
had  been  spending  the  past  few 
months.  Mr.  Rasmussen  has  long  been 
prominent  in  the  politics  of  the  state, 
being  Identified  with  the  populist  gov- 
ernment of  a  few  years  ago. 

Milton,  N.  D. — The  Milton  Business 
Men's  association  at  Its  annual  meet- 
ing elected  the  following  officers: 
President.  H.  G.  Halvorson;  vice  presi- 
dent Gustav  Breck:  treasurer.  George 
Green;  secretary,  O.  T.  Rlshoff;  execu- 
tive committee,  B.  Prom.  P.  R.  Johns- 
ton and  Gustav  Brecke.  ,     ,     ^ 

Jamestown.  N.  D.— Tlie  board  of  edu- 
cation rejected  all  bids  for  the  con- 
struction of  the  new  school.  J.  Bell 
DeRemer  Is  the  architect  in  charge  and 
he  attended  the  board  meeting. 


Kill  Off  Goekroaelits 


Easy  Way  to  Get  RM  ol 
Repnlalvc  Baa*- 

Nearly  every  home  has  the  oockroaoh,  and 
unless  exterminated  he  Increases  at  a  rapid  rate. 
At  the  first  sign  of  a  roach,  put  Steams'  Kleotrlc 
Rat  and  Boaeb  Paste  In  the  sinks  and  oo  tli« 
shelves  at  nl«ht,  and  In  the  mominc  yoo  ma. 
sweep  up  a  panlul  of  dead  cockroaches. 

Steams'  Electric  paste  Is  also  «?•««*•«*•? 
kill  off  rats,  mice  or  other  Termin.  driving  toma 
out  of  tbe  house  to  die. 

Steams'  Electric  Paste  is  sold  ererywherejjjr 
•ent  expr4t$  prepaidon  receipt  of  price,  t  oa.  box 
i6cl0ez.  boxll.oa 

Stearns'  Electrie  Paste  Oo..  G3kleaco»  Uk 


IWT-M  i~rr-rr 


■ 

' 


I 


•w 


22 


THE    DXTLXTTH    EyENDKi   HERALD :     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


1 


uii9  r^ici^i^vffiiiiL? 


By  JOHN  S.  HARWOOD 

JCopyrlfht.  19:9.  by  the  AMOcJat«<l  IJterary  Preiw  > 
^T  Is  quite  customary  these 
days,  when  the  cry  is 
aliroad  In  the  land  that 
the  preacher  is  no  longer 
a  sizeable  man  In  his 
community,  for  the  aver- 
age man  or  woman  to 
look  upon  a  preacher — 
even  the  more  famous  ones — as  Just 
preachers.  Yet  the  fact  of  the  matter 
le  that  today  this  country  possesses  an 
ever-widening  circle  of  preachers  who 
are  more  than  that — wearers  of  the 
cloth  who  are  forces  to  be  reckoned 
with  in  fields  of  activity  far  beyond 
the  church,  making  them,  in  numerous 
cases,  leaders  In  their  extra-clerical  en- 
terprises. 

Some  of  these  preachers  who  are 
more  than  that  have  attained  national 
prominence  as  educators,  as  did  many 
a  preacher  In  the  so-called  good  old 
days,  and  as  heads  of  great  institu- 
tions never  dreamed  of  in  the  times 
when  the  preacher  was  supposed  to 
be  at  his  apogee,  exert  a  potent  and 
far-reaching  Influence  upon  the  citl- 
zenshio   of    tomorrow.      Others   of   tliese 

fireachers  are  civic  workers  in  our 
eading  cities — some  of  them  have 
taken  the  stump  against  political  cor- 
ruption. Then  tlTtre  are  preaclier-edl- 
tors,  preacher-authors,  preacher-sol- 
diers, preacher-scientists,  preacher- 
Bpotsmen,  preacher-diplomats,  preach- 
er-athletes, preacher-sociologists,  and 
preacher-state  officials.  even  to 
preacher-governors — in  fact,  preachers 
who  loom  noticeably  in  almost  every 
honorable    walk    of   life. 

Russell  H.  Conwell,  the  famous  Phil- 
adelphia clergyman  and  liead  of  the 
largest  Protestant  congregation  in  this 
country,  has  built  a  college  and  a  hos- 
pital among  his  other  enterprises,  and 
both  are  directed  by  him.  Frank  W. 
Gunsaulus  of  Chicago  can  turn  with 
equal  versatility  to  either  the  dry. 
hard  facts  of  technology  taught  by  the 
great  Armour  Institute  of  Technology, 
of  which  he  is  the  organizer  and  head, 
or  to  the  fanciful  flights  of  poetry,  of 
which  he  has  written  several  volume."'. 
Archbishops  Ireland  and  Ryan -have 
fought  far  beyond  the  boundaries  of 
Catnoliclsm  against  the  evils  of  di- 
vorce and  intemperance,  and  both  are 
civic  leaders  of  large  Influence  in  their 
respective  cities  of  St.  Paul  and  Phila- 
delphia. Bishop  Samuel  Fallows  of  the 
Reformed  Episcopal  church,  and  For- 
mer Chancellor  Elisha  Benjamin  An- 
drews of  the  University  of  Nebraska 
are  men  of  the  cloth  who  have  also 
worn  the  regimentals  of  war.  as  well 
as  the  mortarboard  of  the  college  cam- 
pus. And  the  bishop,  in  addition,  lor 
years  has  been  the  chief  reformatory 
pianager  for  the  great  state  of  Illinois. 
In  the  venerable  Edward  Everett 
Ifale  the  country  has  not  only  ^. 
preacher,  but  also  the  author  of  "The 
i'an  Without  a  Country."  a  lecturer, 
traveler,  editor,  newspaper  man.  and 
trolder  of  public  thought  on  many  of 
the  vital  qufstions  of  his  day  and  gen- 
eration. Then,  too,  there  Is  Lyman 
Abbott,  also  veneraV>le.  and  also  noted 
•  8  an  editor  and  an  author  both  In  this 
country   and   England. 

Henry  C.  McCook,  the  clerical  rep- 
resentative among  the  famous  '•Fight- 
ing McCooks,"  has  enriched  the  natural 
Studies  of  the  ant.  the  spider,  and 
others  of  God's  small  and  apparently 
Insignihcant  creatures.  In  Henry  A. 
Buchtel.  the  state  of  Colorado  has  a 
Ifovernor  who  was  called  by  it  from 
the  head  of  a  great  university,  which 
first  enticed  the  gentleman  In  question 
from  the  pulpit.  And,  of  course,  the 
average  American  has  heard  more  or 
less  of  Charles  H.  Parkhurst.  whose 
sensational  slumming  enterprises  led 
to  the  exposure  of  New  York  police 
force  graft  and  the  subsequent  over-j^ 
throw  of  Tammany  Hall — a  world- 
famous  Sanskrit  scholar,  literary  man 
and  mountain  climber,  who  ever  since 
has  been  in  the  thick  of  the  fight  con- 
stantly being  waged  by  certain  per- 
sons and  societies  to  purge  the  metro- 
polis of  tliat  which  they  hold  to  be  un- 
necessary evil  and  corruption.  Thus. 
the  list  might  be  extended — one  is 
almost  templed  to  say  to  the  length  of 
a  column  or  two  of  this  paper. 
The  Dlvrrnifled  Activltien  of  a  Bl.<«bop. 
But  of  all  our  versatile  preachers, 
none  is  more  picturesque  or  influential 
than  Bishop  Samuel  Fallows  of  the  He- 
formed  Episcopal  church,  who  is  now 
In  his  seventy-fourth  year.  Like  Dr. 
Conwell  of  Philadelphia  and  Former 
Chancellor  Andrews  of  the  University 
he  has  preached,  fought  and  taught, 
and  like  Dr.  Andrews,  he  has  not  been 
averse  to  taking  part  In  political  dis- 
cussions when  he  considers  the  occa- 
sion ripe  for  his  entrance  Into  that 
m.ost  difficult  of  all  arenas  for  any 
wearer  of  the  cloth  to  occupy  with 
dignity    and   success. 

In  almost  every  respect.  Bishop  Fal- 
lows' career  has  been  varied.  Not  even 
In  the  domain  of  religion  has  he  been 
content  to  follow  one  path.  First  a 
Methodist,  later  an  apostle  of  the 
Reformed  Episcopal  church,  he  has  still 
more  recently  become  an  exponent  of 
the  new  "faith-cure"  in  the  West,  as 
Is  Dr.  Worcester  of  the  Emmanuel 
church  of  Boston  in  the  East.  In  this 
work    Bishop   Fallows    has   the   earnest 


Prison  reform.  In  the  opinion  of 
Bisliop  Fallows,  is  one  of  society's  most 
important  tasks,  and.  apart  from  his 
other  duties  he  has  taken  a  great  deal 
of  time  in  studying  tiiis  problem  not 
In  an  academic  way  by  reading  or 
hearsay,  but  by  mingling  with  the  in- 
mates of  prisons,  confiding  with  con- 
victs and  obtaining  their  confidence, 
and,  later,  by  visiting  them  upon  their 
return  to  the  outer  world,  that  he 
might  help  direct  them  to  better  paths. 
Much  crecfit  has  been  given  the  bishop 
for  the  successful  work  of  the  Illinois 
state  reformatory,  of  whose  board  of 
managers  he  has  been  president  since 
1891  Records  of  its  inmates  dis- 
charged during  the  last  twelve  years 
show  that  over  three-fourths  have  been 
really    reformed 

In  the  Civil  war  Samuel  Fallows 
proved  a  good  fighter,  physically,  as 
well  as  spiritually.  Although  he  en- 
tered the  Union  army  as  a  chaplain, 
he  afterward  shouldered  a  gun  and 
plunged  Into  the  confiict  with  such 
zest  that  for  gallantry  in  action  he 
was  promoted  to  the  rank  of  colonel 
and  later  brevet  brigadier  general. 
At  no  time,  however,  did  he  forget 
his  original  calling.  In  one  battle  he 
was  missed  from  his  post  and  the 
report  was  brought  in  that  he  had 
been  killed.  Some  hours  later  he 
appeared  in  camp  covered  with  mud. 
"We  thought  you  had  either  been 
killed  or  left  on  the  field  to  die,"  said 
the     commanding     officer. 

"No,"  was  the  reply.  "A  young  fel- 
low Whom  I  shot  asked  me  to  stay  by 
him  and  pray  for  him.  I  have  just  left 
him   in  the  hospital — dead." 

When  It  came  time  for  this  chap- 
lain-general— a  combination  consider- 
ablv  rarer  than  that  of  pastor-fighter 
— to  lay  down  the  sword,  he  not  only 
returned  to  the  pulpit,  forsaken  for  the 
defense  of  the  Union,  but  also  plunged 
as  energetically  into  educational  work 
as  previously  he  had  launched  bullets 
and  troops  "in  the  direction  of  the 
"Johnnies."  The  result  was  that  a 
bare  vear  after  the  close  of  the  war 
he  became  a  regent  of  the  University 
of  Wisconsin,  and  five  years  later  his 
fight  for  the  proper  education  of  the 
citizens  of  tomorrow  placed  him  in 
office  as  superintendent  of  public  In- 
struction for  the  state  of  Wisconsin, 
whither  he  had  gone  in  '48  from  his 
birthplace  In  Lancashire,  Eng.  Later 
on,  on  removing  to  Illinois,  the  bishop 
became  a  university  president,  holding 
the  position  for  several  years,  or  un- 
til he  went  over  to  the  Reformed  E'pls- 
copal  church.  But  his  allegiance  to  a 
new  creed  did  not  stifle  his  educational 
work:  today  his  Interest  In  that  branch 
of  activity  is  as  great  as  ever,  and  as 
chancellor  of  the  University  associa- 
tion his  influence  Is  still  large  In  the 
countrv's  higher  educational  circles. 

The  bishop  Is  typical  of  that  small 
class  of  men  who  do  not  let  piling 
years  decrease  their  pile  of  daily  work; 
and  his  latest  enterprise — that  of 
"church  healing" — shows  his  ability  to 
keep  pace  with  modern  thought  and 
movements,  though  he  Is  now  more 
than  three  years  beyond  man's  allotted 
threescore  and  ten.  In  Chicago,  which 
has  been  his  home  since  the  year  be- 
fore the  great  fire — when,  by  the  way, 
he  proved  hlm.^elf  to  be  more  than  a 
mere  preacher — he  Is  well-nigh  univer- 
sally looked  upon  as  one  of  the  West's 
most  versatile  and  Influential  leaders 
In  movements  having  for  their  aim  the 
ultimate   betterment   of  the   race. 

OrKnnlzer  nutl  Heail  of  a  Great  . 
Institute. 
Chicago  also  Is  the  adopted  city  of 
another  versatile  preacher  whose  fame 
Is  equally  as  widespread  as  that  of  the 
bishop's.  This  preacher  Is  none  nther 
than  Frank  Wakeley  Gunsaulus — 
twenty-one  years  the  bishop's  junior 
— who,  by  a  sermon  of  extraordinary 
eloquence,  all  unconsciously  opene'd. 
up  a  new  field  of  work  for  himself,  In 
which  he  has  made  a  name  as  great  as 
that  which  came  to  him  as  head  of 
Chicago's  famous  Plymouth  church 
during  the  years  stretching  from  1887, 
when  he  went  to  the  Western  metrop- 
olis,   until    1899. 

The  sermon  that  gave  Dr.  Gunsaulus 
hlai  chance  to  qualify  as  one  of  the 
country's  technological  experts  was 
delivered  one  Sunday  morning  back  in 
the  panic  year  of  1893.  when  not  even 
a  multi-millionaire  was  supposed  to 
have  In  liis  head  even  a  remote 
thought  of  founding  a  great  education- 
al institution,  let  alone  heavily  endow- 
ing any  established  seat  of  learning. 
Nevertheless,  Dr.  Gunsaulus,  on  this 
particular  morning,  spoke  with  un- 
usual earnestness  and  emphasis  on  the 
crying  need  of  an  Institution  In  which 
poor  youths  could  be  trained  for  vari- 
ous trades.  Such  an  educational  en- 
terprise, he  contended,  would  go  a  long 
way  toward  solving  the  pauper  prob- 
lem witb  which  Chicago,  at  that  time, 
was   pecullarlly   afflicted. 

He  said  what  lay  oh  his  heart,  and 
said  it  straight  from  the  shoulder, 
Gunsaulus  fashion;  and  then — were  the 
man's  innermost  feelings  known — he 
probably  was  seized  with  a  certain 
kind  of  sorrow  that  such  an  institution 
as  he  had  preached  for  was  not  an  Im- 
mediate   prospect    of    establishment. 

The  last  hymn  had  been  sung,  the 
benediction  given,  the  congregation 
was  wending  its  way  out  of  the  doors, 
and  Dr.  Gunsaulus  was  preparing  to 
leave  the  pulpit,  \vhen  up  to  the  pulpit 
steps  came  a  rather  portly  man,  who 
held  out  his  hand  and  shot  this  ques- 
tion  at   the   preacher: 

"Could  you  carry  out  your  Ideas  just 


jFlmcrica  is  Ricb  in  Prcdcbcr-Editors,  Prcdcber'Spommcn, 
Preachcr-€aucator$,  Prcacber-nopeiisis,  Prcacfter-gioic  Work- 
ers, Prcacber-Officiais,  Prcacber-Diplomats,  ana  PreacDers 
lUbo  JIre  Prominent  in  many  Other  Walks  of  Cife. 


expressed    if   you    had   the   means?" 

"Most  assuredly,"  was  the  quick  re- 
sponse. 

"Well,  then,"  said  Philip  D.  Armour, 
"if  you'll  give  me  five  years  of  your 
time,    I'll    give    you    the    money." 

Tiie  beef  baron  kept  his  word.  Out 
of  the  conversation  grew  the  Armour 
Institute  of  Technology,  and  when  Dr. 
Gunsaulus  accepted  Its  presidency  Mr. 
Armour  advanced  him  |dO,000,  his  sal- 
ary for  five  years,  in  one  lump.  To 
enlarge  the  scope  of  the  institute's 
work,  Mr.  Armour  subsequently  gave 
over  $2,000,000.  The  need  for  more 
funds  has  been  Incessant,  because  of 
the  various  organizations  which  Dr. 
Gunsaulus  has  built  up  from  the  Arm- 
our Institute  and  the  Armour  Mission, 
as,  for  example,  the  Doremus  school, 
the  city  kindergarten,  and  the  indus- 
trial school  on  the  340-acre  farm  at 
Greenwood,  where  200  boys  are  trained 
In  body  and  brain  for  the  real  tasks 
of  life. 

But  Dr.  Gunsa-ilus  is  more  than  a 
preacher-educator;  he  also  is  a  preach- 
er-poet, and.  moreover,  a  preacher- 
politician,  and  a  very  active  one  at 
that.  It  Is  ^to  poetry  that  he  turns 
to  free  himself  from  the  burdens  of 
the  institute,  and  declares  that  he  finds 
an  ever-increasing  delight  In  mounting 
Pegasus  for  more  or  less  lengthy 
fiights  Into  the  realms  of  fancy.  As 
tangible  fruit  of  this  recreative  work 
he  has  given  to  the  literary  world  sev- 
eral volumes  of  verse,  which  show  a 
wide  range  of  poetic  thoug'ht  and 
treatment. 

As  a  preacher-politician — using  the 
word  politician  in  Its  best  sense,  of 
course — Dr.  Gunsaulus  Is  no  mean  ad- 
versary .as  many  a  Democratic  leader 
of  the  Middle  West  knows  of  his  own 
experience.  Nor  does  the  strenous  doc- 
tor confine  his  political  activity  to  his 
city  of  Chicago,  in  whose  civic  prob- 
lems he  always  takes  great  interest; 
he  has  also  delivered  slump  speeches 
for  the  hosts  of  Republicanism 
throughout  Illinois  and  the  neighbor- 
ing states  of  Indiana  and  Michigan, 
where  he  Is  In  great  demand  as  a  star 
speaker  when  politics  get  particularly 
hot. 

Possessed  of  tremendous  energy — as 
his  various  activities  show — Dr.  Gun- 
saulus further  Increases  his  cav»acity 
for  work  by  means  of  a  thoroughly 
trained  corps  of  assistants.  To  them 
he  leaves  smaller  details.  His  secre- 
tary keeps  track  of  appointments  and 
corresponderce.  Every  hour  of  the 
day  is  strictly  accounted  for.  He  Is 
up  In  the  mornlhg  as  early  as  a  day 
In  borer,  and  bv  7:30  a.  m.,  lie  is  at  his 
desk  at  the  institute.  From  then  un- 
til 9:30  a.  m.  he  and  his  secretary 
and  stenographer  attend  to  his  volum- 
inous mall.  Then  until  noon  he  re- 
ceives and  talk  wit  hall  who  seek  his 
help  and  advice.  After  luncheon  he 
devotes  the  rest  of  the  afternoon  to 
reading  and  study,  or  consulting"  with 
his  assistants  who  are  reading  and 
studying  for  him.  The  bulk  of  all 
reference  and  research  work  he  turns 
over  to  some  one  else,  and  then  quickly 
digests  the  fruit  of  the  suliordinate's 
labor. 

In  appearance,  as  well  as  in  his 
methods  of  work.  Dr.  Gunsaulus  differs 
from  the  stock-cut  clergyman  of  tra- 
dition. To  Illustrate  the  former  point, 
his  friends  are  fond  of  telling  of  an 
experience  which,  they  say,  befell  him 
when  he  had  gone  out  to  Arizona  to 
Inspect  some  property  held  by  him 
In  that  land  of  deserts,  rattlers,  glla 
nionslers  and  uninterrupted  sunshine. 
Being  fond  of  red  neckties,  and  be- 
lieving they  would  awaken  no  criti- 
ci^m  In  the  desert,  as  they  might  in 
State  street,  Chicago,  the  doctor 
dressed  his  neck  one  morn  in  an  es- 
pecially brilliant  cravat  of  his  favor- 
ite hue.  The  flaming  Ascot,  the  own- 
er's wide-brimmed  black  felt  hat,  his 
heavy  dark~hair  and  bushy  black  mus- 
tache fairly  startled  the  conductor — 
accustomed  though  he  was  to  strange 
habiiaments — as  he  asked  for  the  pas- 
senger's ticket.  Out  came  a  pass,  on 
the  back  of  which  was  the  legend, 
•Rev.   F.    W.   Gunsaulus." 

The  "cagey"  son  of  the  desert  bored 
the  passenger  with  a  steely  eye.  "No, 
vou  don't."  he  exclaimed,  decisively. 
"You  don't  play  that  game  on  me. 
You're  no  preacher.  I  want  your  car- 
fare— and  I  want  it  quick!'  It  was 
In  vain  that  Dr.  Gunsaulus  protested; 
he  was  told  that  he  would  have  to  pay 
or   get    oft.      And    pay    he    did. 

An  hour  or  so  later,  to  the  great 
relief  of  the  Chicagoan.  the  mayor  of 
Santa  Fe  boarded  the  train  and  identi- 
fied him.  But  not  until  his  honor 
swore  legally  and  otherwise,  and  pic- 
turesquely and  fervently,  that  the  red- 
necktled  passenger  was  a  clergyntan, 
did  the  conductor  return  Dr.  Gun- 
saulus'   money. 

A  Preacher  ^ditor  of  3h»tionnl  Fame. 
Among  7e  prceacher-editors — of 
whom  ther^ls  quite  a  notable  com- 
pany— none  >iday  exerts  a  wider  In- 
fluence tha_^  Lyman  Abbott,  who,  cur- 
iously enoutfh,   Is  practically   the  same 


age  as  Bishop  Fallows,  being  only  five 
davs  younger  than  that  famous  Chica- 
goan. Since  1869,  when  he  resigned 
from  a  pastorate  to  engage  in  litera- 
ture. Dr.  Abbott  has  been  one  of  the 
country's  noted-  magazine  and  news- 
paper editors — and  all  that  time,  too, 
he  has  been  among  its  better  .known 
men  of  God,  as  well  as  a  lecturer  of 
no  mean  reputation. 

As  an  editor  Dr.  Abbott  will  go  down 
In  the  history  of  the  American  publi- 
cation field  as  one  who  wa.s  extremely 
fortunate  In  his  editorial  associations 
on  at  least  two  occasions — first,  when 
he  was  colaborer  with  Henry  Ward 
Beecher  in  editing  the  old  Christian 
Union,  and  second,  when  he  and  Theo- 
dore Roosevelt  sliared  the  editorial 
chair  of  the  magazine  which  Dr.  Ab- 
bott    now     heads    editorially. 

But  though  he  Is  best  known  as  a 
preacher-editor-lecturer.  Dr.  Abbott 
has  in  his  possession  a  license  from  the 
state  of  New  York  to  practice  law 
therein;  and  this  he  did— with  tlie  am- 
bition before  him  of  gaining  fame  and 
fortune — before  he  was  influenced  by 
Henry  Ward  Beecher's  sermons  to 
enter  the  pulpit.  Lyman  Abbott  was 
25  when,  in  the  year  before  the  Civil 
war  broke  out,  he  was  ordained  a 
Congregational  minister;  but  though 
he  has  not  hung  out  his  shingle  from 
that  day  to  this  he  has  remained  a 
member  of  the  Empire  State  bar,  and, 
according  to  his  friends.  Is  as  good  a 
lawyer  today  as  many  of  the  well 
known  active  members  of  the  metro- 
politan  bar. 

Because  of  the  great  volume  of  nls 
literary  work,  the  impression  has  long 
been  abroad  that-  Dr.  Abbott  dic- 
tates to  a  stenographer  and  then  re- 
casts the  spoken  words  into  final  form. 
Not  long  since  he  took  occasion  to  cor- 
rect this  impression,  when  he  made 
this  rather  interesting  statement:  "1 
have  to  write  out  every  word  with  the 
pen,"  he  said.  "I  think  I  was  born  with 
with  a  pen  In  my  hand.  I  do  my  own 
writing  because,  as  I  alway.s  speak  ex- 
temporaneously, if  I  should  also  dic- 
tate my  literary  work  I  should  be  In 
danger  of  becoming,  slovenly  In  form. 
Besides  I  think  all  my  work  needs 
some  active  physical  expression;  and 
the  use  of  the  pen  affords  this  neces- 
sarv   exercise." 

Dr.  Abbott  was  moved  to  become  a 
minister  of  te  Gospel  by  Beecher's 
spoken  sermons;  the* Rev.  Dr.  Newell 
Dwight  Hillls.  who  has  wandered 
further  afield  in  the  literature  of  fic- 
tion than  most  preacher-writers,  was 
moved  to  become  a  preacher  by  Beech- 
er's printed  sermons;  and  the  fact  that 
both  of  these  converts  succeeded  their 
converter  In  the  latters  old  pulpit  is 
a  remarkably  strange  colncldence-- 
the  more  so  when  it  is  remembered 
that  Dr.  Abbott  followed  Beecher  In 
the  pulpit' of  Plymouth  church,  and  Dr. 
.Abbott's    immediate    successor    was    Dr. 

Hillls.  .,         ,  • 

While  Dr.  Hillls  can  claim  authorship 
of  a  historical  novel,  the  honors  In  this 
line  among  the  younger  preacher-writ- 
ers of  the  day  doubtless*  belong  to  the 
Rev.  Charles  Dixon.  .Jr..  whose  novels 
dealing  with  problems  and  situations 
peculiarly  associated  with  the  South 
have  given  him  an  international  fol- 
lowing But  the  preacher-writer  of  to- 
day whose  name  is  held  highest  as  a 
writer  of  fiction  is  he  who  probably 
is  the  best  loved  man  of  God  of  this 
day  and  generation — the  venerable  Ed- 
ward Everett  Hale  who,  on  the  3d  of 
next  month,  will  have  passed  his  8.th 
milestone. 

It  was  while  he  was  still  In  his  twen- 
ties that  Dr.  Hale  was  greatly  Im- 
pressed with  the  remark  of  a  then 
famous  preacher  that  every  man 
should  have  an  avocation,  as  well  as  a 
vocation;  and  to  the  influence  that  this 
remark  had  upon  him  the  country  Is 
Indebted  for  "The  Man^  Without  a 
Country,"  and  many  of  tKe  other  good 
\thlngs  that  Dr.  Hale,  as  he  has  gone 
through  life  has  showered  upon  us  in 
his  one  ambition  to  do  good  to  one 
and  all. 
A  Fainona  Dtaelple  of  Ixnak  Walton. 
To  every  true  lover  of  the  great  out- 
of-doors — and  especially  every  devoted 
follQwer  of  IsaaH  Walton-^the  name 
of  Henry  van  Dyke  Is  a  household  one. 
Indeed,  a  vote  of  all  the  enthusiastic 
fishermen  of  the  country  on  the  ques- 
tion. Who  Is  America's  leading  expert 
with  the  rod  and  reel?  would  undoubt- 
edly show  an  enormous  >najorily  for 
Dr.  Van  Dyke.  To  preach,  to  fish  and 
to  write  constitute  a  true  inheritance 
for  Dr.  Van  Dyke;  for  when  he  was  a 
mere  lad  he  was  accustomed  to  spend 
■>vhole  days  fishing  with  Mis  father,  who 


also  was  a  Presbyterian  minister 
writer. 

It  would  seem  that  Dr.  Van  Dyke  has 
the  ambition  to  fish  in  the  waters  of 
every  country  under  the  sun.  With 
his  "father  he  spent  long  vacations 
whipping  the  streams  of  Canada.  He 
has  hauled  in  the  gamey  salmon  oft 
the  Hebrides,  and  he  has  fished  in  the 
Holy  Land.  In  the  very  waters  where 
the  apostles  once  cast  their  nets. 

Among  the  preachers  who  have 
fought  for  civic  righteousness,  the  Rev. 
Dr.  Charles  H.  Parkhurst  is  stUl  best 
known  to  fame.  His  thunderlngs 
against  police-protected  crime  on  that 
memorable  ApriU  Sunday  In  1892,  when 
he  startled  the  entire  nation  by  his 
utterances,  started  a  political  revolu- 
tion which  all  the  forces  of  vice  and 
Iniquity  have  not  been  able  to  smother. 
Twice  Tammany  has  been  defeated  on 
this  issue,  and  never  since  has  crime 
flourished  so  openly  In  tlie  metropo- 
lis. 

Dr.  Parkhurst  once  told  the  writer 
that  he  was  led  to  take  up  arms  against 
corrupt  police  and  graft-levying  city 
officials  because  of  his  Interest  in  young 
men.  He  had  discovered,  after  twelve 
years  of  preaching  in  the  Madison 
Square  Presbyterian  church,  that  ho 
was  unable  to  reach  the  sons  of  many 
of  his  wealthy  parishioners.  Confer- 
ence with  certain  men  of  the  world 
caused  him  to  learn  of  an  alarming 
prevalence  of  certain  forms  of  dissipa- 


tion which  were  ensnaring  the  youth 
of  his  own  congregation.  Tills  dis- 
covery led  him  to  investigate  deeper, 
with  what  result  all  the  world  knows. 
Another  preacher  not  ?d  for  his  civic 
activities  is  the  picturesque  Protestant 
Episcopal  bishop  of  Albany.  William 
Croswell  Doane.  who  might  be  called 
the  best  known  of  the  country's 
preacher-lobbyists,  for  n  his  long  fight 
for  special  legislation  that  might 
guard  society  against  certain  evils, 
which,  he  says,  particularly  menace  it 
at  the  present  time,  he  was  accustomed 
to  appear  before  the  New  York  state 
legislative  committees  in  support  of 
his  pet  measure,  that  of  making  the 
violation  of  the  marriage  contract  a 
crime.  His  labors  were  at  last  crowned 
with  success  two  years  ago.  when  the 
famous  "antl-affnity"  law  was  en- 
acted. 

The  bishop's  visits  to  the  state  capi- 
tal win  long  be  remembered,  because 
he  was  almost  always  attended  by  an 
extraordinary  bodyguard,  a  huge  St. 
Bernard,  which  he  ha<l  named  Cluny. 
after  a  noted  canine  ancestor.  When 
the  biship  would  lay  aside  his  cloak 
and  hat  Cluny  stood  guard  over  Ihem; 
and  at  his  master's  call  he  would  care- 
fully bring  them  to  him.  The  dog  at 
last  became  bo  old  that,  when  accom- 
panying the  bishop  up  ^tate  street  hill, 
he  would  frequently  i  ub  against  the 
churchman's  leg.  as  a  signal  to  stop 
that  he  might  get  his  breath. 


very  anxious  to  get  the  men  out  and 
as  soon  as  the  weather  is  suitable, 
work  will  be  begun  In  cross-country 
running.  The  students  are  atso  very 
anxious  to  get  outdoors  and  as  the 
basketball  season  is  over,  there  ia 
nothing  to  occupy  the  minds  of  those 
who  are  athloticaJlv  inclined  and  whu 
are  very  restless  unless  they  have 
something  to  work  at.  Mr.  Hiestand 
has  hopes  to  turn  out  a  crack  team 
this  year  and  every  Indication  Is  that 
these  hopes  will  bp  realized.  The 
baseball  question  i.«  still  up  in  the  air, 
but  It  looks  as  if  nothing  will  be  done 
in  this  line  this  year,  all  the  efforta 
of  the  students  being  directed  towards 
track  work. 


j  I 


IKID©IHI  S©IHI®@L  iOTI 


Once  more  the  students  of  the  high 
school  gt^t  a  week's  rest  from  the  work 
and    routine   of  school    life. 

At  this  time  It  comes  as  the  spring 
vacation  and  nothing  is  more  w^clcome 
to  the  students  who  have  been  toil- 
ing with  their  books  since  Christmas 
time  without  any  break.  Indeed, 
during  the  balmy  spring  weather  of 
the  last  week  or  two,  the  students  of 
the  school  have  found  it  very  difficult 
to  remain  indoors,  and  every  one  has 
been  longing  for  a  chance  to  get  out 
and  enjoy  IL  The  spring  vacation 
comes  at  a  very  opportune  time. 

The  last  few  months  of  .school, 
which  are  always  the  hardest,  and  the 


those  who  intend  to  graduate,  and 
they  are  a  great  help,  Oeing  the  salva- 
tion of  a  great  many  seniors  who  were 
careless  at  some  time  or  another,  and 
are  given  this  opporturdty  to  make  up. 
•      •      « 

The  Public  Speakin?  club  was  the 
only  club  to  hold  a  meeting  last  week. 
It  being  the  last  week  before  vacation 
and  the  senior  play  taV:lng  up  so  much 
time,  most  of  them  put  off  their  pro- 
grams until  school  commenced  again. 

The  meeting  of  the  Public  Speaking 
club  was  vei-y  well  attended  as  they 
have  all  been  for  the  last  few  months, 
and  a  very  great  inteiest  was  shown 
in  the  debate  for  the  day.  The  de- 
bate was  "Resolved,  rhat  the  United 
States  should  perman<»ntly  retain  the 
Philippines."  Those  on  the  aflflrma- 
tive  were:  -Rodger  Lynch,  Laverne 
Logan  and  Gilbert  Bates.  On  the 
negative  were:  Charl  ?s  Evans,  Bjorn 
Ostby  and  Archie  McDermott.  The 
feature  of  the  flay  wis  the  eloquent 
speech  by  Rodger  Lerch,  which 
.showed  a  deep  interest  and  profound 
knowledge  of  the  subject  on  the  part 
of  the  speaker.  His  delivery  was  also 
very  good,  which  greatly  surprised  the 
members  of  the  club  who  had  heard 
him  before.  However,  despite  this 
he  did  not  succeed  in  convincing  the 
judges  who  gave   the   decision  to  the 

At   the 


How  to  Be 
Free  From  Pain 


it's  a  wrong  to  yourself  and  to  thosa 
dear    to    you    to    suffer    the    tortures    of , 
Rheumatism — its    not    brave    or    cour-  j 
ageous  to  endure  In  silence  when  thera  , 
Is    sure    relief.      Too   much    is    at   stake 
for   you    to   put    it   off.      In    a   month   or  . 
year  from  now,  agony  may  have  twist-  | 
ed    fingers    or    limbs    Into    such    achlntfj 
knots   that   you   will    be   unable   to   help 
vourself     or     work     for     others.       Then 
you   will   be  a   burden,  an  expense  and 
a  trial  to  those  you  love. 

Hill's  Rheumatic  Pills  will  gently  but 
quickly  drive  away  every  twinge  or 
ache — loosen  up  the  stiffened  Joints—* 
give  new  fiexibilily  to  strained  and  tor- 
tured muscles. 

Tlipso  pills  art  made  from  IiMllng  root«  and  h«rl* 
which  (llBsulvc  the  poisons  of  Hheumatlim.  and  Ihea 
Btrtiiellxn  ""<!  geDtly  sUmulate  Kidneys.  Llvar  %n<l 
BcwfU.  so  that  thrse  pt.lsoiia  arc  patard  from  Va» 
body — and   your   aches   and   pains   along   with   Uiein. 

Hiirs  Rheumatic  Pills 

have  befn  in  use  for  7S  years  without  a  tingi* 
change  in  the  fomiiila.  Tliey  r.re  the  only  remedy 
we  kiinw  which  rc.illy  cures  U'.keumalUm  niihout  lea»- 
Irig  trouble  just  as  bad  in  Its  place.  Hill's  Bhett- 
maUc  PUU  are  purely  vegt table.  Tliey  contain  no 
harmful  ralnerals.  such  as  Iodides  and  salyollatea,  to 
upstt  the  dlgfstlon  ir  weaken  the  h<art.  They  e\if% 
by  aiding  nature  to  throw  off  tlie  polsong  which  cauM 
Uheumatlfin.  It  only  takes  a  shrrt  Ume,  and  yoa 
are  free  from  e\€ry  «<  he  and  pain  and  feel  yean 
younger  as  the  deadly  uric  acid  poison  is  dlMoUed 
and  passed   off   as   nature  Intended. 

We  h,-ive  IttUrs  from  ever  18.00D  grateful  peopl* 
who  hare  1,-ccii  freed  from  pain  and  made  well  b# 
tlUs  wondirful  discovery. 

Determine    to    knew    today    what    the    harmleas    bu%; 
wond»rful     healing     herbs    and    roots     used     In     UiU'a 
Kheumallc    niis    will   do    Wx   you. 

TEST  THEM  FREE 

We  realize  that  there  are  hundreds  of  worthleMi 
nostrums  on  the  market — that  you  may  have  been 
deceived  Into  trying  them  and  derived  no  benefit.  If 
so.  you  will  ha\e  a  right  to  be  suspicious.  To  all 
such  we  will  give  a  likeral  sized  package  of  Hill'g 
Rheumatic  Pills  for  a  letter  or  postal  detcrlblng  their 
case.  Addrfss  the  Utter  to  Beldei.  Ar  <'opp.  the  maker*, 
Uept.  108.  illnneapolls,  Minn.  The  package  will  corao 
prepaid.  Pay  t  othing  then  or  at  any  time.  When 
you  find  the  aches  at)d  pains  gtJng.  and  see  yoursetl 
liecomlng  better  and  ttn.ngcr  each  day— then  yo»» 
will  KNOW  and  BELIEVE,  and  will  be  as  aniloua 
to   contlrue   the    rcmwly   and    be   eared   as   we   are   t« 


other      side,      the      negative. 

meeting   the    amendm.mt    to    the    con-|reUeje  ^-■-  -7; "i^J;,,,  ,^^,  p,,„  ,,„„  ,„„  ^^ 


ROBERT  ELY, 
President   of   the   Senior   Class. 


seniors  esnecially  will  take  advantage 
of  their  last  vacation  during  their  high 
school   life  to  prepare   for  them. 

On  the  last  Saturday  of  vacation,  a 
week  from  today,  examinations  will  be 
conducted  in  the  school  for  the  bene- 
fit of  those  who  are  behind  in  their 
work  and  who  wish  to  get  in  good 
standitig.  A  great  many  students 
will  take  advantage  of  these,  especially 


Some  of  tDc$e  Uersatile  men  of  the  Clotb  JIre  frank  m. 
Gunsaulus,  Russell  %  Conwell  BisDops  Doane  and  Tallo\ps, 
Renrv  Uan  DyKe,  €dward  Evereti  Rale,  Cyman  Wtm,  €. 
Benlamin  Andrews,  Renry  C.  IllcCook  and  Benry  JI.  BucMel. 


stitutlon  was  voted  ujjon  and  passed, 
by  which  elections  for  officers  will  be 
held  three  times  a  year.  The  club  is 
now  conducting  the  ;ry-outs  for  the 
interclass  debates,  whioh  will  be  pulled 
off  in  chapel  as  soon  as  the  teams  are 
chosen.  The  first  ju  ilor  try-out  will 
be  held  the  Monday  that  school  com-  ' 
mences  on  the  question  that  the  United 
States  should  so  increase  the  navy  as 
to  continue  to  rank  second  among  the 
naval  powers.  These  interclass  de- 
bates are  arousing  a  i?reat  deal  of  in- 
terest In  the  school  and  when  the 
teams  are   picked  sone  warm  debates 

win  be  held  in  chape  . 

•  •      • 

The  .senior  play  was  the  whole  thing 
at  the  school  duirng  the  week  and  was 
about  the  only  thin?  discussed  all 
week  by  the  putJils.  The  reserved 
seats  were  all  sold  out  in  a  couple  of 
days  and  new  ones  had  to  be  added. 
A  large  sale  of  unreserved  seats  was 
also  made  and  so  a  record-breaking 
crowd  was  assur<  d  beforehand. 
Archie  Glass,  the  bu;iness  manager 
has  been  kept  busy  all  week  arranging 
for  the  production,  as  also  was  Dwight 
Larrowe,  the  stage  manager,  who 
worked  very  hard  to  j.et  the  stage  Into 
good  condition.  The  final  rehearsal 
was  held  Thursday  afternoon,  and 
everything  went  off  fine.  Mr.  Cus- 
tance'.s  addition  to  th  ;  play,  the  coun- 
try choir,  was  one  of  the  best  features 
in  the  rlay  and  made  a  big  hit. 

•  «      • 

As  soon  as  vacatior  is  q\er  It  is  ex- 
pected that  the  woric  for  the  track 
team  will  be  begun.       Mr.  Hiestand  is 


^/. 


druggist. 
Lenex   Drug   Store. 


Lyeeum    Pharmaey. 


OCEAN  STEAMSHIPS. 


Amerlcian 
Line 


W7 

SP 


rE 


Atlantic 

Transport 

Line 

rr 


Frequent  Sailings  to 

LONDON,  PARIS,  OUEENSTOWN. 

LIVERPOOL,   DOV^R,    ANTWERP. 

PLYMOUTH,     CHERBOURG. 

SOUTHAMPTON.  ITALT 

Fine  Fleet  of  Large  Steamers 


Red  Star 
Line 


Alt 

f; 

E  9 


WhHe  Star 
Line 


OirioeHi       llil     South     Third    St.,     Minne. 
apollM,   Minn.,  or   Local   Aaientm. 


liii-iCERlNEl  SALVE 


tsamre  cui-o  for  C'bronlo  I'lcera.Bone  Ulcera^ 
Bcr.T7alo';sUIrer«,  Varicose  Ulcer»,Mercr.r- 
lal  l'lceri«, Fever  .Sor«>B.Oansrene. Blood  Pol- 
enn-ng,  AVhlUfKwelUii;;,  I'oUonod  Woaiida. 

»;!  sore*  of  long  Bta  Utr.t^.Pesltlvely  never  taUi».(,ur«i 
a350  Cnta,  BurnH,  Boil".  Felnnn,  (;arhuDrIe% 
Ab6ce«<^eii.  For  Hale  bydrugglits.  .M&tl25caii(l.50c. 
i     V    AI.LEN  MEI)ICL>E  CO .     ST.  Paci..  Miwa^ 


■  i 


I       4 


1  , 

f 

r 


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-T- 


M»« 


iiUnn 


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i 


r 

J  -     '  '" 

A — ; ' 

■" 

■'■ 

— 

'  - 

-"^-" 

^_ 

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t 


■ 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALS^     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


In     nuics     on     gaidemng     last     wook 
tl.fre  was  a  mistake  made.     Instead  or 
utiing  a  shovel  for  liiinsplantlnK  celery, 
11  should  have  been  a  trowel. 
JLettuee. 

Lettiue  can  t>c  forced  for  early  use 
either  in  the  hotbed  or  cold  frame.  A 
cold  frame  is  the  same  as  a  hotoea. 
■without  tlie  heating  material.  Merely 
a  frame  with  sarsh  on  top.  so  as  to  pro- 
tect tlie  plants  from  nlglit  frosts,  de- 
pending for  heat  of  the  sun.  On  cold 
nights  these  should  b.e  covered  with 
old  carpels,  etc..  the  same  as  the  hot- 
beds. The  seed  should  be  sown  In 
ilRt.s.  and  when  large  enough  to 
the  soil  of  the  bed,  in  rows  about  four 
inches  apart  in  the  rows,  and  the  rows 
about  eight  inches  apart.  The  soil 
should  be  rich  and  light.  A  flbrotis, 
sandy  loam,  well  enriched  with  well- 
rotted  cow  manure,  is  most  suitable. 
AVater  liberally,  shade  from  hot  sun, 
end  give  plenty  of  air  w  hen  the  wea- 
ther is  suitable.  Shading  can  be  done 
by   whitewashing  the  glass. 

Radlijhes  of  tlie  extremely  early 
kinds  can  be  grown  in  the  cold  frame 
or  hotbtd.  The  seed  should  be  sown 
tl.inly  in  the  soil  of  the  bed,  and  if  too 
thick,  should  be  thinned  out.  so  as  to 
stand  about  seven  inches  apart  in  th.e 
rows,  which  should  be  six  Inches  apart. 
OnioBS. 

Onions  can  be  much  improved  In  size, 
«arliiie.s3  and  surenesa  of  a  crop,  by 
what  is  callod  the  new  process.  This 
Is  to  sow  in  tlats,  or  the  soil  of  the 
bed  six  weeks  or  two  months  ahead 
of  th0  time  for  outdoor  sowing,  and 
when  a  few  Inches  high,  transplanting 
to  the  open  ground.  The  ground  must 
bo  rich  and  well  worked.  The  row-s 
should  bo  at  least  one  foot  apart,  and 
the  plants  about  four  inches  apart  in 
ttid  rows.  Good  drainage  is  absolutely 
noceasary.  This  Is  not  really  a  new 
process,  as  I  liave  used  it  all  my  life 
as  a  gardener,  and  was  in  common 
U30  when  I  learned  gardening,  at  least 
In  the  neighborhood  where  I  lived.  The 
large  Spanish  typ«s  ot  onions  are  best 
for  this  purpose,  but  any  kind  can  be 
treated  in  this  manner  with  advant- 
age. 

Tor  early  green  onions,  the  Egptlan 
Perennial,  oi  the  Welsh  early  white 
bunchiiiar,  can  bo  sown  In  August  or 
September,  and  being  entirely  hardy, 
can  remain  In  the  ground  all  winter. 
and  will  produce  the  earliest  green 
onions  in  the  spring.  By  careful  pull- 
ing, leaving  one  every  few  Inches,  the 
two  above  named  kinds  can  remain  in 
tlie  ground  for  several  years,  as  they 
are  perennials  and  Increase  by  mul- 
tiplying from  the  root.  The  Egyptian, 
alao  produces  a  cluster  of  small  onions 
on  the  top  of  the  main  stem.  These 
way  be  planted,  and  Is  the  usual  way 
of  making  new  beds.  Earthing  up 
lengthens  the  blanched  ends,  which  is 
the  part  eaten. 

Of  the  Spanish  tvpe  the  Prize  Taker 
and  .\ilsa  Craig  are  the  large.«t.  The 
latter  is  perhaps  the  largest  in  the 
•world,  and  coming  from  the  North  of 
Kngland,  is  more  hardy  and  better 
suited  to  this  climate.  To  obtain  the 
largest  specimens  transplanting  is 
rece.'*.-<ary.  The  extra  trouble  will  be 
more  than  compensated  for  by  the 
ereat«r  yield.  For  pickling,  the  small 
earlv  white  kinds  are  us-ed,  such  as 
White  Queen  and  White  Barletta.  Both 
are  verv  earlv  and  should  be  sown 
thickly  In  rows  a  foot  or  more  apart, 
to  allow  for  the  use  of  the  wheel  hoe. 
The  ground  should  be  made  rich  with 
veil  rotted  cow  maniire,  and  well 
drained.      A   top   dressing    of    nitrate    of 


soda    when    the    plants    are    young 
hasten    the    growth    of    any    onion, 
wanted    for    green    onions,    seed    of 
large     white     kinds     should     be 
thickly     and     used     as     soon 
enough.     For  earliest  use  sow 


will 
If 
the 
sown 
as  large 
In  hotbed 
or  cold  frame,  it  is  imperative  to  keep 
onions  ireo  from  weeds  and  to  culti- 
vate not  deeply  but  often.  The  wlieol 
hoe  should  be  run  between  the  rows 
at  least  once  a  week,  setting  the  cut- 
ters so  as  to  draw  the  earth  from  the 
plants,  thus  allowing  them  room  to 
bulb.  When  the  tops  begin  to  die 
down  or  drie  up,  the  onions  are  ripe. 
If  towards  the  fall  the  cop-s  remain 
green,  many  gardeners  break  them 
tlown.  This  can  be  done  by  rolling  an 
empty   barrel  over  the  rows;   this  helps 


lo  stop  the  growth  and  ripen  the  bulbs. 
When     cold     weather     approaches,     the 


le 

left    for    a 

sun.      The 

be   cut    off 

In    a    cool,    dry 

not    to    let    onions 

tlavor;   but  It"   once 

so    til!    wanted    tor 

too    small    for    use 

be    kept    for    sets    and    planted    in 

spring    at    seed    sowing    time;    they 

produce    larger  and   earlier   onions 


roots    should    be    pulled    and 
day    or    two    lo    dry    in    the 
lops    and    roots   should    then 
and:    the    onions    stored 
place.       It    is    better 
iree/.e,  as  they  lose 
frozen,    keep    them 
use.       Jilpe     onions 
can 
the 

will   i-.^ — ^--    -  X,.    .   I 

than  from  seed.  To  grow  sets,  that  i 
sm<<ll  onions  to  plant  next  year,  seed 
should  be  sown  very  thickly  on  poonsh 
soil,  and  when  ripe,  pu.led  and  stored 
as  for  other  purposes.  Onions  are  one 
of  the  most  important  crops  we  have, 
and  great  care  should  be  taken  to  In- 
siire  a  good  crop.  It  Is  not  a  sure 
crop  In  the  North,  as  often  they  do 
not  ripen  enough  to  keep  well,  so  the 
earliest  kinds  should  >>e  sown  In  the 
open  ground.  I  have  found  the  Aus- 
tralian kinds  do  the  best,  and  if  started 
In  the  hotbed  and  transplanted,  many 
others  will  yield  a  good  crop.  The 
flat  kinds  are  generally  the  earliest. 
The  globe  shaped  take  longer  to  ma- 
ture, but  are  milder  and  more  produc- 
tive. 

Forcing    L,ettuce. 

There  was  an  article  in  The  Herald 
a  few  days  ago  on  forcing  lettuce  for 
winter  and  spring  use,  In  Duluth.  in- 
stead of  shipping  It  from  Orand  Rapids, 
Mich.  This  ought  to  be  a  good  place 
for  such  an  enterprise.  '  It  has  been 
tried  on  a  small  scale  with  good  re- 
sults. The  trouble  -seems  to  be  want 
of  capital  and  means  of  transporta- 
tion If  some  one  with  capital  enough 
to  carry  the  idea  out  on  a  paying  scale 
would  start,  there  is  no  doubt  of  It 
paying.  There  Is  a  large  and  Increas- 
ing outlying  country  besides.  It  Is 
pays  the  Grand  Rapids  people  to  ship 
their  produce  it  would  pay  here  ju.st 
as  well  There  Is  one  difficulty.  All 
land  available,  at  a  reasonable  price,  is 
so  dlfficu'f  of  access.  Most  of  it  lies 
beyond  the  hills,  which  surround  the 
city.  All  land  available,  at  a  reason- 
able price  Is  so  difficult  to  get  Into  and 
out  of  town  during  the  greater  part 
of  the  winter  There  Is  often  good 
sleighing  In  the  country  and  none  in 
town.  The  grades  are  all  so  sleep  that 
with  the  best  of  roai«s  It  Is  a  great  tax 
•  m  the  best  of  teams  to  get  to  the  top 
of  the  hills.  If  roads  with  an  easier 
grade  could  be  made,  or  Interurban  street 
car  Une.s  with  freight  cars  attached 
were  established,  there  would  be  much 
more  encouragement  and  no  doubt  some 
one  or  even  a  company  for  forcing 
vegetables  in  winter,  would  start  into 
business.  Lettuce,  radishes,  tomatoes 
and  cucumbers  could  be  grown,  besides 
a  great  number  of  oltier  vegetables.  It 
is  done  elsewhere  and  could  Just 
easily    be    done    here 


in    any    way    effect    or    Influence    these  i 
buys'  lives.  ' 

The  routine  of  the  camp  life  is 
ilnne  by  the  members  of  the  party.  It 
is  a  great  training  and  as  I  look  now 
upon  the  boys  who  have  made  these 
trips  and  analyze  their  present  day 
lives,  1  can  see  the  Influence  which  the 
Journeys  have  had  upon  them.  In 
the  development  of  health  and 
strength,  I  can  see  that  these  trips 
have  created  strong,  sound  boys,  dif- 
ferent altogether  from  the  boys  about 
them.  They  have  limbs  of  iron  and 
grand,  sound  bodies.  The  trips  have, 
as  a  rule.  Increased  the  size  of  the 
average  l)oy  of  the  camp  two  or  three 
inches   in   the  seven    weeks   noting. 

The  cost  of  conducting  these  sum- 
mer outings  has' gradually  Increased. 
The  three-boy  outing  cost  about  one' 
hundred  dollars  for  thr«»e  weeks.  The 
fifty-boy  outiii£  costs  all  of  $2,000  for 
seven  weeks.  A  large  item  of  cost  is 
the  equipment,  for  it  is  absolutely 
necessary  to  furnish  each  boy  with  a 
sensible  and  hygienic  costume  for  liv- 
ing in  the  open.  I  have  designed  a 
costume  which  seems  to  fit  every  con- 
dition perfectly,  costing  about  #4.30. 
Care  must  be  taken  that  the  shoes  are 
of  good  quality  and  have  been  "broken 
in"  before  the  start  is  made.  The 
expense  of  a  party  of  fifty  l.s  between 
$25  and  $30  a  day.  Then  there  are 
the    horses   and    wagons,    two    difflcult 


if    properly    financed,    and    cared    for 
during  the  summer,  these  Items  could 
bo  made  to  pay 
earned    last    year 
commissions  and 


at  the   theater  doo 
coming   in   at    the 
$2,726    for    twenty 
When    one   cons 
that   have    been 

on   these  summer;^ 

impossible    to    speak 
them.        We  are  day 
onward,  and  we 
at    every    hour 


emselves.        We 

no    clear    of    all 

ntages  charged 

e  total   money 

offices      being 

performances. 

the      benefits 

ed    by   the    boys 

els,  It  Is  almost 

In    words    about 

by  day  traveling 

are  seeing  new  sights 

of«4ke    day;     we    are 


among  vineyards, BPE^^ftre  in  the  can- 
yons, we  are  by  Hie  lushing  waters, 
we  are  plunging  *ito  the  depths  of 
the  mountains,  le«ng  civilization  on 
behind;  we  are  mStlnfg  friends  In  the 
populous  communities  through  which 
We  pass;  we  are  lying  down  at  night 
with  the  stars  above  us;  we  are  swim- 
ming in  the  broad  rivers,  learning 
every  day  of  nature  and  geography 
and  infinitesimal  things  that  go  to 
make  up  this  beautiful  world.  It  is 
a  dream-life,  this  walking  in  the  sun- 
shine; and  although  it  Is  at  times  a 
hardship,  and  though  it  teaches  them 
a  thousand  iessona  Jn  bearing  each 
other's  infirmitie.s,  in  eating  unpleas- 
ant foods,  and  tr>'lng  to  live  together 
in  harmony  and  peace,  it  brings  us 
all  back  stronger  and  nobler,  and  filled 
with  countless  remembrances  that 
I  take   the    place   of   idle   gossip    during 


problems  for  the  novice  to  handle,  but  i  the  year  to  come. 

HORTON  MINE  STARTS  WORK 

Arizona  Property  Resumes  Afier  Being  Idle  Eighteen 

Months—Several  Sacks  of  High  Grade 

Ore  Now  Ready  to  Ship. 


as 


Phoenix,  Ariz.,  March  20. — L.  J. 
Horton  Is  preparing  to  begin  opera- 
tions again  at  his  mine,  thirty  miles 
northwest  of  Phoenix,  after  it  has  lain 
idle  for  a  year  and  a  half.  When  the 
panic  caused  a  shut-down  of  nearly 
all  of  the  srhelters,  Mr.  Horton  had 
several  .sacks  of  good  ore  taken  from 
a  fifty-foot  shaft  i-eady  for  shipment. 
It  is  still  on  the  dump. 

For  several  years,  Hort'm  has  work- 
ed his  property  in  a  style  both  strik- 
ing and  unique.  He  has  an  immense 
body  of  surface  ore.  from  which  he 
has,  with  methods  of  his  own  manu- 
facture extracted  $8,000  or  $10,000 
in  gold.  His  first  experiment  was 
with  an  arra.ster  constructed  at  the 
Agna  Fria  river,  three  miles  from  the 
mine.  The  tailings  from  this  assayed 
$12.50  per  ton.  a  los.s  much  too  great 
to  sustain.  He  then  constructed  a 
home-made  cyanide  plant,  and  hauled 


THE  OHIO  COPPER  COMPANY 


water  three  miles  to  the  mine  in  a 
home-made  tank.  With  this  he 
workeii  the  ore  frajpi  a  fifty-foot  shaft. 
With  depth,  howevter,'  there  appeared 
more  copper,  lead>AnJ  silver  and  to 
get  the  best  resim^«-equlred  smelter 
treatment  to  ohtd^^yhe  gold  as  well 
as  other  values.      JxO 

Horton  Is  now  ||*»^aring  to  sink  a 
shaft  to  water  lev*l.  He  believes 
thfvt  at  depth  the  \apper  values  have 
been  precipitated  sLnk  that  the  mine 
which  carries  good^gjld  values  at  the 
surface,  wll  prov«>'"  to'  carry  immense 
copper  deposits' at. Jf)^eT  depths. 

The  property  fias  recently  been 
transferred  Into  tli^  ■^wntrship  of  the 
Trixey  Copper  iftlihig  company,  of 
which  Horton  is  president.  It  is  cap- 
italized conservatively  at  a  half  mil- 
lion dollars,  and  a  block  of  50,000 
shares  has  been  offered  for  20  cents 
per  share,  the  pro^^e^s  of  which  will 
be  used  in  develonin«^ut. 


quette  people.  The  Kloman  was  never 
opened  to  the  depths  at  which  It  is 
now  known  that  the  largest  deposits 
exist  in  the  Republic  field,  and  it  is 
expected  that  important  discoveries 
will  result  from  the  diamond  drill 
work  to  be  undertaken  by  the  Cleve- 
land Cliffs  people.  The  location,  di- 
rectly -west  of  the  Cambria  Steel  com- 
pany's Republic  mine,  is  a  very  favor- 
able one.  It  is  understood  that  In  the 
event  the  Cleveland  Cliffs  company  de- 
cides to  acquire  the  property,  control 
will  be  transferred  to  it  for  a  consid- 
eration  of   $125,000. 

New  Con»pre»»ior  For  the  Baron. 
The  Breitung  Interests  have  ordered 
a  thirty-drill  air  compressor  for  their 
Baron  mine,  at  Humboldt,  Marquette 
range,  the  plant  at  present  in  service 
being  of  too  small  capacity  for  pros- 
pective needs.  The  shaft  at  this  prop- 
erty is  to  be  put  down  one  or  two 
additional  levels  this  year,  and  a  ma- 
terial Increase  Is  to  be  made  in  the 
working  forces. 

At  the  Mary  Charlotte  No.  2  prop- 
erty a  new  mine  which  the  Breitung 
people  are  opening  at  Negaunee.  a 
depth  of  375  feet  has  been  attained  and 
the  shaft  is  sinking  to  an  additional 
level.  A  shaft  house.  85  feet  In  height 
and  of.  Washington  flr,  is  in  progress 
of  erection.  Ore  has  been  hoisted 
throughout  the  winter.  No  further 
stockpile  room  is  available  at  the  com- 
pany's Breitung  Hematite  mine,  In  the 
same  locality,  and  the  product  of  that 
property  is  now  being  taken  out 
through  the  main  shaft  at  the  Mary 
Charlotte  No.  1.  Stocking  ground  is 
limited  at  thi.«i  latter  mine  also,  and 
Just  as  soon  as  navigation  opens  ship- 
ments will  be  started.  Two-thirds  of 
the  company's  season's  output  has  al- 
ready  been    sold. 

An  Interesting  report  current  on  the 
Gogebic  range  is  that  the  United 
States  .«Jteel  corporation  intends  to  es- 
tablish a  big  powder  factory,  at  which 
will  be  made  the  dynamite  used  by 
the  company  in  Its  mining  operations. 
The  corporation  Is  materially  the 
largest  consumer  of  explosives  In  the 
Lake  Superior  region,  and  it  is  un- 
questioned that  to  carry  out  the  re- 
ported project  would  be  In  the  interest 
of  lessened  cost.  The  proposed  loca- 
tion of  the  plant  is  near  Ironwood. 

• 

Are  vour  tenants  the  sort  who  "let 
the  landlord  worry"  about  the  rent?  A 
few  Insertions  of  a  want  ad.  will  find 
you  the  sort  of  tenants  who  do  that 
part  of  the  worrying  themselves. 


DR.  CHAS.  A.  HOAG 

The  Successful  Chicago 
Specialist 

will  be  in  Superior,  ^V1(».,  at  the  Hotel 
Supcrinr,  Tuendny,  .March  ::ard,  1»05>. 
Office  honrM,  9  a.  ni.  to  V  p.  m-,  nnd  In 
Anhliind  nt  the  Coininerfinl  House, 
WedneMday,   Msreh    ::4th,   lUOD. 


TO  MONTANA 

IDAHO 

WASHINGTON 

OREGON 
BRITISH  OOLUIHBIA 

From  Duluth  and  Superior  Daily  during  March 
and  April.  Tickets  are  good  in  Tourist  Sleep- 
ing Cars  on  pa/ment  of  Berth  Fare,  Good  via 
Direct  Line  or  via  St.  Paul  and  Minneapolis. 

Tourist  Sleeping  Cars 

on  the  Oriental  Limited  and  Fast  Mail.  For 
full  information  and  illustrated  literature, 
address 


FRED  A.  HILLS, 

Northern 
Passenger     Agent, 

432    W.     Superior 

Street, 
DUIiUTH.    BUXN. 


FRED  HALL, 

City    Passenger 
and  Ticket  Agent. 

Cor  Broadway 
and    Tower    Ave., 
SUPERIOR,  WIS. 


ALASKA-YUKOX-PACIFIC    EXPOSITIOX,    SEATTLE,      JTJXE    1- 

OCT.    16.   1909. 
ROSE     FESTIVAL,     PORTLAND,  ORE..  JITXE  7-12,   1909. 
NATIONAL  IHRIGATJON  CONGRESS,  SPOKANE.   WASH.,  AUG. 

9-14,  1909. 


JOHN   WHELAN. 


THROUGH 
i  CALIFORNIA 


The  Columbia's  Park  Boys' 
Club,  Fifty  Strong:,  Makes  a 
Record  for  Summer  Walk- 
ing: Trips— Suggestions  for 
Coming  Vacation  Tours. 

By  Major  Sidney  S.  Peixotto. 


Hie 


in 


of 

Yose- 

He 


(Exclii.>ii\e  .Service   Charities  and 
Commons  l^ress  Iim-eau.> 

(Major  Pel.xottos  walking  trips 
California  have  become  famous.  Start- 
ing ten  years  ago  w^ith  three  boys  for 
companions  he  has  spent  weeks,  every 
summer,  wtih  growing  parties 
youngsters  tramping  through 
mite  and  along  the  Pacific 
Is  head  of  the  Columbia 
club  and 
recruited 
led  nfty 
Eureka, 
other    boys 

For  the  last  ten  j-ears  I  have  made 
walking  trips  to  the  different  parts  of 
California.         My    first      summer 
spent    walking    with 
Stockton   to  the 
after    twelve 
we 
In 


the 
coast 

Park    Boys' 
from  that  organization  he  has 
his   marchers.        Last    year 
bovs     north     to     the     city 


he 
of 


His    suggestion      may      help 
clubs    to    orgaunlze    similar 


was 

three    boys   from 

Yosemlte   valley,   and 

day.s    in   this   wonderland 

retraced  oursteps  back  to  the  city. 

1901     I   led  a  party  of  twelve  boys 

• on 

as 


experience 
consider    It 


to 

route 


Into    Yosemlte    and   my 
this  trip   caused    me   to 
an  impossible  future  journey  for  such 
a  large  party  of  youngsters.        It  was. 
therefore,    decided   in    the   summer    of 
1903   to  take  a   long  overland  journey 
to    the    North,    the    objective    point 
be   the    city    of    Eureka.        T 
vould  lend  us  through  the  coa.st  coun- 
tries   of   the    state,    through    the   great 
redwood  lumber  forests  and  eventually 
home  along  the  Pacific  ocean.        It  is 
a    delightful    and    attractive    jouriiey. 
but  the  roads  are  very  steep  and  ditfi- 
cult   for   the   horses.        The   first   party 
that    made      this      trip      consisted    of 
eighteen   members.        From    this   time 
the    walk.s    began    to      take      a      more 
definite  and  organized  character.     The 
next  summer  I   enlarged  the  group  to 
twenty-four.         We    walked    from    San 
Jose,       500       miles       to       th.-       .south, 
following   the      old      Kings      highway 
through   the    Mission    countrj-   of    Cali- 
fornia.       This   makes  a   trip  most  at- 
tractive to  boys.       The  entire  country 
along   the    Southern    Ocean      coast      is 
through    populous    towns      and      well 
tilled    valleys,    and    on    our    way    the 
Journey    was    made   delightful   and   at- 
tractive by  the  attention  which  we  re- 
ceived     from      the      numerous    towns 
where    we    were    often    guests    of    the 
citizens. 

The  next  summer,  I  enlarged  the 
party  to  thirty-six  persons  and  we  re- 
traced our  steps  to  Eureka.  Those 
vho  were  interested  in  the  develop- 
ment of  these  walking  trips  began  to 
remind  me  that  I  was  over-stepping 
my  abilities  by  enlarging  the  party  to 
thi.s  number  of  boy.s.  It  was  argued 
that  the  individual  work  became  sec- 
ondary when  the  number  was  In- 
creased to  such  a  large  group.  To  a 
certain  extent  this  was  true,  but  my 
desire  was  to  give  a  greater  number 
of  boys  the  privileges  of  enjoying 
these  beautiful  outings  and  gain  the 
beneficial  results  which  were  so  ap- 
parent in  building  up  phy.sical  and 
mural  character  In  every  boy  who  had 
had  the  privilege  of  being  a  member 
of    previous    walking   parties. 

These  summer  trips  were  inter- 
rupted by  the  fire  and  catastrophe  of 
1906.  The  following  year,  forty-five 
boys  were  prepared  and  taken  on  a 
second    journey   to   Los   Angeles. 

La.st  year,  1908,  we  again  went  over 
the  Eureka  trip  with  a  party  of  fifty 
boys  and  not  only  did  we  make  the 
journey  in  harmony  and  with  the  ut- 
most order  and  good  spirit  In  our 
camn,  but  we  achieved  a  success  in  all 
departments  of  camp  life.  which 
.  makes  the  memory  of  this  trip  the 
anner  year  of  the  ten 
•pent  walking  with  the 
The  summer  trips  of 


which  I   have 

boys. 

the  Columbia 


Park  Boys'  club  have  certainly  de- 
veloped beyond  my  fonde.st  dreams. 
In  the  11»01  trip  the  expenses  became 
so  formidable  a  feature  that  I  thought, 
at  the  last  moment,  of  giving  a  little 
.show  as  we  passed  through  the  various 
towns  and  cities  along  the  line  of  our 
march.  It  was  a  hastily  arranged 
evening's  performance,  but  entertain- 
ing had  been  so  much  a  part  of  our 
club  lifo  in  the  years  gone  by,  that 
we  decided  to  put  our  best  singers 
and  our  best  comedians  on  the  stage 
and  let  them,  in  a  simple  way,  enter- 
tain with  their  accomplishments.  We 
always  had  a  costume  closet  as  a  part 
of  our  club  equipment  and  from  this 
we  licked  out  some  of  the  nicest 
things  and  arranged  a  simple  pro- 
gram. The  starting  oft'  was  a  dis- 
appointment. The  audiences  were 
small  and  discouraging,  but  towards 
the  end.  as  we  entered  the  country  far 
away  from  the  metropolis,  the  inter- 
est became  greater  and  we  were  re- 
warded with  success  in  our  theatrical 
ventures.  The  receipts  taken  in  at 
the  theater  doors  more  than  paid  for 
the  summer  oufing  for  the  party  of 
eighteen  members.  During  this  sum- 
mer, to  attract  the  audiences  to  the 
theaters,  the  boys  gave  a  marching 
drill  in  the  streets  Just  before  the 
theater  opened  It  was  a  military 
ilrill  of  excellent  quality  and  with  the 
drum  and  bugle  corps,  made  a  very 
Interesting  impression  as  a  prelude  to 
our  evening  performance. 

The  next  .summer,  on  the  Los  An- 
geles trip,  we  again  arranged  a  the- 
atrical performance.  The  "show"  was 
greatly      improved.  It      was      well 

thought   out   and   well   acted.        It   re- 
ceived   praise   and   approbation   every- 
where   and    there    was    a    hundredfold 
increase  In  the  receipts  at  the  theater 
doors.        The      following      year,    band 
music     began    to     be    Introduced     into 
the  club  and   when   the  summer   time 
came,  it  was  possible  to  form  a  band 
and  drum  corps   in  place  of  the  mlll- 
tar>-    drill.         This    we    found    to    be    a 
greater    hilp    than    any    other    feature 
j  that  We  had   introduced  and  the  band 
I  Of    that    year,    though    not    conside'Ved 
a   veiT'  ordinary   affair,   was  a   power- 
ful  addition  to  the  summer  trips  and 
to  the  success  of  our  theatrical  shows. 
The  band  has  developed  In  the-=e  years 
to    the    grand      musical      organization 
which    made   the  journey  last  year  to 
the  city  of  Eureka  and  down  the  coast. 
This  crack  band  would  be  able  to  walk 
through   the  streets  of  any  metropolis 
and  attract   the  highest   praise.        The 
band,    consisting    of   every   member   of 
the   party,   fifty  in   all,      whose      music 
was  above    the   ordinary     and      whose 
concert    work    was    exceptional,    made 
a  deep  impression  all  along  the  route 
and  undoubtedly  packed  the  houses  to 
the  doors.        As  a  marching  organiza- 
tion, it  was  worthy  of  mention,  for  its 
drills    and    street    work    were    of    the 
highest    character.         It    ought    to    be 
added,  in  speaking  of  the  theater  side 
of  the  life  of  the  camp,  it  is  of  no  more 
importance    to    the    club      than      their 
ba.seball  or  their  daily  camp  life.     Af- 
ter the  first  two  evening  performances, 
little    attention    is    given      to      further 
bettering  the   "show."        There  are   no 
rehearsals,   nor   no      Iresome,      tedious 
hours    spent    In    keeping    the    "show" 
up  to  a  standard.        It  all  comes  hap- 
pily  and   naturally  that   the   boys   are 
not  bound  by  any  unnecessary  prepar- 
ations, though  during  the  day  the  con- 
versation sometimes  falls  upon  the  bad 
breaks   or   the   roughness   of   some    of 
the    farces    on    the    previous    evening. 
At   the   .same   time.    It   Is   not   a   theat- 
rical performance,  in  the  true  sense  of 
the   word,   and   the  publicity   does  not 


(Continued  from  page  12.) 

nosh.  The  shaft  Is  down  forty-five 
feet.  In  the  North  Billy  group,  ad- 
joining the  Millard  Iron  group,  is  also 
a  good  showing.  Ore  has  been  encoun- 
tered showing  $:i4  to  $55  a  ton  in  gold 
Tlie  Glorieux  Smelting  &  Refining  com- 
pany of  irvington,  N.  J.,  overbid  local 
.smelters  for  a  thirty-three  ton  ship- 
ment of  high  grade  from  the  Mai<>moth 
mine  at  Tlntic.  The  ore  brought  a  lit- 
tk=>  over  $70.iJ00. 

The  Dutchman  Leasing  company,  op- 
erating in  American  Fork  Canon,  has 
struck  four  feet  of  carbonnate  ore 
that  nets  $30  a  ton  in  silver  and  lead. 
A  consolidation  scheme  has  been  ef- 
fected In  Beaver  county  by  which  the 
Frisco  Contact  takes  over  the  North 
Horn  Silver,  the  Gloridus  and  the  Good 
Hope  groups,  all  comprising  twenty- 
one  claims.  The  new  company  will  be 
known  as  the  Frisco  Consolidated  Min- 
ing   company. 

C.  T.  Birchard.  president  of  the  Ltah 
Mining.  Milling  &  Transportation  com- 
t-anv,  which  has  been  operating  the 
Hub  mine  In  Beaver  county,  has 
bought  the  Lady  Bryan  property, 
owned  by  Matthew  Cullen.  as  well  as 
three  adjoining  claims  belonging  to 
A.  L.  Fotheringliam.  rounding  out  a 
compact  group  in  the  heart  of  the  Star 
district.  Considerable  ore  has  been 
marketed  from  the  Lady  Bryan,  and  In 
several  shallow  workings  there  Is  good 
sliver   lead    ore    exposed. 

The  I'.ast  Tlntic  Mining  company  has 
a  showing  of  gold-silver  so  good  that 
the  in-.medlate  Installation  of  a  ten- 
stamp  mill  lias  been  decided  upon.  A 
shaft  has  been  sunk  more  than  300 
leet  3PU  a  number  of  drifts  have  been 
rua  from  thirty  to  sixty  feet,  uncov- 
ering a  ledge  of  gold  quartz  averaging 
SI')..'*!!  jn  gold  and  $2.10  in  silver.  There 
is  also  a  six-foot  vein  of  corbonate 
with  values  of  $2.50  In  gold  and  $1.10 
in  sliver.  About  2,000  tons  of  ore  are 
now   en    the   dump. 


AT  THE  AMALGAMATED  MINES 

iContlnued  from  page  12.) 


will    be   able   to   treat    about    5.000    tons 
of  ore  per  day. 

Bntte  ruulition. 

The  Butte  Coalition  company  is  ship- 
ping on  an  avferage  about  1,250  tons  of 
ore  per  day.  600  of  it  cornThg  from  the 
Rarus  and  the  remainder  from  the 
new  Tramway  shaft.  The  average  cost, 
of  Coalition  copper  Is  below  10  cents 
per  pound.  In  a  few  months,  when  the 
new  levels  of  the  Tramway  are  opened, 
the  company  will  be  able  to  produce 
easily  60.000  tons  per  month.  The 
Trapiway  shaft  is  about  as  deep  as  it 
will  be  sunk  for  the  present.  1,700  feet, 
and  the  lowest  level  will  be  opened  at 
that  depth. 

'We  are  producing  our  normal 
amount  of  copper  In  the  Butte  dis- 
trict," said  a  prominent  operator  the 
other  day.  "and  we  are  shipping  about 
every  pound  that  Is  turned  out,  but 
what  is  being  done  with  the  metal  is 
beyond  my  knowledge;  I  am  sure  it  is 
not  being  consumed." 

Tuoluiune. 
Through  an  accident  to  the  engine  at 
tlie  Tuolumne  mine  the  company  has 
again  been  forced  to  suspend  opera- 
tions. Another  and  larger  engine  has 
been  ordered  to  be  used  temporarily 
until  the  company  gets  its  big  engine, 
ordered  six  months  or  more  ago.  and 
whlth  is  being  built  especially  for  the 
Tuolumne,  but  will  not  be  finished  un- 
til some  time  next  summer.  This  Is  the 
thir-d  time  the  old  engine  has  broken 
down  and  compelled  a  temporary  sus- 
pension of  work. 

"Butte-Montana. 
A  number  of  Eastern  stockholders  ol 
the  Butte-Montana  Copper  Mining  com- 
pany and  of  the  new  company,  the 
Butte-Alex  'Scott,  are  In  Butte  getting 
ready  for  the  special  meeting  of  stock- 
holders of  the  former  company,  which 
is  to  be  held  March  20.  to  pass  on  a 
proposition  to  transfer  the  property  to 
the  new -company  and  change  the  cap- 
italization. While  there  la  much  op- 
position to  the  reorganization  it  Is  not 
likely  that  the  opposition  Is  strong 
enough  to  block  the  plans  of  the  large 
stockholders.  Among  the  stockholders 
who  are  favorable  to  the  reorganiza- 
tion, who  are  In  the  city,  are  Martin 
Rosendahl  of  Duluth.  James  T.  Fisher 
of  Laurlum,  Mich.,  J.  A.  Minnear  of 
Calumet,  Max  Stevens  of  Ironwood. 
John  Tredennlck  of  Hlbbing  and  R.  A. 
Kerr  of  Duluth.  Rosendahl  claims  to 
have  proxies  for  850,000  shares  of 
stock. 

Raven. 
What  the  Butte  stockholders  of  the 
Raven  Mining  company  expected  has 
happened — that  which  they  feared  has 
come  upon  them — and  the  company  Is 
to  be  reorganized.  The  subscriptions 
called  for  did  not  come  In  in  sufficient 
numbers  and  amount  to  provide  the 
treasury  with  a  working  fund  and  it 
is  stated  that  the  subscriptions  that 
were  received  have  been  returned.  The 
company  has  a  considerable  Indebted- 
ness and  in  the  absence  of  a  treasury 
a  resumption  of  work  at  the  mine  is 
Improbable  for  some  time.  What  form 
the  reorganization  will  take  has  not 
yet  been  determined,  but  if  the  views 
of    some    of    the    old    stockholders    are 


taken    Into  account,   the   reorganization 
win    perhaps    begin    with    the    manage- 
ment, for  however  efficient    it    may  be,  it 
still  bears  the  taint  of  the  old  days  of 
Raven     when     thousands     were     stung, 
and   many   that  know  this   have  not   yet 
grown     strong     in     confidence.       It     Is 
likely    that    the    company    will    be    re- 
ojganlzed  on  an  assessable  basis,  mak- 
ing  the   old   shares   exchangeable    for   a 
new    issue,    with    an   assessmetit    added. 
The   Raven   should    be   foremost   among 
thf?    newer    cpmiianies    of    Botte.      None 
of  them   is   more   favorably  situated  as 
to  property.     The  R.iven  Is  almost  sur- 
rounded   by      producing      Airialgamated 
mines,     beside  "which    the    Raven    com- 
pany        owns       three-fotirths       of       the 
Snoozer.  a  property  developed  to  a  pro- 
ducing   stage,    but    bdcattse    the    Butte 
(j'oalitlon      company       owm<      the    other 
fourth   the  Kaven  ounrnot  mine   It  with- 
out the  consent  of  tJ»«»«o-own»r,  which 
is    withheld,    but    sorae -day    the    Raven 
may    be    able    to    acquire    the    whole    of 
the    Suoozer    or    sell,  its    Interest    at    a 
big  price.     Apparently  there  is  no  prop- 
erty   In    the    Butte    district,    that   is    not 
actually    producing,    that    has     greater 
prospects    of    de\'eloping    Into    a   copper 
producing    mine    than     has    the    Raven 
mine.      The   shaft   has   rea.ched  a   depth, 
on  an  Incline,  of  1,350  feet.     The  verti- 
cal  depth   is   several    hundred   feet   less 
than    that.      The    Raven    vein    has    been 
partially    opened    on    the    1,100    and    1,- 
200    and    it    show    a   gradual    and    cer- 
tain  Impravement  In   mineral   contents, 
especially    in    Its    copper.      The    Buffalo 
mine    of     the    Anaconda    company     ad- 
Joins  the  Raven  on   \he  east,  and  it  is 
one    of    the   Anaconda    company's    good 
mines.     Many   Raven  stockholders  iiope 
that    the    reorganization    may    be    along 
plans  that     will   take  In   the  Old   Glory 
claim,    a    property    tying     between     the 
Raven    and   the   SnOozer.    or      that   some 
arrangement     can     be     made     with     the 
Coalition     companj"    for    the     organiza- 
tion of  a  company  that  will  take  In  the 
Coalition    interest   in:  the  Snoozer.     The 
Old    Glory    owners    art*- anrious    to    go 
Into    a    new    company    with    the    Raven, 
and     with     the     SnooJier     In     also,     the 
Raven   could   be    made   a    big   producing 
company    very    quickly. 

Barne»-KinK. 
At  the  annual  meeting  of  stockhold- 
ers of  the  Barne.s-fClng  Development 
company,  held  at  Kendall.  Monu,  a  few 
days  ago.  the  follovTlng  directors  were 
elected:  C.  W.  Goodale,  John  Gillie, 
Donald  Campbell.  1^,0;  Kvans  and  Phil 
C.  Goodwin  of  Bdtf»;John  L.  Bright 
and  Wilford  Johnston  of  Lewlstown, 
Mont.,  and  W.  H.  A.  Fischer  of  New 
York.  The  monthly,  reports  of  Supt. 
McGee  and  the  anRnal  report  of  Presl. 
dent  Gillie  show  that  for  twelve  months 
the  company  -has  -been  able  to  show 
net  earnings  from  abouc  $1,000  per 
month  to  $5,000.  The  property  Is  In 
good  shape,  and  abotit  one-third  of  the 
expenditures  every  month  go  Into  de- 
velopment work.  tha(  being  kept  about 
a  year  ahead  of  actual  mining.  While 
dividends  are  not  thought  of.  the  com- 
pany is  In  a  little  better  condition  chan 
it  was  when  the  new  management  took 
hold   of   affairs. 

PlttNburK-^ew  York. 
The  Pittsburg-New  Vork  Copper  Min- 
ing fompany  stockholders  have  au- 
thorized the  directors  to  bond  and 
mortgage  the  property  for  $30,000  for 
the  purpose  of  raising  money  with 
which  to  pay  debts.  After  all  obliga- 
tions are  liquidated,  the  company  will 
have  about  $10,000  left  foh  the  treas- 
ury for  a  working  fund,  lyith  which, 
it  Is  hoped,  the  gold  property  qf  the 
company  at  Helena  can  be  placed  on  a 
paying  basis.  The  property  was  in 
former  years  a  considerable  producer. 
The  company  also  owns  a  group  of 
undeveloped  copper  claims  south  of 
Butte. 

The  Krao  Silver  Lead  MInirtg  com- 
pany has  made  a  report  to  stockhold- 
trs  showing  a  total  expenditure  of 
$52,475.95  since  the  organization  of  the 
company,  and  a  balance  of  $32.34  In  the 
treasury.  The  company  did  consider- 
able development  work  on  its  property 
in  British  Columbia;  but  the  only  re- 
turn from  ore  shipments  amounted  to 
$1,410.74.  No  work  has  been  done  on 
the  property  for  several   years. 


PRINTING 


of  the  better  class  is  a  feature  of  our 
business.    Give  us  a  trial  order. 

MERRITT  &  HECTOR,  Printers 

"RUSH  ORDERS  A  PLEASURE" 


Both  Phones 


30-32  West  First  Street 


AMERICAN  EXCHANGE  BANK 

OF  DULUTH,  MINN. 

CAPITAL  AMD  SURPLUS,  tl,350,000 

CHECKING  ACCOUNTS  INVITED. 

Savings  and  Time  Deposits  Draw  39b  Interest. 


Treatn  ItheiiinntiMm,  EularRed  Veins, 
FlMtnIa,  IMles  and  other  Uectal  Olii- 
fltnen    nnd    l^lnifferluB    AUmcn<i». 

CA'IV^KRH,  wliich  poisons  the  breath, 
stmnach  and  lungs  and  paves  the  way 
for  Consumption,  also  Throat,  Liver, 
Heart  and  all  constitutional  and  In- 
ternal troubles;  also  Rupture,  Piles. 
Fistula,  Dvspepsia,  I>iarrhoea  and  all 
diseases  of  the  stomacli  and  bovvels 
treated  far  In  advance  of  any  Institu- 
tion in  the  country. 

BLOOD  .4ND  SKIN  diseases.  Pimples, 
Scrofula,  Tumors.  Tetter  and  Eczema 
thoroughly  eradicated,  leaving  the  sys. 
tefn  in  a  strong,  pure  and  healthful 
slate. 

A   VISIT   AVILL   TELL.. 

Perhaps  you  are  suffering  In  silence; 
perhaps  you  have  been  unsuccessfully 
treated;   If   so. 

Do  not  be  natUlled  nntll  you  have 
been  examined  by  Dr.  HoaK.  You  may 
be  sent  away  happy,  without  treat- 
ment, but  with  advice  that  will  save 
vou  time  and  money,  as  well  as  mental 
suffering.  If  you  require  treatnient. 
you  will  be  treated  honestly  and  skill- 
fully and  restored  to  health  within  the 
briefest  time  and  at  the  least  possible 
expense.  All  patlen««  examined  and 
treated  by  me  personally. 

COXSLLTATIOX    FKEB. 

Address  for  home  treatment.  Dr. 
Chas.  A.  Hoag,  6362  Minerva  avenue, 
Chicago,  111. 


When  You  Want 
What  You  Want 
When  You  Want  It 


Send  Your  Printing  Orders  to 

F.  H.  LOUNSBERRY  &  CO..  PRINTERS. 

Bolh  *Phoncs.  Providence  Bldg.  4th  Ave.  W.  &  Superior  St. 


-^ 


YOU    WILL     REALIZE    THAT    "THEY    LIVE 
WELL  WHO  LIVE  CLEANLY."  IF  YOU  USB 

SAPOLIO 


that 
-the 


OUDER  OF  HEARING  ON  PETITION 
FOR  LICENSE  TO  SELL,  MORT- 
(3AGE    OR    LEASE    LAND 

State     of    Minnesota,     County       of       St. 

Louis.  .     ,     ^ 

In  Probate  Court. 
In   the   Matter   of   the  Estate   of  Robert 

Simon,   Minor. 

The  petition  of  William  Simon,  as 
renresentative  of  the  above  named 
minor,  having  been  filed  In  this  court. 
represenUng.  among  other  ^  things 
that  for  reasons  stated  in  said  petition, 
it  Is  necessary  and  for  the  best  In- 
terests of  the  estate  of  said  minor,  and 
of  all  persons  Interested  therein,  to  sell 
certain  lands  of  .said  minor  in  said 
petition  described,  and  praying 
license  be  to  him  granted  to  sej 
said    land:  . ,        ^.^ ,  . 

It  Is  Ordered  That  said  petition  be 
heard,  before  this  court,  at  the  Pro- 
bate Court  Rooms  in  the  Court  House, 
in  Duluth  In  said  County,  on  Monday, 
the  29th  day  of  March,  1909.  at  ten 
o'clock  a.  m..  and  all  persons  Inter 
ested  in  said  hearing  and 
matter  are  hereby  cited  and 
at  said  time  and  place  to 
If  any  there  be.  why 
should   not    be    granted. 

Ordered   Further,   That   this   order 
served    by    publication    in    The 
Evening    Herald,    according   to 
Dated    at    Duluth.    Minn.. 

^^^^'  By  the  Court. 

J     B.   MIDDLECOFF. 

Judge  of  Probate. 
fSeal     Probate    Court,     St.     Louis      Co.. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  6.   13. 
20.    1909. 


WHOLESALE 

JOBBERS  AND 
MANUFACTURERS 

OF  DULUTH.  MINNESOTA. 

Reliable  and  Up-i:o-Date  Concerns  Who  Do  a  Strictly 

Jobbing  and  Manufacturing  Business. 


ASBESTOS 

A.  H.  Krieger  Zo. 


GLASS,   PAINTS   AND   BUILD- 
ING  MATERIALS. 


BAKERS     AND     ICi:     CREAM 
MANUFACTURERS. 

Crescent   Bakery. 


BLAST  FURNiVCE. 
Zenith  Furnace  Co. 


In      said 
required 
show  cause, 
said    petition 

be 

Duluth 
law. 
March    Gth. 


LAKE  SUPERIOR  IRON  MINES 

(Continued  from  page  12.) 

and  most  substantial  In  the  district. 
The  Pioneer  adjolnasthe  Steel  corpor- 
ation's famous  Chandler  mine,  the  last 
of  whose  ore  was  laken  out  last  year, 
and  It  has  ranked  .as  much  the  largest 
producer  on  the  range,  its  output  of 
4  75,000  tons  last  year  being  more  than 
half  of  all  the  ore  sent  out  from  the 
Vermilion.  Its  aggregate  production 
to  date  is  6,500.00.0.  ,•  The  Pioneer  pos- 
sesses a  model  qnaerground  electric 
haulage  system,  aoA-lt  also  has  a  mod- 
el change  house  for  the  miners,  a  com- 
modious one-story  nuilding  of  steel 
and  concrete,  only  recently  completed, 
and  equipped  with_all  facilities  and 
conveniences. 

0|><lun    On  , tine  j  Kloman. 

The  Cleveland  Cltfts  Iron  company, 
already  much  th^  <jargest  holder  of 
mineral  lands  on  tKm  range  has  taken 
an  option  on  the  qld  Kloman  mine  at 
Republic,  in  the  Mai^*te  district.  The 
property  was  forracrU-  In  the  hands 
of  Andrew  Carndjs)^  f^nd  associates, 
and  has  been  idle  for  a  quarter  of  a 
century.      It    Is    ovm«d    now    by    Mar- 


SUMMONS—  *  a»    T       I 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

gg 

District   Court,    Eleventh   Judicial     Dis- 
trict. 
Laura   Charrette. 

Plaintiff, 

vs. 
Samuel   Charrette, 

Defendant. 
The   State    of   Minnesota    to   the   above- 
named   defendant: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  complaint  of  the 
plaintiff  In  the  above  entitled  action, 
which  complaint  has  been  filed  "i  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  said  District 
Court  at  the  City  of  Duluth,  County  of 
St  Louis,  State  of  Minnesota,  and  to 
.'jerve  a  copy  of  your  answer  to  the 
said"  complaint  on  the  subscriber  at 
his  office.  Rooms  313-314  First  National 
Bank  Building,  In  the  City  of  Duluth, 
In  said  Countv  of  St.  Louis,  within 
thirty  (30)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you,  exclusive  of 
the  dav  of  such  service;  and  if  y^u  fall 
to  answer  the  said  complaint  wlchln 
the  time  aforesaid,  the  plaintiff  in  this 
action  will  apply  to  the  court  for  the 
relief  demanded  therein. 

ANDREW  NELSON, 
Attorney  for  Plaintiff, 
313-314  First  National  Bank  Building. 
Residence,    32    East    Fifth    street,    Du- 
luth,   Minn. 

Dated    February   11,    1909. 
Duluth     Evening     Herald— Feb.     13-30-27. 
March  6-13-20,  1908. 


BREWERS. 

Duluth  Brewing  &  Malting  Ca 
Fitger  Brewing  Co. 


Paine  &  Nixon  Co. 

GROCERS. 

Gowan-Peyton-Twohy  Co. 

Stone-Ordean-Wells  Co. 

Wright-Clarkson    Mercantile   Ca 


HARDWARE. 

Kelley-How-Thomson  Co. 
Marshall-Wells    Hdw.    Ca 


BUTTER     AND     ICE     CREAM 
MANUFACTURERS. 

Bridgeman-Russell  Co. 


CEMENT  AND  PLASTER. 

D.  G.  Cutler  Co. 


COMMISSION  AND  PRODUCE. 

Fitzsimmons-Palnier  Co. 

Knudsen  Fruit  Company. 

Thoma*  Thompson  Co. 


LUMBER,  SASH  &  DOOR  MAN- 
UFACTURERS. 

Scott-Graff  Lumber  Co. 


CONFECTIONERY. 

Duluth  Candy  Co. 

National    Cand}-    Co. 

(Duluth  Factory.) 


CORNICE    MANUF/lCTURERS. 

Duluth  Corrugating  &  Roofing  Co. 

DRUGS. 
L.  W.  Leithhead  Drug  Co. 


MEN'S      FURNISHINGS      AND 
MAN'F'RS  CLOTHING. 

Christensen-Mendenhall- 
Graham  Co. 


DRY  GOODS. 

F.  A.  Patrick  ik  Ca 


PAPER. 

Bemis  Bag  &  Paper  Co. 

Duluth  Paper  &  Stationery  Ca 

McClellan  Paper  Co. 

Peyton  Paper  Co. 

PICTURE  FRAMES  &  MOULD- 
ING. 

Decker  Manufacturing  Co. 


PLUMBING  SUPPLIES. 

Crane   &  Ordway  Co. 


FOUNDERS  and  M/.CHINISTS. 
Clyde  Iron  Warks. 
National  Iron  Co. 


FURNITUilE. 
DeWitt-Seitz  Company. 


SADDLERY.     LEATHER     AND 

FINDINGS. 

Schulze    Brothers   Co. 


SHOE  MANUFACTURERS. 

Northern  Shoe  Co. 


For  space  under  this  heading  apply  to  F.  H.  Green,  Secretary  Jobbers 
and  Manufacturers'  Association,  Duli4th,  Minn. 


r 


r 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


rtM 


A 


24 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


HAVE  YOU  NOTICED  THE  PERMANENT  RISE  IN  DULUTH  REAL  ESTATE? 


CENTRAL, 

^SOO— Each  for  2o-foot  lots,  140  feet  deep,  lying  between  Sec- 
ond and  Third  avenues  east,  on  lower  side  of  Sixth  St. 
§1,200— For  40x100  feet  on  Third  avenue  east. 
^800— For  50x140  feet  on  upper  side  of  Fifth  street. 

e:ast  cnd 

$1,350— For  75x140  feet  on  Sixth  street- 

^4,000 — For  double  corner  on  Fifth  street. 

91,800— For  50x140  feet  on  Jefferson  street. 

^1,300— For  50x140  feet  on  Fourth  street,  near  Twenty-first 

avenue. 
$1,600— I'or  50x140  feet  on    Third    street,    near     Eighteenth 

avenue. 


Richstrdson,  Day  (Si  Co. 


^^^§ 


DR  M*Lff<NAN.  PBCSiOtMT 
JAMES  A-  M^  LtNNAN.V-PfW- 


Eon-  F-  SPINS.  StWtTARY 
L  B  MANLtY.  TRlASURtR 


1 


Cenlnl  Dock  Fropiily. 

Half  a  block  of  dock  property, 
with  Railroad  street  frontage  and 
an  area  equal  to  seventeen  50x 
140  feet  ordinary  bay  front  lots — 

$35,000 


4^x^' 


\J^m         /''^^'y  Termw  Cmn  Be  ArraoBed. 

'W'    C^V  REAL  ESTATE,  LOANS  &  RENTALS 

>  V^  TORREY    BLDC.  FIRST   FLOOR.  DULUTH,  M  INN 


SECOND  STREET  GORIER 

100x150  feet  on  the  Southeast  corner  of  Second  street  and  Eighth 
avenue  west.  Sewer,  gas  and  water.  Two  blocks  and  a  half  from 
new  Court  House.  Easy  of  improvement  and  no  ^^Cftfl 
better  site  in  Duluth  for  immediate  improvement.-^"! i#Ull 


R.  P.  dowse:  (Sl  CO., 


GENERAL  INSURANCE. 
106     Providence     Building. 


Corner  100  Feet  on  Superior  St. 

IN  HARRISON  DIVISION. 

rxciush-e'lSby   E.  W.  MARKELL,  soe ion»dai. ewg. 


MANY  SALES  OF  MODERATE 
PRICED  LOTS  FOR  HOMES 

"Own  Your  Own  Home"  Spirit  Booms  Dealing  in 
Suburban  Real  Estate— Many  Homes  Will  be 
Built  During  Coming  Summer — General  Mar- 
ket Is  Quiet. 


Tlie  only  noticeable  feature  of  the 
real  estate  market  during  the  present 
week  was  the  increased  sale  on  build- 
ing lots  In  the  suburbs,  and  the 
sparsely  settled  portions  of  the  city. 
People  with  small  capital  are  anxious 
to  get  title  to  a  piece  of  real  estate. 

The  man  on  the  smallest  of  salaries, 
who  is  now  paying  rent,  is  working 
with  ttie  idea  of  owning  his  own 
home  foremost  in  his  mind.  He  buys 
his  lot  on  easy  payments,  and  pays  for 
it  in  a  few  years.  Then  he  builds  his 
modest  home,  and  when  it  is  completed, 
lie  is  able  to  pa.ss  over  the  burden  of 
enriciiing   landlords,    to   others. 

The  sales  of  lots  in  the  suburbs  have 
been  unusually  heavy  this  year.  Many 
people  are  getting  away  from  the  rent- 
ing idea,  and  working  in  witli  the  "Own 
Your  Own  Home"  !^pirit.  Lakeside, 
Woodland,  ^Vcst  end.  West  Duluth. 
Park  Point  and  Duluth  Heights  are  all 
figuring  in  the  buying  and  builduig. 
and  tiiey  will  hear  the  joyous  sound  iST 
hammer  and  saw  during  llie  coming 
summer. 

•  •     * 

There  haven't  been  any  big  sales  of 
real  estate  during  the  past  week.  Sev- 
eral I'ig  deals  are  on,  but  they  haven't 
come  to  the  tinishing  point  yet.  Own- 
ers of  good  business  property  are  not 
anxious  to  sell,  for  they  have  just  as 
good  an  eye  to  Duluth's  future  as  the 
prospective  buyers  have.  There  are  al- 
ways a  few  people  willing  to  let  go,  of 
course,  so  that  the  prospective  buyers 
liave  not  absolutely  a  barren  field  to 
look  over.  Inciuiry  from  the  East  is 
strong,  for  capitalists  have  an  eye  on 
IHiluth.  The  owner  of  a  good  piece 
of  property  who  is  anxious  to  sell 
doesn't  have  any  trouble  finding  a 
buyer,  and  a  top-heavy  market,  in 
which  buyers  outnumber  sellers,  is 
always  indicative  of  strength  and 
prosperity. 

•  •       • 

The  building  prospects  ore  un- 
changed by  the  week's  developments. 
The  Superior  street  buildings  which 
have  already  been  mentioned  will  go 
up  immediately  after  the  first  of  May, 
l)Ut  no  new  projects  have  come  out  of 
seclusion.  Contractors  are  busy  figur. 
ing  on  the  buildings  already  assured, 
and   there   Is    no   danger   of    men   in    the 


building  trades  being  Idle  during  the 
coming  season.  Outside  of  the  store 
and  office  building  work  alrea<ly  in 
sight,  there  are  hundreds  of  residences, 
coating  from  $1,000  to  J50,000,  to  be 
erected,  and  while  figuring  on  the  big 
jobs,  the  contractors  are  not  losing 
sight   of   the  little   ones. 

*  *       • 

Plans  have  been  prepared  and  appli- 
cation made  for  a  building  permit  for 
a  new  garage  to  be  erected  on  the 
southeast  corner  of  Superior  street  and 
Fourteenth  avenue  east.  The  building 
will  have  a  frontage  of  sixty  feet  on 
Superior  street  and  will  e.xtend  through 
to  Jefferson  street,  a  distance  of  100 
feet.  It  will  be  built  for  the  Dulutli 
Motor  Vehicle  company,  which  will  oc- 
cupy it.  The  building  will  be  of  sub- 
stantial- brick  construction  and  will  be 
ornamental  to  such  an  extent  that  it 
will  not  be  at  all  out  of  place  in  that 
section  of  the  city. 

*  •      • 

Olsen  &  Magney,  the  architects,  have 
let  the  contract  for  an  apartment  house 
for  John  Klowosky  to  Peter  Olson. 
The  building  will  be  on  the  north  side 
of  Jefferson  street  between  Sixteenth 
and  Seventeenth  avenues  east.  It  will 
contain  four  apartments  and  will  be  of 
modern  brick  construction.  It  will  cost 
about   112,000  complete. 

Other  building  developments  reported 
by  Olsen  &  Magney  are: 

Contract  let  to  John  LePage  for  new 
residence  for  Dr.  K.  W.  Johnson  on  the 
northwest  corner  of  Twenty-second 
avenue  east  and  Fourth  street.  The 
house    will   cost   about   J7,000   complete. 

The  contract  for  the  new  store  anu 
apartment  building  for  H.  C.  Fulton  on 
the  south  side  of  First  street  between 
First  and  Second  avenues  east  has  been 
let  to  William  Fawcett.  The  building 
will  cost  about  J6,000. 

The  contract  for  a  residence  for 
Whitney  Wall,  on  the  south  side  of 
Third  street,  between  Seventeenth  and 
Eighteenth  avenues  east,  has  been  let 
to  Ivor  Olson.  It  will  cost  about  $7,000, 
complete. 

Jacobson  Bros,  were  given  the  con- 
tract for  a  new  residence  for  Hart- 
wick  O.  Hanson,  on  the  north  side  of 
Third  street,  between  Twenty-second 
and  Twentv-third  avenues  west.  It 
will    coat    about    $4,500. 

Plans   are  being   prepared   for  a   new 


residence  for  Frank  Brown.  It  will 
be  built  in  West  Duluth  and  will  cost 
$6,000.  Plans  are  also  being  prepared 
for  a  residence  for  D.  C.  Barr,  on 
Woodland  avenue.  It  will  cost  about 
$6,000. 

Frank  DeLuc  was  given  the  con- 
tract for  remodeling  a  three-family 
apartment  house  on  London  road,  be- 
tween Eleventh  and  Twelfth  avenues 
east,  into  a  five-family  flat  building. 
«      •      • 

Austin  Terryberry  yesterday  let  the 
contract  to  William  Fawcett  for  a  two- 
family  flat  building  for  John  .\ndrews, 
at  the  corner  of  Sixteenth  avenue  east 
and  Sixtli  street.  It  will  cost  about 
$6,000. 

Mr.  Terryberry  is  also  taking  bids 
on  a  residence  for  John  Webb  at  Jef- 
ferson street  and  Eighteenth  avenue 
east.      It  will    cost   about   $5,800. 

*  •       • 

G.  A.  Wielard  has  sold  to  N.  Muel- 
ler, three  lots  on  the  north  side  of 
Sixth  street  between  Eighth  and 
Ninth     avenues    east    for    $1,050. 

*  *       * 

George  Bever  has  sold  to  William 
Goldstein  the  lot  on  the  northeast 
corner  of  Fifth  avenue  west  and  Third 
street   for   $5,250. 

*  *       • 

F.  G.  Mellin  has  sold  to  E.  Hegstrom 
a  lot  on  the  southwest  corner  of  Third 
street  and  Nineteenth  avenue  west,  for 
$5,000. 

*  •       * 

W.  H.  Curtis  has  sold  to  E.  A.  Risdon 
a  lot  on  the  north  side  of  Third  street 
between  Fifth  and  Sixth  avenues  west, 
for  $4,000. 

*  •       • 

The  north  Nordstgeran  Lodge  No. 
11,  I.  O.  G.  T.  will  build  a  new  hall  on 
the  corner  of  Twenty-sixth  avenue 
west  and    Second    street    to    cost    $3,000. 

*  *       * 

Quite  a  number  of  building  permits 
were  Issued  through  the  building  in- 
spector's office  during  the  past  week, 
but  most  of  them  have  been  for  small 
work,  entailing  the  expenditure  of 
only    a    few    hundred    dollars. 

Following  are  the  permits  covering 
work  to  cost   $1,000  or  more: 

Anton  Feddeck,  frame  dwelling  on 
the  south  side  of  Eleventh  street  be- 
tween Sixth  and  Seventh  avenues  east, 
$1,000. 

Ingebrit  B.1erkan.  frame  dwelling  on 
the  north  side  of  Eighth  street  be- 
tween First  and  Second  avenues  east, 
$1,000. 

George  Carino.  frame  dwelling  on 
the  south  side  of  Tliird  street  between 
Seventh  and  One-half  and  Eighth  ave- 
nues   west,    $2,500. 

Otto  Johnson,  alterations  to  build- 
ing on  south  side  of  Superior  street, 
between  Lake  and  First  avenues  west, 
$3,500. 

Joseph  Becks,  frame  dwelling  on  the 
north  side  of  Grand  avenue  between 
Sixtieth  and  Sixty-first  avenues  west, 
$2,000. 

Peter  O.  Berg,  frame  dwelling  on  the 
east  side  of  Cascade  street  between 
Fifth   and   Sixth    streets.   $2,000. 

Duluth  Street  Railway  company, 
fire  wall  In  car  barn  on  north  side  of 
Superior  street  between  Twenty-sixtli 
and  Twenty-seventh  avenues  west, 
$3,500. 

J.  W.  Johnson,  frame  dwelling  on  the 
north    side      of    Fifth    street      between 

(Continued  on  page  25,  second  column) 


West  lE^nd  Real  Estate 


We  have  for  sale  only  two  lots  on  West  Fourth  street,  between  Thirty- 
ninth  and  Fortieth  av  jnues  west,  lower  side.  Price,  only  $350;  $25.00  cash, 
$5.00   per  month:    no   interest.      Pick   them  up  nuick. 

yi.lS.'H)  91,500,  fl.35<),  »1,800  and  f2,100  will  buy  common  sense,  good 
homes  ih  tlie  western  part  of  the  city. 

Lr.  A.  ]larse:n  company, 

214-15   PKOVIUEXCE   BFILDIXG. 
HOLIES  EVEUWHEKK — FIUE   IXSIKANCE   AND   LOANS. 


Let  Us  Sho¥if  You  ! 

$3000 

Seven  room  iiouse  at  Lakeside — 
modern  plumbing,  elec.ric  light;  lot 
50x140.     Rents  $30  per  month. 

$55G»0 

Six  room  house  in  East  end,  strict- 
ly modern,  splendid  location. 

We   also    have    a   larjfe    number    of 
houses   up   to   $10,000. 

G.  H.  Graves  &  Go. 

Suite  20O,  1st  National  Bank  Bldg. 


FOR  SALI 

i,%00  CASH — Seven-roon  house  on 
West  Fourth  street,  near  Twenty- 
third  avenue;  hot  watt  r  heat;  hard- 
wood floors:  porcelain  Viath ;  house 
and  lot  in  fine  condition,  $4.500 — 
Balance  on   Eany    Terms. 


PULFORD,  HOW  &  CO. 

309  Exchange  Bldg. 


BARGAINS 

$7600 — For  double  house  on  Fifth 
street,  corner;  stone  foundation, 
full  basement;  7  rooms  and  bath 
each  side,  large  attic,  hot  air 
heat,  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; rents  at  $840. 

$700 — For  2  lots.  50x140;  water  and 
gas  In  street  on  Seventh  street, 
near   Twelfth    avenue   east. 

$800 — For  a  fine  lot  on  Grand  ave- 
nue, near  Thirty-ninth  avenue 
west;  city  water  in  street. 


D.  W.  SCOTT 

18  Mesaba  Block. 


MONEY 
ON  HAND 

For  In.'tns  on  real  estate  at  lowest 
rates— $1,000,  $1,500,  $2,5(X)  and 
larger  amounts  on  application. 

FIRE  INSURANCE 

In  leading  .American  companies. 
Real  estate  in  all  parts  of  the  city. 

C  D.  FISLrD  CO., 

203    Exchange    Bldg. 


HOVSES  AND 
LrOTS  FOR  SALE 

$l,00O— Buys  7-room  house,  stone 
foundation:  some  liardwood  floors, 
and  good  improvements:  lot  32x 
i:{2:  car  line  Forty-third  avenue 
west:    good   terms. 

$2^00^Buys  a  fine  7-room  house, 
very  central.  Park  Point;  thor- 
oughly modern;  hot  water  heating 
plant:  lot  40x100;  good  terms. 

|«,000— Buys    corner    9-room    house, 
East     Sixth     street,    very    central 
lot   50x140;   for  two  families;   casii 

$1,000. 

$2.100 — Buys  7-room  house.  East 
P'ifth  street,  very  central;  lot  25x 
140;   entire   fropt  clear   to    build. 

$700 — For  lot  50x140  on  east  Seventh 
street.  near  Twelfth  avenue: 
water  and  gas.  This  is  offered 
$200  under  price   for  quick  sale. 

$3S0 — For  lot  40x100  on  Park  Point: 
very   central.      Short   time   offer. 

The  Harris  Realty  Co. 

nSS  .Manhattan   Building. 


ATTRACTIVE  HOME  WITHIN  REACH 

OF  MAN  OF  MODERATE  MEANS 


^^^^^^^^^^M^^^^^^^^^>^^^^^^^^^>^>^>^'v^>^ 


BARGAINS 

$3,000 — Buys  liouse  and  lot  on  West 
First  street.  six  rooms.  bath, 
hardwood  floors,  city  water,  gas 
and  electric  lights,  gas  range. 
Monthlv  payments. 

$400 — Buys  two  lots  50x150  feet 
each;  central,  and  two  blocks  from 

oar  line.  ,„    .,,v      ,     * 

$«.-iO — Buys  two  lots  50x150  feet 
nach:  Eighth  street  and  Third 
avenue  east. 

MONEY   TO  1.0AN, 
Real     E.Htate — l,unu.<4 — InHurance. 

Julius  D.  Howard  &  Co. 

2l«   Went    Superior  Street. 


#COCI|  Xo  more  attractive. -strlct- 
VwbwU  ly  modern  ti-room  house 
In  the  Ka.«t  end — tlie  best  of  every- 
thing used  in  construction:  pretty 
reception  hall  and  large  bath;  fine 
location. 

^Onnn  ^**^  ^nick  Sale — Good  8- 
WfcUUU  room  house,  arranged  for 
two  families:  nicely  located  in  East 
end.     A  SN.%P.     % 

If    you     wish    a    large,     handsome 
East  end   home,  call 


Zenith  Realty  Co, 

401  Providence  Building. 

(ieneral    InNuninee — l.onnn. 


Two  Very  Best  Homes 

#00nn  Almost  new  house  with 
f|4Q||U  six  rooms,  splendidly 
built,  one  block  from  Portland 
Sqpare. 

VVOUU  7-roon)  modern  home, 
birch  tinlNht  hot  ^vater  heat:  bent 
plumbing:  lot  33  1-3x1.50;  Mpeclally 
lloe  location;  Juat  flnLthed;  «vlll  Hell 
quick. 

N.  J.  Upham  Go. 

18  Third  Avenue  we«t. 


LONG  TERM 
LEASE 

The  undersigned  are  prepared  to 
make  a  long  term  lease  on  tlie 
southeast  corner  of  First  street  and 
First  avenue  east. 

Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

First  National  Bank  Building. 


Money  to  Loan 

5,   5^/^   and  6  per  cent. 

Insurance 

Old  Reliable  Companies. 

Estate 

Monthly    Payment    Plan. 

Cooley  &  Underbill 

200-10-11    Exchanse    Bnlldlns. 


SIOOOO  dence  '^ 
ftit;  good  location;  i 
cent:  J3,000  cash,  bala; 
#OAAn  I^lat  buildi 
#OUUU  feet,  in  » 
and  well  located,  nettl 
$2,500  cash. 
•  7Cn  I-"t  50x140  f 
9  lUU    good  location 

clnn  i-ot  50x140  f 

vlllU    good  location 
AfRES      on 

road,   near  c 
good  for  daii 


iproved  resi- 
jrner,  60x140 
letting  10  per 
ice  easy  terms, 
ng,  lot  50x140 
ood  condition 
ng  9  per  cent; 

eet.    East    end, 

eet.    East    end. 

Hermantown 
ity,  under  cul- 
y  and  garden- 


tivation: 

ing   purposes. 

A.  H.  W.  ECMSTEIN^ 

301   Burrows  Bldg.  Zenith  Phone  338. 


DO  YOU  WANT 
TO  SELL  ? 

We  have  a  pure  ia.ser  for  an 
eight-room  house ;  must  be 
modern,  of  reasonable  price, 
and  well  located  in   East  end. 

Call  or  write 

GETTY-SMITH  CO. 

201  Manhattan  Bldg. 


bASSHENT 


First  Floor 


5  EC  on  D  Floop? 


SNAPS ! 

$1  Cnn  B"ys  lot  [0x140  feet,  in 
I  vUU  Fast  end.  water  and  gas 
into  the  building  line  and  good  ce- 
ment sidewalk;  $500  i?asli  and  easy 
terms  'on  balance  will  handle  this 
deal. 

XI  AAA  Buys  lot  .'0x140  feet  on 
lUUy  East  First  street;  desir- 
able residence  proper  :y.  This  Is  an 
exceptional  opportuniiy. 

J.  Abrahsimson 

17    Mefiaba    lllocit. 
WE  WRITE  FIKE  INSURANCE. 


The  above  illustration  suggests  a  good 
plan  and  artistic  design,  possible  for  a 
home  of  small  cost.  It  is  a  rule  rather 
than  an  exception  in  building  of  small 
houses  that  builders  sacrifice  the  ap- 
pearance   for    the    cost.      A    house,    no 

matter  how  small,  can,  witli  proper 
attention  to  design,  be  made  artistic 
without  additional  cost. 

The  exterior  of  the  above  design  is 
treated  with  siding  and  stucco,  frame 
construction.  Space  is  well  utilized  in 
the  plans.  For  a  house  of  its  size,  the 
rooms  are  of  unusual  size,  and  the  ar- 
rangement most  compact  and  complete. 
The   width   of  the  building  permits  of 


its  being  erected  on  a   25-foot  lot. 

The  arrangement  of  the  first  floor 
plan  indicates,  in  every  detail,  conveni- 
ence. A  fireplace  enhances  the  at- 
tractiveness of  the  living  room.  Both 
living  room  and  dining  room  are  well 
lighted,  and  by  opening  into  each  other, 
give  an  effect  of  roominess.  No  pantry 
is  planned,  but  tlie  kitchen  is  com- 
pletely equipped  With  fixtures  and  cabi- 
nets, making  that  department  most 
compact;  everything  being  at  the 
finger's  enci.  The  direct  communication 
from  kitchen  to  front  part  of  the  house, 
fcnd  the  convenlepce  of  the  basement 
stairway  and  side  entrance,  are  all 
good  features. 

The   second   story   works   out   excep- 


tionally well  with  three  bedrooms  and 
bath.  The  smallei  bedroom  having  no 
closet,  would  probably  be  better  used  as 
a  sewing  room.  A  large  bedroom  can 
be  furnished  in  the  attic,  where  there 
v.-ould  be  space  besides  for  store  rooms. 
The  roof  being  high  and  gabled,  per- 
mits of  a  spacious  attic.  Witli  the 
attic  finished,  this  would  become  a 
very    complete    seven-room    house. 

With  hardwood  floors,  birch  finish, 
hot  water  heat  and  plumbing,  full  base- 
ment,   and    attic    complete,    a    home    as 

above  described  would  cost  to  build  in 
Duluth  or  vicinity,   $2,700. 

ANTHONY    PUCK,    Architect. 
Duluth.  Mino. 


■  on 

f  COR 


ON  DULUTH   RtAL  tSTAlt 
CORPORATION  I  PIMVATE  FUNDS 

3o\u\5t 


"^dmr{j5^ 


rOR  RICNT 

Building  formerly  occupied  by 
the  Duluth  Mot  jr  company. 
Sixth  avenue  west  near  First 
street,  suitable  for  garage,  livery 
stable  or  storage  hjuse.  Inquire 
524  West  Superior  street. 


FARM  LANDS 
TIMBER  LANDS 
MINERAL  LANDS  I 

Come  in  and  let  us  show  you  how 
cheap  you  can  still  buy  some  fine 
Carlton  county  lands,  near  good  rail- 
road town,  and  in  a  well  settled  com- 
niunitv. 

WE  BIY  n  T-OVER  I>AXns. 

GEO.  H.  EBERT  &  CO. 

IS  Third  Avenue  AVest. 
Y.ealth   i2li4.  Bell  »4-K. 


THE 

KENSINGTON 
FLATS 

Ready  April  Ist. 

7   rooms,   bath,   laundry,   gas  range, 
hot   water    heat;    modern    tlirough- 

$35  to  $40  per  mo. 

Harrison  &  Jafflar,Agts 

310  Providence  Bldg. 


Are  You  Looking  for  a 
Vacation  Spot? 

We  recently  opencil  a  tract  of  land  at  Solon 
Spring?  and  are  scIUiik  lot*  with  100  feet  luke 
frintage  and  from  51(i  to  830  feet  deep;  finely 
wood«i.  Bood  shores.  Hiid  an  Ideal  location  for  a 
funimer  bungalow.  Tlie  only  good  lake  frontage 
lots  left  and  worth  twice  what  we  ask  for  them. 
'riiey  are  on  beautiful  l.ake  St.  rrolx.  nrar  the 
Bnile  and  Ox  Creek.  $125  and  $150  buys  tliem. 
and  only   7   left. 

Also  lots  In  Holon  .'Springs  Proper.  hiyivHy  Um- 
liered  wltli  pine  and  hardwo(Kl  and  In  the  beet 
of    locaUons— $450    and    $50.1    for    tracts    100x143. 

S<!'e  us  about  summer  cottage  furnisbtd  com- 
liUte,    for    sale. 

Hanford  Investment  Co., 

413  «ieII\%ood   Bulldine. 


A  BEAUTIFUL 
HOME 

A  small  amount  of  money  will 
handle  one  of  the  finest  places  at 
I^akeside.  on  the  lower  side  of  Lon- 
don road.  Tile  house  is  practically 
new,  and  is  situated  on  one  of  the 
best  lake  shore  lots,  size  100x350 
feet. 

J.  B.  GREENFIELD, 

sou   Burro^vN   Building. 


$(t50 — .Small  cottage,  Thirty-eighth 
avenue  west;  new:  just  built; 
hardwood    lloors.    $400   cash. 

$«>0— Cottage.  West  Duluth,  large 
lot;  only  $350  cash. 

fLOT."! — Seven-room  house.  Thirty- 
eighth  avenue  west;  water,  elec- 
tric light,  etc.:  easy  terms. 

92.300 — .Six-room  cottage.  East  Sixth 
street;  water,  gas,  electric  light, 
etc.;   central. 

$3,000 — Seven-room  house.  stone 
foundation:  large  50-foot  lot;  East 
Seventh  street. 

fl,»O0 — Kight-room         house.         East 
Seventh     street;    water,    etc.;    only 
one-third  cash. 
Lots  for  building  in  a'l  parts  ol  the  city. 

C.  L.  RAKOWSKY  <&.  CO. 

201  Exchange  Bank  Bldg.  We  write    Fire    Insurance 


A  Few  Snaps  in  Lands 

320  acres  of  mixtd  timber  lands  aln  ;:t  2 
miles  southwest  of  rine  Station,  and  aU^ut  14 
miles  from  Uuluth.  partially  Improved  by  houae 
and  barn  and  alout  15  a<res  cleared.  Timber 
enough  on  land  to  pay  for  It.  Price,  $10.00  per 
acre,    easy    terms. 

All  of  Sec.  7.  Tp.  50,  B.  19,  about  3  mile* 
south  of  Pcupcre  in  G.  N.  Ry..  an  excellent 
opp*Ttunlty  for  a  dairy  farm,  small  lake  on  sec- 
tlou.  bright  prospects  for  Iron  ore.  Price,  $7.50 
per    a"re.    «isy    ttncs. 

40  acres,  one  mile  from  lUce  Lake;  tic«t  forty 
In  whole  tcwn^hlp.  only  $l(i.00  per  acre.  Timber 
enough  on  land  to  pay  for  It.  Ko  trouble  to 
chow     lands. 

AL.  KUEHNOW 


Old    'phone    1001. 


715    Torrey    Bld|. 


WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 
BUSINESS   PROPERTY 

aQAAA  takes  a  pn'perty  facing  rn 
9vvW  toth  Superior  an*  AUcldgan 
ftrc<t«.  Has  two  buildings  on  Superior 
which  make  the  Investment  proflUlUe 
Gcod  factory  site  on  Michigan  street. 
And  the  Value  Will  Inereaie  Yearly. 
Call    at    oirice. 

DUNNING  &  DUNNING. 

506    PALLADIO    BLDG. 

Zrnlth    6('6:    Old    42u-R. 
REAL     ESTATE— BONDS— INSURANCE. 


H 

408  Burrows  Building 

Small  new  house  on  Restormel  St., 
oO-foot  lot;  $300  cash,  balance 
$10  per  month. 

One  50-foot  lot  in  Brj'ant  addition 
— $2D  cash  and  $10  per  montli. 

■•'I   write   Fire   Insurance. 


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THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALi?: '_    SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


25 


STEPHENSON  INSURANCE  AGENCY, 


MILLIONAIRE  COMPANIES  ONLY. 


It 


WOLVIN  BUILDING.  DULUTH. 


Citixeaa*   Inaturanoc   Company. 

Friii^pal  olTice.  8t.  Li'ub,  Mo.  (Organized  In 
IS'rr.)  Oiarles  E.  Chase,  pri-sldent;  Tliomaa  U. 
HciitUml.  s*«T«tan.  Attorney  to  accept  service  In 
Ulutmou.    Commissioner  ol   Insurance. 

CASH   <APIT.\I.     $200,000.00. 
INCOME    IN    I90a. 

Premiunu    ntlier    Uuii    p«rp«luaU I        501.847.05 

Reiitj    .iiul    intMwt t7.869.4."> 

Fr  ".ii    ill    othtT   sourcM 390.06 

P:Mr    (n    sdltj    or    miiturltjr    of    leilfet 
aA>«u    377.50 

To«*l    income    $        529.484.06 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

J^^,.,n^.•     ...  1,1    for    !..,-«> $  S77.186.tj8 

«                    s   and   brokeras* 84,7!«8.42 

S  ;  1  fe«  of  offlceis.  Agents  an<! 

c!iipl'i>e*      56.338.01 

T:ix.>*,   f»'«^*    renU  and  olhfr  real  estate 

23.023.01 

I                    .ind    interest IB.ooo.dit 

I.     .^t-  or  maturity  of  iedger  assets  437. .i'* 

AU  tKher  dlsburtemcuts 31.181-95 

ToUl    dUbursements •        488.987.57 

Esres'i   cf   Income    f^rer  dtsbunementt.  .$         40.496.49 

ASSETS  DEC.  31.   IMS. 

r«!  !?   rf  real   estate   ounwl $  410.00 

M   rfs.ige    loaus 9X2J0.no 

B'f  U    and    stocks   owneil 4»8.64.i..a 

fish   In    offl.-e   miJ    In    b.inli 62.311.39 

Aivnuxl    Interest    nml    renta ».38o.w« 

rrduliinu  in  ciwrse  of  coUei'tion 149  763.60 

T  tal   adniiMe.!   a^-iets *        813.733.71 

Aa»eu    not    .ulnUlted $7.0!)0.30 

LIABILITIES  DEC.   31.    IMS. 

TThpald    l.isses    .ini    .tiihiw I  "1  !)'*  "- 

Kfirwuratu  e   res«'r\e 39J.51J  ."4 

Ba"..irips.   exix-nse*.   laxee.   dividends  and 

titierest      due 4.850.00 

Caplul    Mock    paid    up SOo.QOO.OO 

Total  liablUtl«9   including   capital 1        634.382.22 

j;  .  •  ,,  $         179.351.52 

^3   AND    PREMIUMS.    1908    BUSINESS. 

r.;      .-  --     wriuoi.   .luriiig   tiie  your Jlt;>,0j2.'«>1.00 

Premium.*    rvceWeil    tlirreon 2.159.1Srt.43 

Mnrti.e  .•»nil    liUaiid   rlilu    written   during 

the  year    SO.746.00 

Premiums    receUed    thereon :,, 

Net   luu.'uiit  In  forve  at  end  of  the  year    58.j62.j04.0u 

BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 

t'lrf  Itiaki.  T'lma.ln.  Aggreg-itc. 
RUte.  written  ..$2,947,728.00  $179,034.00  $3,126.7b2.u0 
rre.^uanl■.    ree'd.         5(j. 444.4.-.        '1.0.-1.58  57.490.1^1 

LOM*    Incurred.         44.740.9)  59.02  44.799.92 

Losses      i>aKl     ..         43,971.34  59.02  44.033.;.6 

BWte    'f  .Mlnn««)t!i.    rKp.irtn>ent  of  InAumnce. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  t!ie  annual  »t.-«tement  of  the 
Clti/.'ii-'  In?ur.»iue  cuiniMny.  fur  the  yenr  ending  De- 
cern' r  :l-'  19"8.  of  wtiicli  the  abuve  Is  an  atwtract. 
has  be.ii  rtveUed  .ind  tlleil  In  thi.*  department  and 
dub  approved  by  me.  JOHN  A    HAKTIOAN. 

CommLjsloiier  of  Insurance. 


Ilnrtford    Fire    Insurance    Company. 

Principal  office.  Ilartfonl.  Conn.  (Organlxed  In 
1810.)  Charles  E.  Chase,  president;  Tliomas  Turn- 
bull,  secretary.  .\tt('me>  to  acc<cpt  service  In  Minne- 
sota.     Commissli.ner   of   TnsurHnce. 

CASH   CAIMTAL.    $2.00i).000.00. 
INCOME   IN    1908. 

Premium'*  other   tlian    perpctuaU $       14,071.4.-)5.83 

Rents    and    Intertst 738.568.82 

t'r-im  all  other  sources 556.25 

Profit    on    sale   or   maturity  of   ledger 

ttsseu     2.412-50 

Total   income    ♦  14.812.993.40 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Amount   paid    for    i>.sso-i _. $  7,838..y>9.S7 

('om:ulsslon5    and    brokerage 2.593.683.28 

Salaries    n:id    fei's    of    olTlcen,    agenU 

and   cmpU>y« i,240.6G9.1S 

Ta-xw.     fees,     fenu    and    other    re«l 

estate    expfiisc*    531,942.31 

Wrtdemls   end   Inttrest 600,000.00 

Loss    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

as«et^     30.092.40 

.\ll  other  disbursenienu 828. 179.45 

ToUl     disbursements $      13.652.926.17 

Excess  of  income  over  disbursements.  .$        1,160.067.23 

ASSETS  DEC.  31,    I9C8. 

Value  of  real  esuto  owned $  1.0.'>5.18T.73 

Mortgage    loans     418.000.00 

follattrul    loans    14.u00.00 

Bonds  and  stocks  owned 13.385,373.33 

Cash   In   office  and  In   bank 935.249.68 

Accrued   Interest   and   rents 178.641.11 

Premiums  In  course  of  collection 1.614.688.28 

All   other   .admitted   assets 803,136.46 

l>educt  special  deposit  les.»  $548,704.62 

llaUility    thereon    .^  .  ■  44.387.61 

Tot.ll   .-vdmlttcd   assets »      20.390,429.00 

Assets     not     admltt.ed $55. 186.06 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

T'npald  losses  and  claims $        '•'"^•"i^oS 

Iletnsurance    reserve 12.022.473.8. 

Salaries,     expenses,     taxes,     dividends 

and  Interest   due 182.000.00 

CaplUl   Slock  paid   up 2.000.000.00 

Total   liabilities  including  caplUl...$      15.373.224.23 

Net    surplus     $        5.017.204.77 

RISKS   AND    PREMIUMS.    1908   BUSINESS. 

Klrc  risks   vvriltm   duriinj   the  year $1,453.210. 7. .8.00 

Premiums     ri^eivcd     thereon 17. 803. 480. 7i) 

Net  amount  in  fi.no  at  oiid  of  the  y^-ar.    1.934.552.768.00 

BUSINESS  IN  MINNESOTA   IN    1906. 

lire  Hislo.  Tornado.  Aggregnte. 
RUM  writlen.$l7.5S.-..J39.»0  $2,739,341.00  $20,324,880.00 
Prem's  rei-M.         321. 227. ."ie  17.919.98  339.14.. 34 

lj»ses  Incur-d        2SS.721.18  2^8.724.18 

l^.s.se«  paid. .         278.195.23  278.49...2j 

.Vnm-latrisk         20.017.423.00 

State   of   Minnesota.    l>cpartment   of   Insurance. 

I  Ileieby  Ceitlfy.  Tliat  the  annual  statement  of  the 
Hartford  Fire  insurance  company,  for  the  year  ending 
December  31st  1908.  of  which  tlic  above  is  an  ab- 
stract, lias  l<cn  received  and  filed  in  this  department 
and  duly  apppncd   by  me. 

JOHN  A.    HAUTIGAN. 
Commissioner   of    Insurance. 


Xlagara    Fire    InMurauce    Company.    * 

Principal  office.  .New  \ork.  N.  V.  (Org.ini/..-d  In 
1*50.)  ilarold  Herrick.  president;  George  VV.  Ucwey, 
jccretao".  Attorney  to  accept  service  In  Minntaota, 
Commissioner  of  insurance. 

CASH    CAPITAL.     $75O.0Oi).00. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums    other   than    perpetual* $     3,106. .301. 33 

Rents   and   Interest 

Frtim   all  otiier  sources 

Profit    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

asseta    


197.378.16 
980.00 

25^333.89 


Total  income 


IN 


and 


DISBURSEMENTS 

.\mount  paid  for  lo.sst.s 

Coinmlsslous    rind    brnkerige.  . .  . 
Salaries  and  fees  of  officers,  agents 

employes    

Taxes,   fees,  rents  and  other  teal  estate 

expenses    

Divldenrls  and  Interest 

Loss    on    sale    or    maturity    of    leilger 

assets    

AU  oll>er  dlsbursemeuia 


.$     3.329.393.33 

MS. 

.$     1.731.504.31 
6S3.008.43 

300.495.76 


122,039.18 
150,065.00 

213.421.74 
185.518.81 


ToUl  dlihursemcnU $     3.326,053.23 


Elxce.-:s  of  income  over   Disbursements   .  .$ 
ASSETS    DEC.    31.    1908. 

Mortgage    loai'.s    $ 

Bonds  and  slocks  owned 

Cash  in  office  and   In   l«nk 

Accrued   Intert^Jl  and   rents 

Premiums  In  course  of  collection 

Deduct    special    deposit    less    $31,592.43 
liability    tlitreon 


3.840.13 

363.000.00 

3.624,275.00 

753,807.13 

43.746.37 

443.293.81 

43.922.57 


Orient    Innurance   Company. 

Prfni^pal  office.  Hartford.  Cmn.  lOrgini.Ted  In 
1S67.)  A  O.  Mcllwalne.  Jr.  president;  H.  W  Gray. 
Jr..  secretary.  AtVjmey  to  acoept  service  la  Minne- 
sota. Commissioner  ot  Insurance. 

CA-SH    C.VPITAL.    $500,000.00. 
INCOME   IN    1908. 

Premiums  other  than  perpetiiila $     J.329.f53.85 

llenu  and  Interest 88.985.5.1 

From  all  other  sources 13.997.24 


Total   Income $     1.432.738.62 

DISBURSEMENTS  IN    IS08 

Am'.unt  paid  fir  lot-^ts  I 

Commls.si.ns   and    brokerage 

Salaries  and  foes  of  officer*,  aeenta  and 

employes    

Taxes.   f«-as.   rents  and  other  real  esUte 

expenses 

L'MS    on    sale    or    atatiirity    of    ladjier 

assets    

.Vil  other  JLsbursemcnta 


726  es**  83 

286.881.21 

lofl.rio.oT 

47.800.17 

3.994.85 
100.391, 84 


Total    dUbursements '. •    l.i46,470.9* 


.$50,330.85 
31. 


$     5.184,199.74 


1908. 
..$ 


Total  admitted  a<iset»   . . . 

Assetd  not  adnuttcd    

LIABILITIES    DEC. 

I'npald  losses  and  claims 

Reinsurance  reserve   

Salaries,  expenses,   taxes,  dividends  and 

Interest    due 

Capital   stock  paid   up 

Total  UabiUtles   Including   capital $    3.663.660.49 


204.09'.>.61 
2.678,966.88 

3). 900.00 
750.000.UO 


Net 


surplus    $     1.520,333.25 

RISKS  AND   PREMIUMS.   1908  BUSINESS. 

Fire    risks    written    during   the   year $360,054,897.00 

Premiums   received   thereon 4.087.21  :'.2j 

Net  amount  in  fcine  at  cud  of  the  year  ii''. 320. 421. 00 

BUSINESS  IN   MINNESOTA   IN    1908. 
Fire    Risks.      Tornado. 
Risks    written..      $2,148,151.00  $126,700.00 
Premiums    rec'J. 


Ixwses  Incurred  . 
I»sses      paid .... 
Slate  of   Minnesota 
I  Hereby  Certify, 


.Aggregate. 

$2,274,851.00 

40.390.61 

25.849.47 

24.927.83 


39.r.!i;i.80  790.31 

25.709.01  140.46 

24.787.37  140.46 

Department  of  Insurance. 
That  the  annual  statement  of  the 
NUs  ira  Fire  Insuram-e  company,  for  the  year  ending 
DccemUr  31st.  1908.  of  which  the  above  Is  an  ab- 
stract, has  t)een  received  and  filed  In  this  depart- 
ment and  duly  approved  by  me. 

JOHN   A.    HARTIOAN. 
Cjmmlssloner  cf  Insurance. 


Excess  of  Income  over  disbursements   .  .  $ 

ASSETS  DEC.  31.   1908. 

Value  of  teal  estate   ^.'^ncd   .   $ 

Bnn'U   and   aVociss   ovwied   

Cash  In  office  and  in   baali  

Accrued   Interest   and    rents 

Premiums   in   course  of   collection 

All  other , admitted  asset* 

Dcluct    siieclil    rtepjslt    less    $28,756.11 
liability    therwu 

Total    adml".^d    aaseta    $ 

Assets    not    a  Imltted $111. 20'). 85 

LIABILITIES   DEC.   31,    1908. 

I'npald    losses    and    cLtims $ 

Reinsurance    reser\'e     • 

Salarlei.   eipensts.  taxes,   dividends  and 

interest    due     

AU  other  liabilities   •. 

Capiul    stock    paid"  Tip 


186.267.63 

187.SS6.33 

1.760.5  :S.  50 

304.217.47 

26.U70.17 
225.470.10 

11.378,01 

82.793.89 
2,432.746.74 


Koyal     Exchange     Asisarance     Company. 

I'rindpal  office  in  tho  United  States.  New  York 
City.  N.  Y.  (Commeti'-ed  business  in  iha  Unltod 
SUtes  1891.)  U.  C.  Crosby,  general  manager  In  the 
United  .States.  Atton\ey  to  accept  servioe  In  Mimie- 
Boti.    Commlssloaer  of  Insurance. 

DEPOSIT  CAPITAL,   $200,000.00. 

INCOME   IN    1908. 
Pr^tnl'jms  Tiber  than  perpettjals $     1,683.865.31 


Rents 
From' 


■vnd  tnter?3t 

all  ather  souroes. 


75,373  14 
49.510.93 


Tjtal    In.'ome $  1.808.749.40 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Amount  paid  f'.ir  losses   $  713,808.24 

Commissions    and    br?hersge 465.080.61 

Salaries     and    f^es     of    officers,     agents 

and  employes   120,259.84 

Tajtes    fe68.   renU  and  other  real  astat* 

6SI]i6n't!iS    ,,...••...••  OI7, 1  UI  .o'J 

Return   to   home  office 192,191.32 

AU  jtiier  dlsbuisemsnU .'. 93.430.88 


The    Phoenix    Innurance    Company. 

Principal  office,  Hartford.  Conn.  (Organized  in 
1834.)  D.  W.  C.  Kkllton.  president;  Join  B.  Krox. 
secretary.  Attorney  to  accept  service  In  Minnesota. 
ConmilSiloncr   of   Insurance. 

CAPITAL  STOCK,    $2.ODO.O00.0il. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums   other   than   perpetuals $    4,53I.49r09 

Renis  and  Interest 324.469.17 

From    aU    other  sources 544.87 

Profit    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

a.iseU     8.000.00 


i;i.49S.17 
1.235,627.88 

19.038  39 

33,818.39 

5UO.000.09 


Total   UablUUes   IncludlDg  -capital ....  $     1,909.983  13 


Net    surplus     -.  • $        522.763.61 

RISKS  AND    PREMIUMS.    1908   BUSINESS. 

Firi-   risks   wrl'teii   duilng   tU*   y.:ar $lt)4.194.43.'>.00 

PremJuuis    receiveil    tbercm; 1.918.948.76 

Net  amount   In  force  at.  »iMl:'»f  the  year  210,820.471.00 
BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 

Piro    and   Toriiid)    Uisku— 

Risks    written $     3.G'H.9»6.00 

Premiums     received ,.•... 51.011.63 

Lobses  Ineurijd 29.216.35 

Loss.s      p.dd » 4 28.015.79 

Arao:mt    at    risk 8.507.576.00 

State  of  Mlnneti':  la.   Department  of   Insurance 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  Uie  annual  statement  3t  the 
Orient  Insurance  company,  (or  the  year  ending  De- 
cember 31st.  Ifii8.  of  wli^tjh ,  tiie  aiwv^  is  in  ab- 
stract, has  been  rei-elved  atid  filed  la  ttds  de- 
partment  and   duly  approve-!   hy   me. 

JOHN   A     HARTIOAN, 
Cottemisaloner  jf  Ituurauce. 


Total  atsbursements $  1,624,472.19 

Excess  of  income  over  disbursements.  . .   $  184,277.21 

ASSETS  DEC.  31.  1908. 

Bond*  and  sto-ki  owned   $  1.771.261.00 

Cash  in  office  and  In  bank ^^''•'I.'i  i . 

Aocried  Interest  and  rents   22. 177  30 

Premiums  In  course  of  coUe<-tlon 413.8.>0.22 

All   oUicr   adndltol   assets   40,132.12 

Deduct    special     Jsjposlt    less    $11,673.48 

UablUly    theruon   >-.  43.821.j4 


Tital  adm.'.'e.! 

AsSt;ts    I.ut 


.j.«eu J    2,392,i 

idmllled $130,166.75 


96.35 


LIABILITIES  DEC.   3i.    1908. 

Unp-iid  losses  ani  ^.lalina     $ 

Reinsurance   ris'jvd   

Salarirt,.   eipensos.   Uses,  dividends  and 

Intfrost    dU'? 

All  other  UablUUes   

Dop*>8lt    capital    


109.092.00 
1.532.7:B.43 

20.500. 00 

4.520.55 

200,000.00 


Total   Uabllltles  tncluditig   c*plt*l $    1.868.844.98 


ToUl  income    »     4.884.508.13 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Amount  paid  for  1  i,sea   $ 

Commissions   and    brokerage 

.Salaries  and  fees  of  officers,  agents  and 

employes    '■ 

Taxes,  fees,   rents  and  other  real  estate 

expenses     

Dividends  and  Interest 

L'Ms  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  assets 
AU  other  disbursements 


2..382.571.21 
922.276.  li 

489.118.74 

148.475.86 

280.300.00 

40.627.36 

223,802.70 


Total  dlslmreemcnts $    4.487.231.09 

397,276.14 


Excess   of 


income   over 
ASSETS 


disbursements.  .$ 
DEC.  31,  isoa. 


-A 


Net  surplus    »        525.861.3 

RISKS  AND    PREMIUMS.    1908   BUSINESS. 

Fim  Risks  written  during  the  y»ar     .     $228.3j2.')._.1.00 

Premiums     received     thoreon 2.4-2.8.>8  93 

Net  amount  In  force  at  end  ot  the  rear.   253.21l.893.00 

BUSINESS   IN   MINNESOTA   IN    1908. 


Fir"    Risks — 

Risk.4  wrU'en    

Pr  ^mlums    received . 
Loss***  incurred   .    . 

LOSS'S  paid    

Stite  of  Minnasita. 

I  Hereby  eertlfv. 


$     3,091.596.00 

". 34.761.45 

9,788.04 

v.". '.v. 11,392.04 

Departniout  ^if  Insur.ino*. 
Thst  the  annual  sLalemeiit  of  tlie 
Royal  Kschsnge  AMuraiice  company,  for  the  year  end- 
Uig  n.Wiml)er  31.st.  li)i.  of  which  the  above  U  an 
alm'ract  ha.s  been  received  and  filed  in  this  de- 
partm^nt  and  duly  »t.proved  to  me.     ^^^^^^^^ 

Commissi  oner  )f  Lnsurance. 


CHEAPEST 

LOT  ON 

FIRST  ST. 

*<7Cn||    Jifty  feet  on  I'iist  street. 
9  I  uUU    we.st  of  Tliird  venue  east. 

0|24Cfl  Verv  nice  home,  10  rooms 
vUfcwU  and  lar&re  re'>eption  hall: 
hot  water  f'.f^at:  har.lwaeid  finish  anJ 
floors  ..n  first  tloor:  inside  location; 
verv  ile-sirable  <"orner  W»i. —  <3080. ) 
ttOOnn  <io«d  property  at  West 
VwOUU  end,  9-room  liouse.  fvir- 
nac.-.  l>ath,  electric  liglit;  also  nice 
S-rooni  Hat.  Total  rental.  $3S.OO  per 
month.  TerniN  to  Nuit. — (3933.) 
AflfSA  For  8«>  acre.<»  near  Pike 
i««luU  I.iike.  or  will  sell  40  acres 
r".)i    #-4.si(. 

.•<ee  iiM  for  ilescrlptlon.-*  and  pHcex 
on  beautiful  residence  .sites — Twen- 
ty-third to  Twenty-!*eventh  avenuex 
ea-Ht. 

Thirty  well  located  lots  In  Lake- 
side, very  cheap. 

.MOXEY     TO      LOAN. 

STRYKER,  MANLEY  &  BUCK 


East  Superior  St. 

2  5-foot  lot  on  Superior  street,  near 
Sixth  avenue  east.  Adjoining  lots 
held  for  $6,000.  Our  lot  is  lots  bet- 
ter — for  only 

$4500 


ESTATE 

."^laln    Floor, 


LOANS 
INSURANCE 

Palladio   Bldg. 


MANY  SALES  OF  MOOEHATK 

PKICED  LOTS  FOR  HOMES 

'  tContiniied    ffom   page   24. > 


Here  Are 

Some 

Bargains 


j3,70i>— Buvs  7 -room  lion.se.  stone 
foundation;  hot  water  heat,  and  all 
improvements.  Just  completed. 
Lot   50x140. — 7S-15. 

9S3r>0 — Buy.'?  3-story  brick  flat  bulld- 
injr  in  West  end.  on  car  line:  built 
last  vear.  rent.  .180  per  month. — 
.=^1-6. 

S004».— For  25x140  feet.  Tenth  avenue 
ea-^t  and  Sixth  street.  Torrens 
title.— 123-1:;. 

$2,400 — 50x140  feet  on  Ninth  avenue 
east  and  rourtii  street. — 125-5. 

\S'E   WRITE  FIRE  IXSl'RANf  E. 


3. 

of 

8. 

11, 


*<knnn  '^-room  house  wltlt  hard 
SwUUU  uood  floors  tliroughout: 
ga's  water,  sewer,  bath,  stove  heat, 
but'  arranged  so  that  three  stoves 
heat  everv  room;  located  only  three 
blocks  from  the  postoffice. 

St1t%n    S-roorri     house      In     West 
I   full    Uulutli;    extra    large    lot. 
U-xH";    easy    terms. 

$1  JAA    T-roons    house   with   stone 
I4UU    foundation,      city      water. 
».le(tri<    liglit  and  gas;  good  location. 
In    W.St    r>ulutli. 
*ePf|    80-acre        improved       farm. 

•  DwU  near  station  on  Missabe  & 
Norihcin  railroad;  30  acres  under 
cultivation;  good  log  house;  part 
cash. 

•  flCfl    Will    buy  a   lot   50x125    feet 

•  OwV    at   Woodland. 

G.  A.  RYDBERG 

411   Torrey   IlulldiuK. 


Nineteenth     and     Twentieth       avenues 
east.    $2,000. 

John      Klowosky.      brick      apartment 
house    on    the    north    side    of    Jefferson 
street    between    Sixteenth     and    Seven- 
teenth avenues  east.   $12,000. 
•      •      • 

Following  are  the  real   esUte   transfers  for  the  week: 
G.    L.    TnUn    et   ux.    to    Lsaac    Lewis,    lots   5. 

6.   block  7.   Chlsholra   

\lrglnla      Improvement     company     to     H.     J. 

Soloskl.    lot    23.    b'.oek    30.     Virginia 

Same    to    Frank    Mar\el.     lot    24,    block    45. 

Vlrglids    

A.     Peterson    to    Otto    Frisk,    wt^    of    nwVi. 

seetion   T.-rie  16    

H.    .shane-lling    et    us.    to    J.    F.    Lavlck.    lot 

4.     bl.sk     16.     Virginia     

f.     fusclotto    et    lut.     to    B.     PessetU.     lot 

hli'ck  4.    Northern   addition   to   Chlsliolm. 
Otto   Frisk   et   its.    to  John   Malevkh.    wV4 

n'.v>H.    section    j-56-16    

K.    •'.    Chapman    et    ux.    to    W.    Jory.    lot 

block    11.    PllNbiiry    adiUtlon.    Hlblilng. 
W.    Jory    to    Xlna    Chapman,    lot    8.    block 

Plllsbupi-    addition,    nibbing 

K-    .Mueller    el    ux.    to    M.    J.    Healey    et    al.. 

pirt     lot     23,     West    Fifth    street,     Duluth 

Proper.    First  division    

R.    S.    Woti    to    N.    Ch.apm8n.    vt^t    of    gwVi 

of  Be<'lloii   17;  n'-..  of  nw»i.  section  20-60-19 
K.    C.    Chapman    et    ux.    to    R.    S.    VVoU.    wVj 

of    swVi.     section     17-60-19     nH    of     nwVi. 

seciioii  20-60- r.i 

('.    D.    RutherfonI    et    iix.    to   John    Laplnoja. 

lot   4.    section    24-52-20;    lots    2.    3.   aecUou 

li)  -.2-i;i  

.V.    P.    .SllUman    et    ux.    to    John    Nleinl.    lot 

a.    block   10.    Ilrooklyn    

Cuaranty     Farm     Land    company    to    WlUam 

T.     Gait,     lots     1.     2.     secUon     19-.>4-l2    .  . . 
.Same    to    same.     n«V4     of    se^t.     secUon    3o- 

fil-l4;    nw^»    or    seli,    lots    2.    3,    6.    sec- 
tion     18-63-12.      etc      

Guaranty    Farm    Land    company    to    William 

T.    Gait,    w'.^    of    swVi.    section    171;    e',^ 

of     s;-V*.      .section      lS-«.t-13 

Itoston    &    l>uluth    Farm    Liind    company 

C      P.    Rutlurfoivl,    lota    2.    3,    secUon 

52-19      

J     11.    fY.iwf..nl    et    ux.    to    E.    8.    RadclltTe, 

lot     279.     MlnntsoU     arenue,     lower     Uu- 

Uith      ■    •  • 

Imanucl     XorHcgian       F.rangelical       Lutheran 

CongregaUon  of  Uuluth  to  St.   Paul's  l-^ang. 

Lutlitran   Church  of   iniluth,    lot  .".21.    block 

l(i9     Uuluth    Proper.    Second    division 

R.    B.    l-ilwntds   et   ux.    to   Charles   GuaUfson. 

se'i    of    sw>-4.    sertlim    10-52-12 
County   auilltor  to   Rouchleau-Ray 

company,    3-5    lot    3. 
.Vudltor   to   same.    3-5 

Uon     12-37-18      

.■Same    to    same.    2-5    lot    4. 
San'e   to   same.    3-3    of   seVi 

2-57-18     

VudlUT    to    Rouchleau-Ray 

pany,  3-5  of  »'a  of  ne^4 
3-5  of 


$1 
400 
200 
400 
700 
100 
450 
i 


3.300 
1 


3.000 
1 


to 
19- 


362 


800 


$1650 


New      7-room      cottage, 
hardwood   floors:    lot   35 
xlOO:    small    cash    pay- 
ment win  liandle  tliis. 

WEST  END  REALTY  CO., 


L'l04  VVowt   Superior  Street. 
Over    Itoe'M    Uepartnient    Store. 
»w   'Phone    ■""""    * 


Same 

to   same 

11-57-18     .. 

'<anie 

to  same 

1-37 

-18    ... 

Iron   Land 

section    2-.'57-18 

of   wVi    of   iwhk.    sec- 

secUon    1-37-18.. 
of   nwVi.   section 

Iron  Ijind  com- 
sectlon  11-37-18 
of   nwVa.   secUon 


600 


se'* 


2-5  of  s»H   of  nwVi,   secUon 


20 


ux.    to    John    Roberts. 
26.  Crosley  Park  addl- 


fl.    Fitz- 
block    67, 


Besscttl,    lot    8. 


ohn    .Senier.    8^4 
nw^     of    se%. 


IRON  LAND  CHEAP 

S20  ACRES — Iron  outcropplngs  all 
over  it.  indicating  a  large  body  of 
Iron  ore.  Enough  tlmt»er  on  land  to 
puy  for  it.     Must  sell.     $15  per  aere. 

W.  H.   LOOKER. 
SIO  Tofrey  Building. 


.V.     B.    Oimniiugs    et 

lots   278.   -279,    Uork 

tlon    

John    Hunter.   Jr.,    et    ux.    and    St. 

hiigh    to    John    Jackson,    lot    12, 

Harrison's     Brookd.ale     division 

G.    H.    Kbert  tt  ux.   to  W.   W;  Sanf.ird  et  al.. 

3-16  Interest   In   mines   or  minerals   on   no\i 

of  SK-V4,   seV*   of  seH,   section   21;   3W14   of 

ivthi      serUon    22;    n%    of    swVi,    »w^4    of 

sw'i'    BwVi    of    swH,    secUon    27,     eV4    of 

neVi.    nw'4    of    ne14.    9e»i    of   se%.    section 

28-5: -14    ••• 

C!o«an -Peyton -Tnohy    to    F, 

block    1  i.    ChUholm    •    •  ■  ■  ■  ■  •  ■  •  •  ■  •  ■ 

Western    Land    aasoclaUon    to    City   of   Puluth. 

right  of  way  for  main  saiiltao   trunk  sewer. 

near  Tldrd  street  and   "Hilrd   avenne  weal. 
Slierblan    Iron    company    to 

of    nw^      swVi     of    lie"*. 

stxUon    5-62-14     '/ ' ' 'i,' * '   i.' 

ClOQUet    Tie    &    Po»t    company      to      B.      E. 

Olander,    lot   2,   nw    V4of   neVi.    aecUon   29- 

Cli'a''rle9  C.oigoU  et' iut"  W  H.  Sheplnsky.  lot 
4.    block    4,    Second    addition    to   thlsliolm.. 

Chisholm  Improvement  company  to  T.  S. 
SIe«hlnnlng,    lot   17,    block   6,    Chisholm^... 

Kearsiirge  l.and  company  to  Charles  Oog- 
gola  et  al..  lots  1.  2,  3,  4.  block  4, 
Stx'ond     addiUon.     Chisholm     •  ■ 

North  Towtralt."  compiuiy  to  Matt  .\ho  li>t 
8.    block   6.    Northern    addlUon    to   Chisholm 

Cldsholni  Imprf.veraent  company  to  D.  Mat- 
tura,    lot    20,    blix-k    16,    Clilsholm 

.M.  Anderson  to  N.  B.  Shank  company.  Iota 
10.     11.    bl'wk    56.    Biwabik 

North  Tovi'Slto  company  to  K.  Johnson,  lot 
!)    block   12,   Northern   addition  to  Chisholm 

Proctor  State  lonk  to  H.  J.  Barncard.  loU 
19.    20.    block    19.    Proctorknott 

North  Tt.vmalte  company  to  John  Perko.  lots 
17  and  IS.  block  15.  Northern  addlUon  to 
Chisholm      ■ 

Davis  Heal  »taU'  company  to  H.  M.  lioppe, 
lou  76.  77.  78.  block  7.  Orosley  Park  ad- 
dition     

.S  H  Kckman  et  ux.  to  John  Bjorken,  part 
lots  13.  14.  15.  16,  block  16,  Carlton 
I'lace    addlUon     

Oscar  Bay  et  ux.  to  C.  O'Rourke.  lot  27, 
block    17.    .Southern   achlitlon,    Hlblbng 

a.   H.    Eckman   et   ux.    to   W.    titenlo.    wVk   of 


eii     of     lots     13.     14,     15,     16,     blo<k     16, 
Carlt'in  Place  addition   

C.  I'etersuii  to  A.  Peterson,  part  lot  332, 
block    137,    Duluth    Pr;|ier.    .-leiond    divbloa 

\V.  H.  OirUs  to  E.  A,  Rlsdon.  part  lot  89. 
blwk  33.   l»ulutli  Pn'per.  Thlr<l  division 

P.  S.  Wendell  to  ol«  ouon  et  al..  lota  1. 
2,  3.   bl'X-k  7.  Spalding's  a.Wltlin 

C.  M.  Bergnitist  to  A.  Hagberg.  lot  5.  sec- 
Uon   30-35-16     • 

.\.  K.  Johnson  ci  n»r.  to  (».  NyUndar.  part 
lots  9.  1  >,  11,  r-.  block  14,  Uoyd's  dl- 
vl'lon.     West    Uuluth     

Reljceca  E.  Shaw  t.)  Ch.irles  Bp^raan.  lota 
37.  :i9,  41,  43.  block  12.  Superior  View  ad- 
dition to  Ituliiih.   Second  division • 

N.  E.  Wehr  et  ux.  to  Gc  .rge  Rupiey.  seW; 
of  seH.  section  30;  n^  of  ueV*.  ne>.4  of 
nvr'4,      »ecUon      31-67-10 

Gwrge  Rupiey  et  ux.  to  R.  U.  Miiaser.  se\4 
of  aeV*.  secUon  30;  nVi  of  neVi.  ne%  uf 
of    t\v;\t.     secUon    31-67-16 

Buhl  Investment  company  to  Gust  Cronbeng. 
lot    10.    block    11.    First   addiUon    to    Buhl   . 

.V  W.  Nelsi.n  et  ux.  to  Pn>cti>r  Stat>  tiank. 
part   lot    12.    13.    14.    bl.-.ck   2,    Proctor  Knott 

G.  A.  WliLind  to  N.  .Mueller.  loU  4.  J,  6, 
block   128.    Portbind   division    :. . 

V.  Lucas  et  ux.  to  J.  Marlenclla.  lota  4.  5. 
block    8.    Second    addlUon.     Chisholm 

Western  Tovvnsite  company  to  A.  Jenson.  lot 
5,    block    1,    Wesleni    additi.n.    llihblng 

Emma  Lang  ct  mar.  to  Sheldon->Luher  Tlm- 
iH-r  company.  ne\.4  of  sw14;  nV4  of  seH, 
section    9-66-21 

F.  .\ndcrson  ct  ux.  to  E.  Wright,  lot  3, 
block   24,    West   End   addition 

M.  K.  Taylor  et  mar.  to  Standard  Investment 
comp;iny,  lots  6,  7,  9.  l'».  11.  blx*  103, 
Portland  division    

George  Rupiey  et  ux.  to  Guaranty  Farm  Sc 
Land  company,  loU  1,  2.  3.  4,  section  19- 
60-13   ■  ■    •  • 

S.  E.  Neller  to  George  Rupiey,  lots  1,  a.  3. 
4.  swrtlon  7-60-1.1 • ■  •  ■ 

C.  J.  Erlckson  et  ux.  to  M.  P.  Shapln.  lot 
25.  block  28.  re-amuigement  First  addition. 
Evtleth     

B.  B.  Brlgham  et  mar  to  Northern  Mortgage 
&  Investment  company.  loUs  61.  Third  street; 
lots  12.  14,  Fourth  street;  lots  7  and  9. 
Fifth  street.  Fond  du  Lac 

D.  W  Freeman,  trustee,  to  Me  De  Oraconio. 
lot  '10,   block  5.  Gilbert 

George  Bejer  et  ux.  to  William  Goldstein, 
lot  10,  block  32.  DuluUi  Proper.  Tldrd  di- 
vision   .    "»"■;■"■  .1 

W.  C.  Hart  to  C.  Mlkson,  lots  17.  18.  block 
141.  West  Dtiluth.   Fifth  division 

F.  Powell  to  P.  Martell  et  al.,  loU  7  and  8, 
block  12.   Nelson   

.\.  Olson  et  nx.  to  O.  Mai  Uon.  lot  5.  block 
14.    First   addition    to    .\un)ra 

William  Ahola  ct  ux.  to  T.  F.  Bmly,  guarl- 
lati.  <l-15  lots  1,  2.  block  20,  Southsm  ad- 
dlUon.   Hlbljing    •  ■ 

Wehteni  Townslle  company  to  A.  Jen.vm,  lot 
5,  block  1,  Westeni  addlUon  to  Hibblng 

1).  W.  Freem.an,  trustee,  to  R.  Paciottl.  lot  9. 
block   5,    Gilbtrt    

U.   F.   Seblsky  et   ux.   to  N.   Mueller,   part  lot 

10.  block  1.  Axa  division   

G.  W.  Multiis  et  ux.  to  .\.  A.  Miller,  lot* 
4.   5;  eH   of  seV*.  sccUon  6-66-19 

Clilsholm  Improvetiunt  company  to  O.  L. 
Train,    lots    1,    2.    3,    4.    block   6,    Chbholm.. 

C.  C.  BuUer  ct  ux.  to  F.  K.  Johnson,  lot 
24.   block  79.   Second  addlUon   to   Virginia.. 

Kear-iarge  Land  company  to  Frank  Helln, 
lot  19.  block  6,  Second  addition  to  Chis- 
holm   k'  ■;;■■.■  ;•>■ 

Same  to  Mary  Cvar.  lota  1  and  2.  block  1). 
Se<-oml    ni'dltlon    to    Chisholm 

W.   C.   Hart  to  WUUam  Finnle.   loU   19, 

11.  Brooklyn   

Boston  &   l>uluth   Farm  I>and  company 

O.    tU-klui.d.    ne»-4    of   *«>«,.    sw>4    of 

section   i::-51-18 . 

North   Townslte  rcmpany   to   C.    Cuaciotto.    lot 

3.  bl.)ck  4.  Northern  addition  to  Chlaholm.. 
S.   W.   Freeman,  trustee,  to  M.  S.  Nathaiwoa. 

loU   1,   2,   block  5,   Gilbert ••• 

J.    mder   et    ux.    to    E.    J.    llagarty,    lot    14. 

block   130,   Portland  division    

R    F    Belln<ercli.>  et  mar.   to  G.   II.   Ebert  et 

"aL.   lots   1.   6;  e^i   of  neVi,   section  20-58-12 
E     E     .\mbv    et    mar.    to    Virginia    Fire    I>e- 

partment    Relief    association,    lots    5    and    8, 

bl'x-k  97,   Second  ndtUiion.   VirgliUa 

C     A     Johnson   et   ux.    to   R.    F.    Belleperche, 

lots    1   and   6.   e^   of   neVi.    secUon 
R.    H.    Doran    el    ux.    to    H.    B. 

of    sWi,     secUon     19-50-14 •••■ 

W.     Peters     et     n\.     trustee,     to    M. 

Taylm     lot   7.    block    103.    Portland    dlrUlon 
W      Hlggins    et    al.     t»    V.     R-Visom,     n^ 


15u 


1.500 


4.000 
112 


300 


118 


1,030 
1.373 

75 


2,000 


block    11,    .VsU.iwi    .    . 

R.  B.  hUi-i  ct  mar  to  C.  O'Rourke.  lot  28, 
block    J3.    Soutlnri    addition    to    lUbblng  . 

11.  Rabtiloja  ct  ux.  to  W.  Pekkermeii.  JieJ4 
of     seVi.     section     21-60-13 

Northern  Pacific  Rillway  company  to  3. 
H.    Ohecn.   lot-s   1.    2.    serii  .n   20-70-18     .    . 

N.  <J!ii3  et  ux.  to  C.  F.  Zacher.  ne'<i  of 
mvi-i,    Bectlon    31-54-18 • 

H.  G.  Aiischuu  ot  ux.  to  E.  J.  AnachuU. 
lot  39.  East  Fifth  street,  Dul^iUi  Priper, 
First    division    , 

F.  n.  Mellln  ft  ux.  to  K.  IL-gstnim.  part  Ut 
306.  block  92.  Duluth  Proper.  Second  di- 
vision   .    .  . 

Virgiiiln  Improvement  company  to  John  Matl- 
gon.    Ibt  'tAt    blvk    8.    VIrsilr.li    

Dttluth  Br.-wing.  &  Malting  c.imi>i»ny  to  Ed 
and    L.    Johnsrn..Jot    S.     hWvk    I.    Ituiil 

A.  P.  Slllbnan  et  'ix.  to  J.  Z.  DaiUin.  lot 
25,    block    1 1 ,    Brooklyn  . , . 

E.  J.  .Vnsohutz  t)  K.  M  Anschutt,  lot  39. 
East  Fifth  street,  Dftl'Tlh  Prop^,'  First  di- 
vision      ■...'...* .      ....... 

W'x>.lljnd  Company  of  S»ip»Tl.'r  to  .N.  F. 
Riisscl,    e    to'f   nwi^.^sectlop    14^51-13. -. 

1*.  .-sample  et  ux.  to  Ji>!iiWPB^W.>nL»vitfth.  com- 
pany.   ^    of  S.W     if  .swV.  J0CI4011    3-3213 

C.  L  Nopl  bt  tJX.  ib'ti^^ri.  &  tV  Ry 
compai.y.  strip  >f  land  lOO  feet  wide  over 
n.vSi    of    -.oVi.    section    9-61-18   

American  Exchange  IwnlcUi.  Sur  Inrast- 
1-3    liTeMit"   Df    nwV*     il 


1.725 
350 
325 


S.OQO 

200 


^f  .F* 


Value  of  real  estate  owncil $ 

Mortgage  loans    

CoU.\tenil    loans    

Bonds   and   sto.'ks   owned 

Cash  in  office  and  In  bank 

Accrueil    Interest    and   rents 

PrenU'uns  in   course   of   collection 

AU  other  admitted   assets 

Deduct  speflal  dejioalts,  Icaa  $221,132.92 
liability     thereon 

Total    admlttid    asseu $ 

.\ssets    not    admitted $70. 393. "8 

LIABILITIES  OEC.   31.    1908 

t'npald  lossui  and  claims $ 

Reinsurance    reserve    

Salaries,   expenses,  taxes,  dividends  and 

interest  due    ^ 

Commission   and   brokerage 

All     other     liabilities „  „ 

capital  stock  paid  up 2,000.000.00 

Total  liabilities   Including  capital. 


111.013.38 

44.983..33 

60. 100.  DO 

8.891.884.75 

099.717.13 
58,11.^.82 

395,7.33.13 

539.704.32 

57.287.08 
8.776.984.82 


Fireman's    Fund    InHurance    Conapany. 

Principal  ofTl^-c,  .San  Francis,  o.  Cal.  (Organized  In 
1863.)  Wm.  J.  Dutton,  president:  I.ouls  Weliuaun. 
secretary.  Atlurncy  to  acc^t  service  in  Minnesota, 
Commissioner    of    Insurance. 

CASH   C.VPITAL.    $1.60'). 000. 00. 
INCOME    IN    I90«. 

Premiums  other  than  perpctuaU $    4,217.266.91 

Rents   and  Interest 224,217.05 

From  all  other  sources 22.420.00 

Profit    on    sale    or    m.iturlty    of    ledger 

asscu    179.50 


111.03 
31,13 


ToUl    Income $  4,464,083.46 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    1908. 

Amount   paid   for   losses $  2.324.: 

Coiamls.sl.>iis    and     brokcrag.^ 708,: 

Salaries    end     fees    of    officers,     agenta 

and    emplo.ves    475,369.85 

Taxes,   feoa,   rents  and  other  real   estate 

expenses     139,468.64 

Dividends  and  Interest 16J,000.0« 

Loss    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 

assets     2.200.00 

All    other    distjursements 254,405.14 


ToUl    disbursements $     4,064.485.89 


4.50,440.38 
3,967.497.71 

58.709..30 
96.040.52 
92.409.21 


6,663.097.32 


Excess    of    income    iver    dlslwrsements.  .$  399,397.57 
ASSETS  DEC.  31,    1908. 

Value  of  real   estate  owned $  566.110.50 

Mortgage    loans ^83,980.00 

Colliteral   loans 109,950.00 

Bonds  and  stocks  ov»neel 4,011,666.30 

Cash  In  office  and  in  bank 491.597.11 

,\ccrued  Imprest  and  rents ?''''5I:J'^ 

Preiuluius  In  course  of  cH>llectlon ^'i^^'i'I* 

All   other  adiiUtted   assets 38,878.33 

Deduct    special    deposit    lesa    $93,629.24 

UablUty  thereon 80.370.76 


$    6,371.840.97 

..$2.58.570.49 
DEC.    31.    1908. 


Net    surplus    •»     2.iy.887.o0 

RISKS    AND    PREMIUMS.    1908    Bl  SINESS. 

Klre  risks   «rltten   duri.m  the  year $(20,032,554.00 

I'rcmlunii    rex-eivcd    therein ,^:o-',  s«..n 

.Net  am  uni  in  f.)r.  0  at  end  of  the  yi<ar.   ,  44,i8.,l56.tto 
BUSINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN   1908. 

Fire  Risks.  Toniado.        Aggregate. 

RLsks  wrltteiu$  8.13i!,18(».00$    697,093.00;;  8,835,273.00 
Prom's    Rec'd        108.765.96  3,842.54  ll«-«2!-^2 

I,.issts  ir.curd  7i.006.88  676.19  "•M;;?' 

I..1SSM    paid..  74.491.19  .349.19  75.04O..38 

.Vm't  at    risk.    12.314.09O..M)     2.310.760.00     14,624,8o0.00 
State   of    MlnnesoU.    Department   of    Insi  ranee. 

I  Hereby  Certify,  lliai  the  annual  staiement  of  the 
Phoenix  Insurance  company,  for  tho  yea:  en^ng  De- 
.^eaiber  31st.  1908  of  which  the  alwv;  Is  an  ab- 
stra.t,  lias  been  rei'clved  and  filed  in  tlUs  depart- 
tnent   at-d  duly   approved   by   m?. 

JOHN  A.  HAItTlGAN, 
CommUsloner    of    Insuranoe. 


ToUl  ailniltlod  assets.. 

-Vsiets   not   adndtttd 

LIABILITIES 

Unpaid  losses  anil  claims $        418.486.44 

lleinsiiraii'-e     reserve 2,941,901.51 

Salaries.   e.Ti»enses.   Uies,   dividends   and 

Interest   due    9.3.000.00 

Commissions   and    brokerage 180.136.95 

.^11   other  UablUUes    9.027.70 

Caplul  stock  paid   up 1.600,000.00 

Total  ItablUlos   including  caplUl $    8,242,572.60 

.Net   surplus    $     1.129  268. 3T 

RISKS  AND  PREMIUMS.   1908  BUSINESS. 
Fire    risks    written    (Uirliig    the    year. .  .  .$o2'<.47j.l88.00 

I'rcmiums   received   thereon 4.228.172.04 

Marine  and  lidand  risks  wrUten  during 

tiip    year 330.383,182.00 

Pritiiunms    reoelvtd    thi-reon 2.685.409.93 

Net  amount  In  force  at  end  of  the  year  432,301,101.00 
BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 
Murine  and 
Fire  Risks.     Inland.       Tornado.    Aggregate. 
Risks 

375. 2U9  $8,636,309  $ 


642,310  $14,633,918 


AGCNT. 

Mortgage  Loans,  Real 
Eslate,  Insurance. 

5    EXCHANGE    BVII^DINO. 


Coiumercial 


nient    company. 


u-ia-r. 

et  ul.  to  Tihasoff-Vfentwortli 

.-.2-13 

1*31    iw^i. 


section   :>-.)i 
same.    sSi 


block  i.  'Fall   Laki 
R.    G.    MoKtiuie   et 


to   A.    Okstad,    lot   S, 


lot   1. 


lot  6. 


2.07 


G 


block 

to'c. 

sw^. 


20-38  12 
Utley.    eVi 

B. 


6.000 


130 


400 


5.230 
800 

1.000 
85) 


11I.8OO 
75 
400 
350 
2,500 
850 
300 


125 

25.) 
375 


423 
125 
800 
GOO 


500 


.-;.  R.  Wentworih 
Company.  sH   of  sW*h. 

P.     Scmple    et     ux.  *lu 
secfl.m     ;{-32  15.. 

Jolin    Antoniun   «t    us. 

ke     .....' 

Ax.    to   M.    Cla*. 
'  bl.icit   "2.    First   e4len    Avon   dlri.sion . . 

J.    .N.    Burgess  et   ux.   to  J.   A.   Axelson. 

block    5,    Ty)wer    .    . 

J.  .A.  AxeUon  ct  'ix.  to  J.  N.  Burgess,  lot  12. 
block  8.    Tower .  •• 

E.  M.  Sbrj-er  to  E.  P.  Alexander,  lot  4.  block 
.33.    New    DuluUi,    First   .liilsion    

Dan  Baxter  et  ux.  to  Robert  Carlson.  sw^4  of 
ie\*.    sccUcn    23-52-18 

P.  Berg  et  ux.  to  Mary  Klseleskl,  lot  24. 
wH  of  lot  *5.   block  40.   Virginia 

E.  Fn-eman  et  ux.  to  Pe'.cr  Kuaua,  lot  12. 
block   27.    Chisholm    

O.  A.  Whitman  et  ux  to  I  Shanedllng.  lot 
13.  part  lot  14.  bl.x-k  40,  siecond  addlUon, 
Eveleth   

Virginia  Improvement  company  to  A.  Motlio. 
l.it  8,   blcck  47.   Virginia., .  i.-.- 

James  Nelson  et  'ix.  t^  jCjgUidetson  et  aL, 
part  lot   5,    block -26,  iJ^^fe*   dlrUton... 

Peter  Trauaas  to  Leroy  fhwan.  IH  5.  block 
1.   Virginia    .^" 

E.  Lhulback  ct  ux.  to  Arubrl^K^  Iwn  Min- 
ing ivmpaisy.  wVb  of  se^,,  setJUon  2:  wV4  Jf 
neV».    sw'tlon     11-65-14,  i<      

Edm.md  IiigaUs.  tristee,*W  }i^TtU\  Smith, 
swV*  of  i.oVi.  ne"*  of  urj*.  0WV4  of  swV», 
nw^    of    se^4.    see'tion    7-")»>-I2   

M.  Sl;ap!r>  et  ux.  to  JilMvsir;^ii.x.h.  loU  9. 
block  1:!.. Chisholm,  $2.tt^*s4gned  to  Henry 

Helbilehi    .'•  ■".,>' 

A.  olllla  ot  ux.  to  A.  MUtMVjet  ux..  lat  9, 
bl.K-k  ?,».  part  lot  8,  hHjP''iB),  reirrar.#»- 
ment  'if  -First   addition.  5Sleth 

J.  C  Mullery  to  E.  Ingalte,  sw*4  of  neVi. 
nwVi  of  se'i.  iiVj  )f  s«^?^fc^  section  7-56-12 
A.  T.  KeeleT  et  UX.  U)  D.  tff  *.,-ott.  loU  1 
to  8  Inclusive,  block  3t;  J.^  1  to  8  In - 
chistve,  block  38,  StrykW;;*^  Mauley's  ad- 
dition    -^Xle 


1.20O. 
jl50 


100 
700 


«5e 


300 
2.)0 
659 
2.000 
300 


200 


1,900 
600 


900 


231 


1,230 


Union    Fire 
Couipany. 

Principal    offl're.    New    V'rk.    N.    T. 
1490.)      .V    n.    Wray.   pr«»lil'<ti' ;   C    J. 
t^iry.      .Vttorney   to  accept  service  in 
miasioner   of   Insuriii'-e 

CASH    CAPITAL    $200,000. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Pr.-'nUum.s  -ither  than  perpetuals $ 

Rettta  and   lnto^5»t 

Pr)flt    9n    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 
•asseu .' : i  • 


...  $ 
1908. 

....$ 


Insurance 


(Orj\nized    In 
Hulman.   secro 
Uinnesou,   Com- 


283.886  15 
20.617.80 

233.75 


D.H.COSTEUO,  Agent, 

206-7  Lonsdale  Bldtg. 


BoHton  Innurance  Coinpanr. 

Prlnclp*l     offi.-e.      Boston,      Ma-s.        (  i)rganlzed 


In 


18r:!.)  Ransom  B.  Fuller,  president; 
son.  sei-rctary.  Attorney  to  accept 
nosota     Commissioner   .if   Insurance. 

CASH  CAPITAL.   ?  1.000, 000.  JO 
INCOME    IN     1908. 

Prgmlums    other    than    pon>etuaU X     2, .308. 333. 88 

R»nta    and    Interest 

From    ail   other   sources 

Profit    '.n    sale    or    maturity    of    ledger 
dsseU    


Freeman  Vlcker- 
■eivlce    In    Min- 


191. 13<!  O.S 
11.344.86 


written. .  .$ 
Prendums 
receive-d..  82,433  50,252  3.732 

In-urred..  02,854  9,652  657 

Losses    paid  64,058  7.493  646 

'^at'"riik...    11,295,184        704.587     1.423.855     13,423.626 
State   ot   Minnesota.    Dipariment  of   insurance. 

I  Hertby  Certify.   That  the  annual  statement  of  the 
Fireman's    Fund    Insurance    company,     for    the    year 
ending    December    31st,    1908.    of    wldcli    tlie 
an    alistract.    has    been   received   and   filed   in 
parlmcnt  and  duly   approved  by  me.  „„,^,„ 

JOHN    A.    HARTIGAN. 
Cemimissi.iner  of  lusu  ranee 


138.418 

73.163 
72.197 


al>ove    l.< 
tilts    de- 


6.923.35 


ToUl  Incom  ■     

DISBURSEMENTS 

Arao'jnt  ptld  for  l'«sfat   

c  Mumlsi'lons   an  1   brokerage 

.Salaries  and  fe.'i  of  offlcew.   agenU  and 

employes 

Tax.es.   fees,    rents  ami  other  real  esUte 

exp»!)S'!a   

Dividends  and  lat-ip?st 

.*U    JXhit  dUburscUieuU 


3J4, 


.50 


171.982.80 
64.757.93 

4.125.01 

R.816.42 
14.223.00 
20.397.47 


Total  dUburjements $     232.304.66 

22.452.84 

567, 3.13.00 

31.124.00 

4,417.90 

70.974.48 

68.38 

.t      674.889.96 


ISxossa  of  income  .)vcr    lisb'irs  .jnents     . 
ASSETS    DEC.    31.    1908. 

Bonds  and  stooUs  .wned ^ 

Cash  In  office  and  In  bank 

,\c.rue'4   In'ersst  and  rents 

Premiums  In    "lurse   of   collecUon 

All  'vlhcr  adm^tte^i  assets 


Toul   Income II 

DISBURSEMENTS    Ifl     I9<8 

.Vmo'int  paid   f  )r   I'.s-cs    '^ 

Gonsniliilons    an. I   bi-ok-ir.ige . 

Salaries  Slid  foes  of  officers,  agents  and 

'  employes     ■. 

Taxes,   foes,   rents  and  other  real  estate 

expenses    ■  •  • 

Dividends    and   Interest 

Loss  on  sale  or  maturity  of  leelger  asseU 
.\11    other    ellsbui  semenu 


2.520,640.17 

1,338.618.70 
474.45J.45 

180.311.61 

86.214.63 

180,000.00 

13,580.74 

100,311.10 


THE  MUTUAL 
BENEFIT  UFE 

Mutual  Benefit   \,\tv  Innurance   ,    .1 
Company. 

Principal     office.     Newark,     N.     -T.       (OrganUed     In 
181.'5.>        F.      Frellngldngftpn,     president;     J.      William 
Jolmson.     seereluty.       Attorney     to     accept     servtoe    Inr 
iUnnesota.     Commlgsloner     of     Insurance. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 


Excess    of 


Income   over 
ASSETS 


disbursements. .  I 
DEC.    31.     1908 


Total  admitted  assets 

Assets  r'i)t  admlt'.vl  $21. 69.). 24 

LIABILITIES    DEC    31. 

Unpal'l  losses  and  claims 

R.>ltis'irin.'e   reserve   

.Salirica.    rtxpenses.    tajces.    difldeiids 

In'^rest  due 

Comtulstiloiis    and    bMkerago  

Reserve    for    contlngenclus 

All  other  llabllltiM     

Capital  stuck  pAld  up 


1908. 

....$ 

and 


46.042.00 
234.377.87 

4,2.34.00 

8.871.00 

20.000.00 

9.:>08.07 

200.000.00 


610 


150 
230 


430 
123 


500 


125 
1,800 


300 


225 


150 


B.    Rosiom, 


.     Bartleson. 
loU      1,     2. 


Mortgage   & 
Fourth   street. 


swVi  of 
of  uwVi 


S8C- 


Yawkey,   eW 
nw^4,    section 


F.  ...    

of    nwW.    section     27-59-20 

W.    T,    Knowlton    et    ux.    t.)    F. 

se^4    of    swV*.    section    22-59-20... 
George    Rupiey    et    ux.    to    C.    . 

Vi     Interest     Ui     mlnerab     on 

3.    4.    secUon    19-60-13 ■ ,  , '  ' '.■ 

J     H.    Finn,    trustee,    to    L.    Oou?.e.     lot    », 

"bbx-k   33.   Second   addlUon   to   «»»»«'"■-•■• 

Chlaholm    Imppovement    company   to   N.    Oy»ie. 

lot    4.    block    27.    Clilsholm 

P.    Lafraun    et   ux.    t.>    Northern 

Investment   company,   lot   17. 

Fou    du    Lac     

G.  A.  Flaaten  to  C.  C.  Yukey. 
secUon  8:  n^  of  lieH.  r.eV4 
Uon    17-69-19     

A.   A.   Wlgtlahl  et  ux.  to  C.   C. 
of   ne\4.    section   8;*w^i    of 

9-69-19    ;'■■,;■ 

.Mary  Flaaten  et  al  U)  same,  eVj  '^\ Jf^- 
secUon    8;    wH    of    sw\4.    sccthm    9-b9-i9.. 

J  \  Tuor  to  Opfer  Investment  company, 
wW  of  nwi4   and   lots   2.   6,   secUon   27-64- 

South    side    Realty    company    to    A.     AnUo. 

lot    13.    block    82,    Second    aeldlUon    \  Irglnla 
Longyear    Mesaba    Land    &    Iron    cuiipany    to 

Ed    Darrow,    ku    7    .    8,    9, 

ond    division,    Aurora     • 

Same    to    same,    lot    10.    block    8, 

vision.     Aurora      •  •  • 

W     W     Clayton    to    .V.    Pult.    lot    18.    part   lot 

20.     block    129,     Duluth    Proper.    Third    di- 
vision           :  ■  ■ 

F     A     Robinson   to   M.    Flllpovlc. 

12.    block    53.    Eveleth,    Central 
Virginia    Improvement    to    J.     F. 

6.    block    16.    VlrginU 
G.    Nelson    et   u-k.    to 

28.     M.     Virginia     ■ : ' '  •,;    V  : 

A     Dennis   et  ux.    to   Proctor  Stiite   bank    lot 

23     block   1     Second   RddlUon.    ProctorkiioU 
G    E    lJ>ve  et  mar.   to  W.  D.    Newcomb.  Jr.. 

el    al.    lot    9.    block    53,    Virginia    _. 

Joseph  "Lettman   et   ux.   to   M.    A.    Pe.trt>e,   s\i 

of    SW14,    stcU.-n    7-51-1.1 

Rose   Llppman    lo    H.    Uppman. 

log  and    lot    9.    block   12, 
A.  N.   McOliuUey  et  ux.   to 
1-3  minerals  In  se\4  of 
13 
t  A.    BuboiU    et    ux.    to 


24) 


80 


Indinnia    &   Ohio    Live    Stock    loHurance 
Company. 

Principal    offle-e.    OawforUgvUiB.    Ind      (Organiied    In 

1893.)   John   R.   Bonuell.   president.  Charles   L.    Good- 

bar.     sectetarj-     and     trrwsur?r        Attorney     tj     ai?cept 

servli-e    In    Minnesota.    Commissioner    of    Insurance. 

CASH    CAPITAL.    $100,000. 

INCOME    IN    1908. 

Premiums    Received — 

Live  st.)ck    $183.903.19 

ToUl    prenUum    Income $183.903  19 

From  interest  and  renU...". 8.909.13 

From  all  other  sources 310.31 


Toltal  lUblUUes  Including  caplul $      522.832.74 

Net  s.iroluj  *       131.837.22 

RISKS  A.tO  PREMIUMS.  1908  BUS'ffSS. 

Fire  risks  written   during  the  year •*^''i2;'-.^  i  < 

Pr-inlums   re  -elved   thereon  •  •  ■ „,  ,?i'!!7,T  \o 

amount   In    fnr:e    at    ......i    'f    t'>^.y"^»'-  VaitP' 

BUSINESS  IN   MINNESOTA   IN    1908. 


Net 


Fire  Risks — 

Risks   written    

Premiums  received. 
L'jBses  Incurred   . . . 

Uisses  paiil  

State    )f  >Unn.»sofa 

I   Hereby  Certify. 
Commerdal    Unl 


.....$      743.238  37 

..    ..  1).:503.31 

3.323.93 

'.'.'.V.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. .  ^:'.  ■  ■  ■  3,038.1) 

Department  of  Insurance. 

Tlut  the  annual  st.sicment  of  the 

Yit"    Insurance    company,    fir    the 

year  en.llng   Deeeml«r   3lst.    1903.   of   wld.'^h   ;I'-|   »>;''^e 
U    an    alBtract.    lias    been    received    and    tiled    In    this 
deparuneat   and    duly    ^'P'";;-^^,'*  ."'^^^tIGAN, 
Commissioner  of  insurance; 


Value  of  real  estalj  owned 

Mortgag-j  loans    

ColUUral     loans      

B.inds    ond    stocks    owned 

Cash  in  office  and  in   bank 

Accrued    Interest    and    rents 

Prmilums    In   course   .>f    coUee-Uon 

All   other  admitted   a.s80t«i 

Deduct    special    deposit    less    $2,306.87 
liability    thereon,    


T'jtal   disbursemeau    J     2,353.493.23 

167,146.94 

47,600.00 

1,051,700.00 

89.600.00 

3.550,613.50 

338,004.42 

29.337.64 

431.648.32 

410.00 

17,743.13 


\    5.521,172.75 

...$48,.349.17 
DEC.    31.    I!08. 


Total    admitted    .-issct*. 

Assets  i>ot  admitted   

LIABILITIES 

Unpaid  los'es  and   claims f 

Ri'ilnsurance  resene   

Salaries,   e>pense»,   ta-xes,  dividends  and 

Interest   due      

Commission   and   brokerage 

AU  other  lliibllltles 


358,013.31 
1.435.627.61 

25,396.64 
50,3'25.45 
14.330.23 


Capital   stock  paid   dp 1.000.000.00 


Total   llahllltlfs   Including   capital 1    2.883.093.46 


.  .$     2,637,479.29 
E  USINESS. 

.  .tl63,5:j3,937.00 
1,589.034.73 


$87,322.00- 


.$  87,522.00 
41,583.90 
20,000.00 

9.519.96 
13.882.01 


.$172,507.91 


Sec- 


block    8. 

Second   dl- 


loLs  11  and 
division .... 
Lavick.    lot 


C.    E.    Moore,    lot**    27 


frame   bulld- 

McKinley. 

H.'  Jt.   Lamor.MUX, 
sw>4.   se'Ctlcn    H-60- 

A.    ADdcnoo.    lot    S. 


L200 


250 
200 


700 


225 


1,55.) 


1,500 


ToUl     Ir.i-omo  $193,122.63 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 

Claims    Paid     cNetr— 

Live  stock 

Ni't  paid  jollcy  holders.... > 

Commissions     ' , 

Divldeii.ls  to  .stockholdew...'^. ". . 

Salaries    of    officers,    agents,    empLiyes, 

amlners'    and    Inspection   fees 

.\ll  other  JUbursemenU 

Total    dlsbursemenU 

Excess  of  income  over  .Usbitrsements     . . 
ASSETS  DEC.   31.    1908. 

Mortgage  leans 

Bonds   and  stocks   ovvnetl... 

Cash  In  office  and  In  hank" 

AceTued   Interest    and   rents    

Premiums    In    course    of    collectloo 

Less  agenU'    credit 

ToUl   admitted    assets $245,177.52 

AsseU  not  admitted $13,137.33 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims    In    process    of   adlustment   and    re- 

porto.1   »     9,522.00 

Claims    resisted    : 3,000.00 


.$  20.614.72 

.$  25,300.00 
.  183.497.52 
.  9.998.51 
3.353  0« 
,  23.528-23 
504.80 


Aggregate  of  unp.^ld  claim* . , 

Reinsurance    reserve 

,\ll   other   UaBllitles 

Capital   stock   paid   up ; . . .  -V 

ToUl    llaVlliUes    including    capital.. 


,  .$  ll.5'22.00 
, .  91.216.03 
, ,  10.5U.53 
. .    100.000.00 

..$213,279.58 


National   Brewers'   Insurance   Company 

Principal    )ffi.>>,    clUcago,    III       Organlzc.1   In    l!».)6i 
Wm     H     Rehm,   pr.-sldent,    E.   Oraliam   Blioad, 
Ury.      Attorney  t«>    iccept  servLie  In 
mlsslouer  of  Insurance. 

CA3H    CAPITAL.    $200,000.00. 
INCOME    IN     1908. 

Pr'TOiuma  alher  tJian  perpetuals 1 

Hei;!j    inrt    interest     

From  ali   ilher   sources 


secre- 
kUoaesota.    Com- 


3.29.^..^t, 
5.4.i0.27 
1,269.19 


ToUl    Income    .    ■ •  ■    •  •' 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN     1908. 

.Amount  paid   f  ir  losses   ' 

Commissions   and    brokerage .■•■■.• 

Taxes.    fee«,    renU    and    other   real    esUta 

expenses    

Dividends    and    hiterest 

.\U    Jther    dlsbursemenU 

Total   dtsbutsomeiita    


30,012.82 

7.030.62 
5.823.31 

1.064.57 

lO.'JOO.OO 

234.90 


24.173.43 


lilscess  of  Income   over  dUlwirsero-nU 

ASSETS    DEC.    31.     1908. 

Bonds  and  stocks   owned     . 

Cash  In   office  ami   In   bank 

Accrued    Interest    an.l    rent* 

PrenUums   In   courso   of   ^.Jilectlon 


ToUl    idmltted    asseU 

.\aaeu    not    admitted  ___ 

LIABILITIES    DEC 

Belnsuranco     pserw 
Salaries,    .'xpenses 

Inton-st  due    

Caplul  stock  paid   up 


.  .$40.)..30 
31.    1908. 


5.839.39 

305.934.70 

21.429.22 

3.'.I62.8'.» 

3.782.95 

.$    3:«. 109.76 


Net    surplus 

RISKS    AND    PREMIUMS.    1908 
Fire   rUlts   written   duriiiK   the   >ear... 

Premiums    r^-eive.i   thereon 

.Marine  and  Inland  risks  written  during  _^^,„,,,  „, 

the  year 139,073.311. 0(r 

Preniiums    received    there<m.. ,„.V?.',«'^n«'on 

Net  amount  In  force   at  end  of  the  »eai   19.M23.308.00 
BUSINESS   IN    MINNESOTA    lit    1908. 

Mailne 
Fire  Risks,   and  Inli  ii.l.   Aggrpgatc. 
$.331,018     $3,820,120     $4,131,338 
5  856  32.  W9  38.165 

4.822  12,)92  17.814 

4,819  7,^94  12,814 

393,043  738.»27       1,151, '270 

Department  of  Insi  ranee. 


Rliks     written 

Prcmlunis    re-celved 

Losaes    Incut  re*d    

Losses   paid 

Amount   at  risk  

Stale  of  MlniieioU. 


I  Hereby  Certify,  That  the  annual  statement  of  the 
Boston  Insurance  company,  for  the  ye^ir  ending  De- 
cember 3Ut.  1908.  of  which  the  ab..ve  Is  an  ab- 
stract, has  been  received  and  filed  In  I  Ids  department 
and  auly  appro! ed  by   me.  „_„.». 

JOHN    A.    H\RTIOAN. 
Coomilssloner  of  Insurance. 


First   year's   premimns 

Dividends    ai)plied    to    purchase   paid    up 

Insurance   and   annuities    

Consldcrali.  n   for  original   aiinuldes   lu- 

vohlng    life    contingemcles 

Renewal     premiums 


Total    premium    income.... 

Rents    and    Interest 

Pr.iflt    on    sale    or    maturity 

a!>!«ls    

From   all   other   sources 


of    ledger 


$     1,011.275.43 

411,146.09 

130,582.49 
14.871.894.49 

I7..344. 893.50 
5,416.023.34 

20,610.44 
1,172,010.47 


Total  Income    »  23,954,042.75 

DISBURSEMENTS    DURING    1908. 

Death  claims  and  mr.tured  endowments. $  7,727,743.49 
.\iinultles      and      premium      notes      void 

by    lapse    181.145.47 

Surrender   values   to   peillcy    holders 2.504.177.95 

Dividends   to  policy   holders 2,407,243.44 


ToUl  paid  policy  holders 

Commissions     and     bonuses     to     agenU 

first  year's  prenUum 

('ommls-loiis  on   renewals 

Commissions   on   annuities 

Commuted    renewal    commissions 

Mklsries  and  allowancen  for  agencies.. 
Agency  supervision  and  other  expenses  . 
.Medical     exandner's     fees     and     inapec- 

Ui.n  of  risks  

Salaries   of   officers   and   employes 

lA'gal   expenses    

All   oUier  dlsbursemenU 


$  12.820,310.35 

736,950.06 

989,748.41 

7,788.77 

7,392.10 

27,129.83 

20,749.05 

120.656.06 

414,877.55 

48.396.80 

1.211.154.04 


Total   dlsbu 


rsemenU    $  18,880,153.92 


7,573.888.83 


Excess  of  Inc-ome  over  disbursements ....  $ 
ASSETS   DEC.   31.    1908. 

Value  of  real  estate  owned $    3.688.053.54 

.Mortga ge  leans    

Collateral    leans    

Premium  notes  and  policy  loans 

Bonds  and  stock  owned 

Cash    in    office,    banks    and   trust   com- 
panies    

Bills   receivable  and  agenU'   balances... 

Accrued  Intc re«t  and  rents 

l>eferred  and  unpaid  premiums 

Deduct  agents'   balance  not  allowed 


54. 24.). 785.55 

2, .332,400.00 

21.320.105.70 

34,462.865.51 

1,321.076.71 

34,590.42 

2.16e.7?0.60 

1.376.139  46 

36.180.84 


Guarantee  Company  of  North   America 

Priii.'lpal    office.     37     Beaver    Hall     lilll.     Montrea. 
Can.      (C.immenced   business   In    1872. 
lings,     president;    Richr.rd    B.    .Scott 
urcr.     Attorney  to  accept  service  In 
mhsloner   of   Insunnce. 

CASH    CAPITAL    $.304.60). 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Fidelity    $199,998  34- 

Total   premli.m   Income $ 

Friin   interest   and   rtnU 

From   all  other  sources 


idwarrl   Rave- 

secretary-treas- 

MbinesoU.   Com- 


199,998.34 

63,433.09 

87.50 


ToUl     income   $    263.529.93 

DISBURSEMENTS   IN    I9)t8. 
Paid   (Net)— 


uzes.    dividends    aud 


.$      11,081.28 

500.00 
200,000.00 


Total  UablUUes   LtcluiUng  caplt*! $    2P.484.28 


Net  surplus 


$     122,6-25.48 


RISKS  AND   PREMIUMS.    1908   BUSINESS 


Surplus    over    all    UablUUes $31,897.94 

BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 

Premiums   Received.   L.)38as  Paid. 

Uve    stock $.3  210.27       $2,203.00 

SUte  of  MUuiesoU.   Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  CerUfy.  That  the  annual  statement  of  the 
Imllani  &  Ohio  Uve  Stock  Insurance  camp:uiy.  for 
the  ye«r  ei.Ung  December  aut.  1908.  of  which  the 
alwve  Is  an  abstract,  iias  Jjeen  recclvci  and  fUed 
In  this  department  and  'July  anproved  by  me 
'"    ^  JOHN    H      H.VRTIOAN. 

Commlsst met    of    Induran.:e.-~ 

HOWES  &  BADGER, 

State  Agents, 

Security  Bank  Bldg.,   MINNEAPOLIS. 

WHITNEY  WALL  CO, 

District,  Agent 


Fire  risks   written   during  the  ye-ar 

Premiums    recejlved    thereon 

Net  amount  In  fire  »«  ^ud  --f  the  year^ 
BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTA    IN 
Fire  Rlslo— 

RUks  written      

Premiums  received   

^te  "jf   Minnesota! '  ijeiiirtrnwi'  of    Insurance. 
I  Hereby   Certify.    That  the  annual   statement 
NaUonal    Brew-jrs'    Insor-vnce    company 
ending  Deeember  3lst.   1908.   of 
abstract,    has    been    received 
pirtment   and   duly    approved 


$2.897,;{81.00 
30.3*20.29 
2,239,383.00 
1908. 


57.000.00 

603.00 

57,0«».00 


of  the 
for    the    year 
which  the  ab"ve  U   an 
and    filed    In    this    de- 
by    me. 
JOHN    A.    HARTIOAN. 
Commissioner    of    Lisuraue'c. 


CI  Alms 

Fidelity   r .  •  • 

Net  paid  policy  holders 


$83,539.00- 


Investlgation  and  aiUustment  of  claims  . . 

Commissions    '. 

Dividends   to   sbs-kholders 

Salaries     of     olTlcers,     agenU.     emplojes. 

examiners'    and    Insiiectloii 

.\ll  other  dlsbursemenU 

Total  dlsbur<eraenU 

Excess  of  Income  over  dlsbursemenU $ 

ASSETS  DEC.  31,   1908 

Value  of  real  esute  owned $ 

Bon.'.s    and    stocks    owned 

Cash  In  office  and  In   bank 

.Accrued    Interest    and    rents 

Premiums  Ir.  course  of  collecUon 

Deiluct     special     deposit     less     $2,02C.40 
UablUly     thereon , 

T'lUl   adndtted   a.ssct» 

Assets   rot   adnUtted $27.08!  .68 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims     In     process     of     adjustment     und 


83,539.00 
4.361.63 
1.037.33 

24,368.00 

88.880.92 
34.183.13 

$    236.890.07 


Teital  admitted   asseto $121,129,631,65 

.Assets    not   admitt/id $38,195.84 

LIABILITIES    DEC.    31.    1908. 

.Net   value  of   ouetandlng  policies $108,933,828.00 

Present  value  on  supplementary  ewntracU 

Claims  due  and  unpaid 

Claims  adjusted  and  not  due.  and  un- 
adjusted   and    reported 

Ciaiius    resisted 

Premiums  paid  In   advance 

Dividends  due  poUcy  holders 

AU    other    llablUUess 


1,012,137.07 
63,983.0.) 

442.985.66 

60,906.88 

95,137.40 

2.930.829.77 

1.538,823.87 


Total     UablUUes 
account    


on     policy    holdcis' 


$121,129,831.65 


Gross    divisible    surplus 

EXHIBIT    OF    POLICIES. 


1908 

No. 


.  .$    5.596,651.34 
BUSINESS. 

Amount. 


Policies    in    force    at    the    be 

ginning  of  the  year. 
Pclicles    In 

the  year. 


force    at    close    of 


Net   Increase 


189.802    $440,742,990.00 

200,819       469,247,427.00 

11,217     $  28.504,437.00 


27,130.86 

48.1.30.00 

1.2-34.478.67 

152,011.83 

8,072.44 

5,781.55 

14,149.60 


$1,434,344.91 


reported 

Aggregate  of   unpaid   claims. 


$      36.323.00 


36.323.00 


No  matter  what  yon  want 
it  will  save  you  time  and 
money,  if  you  will  use  The 
Herald's  Wants. 


Total     unpaid     claims     and     expenses     of 

settlement    

Rehisurance   re-erve 

All   other   HatilUtlcs 

CapUtal  stock  paid  up ^ 

ToUl    llabUUles   including  capHal $    *74  207.08 

Surplus   ov.r   all   UabiUtles $    »60.13,.83 

BUSINESS  IN  MINNESOTA   IN   1908. 
Premiums  Received— 

si'ite  "of   Minnesota.    Department   of   Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify,  That  the  annual  .tatement  of  the 
H.iarintee  Company  of  Nortli  Amertea,  for  the  year 
«  ding  DecemlKr  31st,  1908,  ^f  wlU.  h  the  above  Is 
Tn  abstract  has  been  received  and  nied  in  this 
department  and  duly   "PP-^'^^l^^i^RTIGAN, 

Commlssionet   of    Insitrauoe. 


26,323.00 

98.546.50 

44.737.58 

304, 60  J. 041 


239.60 


Issued,    reviv  cd    and 

during  the  year 

Total     termlniUed     during 

year    

By    death 

maturity 

cxplraUen 

surrender 

lapse 

decrease   ...    . 
BUSINESS 


increased 


22,247     $  53.865.513.80 


the 


By 
By 
By 
By 
By 


11.030 
2.111 
658 
2.309 
3.412 
2.540 


IN 


at 


MINNESOTA 

No. 
beginning 


PoUcte«   in   force 

of    the    year 

Issue.l  during  the  year .^  . 

Ceaseel    to    be   In    force   during 

the  year 

In  force  Dec,   31   last 


6.303 
889 

432 
6.740 


Losses 
year 


and   claims   incurred   during   the 


Losses    and    claims    setUed    during    the 


year     

l/osses  and  claims  unpaid  Dec. 


31. 


25.361.076.00 
5.i:»l.808.00 
1.5<i2.309.00 
4.553.602.00 
8.480,»J8.0O 
6,151,714.00 
388,847.00 
1908. 
Amount. 

13.495, 4r8.«» 
1,804,9-21.00 

895.046.00 
14,405,348.08 


231.889.00 


246.4.-r.0« 
2.185.00 

461.758.55 


Received    for    premiums 1;"  

SUte  of  MlnnesoU,  iKDartment  of  I"*"""^,  .  ,^ 
I  Hereby  Certify,  That  the  annual  sUtement  of  th« 
Mutual  Benefit  IJfe  Insurance  company,  for  the  year 
eS  t>^e'nber  31st,  1908,  «f  «W<;"  «';^  ^^^^^Ji 
an     alBtract.     has     been     received     and     filed     in     UlM 

department  and  duly  ^'^^•\^,^r' ^'^_^^riGKS. 

Conmilssloner    of    Insurance. 

T.  J.  MONAHAN, 

District  Manager. 

407   Burrows  Building, 
DLIXTH.        -  -        MIXNF:S0TA 

FRANK  M.  JOYCE. 

State  Agent. 

MIXNEAPOLJS. 


■ 

'■ 

i 

i 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


■    ^ 


— 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


THE  MARKET 
IS  SOLD  OFF 

Wheat  Is  Soft  and  Closes 

More  Than  Point 

Weaker. 


»»»»*«»**»***«»*»»**«**********«**********»*********:! 


THE  MARKETS  AT  A  GLANCE. 

Duluth  May  wheat  closed  ll^c  lower. 
Chicago  May  wheat  closed  %c  to  %c  lower. 
Minneapolis  May  wheat  closed  IVsC  lower. 
Liverpool  wheat  cables   %d  to  %d  lower. 
Duluth  May  flax  closed  %c  lower. 
New  York  stocks,  steady  but  lifeless. 
Boston  copper  stocks  closed  weak- 
Duluth  curb  coppers,  dull  and  unchanged. 
Chicaj^o  live  stock,  steady  to  higher. 
Cotton  is  quiet  and  weak. 


May  Flax  Is  Easier,  Other 

Seed  Options  Are 

Firm. 


Duluth  Board  of  Trade,  March  20. — 
Quite  a  selling  movement  In  wheat 
caused  lower  prices  In  the  American 
markets  today.  Values  declined  almost 
Bteadlly  from  the  opening  until  the 
close,  under  the  pressure  from  the 
bears. 

Receipts  are  s=tlll  furnishing  bearish 
Btatlstlcs  in  the  Northwest  and  Minne- 
apolis and  Duluth  showed  the  heaviest 
declines    from    yesterday.       .    .      , 

Liverpool  closed  ^d  to  Sd  lower, 
Budapest    a,c    lower    and    Antwerp    un- 

The*^.May  option  closed  1  »4  lower  In 
Duluth.  f^tii^c  lower  in  Clncago,  iv^c 
lower  in  Mrnneapolis.  ^c  lower  in  New 
York,  a^w-gc  lower  In  St.  Louis.  >i  1^ 
Sc  lower  in  Kansas  City  and  Ic  lower 
in  Winnipeg.  The  July  option  closed 
'40  lower  in  Duluth  and  Kansas  Oity. 
^(t«jlc  lower  in  Chicago,  l^gc  lower  In 
Mlnneap'>lis.  ^-tc  lower  in  New  \  ork. 
»i4i'9C  lower  in  St.  Louis,  '%c  lower 
In  Kansas  City  and  l^igc  lower  In  \N  in- 
nlpeg 

May  corn  closed  «^@^c  lower  In 
Chicago  and  'gd  lower  in  Liverpool. 
May   oats   closed    'gc   lower   in    Chicago. 

broomhall     cabled     trom     Liverpool 

"Wheat— Easier  American  cables  yes- 
terday caused  larger  offerings  at  the 
opening  here,  and  as  a  result  of  a 
poor  demand.  values  declined  Ud. 
During  the  morning,  the  market  con- 
tinued under  pressure  although  trad- 
ing was  dull  and  a  further  decline  of 
»»  to  ■''t.d  occurred,  with  the  principal 
pressure  in  the  distant  month.  Broom- 
hall  forecasts  that  the  worlds  ship- 
ments for  the  week  will  be  heavy  and 
this,  together  with  continued  liberal 
arrivals  and  further  reports  regarding 
the  favorable  outlook  for  the  American 
winter  wlieat  crop,  prompted  realizing 
in  a  moderate  way.  At  midday,  the 
market  was  easier  and  %  to  %d  lower 
than    yesterday. 

-Corn  was  quiet  at  the  start  and 
unchanged.  Later  the  market  lost  ^gd. 
The  decline  in  wheat  and  the  easier 
La  Plata  offerings,  caused  some  pres- 
sure   to    sell." 

Car  receipts  of  wheat  at  Duluth  were 
95  against  73  last  year  and  at  Minne- 
apolis 160  against  3U0  last  year,  mak- 
ing a  total  for  the  Northwest  of  ^do 
against  373  last  year.  Chicago  receivea 
8.'!  against  33  last  year.  Winnipeg  re- 
ceived   200    against     147    last    year.   _ 

Primarv  receipts  of  wheat  were  4i2,- 
000  bu.,  'last  vear  520.000  bu.  Ship- 
ments 249. OuO  bu..  last  year  2o0.000 
bue.  Clearances  of  wheat  and  Hour  ag- 
gregated  110,000    bu.  ,„ 

Primarv  receipts  of  corn  were  o'2.- 
000    bu.      Clearances   of   corn  were   193,- 

000  bu.  .^  ^ 
Wheat  was  fairly  active  In  the  Du- 
luth market.  May  wheat  opened  »4c 
lower  at  J1.14  asked,  and  ranged  be- 
tween that  and  $1.13  during  the  rest  of 
the  session,  closing  at  $1.13  bid.  a  loss 
of  I'^c  from  vesterday.  July  wheat 
opened  »-ic  lower  at  $1.15^4  bid  ad- 
vanced to  $1.14  »/2.  declined  to  $1.13^^ 
and  closed  there,  a  loss  of  Tic  from  yes- 
terday.                                       .        ,  , 

Durum  wheat  closed  »ic  lower  and 
cash   spring  wheat  Ic  over  May  for  No. 

1  northern.  ,         .  ,, 
Flax  was  dull  and  closed  easier.     May 

fla.x  opened  'fee  higher  at  $1,621^.  de- 
clined to  $1.62  and  closed  there,  a  loss 
of  ""sc  from  vesterday.  July  tlax  was 
inactive  and  closed  »*.c  higlier  at 
Jl  62»>i.  September  flax  sold  at  $  1.391*: 
and  closed  there,  unchanged  from  yes- 
terdav.  October  flax  opened  urtchanged 
at  $1.'35.  advanced  to  $1.35 »-2  and  closed 
there,  a    gain  of    Mic   over  yesterday. 

Oats  closed  =^c  lower  and  barley  %c 
lower.  .         ,      ,  , 

Following  were  the  closing  prices. 

Wheat — No.  1  hard  on  track.  $1.1  o. 
To  arrive:  No.  1  northern.  $1.14;  No.  2 
northern,  $1.12.  On  track:  No.  1 
northern.  $1.14:  No.  2  northern.  $1.12; 
May.  $1.13;  Julv.  $1.13%;  September. 
$1.01.  Durum  on  track.  No.  1.  $102; 
No  2  $1.00;  Mav  durum.  $1.01;  July 
durum,  $1.01 '4.  t'lax  to  arrive.  $L63; 
flax  on  track.  $1.63;  May.  $1.62;  July, 
'$1.61»^:  September.  $1.39',^;  October, 
$1.35»2-  Oats  to  arrive.  aOVac;  oats  to 
track.  50>^c;  rye,  72'S75c;  barley, 
SOwCIVbc.  ^.     ,      ^ 

Cars  Inspected:  Wheat,  ^o,  last  year 
73;  oats,  9;  barley,  13;  flax  7,  last 
year  17. 

Receipts:  Wheat.  113.371;  oats.  12.- 
043;    barlev.    7.550:   rye.    269;    flax,    5.572. 

Shipments:    Barley.    901. 


»4MHlt*««»******«*««*«*««»»»««*«**«******************»* 


No.  1  norlhfrn.  $1.14^1. IT;  Xo.  3  upring.  $1.12® 
1.1«.  Coni-  Xo.  3.  64(<i04'4c;  .No.  3  white.  6.J'<,: 
Nc.  3  jfllow,  64'4(<i6''.i-;  .No.  4,  62(<}63'4c.  O.-vls— 
No.  2  white.  ,'i4®54^o:  No.  3  wheU.  53(a5li':  No.  4 
white.  ."1  (a •"'-'■»<•:  stan<l.Trcl.  34>»c.  t'lose:  Wheat- 
May.  $1  l'>'*:  July.  $1.03;  September.  9''4i«'JTc;  I>e- 
(■eml!er.  "  OT'ic.  tVrn— March.  64»in-:  May.  6j=n('< 
6."i7,c;  Jiilv.  6.".>4r;  SeptemN'r,  Cj^c:  December, 
.■■SVie.  Oais— May.  54'.»e:  July.  48'iw48V»c:  Sep- 
tember. 40^0.  Pork— May.  $17.4:'.:  July.  $17.50. 
Uml— May.  10.07'it(«  10.10;  July  $10.20;  Septemlxr. 
$lii..30(al0.3:'«4.  Klba-  -May.  $0.:'.O;  July.  $9.4->; 
SepteniUr.  $9.j7Ha'J.t)0.  Itye-  Cash,  »U:  -May.  8lc. 
ll.irley — Cash.        64Cn70c.  Timothy — Marih.        3.8  J. 

Cknei^  .March.    $8.73. 


THE  MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET. 


Elevator  Stocks  of  \\  heat  Show  a 
Big  Increase. 

Minneapr.iN.  Jfarch  20.— Th*re  was  13.582.494  bu 
rf  wheat  \t:  tttmiiial  elevators  today,  showing  an  In- 
crease <'f  10  per  cent  o«fr  last  yei'.r.  .Stocks  <le- 
creanrtl  400.000  bu  for  one  day.  Local  receipts  were 
Rgaln  lighter  tlian  last  year.  The  market  was  lui- 
cventful.  Towarjls  the  close  It  weakened  and  went 
$I.13'«.  the  dosing  price  and  oier  Ic  lower  tlian 
yfsttrday's  clo<<>.  .Minneapolis  today  received  100 
cars  ?.gilntt  300:  Duluth.  95  agntnst  73;  Wlnnlprg 
200  against  147.  .May  op«ned  $1.13*l»(Srl.l3'!ii ;  high, 
Jl.ri^i"  1.13T4;  low.  $l.i;t;  close.  $1.13V».  July 
i.p«ncd  at  $1.MH;  high.  $1.14»4;  low.  $1.13%:  close. 
$l.i;>\.  Ca^h  w:)e.-it  was  In  strong  demand  again 
today.  Botli  country  and  loeai  fullers  were  eager 
burers  and  paid  rHi(a2Vic  over  for  No.  1  northern  and 
»-4C  over  to  '4c  undir  for  No.  2.  Close:  No. 
nrrtheni  $l.U'il  MTi :  to  arrive.  $1.14H("  114=^*  . 
No.  2  iiorth<rn.  $1.12Sif!  112^4 :  to  arrive.  $1.12%«a 
l.li'.i:  No.  3  wheat.  $l.t>9(:<5 1.11 ;  No.  3  yellow  corn, 
SlViC;  No.  3  wldte  oats.  50%(ff51«4c;  No.  2  rye, 
73\('>75^c. 

Kl.nx  receipts  were  10  cars  today  agaln't  50.  and 
shlpnunt<.  1.  I>euiand  was  strong,  but  offerings 
wer.'  too  light  to  alow  an  active  market.  Pitces 
wtre  the  same  as  Ouluth   .May.   clo«e.   $1.61%. 

Harley  receipts  wire  40  ears  today  against  27.  and 
shipuinits.  43.  nie  usual  easy  market  for  Saturday 
PFSvailea  fiday.  liemand  was  fair  and  prices  fell 
off  'ic  Feeiling  and  malting  grades  met  about  an 
equal      Inquiry.         tlose.      GlB62Vic. 

Mlllstf.trs  shlpmenli  were  1,1.".9.  Dtmand  was  good 
.ind  In  excC'S  of  the  supply.  Shipments  were  heavy 
and    prices    held   firm,      liran    In    bulk,    23.00(s  2:l..">0. 

Ttie  demand  for  tl'ur  was  slow.  ,\  large  milling 
company  ti^iiay  was  obliged  to  close  pari  of  one  of 
'Jiclr  bigscst  nulls  on  anount  of  the  poor  business. 
.•<iilpn«nis  "ere  light  ai.d  prices  reniiilned  unchanged. 
Siilpnients.  40.8S3  barrels.  First  patents.  $.i.65<s5.7:> : 
iivud  panntc.  $d.5J(!i5.6j;  first  clean.  $4.40^4.50; 
eei-oml   de^trs.    $3.1.'>(n  ;t.2.'>. 


I-ard    

Pork  lulDS 

Veal    

Ladita    ... 


llH 

11    @ 

T     @ 

13     9 


IIH 
13 


New    York. 

New  York.  March  2  i.— Hut'«r-Market  of  line  grades 
ftirther  advhnced  and  closed  firm,  re<'«ipt*.  3.7ii0; 
creameries  ^perlals.  ol(g3H4c;  offlclnl.  :ilc;  ■■rpHniery 
cxtnis.  30 '.2c;  crcaniry.  Uiinls  to  firsts.  21(<>-'9c; 
creamery,  held  common  w.  spt^-ial.  20»»28'ic.  Che«*e 
—.Market  firm;  receipts.  334  boxes:  weekly  exports. 
2.1711:  state  to  cream  fpw-ial.s.  14^«Bl7c.  Kggs— 
Market  steady:  ret-elpts.  11.57.'5:  stat*  Pennsylvarda 
and  nearby  fancy  selected  wlUle.  23c;  do,  fair  to 
ihoice,  213  22c;  do,  brown  and  mixed  fancy,  20 
(3  20VkC. 

■ 
CbicaKO. 

Chicago.  March  20.— Butttr- M.Markct  firm;  cream- 
eries 22@iyc;  dalriea.  20®2Sc.  Kjrgs— Market 
steady;  fir-U.  18c;  prime  firsts,  10c.  Cheese— Market 
flnn;  dKlsli-a.  Ij'ic;  twins.  15c;  young  .^raeriras 
16V»c;  long  horns.  16'4c.  Potatoes— Market  steaily : 
choice  to  fancy.  88(ig90c;  fair  to  good.  8j(i87c. 
Poulto— Market  steady;  turkeys,  17c;  chickens,  l.'i'ic: 
springs.  l5Vic.  Veal— .Market  weak;  50  to  00-pound 
weights,  7c;  60  to  85-rK>iind  welghU.  8Hc;  8i  to 
110-pound   weight!?.    DO3  10c. 

HIDES,  SKINS  AND  FURS. 


DOWNWARD 
MOVEMENT 

In  Stocks  Qmtinued,  But 

Losses  Restricted  to 

Fractions. 


Duluth    tar    In.speetion. 

\Vti.?at-  .\o.  1  hard.  1;  .No.  1  ntrilieiii.  41:  No.  2 
ncrtlvni.  24:  .No.  3  spring.  6:  No.  1  durum.  14.  No. 
2  ilunim.  «;  No.  3  durum.  1.  Total  of  dunim.  21: 
mi.\e<l.  1:  velvet  chaff.  1.  l\)Ul  of  witeat,  95;  last 
year.    73. 

Klax— No.l.    7.      Total    of   flax.    7;   last  year.    17. 

Oats.    9;    barley.    i;i. 

Total    cf    all    «ars.    124.      Cars    on    track    today.    119. 


American    AVheat    Markettk 

Uuliiili.  -Minneapolis.  Clucago.    .New  Tork. 


.Vlay  - 
Opi  n  .  . 
High  . . 
I.0W  . . . 
Clof  e  . .  . 
(lose    1» 

July- 
Open 
High  . . 
Ij>w  . . . 
Close  .  . 
Close 

St. 

.May    

July    

Kansas  CJty — 

May     

July    

Winnipeg 

.May    

July    


19. 
Louis — 


tl.l4A 
1.14 
1.13 
1.|;<B 
1 . 14  >i 

1.14>4B 

i.im 

1.13^4 

1.13'»B 

1.14?i 


$I.l.tH-'^  $l.ljT4-\  $1.19UA 
I.13vi 
1.13>,» 
l.lSVi 
l.ll'i 

A  14*4 
1.14-H 
1.13% 
1.13*1 
1.14Tft 


1.15% 

I.IBH 

l.loVi 

1.19'» 

1.1.-.^-% 

M9»^4B 

1.16 

1.19T4 

1.03t4-«i 

l.UH 

1.03*4 -'4 

l.llVi 

1.027» 

l.UVi 

1.03.\ 

1.11^ 

1.03T»-04 

l.ll'* 

Close    20th.     Close    19th. 

....$l.l2H-?4  $1.13'» 

....    1.00% 

l.Ol-H 

....    1.06H-S 

1.07«4 

....        03V*-H 

yevi-v. 

l.li»4 

1.12% 


1.12>4 
1.13»i 


UIDKS. 

Green  salted  heary  steer  hides,   oTe» 

60     ll)S 

(jpfen  s.ilted    cows.    25    Iba.    and    up. 

and  steers  under  60  lbs 

Green  salted    bulls,    stags   and   oxen, 

40  lbs.   and  up 

Green  salted   long   haired   kips,    t   t« 

25  lbs 

Green  salted  veal  kips.  15  ta  33  Iba. 
Green  salted  veal  culf.   8  to   15  Ibe. . 

Grven  salted  hog  bUiis,  each 

dT'.tti  saltctl  hers*    and    mule    hide*, 

larg.  each   

Green  and    frozen    heavy    steers,    over 

60  lbs 

Dry    fUnt    Indian      trimmed      hluea. 

heavy,   over  16  lbs 

Dry    salted    hides,    all    swtlons.    over 

12  lbs 

Gmen    and    green    salted    deer   skins. 

all     sectloia 

T.\1J.0W. 

T.'.llow.  No.   1.  In  cakes 

Tallow.  No.  1.   in   barela 

Tallcw.   No.   2 

Grease,   v.bite.    choice 

Grease.  J I  lie  w 

Grease,  brown    or   dirk 

ijrease.  including  skunk  and  soon  oU 

Old  butter  

Uuugh  tallow 


No.  L       No.  1 


12H 

UH 

SH 

UH 
13H 
15% 
30 

3  20 

11^ 

ITH 

It 

11 


«     d 


11  V» 
10  H 
>H 
10 

11 

15 
1  20 

10^ 
ITH 
13 


4% 

4% 
S% 
S% 

s 


Trading  Light  and  Close 

Was  Barely  Steady, 

But  Lifeless. 


New      York,      March      20. — Prices      of 
stocks    moved    to   a    lower    level    In    the 
opening   dealings   today,   which   were   in  ; 
light   volume.      The    changes   also    were  1 
small,  as  a  rule.     Colorado  &  Southarn  | 
first    preferred    and    Tennessee    Copper  | 

lost      l';4. 

Sympathetic  weakness  spread  through 
the  list  when  an  active  selling  move- 
ment began  in  Reading.  Tliat  stock 
declined  over  a  point,  touching  127'^. 
Losses  otherwise  were  restricted  to 
fractions.  The  local  tractions  contin- 
ued their  downward  course.  Covering 
by  the  shorts  In  Reading,  and  a  rise  of  ^ 
1  In  Great  Northern  preferred  and  \\k 
in  Northern  Pacific  pulled  up  the  list 
afterwards. 

The  market  closed  barely  steady,   hut 
lifeless.     The  drift  of  prices  was  down- 
wards   again    In    the    seconel    hour,    but  , 
the  movement  was  held  within  the  pre-  i 
vious  limit.     Brooklvn  Union  Gas  rose  3.1 
and   Toledo,    St     Louis   &    Western    pre- 
ferred 1.     Minneapolis.  .St.  Paul  &  Saiilt 
Ste.    Marie   and    American    Malting    pre-  | 
ferred   declined    1. 


'PHONES— 

ZBIOl'H,    1464.        DULrUTH,    18T1. 


REFERENCES: 

Olty  National  Bank, 

First  National  Bank. 


Martin 

Rosendahl 

&Co., 

lacorporated. 

CAPITAL,  $50,000.00. 


Copper  Stock 
Brokers 


Duluth  Copper  Curb  Market. 

N.  S.  MITCHELL  &  CO.. 

202-204    MANHATTAN    BUILDING. 

Referencrai 
PrlTMte    \%Mr«a.  CITY    NATIONAl.  BANK.        PrlTate  I^ne  DlManej. 

City  'Pbonea,   180S.  Duluth,  Mln*.  »Pho»e»,  1«57-1805. 

MARCH  20,  1909. 


I     Bld.1    Ask. 


I     Bld.l    Ask. 


American  Saginair  . 
Arlz.-Mlclilgan  .  . . . 
Black  Mountain  .  . . 
Butte  &  Superior. . 
Butte  Ballaklava  . . 
Caliunet  &  .-Xrix.  .  .  . 
Cal.  &  Montana  .  . . 
Calumet    &    Sonora. 

Carman    Cons 

Chemung;     

CHIT    

Copper    Queen     . . . . 

Cordova 

Cactus     

Dcnn-Artzona    

East    Butte     

Globe    Cons 

Greene    Cananea    . 


3.50 

3.73 

1.25 

1.37 

.95 

1.05 

1.00 

1.06 

16.00 

16.25 

99.00 

100.00 

.17 

.19 

13.00 

13.50 

1.25 

1.37 

.19 

.20 

l..>0 

1.75 

l.»7 

l..-)0 

1.75 

2.00 

1.50 

1.62 

3.62 

3.75 

14.00 

14.25 

5.87 

6.12 

9.12 

9.37 

Keweenaw •  •! 

Fiive   Oak    

Lake  Sup.  &  Sonora.. 

Mowitza    

NiplFistne 

National    

North    Butte    

Rod  Warrior    

Bau'hide  Royal   

San    Antonio    

Savanna    

Sup.  &  Pittsburg. .. 

Sup.   &    lJo.-iton 

S  Sliattuek-.Arizona    .. 

Superior  &  Globe .  . . 
I  Tuoluniue     

Warren    

,  Zontth  Lead  «  Zinc. 


8.75 

4.00 

5.75 

6.00 

3.62 

3.87 

1.25 

1.37 

10.50 

10.75 

.52 

.54 

67.00 

67.25 

2.25 

2.25 

.14 

.16 

13.75 

1    14.00 

1.87 

2.00 

13.00 

13.25 

14.121    14.37 

15.25 

!    15.50 

.95 

;     .97 

1.75 

1.87 

3.50]      3.75 

1.75 

i      2.00 

New    ycrk    stock    Quotitluiu    turnlshrel    Ttie    Hen  til 
bT    Piper.    Johnson    It   Cate. 

I  Opon.l  nigh.!  liOW.  I  Close. 


colcr. 


C'blcaKO  Corn,  (latM  and  Pork. 


(>l)on 
High 
Low 
Close 


O.lt 

May. 

54  >4 

31H 

53%-54 

34  »4 


e'er.. 
.May. 
66  ^ 
f,6  '3 
6-.^ 


Trrit. 
May. 

$17.6:. 

17.65 
17.4.1 


60=>»-'»B     17.47 


Ne^    York   Orain. 

Ntw   Yirk.    Wanh  -U.— Close:    \\lKat-.May.    Jl.lOVi; 
July.    JMIH.      funi     .May.    73St-;  July.    'iUc- 


Puts  and  (alls. 


Dnluth   Car   Intipectlon. 

No.  1  nrrthtni.  ?.-:>  c.Tr 

'No.  1    northern.    2    rare 

No.  2  nerthem.   202  bu  30  Ifac 

No.  3  spring.    1    car 

r'anim,   1  car  No.  1 

I)umm,  3«4   rar<  No.   1 

Durum.   1  tar  No.   1 

Itunim.    1 -oars   No    3 

Oats.    1   far   No.    4    white 

Rye,   ^  c-ar  No.   2 

Hye    1    car   No.    2 

BarKy  3    2-5    rars 

Barley,   3   car? 

Barlty.  1    car    

FUi.  .500   bu   to   arrive 

FUx.  3-5     car 


.$1.H»4 

.  1.14\ 

.  1.12H 

.  l.('9^B 

.  1.02"2 

.  1.02 

.  1.021, 

.  l.OOU 
.      .50»« 
.      .74 
.75 
.      .«<t>, 
.      .60 
.      .61', 

.  1.63S» 

.  1.63'.., 


Mlnnearrlis  p-.it3  were  $1.12H.  *l.ia»4  «ncl  $1.12H 
^1.12'«    and   calls.    $1.13\. 

Chlcaco  May  ui-s  were  J1.157i(a  1.16.  and  jio;m». 
$l.llfi.  Jub  "iw  wif  *l-03>«(s"l.l)o^  and  |1.13^. 
and   downs.    |I.02'4. 


30 
28 
26 

2a 

16 


a 


32 
30 


17 


20     @       23 


Liverpool    Grain. 

LlTtrpooI.  >lan-li  l:".— <  !o«e:  Wheat— ."pot  firm: 
No.  2  red  western  winter.  8^  ."•'id:  fufiircs  quiet: 
Mav.  8s  l"»d:  .Tuly  8s  3\d;  HcpSember.  7s  lOd. 
tYrii— Spot  llmi:  new  .XDitrican  nUxed.  via  Oalves 
ton.  58  Ud;  futures  qulft:  .March  nominal;  May.  ''f 
S'.»d. 


THE  (HK AGO  M.ARKET. 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 

Pricen     are     steady     and     unchange<l. 

Ttie    following    quotuUona    were    mnlshed     tu    the 
iccretari'    of    the    produce    exchange. 
BUTTKR. 

Creameo'    prints 

Tubs    

Itenovated    

Ladles    ■ 

Packing  strck  

EGOS. 
FfPBh   iggs    

full  cream,   twins   

WlBconi-ln  flats   ._.^. 

llluck   and   wheel   rhcct* .."..."%.„.. . 

Umburger.   full  cream   

Prlmost    • 

HONEY. 
New   fancy   white   clover,    per   lb... 
do    per    caae    

mapue:  sykup. 

Vermont,  per  lb  • 

MaLle    (irup,    lO-lk    cans 

NUTS. 

FUlerts.    per    lb 

French    wahiutJ.    ler    lb 

CaUi'uniib    icft-sUeUetl    «alnuu, 
lb 


13 
15 
17 
18 

in 

IT 
4  SO 

IS 

1  35 

14 
19 


(9 


I( 
18 
20 


rciis. 

Prime 
Bear—  Large, 
ttlack  Mlnttaola.  Wisconsin  and  Da- 
kota       19  0« 

Black  yeart!r.s,    Minnesota   Wisconsin 

and  Dakct*   10  00 

Bla^-k   iube.      .Minnesota,      Wisconsin 

and    DahoU «  50 

Badger^ 

Northim    2  50 

Cat- 
Wild.   Northern 3  50 

House.  blucK.  winter  ktllea 

House,   Maltese,  winter  killed 

House,  sundry  colors,  winter  killed.. 

Cltet.  all  section. 

lUngtalled     

Dog— 

Black  long  h.ilred,  winter  killed 

Ixing    haired,    sunarj    colors,    winter 

killed    

Short  haired,  all  colon 

Fisher — 

Northern:    S&rk 

Ncrtliejn.   brown  or  pale 

Fax  — 
Black— Prices     vary     as     to 

beauty  and  flnrnes* 

Silver  Grey— Prkti  vary  as  to  color. 

beautv  and  ftiieiit»s— dark 200  00 

Silvtr  Grey— Prtcts  vary   as  to  Color, 

beauty  and  flreness — palo 80  00 

Cross— Price*  vary  .is  to  color,  beauty 

and  fineness — dark 15  00 

Cros»— Prices  vary  as  to  color,  b«auty 

and    llnei.iss — pale 7  00 

Ited.  Northern    6  00 

Red.  Nebniska  and  Wisconsin 9  23 

Grey,    Northim  1  23 

Kttt    or   Swift 1  00 

Lynx- 
Dark 

Dark    brown 

Light  brtwn  or  pale 

.Mink- 
Minnesota.    Wisconsin,    Vpjier   Michi- 
gan   and    North    Dakota— dark    or 

dark  tnwn 

Minnesota.    Wisconsin.    Upper  Michi- 
gan and  North  Dakota— light  brown 

or    pale    

Cotton  or  Wldte  Grounds,  all  sections     1  23 

Otter- 
Minnesota.  Wisconsin.  Iowa  and  Da- 
kota—dark   .    la  00 

Minnesota.  Wlsccnsln,  Iowa  and  Da- 
kota—brown or  pale 14  00 

Kaccccn — 

Black    «  00 

Minnesota.  Wisconsin.  Northern  Iowa 

and    Dakota 2  00 

Skunk — 

Black,     cased 2  85 

Short   strtptd.    cased 2  25 

Long,  narrow  striped,  cased 1  60 

Broad  striped  knd  white,  cased 85 

Weasel — 

White,  winter  caught,  with  tails 33 

Winter   caught,    luidly   stained,    vUti- 

out  tails,  or  damaged 20 

Wolf- 
Mountain    Timl-*r,     Northern,    rased 

and     open 

Buffalo  and  Brush.  Northern,  cased. 
Buflalo  and  Bnish.  Nortlum.  open.. 
Prairie  and  Coycte,  Northern,  cased 
Prairie  rnd  Coyote.  Northern,  open. 
Tlml^r,  Scuthwe'teni.  cased  and  open     2  50 

BeaMr.  per  skin 8  00 

\f  uakrat 30 


i  r(m2 

8maii. 

10  00 

•  79 

S  00 

15 


3  60 

1  50 

30 

18 

18 

10 

10 

6 

50 

85 

«0 

83 

SO 

20 

SO 

12«4 

20 

10 

12  GO 

«  73 

8  SO 

e  23 

.350  00        130  00 


73   00 
8.%  00 

7  SO 

8  73 

3  23 

S  00 

73 

33 


18  00 
8  00 
6  CO 


6  07 


4  50 


per 


Cocanuta.    per   doi 

Uraiils.  per  doz 

Mixed    nuts,    per    lb. . 

I'lanuls.    per   ID 

i;bp»lnuts,   per  lb 


FKL'ITS. 


IS 
50 
2  SO 
12H 
8 
12 


a         8>i 


Wheat  Steady.  Following  a  Dedine 
at  the  Start. 

Chl'-ago.  Manh  20.-  The  wheat  market  was  steady 
In  the  session  today  following  decline  o(  'ic  to  \m\v 
at  the  start.  Lower  cables  add  additional  rain  In 
Oklahoma  and  Southern  Kansas  pr<  pmt«l  some 
sellng  by  pit  traders,  but  offerings  were  readily 
abe(rti«<l  by  commisslor  houses  after  the  first  few 
minutes  of  tmde.  May  opened  at  $1.15^(S  ].l3Ti 
awi  sold  off  to  $1.1.''5.  July  opene<l  at  $1.03'/i# 
1.03H  and  sold  at  $1.03=%ii."  1.03%.  The  market  de 
velope<l  .iddltional  weaknei-s  later  In  tlve  day.  the 
July  drilvfrj  being  ufuler  cinsidtrable  selling  pressure 
by  longs.  -May  dropped  to  $1.15'«  and  July  to 
tl.02%.  The  close  was  weak  at  almost  the  liot- 
tom.  .May  being  olT  Hvf 'itc  at  $1.15%fel.l3H.  JiilJ 
was   down    "»ffi  Ir    at    $1.03. 

Uber^l  rtceipts  ar.d  a  slackening  of  demand  ftr 
the  cash  gi-aln  cnuf-ed  weakness  In  the  com  market, 
cash  hou5<es  l^ing  niiKUrate  selUrs.  Wet  wiather  in 
tbe  com  l)elt,  hiwrxr.  had  a  tendency  to  check  the 
selling  pressure.  Prices  at  the  start  were  un- 
changed to  '4c  lower.  .May  t>e!ng  at  66^  (n  66 '/4c 
Early  In  the  day  May  declineel  U.  66^66',c.  Tlie 
market  folic weel  wheat  in  its  dewnwiird  courw.  Ma\ 
derliidng    to    6."^c.       The    close    was    weak    with    Ma.\ 

Off  H("\i   at  r.-i^rtor.^c. 

Oats  »X:re  weak  on  selling  by  ca«h  Interests  based 
on  the  easier  tone  of  (-ther  grain.  .May  rpeiieel  c 
•hade  lower  at  54V»&54%c.  sold  at  54  Sc  an<'. 
then   ea'!e<l    off   to   .'>4Hc. 

Provisions  were  firm  at  the  start,  but  soon  weak- 
•Tjed  on  piTiflf  taking  bas«l  on  the  weakness  of 
grain.  Perk  was  espcMally  heavy,  declining  about 
20c  from  l;.itial  quotiitlins.  Prices  at  the  opening 
were  nnchai'geel   to   3c   higher 

Articles- 
Flour,     bbls 

Wheat,      bu 

Com.    bu 

Oats,  bu 

Kye.    bu 

Barley,      bu 

Car  lot  receipts:  Wheat.  83  cars,  with  29  of  con 
tract  grade;  c<  rn.  260  cars,  with  20  of  contr.ict  grade: 
o«U.  144  cars.  Total  if  re<-cipts  at  Chicago.  Minne- 
apolis i.nd  Iiuluth  today  were  3.18  cars,  ceimpared 
With  255  cars  la-st  week  and  406  cars  Uie  correupond- 
Ing    day    a    year   ago. 

Wheat  cash  .No.  2  red.  $1.25®1.23;  No.  3  red 
81.15'a(<»1  22H:  No.  2  hard.  $1.15®  1.17>;4 :  No.  ? 
tooKi.     (1  12^01.15:    No.    I    northern.    $1.15H@1.18: 


Bananas,   per  lb 

MaUga    srai>c»,    per   keg    , 

Dates,    hard.    l::-lb.    box 

Dales,   mgar  walnuts,   lo-lb.    box 

Klgs.   Smyrna,    lu-ib.   bux 

Figi,     Calif  truia     

Oranges    

Lemons.     Cajiiv/nla     

Limes,  per  box   

Grape  truit.  per  box 

.Vppltii      

CraJiberries.    per    bbl 12  50 

Florida   pineapples,   per  crate    «  90 

ORl-KN    Vl!;Ut,TABLt8. 

Wax  beans,   per  liaaket    2  90 

Pie  plant,  per  box i  25 

Cueumlicrs,  hothouse,  del 8  00 


4 
S  00 

1  19 
I  10 

1  23 
83 

2  79 
«  04 
I  i% 
4  00     @  4  50 

3  00     (9  3  50 


4 ',4 


4  50 
3  00 
2  ,'.0 
2  50 
2  00 


e  00 
3  00 


3  00 


2  as 

73 


9  00 
7  00 
2  00 

1  00 

2  IS 
1  75 
1   10 

89 

20 
10 


2  00 
1  00 
I  S3 
1  33 
1  15 
I  33 

3  SO 
29 


Allls   Chalmcra    

do  pfd    

.\malgamated   

.\uierican    Hugr.r    

.Vmerican    Car    Foundry   . 
.Knitriran    Cclinn    Oil.... 

American   Smelter*    

.\nae-onda      

Atcldson    

do     pfd 

Baltimore    &    Ohio     

llrooklyn    Rapid    Transit. 

Central     Ixfllhcr     

Chesapeake    &    Ohio 

ClJcago-tJt.     Western    com 
♦""hlcago-Great   Wcsieni   A 
Chicago-Great  Western   O 

C,    M.    ft    St.    Paul 

Coll  rado   Fuel   &   Iron... 

Coloraeij    Southern    

Consolidated  Gas   

Canadian  Pacific   

Delaware    ft    Hudson    . . . 
I>en\cr  &  Itlo  Grande   ... 

lUstlllere     

1>..   S.   S.   ft  A 

Krie     

do     1st    pfd 

do    °ind    pfd 

Freal    Nortlu  rn    

Great    .Norllurn    Ore 

Ililiols     Co  tral     

Inter-.Mft      

lima     Central     

Kaii'<as   City    .'Southern... 
Louisville   &   Nashville... 

.Mexican    Central    

•Missouri.   Kansas  ft  Texas 

.MUsourl    I'aclflc    

National  Lead   

New   Yi  rk  Central 

Norfolk    ft    Western    

.N'irlh   American    

Ncrthein  Pacific   

Ontario  Ac   Western    

I'ennsylvanla    

Peeiple's   Gas    

Prewsed  Steel  Car  . 
He  public     Steel     ft 

do    pfd     

Kock    Island    

do    pfd     

Blading     

Slos.^-Sheffleld   

Sio  Line   

Southern    Hallway 

ilo  pfd    

Southern    Pr.clflc    . 
Tennessee    Copper 
Texas    Pacific    .... 

Tldrd  .\vcnuc 

Twin    City     

lnl(  n     Pacific     . . . 

Ituh    Copper     

C.    S.    Steel    

do    pfd    

Wabash    

do     pfd      

Wesiiiighouse   

Western   Vnlon    . . . 
Wlsionslu    Central 

do   pfd    


68*4 

12!'% 

50  \i 

84" 
40  Va 
103 

107^ 
71 '4 


69 
4 '4 


Iron. 


T 
144  Vs 

32^4 

i29   ' 
167 

'44'H 


24 

37% 

28% 
140% 

65 'i 
142 

14 

'44H 

'20 ',4 
40 ',a 
68  >4 

i24'/i 

78% 
ViiVi 

45 

130% 
113% 

30 

20  Vi 


68% 
U'11% 
51 

84% 
40% 
103 

io7% 

71% 


6P'4 
'4% 


7 
144% 

32% 

iioH 

167% 
°44% 


24 

37% 

28% 
142 

65% 
142  >i 

14 

"45' 

20 '4 

40% 
68  >i 

124^ 
87 '4 
78% 

14) 
45 

130'S 

112 
36  « 
20  >4 


68 

129% 
50 ',4 

83% 

40% 

102'/* 

i67% 

71% 


69 
4% 


13b 

41b 

C8'4 
1J»% 

51 
Sl'-tb 

8:t% 

40% 
102% 
102b 
107  ',j 

71% 
2'J'4b 

6!' 'A 
4Va 

25b 
6% 
144 

32 

82',»b 

129% 

167 

173%b 

41  >> 
35 '4  b 
lC%b 

24 

37% 

28% 
141 

65% 
142% 

14 
2!t%b 

44% 
12!"-.b 

20% 
40%  I  40% 
68>/4|     68% 

I   75%b 

124%<   124% 
87%1     87'4 


6% 
143% 
32 

iiji" 

167 
"44"' 


23% 
37% 
28% 

140% 
65% 

142 
13«/4 

'44% 

'20% 


414    WEfft    SUPERIOR    STREET. 
102-103  BIANHATTAX  BMHJ. 


My  own  wires  to  the 
Copper  country.  Also  con- 
nections to  Eastern  mar- 
kets. 


•8% 
138% 

45 
1.30% 
111% 

36 

20 '/4 


::::: 


23 

63 

128% 

"23   ■ 

63% 

128% 

23 

62% 
127% 

i45% 

145% 

145% 

'6i% 
118 
41 

61% 
118% 
41 

61% 

117% 

40% 

'35% 

35% 

34 '.t 

i78" 
41% 
43% 

109% 
17% 
44% 

178% 
41% 
43% 

110 
17% 
44% 

177% 
41% 
43'>. 

109% 
17% 
44 

■48% 
86% 

■48% 
86% 

"48% 

86  %| 

78«: 

1.58% 
45 

130% 

111% 
38'; 
20', 

71 '4 1) 
23 
6:i 

128 
70b 

145  V.- 

23  %b 
61% 

118-\ 
40% 
32b 
35'.^ 

103b 

178 
41 '» 
43',., 

110 
17v, 
44 
78b 
05b 
48% 
80% 


FRED  H.  MERRITT 

BROKER. 

Stocks,  Bonds,  Grain. 

328    WEST    SUPERIOR    STREET. 

Telephonen:  Duluth  140H;  '/.enlth  UTl. 

>L\RCH  20,  1909. 


HlbbiuiK. 


— BUA.XCH   OFFICES— 


Superior. 


PAID  UP  CAPITAL  $50,090.99 

inr.  LEE  &  GO.^  Inc. 

eANKEftS  AND  IR3KERS. 

Piivnte   WliTw   lo  Copper  Country,   Kanee  aud  all   t.««tern  Market". 
Both    phones,   2093.  *^»  We.t   Superior  Street. 

DVI.ITH  crnB   STOCKS. 


Total    shaits.    217.000. 


3  I  25 
(»  3  25 


O        4S 


@       19 


llecelpts.   Shipments. 
. .  23.200         is.yoo 


82.8  10 

335.000 

229.100 

2.000 

88.  ."■(«) 


55.. 100 

300.800 

234.400 

2.00) 

34.6011 


Fancy  Golden   Hunt  celeo 35 

Undlvei.    per   bus 2  00 

Lettuce,   hothouse,  per  bus 1  25 

Radlihcs.    per    uo* TS 

Kjoui   radlalies.    per  doa TS 

SiTlng?.    per   lb 17 

Toualoes.    H-i    basKeta 4  50 

VKtiETABLES. 

Punipklns,    per    aoz 150 

Hubbard   squash,   per  doz 1  50 

Cabbages,    per    crate 8  tM> 

Unions.  Spuiilsh.  per  b'ate 2  00 

Horscradiah,    per    Dbi 8  50 

lied  Globe  onions,   uew.   oer  100  lb*  1  50 

Potatoes,    per   bushels 95     @   1  00 

Sweet    pctatuet.    per    bus 1  75 

Brown     Deans       8  00 

Beets,  per  lua 75 

.New    carrots,    per    bua TS 

Turnips,    per   bus •$ 

Uagus.     per    biu 79 

Parsley,    pet    eloz 40 

Oyster  plant,  per  doa 7S 

m;w   ciUKii. 

New  apple  elder,   per  keg 8  50 

Black    rasptcn  y    lidce 5  50 

Urange.  chem  or  pear 8  69 

POP    CORN. 

Choice,    per    lo 4     •        » 

lUce  com.   shel'e.l   S 

DRESS  KD   POUMKT. 

.Springs,     per    lb 15 

Ilei.s.    per   lb 16 

Turkeys      25 

Uu.V4.    per  lb 17 

Ueeae.    per    lb 14 


Pike,   per  lb 

Perch,    per    lb 

Fresh  salmon,   per  lb. 

Pickerel,    per    lb 

Wliite.    per   lb 

Freah   lake   tiuul    . . . . 
Herrhig.   per  lU    


FISH. 


HAT. 


TiiDothy,    i-er    ton 

Upland.    No.    1,   pf-r  ton 

Jt'EED. 

.Shorts,    per    ton 

Bran,    per   tun 

Oats,    per   bu 


MEATS. 


Beef    .. 
Mutton 


0 
7 

11 
T 
9 

10 
9 

11  0« 
•  50 

27  00 
26  00 

57 

7 

0 


17 

17 

18 
15 

10 

8 

IS 


(S)       10 


@       10% 


AN  ECONOMICAL  BEACON. 
Tetlinical  World:  On  a  .'sunken  leef 
350  feet  distant  from  Stornoway  llprht- 
hoi5.se  Is  a  remarkable  beacon  wlilch 
warns  mariners  wltli  the  help  of  a 
llgrlit   which   \s  only  apparent. 

Tlie  beacon  i.s  a  cone  of  cast  Iron 
plate.s  surmounted  with  a  lantern  con- 
taining a  Klass  prhsm.  Tlie  prism  de- 
rlve.s  its  light  from  refracting  the  rays 
emitted  from  the  lighthouse,  and  the 
optical  delusion   is  marvelous. 

Mariner.s  naturally  suppose  that  there 
Is  a  lighted  lamp  on  the  beacon  itself, 
and  many  of  them  will  not  believe 
otherwise.  But  the  object  of  the  bea- 
con Is  attained  when  the  navigator  sees 
the  reflected  light,  which  indicates  the 
perilous  rook  below.  This  beacon  has 
been  in  use  more  than  half  a  century 
and  since  It  was  fixed  in  position  others 
have  been  placed  in  other  neighbor- 
hoods to  make  clear  points  of  danger. 
> 
STRENGTH  OF  A  WHALE. 
Kennebec  Journal:  An  anecdote  of 
the  whale  is  told  of  us  by  an  eye- 
witness, .Sidney  King,  who  says  that 
while  at  Grand  Manan  last  week  he  saw 
a  large  specimen  swimming  about  at 
Seal  Cove,  near  the  mooring  at  that 
place. 

The  large  sardine  boat  Oulda.  owned 
by  William  Russell  and  Grover  Cook, 
was  tied  up  for  the  winter  with  a  6- 
ineh  anel  a  4-inch  bridle  to  the  mooring. 
In  playing  about  the  vessel,  which  Is 
of  some  fourteen  tons  burden,  the  sea 
monster  either  accidentally  or  by  way 
of  sport  took  the  two  large  ropes  In 
his  mouth  and  started  to  swim  to  the 
bottom.  The  vessel  heeled  over  and 
took  in  wat«r,  the  chocks  were  torn 
completely  off  her  deck,  and  finally 
both  ropes  were  parted  by  the  terrific 
strain,  setting  the  vessel  adrift. 

She  was  tied   up  again   without  dam- 
age, but   it   shows   what   a    whale   could 
do  if  he  was  really  enthusiastic. 
a 
Read    the    want    ads    tonight.      Your 
neighbor  does.     It  pays  too. 

• 

North  Butte  Mining  Company. 
Dividend  Xo.  13. 

A  eiuarterlv  dividend  of  $400,000.  be- 
ing Jl  per  share,  on  the  outstanding 
stock  of  tlie  company  has  been  de- 
clared out  of  the  surplus  earnings, 
pavable  on  March  27,  1909,  to  the 
stockholders  of  record  at  the  close  of 
business  on  March   13,  1909. 

The  transfer  books  will  be  closed 
from  March  15,  1909,  to  March  27, 
1909,    both   inclusive. 

C.   A.    DUNCAN, 

Treasurer. 

Duluth,    Minn.,    Feb.    16,    1909. 


Stuck     tiOMHip. 

New  York  to  Piper,  Johnson  &  Case: 
A  very  dull  and  narow  speculation  was 
seen  in  todays  session.  From  a  weak 
opening  the  market  gradually  hard- 
ened but  It  was  a  very  tedious  affair. 
The  '  tractions  W&re  under  pressure. 
Inter-Metropolitan  preferred  sold  down 
to  a  new  low  level  and  large  blocks  ot 
Steel  common  were  pressed  for  sale  at 
slightly  lower  quotations.  Northern 
Pacific  and  Great  Northern  were  ex- 
ceptions to  the  general  rule.  The  first 
named,  instead  of  opening  easier  as 
foreshadowed  by  the  London  market, 
advanced  sharply  in  the  first  few  sales 
and  before  the  first  hour  ended  the 
stock  sold  at  140.  an  advance  of  almost 
2  points  from  the  low  of  yesterday. 
Great  Northern  did  not  do  as  well,  but 
the  buvlng  w «  of  a  good  character. 
We  look  for  a  narrow  market,  but 
favorable  purchases  on  all  sharp  reces- 
sions. ^ 

THE  COPPER  STOCKS. 


Y\.-\\.  Scott  full  ml . .   . 
Buttc-.\.  Scott  $2  pel 
liutte-linllaklnva   .  .  .  . 
Riitte  &  Superior...  . 

Cactus    , 

Caluiiiet  &  Sonora..  , 

Carnian   

Chief  Cons 

Copper  Queen    , 

Cordova  $2  pd 

l>enn-.'\rizona 

(iiroux    

Greene  Cananea  .... 
Lake  S.  &  S.  $2.50  pd. 

I.ion  Gulch 

IJve  Ooak  $2  pd 

Mowitza 

HawliUle  Koyal   

Red  Wan-itu-    

San  Antonio  $1  |<d.  .. 

Savanna  $2   pd.' 

Siinttuck-.^rizona  . .. 
Sup.  &  Pittsburg.  .  ., 
Zenith    


Bid.   1 

Ask. 

$8.25 

$8.50 

•1.00 

4.25 

16.00 

16.25 

1.00 

1.25 

1.37 

1.50 

1.3.00 

13.12 

1.25 

1.25 

.94 

.96 

1.12 

1.37 

1.87 

2.00 

3.50 

3.75 

8.25 

8.37 

9.12 

9.37 

3.87 

10..50 

11.00 

.5.75 

5.87 

1.25 

1.37 

.15 

2.00 

2.25 

14.00 

1.87 

2.00 

15.25 

13.12 

13.25 

2.00 

lyATKST  NFAVS:  The  Xew  York 
market  Iicid  up  very  well  tln'ougii- 
out  the  sliort  session  ttnlny.  in  face 
of  some  disquictino:  rinnors  ivlalive 
to  llie  Steel  situation,  and  closed 
but  .slightly  under  tiie  opening 
prices. 

Tliere  Is  no  chang-e  iu  the  copper 
metal  situation.  The  prevailiuR 
sentiment  of  uncertainty  letl  to  a 
quiet  and  uniiiterestina:  .session  on 
the  Boston  exehanfie.  Price  remain 
practically  unchunsed,  the  leadcTs 
such  as  Xorth  Butte  and  Copper 
Itauf^e  eloslns:  well  up  to  the  open- 
ing quotations. 

liOcally  little  interest  was  shown, 
the  few  transactions  beins  in  s|m»- 
ciaities.  Kawhide  Royal  selling;  at 
1.5c.  An  awakening-  of  interest  in 
this  issue  would  indicate  a  higher 
level  for  the  sliarcs. 

Lake  Superior  &  Sonora  holding 
strong  at  $3.87  bid  with  no  offer- 
ings. A  realization  of  the  possi- 
bilities of  this  particular  stock  will 
certainly  l<'a<l  to  better  prices. 

Offerings  of  Mowitza  are  nil.  The 
demand  is  Improving. 

Zenith  licad  &  Zinc  is  a  good  pur- 
eha,se  at  any  figure.  Dividend  to 
follow  later  on  will  make  this  stock 
much  sought  after  as  an  Invest- 
ment, and  make  it  an  active  trader. 


BITTK-BALLA 
KtookM.  We  advl«e«l 
Mr.  M.  U.  Lee  In  iu 
lime  and  we  eipect 
Hhuiild  easily  paM»4  8 
(Ion  OB  Butte  Ktoek 
Butte. 

BITTE  SII'KR 
fairly  oU-anod  the  1 
tlie  market  at  iires> 
level. 

rawhide:  It01 

board.  Don't  be  *« 
held  wonderfully  w 
reportM  will  eanlly  : 

cofPi:u  Qi  i:i- 

medluni  elans  «tooh 
paNi  the  developnie 
MOW  ITZ.\  OF 
past  week  and  niuc 
ThiH  Im  one  of  the  1; 
luent  and  In  a  pro\« 


IvL.WA  COPPKK — The  redeemer  of  tbe  Duluth  curb 
ItN  purehaHe  e\er  »rtnce  our  firwl  trip  to  Butte  and  now 
Butte  esanilnluK  thin  and  ether  pr€;pertleH  for  the  third 
the  nioKt  favorable  rep«-.rt  upon  hlM  return.  This  «t«»ok 
'M  on  further  Kood  newM  from  the-  mine.  .\ny  lufornin- 
H    ^111    be   KlMdly    ei^f"    ««»    tl**"    return    of    Mr.    Lee    from 

ion Kxeellent    buying    from    Butte    the    pant    week    ban 

)uluth  market  and  there  In  little  or  no  tetoek  preHHlnf; 
?ut   prices.      We   eonslder   It    an   excellent    buy   at   prenent 

lAI. The  bent   buy  of  the  eheaper  HtoekN  on  the  Duluth 

nred  out  of  your  Moek  on  any  action,  the  market  hn« 
pH  on  HH«-h  an  advance  and  we  think  Ka\«hide  from  all 
>ell  even    with   Knwhide   Coalition. 

:\_<-opper  Queen  if*  the  bent  buy  en  the  board  In  the 
N.  The  manaK«'nien(  In  clean  and  the  property  I*  now 
at  Ntnee  and  wtll  Koon  be  iu  the  di\  Idend-paying  elaHW. 
ITAH — touHldernble  trading  In  Mowltif.n  during  the 
h  profit-taking  <»u  tbe  flr»«t  advance  under  the  fZ  mark. 
CMt  cheap  Kto<'k»»  on  the  board  with  clean,  nlile  mannee- 
n  diKtrfct. 


THE  ORBATE8T   EXCITEMENT 

.         .L    ricn  Kr   pre    Eh  utrfiits    to    Uie    iiciirby  Mmlttrs    to    .■..raineiH  e    in    tbe   near    futi.re.    lli.re    .an 
?""L  ^n.J.T  doubT  aV  t-T  t  I   future    cf    this     ciupany.       Tr.-a«ur>     tu.k    1.    n. «     *clUi.g    at    onlj 

Prtc"     Uo   not   ml-s   thU    wrtui.lty.    but    Invest     NOW.      Appl>    to 

_    _    ^  1>    £^A       CtoAnI   Anflc      ^13-14   Flrxt    \ntional  Bank   Bldg.. 

0.  E.  PCtlCrSOn   «   tU.,    tlSCal  /tgiS.     U„|utb    MIna.      <>ld     rhone   t»S.1-K. 


Both    'Phwlicii,    14S5. 
ROOM  "B.-  PHOEMX   BLOCK. 

J.  a  R013BERS, 

Copper  stocks  and  Bonds 

Curb    Stock*    r     Specialty. 
Llated     Seturltle*. 


N.  E.  LIIGOFF 

STOCKS  an:)  bonds. 


All    Ordem    Promptly    and    Confiden- 
tially   Kxeeuted. 

ROO-nO  1-502     LONSD.ILE     BCIlDIXCi. 
Old    phone    IC^Os        Zenith   phone  977. 


Mining. 

'oii!!!! 


The  following  aie  the  clo.=;lng  quota- 
ons  of  copper  stocks  at  Boston  today, 
"ported  bv  Paine,  Webber  &  Co..  Uooin 


ti 

repo . 

A,  Torrey   building 


STOCKS — 


Amalgamated    

.\naconda    

.Xdventure    

Alimeek    

Allouez    

American    Telephone 
American   Zinc 

Atlantic     

Arcadian     

Arizona    Commercial 

Begole     

Boston    Cons 

Boston    Corbin 
Black    Mountain 
Butte    Coalition 
Butte    &    London 
Calumet    &    Arizona 
Calumet  &  Hecla   . . 

Centennial     

Cons.  Mercur 
Copper  Range 
Cumberland   Ely 

Daly   West    

Davis  Daly  

Dominion   Copper   ... 

East   Butte    

Franklin    

First    National    

Giroux    

Granby    

Greene  Cananea   .... 

Hancock   Cons 

Helvetia    

Isle    Royale    

Keweenaw    

Lake  Copper    

La    Salle    

Mass.    Cons 

Mass    Gas    

Mexico    Mining    

Miami   Copper    

Michigan     

Nevada   Consolidated 

Nevada    Utah     

Newhotise    

Nipplsing    

North    Butte     

Ojibway 

Old    Dominion 

Osceola    

Parrott     

Pneu.     Ser     

Quincy     

Baven     

Santa    Fe     

ShanTion      

.<hoe    Michigan     

fJuperior    Copper     

Superior    &    Pittsburg 
Tamarack 


Trinity     

United    Copper 
United     Fruit 
United    Stales 

do    pfd    

United     Slates 

Utah     Apex     

Utah  irons 

Utalj    Copper    

Victoria    

Winona    

Wolverine     

Wvandot     

Yukon     Gold     

Arizona-Micliigan  . . 
American -Sagamore 

Boston-Ely    

Butte-Ballaklava    

Butte  &  Superior 

Chief  Consolidated    . . 

Cactus    

Calumet  &  Corhin  .  . 
Calumet  &  Sonora  .  . 
Calumet  &   Montana. 

Carman    

Chemung     

Cliff    

Copper  Queen    

Cordova    

Denn     Arizona     

Duluth  &  Moctezuma 

Ely   Cons 

Globe    

Goldfleld    Cons 

Lion  Gulch    

Live  Oak    

T.«ke  Superior  &  Sonora 

Mowitza    

National   Exploration    .  . 

North    Lake    

Ohio  Copper    

Rawhide  Royal    

Ray  c^onsolidated    

Red    Warrior    

Rawhide  Coalition    

San    Antonio    

Savanna   

Shattuek    

Superior    &    Boston 

Superior    &    Globe 

Torre  Roca 

Tonopah   Nevada    

Warren    

Wolverine    &    Arizona.. 

Zenith  Lead    


13 '4 

11=^4 

133 

40 

44% 

30  Ms 

5*4 

39V2 

40% 

4 

5 

138 

2% 

4V4 

1% 

3% 

1% 

With  our  own 
connections  wit^ 
Boston  and  the  c< 
of  Michigan.  Mo 
Utah,  Arizona  a: 
are  the  best  eq' 
you  quick  execut 
leading  local  stoc 
erage  house  in  th 


private  wlrs 
New  York. 
)pper  countries 
itana,  Nevada, 
id  Mexico,  we 
lipped  to  give 
ions  on  all  the 
us  of  any  brok- 
e  city. 


PAINE,  WEBBER  &  CO., 

a  IS  WEST  ST^]'ERIOR  ST. 
Torrey  to  lilding. 


PIPER, 
JOHNSON 

(Sl  case 

BROKERS 

Our  booklet  on  Copper  Mining, 
and  a  copy  of  our  recent  letter  on 
Girotix,  will  on  application  be  mailed 
to   tl.ose  interested. 

MEMBERS: 

Boston  Stock  Exchange 
New  York  Stock  E-xchanje 
IVew  York  Produce  Exchjngz 
Chicago  Stock  Exchange 
Chicago  Board  ol  Trade 
"  Mpls.  Chamber  of  Comm?rc2 
Duluih  Board  o!  Trade 
Winnipeg  Grain  Exchang2 


4(N(-411    fhaniber    of    tomnieree 
Neiv   Vork  Life  .\rcade, 
MInneapollM. 


md 


102     Pioneer     PrenB     BIdK.,     St.     I>aul. 
Grain  Kxcbange,  Winnipeg. 


DULUTH: 

Temporao'  ©like  - 

18  3rd  Avenue  West, 

R.  G.  Qubbell,  Manager. 

BELL  PHONE  n).  UMIH  PHO.XiE  ?.'J. 


TRIANON  DAIRY 

Stmppi^  i^  ^^^^ 

Is  now  available  f c  r  a  few  custom- 
ers.    Phone   16/2   Hell,  or  write 

TRIANON  DAIRY 

401  Lonsd;  le  Bldg. 


99c 

9-lc 

l''» 

1 
13 
17c 

life 
18 

1% 
IMi 
3% 


4 '4 
7% 


5% 

3% 

IV4 

50c 

0 

6% 

13c 

12»;4 

1        2% 

64c 

13% 

«) 

15 

14^ 

95c 

3 

6% 

SVi 

|'"i%' 

$342  800.  Spe<lP.  $271.52,1.I( 
serve  $3.'.2.022.8ii;  ln<ro«^! 
Uiilnd.  $337,116.32:.;  itecre 
$14,906,475;  liu-reasp,  $1. ■»•'■• 
posits.  $1.-..51!».875;  liurcase. 
The  pt'iceiitaKC  ol  ni'tual 
house  banks  'vhs  26.4'.';  Uie 
trust  rtmpaMies  of  (ircater 
):ig  Ui  the  lUnriiiK  tioube 
gsltutiims  liBve  a«Krepte  «1 
•  ot'al  cash  <n  hand.  $148.18 
ing    to    $1,07(1,089.000. 


0;  inrrease.   $18P.800.   Ke 
.",32. BOO.        Hisirre     re 
i?e,     $(i20.!i2."i.       Surplus, 
FJ-l'nit«d    States    de- 
$1,461,000. 
r<s<rve    of    the    clenrlnj! 
statement    of    banks    and 
Ntw    Yirk,    not    report- 
shows    Uiat     thise     In- 
:p<l,it8    of    $1.20i".41l.->.8J0; 
J,  100.    and   leans   uiuount 


St.    Paul    l.lvedtoek. 

St  Paul.  -Minn..  .Marcii  20.— Cattle- 
Receipts.  300;  steady,  unclianged.  Hop 
—Receipts.  1.600:  steady.  rang:e  $b.oo 
^16.55;  bulk.  $6.3.=>^'6.40.  •'^''ff'P— «*•.- 
ceipts,  100;  steady,  unchanged;  lamb.-,, 
unclianged. 


The  Cotton  Market. 

NVw  York.  .Manh  20.  -'Hie  cotton  market  opened 
at  unchange<t  prices  to  an  adTance  of  2  points  and 
lat<r  ea»e<l  oflf  to  a  net  loss  of  about  1^3  points. 
Futures  rlosed  rasy.  Closlnc  bids:  March.  0.31; 
AprU,  9.27;  May,  9. 26:  June.  0.17:  July.  018:  .\ugiist 
9.14:  September.  9.12:  OctoNr.  9.12:  November.  9.08 
I>ere'ml*r.  9.08;  J.-.nuary.  y.<'6.  Spot  riosetl  quiet.  .'1 
points  lov»er;  ndddling  uplands.  9.65;  mldling  gulf. 
P.  90;   no  sole». 


New  Yorii 

New     Yirk.      Marcii     20.- 
noniinal;   time    loans   Qulel 
(a2M    per   cent.   90   days.    2 
months.    2^i'<3    per    cent, 
paper.    3HC«4    fw   <'»"t:   st< 
actual    buslnes    in    bankers 
for    60-day     bills     and     at 
mend;     crniraercial     bills. 
.ViJ^4c:   Mexican   doUirs.    44c 
and   railroad   bends   heavy. 


Money. 

-Cl'se:  .Mcufy  on  call 
iiui  sttailv:  00  days.  2'-* 
^(fi2\  P<r  cent,  antl  sii 
VMose:  I'rime  mercantile 
rling  e!ii-hhuge  firm  with 
bills  at  $4.86.20t«4.86.:iO 
$4  8S  3('(o4.88.ao  for  de- 
4.8(i(u4.86»«:  bar  »ilv«r. 
govtmtucnt  bonds  steady. 


Cotton  : 
Wasiiington,  Mai 
bales  of  cotton,  nu 
of  avciage  gross 
pounds,  all  equiva 
oOti-pound  bales,  wi 
operating,  was  the 
census  bureau  today 
grown  ljj''*^08.        " 


leport. 

cli  20. — Running 
mbering  13.40S.841. 
weiglU  of  505.8 
lent  to  13.563.942 
th  27.587  ginneries 
final  report  of  the 
on  tlie  cotton  crop 


BOOKLET 

Entitled 


iftui:. 


Winter  Apples  for  Profit" 


telling  all  about  the  Commercial 
.^liple  Orchard  Industiy  in  the  Spo- 
Itane  county.  State  of  Washingtton, 
will  be  mailed  to  readers  of  The 
Herald  who  arc  desirous  of  increa*- 
ing  their  annual  income  and  are 
willing  to  Invest  9H.Z:i  a  month  out 
of,  their  savings.     Just  address 

HANAUER-'.  RAVES  CO., 

S(nith   hi.   Stevtiis   S'.r;c!.    .SpiU.ine.    Wki.;i 


5 'A 
6 


%  MONEY 


Money  to  loan  on 

Real  Estate  Security. 

Building  Loans. 


"Weekly   Bank    Statement. 

New  York.  Murch  20.— Tlic  ftmnient  rf  clearing 
'hou'e  banks  fc  r  the  week  shows  that  the  banks  hold 
$14,906,475  mere  tban  the  rcstntd  reqairementa  of 
the  2r>  per  cent  nde.  Tills  is  an  lncr»a«e  of  $1,433.- 
.">2ri  In  the  pr->portlonate  <»sh  reserve  as  comparid  with 
last  week.  The  »t.->tenv?nt  foilovvs:  Ixians,  $1.3,il.63.i.- 
400-  detrease.  $3,178,300.  D.pcsiU.  $1. '148. 4  6.1, 300; 
dwrcise.  $3,683,700.  Circulation.  $48,581,900;  In- 
creaae,   $32,200.     lA«al  teoUcrs,   $80,302,700;  inctcaae. 


Treanurj 

Washington.  Ma 
statement  of  the  tr 
thp  general  fund  ex< 
006.000  gold  reserve 
and  bullion.  $43.81 
cates.  510.694.515;  i 
ancer-.    |136  013.434. 


Balaneea. 

rch  20. — Today's 

easury  balanci'S  in 
•lusive  of  tlie  $150,- 
shows:  Gold  coin 
if. 688;  gold  certifl- 
vatlable    cash    bal- 


Midway   Hoiiie   Market. 

Min.soia  Tran  fer.  St.  1 
Barrett  &  Ziiomcmian  repel 
grades  of  lii  r«es  <rntlnues 
good  brood  mans  of  the  dn 
meet  with  good  dematid  wi 


:iul.     Minn..     March    2ft.— 

t:  The  In-iH-rr  fir  nie«llum 

teedy.    jo'ril   crdcrs   for 

ft  type  were  fUIrd.  Mule* 
Ot  the  supply  Umiied.   TIm 


W.  M.  Prindle  &  Co. 

LONSDALE  BIILDING. 


usual  rprlng  movenient  of  1  migrants  to  Uie  North- 
west and  Canada  has  commenied  .nn<l  a  large  num- 
ber of  Ihem  buv  what  hirs«s  they  iiee»1  on  this  mar- 
ket. Pricts  have  advanced  but  little  with  the  p!a<  iii» 
of  spring  oivUrs.  much  to  Uie  disappoint m«nt  of  deal- 
ers hire  and  shipper*.  The  market  is  »eU  suppUed 
with   big.   young,   rugged  draft   horses. 

IWaflcr'.    extra    'Il'^rlx; 

Urafters.     choice     '2^2?$! 

Itrafters.  <ximui<  n   to  good    .   -?    in! 

Kiirm  man*   and   l.c.r«».   extra 14.'.<«  1«(1 

Farm    mares    and    li<.r»eii,    choice i"?}TX 

Kami    n.arts.    romiuc  n   to  good ,5l!?;ii 

nelivery   120^185 

nilvcri    and    s.iddlers     }':'^:„ 

Mulea,    awording    to    sixe 140«s«> 

■ 
Chieaso  Uvewtoek. 
Chicago  M..1I1  -'  Cattli-  Ut<-<:pts  rctlmated  at 
300  marii/ct  Me.idy:  l-^ves.  $4.«;'^  7.0<l ;  Texas  steers. 
$4  40('i.">.30:  weeteni  sUtrs,  $4.00^3.46:  sUickers  antf 
fee<Urs  $3.40(p  3.:t3:  cows  and  heifers.  $l.lM>«i550; 
cal\e«  $«.0"t<ii«.OP.  Ilegs— Hcceip's  estimated  at  10.- 
00-  mar.(et  5c  higher:  light.  $3.2.Tp3.55;  miicd.  $3  45^ 
ffi5  8'.-  heavy  $6..'.o^6.77H :  nugh.  $C..'40ta6.6.' :  god 
to  choice.  heav>.  $6b0iaC87>4:  plgs.  $r..2."S^«  2<i :  tnilk 
of  *al<s.  le.eo^e.Sft.  Sheep — U«-tlrt«  estlmaUd  at 
2  00-  market  steady;  native.  $3.»5(n5.80;  western, 
$3  50<a5'>0;  yearling.".  $4).nO(«7.25;  lamb*.  n«Uf«, 
5.5037.80;    wtsUro,    $3. 50*7. 80. 


I 


"T 


i-^   ■ 


!  , 

1      , 
1 

1 
1 

1 

1 

4 

i 

1 
1 

• 

• 

\ 

I 

j 

I 
I 

— 

I 


^Kriiiii 


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•^a 


t 


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IT  i~i-i    ri*  1 


« 


rpXITT' 


DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD  i^  SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1909. 


OCKAN    STE.\MSHIPS. 


EUROPE 

70  TOIIIS.  do  Luxe  and 
Vacation,  for  1909;  Cover 
All    Europe. 

$150  to  $1195 

All  Traveling  Exp«nM9  Indnled. 

THOS.COOK&SOH 

245  Broadway,  New  York  /f) 

Cook's    Travelers'    Checks   f| 
are  Good   Everywhere. 


IforthCJermanAloyd. 

FAST    EXPRESS  SERVICE. 

PLYMOUTH-CHERBOURG— BREMEN— 10    A.     M. 

CecUle    Mar.h  i3     K:iUer    VVm.    U April  8 

K.    Wm.    I>    ■;:■  Mirrh   .M      Krnprlr.'    Win        .April    U 

TWIN-SCREW  PASSENGER  SERVICE 

BREMEN     DIRECT- iO    A.     M. 

Roon      .M.inh   18  i  •!•.    KreUerUli    VVm.  .April  I 

Bclwrnliorst   .    .Mun-!i  2.^       •Ynrck    April  8 

•C»;i-i    .Ht    PUt.i  "itli     idi'l    t'lurh  I'lrc 

MEDITERRANEAN  SERVICE. 

GIBRALTAR— NAPLES— GENOA. 

SttlliiiB   at    n    a.    m. 

Btrbarowft   .Mari-1\  27  ]P.   Irene  April  17 

K.    LuUe AprU   10  |k.   Albert   April  24 

North     German     Llayd     Travellers'     Checks 

Oflrichs   &   Co..   Agents.   5    Broadway.    N.    Y. 

H.   Claussenlus  &  Co..  93   Dearborn   St..  Chieato,   III., 

or  ttM   local  aiMt  ia  y*ur  elty. 


1=777 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

DILDTH.  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY, 

Office  I     426  >Veitt  Superior  St. 
'Phone.    »S». 

For  HIbblng.  Virginia.  Eveleth, 
Coleralne.  ••Mountain  Iron, 
••Bparta,    ••Blwablk •7i40  AM 

For      Hibbingr,      Virginia. 

••Eveleth.    Coleralne 'StSO  PM 

For  Vlrgiiiia,  Cook,  Ranler, 
Fort  Fiances.  Fort  Arthur, 
Beandette.  Warroad  and 
Winnipeg   •TilO  PM 

•Dally.     ••Except  Sunday. 

Cafe.  Observation  Car.  Mesaba  Range 
Points.  Solid  Vestibuled  Train,  Mod- 
ern   Sleeper  through   to   Winnipeg. 


FARM  LANDS 

FOR  SALE— THE  LAND  "dKPART- 
ment  Of  tho  Duluth  &  Iron  Uange 
Railroad  company  is  preparing  to 
put  on  the  market  a  number  of  ten 
and  twenty-acre  tracts  for  poultry 
farming  and  truck  gardening  at 
Meadowlands.  These  lands  will  be 
well  ditched  and  drained  and  sold 
on  easy  terms  and  long  tnmo.  For 
further  information,  address  Land 
Commi.^sioner.  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
Railroad  company.  5i:J  .Wolvln  build- 
ing.   I>uluth.   Minn.  


GOVERNMENT  FARMS  FREE.— OUR 
112-i)age  book  "Vacant  Government 
Land"  describes  every  acre  in  every 
county  in  the  United  States.  How 
secured  free.  1909  diagrams  and  ta- 
bles. All  about  free  irrigated  farms. 
Price  -5c  postpaid.  Webb  Pub.  Co., 
Dept.    137.    St.    Paul.    Minn. 


THE  DULUTH  &  iROM  RANBE  RAIL- 
ROAD COMPANY. 

'•THE  \  tlUlllilOX  KOUTE." 


DriATH. 


ArrUc 


I  !  KuU9  lU^er.  Tvo  Httr-  1 
•7-30  ami  I  bon.  Tdwit.  Ely.  Aurora.  I 
•  3   15  pml  ^  UlwaUk.    McKlnley.    Sparta,  h 

t7.43am,  [                  tviWtli  and  | 

1  I.  Virginia^ J 


*  12.00  M 
*7.4S  pm 
t6.43  pm 


•  Dally   I'xoept   .SuiiUay.      tiiunday  only. 


Dulutb  &  Korlhern  Minnesota  Railway 

OfflccH.  510  Lun.<idale  Bide.,  Dulutb. 

Trains  leave  Knife  River,  20  miles  out 
on  the  D.  &  L  R.  R.  every  day  except 
Sundays,  on  arrival  of  tlie  train  leaving 
Vnlon  station,  Duluth,  at  V:30  a.  m.  Re- 
turning connections  are  made  at  Knife 
River  with  trains  due  In  Duluth  Union 
•ta:lan  xi  7:4.'  p.  ni.  CuunecUuna  arc  m.Klt.-  daily,  ex- 
cept .Sundaj  at  Itaptlsm  Rher  viith  stage  line  for 
Qrand  .Vfar.iU  and  all  north  Shore  poinu. 


NORTHERN  PACIFIC  RAILROAD 


•4.00  pmi..^ Ashland    and   Kast 

*6 .  00  am   ..*.... .  Aililand   ana   Mtist 

•7.30  pm  ...Minn,  und  Dakota  i-Upress.. 
•8.13  am, Nortli  I'lia-it  Limited 

I.A-.1V.:.     j  "UuIutU   Short    line." 


.\rri>4. 

•  II   IS  am 

•6.40  pm 

•8  IS  am 

•6.23  pm 


Arrive. 
•6.30  am 
ST.    PAUL  t2  OSpffl 

^MINNEAPOL^S^ •?  00  pm 

fD.Uly  Mi-epi  Suntlaj.      "Phone.   214.    L'uiuo 


-  l>ally.      ,  .^...sj   .-•.«»—  ^.».. ..-.,. 
I>ciwt  and  33)  Weitt  Suinrtur  street. 


MORTHkWESTERNllNEl 


L\  Duluth  ftiicpm 
I-T  Superior  ^  5Spni 
Ar  Y.Ai.  Ll.^ire  b  ^-^ytm 
Ar  MiUi^on        3  15.1111 

A»  .^liiw  JiiikCC  ^— ^— 
Ar  UueiiiUs  4353m 
Ar  Chua^j  7  0oara 
1)1 


b5  isHO 
S^Spm 

lu  aopm 
3  4^uni 
1 400111 
4500111 


aLaliy     XE»ccv>t  Sunday. 


Lv  Duiuth  \.ii  35am  a4  3Sr'ni 
Lt  Superior  s  c.-ytm  4  5;pm 
.^r  St.  Paul  4  30pnj  g  sspra 
Ar  M  'poiis  5  '.5{/ni  10  a5^m 
Pul.aian  sleeper*  and  chair 
can  to  Chicai^.  Parlor  and 
.af-  cars  to  Twin  Cities.  OiBce 
-301  W.  superior  St..  l>ututh- 


DULUTH.  SOUTH  SHORE  A  ATLANTIC 


No.  i 
A.M. 


.0.  S  I 
'.■Sl.\ 


No.  7      No.  5 
A.M.      P.M. 


i 


7.45 

a.  05 

M. 

7.45 

^B.3S 

^8.35 
7.43 


»5.001Lt 
•5.15 
AM 
•5.40 
*6.30 


Ar. 


•3.50 

•4.30 

•10.13 

•8.00 


Duluth    . 
Superior   . 

Houghton 
Calumet 


. . . .    lahpemlng    . . . 

Marquette    . . . 

.  .Sault  Sie.    Maile. 
Montreal   . . . . 


•8.15  .... 


Bostoa 


Ar 

•10.30 

•10.15 

P.M. 

L» 

•10.30 

•  . 

•9  40 

P.M. 

•12.25 

•11.30 

*  .   . 

•5.30 

•9.50 

•10.00 

t7.55 
t6.40 


A.M. 

t7-55 
|«.4S 


A.M.      P..M.  1 
♦  8.56     •7.I0LT... 
P.M.     A.5i. 
fS.OO     •7.l8lAr... 

.    Montreal    . . . 
..New    York 

.Ar 

A.M. 

•7.30 
P.M. 

•7.00 

P.M. 

flO.IS 
A.M. 

to. 43 

•Dall7        tD>dly 
Tnliis    .N'js.    T   and 

eicept    iiunday. 
8. 

Dlclxig    car    00 

THE  BREAT  NORTHERN 


Leave 


STATIO.NS. 


I     Arrive. 


tS.ue  am|  i  ST.    PAUL 

•3.25  pmi^  and 

•II.IOpmjL  MINNEAPOLIS. 

•8-45  am|  (    Crooksron.     (irand     Forks. 
•8.55  pm'  i  Mi-ntaiia  and  toast. 

t2.20  pmi  .Swan    lUvtr.    Illbbtng.    Vlr^nla.  It  12.30  pm 
16  Oe  ami. St.  Cloud.  Wllmar.  .Sioux  Clty.jf  1015  pm 

•iMlly.     ^l}iMs  except  tSuiidity.     Twin  City  sie«l>C'ri 
ready    at   'i  p.    m.     UtTloe.   Spalding  tioteL 


I  it  10. 15  pm 
V  ♦1.55  pm 
/  •6.30  am 
I  I  •e.So  pm 
J  I    •7.15  am 


HOTKI^  LrEmOX 

10o»X.    thoroughly    equiptjed    In    th« 
Nortliwe.st.      Sanitation    perfect. 
EVROPEAX,    $1.00    .AVD    UP. 

A3ie:rican,  $2.00  .\NO  UP. 


ORMONDE  HOTEL 

'i'Z\-2'2'A  Lake  Avenne  Suutli. 

The   Only    FIr»t-Cla»ji    Sl.OO   Per    Day 

Hotel    iu    the   City. 

Every     room     heated     and     modern 
throughout. 

American  and  European  Plan. 

MIKE    GLEESON,    Prop. 


The  Miller 

232-224  W.  Superior  St. 

American  and  European  Plan 

Fifty    Home-like   Rooms. 

JOHN  W.  MILLER,  Prop. 


New  Buildlns.  New  Bqntpment. 

RATES,  $2.00  AND  »2J»0. 

Hotel  McKay 

Cor.    First   Street  and  Fifth   Avenue 
West.    Duluth. 


Hotel   Superior 

SUPERIOR.    WIS. 

Lending  lintel  of  the  city.  Pine  Cafe  Seir- 
Ire  At  impular  prices.  Large  Sample  Booma. 
U.i>    DjdU    all    Imliig. 

European   Plan,  73e  to  S2.50  per  day. 
Special   Weekly   Rataa. 


FARM  LANDS— 12s  ACRES.  HUBBARD 
countv;  Iron  lands;  on  lake  shore; 
$1  300!  A  snap.  Tslah  Henry  Brad- 
ford. 213-214  Torrey  building.  


FOR  SALE— 40  ACRES  IN  TIMBER 
a!.so  40  acres  cultivated;  railroad  and 
depot  in  center  of  same:  two  wells; 
furnished  house,  cost  $2.;>U0;  gooii 
stable,  three  milch  cows,  granary  aiid 
complete  farm  machinery;  twenty-six 
miles  from  Duluth.  Part  cash,  bal- 
ance easy  terms.  Inquire  J  79,  Her- 
ald office. 


HELP  WANTED— MALE.  . 
(Continued.) 

WANTED— MEN.  DON  T  ACCEPT  ANY 
kind  of  work  until  you  hear  from 
us.  Make  $10  per  day,  selling  a 
household  necessity;  new  article; 
new  plan.  125,000  sold  In  Minneapo- 
lis. Cost  6c.  sells  for  "5c.  Send  5c  for 
two  samples.  Domestic  Mfg.  Co., 
Desk   A46.    Minneapolis.   Minn. 


WANTED— MANAGER  AGENTS  TO 
get  our  proposition  about  a  slot  ma- 
clilne  substitute.  Write  quick  to  In- 
.sure  you  territory:  sample  $1.  Zenith 
Novelty    Co.,    Duluth,    Minn. 


WANTED— SALESMEN  TO  SELL  OUR 
seeds  direct  to  farmers,  and  orna- 
mental stock  in  towns;  liberal  in- 
ducements. Herrick  Seed  Co. 
Rochester,  N.   Y. 


WANTED— HEAD  LAUNDRY  MAN  OR 
laundry  woman  to  take  charge  of 
laundry;  must  be  thoroughly  experi- 
enced.    Apply  Spalding  hotel. 


1-OR  SALE— 5-ACRE  TRACT.  NEAR 
city.  With  house,  chicken  coop,  pump, 
some  fruit  uees,  tract  fenced  in  .for 
sale  or  exchange  for  city  properly. 
J  9.5.  Herald. 


FOR  SALE— .SOUTH  AFRICAN  SCRIP 
good  for  S20  acres  choice  land; 
money-making  opportunity;  price 
doubled  in  short  time;  Increasing 
rapidly;  order  before  price  doubles 
again;  write  or  wire.  Allen  company, 
Somerset    building.    Winnipeg,    Can. 

WHITE  EARTH  RESERVATION 

lands  in  Minnesota;  good  lands  at 
low  prices:  the  lands  are  very  fertile, 
heavv  black  loam  over  clay  sub-soil; 
we  liav^  largo  or  small  prairie  or 
timber  tracts,  from  $S  to  $15.  accord 
ing  to  location  and  cultivation. 
Beaulleu  &  Dahl,  .'517-319  Palace 
building,  Minneapolis.  Minn. 


FOR  SALE— 80  ACRES  IMPROVED 
farm,  near  station  on  Missabe  North- 
ern railroad;  thirty  acres  under  cul- 
tivation; gouil  log  house;  price  only 
65(1.  G.  A.  Rydberg,  411  Torrey 
building.  


FOR  SALE— WHITFi  EARTH  RESER- 
vatlon  In  Minnesota.  An  agricultural 
paradise  of  unlimited  resources: 
thousands  of  acres  of  prairie,  brush 
and  timber  lands  at  $8  to  $15  per 
acre.  Beaulieu  &  I>ahl.  317-19  Palace 
Building,   Minneapolis.  


FOR  SALE— TWENTY -ACRE  FAIOI. 
two  miles  from  car  line;  splendid 
tix-room  cottage;  large  barn  and  hen 
house:  will  sell  in  five-acre  lots 
if  so  desired.     Address   H  55,   Herald. 


roR  SALE— FIVE  AND  TEN  ACRES; 
small  fruits,  chicken  buildings;  near 
St.  Paul;  gt>od  car  service;  new 
houses:  inconie  on  berries  this  year. 
P.  B.  Pruden,  Route  4,  St.  Paul, 
Minn.  

WHOLE.SALE  BARGAINS  —   12,800 

acres  in  Montana  at  $5.75  per  acre: 
40.000  acres  in  Te.xa.s,  at  $1.75  per 
acre.  Jay  P.  .Morrill,  Palace  building, 
Minneapolis. 

FOR  SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE  FARM 
rwelve  miles  from  town,  on  Rice 
Lake  road.  Will  sell  cheap  for  cash. 
J  ,64,  Herald. 


WANTED— YOUNG  MEN  WHO  WISH 
to  become  moving  picture  operators. 
Answer  immediately.  Address  L  4  5. 
Herald. 

WANTED  —  BEN  HUR  —  WANTHD— 
70  men;  10  little  girls;  10  little  boys. 
Apply  stage  door,  Lyceum,  Sunday,  8 
p.    m. 


WANTS 

BRING   * 
^  QUICK    Cy 


-yuw 


BUSINESS  CHANCES. 

BUSINESS  CHANCE^UBSTANTIAL 
business  opportunity  for  men  of  sell- 
ing ability.  Vacuum  cleaners  for  all 
purposes.  Clothes  washers — electric, 
hand  and  nursery  sizes.  Dishwashers 
and  other  patent  household  special- 
ties. Largest  and  best  line  ever  put 
out  by  one  concern.  Only  moderate 
capital  required  to  establish  yourself. 
Most  attractive  proposition  offered  in 
years.  Read  Adv.  Saturday  Evening 
Post  of  March  20.  What  can  you  do? 
Address  Sales  Manager,  Keller  Manu- 
facturing  Co.,    Philadelphia,    Pa. 


LOST   AND   FOUND. 


WANTED— YOUNG  MEN  TO  BEND 
their  subscriptions  and  renewals  for 
the  Saturday  Evening  Post  to  Miss 
L.    Kluge,    agent,    care    of    Herald. 

WANTED  —  SALES.MAN  EXPERI- 

enced  in  any  line,  to  sell  general 
trade,  in  Minnesota:  an  exi-ellent  spe- 
cialty proposition;  commissioits,  with 
$35  wtekly  advance  for  expense^. 
The  Continental  Jewelry  company, 
Cleveland.    Ohio. 


FOR  SALE— HORSES. 

FOR    S.\LE — 

HORSES  HOIiSES  HORSES  HORSES. 
Wo  ait  leaders  in  our  line  and  can- 
not be  undersold.  Our  motto,  "quick 
sales  and  sm.ill  profit."  We  have  from 
400  to  600  i«jad  of  horses  on  hand, 
consisting  of  draft  horses,  farm 
mares,  delivery  horses  and  muks. 
\\  e  can  sell  you  one  horse  or  a  car- 
load Auction  every  Wednesday  at 
1:30  p.  m.  Private  sales  daily.  Part 
time  given  it  desired.  Take  inlerur- 
ban  cars  from  either  city.  Barrett  & 
Zimmerman,  Midway  Horse  Market. 
St.   Paul. 

FOR  S.VLE— EIGHT  ROOM  MODERN 
house  in  Ea.-st  end,  very  reasonable. 
For    particulars,   call    874,   old     phone. 

FOR  S.\LE— HORSE,       CHEAP,       IF 

taken   at   once.      107    West    Fourth   St. 


IF    YOU     LOSE    ANYTHING— Advertise    tt 

here.     It  will  be  retunxd  t-i  you  If  an  huiiest 

pewon    ftndi    It      Keniarkulile    recoveries    arc 

^Uruight  itlxiut  e\ery  day  iliDiigh  this  column. 

IF  YOU    FIND   ANYTHING  bring  It  to  Uie 


HERALD  OFFICE. 


Oet  a  eUlm  ch*:k.  Hare  it  adrertl^ed. 
Re<  luim  It   If   liie  owner  dors   Dot. 

THE  LAW — "Kvery  ptrjon  who  shall  And 
lost  pr'>rcrty  under  circumstaiices  which  ga^e 
Idni  kill  wlcdgc  or  meaos  of  Inuulry  as  to  tlie 
trae  owner,  who  shall  appropriate  sucli  prop- 
erly to  his  <>wii  uae.  or  to  tiie.  use  of  aiwther 
ptr^on  not  entltle<I  thereto,  without  having 
tlr:<t  made  reaionable  eftiri  to  flnd-lUe  owner 
and  restore  the  property  to  Idm,  aluU  be 
guilty  of  larceny."— Section  5u8ij,  KovUed 
Litws.    Minucitota.    li)')j. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE — 320  ACRES,  2 
miles  from  Seattle,  in  line  of  city 
extension.  perpetual  water  and 
mountain  view;  a  profitable  Invest- 
ment for  subdivision,  $250  per  acre. 

Should  interest  the  man  wfth  cash; 
44  acres.  Puget  Sound,  water  front- 
age, a  most  attractive  homesite, 
with  scenery  and  soil,  coupled  with 
an  excellent  investment,  $2,500.  G. 
W.  Randall  company,  824  Alaska 
building,  Seattle. 


DRESSMAKING. 

drp:ssmaking — reliable  dress- 
maker  and  ladles'  tailor,  with  ten 
years'  experience  in  Twin  C.ties,  will 
make  suits,  skirts  and  waists  at  rea- 
sonable prices.  All  work  guaran- 
teed. 331  West  Third  stree ..  Zenith, 
1602-A. 


miss  victoria  gajewski,  dress- 

making,   817   First   avenue  east. 


Mrs.     J.   R.   SLOAN,   119   WEST      FIRST 
street.  Old  'phone  2137-L;  Z<n.  2083-D 


FANCY    dressmaking      AND      TAIL- 
orlng.      515   East  Fourth   strjet. 


DRESSMAKING — GOOD  DRESSMAKER 
can  be  secured   by   1717-L. 


MILLINERY. 

M;    A^   cox,    330    EAST    FOURTH    ST. 


FOR  RENT— STORES  &  OFFICES. 


MRS.     BRANDT,  114  WEST  FO  JRTH  ST. 


BUSINE.SS  CHANCE— MOVING  Pic- 
ture exhibitors  and  operators  should 
see  some  of  the  high  class  outfits 
we  have  on  sale  at  half  price.  Edison, 
Lubin,  Powers  and  the  optigraph. 
Films  at  >15  per  1,000  feet.  New 
sOng  S-tts.  We  can  fit  you  out  com- 
plete for  road  or  house  shows.  Oper- 
ators and  partners  wanted.  Outfits 
bought,  sold  and  exchanged.  Nation- 
al ICmployment  company,  5  South 
Fifth    avenue    west.      * 


-SWEDISH  MASSAGE. 

a!      ETllA^i^ENri^ASSEURr     400   NEW 
Jersey    buil(j_ing.    Old    'phona    1826-K. 

Mrs    H.  Wiking,  Swedish  masi;age.  Flat 
2,    2018    W.    Sup.    St.       Zeniti.    1894-D. 

Maria  Grlndereng,  graduated  masseuse. 
Dr   Averdson's  Inst.  Sweden    Zen.  844. 


L-jST— TAIL  OFE^lC)*:  A  SABLE  I'OX 
far,  between  higli  scliool  and  Ninth 
avenue  east.  Finder  please  return 
to  314   Ninth  avenue  east  for  reward. 


LOST — BE 
and   Sup 
nue     east 
buckskin 


;twee>| 

erior  strc 


LAKE       AVENUE 

ioe\.  and   Second   ave- 

and    fietipnd    street,     black 

pockelbook     with     sterling 


silver  mounting]  finder  kindly 
to   131    East  Second  street. 

I 


return 


CLAIRVOYANTS. 

MADA>r^lOS?VVELri7l2^^  PAL.M- 

ist.  118  "Third  avenue  west,  tells  past, 
present  and  future  on  all  affairs  of 
life;    satisfaction    guaranteed. 


MADAM  STERLING.  PALM  READING 
25c.  Card  reading  50c.  1J.4  East  Su- 
perior   street 


MEDICAL. 

LADIES — $1,000  reward!  I  positively 
guarantee  my  great  successful 
"Monthly"  remedy.  Safely  relieves 
some  of  the  longest,  most  obstinate, 
abnormal  ca.ses  In  three  to  five  days. 
No  harm,  pain  or  interference  with 
work.  Mall,  $1.50.  Double  strength. 
$2.  Dr.  L.  M.  fcouthington  R  Co.. 
Kansas   City.    Mo.  

LADIES — DR.       LA       FRANCO'S    COM- 

Bound:  safe    speedy  regulator:        25c. 
•rugglst   or   mall.    Booklet   free.      Dr. 
La   Franco,   Philadelphia.    Pa. 


FOR  S.\LE— 6- YEAR-OLD  HORSE, 
weight  1,250  pounds:  cheap  if  taken 
at  once.  Inqtiire  Northern  Scrap  Iron 
Co.,  foot  of  Sixth  avenue  ■west.  Ze- 
nith   'phone    1041. 

For  Sale — ^Draft.  delivery,  farm  mares 
and  drivers  always  on  hand  at  our 
now  stables,  308  East  FIr.st  St.  Also 
wagons   of  all    kinds    L.   Hammel   Co. 

For  Sale — Horses,  mill  wood.  Also  ashes 
removed.   2119  w.  1st.  Old  'phone  1931 -M. 


PERSONAL. 

DIAMOND  QUEEN 
A  Monthly  Regulator.  The 
very  best  remedy  we  know 
of  to  protect  women  from 
trouble,  diseases,  sickness 
and  serious  operations; 
highly  recommended  as  a 
cure  for  Inttammatlon,  Ul- 
cerations. Leucorrhoea  and  all  diseases 
of  the  pelvic  organs.  Price,  $1.5'»  per 
box  at  drugsUnes  or  by  mail  securely 
wrapped.  Duluth  MeUlclne  Co..  P.  O. 
Box  326.   Duluth,   Minn. 

PERSONAL — LADIES.  ASK  YOUR 
druggist  for  Chichesters  Pills,  the 
Diamond  Brand.  For  2o  years  known 
as  best,  safest,  always  reliable.  Buy 
of  vour  druggist;  take  no  other. 
Chichesters  Dlaittond  Brand  Pills 
are    sold     by    druggists     everywhere. 


AGENTS  WANTED^ 

AGENTS  W.\NTEJ)— OUR  SALESMEN 
make  $10  i)er  day  uelllng  our  new  in- 
door baseball  g4me;  Sells  at  sight  to 
cigar  stores,  hotteft;.  saloons  and  drug 
stores:  greatest  iirade  getter  for  deal- 
ers ever  invented.  .Sells  for  $1:  stores 
use  from  5  to  ll)  each  week.  Agents 
given  exclusive  ,  territory.  Territory 
open.  Write  at  once.  United  States 
Novelty   Co..    Duluth,    Minn. 

AGENTS— TO  LIVE  Mi¥NTS  WE  OF- 
fer  something  really  worth  while. 
Largest  and  beat  line  of  vacuum 
cleaners,  dishwashers,  clothes  wash- 
ers and  small  household  specialties 
put  out  by  one  concern.  Enormous 
demand — large  profits.  Read  large 
adv.  in  last  issue  of  Saturday  Even- 
ing Post.  Then  write  to  Keller  Man- 
ufactlng  Co..  Agts.  Dept..  Philadel- 
phia, Pa.  "- 


B I  SI  NESS  CH-ANCES — LAMB  MARINE 
Engine,  best  on  earth,  for  sale  by 
T  W.  Wahl.  208  Lonsdale  building. 
Our  representative  will  call.  upon 
'phone  message.    Both   'phones.  439. 

BUSINESS  CHANCE— DOCTOR:  I  HAVE 
a  bargain  for  you;  a  strictly  office 
practice  in  a  city  of  40,0^)0  Inhabit- 
ants; business  averages  $700  per 
month  cash;  if  you  mean  business 
write  me;  if  not.  don't  waste  your 
time  or  take  mine;  price  $3,000; 
$2,000  cash,  $1,000  on  time.  Address 
P    O.  Box  603,   Kalamozoo,  Mich. 


BISINE.SS  CHANCES — A  PARTNER 
wanted  for  land  and  steamship  agen- 
cy. Musi  have  some  money  to  handle 
deals  and  best  of  references.  Apply  to 
manager  of  National  Employment  Co. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES — A  LIMITED 
amount  of  stock  in  the  Spicer  Creek 
OH  company,  for  sale  at  $100  per 
share.  Guaranteed  dividends  of  15 
cent.      Box    143,    Toledo,    Ohio. 


LIQUOR   HABIT  CURED. 

Prof.  J.  B.  Flssette,  Antl-Llquor  Cure; 
guarantees  to  cure  the  worst  habit- 
ual drunkard  in  two  weeks,  or  mon- 
ey refunded.  No  danger  :o  health. 
Investigate.  Testimonials,  advice  free. 
Call    or    write    815    West   Superior    St. 


FOR  RENT— IN  WEST  DULUTH.  ,  ON 
Central  avenue,  fine  corner  store, 
with  basement,  and  warehouse  in 
rear;  steel  ceiling:  hardwood  fioors 
in  both  store  and  warehouse;  one 
of  the  best  corners  on  Central  ave- 
nue. For  rent  from  May  1.  W.  C. 
Sherwood  &  Co..  118  Manltattan  block. 

FOR  RENT — SMALL  STORE.  APPLY 
Nelson  Bros.,  Knitting  Mills,  Twen- 
ty-first avenue  west  and  Superior 
street. 

FOR  RENT— .STOREROOM  SUITABLE 
for  grocery  store  and  meat  market. 
Inquire  on  premises,  1804  Piedmont 
avenue,  or  Cooley  &  Underbill,  209 
Exchange    building. 

FOR  RENT  —  A  PORTION  OF  THE 
store  room  lit  Gidding's  Annex.  May 
1.  Inquire  at  Madame  Warde's  mil- 
linery.   5    West    Superior  street. 


FOR  RENT— NO.  114  WEST  MICHIGAN 
street;  four-story;  25x90;  railroad 
track  at  the  rear;  elevator,  refrig- 
erators and  office  all  in.  P.  Beneteau, 
St.    Paul,    Minn. 


FOR  RENT— DESK  ROOM;  USE  OF 
both  'phones;  $7  per  month.  A  snap. 
Inquire    1010    Torrey    building 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE 


FOR  SALE — TWO  GOOD  LOTS  FOR 
$300,  on  Woodland  avenue,  one  block 
from  street  car  line.  S.  L.  Smith, 
118   Manhattan  building. 


FOR  S.VLE  —  WANTED,  VACANT 
property  In  exchange  for  Jackson, 
Mich.,  lots;  win  pay  cash  difference. 
W.  H.  Locker,  310  Torry  Building. 


STOVE  REPAIRS. 

WE  CARRY  IN  STOCK  REPAIRS 
for  10,000  different  stoves  and  ranges. 
C.  F.  Wiggerts  &  Son,  410  East  Su- 
perior street.       Both  telephones. 


FOR   SALE— NEW   9-ROOM  HOUSE  IN. 
perfect    condition.    East    end;    50-foot 
lot,    most    desirable    location.      B.    48, 
Herald. 


DANCING  ACADEMY 


COKFINS.      18   Lake  tiTtiiue  north.      New   'pUoiif    1242. 
OM    'phone   1427-B.    Open    afieruoonft    and   eveuitigs. 


w  ^  ^  ^  V 

•^  j^  *f\  ^*  ^ 


tJNHtc-^K****^************  *»*»»*»*»*»»»»»* 


WA.\TEI.> — AGENTS  AND  C.VNVASS- 
ers  for  a  high  cla.ss  publication.  Sell 
to  offices  and  houses.  Big  money  for 
hustlers.      National    Employment    Co. 


PERSONALr— WANTED 
An  invalid  chair  for 
Call  413   Lenox  hotel. 


TO       RENT— 
several  weeks. 


PATENT  LAWYERS. 

MASON,  FENvViCK  &  LAWIIE.'.CE, 
patent  lawyers.  Washington,  D.  C. 
Established  47  years.  Best  references. 
Careful  work.  Terms  moderate.  Il- 
lustrated booklet  free.  Ee  caerful 
In  selecting  an  attorney.  Write  us. 
Dept.    A.    C. 


STENOGRAPHERS. 

TVpEVvTHriNOr^fTENOGir^  AND 

copying.     l..enox  hotel   notary. 

GRACE  BARNETT,  FIRST  NAT.  BLDG. 


PERSONAL — DON'T  MARRY  UNTIL 
you  have  your  friends'  clia'racter  told 
from  their  handwriting:  send  speci- 
men and  12c  to  Gordon  Gordon,  Grant 
street.  Camden.  N.  J. 


PERSONAL  —  FURNITURE.  FIX- 
tures.  pianos,  any  kind,  repaired  and 
refinished  like  new;  any  finish:  work 
guaranteed:  cliarges  reasonable. 
Address  Box   243,   city. 


PERStWJAD— WEALTHY.  MARRIAGE- 
ahle  persons;  photographs  and  de- 
scriptions free.  D.  M.,  Box  7.  Canon 
City.  Colo. 


PERSONAL— RICH  AND  ANXIOUS  TO 
marry:  particulars  free.  M.  D.,  Stel- 
ler.   Box  X,   Boulder.   Colo. 

PERSONAL — IF  INTER  E  S  T  E  D  IN 
Hypnotism.  Mind-reading.  Clalrvoy- 
ance,  etc..  take  my  private,  practical 
course  on  Mental  .Science  and  learn 
to  apply  them.  Scientific  Demon- 
strators,  Box   586.   City. 

PER.SONAL — AN      OLD      GENTLEMAN. 

who  wishe.*)   a   good  home.     Apply  at 
640   Garfield   avenue.    Flat   4. 


AGENTS    W.VNTED— DIAMOND    BRIL. 

Hants,  the  latest  scientific  discovery; 
bright,  spai'kling,  beautiful,  equal 
the  genuine  diamond  iti  brilliancy; 
stand  all  tests  and  puzzle  experts; 
big  monev-makers;  llbei'al  offer  to 
agx-nts.  Diamond  Brilliant  .company, 
P.   O.   Box   634,  Lincoln.   Neb. 

AGENTS — WE   WANT    .\      GOOD    REP- 

RESENTATIVE. 

To  Sell   The 

GEYSER    SELF    FEEDING    INK    PAD. 

For    Rubber   Stamps. 
USED   BY   ALL      LEADING     MERCAN- 
TILE   HOUSES. 
We  have  a  good   pn>posltion  to   offer 
PARTICULARS       FREE, 
limited.   Write  at  once. 
INK  PAD  CO.,  40  Dearborn 
St.,    Chicago. 


BUSINESS 
trade.    Al 
liarness. 


CHANCE 

piano   for 

National 


—WANTED 
work   horse 
Employment 


TO 

and 

Co. 


BUSINE.SS  CHANCE.S— INVEST  YOUR 
money  in  6  per  cent  gold  bonds,  se- 
cured bv  first  mortgage  on  water- 
power.  We  are  offering  a  small  issiffe 
at  par.  Sauk  River  Power  company. 
St.  Cloud,  Minn. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— A  9  PER  CF.NT 
fixed  income  a  year  with  excellent 
prospects  of  doubling  It  is  offered  In 
the  preferred  stock  of  one  of  the 
l.irgest  publishing  house  doing  an- 
nual business  of  $1,250,000.  Company 
i.wns  magazine  of  largest  circulation 
In  the  world.  If  interested  in  a  great 
proposition,  where  your  investment 
will  multiplv  many  times,  address  for 
lartlculars,  ■  Geo.  H.  Fuller,  50  W^ 
Monroe    St.,    Chicago^^ 

BUSLNESS  CHANCE— W.\NTED  A  JOB 
of  sawing  lumber;  have  new  and 
complete  sawmill  plant  of  good 
capacity  and  practical  men  to  oper- 
ate it.     Address  F.  M.  Blare.  Herald. 


DULUTH'S 

PROQRESSIVE 


FIRMS! 


Something  is  Always  Wanted.  Just 
what  it  is,  who  makes  it,  sells  it,  or 
does  it,  and  where  it  may  be  obtained 


hustlers. 
Territory 
FOUNTAIN 


AGENTS— MOST  ATTRACTIVE  PROP- 
osition;  our  self-generating  burners 
for  kerosene  lamps,  brilliant  gas- 
light; liberal  inducements:  descrip- 
tion free.  Simplex  Gaslight  company, 
23  Park  row.  New  York. 

AGENTS— JUST  PATENTED,  YOUNG'S 
wonderful  buttonhole  gauge  knife. 
One  agent  sold  107  in  one  day.  made 
$13.37.  Fifteen  other  rapid  sellers. 
A.  M.  Young.  4T7  Youngs  building. 
Chicago.  '    • 


E.  J.   FARRF:LL.  yceum  Bldg.  Old  2380. 


^lendoiihall   &    Iloopes.   AgouLs. 

DetruR    Fire   &    Marine    lU'^iirance   Com- 
Iiany. 

rrinclpal  office.  Detroit,  .Mich.  (OrB;inlzeil  In  18G6. ) 
K.  n.  Hutler.  president;  A.  H.  McDonnell,  setrt.- 
t;\ry.  Attorney  to  accept  service  In  itiuneaota,  t'ora- 
mlMioner   of    Insurance. 

CASH    C.M'ITAL.    $.'.no.OOO.f>0. 
INCOME    IN    1908. 

Prrmliimfi  other  than  perpttuals $      S43.82T.94 

Rents   «r1  lilerest 79.737.97 

Krom  all  other  sources ■ . . .  4,586. 3C 

I'ruflt    on    sale    or    maturity    of    ledgrr 

asseU    738.00 

Tot.'il    In.-omp $  630.89().?7 

DISBURSEMENTS    IN    1908. 

.\raoiint   paid   for   losses $  372.819.41 

Commissions   afU    brokerage 119,069.32 

Salarlea   and   fees  of  officers,   agents   and 

imt>Ui>es 43.717.92 

T:i .«?<«.    tos.   reiitii  and   other   real  eatate 

i>xi>eusi3     14.122.1C 

DtTldenrti  and  interest SO.OUO.DO 

'i.u*;\  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  asscta  49). 31 

.\U    Other    dlshursemenls 38. 181 . j8 

Total    ilUbursenionts $  640,700.70 

Lxcess  of  dlibursei.ionts  over  Incoinie . . . . |         9,810.4'J 
ASSETS    DEC.    31.     1908. 

Value   of  real   estate   owned $  244. 077. 8S 

Morlnage    leans     082.916.47 

follateral    leans 3.'>.2.j0.oi; 

Itondj   and   stocfcs   owned '!»•>. S.'iO.Od 

("Mih  In  office  and   In   bnok 69.118. i.* 

Accrued  Interest  and  rents W.0')8.2.") 

PriHuiums  In  courie  of  collecUon 7i,470.1'. 

All  otlier  ac^mltted   assets 2.360.00 

Total  adraltud   a8S«U $  1,932.251.59 

ASzieU  not   admitted J2.119.6l 

LIABILITIES    OiX.    31,     1908. 

Unpaid    lossts    and    ilalm-' $  63.."i08.74 

ItelDsursnce     reserve 459.735.81 

Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,    dividends    and 

Interest    due 11.814.84 

rommlsslon  and   brokerage 102.38 

fapltal   stock   paid   up 500,000.10 

Total    liablUUes    including    capital $1,033,281.77 

Net  surplus    %      89ti.06!>.82 

RISKS  AND    PREMIUMS.    1908  BUSINESS. 

fire  risks  written  during  the  year $39,408,484.09 

Premiums   re<-elved    thereon 697,73^.29 

.Marble   and   Inland   risks   written   during 

the  year   4.658.955.00 

Proinlums    n-cebed    thereon 2:{. 270.6" 

Ntt  amount  In    ■■•ri-e  at   end  of   tlie  year.    79.002.3U5.U3 
BUSINESS    IN    MINNESOTA    IN    1908. 
Marine  and 
Fire  Risks.         Inland.    ARgregatr. 

Klsk^    written $2,084,938     $1,227,863     $3,312,801 

Prendunt,  retelved..  .         33,814  6,502  40. .516 

l.ossts  Incurred 27,91!)  292  28.212 

1.0SJCS    tald 30.073  350  30,424 

Amount  at   risk S.101.762  ...  

State    of    Minnesota,    Department    of    Insurance. 

I  Hereby  €trilfy.  That  the  annual  statement  of  the 
Detriilt  Fire  &  Marino  Inaunince  company,  for  Ihe 
year  eliding  I»cccmber  31st,  19t)8.  of  which  the  above 
Is  an  alistract.  has  Ijten  received  and  filed  In  tills 
department   and   duly    approved    by   me. 

JOHN    A.    HARTIGAX. 
Conimlsii«(^  of  Insurance. 


PERSONAL— PLAIN  SEWING  WANT- 
ed  at  once,  by  good  dressmaker. 
Call   Zenith   'phone,    1352-Y. 


PERSONAL— MARRIAGEABLE        MEN 

and  women — write  for  matrimonial 
paper.  March  issue  just  out,  contain- 
ing many  advertisements,  marriage- 
able people,  some  rich.  J.  D.  Thomas, 
414    Mclntyre    block.    Winnipeg. 


FOlfSALEtVHOUSES. 

FOR  SALE^^^42?r00-r^  SEVEN  ROOM 
house  witli  water,  g'as  and  sewer; 
some  hardwood  iloors;  well  built  and 
convenieiiMy  arrajjiged.  and  In  good 
condition.  To  clo§e  out  quickly  have 
made  this  close  figure,  and  at  such  a 
price  this  Is  undoubtedly  the  biggest 
snap  on  the  market.  H.  S.  Merry, 
729    East   Sixth    Stxeet. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— A  LEGITIMATE 
fubstiiute  for  slot  machines,  price 
11,  nets  dealer  $4.55  cash,  and  sells 
$7.25  trade,  no  ca.'^h  paid  out.  A  big 
trade  stimulator.  Write  for  par- 
ticulars. Agents  wanted  quick.  United 
States    Novelty    Co..    Duluth.    Minn. 


ll%%%-1(.%%%%%%%%%%%%*Mf^%%%%%%%%%%'t^''f'*'^%n~%%%%%%%%%%%'l^%%W%% 


AUTOMOBILES 

Flyers.  40-hp.  6-cyi;iider. $3,000 
Flyers,  60-lip.  6-cyllnder.  4.500 
Flyers.  70-hp.  6-cyll:ider.    6.000 

t::halmers  Detroit.  30-hp.  6-cyl 1.500 

Most  perfect   cars  in  America.     Mutual 
Auto  Co.  Garage  rear  B.   of   T.,  Duluth. 


Thomas 
Thomas 
Thomas 


IMPROVED 


REPAIRING 


GOPHER  SHOE   WORKS — Shops   10   1st 
avenue  west  and   12  4th  avenue  west. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES  —  WANTED— 
Man  with  brains  and  ability  to  take 
charge  of  territory  to  sell  secnrities 
paving  biggest  dividends  consistent 
wic^  honesty  and  safety.  Address  L. 
C,  Williamson,  140  Dearborn  street, 
Chicago. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— UP- 
to-date  restaurant  in  tlie  West  end. 
Complete  outfit.  Doing  good  business. 
Other  business  to  attend  to.  In- 
quire  614  West  First  street. 


BUSINESS      CHANCE- 
Ing     parlors,     doing 
be.st  in  city;  will  sell 
to   resporrslble   party. 
Herald. 


-HAIR      DRESS- 

good     busliiess; 

reasonable  price 

Address   J.    80. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES  —  FOR  SALE, 
large  twenty-room  modern,  steam- 
heated  hotel,  including  large  sample 
room,  parlor,  etc.;  fine  lawn,  good 
town,  big  business:  will  sell  on  easy 
terms.  George  McDonald,  Sr.,  City 
Hotel,  Hawley.  Minn. 


BUSINE.SS  CHANCE— Will  trade  piano 
for    driving    horse.       123    W.    First    St. 


FOR  SALE — NEW  7-ROOM  HOUSE, 
large  lot.  in  fashionable  location;  a 
very  fine  home,  vTith  the  best  of  heat- 
ing plam.s,  bath,  gas,  electric  light, 
oak  finisliings  and  fioors;  only  $3,850, 
for  quick  sale,  very  reasonable  terms. 
J.  B.  McCloud.  :i01  Exchange  bldg. 
•Phones.   2046. 

FOR  .SALE — LEAVING  THE  CITY 
and  must  sell  house  at  once,  nearly 
new.  modern  house,  large   lot,  in  fine 


PERSONAL — Foot  specialist;  corns  ex- 
tracted. 25c;  Inverted  nails  and  bun- 
Ions   cured.      Scott.   17   E.  Sup,   street. 

Turklsli 
Sup.  St. 


PERSONAL — Electric   cabinet 
baths.     Knauf  Sisters.   24   W 


Personal — Manicuring,    massa.ge, 
treatment.   813   Torrey;   'phone 


scalp 
946-X. 


PER.SONAL  —  LEARN  HYPNOTISM., 
Free  lessons  and  particulars.  Box 
152   Esthervllle.   Iowa. 


Wanted  old  clothes,  furniture,  etc.  Sal- 
vation  Army.  Old  1003-K:  new  2134-X. 


PE  RSON  AL— P  A  LNTl  NG 
hanging.      Zenith,   1518 


AND  PAPER- 
-X.     C.  Gill. 


PER.SONAL — OLD  MIRRORS  RESIL- 
vered.  St.  Germain  Bros.,  121  FirKt 
avenue  west. 


FOR  RENT— HOUSES. 

FOR  RENT— FIVE  ROO.M  HOUSE, 
with  conveniences,  rear  2009  \^  est 
Third  street.  $15;  7-room  house  on 
Fourtli  avenue  west,  near  Fifth 
street.  $13;  three  and  four-room  fiats. 
water  and  toilet,  Fifteenth  avenue 
west,  near  Superior  street.  $9  and 
$12.  Harris  Realty  company,  533 
Manhattan  Bldg. 


FOR      RENT— UNTIL        NOVEMBER    1, 
six    room    house    furnished    or    unfur- 
nished; very  reasonable.     Inquire  622 
_^ixth   avenue   east. ^^ 


FOR  RENT — MODERN  FURNISHED 
house;  centrally  located.  Call  Getty- 
Smith  company,  201  Manhattan  build- 
ing. 


For  Rent — 7-roOm  House,  $18:  6-room 
house,  $12.50:  4-room  apartment.  $8; 
centrally  located;  water  paid  by 
own'er.     Inquire  524  W'est  Sup.  street. 


FOR  RENT— NEW  6-ROOM  HOUSE  TO 
couple  without  children:  rent.  $25.  80;^ 
East  Third  street.  'Phone.  1388-K,  old. 


locality: 
mediate 


willing 
sale.      J 


to 

90, 


sacrifice 
Herald. 


for   im- 


FOR  SALE— SIX  ROOM  HOUSE  IN 
West  Duluth:  water  and  gas.  Par- 
ties leaving  the  city.  Snap,  if  taken 
at  once.     Call  2821  West  Third  street. 


FOR  SALE— 7-ROOM  HOUSE.  WITH 
water,  gas  and  sewer.  Bargain  if 
taken  at  once.  H.  S.  Merry  729  East 
feixth    street. 


FOR  SALE— AT  WOODLAND— NEW 
eight-room  house;  all  modern  con- 
veniences: hardwood  floors;  down- 
stairs finished  in  oak;  fireplace,  good 
attic  and  basement,  furnace,  laundry 
chute  and  laundry  tubs.  Zenith 
'phone   1224-.\;   old  'phone   424-M. 


BUSINE.SS  CHANCE— FOR  SALE— A 
restaurant  and  confectionery  outfit, 
including  dishes,  lunch  counter, 
stools,  sho-wcases,  shelving  and  re- 
frig9rator.  Will  sell  separate.  231 
Central    avenue    west,    upstairs. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFFICES. 

MRS.     SOMERS'      EMPLOYMENT      OF- 
fice,    17    2nd    Av.    E.       Botth    'phones. 


ARCHITECTS. 

Olsen  &  Magney.  513-14  Sellwood  Bldg. 
FRANK  L.  YO^'G  &  CO.,  201  Pal.  Bld'i 


ATTORNEY. 


William    Marx, 
Burrows    bldg. 


Attorney    a;    Law,    510 
Zenith    'phone    384-A. 


BLACKSMITHS   AND   WAGON 
MAKERS. 

Horseshoeing    and    repairing — Devaney 
&    Jordan,    20-22    First    av  ;nue    west. 


BOATS  AND   LAUNCHES. 

All  kinds  built  to  order  and  for  sale; 
also  gas  engines.  H.  S.  Patterson, 
Railroad   street  and  Sixth   Ave.   west. 


COAL  AND  WOOD. 


city 


Wood     Yard. 
D.   O'Connell. 


Prompt    deliveries. 
Prop.     Both  'phones. 


CIVIL  engineer;:ng. 

Duluth  Engineering  Co.,  W.  B.  Patton, 
Mgr..  613  Palladio  Bldg.  Specifications 
prepared  and  construcUo  i  superin- 
tended for  waterworks,  se^i'erage,  etc. 


DENTIST. 


Dr.   W.   H.   Olson.  222  New  Jorsey  Bldg. 
All   work   guaranteed.      Both  'phones. 


EMPLOYMENT  OFI'ICE. 

N^TT^E^Tipr^irT'srstpAAr  w.  Esfb. 

1882.   "We   get  the  men."   Phones   376. 


ENGRAVING. 

Jewelry  and  Silverware,  lovest  price.s. 
Dul.    Eng.   Co..    4th    av.    W     &    1st    St. 


TENTS  AND  AWNINGS. 

POIRIER    &    CO.,    108    E.    Superior    St. 

AGENTS  WANTED. 

AGICNT  WANTED  RESIDING  IN  DU- 
luth  to  represent  established  line 
union-made       shirts,     overalls,     coats 

and  apron.s  in  Duluth  and  the  Iron 
range.  Apply  to  Twin  City  Manufac- 
turing company,  214  Nicollet  avenue, 
Minneapolis,    Rllnn. 


FINANCIAL. 

Buy   Germania-Tungsten    stc  ck, 
share.  Hoffman,  605  Man.  Zen. 


$100.00 
1731-D. 


FOR  SALE— MODERN  C-ROOM  COT- 
tage.  lot  37^  by  140;  one  block  west 
oi  Lincoln  Park;  $3,500.    J  69.  Herald. 

FOR  SALE— SEVEN-ROOM  HOUSE:, 
water.  good  foundation.  Inquire 
423    Forty-second    avenue    west. 

FOR  SALE  —  FOUR-ROOM  HOUSE, 
small  barn  and  sixty-five  chickens. 
I'rlce  $300.  Inquire  at  224  Forty-fifth 
avenue   west. 

FOR  SALE— SEVEN -ROOM  HOUSE, 
■  nicely  arranged,  porch,  some  hard- 
wood, floors.  Al  well  built  Water, 
gas  and  sewer  connections  made. 
Lot  25  by  140  feet.  Shade  trees  and 
shrubbery  and  sodded.  Big  bargain 
if  sold  at  once.  H.  S.  Merry,  729 
East   Sixth   street. 


FOR      SALE— EIGHT-ROOM        HOUSE. 

with  all  modern  conveniences.  To 
deal  with  ownei*.  Zenith  'phone 
2O05-X.      lOlG  East  Sixth  street. 


FOR  SALE— SEVEN-ROOM  HOUSE, 
water,  electric  light,  sewer,  bath; 
doable  lot,  concrete  foundation  and 
walks;  reasonable.'  Reason  for  sell- 
ing, owner  leaving  city.  115  Vernon 
street 


PICTURE  FRAMING. 

GUSTAV^LENNECKETTrpE^UP.  ST. 


WANTED    TO    BUY. 

We  buy  furniture  and  stoves.   Joe   Pop- 
kin.    22    W.    1st    St.    Zenith    1857-X. 


Higliest  prices  paid 
ture    and    clothes. 


West    Superior    street. 


for  2d-hand   furni- 
619-D.    Zenith.      1 


WANTED  TO  BUY— A  HOUSE  CON- 
talning  from  five  to  nine  roopas,  lo- 
cated in  or  about  Portland  division, 
for  removal  to  my  lot.  J  94,  Her- 
ald. 


FLORIST. 

W.    W'T'seeWns,    302     E.    Suj). 
flowers  and  floral  emblems. 


St.      Cut 
all  kinds. 


KODAKS  AND  CAMERAS. 

Eclipse   View   Co..   Inc..   30   4th   Ave.   W\ 
Develops    and    finishes    for    amateurs. 


LAND  FOR  SALE. 

We  always  have  bargains  in  wild  and 
Improved  land.  List  with  us.  E.  H. 
Hobe  Land  6c  L'ber  Co.  10  5th  av.  W. 


LOAN  OFFICE. 

Money   loaned   on   all   articles   of  value. 
City  Loan  Office,  524    W.  Superior  St. 


LYCEUM  SCENIC  STUDIO. 

Photographic     background     painted     to 
order,  decorating  all  kinds.     Lyceum. 


LAUNDRY. 


Model  Laundry.  126   E.   let 
the  work."      Old,   2749-L. 


St.     "We  do 
New,    1302. 


MATTRESS  MANUFACTURER. 

Duluth    Bedding   Co..    308    Lake    Ave.   S. 
Mail    orders    a    specialty.      Zen.    1732. 


MUSICAL  MERCHANDISE. 


Boston 
ty.   R 


Music  Co. 
1   W.   1st. 


Mail 
Old 


orders 
:787-M. 


a  special- 
New  673. 


PROFESSIONAL. 

DR.  MITCHELL,  electro-magnetic  spe- 
cialist, has  positive  cure  for  kidney, 
stomach,  liver,  lieart,  deafness,  blind- 
ness, piles,  sexual  weakness,  all  fe- 
male trotibles.     325  West  First  street. 


PHOTOGRAPHER. 

Snap    shots,     25c    a    dozen    at 
zle's,    30    East   Superior   St., 


McKen- 
upstairs. 


PLUMBING  AND  HEATING. 


Geo.    McGurrln 
Old.   815. 


Co.,    329    E. 
JOBBING. 


Superior  St. 
New.   983. 


PAINTS,  OILS  AND  GLASS. 


FURS  STORED  AND  REPAIRED. 


Fur 
ty 


gaiments 
Duluth 


made  to  ordei    a  special- 
Fur   Co.    327    \v'.   First   St. 


FAMILY    THEATER. 

SAV^OY — Vaudeville     and     feature     pic- 
tures,   afternoon    and    evening.       10c. 


FURNACE  AND  SHEEl    METAL. 

Work   done    on   short   notice    Burrell    & 
Harmon,  308  E.  Superior  St.      Phones. 


FURNITURE  RECOVERED. 

Li^r"F\n^^td?'do"Tou^^ 

334  E.  Superior  St,  or  'phoie  Zen.  949. 


FURNITURE  AND  PIANOS. 

Polished     and    repaired.       Thompson 
Hill.  336  E.  Sup.  St.  Old  'phone  1202 


& 
L. 


WANTED      TO      BUY — A      TEAM      OF 
mare.s.     weighing       2,800       to       3,000 
pounds,    6    to    i    vears    old.      Address. 
J  91.  Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — SINGLE  HORSE 
or  team  about  8  years  old.  223  Lake 
avenue  south. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— IF  Y'OU  WANT 
to  sell  or  buy  property,  any  kind, 
anywhere,  write  the  Northwestern 
Business   Agency,    Minneapolis     Minn. 


FURNITURE  AND  STOVES. 


FOR  RENT— EIGHT-ROOM  DWELL- 
ing;  water,  etc.:  Forty-fifth  avenue 
west,  one  block  from  street  car  line: 
rent  reasonable.  Dlckerman  Invest- 
ment   company,    Lonsdale    building. 

FOR  RENT — 407  TWENTY -FOURTH 
avenue  west,  $20:  water,  sewer,  por- 
celain bath;  five  rooms;  hardwood 
floors  on  first  floor;  first-class  condi- 
tion    Little  &  Nolte,  agents. 


PATENT  ATTORNEYS. 

PATENT^iST^AlX^COUNTRrES^^^ 
talned,  sold,  manufactured;  estab- 
lished 25  years;  unexcelled  reputa- 
tions; Investors'  book  free.  American 
Patent  Market,  St.  Paul.  Minn. 


PIANO  TUNING. 

C.  A.  GREGORY,  ZBNfTH  'PHONE  6t)6. 


Highest  price  paid  for  cast-oft"  clothing. 
M.   Stone,    213   W.    1st   St.   Bell   1834-L. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— A  LARGE  OR 
small  traet  of  land  for  investment. 
I    69.    Herald. 


CARPET  CLEANING. 

INTERSTATE  CARPET  CLEANING 
Co.,  Sinotte  &  Van  Norman,  com- 
pressed air  cleaners  and  rug  weavers. 
Both   'phones.     1701-03    W.   Mich.   St. 


Al!  kinds  at  lowe.st  pricfes. 
First  avenue  west.     Zen. 


Shapiro,  12 
■phone  1032. 


k 


The  Little   I'alnt   Man    says: 

Sherwln-Willianifj    Ls   the   best. 

NORTHWESTERN  PAINT  CO. 

323    West    First    Street. 


PAINTERS    AND    DECORATORS. 


John    Hogan    &    Co., 
us   figure   on   your 


22    E. 
work. 


1st    St. 
Zenith 


Let 
741. 


PRINTERS  AND  BOOKBINDERS. 

Merritt  &  Hector.  Railway  and  commer- 
cial printing.  30-32  W.  1st  St.  Phones. 


PLASTERING  AND  BRICKWORK. 


Estimates 
'phone. 


furnished.   W. 
1224-A;     old 


J.  Darby.  New 
phone,     424-M. 


RELIABLE  SHOE  STORE. 

Shoes  that  wear  and  fit  for  all.     Lowest 
prices.  Joe   Willlam.s,  123   1st  Ave.   W. 


FRENCH  CLEANER  AMD  DYER. 

Zenith  Valet,  213   W.  1st  St.  Expert  re- 
pairing    and     tailoring.      Old     1834-L. 


HOME  BAKERY. 

The  Zenith  will  furnish  yon  bread  and 
pastry.      Zen.    1879-D.      427    E.    4th    St. 


HAT  MFR.  AND  CLEANER. 

Geo.    G.    Moosbrugger,    successor    to    C. 
VoUand,  24  First  avenue    Z.     'Phones. 


HAY,   SEED  AND   FARSf   MCH'Y. 

T.   A.  Scarlett.   127   W.   Lst  St.     'Phones. 
Make  Lakeside  Tuesdays  ;iad  fi^rttiays. 


ROOFING  AND  SHEET  METAL. 

Work    executed    promptly.       Burrell    & 
Harmon.   308   E.  Superior  St.  'Phones. 


SHIRTS  AND  UNDERWEAR. 

Made     strictly     to     order,     fit     guaran- 
teed.     C.    C.   Smith,    409   Torrey   Bldg. 


TYPEWRITING. 

Public  stenographer  and  notary  public. 
Miss  Orton.  433  Man.  Bldg.  Zen.   1598. 


TURKISH  BATH  PARLORS. 

Guaranteed     cure,     all     rheumatic     ail- 
ments.   S.  Kasmlr.  und*r  Hotel  McKay. 


UMBRELLAS  RECOVERED 

And  repaired.     It  pays  to  do  them  now. 
Glngold,   Mfr.,   125  E.   Superior  St. 


■ 


I 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD.    Saturday,  march  20  im 


Yes,  You  May  Get  a  Job  WitlioiitlAdvei1ising--Sometimes,  Perhaps 


One  Cent  n  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  Less  Tlian  13  Cents. 

SHOPPING 
BY  TELEPHONE. 


Old 
'Phone. 


MEAT   MARETS— 

R   J.   Tobtn    

Mork    Mros 

L.AI  NORIK^ — 

Yale   I.aiir.tlry    ... 

Lutts  Laundry    . . 

Trov    Liiundry    .. 
UHltJOISTS — 
•   Kildie  .It>rt>n imus 

Bovce    

BAKKKIKS — 

Thf    Ron   Ton    1720-L 

HKATI.NG    AXO   PM'MBIXG — 

Arilile   MfDougal    ...ITI'3 
WOOD — 

W.    S.    ElUnpspn    


.      22 
1B9(K 

479 
447 


1243 
,    163 


New 
'Phone, 

22 

189 

479 
447 

257 

1027 
163 

1128 

916 

1730-A 


REAL  ESTATE,  FIRE 

INSURANCE  AND 
RENTAL  AGENCIES. 

John  A.  Stephenson.  Wolvln  building. 
E  O  Field  Co..  203  Exchange  building. 
L  A  Karsen  Co..  Providence  building. 
Pulfoid.  How  &  Co..  309  Excliaoge  BlJg. 


MUSIC. 

PHONOGHAFHS  AND  "^SICAL  IN- 
struments.  Send  your  orders  lor 
popular  songs  and  records  to  Zenith 
Music  company.  No.  6  East  Superior 
street,    Duluth     Minn. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  l^ess  limn  15  Cents. 

FOR^SALE^  MISCELLANEOUS. 

lure,  architects'  and  engineers  sup- 
plies, typewriters  and  supplies.  J.  S. 
Kay  Co!,  406  \V.  .Sup.  SI.   Both  phones. 


FOR  SALE— UOW  BOATS,  THE  BEST 
16-foot  scjuare  stern  row  boats,  made 
for  general  purchase:  these  boatd 
are  new  and  extra  tine  rtnish,  at 
|3u  each  on  board  cars  White  Bear 
Lake,  Minn.;  we  have  made  these 
bo.its  for  nearly  forty  years,  and 
sonic  of  them  that  have  been  used 
twenty  ytars  are  in  good  service 
yet.  Leaman  Boat  Works,  White 
Bear   l.,al«f,    Minn. 


FOR  SALE— SEND  US  YOUR  NAME, 
We  will  mail  you  the  new  Victor  and 
Edison  record  lists  each  month.  Free 
of  charge.     French  &  Basselt. 


FOR  SALE — THE  NEW  STYLE  Vic- 
tor "O."  A  genuine  brand  new  Victor 
machine  with  horn,  needles  and  len 
10-inch  new,  perfect  records.  Direct 
from  the  Victor  factory.  All  com- 
plete for  $23.50,  Easy  terms.  French 
&   Bassett. 


FOR     SALE— BABY     GO-CARTS— THE 

new  I'rlncess  one-motion  collapsible 
Is  the  llnest  folding  go-cart  in  the 
world;  prices  56.60  up;  call  and  look 
"em  over,  or  send  lor  free  booklet. 
Bayha  &  Co.,  Duluth. 

FOR  SALE— ONeTiAHOGANY  PIANO, 
nearly  new  and  in  good  condition;  a 
splendid  bargain:  $10  cash  and  %b  a 
month.      French   &   Bassett. 


BtslC   ANU    .mVsII  AJ 


I'S'stHVMENTS  OK  EYElf? 
.IcscrlpUon.  EiUson  ptiono- 
srapht.  Oana  and  or- 
r  h  e  s  t  r  a  instrumeDt*. 
plauos  and  organs.  Ing- 
wjlia  WESTGAAHD,  " 
jiid    &   Flrat    Avenue   We«t. 


FOR   RENT— FLATS. 

p5r"'rENT^^^^NEw'"si3c^^  FLAT, 
St.  Regis  apartments;  conveniently 
arranged;  lieat,  water  and  janitor 
service.  M.  H.  Alworih,  100  Alworth 
building. 

FLAT — 
Jefferson 
basement 


FOR      RENT— FOUR- ROOM 
modern    except    heat.      1324 
street.     Inyulre  J.  V.  Wilde, 
flat. 


FOR   RENT— NEW   FIVE   ROOM   FLAT 

all  modern  tonvenlences,  except  heat, 
at  Twentv-seventh  avenue  west  and 
Third    street.      Zenith    'phone    2208-X. 


FOR  RENT  —  SIX- ROOM  FLAT  — 
heat  and  hot  and  cold  water  fur- 
nished: hardwood  floors  and  finish. 
Apply  Corporate  Investment  company. 
Torrey    building. 

FOR  RENT- AT  120  WEST  FOURTH 
street,  modern  5-room  flat,  new  bath 
and  hardwood  Moors.  AV.  C.  Sherwood 
&    Co.,    118    Manhattan    building. 

FOR  RENT  —  FURNISHED  ROOM, 
central,  for  one  or  two  gentlemen. 
Flat  4.  118  Mesaba  avenue. 


FOR  RENT— FOUR-ROOM  FLAT  AT 
Twenty-ttrst  avenue  west,  water  and 
toilet,  newlv  papered  and  painted. 
Call  Zenith    "phone  2277-Y. 

FOR  KENT— FLATS;  MODERN  SEVEN 
room  flat;  steam  heat,  janitor  serv- 
ice; moderate  rent  to  right  party. 
C  P.   Craig  &  Co..   Sellwood  building. 


FOR     SALE  —   PHONOGRAPHS     AND 
records;    don't    buy    till    you    get    our 

firices.  We  carry  by  far  the  largest 
ines  of  Viccor  and  Edison  machines 
and  records  in  Duluth;  only  new  and 
perfect  goods.  Outfits  $10  up;  cash 
or  easv  payments;  catalogues  and 
record  lists  on  request.  Bayha  &  Co. 


FOR  SALE  —  36-FOOT  CRLtTSING 
launch;  good  reliable  engine;  toilet, 
cooking  galley,  ice  boxes,  sleeping 
capacity  for  six  per.sons;  storage  de- 
partment on  top;  electric  lights, 
nickel  plated  trimmings  and  complete 
in  every  respect.  inquire  28  East 
First   street. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
Nj»  Advertisement  I-e.^ss  Than  15  Cents. 

HELP  WANTED— FEMALE. 

WANTED — A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  Must  be  good 
cook;  good  wages.  24  Butte  avenue, 
Hunters   Park.     Old  'phone    1011. 


WANTED — LADIES  TO  CALL  AT  THE 
daylight  trunk  store.  Our  goods 
stand  the  sunshine.  A  square  deal. 
Try  us.  Repairing  reasonable.  North- 
ern Trunk  company,  228  W.  First 
street,   opposite    Wolvin    building. 


WANTED— A  THOROUGHLY  COMPE- 
tent  working  housekeeper,  three  in 
family;  small  modern  home;  wages 
$20  Sail  after  6:30  p..  m.  Old  phone 
1689-U 


WANTED — DINING    ROOM   GIRL.    5310 
Roosevelt    street- 


WAXTED— THE  LADIES-  TO  KNOW 
that  Mrs.  C.  F.  Morgan  has  removed 
her  dressmaking  parlor  from  23 
Columbus  block  to  214-216  West 
First    street. 


WANTED— C0MPETF:NT  GIRL  FOR 
general  hoiwework.  711  East  First 
street. 


WANTED— COMPETENT     COOTv.     Mrs. 
J.   T.   Hale,   1203   East  First   street. 


WANTED — LADY  OR  GIRL  IN  EACH 
town;  good  pay  spare  time;  copy 
names  for  advertisers;  cash  weekly. 
Stamp  for  particulars.  Am.  Adv. 
Bureau,   Sanbornville,   N.    H. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  Vcss  Than  15  Cents. 


SITUATIONS  WANTED— 
FEMALE. 

SITUATION  WANTED — PLACES  TO 
wash  and  iron  and  liouse  cleanitig. 
119  Tliird  avenue  east. 


SITUATION  WANTED— -GOOD  WOMAN 
will  do  all  kinds  of  scrubbing  from  8 
until  6.     Address  M.  B.,  care  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  WORK  BY 
the  day.  Anna  Wesley.  116  West 
Second  street. 

SITUATION  WANTED— THOROUGHLY 
experienced  cook  and  housekeeper 
wants  position  in  private  family; 
■widow  with  child  2  years  old.  K  86, 
Herald. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  Less  Thau  15  Cents. 

'         HELP  WANTED^MALe! 

v^A^^T^o'^^^^^lD^^^r'^yio^        "easy^ 

quick,  sure,  men,  women;  experience 
unnecessary;  spare  or  all  time.  See 
what  others  are  doing.  C.  O.  Garrett, 
Ohio,  showfed  7  families;  sold  6;  profit 
$18.  A.  B.  Verreit,  La.,  sold  8  one 
day,  profit  $24.  N.  Boucher  orders 
75  more;  says,  "Everybody  wants 
one;  best  bu.siness  I  ever  had."  Mrs. 
J.  Rrown,  I'ennsylvania,  sold  10; 
made  $30  first  three  days.  Only  2 
sales  per  day  means  $36  per  week 
profit.  Free  samples  to  active  agents. 
Famous  Easy.  Way  Clot  lies  W^asher 
cleans  family  wash  In  30  to  50  min- 
utes, while  you  rest.  No  work;  only 
move  knob  occasionall.v.  Not  a  wash- 
ing machine.  Nothing  else  like  it. 
No  chemicals,  no  rubbing,  no  wash- 
board or  boiler.  Every  family  v.^ants 
one.  liasy  to  sell.  Low  price  $6.  We 
create  demand.  Write  today.  Specify 
territory.  Act  quickly.  This  won't  ap- 
pear again.  Harrison  Manufacturing 
Co.,  81   Harrison  Bldg.,  Cincinnati.  O. 

WANTED— SHORT    ORDER   COOK   AT 
2532    West    Superior   street. 


One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  I-^ess  llian  15  Cents. 

^FORnRENT^J^OMS^ 


FOR  RE>rT. 

A  Carpenter  Shop;  good  stone 
building,  rear  of  2"  East  Supe- 
rior street.  Call  Vienna  bakery, 
207   West  Superior  street. 


it 

FOR  RENT  —  MODEF.N  FURNISHED 
room  in  private  family;  reasonable. 
Zenith  2138-D. 

FOR  RENT  —  FURNISHED  ROOM: 
electric  light;  cooking  allowed.  111^ 
East  Fiftli   street. 


FOR      RENT  - 
quire  at  628 


-  THREE 
West  First 


ROOMS 
street. 


IN- 


WANTED— LADIES  MAKE  SHIELDS 
in  spare  time;  $7.20  to  $14.40  weekly; 
material  and  instructions  sent.  Ad- 
dressed envelope  brings  particulars. 
E.  Dist  company.  140  Lippincott 
building,   Philadelphia. 

WANTED— GIRLS— GIRLS—  FREE— A 
beautiful  gold  watch  with  standard 
movements,  together  with  watch  pin, 
given  away  absolutely  free  for  a  few 
hours  of  your  time.  Send  us  45  cents 
for  a  satnple  of  our  latest  household 
novelty  to  take  orders  with.  Send  us 
In  the  orders  you  take,  and  the  watch 
and  pin  are  yours.  A.  Fay  &  Co., 
Tower,    Minnesota. 


FOR  SALE— IRON  BEDS,  ALL  SIZES, 
at  half  price.  Engt  r  .t  Olson,  i:012 
West   Superior   street. 

FOR  SALE^NEW  VICTOR  AND  EDI- 
son  records,  direct  from  tlie  factory. 
Full-toned,  perfect  records.  They 
last  longer  and  sound  better.  Buy 
them  of   French  &   Bassett. 


FOR  SALE — THREE 
Scotch  collies,  nine 
West  Third  street. 


REGISTERED 
months   old.   3614 


FOR  SALE  —  EIGHTEEN  FOOT 
launch,  fifty  inch  beam,  3-horse  en- 
gine; first-class  order.  Address  J. 
97,   Herald. 

EGGS  FOR  HATCHINCJ,  SINGLE  COMB 
v.'hite  Leghorn  eggs  from  prize-win- 
ning stock,  $1.50  per  setting.  R.  E. 
Judge,  276  East  Curtice  street,  St. 
Paul,   Minn. 


FOR  SALE— NEARLY  NEW,  LARGE 
size  oak  dresser  and  commode;  cost 
$32,  will  sell  cheap,  for  cash.  26 
Fourth  avenue  west. 


FOR  RENT— MODERN  FOUR  ROOM, 
heated,  downstairs  flat,  to  couple 
with   no   children.    419   East    Fifth   St. 

lUR  RE.NT— NEW  FOUR-ROO.M  FLAT, 
upstairs;  hardwood  floors,  elec- 
tric light;  $11  per  month.  803  Eighth 
avenue  east. 


FOR  RENT— STEAM- HE.\TED  FLATS 
with  all  modern  conveniences:  gas 
range,  hot  and  cold  water,  steam 
laundry,  janitor  service.  Zenith 
■phone  1048.     W,  W.  Allen,  West  end. 

FOR  RENT— SIX-ROOM  STEAM  HEAT- 
€d  f.at.  hot  and  cold  water;  single  or 
suitable  for  two  families;  also  two 
furnished  rooms  for  light  housekeep- 
ing.    1030   West  First  street. 


FOR  RENT— 4-ftOOM  FLAT.  ELEC- 
tric  light,  gas.  bath,  hardwood  floors. 
30    Fourth    avenue    east.      Inquire    18 

■     Fourth    avenue    east. 

FOR  RENT— AT  120  WEST  FOURTH 
street,  modern  G-roon.  flat:  new  bath 
and  hardwood  floors.  W.  C.  Sher- 
wood   &    Co,    118    Manhattan    Bldg. 

FOR  RENT— MODERN  SEVEN-ROOM 
flat  In  .Minnesota  building,  conven- 
itnily  arranged:  janitor  service.  In. 
(luire  118  Eart  Fourth  street. 


FOR  SALE— 24-FOOT  LAUNCH  4»4 
horsepower  engine;  also  tent  and 
camping  outfit.  Call  531*  East  Supe- 
rior   street,    or    old    'phone,    2778-L. 


WANTED — CHAMBERMAID. 
McKay. 


HOTEL 


WANTED— DISHWASHER 
West    Superior    street. 

Wi^NTED— COMPETENT 


AT       19()9 


general 
must  be 
street. 


housework 
good  cook. 


GIRL      FOR 
two    in    family; 
1731  East  Fourth 


WANTED— GIRL 
housework.       124 


nue   east. 


FOR         GENERAL 
Txenty-third    ave- 


WANTED— A  HOUSEKEEPER  FOR 
family  of  four.  Call  after  6  o'clock 
p.  m..  or  address  2807  West  Helm  St. 


WANTED— IF  E.  M.,  E-\U  CL.VIRE, 
will  again  send  address  to  H  38.  he 
will  receive  answer.     H  38,  Herald. 


WANTED— A     SECOND 
East  Fourth  •street. 


GIRL    AT    301 


SITU-\TION  WANTED   —   EXPERI- 

enced    dressmaker    wants    sewing    by 
the  day.     K  95,  H«rald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  COMPETENT 
btiokkeeper  and  stenographer,  en- 
gaged only  part  of  day,  desires  posi- 
tion to  fill  in  balance  of  lime;  thor- 
oughly proficient  .and  a  willing  work- 
er.     H    88,   Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— DAY  WOFtK 
by  middle  aged  woman.  Call  or  ad- 
dress, 415  Twentieth  avenue  west. 


SITUATION  WANTED— IN  DOCTORS 
or  dentists  office  by  neat  young 
lady.      H    86,    Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  AS  COMPAN- 
ion  or  ladies'  maid  for  elderly  or 
young  woman;  willing  to  travel. 
2509  Eleventh  awenue  south,  Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 


SITUATION  WANT*:d — A  FEW  GOOD 
places  to  wash  and  iron,  early  part 
of  week.  126  East  Second  street. 
Mrs.   Gatewood. 


SITUATION  WANTED — THOROUGHLY 
competent  lady  stenographer  and 
bookkeeper  desires  position;  good 
penman,  educated,  hard  worker, 
amiable  disposition.  Address  box  685 
Crookston,  Minn. 


WANTED— TWO  FIRST  CLASS  PIANO 
salesmen.  Howard.  Farwell  &  Co., 
120    East   Superior   St.,    Duluth.    Minn. 


WANTED— 100 
at    Esterly's. 


MEN  TO  BUY  Watches 
Spalding  Hotel  Jeweler. 


WANTED — LEARN  B.\RBER  TRADE, 
big  dcinand  for  barbers;  big  wages; 
easy  work,  Ehort  time  to  learn;  tools 
given;  catalogue  free.  Moler  Barber 
College.  27  E.  Nicollet  avenue,  Min- 
neapolis.   


WANTED— RAILWAY  MAIL  CLERKS. 
Salary  $800  to  $1,400.  Examinations 
in  Duluth  May  15.  Common  educa- 
tion sufficient.  Candidates  prepared 
free.  Write  Immediately,  Franklin 
Institute.    Rochester,   N.   Y. 


WANTED  —  STENOGRAPHERS  AND 
bookkeepers  wanting  positions  sliould 
register  at  the  National  Accountants 
and  Stenographers'  Bureau.  Minne- 
sota office  at  the  Duluth  Business 
University,  600  Christie  Building. 


W  ANTED  —  EXPERIENCED  CLOTH- 
ing  salesman.  Harry  Mitchell,  18 
East  Superior  street. 


WANTED— L.\TH  PULLER  WHO  UN- 
derstands  grades.  One  lath  bolter. 
One  knee  bolter.  Company  work 
in  this  state.  Wfe  want  for  big  Ari- 
zona mill  a  band  saw  flier  and  two 
helpers;  also  woodworker  to  repair 
and  make  carts  and  wagons.  Na- 
tional Employment  Co.,  No.  5  South 
Fifth   avenue  west. 


SITUATION  WANTED— COMPETENT 
and  experienced  young  lady  stenog- 
raplier  and  bookkeeper  desires  posi- 
tion in  Minneapolis.  Salary  $35  a 
month.  Address  box  145,  Fergus 
Falls,  Minn. 


FOR  SALE  —  FINE  CHANCE  FOR 
caterer,  restaurant,  hotel  or  boarding 
house,  lot  01  white  porcelain  dishes, 
cheap.  Address  for  particulars  by 
letter  only.  H.  Grueson,  226  Fifth 
avenue  east. 


FOR  S.\LE— SET  FLAT  IRONS.  1  GAS 
plate,  two  good  ladies'  worsted 
dresses  and  other  wearing  apparel, 
$5.     K  94.    Herald. 


FOR  SALE— GAS  RANGE,  GAS  WA- 
ter  heater  and  Singer  sewing  ma- 
chine. Call  week  days  or  evenings. 
412    Eleventh    avenue    east. 


For    salp:  —household    furni- 

ture,  including  folding  bed.  sewing 
machine,  cook  stoves,  tables  and 
chairs.  Address  209  Third  avenue 
west. 


FOR  RENT— NICE  FLATS.  FOUR  .\ND 
five  rooms,  opposite  new  courtliouse. 
Call   508    West  Third  street. 


FOR  RENT — 6-ROOM  LOWER  FLAT, 
bath,  electric  light.  1325  London 
road.  Inquire  1913  London  road. 
Zenith     'phone,     1535. 


ASHES  AND  GARBAGE. 


FOR  SALE- 
range.  Call 
Fourteenth 


-A  FOUR-BURNER  GAS 
1327  London  road,  corner 
avenue  east. 


FOR  SALE — TWO  FOUR-FOOT  SHOW 
cases.  Inquire  514  East  Fourth 
street 


WANTED — A  GIRL  AT  ONCE,  ABOUT 
18  vears,  for  light  housework.  922 
Eas't   f^lfth   street. 

WANTED — COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework.  1427  East  First 
street. 

WANTED — C0MPF:TENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework  in  small  family 
of  adults.  Apply  any  evening  after 
6  p.  m.     718  West  Third  street. 


WANTED — PANTRY 
restaurant. 


GIRU      HALEY'S 


WANTED— COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
gen'eral  housework;  good  wages  to 
right  party.  Apply  2207  ^Vest  Third 
street. 


WANTED— LADIES  TO  SEND  THEIR 
subscriptions  and  renewals  for  the 
Ladies'  Home  Journal  to  Miss  L. 
Kluge.    agent,    care    of    Herald. 


WANTED  —  WE  GUARANTEE  ANY 
lady  or  girl  can  make  $1  per  day 
tinselling  Easter  postcards  at  home 
spare     time.  Full    particular.*    and 

sample,  with  your  name  on,  10  cents. 
Kevstone  company,  120  Main  street, 
Liliy,  Pa. 


WANTED 
genera* 
street. 


AT     ONCE 
housework. 


—  GIRL 
512    East 


FOR 
First 


SITUATION  WANTED— WASHING  OR 
Ironing  or  plain  sewing  by  the  day. 
321   West   Fifth   street. 


SITUATION  WANTED  AS  STENOG- 
rapher  or  general  office  work.  Old 
phono    1643-K. 

HOUSE- 
Address 


SITUATION      WANTED — AS 
keeper,    by   reliable   woman. 
B    44,    Herald. 


SITUATIONS   WANTED  — MALE. 

iTruATioN     ^""vTantelT^^^^^^^ra^^ 

and  gralner  wants  work;  would  like 
to  lake  a  Job;  reasonable  prices;  flr^t- 
class  work.  Let  me  figure  on  your 
joi'.      H   84.    Heiald. 

SITUATION      WANTED— A      POSITION  J 
commencing   about   April    1    or   later, 
as   bookkeeper  or  office  assistant,   in 
or    out    of   city.      Please    grant 
view.      H    92,    Herald. 


inter- 


WANTED— A 
housework; 
noons.     1109 


GIRL     FOR 

gocd    wages. 

East    Third 


GENERAL 
Call    fore- 
street. 


FOR  SALE— HOME  MADE  JELLIES, 
jams  and  canned  fruits.  All  in  first- 
class  condition  and  prices  reasonable. 
Mrs.  J.  K.  Rlchter,  319  South  Nine- 
teenth   avenue   east. 


FOR  SALE  —  THREE  BUILDINGS, 
suitable  for  barns;  700  feet  of  eight 
foot    fence   at    new    courthouse. 

FOR  SALE  —  LEASE  ANI>  FURNI- 
ture  of  10-room  house;  rent  $15  per 
montli;  centrally  located.  Big  bar- 
gain.    H  91,   Herald. 


ASHES, 
hauled 
1274-V, 


GARBAGE        AND     MANURE 
Dick   Barrett,  Zenltii    phone. 


REMC»VED— GUST    HOLMGREN, 
Lond'in  road.     Old  'plione.  331-M. 


1906 


FOR  SALE— COWS. 

FOR  SaTe— E.  CARLSON  ARRIVES 
Willi  n  carload  of  fresh  milch  cows 
Saturday,  March  20.  2J01  West 
Twelfth  street.   Zenith  'phone   1654-D. 

FOR  SALE— CHOICE  OF  TWO  FRESH 
mlleh  cows.  M.  Boden,  boulevard  and 
rifle    range. 


FOR  bALE— I.  L.  LEVINE  WILL  AR- 
rlve  with  a  carload  of  fresh  niilcli 
cows.  Sunday,  .Match  14.  821  Fourth 
avenue    east.       Zenith    'phone    1708-D. 


BOARD  OFFERED. 

Two  desirable  rooms  with  board  at  tlie 
Colonial.    16   West   Second   street. 

BOAR'd  offered  —  FURNISHED 
rooms.  .«team  heated,  with  or  will/- 
out    board.    122    East    First    street. 

FOR  RENT— BOARD  AND  LARGE 
front  room  with  alcove  for  two  peo- 
ple, private  family  In  East  end.  Call 
old   "phone,    2806-R. 

BOARD  OFFERED— A  CHANCE  FOR 
two  gentlemen  (o  secure  board  and 
room  In  private  family;  East  end; 
walking  distance.  Zenith  'phone 
2138-D. 


FOR    SALE— SEND    YOUR    SUBSCRIP- 
tions    and    renewals    for    the      Ladies' 
Home  Journal  and  Saturday 
I^ost    to    Miss    Kluge,    agent, 
Herald. 


Evening 
care    of 


FOR      SALE  —  MAHOGANY      PARIOR 

cabinet  and  oak  china  closet  at  118 
East  Fourth  street,  flat  D.  Call  be- 
tween  9  and   12   o'clock. 


WANTED — EXPERIENCED     DI  N  I  N  G 
room   girl.      Delmoiiico   Restaurant. 


WANTED — COMPETENT 
general        housework; 
1810  East  Fifth   street. 


GIRL      FOR 
no     washing. 


AVANTED— NORWEGIAN  GIRL  FOR 
kitchen  work  in  boarding  house.  Ad- 
dress M.  Edwardson,  Two  Harbors, 
Minn.  

WANTED  —  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework,  small  family.  109  Soutli 
Fiftv-seventli  avenue  west. 


SITUATION  WANTED— BY  A  YOUNG 
man  19  vears  old,  wit  ha  business 
education,  position  with  reliable 
business  firm,  preferably  a  hank. 
Best  of  references.  Address  Otto 
RastomlJy,  R.  F.  D.  No.  1,  Herron 
Lake,  Minn. 


WANTED— Or.GANlZERS;  GOOD  COM- 
missions;  Fraternal  Social  Order  of 
Owls.  John  Talbot,  supreme  presi- 
dent.  South   Bend,   Ind. 


FOR 

720 


RENT— 3 -ROOM    BASEMENT, 
East  Third  stree ;. 


AT 


FOR  RENT— TWO  OR  THREE  PLEAS- 
ant  rooms  for  light  housekeeping; 
one  furnished,  if  desired.  521  West 
Fourth   street. 


FOR     RENT— 3 
housekeeping; 
ron   street. 


ROOKS     FOR 
second  floor. 


LIGHT 
627   Hu- 


FOR  RENT  —  FURNISHED  ROOMS 
for  light  housekeeping.  101  East 
Superior  street.  


Volk.  W. 


SECRET  SOCIETIES. 


MASONIC. 
PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79,. 
A.  F.  &  A.  M. — Regular  meet- 
ings first"  and  tliird  Monday- 
eveiWVigs  ot  each  montli.  at 
7;3ti  o'clock.  Next  meeting 
March  29,  1909.  Work— Sec_ 
ond       degree.       Andrew  C^ 

M. ;  H.  Nesbitt,  secretary. 


IONIC  LODGE,  NO.  186.  A.  F. 
&  A.  M. — Regular  meeting: 
second  and  fourth  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month  at 
7:30  o'clock.  Next  meeting, 
March       22,       1909.         Work — ■ 

Third    degree.      Clarence    B.    Miller,    W.. 

M.';   Hugo  Burgo,  secretary. 


meeting. 
Work — P.  M.  and  M. 

iam     D.     Underliill, 
Richeux,    secretary. 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER,  NO. 
20,  li.  A.  M. — Stated  convoca- 
tions second  and  fourth. 
Wednesday  evenings  of  each, 
month  at  7:30  o'clock.  Next 
March  24th,  1909. 
E.  M.  degrees.  Will- 
H.     P.;     Alfred     Le 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  STEAM- 
heated  room;  light  housekeeping  al- 
lowed.     126    East    First    street. 


FOR  RENT— TWO  ROOMS.  NEWLY 
papered,  suitable  lor  light  house- 
keeping; unfurnished,  $6.50;  fur- 
nished, $10.  Addreiis  D.  Mars,  519 
First  avenue  east. 


FOR  RENT— DESIRABLE  ROOMS.  ALL 
conveniences.  10  W>;8t  First  street. 
Flat    "B." 


FOR  RENT— FURN:  SHED  ROOM, 
suitable  for  two.  l:ates  reasonable. 
Board  if  desired.  512  Fourth  avenue 
east.      Zenith     phone,    2321-X. 


FOR   RENT— FURNISHED   ROOMS,  331 
West   Third   street. 


FOR  RENT  —  VER^  DESIR.*iBLPJ 
rooms  all  conveniences.  10  West 
First  street,  flat  B. 


FOR  RENT  —  TWO  ROOMS  FOR 
light  housekeeping;  all  modern  con- 
veniences; good  lake  view;  also  room 
for  gentleman.  701  West  Second 
street. 


WANTED— SALESMEN  WITH  ABIL- 
Itv  to  earn  $50  and  more  per  week 
handling  new  advertising  proposi- 
tion .Side  line  or  exclusive.  Desk  21, 
Cruver   Mfg.    Co.,   Chicago. 


WANTED— MEN  QUICKLY  BY  BIG 
Chicago  mall  order  house  to  distri- 
bute catalogues,  advertise.  $25  week- 
ly; $80  expense  allowance.  Globe  As- 
sociation.  30   Wabash  Bldg..   Chicago. 


WANTED  —  FIRST-CLASS  PAPER- 
hangers  and  hardwood  finishers. 
Billposters  and  dabbers  need  not 
apply.      306   East   Superior  street. 


WANTED— SIDE  LINE  TR.WELING 
salesmen  can  make  $30  to  $50  per 
week  iiandling  our  latest  production 
of  advertising  fans.  Liberal  terms. 
Apply  at  once.  United  States  Calen- 
dar   Co.      Cincinnati,    Ohio. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  CLERICAL 
position  by  young  man  with  exper- 
ience In  banking  and  general  office 
work.  Also  two  years  in  merchan- 
dise store;  references  furnished.  A. 
L.  Nelson.  2536  Elliot  arenue  south, 
Minneapolis,    Minn. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —  EXPERI- 
enced  grocery  clerk  desires  position 
In  or  out  of  city;  steady,  honest  and 
good  habits.  Cliarles  S.  Shaw,  An- 
oka. Minn.  


WANTED — DISHWASHER.        AT     1919 
West  Superior  street. 


FOR   SALE — 

CA.^H    REGISTERS. 
We    manufacture   a   cash    register 
every   two  minutes.     Liberal  allow- 
ance  for  exchange  of  registers. 
Call  and  see  our  1909  models. 


THE  NATIONAL  CASH  REGISTER 

COMPANY. 

E.   W.   Russell,   Sales  Agent, 

425  West  Superior  Street. 

Zenith,  817.  Bell,  2585. 


BOARD  AND  NICELY  FURNISHED 
room  in  private  family  in  East  end. 
Address   B.    53.    Herald. 

Room    and    board — 301    East    Third    St. 


Room    and    Board — 318    W.    Second    St. 


BOARD     AND     ROOM 
East   Third    street. 


OFFERED— 426 


DYE  WORKS. 

ZENITH^'ITY  DYE  WORKS — LARG- 
est  and  most  reliable.  All  work  done 
in  Duluth.  Work  called  for  and  de- 
livered. 'Phones:  Old,  1154-n;  new, 
1888.      232   East  Superior  street. 


FOR  SALE— BIG  BUNCH  OF  $2,000, 
also  sample  to  make  one  quart  of  rye 
whisky  by  mail  for  50  cents.  Ernest 
G.  Carlson,  Mandan,  N.   D. 


FOR  SALE  —  FURNITURE,  STORES, 
carpets,  draperies  and  house  furiiish- 
ings  of  every  description  at  money- 
saving  prices;  cash  or  easy  payments. 
Bayha  &  Co..  Dululh's  largest  house- 
furnishing  concern. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN. 

DO  YOU  NEED  MONEY? 
Money  loaned  In  Duluth  or  Superior  to 
salaried  people  without   security;   also 
on   pianos,   furniture,  horses,   wagons, 
etc.    Business  absolutely  confidential. 
Call    and    get    our      rates     and    terms. 
Monthly  or  weekly    payments  as  de- 
tlreu.     No    good    applicant    refused. 
W^ESTERN   LOAN   CO., 
621    Manhattan    Building. 
New  'phone    930.  Old  'phone,  1036. 


FOR    SALE — KIMBALL    PIANOS    NOW 

sold  direct  from  factory  tp  your 
home.  No  canva.^se-s'.  no  agents',  no 
dealers'  profits  for  you  to  pay.  Come 
in  on  your  own  acc<»rd  and  buy. 
Korby  Piano  Co.,  the  Kimball  factory 
store,  201   East  Superior  street. 


FOR  SALE  —  ADDRESSOGRAPHING 
machine,  cheap.  It  can  be  seen  at 
Bayha  &  Co.'s. 


FOR  SALE— SABLES  AND  VAULTS 
opened,  combinations  changed;  fire 
and  burglar-proof  safes,  vault  doors, 
safety  deposit  boxes  and  bank  vaults. 
Christie  Lithograph  &  I'rinting  Co., 
Northwestern  agents.  Herring,  Hall, 
Marvin  Safe  company,  manufacturers 
of  the  original  Hall  safes. 


FOR       SALE    —    ONE       OAK      J'lANO, 

splendid  tone,  fine  action.  This  In- 
strument is  a  big  snap  for  the  lucky 
buyer.  Price  only  $175;  $10  cash  and 
$5  "a  month.     French  &   Bassett. 


Duluth  Dye  Works — French  dry  clean- 
ing; fancy  dyeing.  ^Id  'phone 
1202-R:   new.    1191-A.      330   E.  Sup.   St. 

Northwestern  Dyeing  &  Cleaning  Co., 
oldest  reliable  dyers  and  French  dry 
cleaners  in  Northwest.  15  Lake  Ave. 
north.    'Phones:   New.    1516;   old.    1337. 


BURKE  BROS. — Most  up-to-date 
cleaning  e.^tablishment  in  the 
i2   East   Sua.   St.      Both    'phones. 


dry 

city. 
257. 


For  Sale — Typewriters,  safes,  cash  reg- 
isters,  cabinets.   Edmont,   116   W.  Sup. 


FOR    MEN    ONLY. 

And    women    who    need    money. 
We  make  loans   from   $5.00  up. 
Your   ntite   is  all   that's  necessary. 
Our    rates    are    right. 
Everything    private    and    confidential 

DULUTH    FINANCE   CO.. 
301   Palladio  Bldg.  Both  'phones. 


SITUATION  WANTED— POSITION  AS 
window  trimmer,  or  would  go  as  as- 
sistant; can  give  good  references. 
Address  Martin  Hollisler,  311  South 
D   street.  Marlon,  Ind.  


WANTED— M.\N  WITH  A  FAIR  EDU- 
catlon,  married,  to  canvass  and  col- 
lect for  the  Prudential  Insurance 
company,  salary  and  commission; 
good  opportunity  for  advancement. 
Only  men  with  busines.s  abilllv  need 
apply.  N.  Nlssen,  Supt.,  Sellwooa 
Bldg. 

WANTED— $36  A  WEEK  TO  MEN 
with  rig  to  introduce  poultry  and 
stock  remedies.  Grant  Co.,  Dept.  87, 
Springfield,   111. 


FOR  RENT — VERY  NICE,  LARGE, 
furnished  room,  also  smaller  one,  all 
conveniences,  320  East  Second  street. 

FOR  ItENT— 2  FUR>1SHED  ROOMS 
for  light  Jiousekeepng,  water,  light 
and  heat.  No.  5  South  Fifth  avenue 
east. 


Master 
T.    1.    M 


DULUTI^<:OUNCIL.  NO  6,  R. 
S.  T. — Regular  meetings  first 
and  third  Friday  evenings  of 
each  montli  at  7:30  o'clock. 
Next  meeting.  March  19.  1909. 
Work  —  Royal  and  Select 
degree.  .Andalla  W.  Torrance.- 
;    Alfred    Le    Richeux,    recorder. 


DULUTH  COMMANDERY  NO. 
18,     K.     T. — Stated       conclave 
first   Tuesday   of  each   month 
at  7:30  o'clock.  Next  conclave 
will   be  held   Tuesday,   March 
23.        Work — Installation      or 
ofticers.  followed   by  dance.   C.   K.  Peas- 
lee,    acting    E.    C;    Alfred    Le    Richeux, 
recorder. 


Cooley, 


SCOTTISH  RITE— REGULAR 
meetings  every  Thursday 
evening  at  7:30.  Next  meet- 
ing, March  25th,  1909.  Work. 
— Thirtieth  degree.  J.  E. 
secretary. 


ZENITH  CHAPTER.  NO.  25, 
Order  of  Eastern  Star.  Reg- 
ular meetings  second  and 
fourth  Friday  evenings  of 
each  month.  Next  meeting, 
Friday,  March  28.  1909.  Work, 
regular  business  and  iiiiation.  Gertrude 
Bates,  W.  M.;  Ella  F.  Gearhart,  secre- 
tary. 


FOR      RENT  —  THRr:E      FURNISHED 
rooms    tor    light    housekeeping.    New 
I'phone    3104-A.         3614    West 
street. 


Third 


FOR  RENT— TWO  LARGE  ROOMS 
for  light  housekeeping;  all  modern. 
Both  'phones;  old,  1714  K;  new, 
689-A. 


FOR  RENT  —  FURNISHED  ROOM. 
with  board,  if  desired.  818  East 
Fourtli   street. 


FOR  RENT— FURNISHED  ROOM,  218 
West  Fourth  street,  first  floor,  side 
entrance. 


FOR  RENT— 1  FURNISHED  ROOM, 
all  conveniences,  $6  per  month.  316 
West  Fourth  street. 


WANTED— CAPABLE  SALESMAN  TO 
cover  Minnesota  with  staple  line; 
high  commissions,  with  $100  monthly 
advance;  permanent  position  to  right 
man.  Jess.  H.  Smith  company,  De- 
troll,  MiclK 

WANTED— RAILWAY    MAIL   CLERKS; 

$8')0  first  year,  promotion  to  $1,800; 
examination  In  Duluth  May  15;  com- 
mon school  education  sufficient  with 
our  coaching;  we  guarantee  where 
others  promise.  Full  particulars 
free.  Ask  for  booklet  Q.  R.  Wash- 
ington Civil  Service  school,  Washing- 
ton.  D.  C. 


SITUATION  WANTED— BY  MIDDLE- 
aged,  married  man  as  collector  or 
soliciting:  sober,  energetic  and  good 
worker.     Address  H  93.   Herald. 


WANTED— BOY,  14  TO  16  YEARS  OF 
Bge,  to  learn  the  business.  Consolid- 
ated Stamp  &  Printing  company. 
Fourth   avenue  west. 


SITUATION  WANTED— A  GOOD  AND 
reliable  Norwegian-American  citizen, 
doing  some  kind  of  work  where  he 
may  be  of  a  little  more  than  ordinary 
use;  Is  practical  man,  and  wants  an 
opporiunity     where     his     work     nigy 


speak  for  itself. 
Water      street, 
2:J82-Y. 


Inquire  at  '2 
or      'phone, 


125  East 
Zenith, 


W^ANTED— YOUNG  MEN  DESIRING 
to  become  motormen  or  conductor; 
write  at  once,  inclosing  stamp  for 
reply.     Box   676,   Elkhart,   Ind. 


WANTED— GOOD  OPENING  FOR  TWO 
slde-llne  men  to  sell  our  Geyser 
self  feeding  Ink  pad  for  rubber 
stamps;  write  for  particular.^.  Foun- 
tain Ink  Pad  Co.,  40  Dearborn  St., 
Chicago. 


FOR  RENT  —  TWO  ROOMS,  FUR- 
nished  for  light  housekeeping.  431 
East   Superior   .stree:. 


FOR  RENT— 3  FUR^.'ISHED  ROOMS; 
complete  for  housekeeping.  A.  Camp- 
bell, 2805  West  Rail -oad  street. 


FOR  RENT  —  FIVE  AND  SEVEN 
rooms;  all  modern  conveniences.  Ap- 
ply A.  H.  W.  Eckstein,  301  Burrows 
building^ __^_^^_____^— 


Third 
M.;    A. 


EUCLID  LODGE,  NO.  198,  A. 
F.  &  A.  M. — Regular  meetings 
second  and  fourth  Wednes- 
dav  evenings  of  each  month 
at' 7:30  o'clock.  Next  meet- 
ing, March  24th.  Work 
degree.  Martin  J.  Murray,  W. 
Dunleavy,    secretary. 


W.    B 

secretary. 


I»ULUTH  CHAPTER,  NO.  59, 
R.  A-  M. — Meets  at  West  Du- 
luth first  and  thlrd^Wtdnes- 
davs  of  each  month  at  7:30 
P  "m.  Next  meeting  March  17, 
Work— Royal  Arch  degree. 
GetcheM,    H.    P.;    A.    Dunleavey, 


DCLL'TK    LODGE.     NO.    28.    I      O.    O   J.-^f^TB, 

hiiU.   18  l.*lie  a*inue  n<  nh.   Nixl  «««■•""• 
Manli    MUh.     Work— Klrst   dfEn>.    W.    U. 
KoTikler.    noble   grand:    Kdxvln    Btrgstrom, 
recording   Mcretary;    A.    H.    Paul.    Cuamlal    M-.reui>. 


K*     O     T     \i 

rri.t'Tii  TEXT.  NO.  1.  MEirrs  kveht 

Wrdiusday  evening  at  Macc»b<e  hall.  2S4 
Wc*t  First  ttrect.  VlslUiig  inemb»re  wel- 
fcuic  A.  J.  Anderson.  comm:'.nder.  601 
Kaft  Kdurtli  street;  J.  B.  GcM.ieaa,  rec- 
ord kecptr.  Ofri<e  In  liall.  Hours.  10  a. 
m.   tc   1   p.   m.     ZcnUli   'ph-mt  SlU-X. 


TIMBER   LANDS. 

SHELDON-.MATHER  'riMBER  CO.     30!) 
Fist  National  Bank  bldg.     'Phones. 


TLMBER  AND  CUT-OVER  LANDS 
bouglit:  mortgage  1  jans  made.  John 
Q.  A.  Crosby.  209  Palladio  building. 


buv    standing    timber;    also    cut-over 
lands.    Geo.  Rupley,  322  Lyceum  bldg. 


WATCHES   REPAIRED. 

Guaranteed    :\lain    Spring.    $1.00;    watch 
cleaned,   $1.     Garon  Bro.s.,   213  W.   1st. 


UPHOLSTERING    k   REPAIRING. 

Wlien  Cameron  does  your  upholstering 
It's  right.  Both  'phoies.  123  1st  A.  W. 


ED  OTT,  1]2  IsL  Ave.  W.  Both  'phone.s. 


WANTED    —    CIGAR  TRAVELING 

salesman  In  your  territory;  $100  a 
month  and  expenses.;  experience  not 
necessary.  Northern  Cigar  company, 
Detroit,     Mich. 


WANTED — CIVIL  SERVICE  EXAMI- 
natlons  will  soon  be  held  In  every 
state.  Full  Information  and  ques- 
tions r*-cently  used  by  the  commis- 
sion free.  Columbian  Correspondence 
college,    Washington,    D.    C. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  PIANOS.  FUR- 
niturc,  horses,  wagons  and  fixtures 
at  low  rates  and  on  small  payments. 
A  liberal  discount  if  paid  before  due; 
business   confidential. 

YOU    CAN    GET    IT    TODAY. 

Security   Mortgage  Loan   Company, 

401     FIRST    NATIONAL     BANK     BLDG. 

Zenith  'phone,  612, 


MONEY'   TO    LOAN 
On     real     estate     or     household     furni- 
ture.    Business  confidential. 

MUTUAL  LOAN   COMPANY, 
2104    West    Superior    street,    over   Moe's 
department  store.     Side  entrance.     New 
'phone,    1679-A. 


FOR  SALE  —  WOOD  AND  IRON- 
working  tnachinery:  sawmills,  edgers, 
lathmills,  saw  tables,  surfacers, 
sharpers.  Northern  Machinery  com- 
pany,   Minneapolis. 


PATENTS. 


PATENTS — ALL 

See  Stevens,  610 


ABOUT 

Seliwood 


PATENTS, 
building. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN  ON  DIAMONDS, 
watches,  furs  rifles,  etc.,  and  all 
goods  of  value",  $1  to  $1,500.  Keystone 
Loan  &  Mercantile  Co..  16  W,  Sup.  St. 

Money  supplied  to  salaried  people  and 
others,  upon  their  own  names,  with- 
out security.  Easy  payments.  Offices 
In    66    cities.     Tolman's.    509    Palladio. 

Furniture  and  salaried  loans  by  Union 
Loan  company,  303   Palladio  building. 


SITUATION  WANTED— AT  ONCE,  AS 
bookkeeper  with  general  office  work.^ 
in  connection;  prefer  position  outside 
of  the  Twin  Cities:  references  fur- 
nished. Address  Bookkeeper,  1210 
Nineteenth  avenue  northeast,  Min- 
neapolis,  Mmn. 


SITUATION  WANTED— YOUNG  MAN 
with  several  years'  experience  as 
stenographer,  office  man  and  road 
salesman,  wants  position  In  live  real 
estate  office  to  learn  business;  mod- 
erate salary.  Address  Box  1102,  Mi- 
not.    N.    D. 


SITUATION  WANTED— WANT  CON- 
tract  to  break  1,000  acres;  don't 
want  sw.tmp  or  stony  land;  must  be 
cash.        O.    P.    Larson,    Grafton,   N.    D. 

SITUATION  WANTED — YOUNG  MAN, 
23,  wishes  position  as  soda  clerk  or 
candy  makers'  helper;  have  four 
years'  experience  and  best  references. 
Edward  Jacobs,  447  Sherburne  ave- 
nue.   St.    Paul.    Minn. 


SITUATION  W^ANTED— Y^OUNG  MAN 
with  three  winters'  experience  as 
timekeeper  in  the  woods  desires 
something  similar  this  spring.  Ad- 
dress Crosslhwalte,  Northland  Pine 
Co.,   Walker,  Minn. 


WANTED— MANAGER.  EVERY  SEC- 
tlon,  to  appoint  agents  for  new  Im- 
proved penny  breath  perfume  and 
peanut  vending  machines;  $60  week- 
ly easily  earned;  finish  beautiful, 
sanitary  throughout;  sold  on  easy 
pavments;  thou.sands  now  in  use; 
sample  sent  free.  Proposition  will 
please  vou  if  we  still  have  opening 
In  your"  section.  Great  Western  Scale 
Manufacturing  works,   Chicago,   111. 


CUTTING    &    SEWING    SCHOOL. 


MOOKRN    SAMAKITA.VS.     ,,^,.^     ,_ 
AU'HA    COIMIL    XO.     l-MEKTO    AT 

K]k«'  '.i^U  evcr>  Tliursday  evrt.ing  at  h 
t -(licit,  nenetlceiit  degree,  f.ist  aaU  tlUrO 
Tliursdav;  Haraarii:.n  degree.  Be<.<:iid  and 
fouilh  Thursday-*.  A.  Nelstii.  G.  8.:  Lucj 
M.  Furdy.  L.  G.  S. ;  T.  A.  Ga  1 
tncial    urilje.    Ml    ElrA.    .Nialinal 

building:   WiUlace  P.    WeUbanks,   stribe 

liaiiS   Invited. 


au 


fln- 

Haiih 

Bamar- 


A.    O.     V.    W. 
FIDEUTY     LOPGE.     NO. 
Rl    Ma«aU*    hail.    224    West 
ovtry     Tiitirsdiiy    at    8    p- 
meniters      vvelK'ine.        Gust 
W  ;   A.    E.    PI  ring. 
Tcld.    ftnamlti.    217 


ipr.— MEt;T9 

Klr^t  fireet, 
ni        Vlsninj 

lialiUn,  M. 
recorder;  O.  J.  Mur- 
East    Jirth   strcl. 


Pl'I.VTH  LODGE,   NO.   10.  A.  O.   U.  W. 
—Meets    at    Odd    Fellows     hall.     18    I-aW 
avenue    lurth    every     Tufsdiiy    evening 
a     c'cU.rk.       VUiting     trotlK-rs 
Ncnnan  Jchnson.  masler  workman,   K.  O. 
FotTfe.  reorder;  T.  .1.  St.  Gtmiuin, 
rlcr    121   Klist  arenue  vttt. 


at- 
wcloK.me. 


ttuan- 


I.     O.     F. 
COrRT   COM-MEIIC'E,    NO     : 
ncn('ent     Onler    v(    Fcreaters.  ,  ,     ,. 

and    third    Friday    evenings    at    h    o  cJoc» 
at     Ko«-leys    hail,     .No.     1J2    West 
ftnet.       Next     reg^iisr     n»«-tlng^ 
Mhrch  If'th.  C.  A.  Carlson,  C.  K 
HocKfc".    H.    S. 


83.    INDE- 
nieeu    first. 


Flrit 
Frtdaj. 
W.;  W. 


Pupils 
Third 


enter 
floor. 


any     lime— 
Grav-TEllant 


WANTED  —  CIGAR  SALESMAN  IN 
your  locality  to  represent  us;  exper- 
ience unnecessary;  $110  per  month 
and  expenses.  Write  for  particulars. 
Monarch  Cigar  company,  St.  Louis, 
Mo. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN— ANY  AMOUNT 
from  $500  to  $5,000,  on  Irhproved  real 
estate.  No  delay.  J.  B.  Greenfield, 
306    Burrows    building. 


MONEY  LOANED  ON  PEiRSONAL 
F'ROPERTY.  Minnesota  Loan  com- 
pany, 205  Palladio  building. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN— LOANS  MADE  ON 
farms  and  timber  claims.  Guaranty 
Farm  Land  Co.    416  Lyceum. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  BY  Y'OUNG 
man  as  clerk  in  hotel  or  other  work; 
wages  no  object.     H  85,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED — POSITION  IN 
general  merchandise  or  grocery  store 
in  Montana  or  North  Dakota  by 
young  man,  age  24;  three  years'  ex- 
perience; good  references.  Can  also 
speak,  read  and  write  German.  Ad- 
dress F'.  O.   Box   212,  Gaylord,   Minn. 


SITUATION  WANTED— POSITION  BY 
salesman,  acquainted  with  grocery 
and  meat  trade,  in  Duluth,  Superior 
and  Northern  Minnesota;  can  furnish 
best    of    references.      H    90,    Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  PRUDENCE 
Robert,  public  janitor  and  porter, 
window.?  washed,  floors  mopped,  etc. 
Branch  Bethel,  608  W.  Sup.  Zen.  381. 


WANTED— SALESMEN  OF  ABILITY 
and  neat  appearance  to  call  on  all 
merchants  in  their  territory;  ele- 
gant side  line,  convenient  to  carry; 
good  commissions;  prompt  remit- 
tance. Belmont  Mfg.  Co..  Cincin- 
nati.  O. 

WANTED — MAN  TO  TRAVEL  IN  MIn/ 
nesota:  start  now;  experience  un- 
necessary; good  pay  and  tailor-made 
suit  free  in  ninety  days;  write  for 
particulars.  J.  E.  McBrady  &  Co., 
Chicago. 


WANTED  —  MALE  STENOGRAPHER. 
Out  of  city  position.  Must  be  good 
penman  and  willing  to  assist  upon 
books,  payroll,  etc.  Address  J  77, 
Herlad. 


PRIVATE   HOSPITAL 


PRIVATE  IIOSPITAI.— PROSPECTIVE 
mothers  will  find  a  pleasant  home 
during  confinement  at  the  Ashland 
Maternity  Home,  villi  best  of  doc- 
tors; confidential;  may  board  or 
adopt  infants.  Mis.  K.  Hess.  923 
Second   avenue   east.   Ashland.   Wis. 

MRS^  HANSOnT  G  r  -ADUATE  MID- 
wlfe;  female  comphilnls,  413  Seventh 
avenue  east.  Old  phone  1594;  Zen- 
ith  1225^. 

Private  home  for  Indies  before  and 
during  conflnemert:  expert  care: 
everything  confidential;  Infants  cared 
for.  Ida  Pearson,  M.  D.,  284  Harrison 
avenue.  St.  Paul. 

pri- 


WisI 


tNITi:n      OKPEn      of      FttKESlEllS— 

NotUi  star.  No.  49.  metta  every  second 
,  ind  fourth  Monday?  at  f.  <»•  K.  hall 
•ornrt  Fourth  .Twnuc  vve«l  and  First 
i'.ntt  M.  E.  bain.  C.  U..  2  Ofbornt 
Hock-  E.  M.  f^tewart.  Bei-rtary.  222  Tllrd 
hvenut  vveM;  11.  B.  Young.  Ucasurcr.  3U 
-riiiru  ttnct;  IT.Ti-K.  eld  'phone. 


INITED      OKDEK     OF      FORESTER.S- 

Oourt  Eaftern  St:;r.  No.  86.  meett 
every  fir^t  mul  I'lUr.!  Tuesdays  at  V.  O. 
F  hall.  c<nier  Fourth  avctme  we«t  an* 
Kln-t  ffrcu  A.  L.  Foster,  C.  11  .  107 
V:ast  Ni;ith  ffre*t :  C.  E.  Paul,  secrttary. 
3  Wi-st  Superior  sWett;  lUrry  .MUne*. 
Room    23,    Wlntl.rop    blo«»;    Ztnllti     phone 


Mrs.  H.  Olson,  graduate  mitjwlfe; 
vale  hospital,  329  N.  68th  Av.  VV. 
31J3. 


HOSPITAL  FOR  lADIES  DURING 
confinement.  Mrs.  W.  K.  Cody,  508 
East  Lake  street,   lillnneapolis. 


MRS.    ANNA    RONGE— Graduated    mid- 
■  wi^,  2018  W.  Sup.   St.    Phone   1894-D. 


Mrs.    J.    C.    Haglund     graduated    mid- 
wife, 634  N.   5Cth  Av.   W.  Ztn.   3174-D. 


CLOTHES  CLEANED  &  PRESSED 

Suits  pressed,  50c;  pints,  15c.  Ladies' 
skirts  cleaned  and  pressed,  50c.  Zen. 
1852-X.  J.  Oreckovsky,   10  4th  Av.   W. 


Fine  ladles'  tailoring  a  specialty.  Bring 
your    alterations    and    relining    coats 
before    the    rush. 
First   street. 


IMPERIAL  CAMP  -NO.  22f.C  —  .MEETS 
at  Stelnvvaj  hall.  Fourth  avenue  weft  and 
First  Btrtej.  second  and  fourtli  Tue»vl«»» 
ot   each    month. 

F     E.    l'on!mus.    pi.nsul. 

C     P     Earl,   clerk.    Uoi   4:i.        


of  P. 
Elk»* 
West  Superior  street.  Next 
Tuesday  eveiUng.  March  18. 
Wi-rk -Rank  of  Page.  Vlii;liig  hioghta- 
welcome.  Loula  Dworshak,  C.  C. ;  L.  L 
of  U.   and   S. 


NOItTU  STAR   JX)t>GE   NO.    5.   K. 
— Mocts     every     Tuesday     nlglit     at 
hail,     lis 
ni.^eUug. 


meeting  Maich  31 


STEW.VRT,     NO.     50.    O.    8.     C  — 

nr:>t  and  third  Wednesdaja  each 
8  p.   m.,  Folz  hall.   IIC  West  Su- 

strcet.      Alexander    G      Mcl<  night. 

Don  Mcl>ennan.  se<THar> ;  John 
Buinett.  financial  secretary.  4ia  l-'lrst 
National     Bank    Uulldh.g.       Ncit     regulaf 

19('J.     Dancing  from  i'  to  12  P.  m. 


ri>AN 

Metis 
month 
iKTit-r 
ddef : 


Mueller.    208    W^est 


WANTED— MEN  TO  INSPECT  .  OUR 
$1.25  cowhide  suit  cases.  Don't  get 
fooled  on  sheepskin  cases.  We  man- 
ufacture. Trunk  and  case  repairing 
very  reasonable.  Northern  Trunk  Co., 
228  West  First  street,  opposite  Wol- 
vin building. 


WANTED  —  INSURANCE  MEN  TO 
handle  best  line  of  health  and  acci- 
dent policies,  costing  $1  per  month 
and  up.  Include  latest  and  most  at- 
tractive features.  Big  money  to  be 
made  under  good  contracts.  Call  or 
write  National  Casualty  company,  506 
Palladio    building     Duluth. 


(Continued  on  page  27.) 


TYPEWRITING. 

FOR  MULTIGRAPH  WORK  OF  ALL 
Kinds  at  right  prices,  'phone  new 
2067-X, 


KOTAL  EEAGIE. 
ZENITH     CufNCU..     NO.     161, 
l.e&gT'M'—nef^is    In    Elks'     hall    fir?t    »wl- 
thlrd    Monday    tunings    at   S    o  c'ock.      u. 
L.     Hargrave*.    sirilt.    care 
SlKc    company;    W.    W. 
care   cf    .Marshal!  Wells. 


ROYAL 


of    Norlliem 
UuoiSi.    ardioB. 


WANTED  lO  RENT. 

W.VNTED— YOUNG  LADY  DESIRES 
good-sized,  modern  room,  with  or 
without  board,  within  fifteen  min- 
utes' walk  of  postcffice.  K  500,  Her- 
ald.   


OPTICIANS. 

C.  C.  STAACKE.  203  NEW  JERSEY 
building.  106  Wert  Superior  street. 
Wednesday  and  Saturday  evenings. 


WOODMI.N  OF  TllE  WORLD. 
ZKXITH  CITY  CAMP.  NO.  5.-MEET9 
every  second  and  fourth  WcdnesuMj  »t 
the  old  Masoidc  temple,  fifth  noor.  JoliB 
Haucen  C.  C. ;  A.  .M.  Holmes,  banker. 
720  We-t  Fifth  stroL-t.  flat  t;  Rcbert-" 
Fcrsyth.    derk.    817    East    Second    street. 


First    street 


ZENITH  CITY  TENT.  NO.  1044, 
Kidghts  of  the  Modem  Muccal»«,  meets 
every  second  ;ind  fourth  Frldaj  e*ening»- 
of  tacli  mciiUi  In  Maccaljee  hall,  •224- 
We^t  Flr«t  strwt.  R.  M.  lUkcr.  c<  m- 
mander;  C.  H.  Loomls.  H.  K.,  1030  Wert 
ZtnlUi     phone    2243-Y. 


tary 


ROYAL  ARCANUM,  Duluth  Council.  No. 
H»3.  meets  first  and  thlril  Friday  even- 
ings. Elks'  hall.  Clinton  Brocks,  sec- 
retory.   401    Burrow*    building. 

Mesaba    Council.    No.    Iii4a.    meets    first 
and   thlnl   Wednesday   evenlikgs.    Colamt4» 
hall.    Wtat    end.      A.     M.    Johnson.    »ecM> 
Nirtb   Twtatlctti   aTCou*   weak 


i- 
I— . 


i^itf*. 


I    . 


.^OL 


■*  -t 


T" 


*